1 ' t : - I v. 1 I . : i - . : i BY S. B. E0. . CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, EEBRARY 6, 1861. VOL. 7.-NO. 23. I THE WAY OF THE WORLD. Blithe Robin lost his brindled cow, He uiourn'd. he wept, he could not buy another ; His wife soon follows! Eager now er. His friends advise that he his grief ehould smoth- llere'a my daughter, young and truo, A worthy wife she'll be to you." Then Robin mused, and scratch'd his head, And in reflective accents said, Iee it clearly now In this strange village where I live, I lose my wife my friends toother give ; But no one offers me anothor cow !" THE FIVE-DOLLAR NOTE. "What is the price of tbi dressing gown, q ( a.lKeu a sncci-iutcu juuug 111 cuicuug . . i t i -J : -! the elegant, store of Huntley Warner, in a city and the street of a city which shall bo nameless. It was a cloudy day. The clerks lounged over the counters, read papers and yawned. The man to whom Alice Locke ad dressed herself, was jaunty and middle-aged, lie was head clerk of the extensive establish ment of Huntley & Warner, and extremely consequential in his manner. That dressing gowa we value . it at six dollars you shall have it for five, as trade is dull to-day." Five dollars 1 Alice looked at the dressing gown longingly, and the clerk looked at her Ha saw that her clothes, though made and worn genteely, were common enough in tex tare, and that her face was very much of the common line. How it changed ! now shaded, now lightened by the varied play of her emo tions. The clerk could almost have sworn that she bad no more than that very sum, five dollars, in her purse or pocket. The gown was a very good one for the price. It was of common shade, a tolerable merino, aud lined with the same material. I think" she hesitated a -ent "I think I'll take it," she said ; then seeing in the lace before her an oxpression which she did not like, she blushed as she handed out the bill the clerk had made up his mind to take. Jennis," cried Torrent, the head clerk, in a quick, pompons tone, "pass up the detector." Up ran a tow-headed boy with the detector, and npand down the clerk's eyes from column to column. Then he. looked over with a sharp glauce and exclaimed "That's a counterfeit bill, Miss." Oh, how pale the sweet face grew! "Counterfeit! Oh, no it cannot be ! The man who sent It could not have been so careless ; you must be mistaken, sir." "I'm not mistaken ; I'm never mistaken, Miss. The bill is a counterfeit. I must pre sume, of course that you did not know it, al though so much bad money has been offered us ot late that we intend to secure such per sons as pass it. Who did you say sent it " "Mr. C , sir, of New York. He could not send me bad money," said the trembling, frightened girl. "Humph, humph !" said the clerk. "Well them's no doubt aliont this ; you can look for yourself. Now don't let me see you here a gain until you can bring good money, for we always suspect such persons as you, that come vn dark days with a well made story." , "But sir" . "You need make no explanations, Miss," m! the man, insultingly. "Take your bill and the next time you want to buy a dressing gown, don't try to pass counterfeit money," snd, as he Landed it, the bill It'll from his hands. Alice caught it from the floor and hurried into the street. Such a shock the girl had never received in all her life belore. 11 was the tirst insult he had ever known, and it burned her check and pained her heart. . Straightway, Indignant and grieving, she hurried to a banking establishment, found her way in and presented the note to a noble looking man with gray hair, faltering out, "Is this bill a bad one, sir ?" The cashier and his son happened to be the only persons present. Both noticed her ex treme youth, beauty and, agitation. -The cashier looked at it closely and handed it luck, as with a polite bow and somewhat pro longed look he suid : "It'a a good bill young lady." "I knew it was," cried Alice with a quiver ing lip "and he dared She could go no farther, but entirely over come, she bent her head, and the hot tears had their way. "I beg pardon, have you had trouble with it ?" asked the cashier. "Oh, sir, you will please excuse me for giv ing way to my feelings but you spoke so kindly, and I felt so sure it was good ! And 1 think, sir, such men as one of those clerks in Huntley & Warner's should be removed iff told me it was counterfeit, and added ome thing that I am glad my father did not bear. I knew the publisher would not send me Daa money." "Who is your father, young lady?" asked me cashier becoming much interested. "Mr, Benjamin Locke, sir." - . -; -uunjamin Jten lock was ne ever a t-erk in the Navy Department at Washing ton?" . "les, sir; we removed from there," repli ei Alice. "Since then" she hesitated "he dm not been well and we are somewhat re? weed. Ob. why do I tell you these things, ir? '. . .. : ... . , .. . . "Ben Locke reduced !" murmured the "shier; "the man who was the making of me ! 'we me his. number and street,, my child. lonr father was once the best, perhaps the only friend I had. I have not forgotton him. Liberty street. I will call this evening. eantinie let me have the bill let me see r " give you another. - Come to look, I bavn't ,Te here' a ten we'll make it all right." , l epening the inmates of a shabby, gen cl house received the cashier of the M Mr. Locke, a man of gray hajr, though nwnbering but fifty years, rose from his arm wir, and much affected, greeted the familiar ..Ce- The son of the pashier accompanied ice0' While the e,der talked together, Al- nd the young man grew quite chatty, v i ir, I have been unfortunate," said Locke, in a low tone. "I have but just JWTerod as you see, from a rheumatic fever, for it by un(lne exertion and had itjnot been r 'hat SWeet crfrl nfmiiu f l-nnui nnt uhot T Mn.iM - e-. - " ....... - thtw . - iidTe aone, She, bj giving lessons in ill it at a cil k u icucn aDa vy writing lor perioai- '"lli and I."