.-4.-.- ? - t lit: i I i- i i v i 1 - BT S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1860. VOL. 7.-NO. 9. UNDER THE MOON. Under the moon, as the twilight breese Hippies the water in pulses of light, "Ve stand on the bridge by the sycamore trees, And lift to the voices that come thro' the night. I'nder the elm row, misty and dank, Love's sweet laughter rings from tho bank sprinkled with many a dim red lamp. Stretched away through the distance damp Hark ! 'mid the foliage blossomed with June, TiDkles a serenade under the moon. Under the moon, in the village street, Uossipping groups in the shadow meet ; Seated At dusky doorways there, Ked-lipped maidens taste of the air; Whispering now of their lovers' eyes, HUie as the beautiful summer skies ; Whispering then of their flatteries sweet As Autumn's fruitage dropped i' tho heat, I'ntil they cadence a trembling tune, Soft as their pulses under the moon. Under the moon, by the cool sea-shore, The wind walks over its spacious floor,' Courting the snowy-bosomed sails I)aintily rippling through azure vales ; Over the crisp foam bearing along The musing mariner's midnight song, As by the rising helm with hands .Lit in the compass lamp he stands, Thinking of those he left at noon, Sad on the green shore under the moon. Under the moon, by the dusty road, Pace we on to the old abode ; The listless splendor floating falls Over its sycamore root and walls, Peering into the casement nook Piled with many a brown old book ; Spirits are they whose pages beam Avitb thoughtless ditty nud pictured dream ; Hpirits. amid whose silence soon Our own shall slumber, under the moon PRIDE AND PRINCIPLE. BT B. S. BCBTOX. I was returning home alter an absence of pight years ; returning to the home of my childhood. The lumbering coach tht bore rue rapidly along, was already entering the little village where I was born, where I had received the first rudiments of knowledge ; where I had sported many a happy childhood's hour, and where I had first learned to love. Yes. to love the prettiest, merriest, and prou dest miden in all tho village "not wisely, but too well." She rejected my suit ; she had higher aspirations- It was true she liked me very well it might be loved me. but I was not rich ; and she was proud and haughty, as well as beautiful. Yet she was indeed kind and charitable ; she did not reject my offer disdainfully, hut seemed to study some meth od by which her irrevocable reply might give me no pain. I did not question her motives ; 1 knew them too well, and then and there I resolved that if health should be spared me I would depart at once from my native village, and some day return a wealthy man not again to urge my suit, not even to claim her as a friend or acquaintance, unless it should be her express desire ; for I too had a proud spir it, and could never condescend to plead with a woman. All these thoughts passed rapidly through my mind as I ncared my father's cottage ; and I rejoiced to think that in part my purpose had been accomplished. I was rich rich even beyond the fastidious requisition? of Is abel Ilayne ; richer than her father had ever been, and yet my stern resolve had seen no change. I met my "father, now silver-haired with age. My mother had been lying in her silent, narrow home for ncarty two years. My sister, my only sister, whom I fondly hoped to meet, was married, and had gone to a distant place o dwell. The spirit ot change had breathed ipon every dear and familiar object. I met lie companions of my youth, who welcomed me back with smiles, which seemed the dis torted mockery of the smiles that lit up their happy faces in my boyhood's days. They were growing old. Yet some seemed appa rently no older than when I had seen them eight years before. 1 did not meet Miss Ilayne ; nor did I even inquire about her. She had probably gone away ; or what was quite as probable, her father might have become so wealthy that she no longer moved In the village society. Per haps she was married, and was living in some other place. What was she to me, that I should spend a thought in speculation as to the cause of her invisibility ? And yet I could not efface her image from my mind. If ever in distant lands I had succeeded in banishing her from my memory, I could not do so now. The associations of home and familiar scenes brought back the recollection of happy days, and her name her form, just as she appeared to me then was indispensably necessary to complete the picture which fancy painted me. There was a social gathering at a friend's, but she was not there. Why should I look so anxiously about, hoping and yet fearing to encounter her beautiful face ? Why could I not forget her at once, and for ever ? Some one mentioned her name. "Why was she not there?" "She does not go out now since their mis