u If . jc . if 1 : mi m n ;n jn mi- n - .n in ' " BY S. E. HOW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1858. VOL. 4.-N0. 41. 1 ; ; For the Journal. TO AX ABSENT SISTER. ; - .. BY CLARE. Sjstor dear, we miss thee s.vlly, In thy olden homo, Where in happy childhood. Thou wast wont to roam. - And ire miss theo, dearest sister, When wo kneel to pray, 'Anil onr words falter. : - In the evening lay. When tho stars come out, lore, In th3 ether blue. Memory whispers softly Sweetest thoughts of yon. Then I kneel and pray, love, , . That God will guide theo right. -And that o'er thy youn glad spirit, Xo'er luay come a blight. For there come, my sister, griefs O'er spirits glad. Turning light to darknes. Making gay hearts sad. CUPID IX A QUA'DAKYi BT TUE COLOX EL. I was In lovo, once' - Of courso she was charming creature that had won my sudden af fections. I never knew a lady to be any thing else in the eyes of lier lover. For my own part, I thought Angelina was an angel. I have crown older since, and have discovered exact ly the dillerence between a woman and one of those atrial indcscribables. At that time 1 was too impressible and impulsive to bo obser vant. I originally saw Angelina in Union park. and my heart, inflammable as tinder, was in a blazo in an instant. My earnest gaze attract ed her attention. Finally it confused her. In her confusion she ran against the end of one the benches, and fell upon the walk. I flew to her rescue, and lifted her to her feet. She was not much hurt, though much mortified. I soothed and consoled her. In doing this I called her Miss Julia, when she corrected me by stating that her name was Angelina. That was tho mode I adopted to ascertain the name of my inamorata. Two days after that I met Angelina in the park again. It was not exactly by appoint ment. Of course she would have been shock ed at such a thing, and I almost a stranger to her. But, as I left her before, I had said that I always took a tour of the Union park at such n hour every afternoon, and I could not hold adding how delighted I should bo were acci dent at any time to bring her steps in that di rection about that period of the day. Acci dent did do it. When we parted at that time I was silly enough to think that I had created tender feeling in her bosom and that acci dent might favor another interview. Two days more elapsed and I fell sure that she would come. But she did not. I remain ed in the park until night set in, I then des paired. Just as I was departing, and in a very melancholy mood of mind, vexed st tho Inconstancy of . woman-kind in general, and Angelina in'particnlar. 1 paused. There was a cloak entering one of the gates that struck nio as familiar. I watched it I followed it. It was Angelina's height jnst her figure just her walk. But the lady, although sho observ ed n;o ct her side was silent. Her face was Enveloped in a thick veil. No hope of grati fying my curiosity in that particular I What shall I do. I never had remarkable confidence; so I easily convinced myself that it was Angelina, and stepping up to her, ad dressed her by that name. Sho made no re ply, except by a slight laugh. This assured me sho was indulging in a coquettish trick. 1 was not to bo deceived in that manner. I perceived, therefore rattling away ail sorts ot pretty nonsense and telling her in every pos sible manner how much I idolized her. Good ness gracious ! how eloquent I felt, and how happy. ' In this manner wo proceeded up one street and down another, until we reached the Sec ond Avenue and Nineteenth street. I did not know whero Angelina lived. She had never told me. She had forbidden mo to see her nil the way home. Bull knew she lived in Second Avenuo. On this occasion I implored my silent companion since it was alter night to permit mc to escort her to the door. Si lence gives consent you know, and I did it. She paused in front of a large uoblo dwel ling. Good ! thought I ; my sagacity was not at fault; she is aristocratically connected. She placed one little foot on the brown door step then, as if she had changed her mind and did not care to ring the bell in my compa ny, she proceeded to the area gate, opened it entered I followed of course Perhaps it was a little impudent on my part, but she turn ed her head towards me as sho passed in, and I could have sworn I saw or heard a token of invitation. That was enough for an impas sive lover. She opened the area-door. I s M pursued her. She passed in-so did I, .closing the door after me. Sho entered the front basement-a species ot sitting room-ami thence glided through into the rear basement, which was a kitchen. I was close at her heels. The gas was burning brightly in the kitchen; but I never stopped to think of my dilemma, and siezing her by tho hand, I murmured: "Oh! Angelina, how delighted you make me! She threw off her bonnet and veil, and by Jove ! hewasa total