- a. a 1 r . - a.- j? ..V1 CP mt o far. above want." MeM , ",l no longet now want, .inn tk. i . .. j my old iWrf u a8 caoier "I was Tt,I that ent yur brighter 8 a place in the bank Jus mad "It Was "kih4 to to: made vacant by the death of a valuable clerk, and it is at your disposal. It is in my gift, and valued at twelve hundred dollars a year." Pen cannot describe the joy with which this kind offer was accepted. The day of de liverance had come. On the following morning the cashier enter ed the handsome 6tore of Huntley ani War ner, and asked for the Lead clerk. He came obsequiously. "Sir," said the cashier sternly, "is that a bad note ?" "I I think not, sir," replied the clerk. The cashier went to the door. From his handsome carriage stepped a young girl in company with his daughter. :Did you not tell this young lady, my ward, that this note was counterfeit And further more, did you not so far forget self-respect, and the interest of your employers, as to offer her an insult ?" The man stood confounded he dared not deny he could say nothing for himself. "If your employers keep you, sir, they will no longer have my ccstom," said the cashier sternly. You deserve to be horse-whipped.' The firm parted with their unworthy clerk that very day, and he left the store disgraced but rightly punished. Alice Locke became the daughter-in-law of the good cashier. All of which grew out of calling a genuine bill counterfeit. PERSONAL SLAVERY BILLS. It is sixteen years since the Hon. Samuel Hoar, one of the most respectable, and also one of the most conservative citizens of Mas sachusetts, was expelled from South Carolina when sent there on a diplomatic agency as the representative of his own State. The circum stances of that case are probably not known to one in a thousand of the young men of the country under thirty years of age, and imper fectly remembered by many who are older. ' In March, 1844, the Legislature of Massa chusetts pussed a resolution authorizing the uovernor to appoint an agent to proceed to South Carolina, for tho purpose of collectiug information as to tho number and names of colored citizens of Massachusetts who had been imprisoned in South Carolina some of whom had been sold into Slavery and also to bring suits in behalf of any such citizens, that the question of the constitutionality of the laws under which they were imprisoned mfght be tested before the Supreme Court of the United States. Mr. Hoar, a gentleman advanced in life, and a lawyer of high standing, was an pointed such agent. Tbe laws complained of, and which are still in full force, take out of every ship arriving in Charleston from a Nor thern port every colored man who may be on board, imprisons him during the stay of the vessel, and, on her departure, unless tbe jail fees are paid and the man taken away, sells him as a slave to defray the expenses of bis de tention. The Massachusetts Legislature held these laws to be unconstitutional, their action a wrong to her colored citizens, and an onerous charge to her ship-owners, both of which had bocome intolerable. "She only asked, howev er, that tne question might be referred by an amicable arrangement to the Federal Courts for adjudication. Mr. Hoar arrived in Charleston in Novem ber, 1844, and immediately announced hfsfar rival and his errand to the Governor of the State, J. H. Hammond, and the next morning sought the Mayor for the same purpose. From the Governor he received no reply, and tbe Mayor wa9 absent from the city : and for three days no notice whatever was taken of his pres ence. At tne end or that time he heard that his letter had been communicated to the Le gislature by the Governor, and had created some excitement. An hour or two afterward, on entering his hotel, he was accosted by one of three persons, who announced that he was the Sheriff of Charleston, adding, with great warmth and earnestness, "I have some busi ness with you, Sir." He then introduced his companions as the acting Mayor and an Alder man of the city, and a conversation ensued, in the course of which the Sheriff informed Mr. Hoar that "he was suspected of being an Abo litionist," and that the mission "was supposed to be a hoax, as he had presented no creden tials." The credentials were produced, and he was then assured "that it was considered a great insult to South Carolina to send such an agent;" and that be "was in great danger and had better leave the citvas soon as noasihta " A letter frem the Attorney-General of the State was read to him, in which the writer urged that lynching be avoided, and called up on the Sheriff to prevent that process. The Sherifi further urged the existence of great public excitement, and doubted if it would be in his power to protect the stranger. To all which Mr. Hoar replied tbat having been sent there on a legal errand, as the agent of a sov ereign State, he should not leavo without some attempt to fulfill his mission. A second inter view took place the following day with the Sheriff, when Mr. Hoar was again urged to leave, and on the same plea. "What do you expect ?" said the officer, "You can never