fortune," was the reply. "What a pity! Poor Hayne ! They say that she supports him by teaching." "Yes, she is engaged in a school just beyond the village. It must be a severe and humili ating lesson to her; she was very proud." I must confess I was interested, and desired 1o know more, much more ; bnt I asked no questions I could not forget the past. ; Not long after this I learned that Mr. Hayne's house and grounds, which had passed 4nto the hands of some large landowner, was fg&in for sale. I purchased it, having no def inite purpose in view,unless it was the thought that it would make a comfortable residence for my father in bis declining years, since bis own cottage was getting quite out of repair. I at once set about repairing the mansion, for that too had feltthe mouldering touch of time; and for that purpose I frequently drove out to watch and direct the operations of the men employed. I was one day driving leisurely along, when l espied, at some distance before me, an old man, bent with age, and groping his tedious way along the road. Presently he sat down by the roadside to rest, and when I came up I offered him a seat in my chaise. "Nevermind," he said, "it is only a little J7 that I have to go; just to yonder school hoose on the hill-top. I go there sometimes when the days are pleasant like this to meet rh!,Ug J? r and ccompany her home from .. cbool. She is the teaeher, you know," , InVEn.g out of tbe cbaise tending him my hand to assist him to a seat, as though I 0 1 " ma"cr of course that bo would ride. "Well, well," said he. since vou wish it. I will go with you. There are not many that are kind to the old man now. 1 am not what I was six years ago I I was a rich man then very rich ; but speculation did tbe mischief. See yonder houso just beyond the school j it was mine. Ah I it was a happy home, but It can never be roina again." . And thus he babbled on ; for tbe infirmities of age, prematurely induced by his misfor tunes, had rendered him garrulous. He was indeed changed ; for among all I had seen since my return home, not one had grown so old as he. He did not recognize me ; and as I drove slowly along, very slowly for he eaid many things that were interesting to me--I learned more of his circumstances, and of the sacrifices, concessions, efforts and filial aflec tion of his daughter, Isabol tho name affec ted me, I will confess it than I had previous ly ascertained. 1 had often passed the school-house, as It was directly on my way to my new purchase, but had never before caught sight of the fair teacher. As we now approached, I observed the scholars rushing from the door, and before we drove up, she herself emerged and stood before us. "Ah, Isabel, this kind gentleman urged me to ride in his chaise, and I want you to thank him in my behalf, because you do nut know how much it has rested me." . If I had remained unrecognized by the fjther, I could not escape the searching glance of the daughter. Her quickly changing color indicated at once that she knew or at least suspected Who I was. I turned round my chaise, sprang out and offered to assist her in, saying, "Permit me, Miss Ilayne your father is fatigued, and I will drive you to your home I shall have ample time to attend to my other business afterward." She stammered some excuse; but I insisted upon her riding, and had the satisfaction of seeing her yield. For a moment I gave myself tip to the hap py memories of the past. I was again beside the only being I had ever loved. I felt the rustle of her dress against my hand, and not withstanding my exterior coldness and assum ed formality, I could not suppress the tumult within. Isabel was little changed ; but changed much for the better. The haughty maiden had become the beautiful woman. She was pensive, sad. But little was said during our homeward drive, except that which was utter ed by the talkative old gentleman. Isabel said nothing. What a strange meeting ! had 1 been an entire stranger, as Mr. Ilayne sup posed me, it could scarcely have been differ ent. She did indeed smile when I lifted her from the chaise, then lisped, "Thank you," then blushed, then paled again. Mr. Ilayne cordially invited me to revisit their bumble cottage, and solicited the honor of knowing my name. "Is it possible?" he exclaimed; "is this indeed our old friend Temple's son ? and re turned rich too, they say. Heaven grant you may make good use of your money ; but be warned by an old man, and make no rash ven ture. Here, Isabel, daughter ! Did you not know this gentleman ? This is Harry Tem ple. You surely cannot have forgotten him." "I scarcely recognized him," she replied, somewhat confused, as she returned from the cottage to lead her invalid father into the house. "I hope we shall have tho pleasure of seeing you here again, Mr. Temple." It was the same