mrf MM illl Ji l: II l : . VOL. 2.--M 51. BY S. B. KOW. CLEARFIELD, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST G, 1856. DO YOD REALLY THINK HE DID 1 I waited till the twilight, ; . And yet he did not eomXs I strayed along the brook-side, And slowly wandered home : When who should come behind me, . , Hut him I would have bid ; lie said he came to find me '. Do you really think he did? lie said that since wc parted, lie thought of naught so sweet, As of the very moment. The moment we should meet, .lie show'd me where, half shaded, A cottage home lay hid, lie said fur me he made it Do you really think he did ? lie said when first he saw me, Life seemed at once divine Each night he dreamed of angels, And every face was mine. Sometimes a voice, when sleeping, Would all his hopes forbkl, And then he waked up weeping lo you really think he did ? A RACE FOR LIFE, Or a Steepla Cha83 on the Prairie. The first of June, 1843 ! Seven years ago ! Ilow stranger than fiction it seems that on this seventh anniversary of that eventful day, after traversing all the vicissitudes of experience, after boxing the compass of life's stormy sea, and shaking hands with every extremity of fur tune, I should be seated at last in this quiet little sanctum ; the hum of that mighty city, which was then the goal of all our hopes a round me ; the wild freedom of the illimitable prairies exchanged ior the confines of a dingy office; my snorting charger discharged lor this old arm chair ; the badge of the pioneer laid aside for a more peaceful weapon, this "gray goose quill." It was on this day scv.en years ago. Eighty five of us, weary wanderers over the trackless prairies, were day after day and month after month toiling onward to this land of gold, whose lolly sierras and summer plains have since gathered to their eternal embrace so ma ny members of that gallant youthful band. It was Sunday in the wilderness; the wagons all "corralled"' on the banks of the "Little Blue," the toil-worn mule scattered around, joyfully cropping the grass under the watchful vigi lance of the guard. Some cf the party were bathing in the clear stream, some cooking. mending clothes, washing, lounging, or siuok ing,and all enjoying to the full a glorious sun shiny day of rest and indolence, when some evil genius possessed me with a sudden desire to be the first of the party to slay tho long ex pected "buffalo," an animal we had not yet encountered, but which now begun to be the constant theme of conversation p.nd conjec ture. - Several of the boys were hunting tur keys in the margin of the timber, which skirt ed the river, so that when I saddled up my steed, and, with rifle at my saddle-bow, started out to the northward, the few who observed my departure exchanged sly winkU,niy proba ble disappointment, but never dVefhied of the thrilling adventure that I wasso rashly rush ing into. Although we knew that we were about the confines of the Pawnee Territories, and had indeed been warned by a convoy of trappers, whom we had met but a few days previous, re turning from their distant wintering ground in the mountains, that war parties were out, yet, confident in our numbers, and the entire ina bility of our unpracticed eyes to detect any traces of them, we had attributed the well meant warning of the old mountaineers rather to a spirit of news mongering than anything 'else, and rather despised those wild Bedouins of the prairies of whom wc heard so much, but had as yet failed to see. Far away over the beautiful undulating ar.d vernal bosom of the trackless prairies I rode gently along, on the qui rive for any indica tions of the object of my desires, but though I eagerly scanned the horizon as I proceeded, not a living thing met my eye3 except a few antelopes, whose wary caution ar.d quick per ception rendered them impossible of appioach upon the open prairies. Far as the vision could reach, nought but a monotonously undulating surface of gently swelling and naked hills, covered only by the buffalo grass and flowers of every hue, extend ed in every direction towards the fair horizon, when the blue sky of summer kissed the dis tant hills glowing in the fresh verdure of the advancing season. Struck with the voiceless solitude of tsfs untrodden dosert, I lode slowly, along, lazily musing on the strange vicissitudes which so suddenly translated me from college halls to this wild scene, and hid almost imperceptibly placed some seven or eight miles between rae Camp, when, far in the distance, directly in front of me, I discerned a column of