stranger! I had never seen bor before! I felt at that moment the full force of my ridiculous position. I did not lose m v seir possession however. On the con trary, 'I threw myself ioto a chair and laughed heartily, although my heart was rapidly mak ing an exploration away down into my boots My companion happened to be a good look ing young woman ; evidently a domestic, in thohouseln question. My assurance aston ished her at first, but recovering herself, sho naked if sho could call for ""rta7. .P"cth mc out into the street. In the most insinuat ing terms possible, 1 foMed to her my mis take, implored her to forgive me, and Protes ted I had the remotest idea of insulting one whom I was convinced was as pure as she waJ lautiful. That little piece of flattery secur ed my favor. She forgave me, pointed to the loor, and, desired me to go, as she Pte -very moment a message from the parlor above in regard to lunch. . I thanked her and turned to depart. J ust as I stepped towards the kitchen door, I heard tho sound of feet decending the stairs. How should I escape? Where should I fly to f Quick as thought I darted into a tell closet that stood in the corner of the room. The tip per part contained three shelves bnt the lower part afforded me space enough to crowd into, doubled up. The girl immediately closed the 'lioron roe ind buttoned it. I did not feel very comfortable, fastened np in that box Suppose I should not be let out ! But all fear ot this was lost in a still greater apprehension, when I heard the voice of a male individual who had entered the kitchen. I concluded to remain quietly where I was. As soon as ho had departed, the girl camo to mc, and unbuttoning the. rlnnr tr.i.i m t had made a fortunate escape, and added that w ui.i i.ui wish lo compromise both her and myself, I had better conic out of that dumb- nauer aim DCgone. unmo-waiter !" I exclaimed. "Am I In a dumb-waiter, and liable to be hoisted up in a twinkling to the pMrlor." Here was affright. I uncoiled myself to es- cape ; out just as l rose, away went tho dnmb waitcr np towards the coiling with myself in side. The jar of the first movement threw me back. I had no time to recover my feet and lean. I COUld but till II tho rlnnr tn am iUn iwv ascended, while the paroxysm of laughter nuncieu mo giri in the kitchen went to my heart, ar.d smote me with a feeling akin to madness. I would have sold mvselt at that moment for three cents of any decent man's You may guess exactly how I looked when mo uinuu-waiier naving reached the dining room floor above, I heard the sound of half dozen voices. Amongst them my heart re cognized that of Angelina herself, as she ex claimed : , x- 1 . . -o, pa, uo ici us nave a lunch. I am so hungry." " I'm, yon will," I thought, "when yon see use com meat mat's ready for yon?" for an icy perspiration was dropping from every pore. The door of tho dumb-waiter was opened, and I walked out. There was a table set and aronnd it I beheld Angelina, her father and mother, (as I pre sumed,) two brothers and two sisters. Ange lina shrieked and feinted. I darted towards the parlor door, but not quite in time to e scape'a How from the back of a chair aimed at me by one of the young gentlemen. I scrim bled to my feet, and then you should have seen the race. Fortunately tho waiter was jnst ad mitting a gentleman at 1 1 o on hnll ,tnr,r- , I leached it. Deli?htd t tho rh aea past the visitor, and made one leap to the pavement. Three more placed mo on the plat form of a Second Avenue car jnst passing. Need I say I have not entered Union paik since! I detest the spot. As to Angelina, the very thought of her makes my blood run cold! and if yon want to create beligerant feelings in my bosom at anv time, iust s.iv dnmb-n.iiror" to mo, and look out. That's all. Look Befoe c you Kick A minister recent ly, while on his nay to preach a funeral ser mon in the country, called to see one of his members, on old widow lady, who lived near tho road he was traveling. The old lady had just been making sausages, and she ielt proud of them they were so plump, round and sweet. Of course she insisted on her minister taking some of the links homo to his family. Ho ob jected on account of not having his portman teau aiong. I his objection was soon overrul ed and the old lady, after wrapping them in a rag, carefu.ly placed a bundle in either pocket ot the preacher's capacious coat. Thusequip ed, he started for the funeral. . While attending to the solemn ceremonies of the grave, some hungry dogs scented the sansnges, and were not long in tracking them to the pocket of the good man's overcoat. Of course this was a great annoyance, and he was several times under the necessity of kicking those whelps awaj-. The obsequies at the grave completed, the minister and congregation re paired to the church whero the funeral dis course was to be preached. After tho sermon was finished