sweet voice as of old, tem pered by charity, humility and affection ; and softened by the influence of religion and filial affection. I pondered well the circumstances. Should I yield to the yearnings of my heart ? Should I again offer my hand, perhaps to be refused ? Perhaps she would not a second time reject my offer. I was now rich and she poor. It would be nosaciifice of principle on my part to offer to wed the poor school-teacher, altho' I had determined never to renew my suit with the wealthy heiress. It might have been des tiny that decided her to reject my first offer ; for had she not done so. I never should have left home and friends, to wander in foreign climes in pursuit of wealth. I might at this very day have been groveling in abject pover ty. I should have been utterly unable to res tore the old man and his daughter to their old home, as I now fondly hoped to do. Yes, in deed, pride was conquered, and the principle which had never been quite extinguished within me, but against which I had battled with might for eight years, at length triumph ed. I visited their cottage repeatedly, and as sured myself that the change in Isabel's char acter, disposition and manner was deep and radical. She no longer had high aspirations ; her only thought was the comfort of her do ting old father. At length I offered my hand again, and this time I felt no scruples about urging my suit, since matters occupied quite a different posi tion from that of former years. I cannot tell yon how happy I was when I pressed her to my bosom, and. knew that she was to be mine. If I had loved her in my pride, and desired to make her my wife, how much more I loved her now in her humility when I knew that I could protect her and re store her and her dear old father to their home again ! I was indeed happy when I saw her shed such copious tears of joy. Ah, thonght I, this retaliation, this happiness for unhappi ness, is sweet both to the giver and the recipi. ent.- An Illustration. The Southern threat of secession and disunion, in case their demands of protection for slavery are not granted, re minds us of tho threat of an Irishman who lost his hat in a well, and was let down in a bucket to receive it. The well being deep, his courage failed him before he reached the water. In vain did he call to those above they lent a deaf ear to all he said, till at last, quite in despair, bellowed out, "Be St. Pat rick, if ye don't be "after drawing me up, sure ril cut the rope!" "Pickard's Dog" bite, it appears, was not fatal to Andy Curtin. The "lottery" story did not "draw." The "Dutch" seem to have got into the notion of voting for the Republi cans "through both their skulls." And the Democracy will have ample time, during Col. Curtin's Administration, to repent of their folly in the renowned shades of Salt River. Tom H ood died ccmrTosing and that , too, a humprouB' poem. 440 is said to have remark ed that 'he was dying out ot cnanty 10 me uu (JcTtfk'cfy who vf'ed to earn a Uycly-HooL "ARTEMUS WARD" SEES THE PRINCE. Our good n at 11 red and facetious friend. Ar. temus Ward," has been to "Kanady" to see the Prince of Wales, and writes a long cora- uiunicanon 10 nis iriencfs or the "Editorial Korpse," giving an account- of his interview wnn tne scion of royalty. He says: "I've bin follerin Mrs. Victory's hopeful sun Albert Edward threw Kanady with my onparaleled enow, ana tnol namt made much in apecoon ery pint of vew, Ive lernt surathin new, over jiere on .British sue, where they bleeve in Saint George and the Dragoon. Previs to cummin over hear I tawt my orginist how to grind Rule Brittany and other airs which is poplar on British Sile. I likewise fixt a wax figger up tu represent Sir Edmnn ned the Uovner Uinral. The statoot I fixt up is the most versytile wax statoot I ever 8aw. Ire showed it as William Penn. Napoleon Bony- part, dUReot Wellington, the Beneker Boy, Mrs. Cunningham Ik varis other notid persons, & also for a certin pirut named Hix. Ive bin so long amung wax statoots that I kin fix 'em to soot the tastes of folks, & with sum paints I heV I kin give their fasisa benevolent or fiendish look as tbe kase requires. I give Sir EdmuD Hed a beneverlent look, & when sum folks who thawl they was smart sed it didn't look like Sir tdrnun Hed envmore than it did anybody else, I sed, "That's the pint. That's the beauty of the Statoot. It looks like Sir Edmun Hed or any other man. You may kali it what you please. f it dosen't look like anybody that ever lived, then it's sertinly a remarkable Statoot & well worth seein. I kail it Sir Edmun Hed. Yu may kali it what you darn pleese.'1' The showman .next de tails the difficulties which he experienced in gaining access to the Prince, and relates in his own peculiar style a rather stormy inter view he had with the "Kurnal of the