dust, which, as I supposed, betokened the long de sired buffalo. Away went romance and reflec tion. The ardor of the hunter took posses sion of me, and hastily loosening my pistols and glancing at my ride's lock, I struck spins to my steed and galloped forward.never doubt ing that the opportunity so ardently coveted was now at hand. Charging down the hill and across the intcr- Tening valley, I rose another gently swelling roll of the prairie, and as I gained the summit, again the moving clond of dust met my gaze, and this time considerably nearer, and, as 1 closely regarded it, I perceived that it was ra pldly approaching, and I began to discern the flashing of bright objects gloaming out from fcs'otscnriry. This looked less like buffa lo. As the object, whatever it might be, con tinued to approach, I halted for a better view, and was not long in making out a band of mounted Indians, their snow-white shields and burnished lance-heads glancing brightly in the morning sun. Still, however, I scarcely thought of Paw nees, but supposed it might be some hunting party of friendly Pctiawatomics or Sioux; and, at all events, knowing the mettle and power of my horse, and having a retreat at pleasure, I thought I incurred no great risk by waiting for a more satisfactory inspection. Gradually across the broad expanse of the prai rie, they drew nearer and nearer, now disap pearing from view in crossing soma concealed hollow, end again displayed in bold relief a gainst the sky as they surmounted some pro minent ridge. At length their distance was diminished to less than a quarter of a mile and thinking a nearer acquaintance undesirable, I tume'd my horse's head, with a view of riding moderate ly towards the camp, till they should manifest some design to pursue me ; when imagine the chill of horror Which curdled my blood, as I saw two smaller parties in my fear, gallopirg together from either side to cut oil my retreat, and heard the terrible yell which all three rais ed, as they saw their wild manoeuvre discover ed, and that further silence would be useless. Whilst the main body had continued to at tract my attention by advancing conspicuous ly towards me, these two parties had taken ad vantage of the numerous hollows, which at times had concealed them temporarily from view, to diverge, and by a wide circuit, attain my rear, I, greenhorn that I was, never dream ing of th:3 common Indian stratagem, while stupidly regarding the first and only object which attracted my gaze. The two intercept ing parties were rapidly converging towards the line of my retreat, and were alreaJy with in a quarter of a mile of each other, while I was no more than half the distance from tho centre. The main body,with a fearful whoop, dashed on to close me in. My horse was fleet and true, but he was also travel-worn and fatigued. Ilow long could he distance those wild coursers of the desert.even if I escaped the immediate danger 7 iiut there was no time to deliberate. Now or never was the chance. Another moment would be too late. Grasping my rifle with a firmer clutch, and re-assuring with caressing words the fright ened sfeed, who alone could save me from a horrible fate, I made a bold dash for the inter val which still seperated tho detached parties, and upon which they were rapidly closing. Nobly the gallant animal responded to the call. Snorting with terror at the wild shouts of our pursuers, trembling in every limb with the intensit3- of his exertions, he flew over the ground, and with the fieetncs3 of the wind, he dashed between the approaching hordes,within a hundred yards of i:s on either hand. "With tho energy of despair I grasped the saddle with my knees, and bent forward to as sist his flying course. On, on, towards the on ly hope of safety, fifty yelling demons hard upon our tracks, their blankets and finery fly ing in the wind, onward we sped, pursuers and pursued, over the broad expanse of that prairie ocean. Soon the fiectness and blood of my Ameri can curser began to tell on the enduring but slower-footed mustangs of the Indians. Some of the worst mounted were gradually dropping to the rear, and after running two or three miles they were strung out in a long line be hind me. Gradually I slackened my speed, for I well knew that the bottom ar.d endurance of Indian horses, accustomed to traverse im mense distances at a single stretch is almost without limit, and many a long mile was still before us. Again they would diminish the distance, and again I was obliged to urge my jaded steed to his best efforts. But I