tho minister halted to make some remarks to his cogrega- tion, when a brother, who wished to have an nppoinf ment given out, ascended the steps of the pulpit and gave the minister's coat a hitch to get his attention. The divine, thinking it a dog having a design upon Ins pocket, rais ed Ins foot, gave a sudden kick, and sent the brother sprawling down the steps. "You will excuse me, brethcfn and sisters!" said the minister, confusedly and without look ing at the work ho had just done, "lor I could not avoid it. I have sausages In my pocket, and that dog has been trying to grab them e- versince I came upon tho premises!" Our readers may judge of the effect such an announcement wonld have at a funeral. TirTTTiTf AiiFin. Trouble, it seems, has al ready commenced in reference to the re-sale t the State canals by the ftunonry ana j-.rie Railroad company. On Tuesday the 2oth, says the Philadelphia Ledger, it is understood, the Railroad Company sold the North Branch Division to an association of gentlemen, some of whom reside on the lino of the canal, and nihnrs in Philadelphia and at New York, for one million and a half dollars ! the payment be ing secured, as o aro informed, by a lien on the works themselves. This sale is contested iv another association of capitalists, who have been in treaty for the same works, and who al lege that they offered the Sunbury and Erie i?.;i.nil rnmmnv half a million mora than the sum for which they have been sold, name- two millions oi aoiiars ; ono nunareu nnsnnd dollars in cash, ono hundred thous and dollars annually for five years, and four teen hundred thousand dollars secured by lien on the line of the works. Tho result of this disappointment by the two million party, has boon an annlication to the Courts for an in junction restraining any further action in the premises until the parties can oe nearu in open Court on the merits of the complaint. On the application of Wni. M. Meredith and St. Geo. Tucker Campbell, Esqrs., Judges Sharswood and Hare have granted the applicatidre, and fi3 xed the 8th of June for argument on tho va- 111 ity of the alleged sale. e have not the of the Legislature authorizing u:u cou vevance of the canals to tho Sunbury & Erie Railroad Company now before us, out, n we remember rightly, it stipulates that if a great er sum than $3,500,000 is realized by the com pany for all the canals, 75 per cent., or some specified proportion of the excess, shall go to tho State. To prevent there being any ex cess, collusion is alleged between the buyers and the sellers, hence this application for an injunction. . . - . ' An entire Chinese regiment, for having a bandoned an untenable fort, during the recent attack on Canton by the French and English Srccs.bas been sentenced to wear women-a clothes for fivo years. Rather unusual pun ishment, wc should think. AN APPEAL TO PATRIOTS. SPEECH OF HON. A. BURLINGAME, OF MASSACHUSETTS. Delivered in the U. S. House of Representatives, March 31, 18-58. Me. Cn.UBMAN : It has been shown, in the great rtebate which we have had, that the peo ple of Kansas never authorized the Lecorapton Constitution ; that they never made it; that they never ratified it ; that it does not reflect their will. It has been shown that tho first Legislature was a fraud ; that the second was a irauu ; that test oaths and gag laws were put upon tne people, so that they conld not vote ; that then they were held responsible lor tho crimes of Ihoso who did ; that when they were persuaded to vote, they were cheated ; that when nobody voted, returns wero mado as if from populous regions. It has been shown that the honesty of the officers of the Govern ment, who tried to stay the hand of theso frauds, was considered an offence by tho Gov ernment. It has been shown that the people have been menaced in their property and their lives; tnat armies were sent there to vote them down, or shoot them down, and without aiunoruy ot law. it has appeared, that the men who did these things wero held dear by the Government, and they are its officers to day. It has been shown that, through all this time, that devoted people has held itself in such an attitude as to win not only tho respect of the people of tho United States, but the respect of the officers of the Government who had been sent, from time to time, to persuade or to subdue them to tho policy of tho Gov ernment. But, Mr. Chairman, it is not my purpose hero to-day to go over tho history of Kansas affairs ; that has been done, as the gentleman from South Carolina (Mr. Miles) has just now well said, sufficiently. Every fact has been stated ; every principle has been argued. Day by day, we have urged our cause with all the zeal of men who know they are right. ' Every fact has been met on the other sido, by some daring and insolent assumption ; every argu ment, with scornful sneers, which no man can answer. U hen we have oflered