get a verdict, and if you should, the Marshal would need all the troops of the United States to en force a judgment." Several gentlemen called in the course of the day, and informed him of various plans to rid the city of his presence, the mildest of which was to take him by force on board a packet and ship him to New. York. But Mr. Hoar waa immovable. At length a proposition was made to him, on tbe part of the Sheriff, that a case should be made up to be submitted to the Circuit Court, and then carried to the Supreme Court for final decision, . provided ho would go ; and to this he assented. In waiting the next day upon the Sheriff, this proposition was withdrawn, on tie iUwUiia that if adhered to, "the purposes of the State might bo thwarted ;" that it was an "insult in Massachusetts to send any person ou such busi ness," and that there was "a determination to rid themselves of him by some means." On returning to his hotel, Mr. Hoar was co?tod by a 'decently-dressed man,' who said : "You had better bo traveling, and the sooner the bet ter for yon,, I can tell you ; if yon stay here till to-morrow morning you will feel something you will not like, I'm thinking." lie was a- gain nrged by gentlemen, to whom he had brought letters, to leave at once, but ne resist ed their persuasions. That nighj he expected an attack unon the hotel, which he afterward learned, was prevented by the promise of his remoyaj py steamboat tne next aay.. iuc iui lowinar dav was consumed in further nezotia- tlot; which led to no result. Mr. Hoar kept to bis hdtel, and avoided insult. Tne excite ment outside, meantime, fbcreased, but tbe fact that Mr.' Hoar had bis daughter with him probably delayed a resort to extreme measures. One of the persons who waited upon htm said "It is that which creates, or created, our em barrassment." But the day following, the Committee waited upon him, and announced their intention of conducting himo the boat. "Fighting on his part," Mr. Hoar faid, "would be loolish, and he was too old to run." "it seemed, then," he says, "that there was but one question for me to settle, w hich was wheth er I should walk to a carriage or bo dragged to it." He preferred the former, and went peaceably. On the boat a man was pointed out to him who bad offered his services as "a leader of a tar-and-feather gang to have been called into the service of the city." Thus tho sovereign State ot South Carolina disposed of the sovereign State of Massachu setts, through her representative, by virtually kicking her off the premises. The retaliatory measure ot Massachusetts has been to come to the conclusion that a system which thus defies the rights of a sister State, and refuses to re cognize the power of the Supreme Court of the United States, had better not, for the good of all concerned, bn permitted to extend its dominion over the Territories. But South Carulina did not stop there. Her Legislature immediately passed an act by which it is pro vided that any person coming into the State on his orn behalf, or on behalf of any State, to disturb the laws in relation to colored persons, bond or lree, shall be held to be guilty of a misdemeanor, be imprisoned in the common jail for trial, and on conviction be sentenced to banishment, and to fine, and imprisonment at the discretion of tbe court; and for a sec ond offense the penalty is seven years impris onment, a fine of a thousand dollars and ban ishment from tbe State. The penalty first namedtattaches also to any person coming with tbe same purpose, who disobeys tbe warning of the Governor to leave the State within 48 hours, and any citizen of the State accepting a commission for snch a purpose from another State, shall be punished, for the first offense, by a fine of one thousand dollars, and impris onment not more than one year; and for the second offense, by imprisonment lor seven years, and a fine of a thousand dollars, or ban ishment, as the Court may see fit. Thus, if any Northern colored citizen, whoso son or whose brother may have been sold in Slavery by the cruel laws of South Carolina a thing that has happened far oltener, without doubt, than any fugitive slave of that State has es caped to the North shall go there to redeem him from Slavery, or any ono for him, not on ly is it held that he has no rights which the State is bound to respect, but he is fined and imprisoned for venturing to assert them. The personal liberty bills ot the Northern States have never freed a slave ; but every Northern vessel that enters the Port of CLarlealort"wTth a colored man on board is compelled to sur render him to imprisonment so long as she remains; and not only has lie no redress for this gross injustice, but to attempt his redemp tion, should the captain choose, for any rea sou, to leave him behind, is a penal offense for which there is no remedy. When, in the course of compromising, we come to the con sideration of bills enacted to prevent kidnap ping, lei us veuture at tne same time to lnqr.:ro for laws created to make kidnapping easy. The Catholic Church and Secession. A few Sabbaths since, the Most Rev. Archbishop Puree!!, delivered an address at Cincinnati, in tbe course of which be said : "Everj'wbere throughout the world the clouds hang in dark ness. It would seem as if tbe death-knell of our glorieus Union had already been beard ; that it was to be dismembered and torn into fragments ; that State would part from State, snd Cities from tbe States to which they be long. Oh, what is the treason of those men who thus