was begining to breathe freer, the first startling alarm was over, half the distance . ... n was accompiisiie-vi. it my g-aaam gr.c-y couia but maintain his tremendous exertions but four miles more I was safe. Once in sight of camp and the prudence of my wild pursuers would glance but once at the eighty American rides which would gleam from Le.und our waon wheels. I was descending a long but gentle inclina tion towards a broad level depression in the prairie which spread out about a couple of hundred yards wide at its base. My savage pursuers were for a moment out of sight be hind the ridge I had crossed. I reached the foot of the hill at full speed ; my steed plun ged forward on what seemed hard ground ; and, O, despair ! sank to his belly in a treach erous swamp! Ah! can the gathering years of all futurity ever blot from my memory the despair of that awful moment ? Ilow far this seemingly impossible barrier extended up and down the rivulet which divided it, I could not guess. A terrible yell burst from the ex ultant warriors as they appeared over the crest of the ridge and recognized the dilemma they had too truly anticipated. Terrible fears chilled my blood. In that brief moment, as tho wild savages came char ging down the hill, tumultuous thoughts of home and friends, mingled with the bright an ticipations, as long cherished, of a golden fu ture in the land of promise, carao thronging in wild confusion through my teeming brain. There was one hope left, desperate as it soerned ; but there ' was no time for delibera-1 tion, no opportunity for choice. Resistance was madness. I was hemmed in on every side tut one. Straight ahead .was my only chance. I might flounder through, and, at all events suffocation or capture in the bog was no worse than instantaneous destruction where I was. . . . Dashing the rowels into the trembling ani mal, I madly urged him forward. The soil though covered with grass andapparantly firm gave way at every step. Ploughing his way by gigantic efforts, now for an instant raising himself on some harder spot, then sinking to his sadile-girths, urged by my frantic ex ertions, terrified to phrensy by the appalling ycll3 of the rapidly approaching enemy and the shots which began to whistle around us, tho noble animal toiled gallantly on and gain ed the firm bank just as the dusky forms of my pursuers, inf uriated at the possible loss, of their prey, were clustering on the opposite side, seeking a favorable spot to follow. Their deliberation saved me. . It requited a f trone control of reason to walk ray failing horse slowly up the. hill while tho Indians were floundering after me through the swamp. But I rightly judged that a little breathing time would not be wasted on him. I turned the summit of the hill just as tho discemfitted Indians were begining to crawl out from tho bog, and again putting spurs to my jaded horse once more we sprung forward in that madjaca for life or d?ath. Onward we rushed, 'over hills and valley, across streams and ravines, in head-long flight, pursuers and pursued. -. The timber which marked the camp grew more and mere distinct; now for a moment more concealed by an intervening hill, aiuJ again as we flew over its summit rising near er and clearer to view. My horse was rapidly failing great flakes of foam Cow from his mouth. Covered with mud and drenched with sweat, he still, however, toiled gallantly onward, spurning the sod of the prairie with his flying hoofs. But the goal was nearly won. Oh! if ho could hold his pace a little longer ! The tireless mustangs of the Indians, no match for his fleet limts in a short stretch, now exhibited :iheit wonderful powers or en durance. Onward they swept after us with undiminished speed, their unshorn manes and sweeping tails mingling with the flowing dra pery of the wild riders and flying out upon the wind. The timber banks of the "Little Blue," which I had so eagerly longed for, had for some moments been concealed by a long but gentle swelling ascent, the summit of which I was approaching. If from here the white wag ens of our camp should be visible over the un interrupted plain I should yet reach them. But, chTif another of these interminable ridges should intervene ! My poor horse was on his last legs. But to perish in sight of sifety, to bo taken in view of tho camp by theso implacable savages ! My brain teemed with these maddening doubts as I Beared the spot which was to decide my fate, and I trem bled with eagerness for tho view which might consign me to despair. I nearcd the summit; another bound and wcwent over, and flying with faltering steps down a long gentle inclination which swept away iu gentle undulations to the longed for timber, stiil about a mile ahead. 