to irove facts. the will of tho people of the United States, as reflected by the Representatives upon this floor, has been baffled by parliamentary tactics. Yes, you who belong to the party that went behind the great seal of New Jersey, as mv eloquent friend from Indiana (Mr. Coltax) very truly said, you who go behind the certificates of thQ Governors of Ohio and Maryland, when the interests of a whole people aro at stake, and fraud is charged, you say you cannot go behind the record ; you say that you are estop ped ; yon say "it is so nominated in the bond;" you refuse to investigate, and propose speedily to force upon the peoplo of Kansas a Constitu tion never mado by them. Yes, you who say, with us, that tho people aro the source of power; you, who say that power should flow forth from the peoplo into practical govern ment on the line of their desires; you, who shouted your great radical rule of Democracy in the cars of the country Buchanan at your head to be this, that Inasmuch as the people are sovereign, inasmuch as that sovereignty cannot be alienated by them in such a manner that it cannot be resumed when tho safety ot the people shall require it, therefore it is for them to determine at what time and in what manner they will change their fundamental law ; that was your radical rule of Democracy. It is now pronounced Dorrism by the Democ racy on this floor. You planted your rule in opposition to the rule of the other great school of the country, which rule was stated most clearly by Mr. Webster, in tho great Rhode Island case, to be this : lie said that the will of tho majority must govern ; that it was as potent as the will of the Czar of Muscovy, when it was legally, ascertained. But how will you ascertain it, said he ; it must be as certained by sonic rule prescribed by previous law. That rule, the fierce Democracy denoun ced as the rule of tvrannv. Well, sir, here we have a case whero even the requirements of that rule have been met by the people of Kansas. Their will was col lected legally, by a legal Legislature ; and it appears that their will, by 10,000 majority, is against your Lecompton Constitution ; and yet, in the face of that declaration, you come forward as a party ; and propose to force that Constitution, in defiance of your own rule of Democracy, in defiance of the Federal rule, upon that people ; aye, sir, worse than that you declare, through tho lips of j-our boldest and ablest leader, through the lips of the dis tinguishedSenator fromGeorgia,(Mr.Toombs,) through the lips of men upon this floor,through the lips of the gentleman who has but just taken his scat, if I understood him. that it in volves a question of union or diisunion. I , agree with the gentleman from South Caroli na, (Mr. Miles,) who said that wo might as well meet this question. I, for my part, am ready to meet it now. I accept the issue which is tendered. I accept the more eagerly, in the presence of this menace. A represen tative of the peoplo would be craven, did he shrink from his duty in the prcseuce of such a threat as that. What, you dissolve this Union because j-ou cannot have your own wild will ! lou dissolve this Union because the Lecomp ton Constitution, born of fraud and violence, legally voted down m this House ! Has your nationality no belter quality than that? How will yon do it J Who is to do it 1 Whose hand is ready to strike the first blow 7 AVhere is your army chest f Where j-our battalions, to cope with the people of this country You cannot do it. It would be wrong to do it. .It would not be legal. It would not be safe to doit. I tell you, that on the. banks of the Santee it would require no Federal army to subdue rebellion. The descendants of Sumter and of Marion, as their lathers struck down the Tory spirit in tho brave days of old, would quell the spirit of rebellion to-day. We have heard this threat before. We havodeemed it but the idle vaunt of idle men ; but it comes now with an emphasis and an authority that it never had before. We find tho fire-eater giving his will as tho law of the great Democratic party. He has the right to rule it,roni his courage and his activity. I say it conies with new empnasis ucu me lonrlor of tho Democratic party gets up in the Senate of the United States, and with deliber ation not acting on an impulse declares, and I-heard him, that this Union is a mith ; that ho has calculated its value ; that the people of Kentucky love it "not wisely, but too well ;" and that this Lecompton Constitution involves tho satetv of the union; and when ttie ganani Senator "from Tennessee Mr. Bell accepted tho issue, and when ho rc-5tated theso points' the distinguished Senator from Georgia bowed Ins assent, and I saw him ; and no member of the Democratic party in the Senate protested against that doctrine. I say, when such men express such sentiments, the time has arrived when the