Seventy Fust," who was horrified at tho idea of "Ar temus" seeking the presence o? royalty, and would have made short work of his pretensions but for his Royal Highness himself, who, in the nick of time came to his rescue. The scene that followed between the showman and tho Prince is thus detailed i "Wall," sez I, "Albert Edward,, how's the old folks?" "Her Majesty & the Prince are well," he sed. "Duz the old man take his Lager Beer reglar ?" I inquired. The Prince larfed & intennatid that the old man didn't let many kegs of that bevridge spile in the seller in the coarse of a yere. We sot & tawk ed there sum time abowt matters & things & bimeby I axed him how be liked bein Prince as fur as heed got. "To speak plain, Mister Ward," he sed, "I don't much like it. I'm sick of all this bowin & scrapin & crawlin & hurrain over a boy like me. I wood rather go threw the country quietly & enjoy myself m my own way, with the other boys, & not be made a Show of to be garped a fc-by -everybody. But you know, Mister Ward, I can't help bein a Prince, & I must do all I kin to fit myself fur the persishun I must sumtime ockepy." "That's troo," sez I, "sickness and the docters will carry the Queen orf one of these dase, sure's yer born." The time hevin arove fur me take my departer, I rose up and sed : "Albert Edward, I must go, but previs to doin so I will obsarve that you soot me. Your a good feller Albert Edward, & tho' Irne agin Princes asagineral thing. I must say I like the cutofyure Gib. When you git to be King try to be as good a man as yure muther has bin. Be just and be Jenerus, espeshully to showmen, who hev allers bin aboozed sins the dase of Noah, who was the fust man to go into the Menagery bizness, & ef the daily papers of his time are to be bleev ed Noah's colleckshun of livin wild beasts beet ennything ever seen sine,- tho I make bold to dowt ef his snaiks was ahead of mine. Albert Edward, adoo 1" I tuk his hand which he shook warmly, & givin him a perpetooal free pars to my show, & also parses to take home for the Queen & Old Albert, I put on my hat & walked away. Tho showman thus gives vent to the feelings which swelled his ' bussnm" after leaving the royal presence, ne writes : "Mrs. Ward," I 8olilerquized, as I walkt along, "Mrs. Ward. ef yn cood see your husband now, jest as he prowdly emerjis from the presents of the fu tur King of Ingland youd be sorry you kalled him a Bcest jest becawz he cum home tired 1 nite and wantid to go to bed without takin orf his boots. Y'oud be sorry for fryin to deprive yure husband of thepriceliss Boon of liberty, Betsy Jane!" Jest then I met along per seshun of men, with gownds onto 'em. The leader was on horseback, & ridin up to me he sed, "Ar you Orange?" Sez I, "Which ? "Air you a Orangeman ?" he repeated sternly. "I used to peddle lemins," sez I, "but I nev er delt in oranges. They are apt to spile on yure hands. What particler Loonatic Asylum hev you & yure friends escaped from ef I may be so bold." Just then a sudden thawt struck me & I sed, "Oh yure the fellers who air wor ry in the Prince so & given the Juke of Noo castle cold swets at tite, by yure infernal catawawlms, air you ? Wall, take the advice of a Amerykin sitterzen,take orf them gownds & don't try to git up a religious fite, which is 40 times wuss nor a prize fite, over Albert Ed- ard, who wants to receve you all on a ekal footin, not keering a tinker's cuss what meet In house yon sleep in Sundays. Go home and mind your business & not make noosinses of yureselves." With which observashuns I left 'em. I shall leeve British Sile 4thwith." The Episcopal Chcrch in the United States. According to the Church Almanac for 18G0, the Episcopal Church in the United States contains thirty-three dioceses. The number of bishops is forty-three; priests and deacons, two thousand and thirty ; parishes, two thousand one hundred and ten. lhere were ordained during the year seventy deacons and ninety-three priests. Number of candi dates for holy orders,two hundred and eighty one ; churches consecrated, sixty-nine. The baptisms were as follows : infants,thirty thous and four hundred and thirteen ; adults, five thousand one hundred and twenty-one ; not stated, four hundred and eighty-seven total, forty thousand and twenty three. Number of confirmations, fifteen thousand five hundred and ninety six ; communicants added,fonrteen thonsand seven hundred and ninety-four ; present number, thirty five thonsand seven hundred and ninety-seven ; marriages, seven thousand and fifty nine ; burials,twelve thous and four hundred and forty-two ; Sunday school teachers, fourteen thousand and ninety one ; schools one hundred and eighteen thousand and sixty-nine. Amount of contri butions for missionary and charitable purpo ses, $1,027,183 lij. "NEGRO EQUALITY." The Democracy are