1 strained my eyes for indications of comrades ; and oh ! rapture unspeakable ! far away, but directly before me, nestling at the base of the long dark line of cotton-wood, in full view cf the panting fugitive, loomed up the white circle of tents and wagon tons dearer to my long ing gaze than to the desert worn pilgrim tho lofty minarets and marble palaces of Eastern story. A shout cf triumph and exultation burst from my lips as I discovered the welcome scene and recognized the gate of my deliver ance. I looked back. One after another savage came bounding over tho ridge pres- I :., ...:!, tt.n it-;!. f.-rv nf 1 inn T"oi ted ig ou nu mi, . w - ! rage. But their practiced eyes were not slow t tWiscover my reiuge, and one after another pulled up his panting steed and gazetl witn baffled malignity after their expected victim. But I was saved! Covered with foam ana sweat my gallant preserver burst iuto camp, and, as I sprang from the saddle into the midst of my startled comrades, with a groan of ex haustion he sank quivering to the earth. The faithful creature had toiled to the last ; he had done his best, his powers were exhausted, and yielding at last to utter prostration, he stretched his weary limbs upon the sward, and I thought that the last race of my gallant grey was run. How I nursed him through the long night, how I covered him with my own ."bcjc ofbla'nkets and supplied him carefuliy and cantiously with grass and water, how I trud ged along on foot day after day for the next two weeks, and cherished him like a feeble child, I have not time to tell; but although many a mile he carried me in after days over these dreary deserts, and many a time brought me alongside the flying buffalo in his mad ca reer, yet never again did he run an eight mile steeple-chass against the field, with fifty un tamed coursers of the desert for his competi-. tors and fifty painted warriors yelling in his rear. Is Philadelphia the citizens are employing private watchmen to guard their dwellings, having no confidence in the regular police. COL. FREMONT. A friend has called our attention to a very striking testimonial to the talents and acquire ment of Col. Fremont. It is found in an edi tion of the Anabasis of Xenophon, prepared i by Dr. J. Robertson, and published by Lippin- : cott & Co., Philadelphia, in 1850. In the pre face to this work, which Is dated Philadelphia, August, 1300, Dr. Robertson, addressing him self to the student for whose use his book was designed, relates for their encouragement what he calls "a very remarkable instance of patient diligence and indomitable ptcverauce." We subjoin his narrative : 'I;i the year 1827, after I had returned to Charleston from Scotland, and my classes were going on, a very respectable lawyer came to my school, I think some time in the month of October, with a youth apparently about six teen, or perhaps not so much, of middle size, graceful in manners, rather slender, but well formed, and upon the whole, what I would call handsome ; of a keen, piercing eye, and a no ble forehead, seemingly the very seat of ge nius. The gentleman stated that he found him given to study, that he had been about three weeks learning the Latin rudiments, and (hoping, I suppose, to turn the youth's atten tion from the law to the ministry,) had resolv ed to place him under my care for the purpose cf learning Greek, Latin and Mathematics, suf ficient to enter Charleston college. I very gladly received him, for I immediately per ceived he was no common youth3as intelligence beamed in his dark eye, and shone brightly on his countenance, indicating great ability, aud an assurance of his future progress. I at once put him in the" highest class, just beginning to read C.-esar's Commentaries, and although at first inferior, his prodigious memory and en thusiastic application soon enabled him to sur pass the best. He began Greek at the same time, and read with some who had been long at it, in which he also soon excelled. In short, in the space of one year, he had with the class, and at odd hours with myself, read four books of Caesar, Cornelius Xepos, Saliust, six books of Tirgil, nearly all Horace, and two books of Livy ; and in Greek, all Grreca Mi- n-ora, W4 tk Holfof tlio fir at -relume of tf TUi- ca Mi'jora, and four books of Homer's Iliad. And whatever ho read, he retained. It seem ed to me, in fact, that lie learned by mere in tuition. I was myself utterly astonished, and at the s.ime time delighted with his progress. I have hinted above that he was designed for the church, but when I contemplated his bold, fearless disposition, his powerful inventive ge nius, his admiration of warlike exploits, and his love of heroic and adventnrons deeds, I did not think it likely he would be a Minister of the Gospel. He had not, however, the least appearance of any vice whatever. 