national men of the country should unite to rebuke such sentiments, and vote them down here, and vote them down, elsewhere. These are the men, are they, to taunt the loyal old State of Massachusetts with having legis latcd herself out of the Union, because she has declared, that of two given offices, it is incom batiblo lor one of her citizens to hold both of them 1 She had a right to pass such a law No court has decided it to be unconstitutional When the Court shall so decide,Massachusctts with her accustomed obedience to law, will sub mit. She simply says this: If you desire to carry men "back to old Virginia to old Vir ginia's shore" you must do it with your olh- cers. and not with hers, lhatisall. But I am not here to-day to defend her ; I am not hero. to plead for her. She denies the jurisdiction of this House. Sho is not responsible to it for her local legislation. I stand hero npon the great doctrine, which I believe In, that tho will of the majority, constitutionally expressed most stand until it shall be constitutionally re versed ; and so far as the threat which has been made is coucerned, I disdaining to argue in its presence stand here, before tho people of this great country, and trample that threat of disunion scornfully under my feet. ' Why have you brought this sectional ques tion here ? Why do yon seek to force a Con stitution upon a people whom you know abhor it 7 What are you to gam by it 7 Did not the gentleman from SouthCarolina rMr.Mileslverv truly say that it would Iks a barren victory that it would wither in vour grasp 7 Anil he said, speaking more fully in the interests of tho South lhan most of you, that he did not caro now much about the passage of the Le compton Constitution. What are you to gain 7 Is your dogma that there can bo propeity in man, borne in tho bosom of that Constitution, recommended by such a courso" more warmly to the hearts of the American people 7 Will you more easily persuade them, at some future time, to be more willing to admit States from other Territories, where tho system may be more congenial to the climate 7 Will not the people say, and with truth, that this system, which requires snch means as these to strength en and sustain itself, is dangerous to the peace and prosperity of the Republic?' Will they not hate your system, because of your conduct in this case 7 .What ! will two Senators from that State.who must be fugitives from theState that they will pretend to represent will that State, held down, as tho gentleman from South Carolina said he would hold it until 18G1 compensate you for tho illfeeling you have cre ated 1 Will they compensate you for tho alien ation of the people which will take place 7 Will thev compensate yon for your party dismem bered, broken, and lost 7 Tho gentleman from SouthCarolina Mr. Miles gave us statistics of the last election. It is true, that with the suspicion that you would do this thing, we swept the North, and the East, and tho West, with, as he says, more than 1,300,000 votes. We swept the great and populous States of the country with tho mighty ten-wave of tho peo ple's enthusiasm. We bronght down the vic tory Into the very shadow ot your malign sys tem. If we did it then, what will now bo your fat at the polls, when yon go back to an in dignant and betrayed constituency 7 You can no longer say you are for r ree Kansas ; ire will nail you to the record. You cannot say any lon ger that you are in favor of the great doctrine of popular sovereignty ; we trill nail you to the record, i ou ctnnot say any longer that we are mere Freedom shriekers, because there shall stand side by sido with us the great chief ot Democracy, the distinguished author of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, and ho will tell you that you have betrayed your constituents. e will summon clouds of witnesses from all tho winds of heaven. We will summon them from the South, the East, and the West. Wc shall summon the gallantWise of Virginia who desires that the State shall be slave, but who is too honest to cheat the people. M c shall summon Walker, who has added a now empire to strengthen tho South. We shall summon Stanton, and Forney, and Bancroft, and a host of others; and above all, we shall summon those gallant Senators fromKentucky and Ten nesse, the acts of whose live9 for a quarter of a century shino along the annals of their country We will call upon them, and they will tell you you have betrayed the people; that your are forcing upon tho peoplo of Kansas a Consti tution conceived in fraud and violence. And how are you to meet those charges? How are yon to answer to a great and indignant people for they will question you with a toungeof hre. They will go back beyond your proceedings here; they will question you as to tho doings and purposes of the Administration; they will ask you why you did not adhere to the doc trine of popular