pretty much bankrup ted for arguments, but they have one last re source when everything else fails everlasting -"eser equality." ut couise there will be no "nigger equality" where there are no"nitr gers," and as the Republican party propose to save the Territories for free white men, while iuo democracy leave a way open for their in traduction, it is difficult to see how the slang fiuuao uere quoted applies 10 any other party than themselves. But there are a few facts in this connection which have a more special sier nificance, as fixing upon the Domocratic par ty iue responsiouity or all the negro equality which prevails in the United States. We quote Hum me unicago Tribune : "In the State of Maine the negro is acitizen .ine&tate of Maine, at tho. time when the laws were enacted conferring citizenship upon negroes, was overwhelmingly Democratic, and me democratic party enacted by law that no groes should be citizens! "In the State of N ew Hampshire neffroos are citizens. The State of New Hampshire at the time when citizenship was conferred upon ne groes, was overwhelmingly democratic, and that party enacted tho laws which gave them me ngnt 01 suurage I in tne estate 01 Massachusetts necroes are unicua, ana tne elective irancnise was con- ierred upon, them by the Democratic party of mat otate at tne only time when they ever held the reins of government there ! "In the State ot New York all colored per sons who own $2o0 worth of property are al lowed to vote. The Constitutional Conven tion which conferred this privilege upon them was largely Democratic was presided over bv Martin Van Buren. then the Democratic lead er of the state and the same Martin "Van Bu ren, was subsequently elected President of the united Mates by the Democratic party of the nation I Aud at the same time Richard M. Johnson, of Kentucky, who had married colored woman on the most approved princi- pies-oi amalgamation, was nominated for Vice President by a National Democratic Conven tion, and elected to that high office by Demo cratic votes 1 "In the State of Ohio persons of one-half negro blood are allowed to vote. At the time this privilege was conferred UDon them the Democratic party was in power.and they framed the Constitution which extended tho right of sunrage to persons of color! "borne years ago the Legislature of Wis consin provided for a popular vote on the question of allowing negroes to vote at all elections, the same as white people. At this time the Democratic party was largely in the majority in Wisconsin, and they are responsi ble tor the attempt to establish negro-equality in that State I . ."Now, let ns see what the Republican party has done in the way of negro equality. Will any gentleman Democrat put his finger on the act which couples them with that doctrine 7 It is most true that the Republican party are op posed to the enslavement of any one who bears the Divine image and likeness. It is equally true that no man can be a good Democrat in these days unless the first article in his creed is that he "don t care whether slavery is voted down or voted up." But here are five states admitting negro equality into their laws and constitutions, and a sixth where they propos ed to do so, though the people failed to ratify tne proposition and ..all done by the Demo cratic party. And not only so, but the Dem ocracy of the United States elevated to the 'residency one of the champions of the doc rine, and to the Vice Presidency a person who was actually married to a colored woman and who, in the event of the President's death, would have been mistress of the White Honse! Quite lively she would have lent grace to the Presidential levees. Quite likely she would have received tho foreign Ambassadors with dignity and suavity ; we have always heard her spoken of as an accomplished lady. But O, what a comment on the Democracy and ne gro equality !" Those Dreadful Wide-awakes ! The op ponents of the Republicans are very hard to suit. When we consider in what a desperate condition they are, we can pardon them for being a little hypocritical. Cassius M. Clay has lately told us that his neighbors were e- qually displeased with him, whether he bad slaves or not. Some of tho anti-Republican papers have complained that certain Wide- Awake'clnbs were turbulent and noisy. But it seems that they are as much displeased if the Wide-Awakes are quiet and orderly. A Philadelphia correspondent of the New York Herald says with evident solicitude : Indeed, tbe exactitude of their march be comes painful to observe, when the quiet pro cession moves along tbe highway as if one power was moving it, and this formality is compared to the gay .romping crowd of "devil may care" fellows, who have hitherto compos ed our political clubs, aud infused a life into national politics with their wit and