0;i tho contrary, he was always the very pattern of virtue and modesty. I could not help loving him, so much did he captivate me by his gen tlemanly conduct and extraordinary progress. It was easy to see that he would one day raise himself to eminence. "Whilst under my instruction, I discovered his early genius for poetic composition in the following manner : When the Greek class read the account that Herodotus gives of the battle cf Marathon, the bravery cf Miltiados and tiis ten thousand Greeks raised his patriotic feel ings to enthusiasm, aud drew from him ex pressions which I thought were embodied in a few days afterward in some well written verses in a Charleston paper, on mat ur-iauiuu une qual but successful conflict against tyranny and oppression, and suspecting my talented scholar to be the author, I went to his desk, and asked him if he did not write them ; ar.d hesitating at first, rather blushingly, he con fessed he did. I then said, "I knew you could do such things, and I suppose you have some such pieces by you which I should like to see. Do bring them to me.' He consented, and in a day or two brought me a number, which I read with pleasure and admiration, at the strong marks of genius stamped on all, but here and there requiring, as I thought, a very slight amendment. 'I had hired a mathematician to teach both hira and myself, (for 1 could not teach that science,) and in this he also made such won derful progress, that at the end of ore year he entered the Junior Class in Charleston College triumphantly, whilst other3 who had been stu dying four years and more were obliged to take. the Sophomore Class. About the end of j the year 1823 I left Charleston, but I heard he highly distinguished himself, aud graduated in 15520. After that ho taught mathematics for some time, and then went to study law un der a certain celebrated Senator. His career afterwards has been one of heroic adventure, of hair-breadtb escapes by flood and field, and of scientific explorations which have made him vrcrld-wide renowned. In a letter I re ceived from him very lately, he expressed Lis gratitude to me in the following words :-"I am very far from either forgetting you, or neglec ting you, or in , any way losing the old regard I had for you. There is no time to which I go back with more pleasure than that spent I with ,y on, for there was no time so thoroughly L well Spent, and of anything i nave learned, 1 remember nothing so well, and so distinctly, as what I required with you.' Here I cannot help saying that the merit was almost all his own. It is true I encouraged aud cheered bim on, but if the soil into which I put the seeds of learning had not been of the richest quali ty, they never would have sprung up to a liun dred fold in full car. Such, my young friends, is bat an imperfect sketch of my once beloved and favorite pupil, now a Senator, and who may yet rise to be at the head of this great and growing Republic. My prayer is that he may ever Iks opposed to war, injustice and op pression of every kind, a blessing to his coun try, and an example of every noble virtue to the whole world." 23SOCES AND I-UHLITTGAI.tS. The recent acts of the South Carolina ruf fian, who has fit last relieved the House of Rep resentatives from his presence, by resigning his seat, are i;i strict keeping with thexlas tardly deed which first brought him "promi nently before the public. Thr.t l.c is at heart an arrant coward, whilst it might have been inferred from the mode and manner of bis at tack upon Senator Sumner, has been most con clusively established by the course he has pursued in relation to his difficulty with Bur linganie of Massachusetts. It will be remem bered that the gentleman referred to delivered in the House of Representatives the most elo quent speech which the expulsion resolution called forth, in which he commented upon the Sumner outrage with just and scathing severi ty. For this the gallant hero of the bludgeon saw proper to challenge him to mortal combat. Contrary to his expectations, iu all probabili ty. Mr. Buriingamc promptly accepted