sovercigenty? why, after you had maintained that the people of a Territory could exclude slavery you changed around, and said they could do it when they formed a State; and why it is that your popular sover ignty has vanished away into the Hibernian suggestion of the President that the quickest way to make Kansas a free State is first to mako it a slave State. Tbeyjwill ask you why you have substituted the dogmas of Calhoun for the doctrines of Jefferson. They will ask you how it is that the President of the United States, after having, in 1819 and 1841, held that Congress had power over the Territories, in 1857 expressed his amazing surprise that anybody should have ever held that doctrine. They will desire to know why it is that there was a complicity between him and theSupreme Court of tho United States, by which, under yonlor steps of the Capitol, he was enabled to foreshadow what they alterwards announced as an opinion. They will ask you why it was that that Court, wearing the ermine of a Jay, a Marshall, and a Story, when there was no case before the court calling for it, went beyond tho line of their duty, and published political o pmions. They will ask you why the army of the United States have shot down American citizens in the streets of Washington, and why it was held is terrorem over the people of Kan sayso long. And they will ask you, doughla ces of tho North, why you sat still in your seats, and allowed men to call your constitu ents, because they toiled, mud-sills and slaves. You will have to answer all theso things. You cannot do it, and we shall beat you like a threshing floor. We shall hereafter hare a majority in this House. We shall strengthen ourselves in the Senate, and we are to day fil ling all tho land with tho portents of your gen eral doom in 1860. And I say in tha presence of this stato of thiDgs, that our first duty to God and our country is to devoto ourselves to the political destruction of doughfaces, who say one thing at home and come here to vote another ; and who fawn and tremble, and fall down, in tho rosencc of the Administration. No wonder that you, Southern men, call us slaves, judging us from these specimens of tho people. But I tell you they do not represent the fire and flint of the grim and grizzlyNorth. They are but our waiters on Providence, our Mac sychophants; they aro our Helps; they belong to Dante's selfish men, whom he said, heaven would not have them, and hell rejected them. I tell you. Southern men, I am ready to strike hands with fire-eaters, and extermi nate the race. It is becoming extinct: Look in their faces for tho last time, they aro fading away fading away. Oh ! for an artist to take their features, to transmit them to a curious and scornful posterity. Do it quickly, for tho places which now know them shall soon know them no more forever. . I think it is the first duty of Republicans to extinguish the doughfaces, but I hold it also their duty to bear testimony as to tho manner in which tho Douglas men and they will par don me for giving them tho namo ot their gal lant and gifted leader to bear testimony to the manner in which they have borne themsel ves. They have kept the faith ; they have ad hered to the doctrine of popular sovereignty ; they have voted it in this House, and they have not fawned aud trembled in the presence of a dominating Administration in the pres ence of that great tyranny which holds the Government in its thrall at Washington. They have given flash lor flash to every indig nant look ; and when a gentleman from Vir ginia, tho other day, tauntingly told them that certain language which they used upon the floor of this House was the language of rebel lion, they shouted out, through the lips of the gentleman from Indiana, (Mr. Davis,) 'itwas the language of freemen." I say that it is duo to them that we should say that they have borne 1 tho brunt of the battle and that they, whether from New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, or Illinois, have kept the white ness of their souls, and have made a record which has lain in light ; and if my voice can have any weight with the yonng men of the country where those men dwell, I should say to them, stand by theso men with all your young enthusiasm, stand by them without dis tinction of party ; they may not agree exactly with you, but they havo stood tho test here, where brave men falter and fall. Let them teach this tyrannical Administration, that if it is strong, that the people aro stronger be hind it. Thus I would speak to the young men of the country. I differ in some points with those men, and I do not wish to compli cate them. I pay also the high tribute of my admiration to that band of men who have been reposing outside of tho boundaries of the great parties of tho country as a patriotic corps of reserve, for the purpose, I suppose, of saving the Union when it is endangered. When