song. Quiet men are dangerous." The Richmond (Va.) Whig appears greatly disgusted with the "people living m the ex treme Southern States." It says that they are eternally threatening to break up the Union because of the aggressions of the North 5 and, worse than all, they insist upon dictating to the border slave States what they shall not do. This "gracious interference" does not please their border bret hern; and the Whig is inclined to think that it is not quite disin terested inasmuch as the danger, if the Union were dissolved, would, be, not to tne liuir States, but to the three great border slave states, behind which the Gulf btates are-en trenched. It goes on to say that upon these border States falls the weight of loss from the runaway slaves, yet their people are not as a rule, thinking about dissolving the Union. There are many grains of sense in the Whig's rebuke of its more Southern friends. There exist in Ireland at present about 70 towns containing from 10,000 to 25,000 inhab itants without a book seller s shop; and six whole counties are found without either a pub lisher, bookseller or circulating library.- In Scotland the number of booksellers, as com pared to Ireland, in the proportion ot the pop ulation, is nine to one. The Next Dodge. Now for the disunion howl ! Pennsylvania has gone, Indiana has gone, and now tho disunion nowi is in oraer 1 Let all Republicans be prepared for it for proclamations by Southern. Governors for jeremaids by the Locofoco press for diatribes of proslavery orators ! 4 his is tne next dodge. - 1 SLAVES AS PROPERTY. The aigume'nt so often repeated that it has become threadbare, advanced bv the advo cates of slavery extension, that slaves should be classed with that which is recognized as property by the laws of the Northern States or in other words, the Southern negro, who is represented as a "person" in Congress, should De classed witn the Jive stock of a isorthern farm yard, in order to secure his admission into a territory is so fallacious that we "are surprised that even Southern men have the effrontery to advance it. And yet it is the foundation of the slave code idea, and is nrg ed with a pertinacity that seems like infatua tion, not only by slaveholders, but by men in the North who call themselves "democrats" and "conservatives." There is not a day passes that we do not find some demagogue contending, with apparent earnestness, that the owners of slaves should be placed, in fliis respect, on an equal footing with the owners of horses, oxen and sheep. As this class of individuals generally recieve with great def erence the opinions on the subject of slavery advanced on the south side of Mason and Dixson's line, we beg leave to direct their at tention to the following extract from an arti cle written by a Virginia editor a Mr. Park ins, ot L-narlestown who although he sup ports Breckinridge, has some misgivings as to the stability of his platform. He proposes in this article to abandon the slave code, and compromise the vexed qnestion by dividing the national domain equally between the slave and free States lor future settlement and oc cupation. Tbe portion of the article, bower er, which has attracted our attention is that which draws the line of distinction between the different species of property, and which, in our opinion, refutes the position of the slavery propagandists in the North and the South on this subject : "The Breckinridge party rests its claim'np on general principles of equallity and the Dred Scott decision. They say it is unequal for the N orth to be allowed to carry and pro tect by the arm of the Federal Government, if necessary, all their property in the Territo ries, and for the South to be refused like privileges. This, as a naked proposition, is certainly correct. But how Is it when yon come to look at the concomitants of eacu species of property. Slaves are men. Men affect the order of civilization. The North has as much interest in the order of civiliza tion as the South. An order of civilization is as dear to a people as property, and indeed. materially affects its value. The rights of an "order ot civilization" are as sacred and as much for a government to protect as rights of "property." Ihe Sourhern order of civil ization displaces the Northern as effectually as a Wilmot Proviso does the Southern The two owners cannot co-cxist upon tbe same soil, any more than a State can be at the same time a slave State and a free State. Besides, the legalization of slavery in a Territory makes it as fully and thoroughly a 6lavo Ter ritory as if there were a multitude of slaves therein. It is this legal character of the Ter ritories that is looked to and that all this con tention is about. The question is, shall tho legal status and character of all the Territo ries be free or slave? Tbe