the challenge, fixed the Canada side of the Niag ara river as the place of meeting, and after sending Brooks word to that effect, repaired to the city of New York, on his way thither. After some deliberation and consultation with his friends, the challenger concluded that dis cretion was the better part of valor, and de clined to follow his antagonist to the spot se lected, i:pon the absnrd plea that he would have to travel some seven hundred miles thro' nu "enemy's country," and was liable to be attacked a the way. This is essentially a back out a showing of the white feather for he would, have been perfectly safe ; not a hair of his head would have been disturbed. The true rcasaa i.s. J?ij!t iejs uVaiJ to mtct Mr. Burlingame, who is a dead . shot. Aud what will the South say to the conduct of their champion, who had the courage to strike down an unarmed Senator ? According to the 'code of honor,' he is disgraced beyond redemption. Mr. Burlingame subsequently returned to Washington, and both parties are now under bonds to keep the peace. A Father asd Sox with Six Wives Arises. The Manchester ( N. II. )Jrror, gives a long account of the proceedings in that place and in Rutland, Vt, of two men calling themse'.ves Dr. Lyman A. Abbott and James H. Abbott, said to be father and sou, who are now lfoth under arrest on the chaige of bigamy. It is slated that they have each, within a short pe riod, married no less than six wives. The fa ther passed at Manchester, N.I1-, as the "rich old uncle'' cf his son, and in consequence of his representations, the tradesmen cf Manches ter were victimized to the amount of several hundred dollars. The career of both parties for a number of years is detailed in the?Jirror with great minuteness. At Newark, X. J., in 18-31, the elder Abbott was married to Mrs. E lizabeth Roberts, who soon discovered that he had a wife living in Syracnse. N. Y. He was consequently arrested for bigamy, convicted and sentenced to ten years in the New Jersey Penitentiary, but was pardoned out aft.-r seven months' detention. A Mbs Gardiner, of West moreland, X. II., states that she married the same man, inder tho name of Dr. Lyman An drews, ia 1Sj2. In Sussex comity,X. J-, i:i 1819, ho persuaded a Miss Sherman to elope with him, and they were married by a Justice . . r ... ... of the Peace. He was soon sifter obliged to abscond for'threatetiing his w ife's life in order to obtain her properly. It was also ascertain ed that tho true, original name of the "old doctor" is Aaron Andrews Abbey, and the trne name of the young man James Henry Ab bey the latter being the eldeit son of the for mer by his first wife. Both parties are hell for trial. The Committee on Elections of the United States House of Representatives have repor ted in favor of Governor Boeder's claim to a seat in Congress, as Delegate from Kansas. They decline to send the case ba?k to the peo- f pie of Kansas for a new election, on account cf the certainty of a repetition of the disgraco- ful scenes which have attended previous elec tions there ; and until the passage of an act, by Congress, by which an election can be legally held there, they recognize Governor Reeder as the Delegate elected by the majority of the citizens of Kansas. . Commodore Robert F. Stockton has written a letter withdrawing from the contest for tho Presidency. His associate od the ticket, Kenneth Rayner, withdrew some time ago This slightly narrows the contest, one ticket being entirely out of the field. - Fillmore, Fre mont, Buchanan and Gerrit Smith are the on ly men now regularly before the people as candidates for the Presidency. Advices from Key West, Florida, state that a party of 15 volunteers had attacked a band of Seminole Indians, numbering 75, on the 17th nit., and killed 17. The volunteers lost one-third of their men, but succeeded in dis persing the savages. A LEAF TECH THE NATIONAL LELGEB. An exchange, in a calculation o"the cost of the public lands of nr domain, says that tho equivalent which we give lor them amounts to about a hundred millions of dollars. This wo believe to be an altogether inadequate esti mate. That this is an immense country, and a growing one beside, and that it will invento ry, as the merchants say, at a much higher fig ure than $100,000,000, a glance at Uncle Sam uel's real estate operations will satisfy tho most incredulous. Beginning, then, in 1S03, when w e first began as a nation to break a por tion of the tenth section of the decalogue, w purchased Louisiana from France, giving her as au equivalent 