they saw this sectional issue made, standing as they did in a position to look fair ly on between the parties, they saw who made it, and they instantly took sides ; and in the language of Mr. Bell, in his reply to Mr. Toombs, they accepted the issue of disunion. They accept it ; and when, sir, they saw that Lecompton was synonymous with "fraud, with forgery, with perjury, with ballot-box stuff ing," then they trampled it with their high manly honesty under their feet. They have taken it in charge to preserve the ballot-box pure and open to American citizens. Sir, it was a proud day to me, when I heard tho speech of tho venerable Senator from Ken tucky, (Mr. Crittenden.) The melody of his voice, and his patriotic accent, still sound in my ears. I was glad to hear mm denounce fraud ; I was clad to hear him stand for the truth. As I listened, it seemed to mo that the spirit of the Kentucky Commoner had come back again to visit his old place in the Senate. It seemed to mo as if his spirit was hovering there, looking, as in days of old, af ter the interests of tho Union. At that mo ment, the heart of Massachusetts leat respon sivconce again to that of grand old Kentucky ; and I longed to have tho day coma again, when there should be such feelings as in the olden time, when the Bay State boro the name of Henry Clay on her banners over her hills and through her valleys, everywhere to victory, and with an affection equal to the af fection of Kentucky herself. I also felt proud to hear tho spcach of the distinguished Senator from Tennessee." Mr. Bell. I was glad to hear their confreres on this floor, Messrs. Underwood, of Kentucky, Gilmore, of .North Carolina, Ricand and Har ris of Marylaud, and Davis, with his surpass ing eloouence, worthy of the best days of Pinkney and of Wirt; and I also express my gratitude to Mr. Marshall of Kentuckev, who has labored so long to secure this union of patriotic men. I owe it to these men, and to mvself to sav that 1 do not agreo with them on the subject of slavery, and I know that they do not with me. Neither do I agreo with the Douglas men ; I take what I think is a higher position. I hold to tho power or Uongress over tho Territories; they do not. But while I oppose tho Lecompton Constitution for one reason, and while tuo uougias democrats op pose it for another, the South Americans may opposo it for still another, iroa Knows we have all cause of war against it, and against the Administration. And we have come to gether here as a unit, not by liny preconcert, not by any trade among leaders, but by tho spontaneous convictions of our own honest minds. I trust that this may be an omen of what may happen in the future. As to what may happen, it is not for mo to prophesy. Let time and chance determine. .We come together, not in a spirit of compromise, be cause we compromise - nothing, but in a spirit of patriotism ; and in that spirit I for one, am "prepared to sustain the substitute offered by the distinguished Senator from Kentucky. After first voting to reject the bill, I will vote for that substitute, not becauso I would vote for it as an original measure ; I will vote for t because I think that it win mono abuw - free State. The Administration says n is a slava Territory to-day tho Lecompton Con stitution makes II a slave State. I feel that the Lecompton Constitution, without this sub stitute, would pass in its naked form, and that Kansas would be a slave State under it; and it I foreeo this opportunity to make itafiee State, the opportunity will be lost forever. And how could 1 meet my constituents, and say that, because I desired to appear consis tent, I would not voto for that substitute, and give the people of Kansas ono mora-chance for freedom. If there were only one in a hun dred, I would do it. But it is not a chance ; it is a certainty. Doughfaces will undoubted ly feel very sad about my vote, and complain that I am not consistent. That word consis tency" is a coward's word. It is tho refuge of selfishness and timidity. I will do right to-day and let j-esterday take care ot itself. That word "consistency" is what has lured many a noble roan to ruin, jinas sioppeu. all generous rclotm. When I am ready to adopt it, and to depart from practicability, I will join tho immovable cvilization of China, and take the false doctrines of Confucius for my guide, with their backward looking thought. These are my reasons, these are tho reasons that animate my associates among the Repub licans. And I tell yon, the common enemy, fairly and openly, that our cause is jnst ami our union is ierfect. We Repnblicaos will place to-morrow our united vote npon tho record in favor of the substitute. Our great chieftain here, (Mr. Giddings,) with his whito hairs, who has stood for twenty-years thrt great champion of Liberty, we will bear with affection to the record to this determination he has come, after