Lincoln men as sert that they will pass the Willmot proviso, and make them all legally tree; tho Breckin ridge men, on the contrary, assert they will, by the Dred Scot decision, make them all le gally slave. This view of the demand of Breckinridge looks as unjust and unequal to the North as Lincoln's to the South. The Dred Scott decision seems to be confined to property, and takes no account of persons and orders of civilization. A decision covering the whole ground, it would seem, should ap ply to all. Again, are there not principles of common law which might modify this par ticular decision 7 Though, as a general rule, there is a right to carry into any of the Terri tories all sorts of property common to any of tho States, yet common law principles per taining to nuisances and injurious species of property might possibly apply. For illustra tion ; lead manufactories are property in the States; might they therefore be carried into any of the Territories ' and placed in any of the towns, and constitutional protection claim ed and common law principles defied, jnst on the ground that they were property, though spreading poisonous fumes abroad ? Perhaps, if slaves require slavery, as is a fact, and sla very excludes the free order of civilization which is Northern society and thereby pre vents the North from their rightful and equal participation in the Territories, some applica tion to it of those common-law principles might be just." Here follows the proposition to appropriate equal portions of tbe public domain to free dom and slavery. Deaths from Spider Bites. Dr. Wm. Feasel, formerly a practising phj'sician at Hannibal, Mississippi, but who has recently been engaged in farming near Barclay Station was bitten by a spider on the end of his great toe, coming down from Keokuk on Friday, from the effects of which he died on the 19th nst. At first he thought it was the bite of a musquito, but when the wound became infla med and commenced swelling, ho called on Dr. Duffield, but, alas ! too late, as the sequel proved. He leaves a wife and three or four children to mourn his untimely death.. A lit tle son of Cbas. Goit, of East Laneboro', (Mass.) aged five years, died a few days ago from the bite of a spider. The little fellow awoke in the night crying, and on his parents seeking the cause of his grief, they found a small black spider was biting the calf of his leg, and appeared to be sinking itself into the flesh, where it hung very tenacionsly until re moved. The leg swelled to a very large size, and his sufferings increased till they termina ted in death, about 48 hours after he was bitten. Mr. Yancy, the great Disunionist, in his New York speech, exposed the real secret of his hostility to the election of Lincoln. He Raid : "Now, then, what would be the result of putting Lincoln into power? Why, gentle men, it would build up an additional party in every Southern State, and there is no doubt of it. There are men in the Southern States jvho would take office under Lincol n, and they would, of course, be the nearest to sympathiz ing with him in his rule. I tell you it would not take long for them to sympathize entirely with him at least so entirely as to be able to keep the office." Mr. Yancy is right. Tbe mere probability of Mr. Lincoln's election has already built up formidable Republican organizations in Mary-1 land, Missouri, Kentucky and Delaware. MR. LINCOLN AND THE TARIFF. A correspondent; of tho Philadelphia North. American furnishes the following from the journals of Congress as a part of Mr. Lincoln's record on the Tariff: "dpril 1848. C. J. lngersoll moved a res olution, tbe object of which was- to throw off 15 of the 30 per cent, ad valorem tax on French productions imported into the United States. Tbe subject, after discussion",-was laid uppn the table, Lincoln voting with John Blanchard, Jasper E. Brady, George X. Eckert, John Freedly, Moses Hampton, John II. W. Ilorn bnck, Alexander Irvin, Lewis C.LeVin, Andrew Stewart and John Strohm, in favor of laying Ue resolution upon the table, and thus pre venting the proposed reduction of duties. See Congressional Globe, vol. W, p. 688. Again. June 19, 1848-Andrew Stewart, of Pennsylvania, moved a suspension of tho rules to enable Lira to offer the following reso lution : "Resolved, That the Committee of Ways and Means be instructed to enquire into the expedi ency of reporting a bill increasing the duties on foreign luxuries of all kinds, and on such for eign manufactures as are now coming into ru inous competition with American labor." Yeas 80; nays 82. Tbe rules were not sus pended, two-thirds not voting in favor there of, but among the vote in favor of suspend ing the rules is that of Abraham Lincoln, of Illinois. Congressional Globe, vol. 18, p. 852. Again, in 2d Session of 30th Congress, De