11,250,000, besides making out for her a receipt in full for obligations of about r.n equal amount, for which she was pre viously our debtor. This satisfied os for while, until in 1819we.iaid $5,000,000 to Spain in order to secure Florida. We then disbursed 5100,000,000 more for the extin guishiue;:t f the Indian title, an operation which was afterwards succeeded by tho trans fer of Texas iind the acquired Mexican terri tory, at a cost of $2-3,000,000, more. If we then sum up the figures and add $3,000,000, which is a k w estimate for the expense of sur veying this extensive territory, we find tho sum total to be one hundred and sixty odd millions of dollars, not counting the expens cf the Florida, the Mexican, and the contin ued Indian wars. At the present time, say De Bow's statistics, the U. S. own fifteen hun dred million of acres of land, which arc worth, to it two billions of dollars. What a glorious picture is here presented of the "responsibil ity," according to commercial parlance, of this great nation ! All these immense sums have been paid at maturity, and yet taxation has rested as lightly upon the shoulders of tho people as dew upon summer foliage. We are apt to felicitate ourselves upon liv ing ia a progressive era. We do ; but whoev er lives to sec a centuiy hence, when all this huge domain is under cultivation and every acre is occupied by colleges, newspaper offices, telegraph stations, model farms and machino shops, will witness the prosperity of a country teeming with a population of 500,000,000 of souls. If wickedness don't keep pace with progress in the arts, and the world is not pre-maturel- destroyed for its presumption, tho greatest country that ever had an existenco upon its surface will be these United States ! It is as certain as certainty itself. A Trtk Sabmixt. The other morning as' Father O'Nci! mounted the rostrnm of the cha pel at Bathfeyland, having just come over from Ballygraddy on his one-eyed minus-tailed shetty. which was tied to a post behind tha chapel, he thus addressed his assembled con gregation : "My friends tarn wid -me if ya plaze. as the subject of our morning's medita tions, to Taul's Epistle to the Romans. But I may as well tell you that some of ye knows as little about what an Epistle manes as a Con naught pig knows about plaiting a shirt front. But an epistle, let me inform ye, is neither more nor less than alether; and that Paul wrote this 1 ether and addhrcsscd it is ivident tons all, but whether he saled the lether, or merely stuck a wafer into it, all the commen tators I have consulted have not been able to inform r.ie. Howsureever, my friends, he did not address it to them dirthy Episcopalians, northern sehurvy Presbyterians, nor to them theeven Unitarians, nor any of them Herctic onaiians. No! he addressed it to you my friends the Romans. 1 intend to divide ray discourse this morning into three heads. Tha first will trnte on something that I know my self, and that niver a one o' ye knows a ha pmth about. In tho second place, I mane to sprko t' ye about something yourselves know I ,, bcnt " nDj j j.rovr nolh;ng about rneself ; and in the third place I mane to spake to ye about something that nakher you nor I knows anj thing about at all, at all. In the first place then as I was mounting my nag this morning to come (o praich to ye here, I tore a thump ing hole in the knay of my black throisers, and ye knew nothing about that. In the sec ond place yon know when you're going to give me a new pair, and 1 don't ; and thnrdly, we don't know what that l'rottistant tailor oover the wav will be after charging ns for thim." It is now evident thot Messrs. Toombs and r Don "las, i i',e preparation of their Kansas hav been acting iu concert with tho i I r Missouri propagandists of Slavery. By a tele graphic dispatch from. St. Louis, wo learn that a hand-bill was issued on the 8th of July by Stringfeflow and his associates, calling up on alb good. Missourians to go over into the T.I-..;i.. t.f.ra V lf r,r Inormt as in hn in readiness to vote at the November election. There can . be. 5w question that ;it the Senate bill should become a law, hundreds of the bor der ruffians, would- be enrolled by tho commis sioners whom the- l'ref ident is authorized to appoint, and, ias.tbry leave repeatedly dono heretofore, defeat "..ihV: wishespf the actual residents. ' The Mammoth Cave-. An nuknown pas sage some two miles in length was discovered in tho Mammoth Cave. Kentucky, on thcL? 111SI. A inn iaa;i:;c is iu Jiers far surpassing 8tk both in extct- , the wh .