much thought. At last, ho felt that his principles required him so to vote, and, obeying the impulses of an honest and patriotic and not fanatical heart, lie points the way of duty and victory. Tho member from South Carolina, (Mr. Miles,) if he knew him better, would find his heart to be a loving one ; and I will tell t!.at member that his in terests and the interests ot South Carolina are saler to-dy in the hands of that good old man, than they are in tho hands of the most malignant of doughfaces. I say our union is perfect. We w ill put our votes on record to morrow in favor of tho substitute, not as a choice of evils, but because it is tho good thing to do; it is tho only thing lor honest men to do, if we wish to have Kansas a freo State. - - Mr. Chairman, a great many thoughts sug gest themselves to my mind, to which 1 would like to give utterance. I am told that "my time is about to expire, and therefore wiH not prolong my remarks to greater leHgth. I say, lor our party, that wo are ready. We seek no postponement of the quest ie. All that men could do, wo have done. We havo argued the question ; wo have implored ; we have voted ; we have done everything to secure our triumph ; wo have been baffled by parliamen tary tactics ; we have been sometimes betray ed. The President has given way ; the Sen ate has given way ; but, thank God, the tri bunes of the people, standing here in this House, have not yet betrayed their trnst. They stand firm, and my high hope ts I do not know why, looking to oar past conflicts here, I should have it that on the great to morrow, when the sun shall sink behind the hills of your own Joved Virginia, this Lecomp ton Constitution will be defeated ; Kansas will bo saved, and the whole country rejwse in good will, and peace dwell in all our borders. McCracken says that a woman may be known by the color of her xetticoat. A black petti coat indicates low spirits and a taste for books and quietude. A blue petticoat proclaims the unsettled mind an uneven temper and an attachment for romance. The red petticoat belongs to a termagant, and is always found on strong-minded females women who cut their too nails with their husband's razors, and girls who talk back to their mothers, and get off to balls by jumping out of the back win dows into the arms of butchers boys. Young men before making their choice will take ob servations accordingly. Noble Sfutimext. Condemn no man for not thinking as you think. Let every one en joy tho full and free liberty of thinking for himself. Let every man use his own judg--ment, since every man must give an accouut of himself to God. Abhor every approach, in any kind of degree, on the spirit ol perse cution. If you cannot reason or persuade a man into the truth, never attempt to force him into it. If love will not compel him, Ieavu him to God, the Judge of all. John Wesley. A chimney bnilt in 1793, In an old house on -King street, Northampton, on being taken down, a few weeks since, furnished brickae nough to build three modern chimneys, an un-. derpinning to the house, a cistern, eight piers in the cellar, and a drain three hundred feet' long, besides a wagon load sold and a lot on hand. Sulky females generally dio old maids. If. a girl wishes, therefore, to tasto the sweets which spring from love and cordnroy, let her go In training for good nature, and becomo mnsical with gladness, like June crowded with many bobolinks. , Spurgeon, the celebrated English preacher, sometimes comes out with a good thing. "Brethren," said he, "if God had referred tho Ark to a committee on naval affairs, it's my opinion it wouldn't bo built yet." Liquor merchants who pretend to sell "pnro liquors' now-a-days, are a good deal like tho fellow who thought ho was drinking pure wa ter out ol a puddle in which swine had been wallowing. A wag observing on the door of a house tho name of two physicians, said that it put him in mind of a double-barreled gun, for if ono of them missed the other was sure to kill. "I don't believe it's any use this vaccina tion," said a Yankee. "I had a child vacci nated, and ho fell out of the winder a week arter, and got killed I" "Mister, I say, I suppose yon don't know of nobody who don't want to hire nobody to do nothing, don't you 7" The answer was, " Yes, 1 don't." When thou art buying a horse, or choosing a wife, says the Tuscan proverb, shot thine ; eyes and commend thyself to God. . Twelve thousand persons have joined the " Methodist churches, in New Jersey, within the last six months. . "What is the, best line to lead s man with T ' crino-fia. And the Lest Hue to lead a woman with is Mascu-ltnc. -. The Lebanon Valley Bank, chartered by the Legislature ol 1857, is about to go Into ope ration. The speaker who was "drawn out" measur ed eighteen inches mare than before. ' 1 j , ; "A coffin," said an Irishman, is the house a man lives in when he is dead." i