cember 11, 1848, Mr. Eckert offered the follow ing resolution: "Resohed, Thai tho Committee of Ways and Means be instructed to inquire into the expediency of reporting a tariff bill based1 up on the principles of the tariff of 1842." Mr. Lincoln voted in4favor of the resolution. Congressional Globe, vol. 20, p. 26. Again. January Z; 1849 Upon considera tion of a resolution of Mr. GTeeley, inquiring of the Secretary of the Treasury as to the tar iff of ;4G on flannels, &c, and asking why the tariff on these articles was lower than on tho raw material. On motion to lay the resolution on the table, Mr. Lincoln voted against laying on the table. Congressional Globe, vol. 20. p. 147. Thus it will be seen that every recorded vote of Mr. Lincoln in Congress, on the tariff question, was in favor ot the highest tariff proposed, and if he did not commit himself any more fnlly on this question, it was because no opportunity offered whilst he was in Con gress. If his acts and speeches out of Con gress be examined, they will be found to bo perfectly consistent with liis vote in Congress on the tariff question." . . OLD-TIME DEMOCRACY. "Slavery is an atrocious debasement of hu man nature."-Zr. Franklin. "Slavery is contrary toJhe law of natnro and nations." William Wirt. "It is wrong to admit into the Constitution1 the idea that there can be property in man." James Madison. 'We have found that this-evil fsiavervY has preyed upon the very vitals of the Union, and has been prejudicial to all the States." James Moriroe. y "I never would have drawn my sword fn tho cause of America, if I could have conceived that thereby I was helping to found a nation or Slaves." Lafayette. "The earth, which multiplies her produc tions under the hands of the free born labor er, seems to shrink into barrenness under tho sweat of the slave." Dr. Rush "It is a debt we owe to the purify of our re ligion to show that it is at variance with that law which warrants Slavery. Give me Lib erty or give me Death !" Patrick Henry. "bo long as Crod allows the vital current to- flow through my veins, I will never, never, never, by word or thought, by mind or will, aid in admitting one rod of free terrrtory to the everlasting curse of human borwiffge," Henry Clay. "Slavery stifles industry and represses en terprise ; it is fatal to economy and Provi dence; it discourages skill1, impairs our strength as a community, and poisons morals at their fountain head." Judee Gaston, of ftorth Carolina. " Your late purchase of an estafe.with a view of emancipating the slaves on it, is a generous and noble proof of your humanity. Would to God a like spirit might diffuse itself generally into the minds of the people of this country." II ashington's Letter to Lafayette. "It would rejoice my very soul, that every one of my fellow-beings was emancipated. We ought to lament and deplore tho necessity of holding our fellow-men in bondage. Believe me I shall honor the Quakers for their nobro efforts to abolish slavery." ParticU Henry. "One hour of American Slavery rs fraught with more misery than ages of that which our fathers rose in rebellion to oppose." . . " tremble for my country when I remember that God is just, and that His justice cannot sleep forever. A revolution is among possible e- vents. The Almighty has no attribute which would side with us in such a struggle." Tho mas Jefferson. "My opposition to tbe extension or slavery dates farther back than 1844 forty years fur ther back ; and as this is a suitable time for a general declaration, and a sort of general con science delivery, I will siy, that my opposi tion to it dates from 1804, when I was a stu dent at law in the State of Tennessee, and studied tbe subject of African Slavery in an American book a Virginia book Tucker's Edition of Blackstone's Commentaries. Tho mas LI. Benton. "Sir, I envy neither the heart hor the head of that man f rom the North who rises here to defend Slavery on principle." . . "1 give to mv slaves their freedom to which my con science tells me they are justly entitled. It has a long time been a matter of the deepest regret to me, that the circumstances under which I inherited fhem, and the obstacles thrown in the way by the laws of the Jand, have prevented my emancipating them in my fe time, wnicn it is my iuu inienuon 10 ao in case I can accomplish it." John Randolph. In Calhoun county, Florida., on the 25th ult., the "Regulators" killed Jesse Durdwi, William Musgrove and Lark in (J.ilusgrove. The First Brigade of Florida malitia has been called out to operate against them. Judge Finley, of the United States District Court of Western Florida, has declared the country to bo in a "state of insurrectionary war," , and tbe United States Marshals were summoning forces to ai the militia. 1 1 i '- 1 r: ) 1 i t: r 1 : 1 I -, ( 1 i