sacrifice the noblest hope of man? And who is there that would not lay down bis life a willing sacrifiec to preserve the union of these States 1 There is an incident recorded in Holy Writ, in which it is stated that when ever a dead body was found upon the highway, all whose steps led from the spot were brought to the corpse and made to swear that thev were not the murderers. If it should so be, that our Union is to be severed, every Catho lic in the land may come, and extending his hand over the bier, say : 1 am guiltless of its death. When you look around this hail, and see the beautiful stars and stripes that adorn it, pray, ob, pray ! that the hideous rattle snake may never sting them, but that the rat tlesnake ot secession may be crushed, even as the serpent that caused onr fall." Universal White Sltfraqe to bb Abol ished. lhe Southern Literary Messenger for January, published at Richmond, in Virginia, has just been revealing some of the purposes ot the slaveholder rebels, in breaking rp tzz Union. One of them, and the main one, is to abolish universal white suflrago. It declares the experiment of a Republican Government, based upon the universal suffrage of the white man, to be a disgraceful failure, and openly avows the design of the rebels to be to create a Southern Republic, upon a white suffrage, limited to men of sufficient property for annu- alasubsistence upon usufruct! In other words, the policy of these rebels is, to reduce soci ety in the Slave States to the feudal condition again, with African Slavery for its basis, and to adopt such legislation as will compel the poor white man to emigrate, and to confine tbe dominant class to the fewest possible numbers. lhis is but a natural sequence of the policy of the disuniomsts. Starvation and Distress in Enol and. The London and Liverpool papers continne to be filled with dreadful accounts of starvation and suffering in the manufacturing districts, in consequence of lhe lack of employment, re sulting mainly from the countermanding of or ders from tbe United States, and the conse quent suspension of labor. - There is a loud call for tho organization of "relief societies," "soup houses,' (f uel and clothing associations,' &c.', in all tbe great towns aud cities. Tbe reports from tbe trade circulars show the con dition of things in Manchester, Leeds and Hud dersfield to be distressing. Nottingham, too, is a serious sufferer. One of the journals states officially tbat "the number of in-door poor, at the poorbouse, exceeded by 415 those from the corresponding period of last year.wbile tbe out door recipients amounted to 2,016 more than last year." s . . ' ' 'A ictircd schoolmaster excuses bia passion for angliDg by saying that, from constant babit, he ncyer feels quite himself unless he Is hand ling tho rod. PLAIN TRUTHS PLAINLY TOLD. In the nouse, at Washington, on the 2Gth -an., tne Keport of the Committee of Thirty three beinz under consideration. Mr. Gilmer, (Amer.) of North Carolina, said a desperate struggle was now going on in all the Southern States to consummate that which South Carolina now avowed she had at heart for the last thirty or forty yeais. When he " ooy me aocinne ot numacation was preached in that State. It was declared to be a peaceful remedy, the only remedy by which the differences which then existed be tween that State and" the General Government could be settled, and by which the Union could be saved ; but when that doctrine was crushed out by Gen. Jackson, tbe next resource was secession, and in order to give some little piausioiiuy xo it, it was said to bo of a most peaceful character. Nullification could nev er have many friends, and secession would have but very few friend's were it not for that decoy doctrine, the fruitful and seductive re commendation which was attached to it, tbat it was peaceful in character. He would come to tho history of events within the last twelve months to the time when the Democratic party. wnicn nad been broken up by the nuMiners and seceders at Charleston and Baltimore. Their nullifying friends on that occasion relied upon tne action they might take In a separate Con vention, which it was said contained many prudentand patriotic men. They did not then hold out the idea that the election of Lincoln would be a just cause for disrupting the Gov ernment. They held out the fact that they had made a Union nomination, and placed at tbe head of their ticket Union-loving men. But when they were charged with having had design to disrupt the Government in case they were defeated, and in case Lincoln was elected, these men universally and generally through out the South denied this charge most manful ly. The men who controlled that party the men who were first on tbe Breckinridge ticket and who declared tbat nullification was peace ful and secession was a proper and peaceful remedy where were they now ? They were scattered everywhere over the Southern States, doing all they could to destroy the Govern ment and break up the Union. What was the course being now pursued ? Were they giving the country time for reflection 1 W here they giving it time for thought and consideration ? No; but while they found State after State going out of the Confederacy, they still found men indisposed to let the country nave an hour to do what it should do in this crisis While the Gulf States were calling for con ventions, what did tbey see? They found that dispatches were going from this place dispatches, not of peace, not for reason, not for reflection no, but dispatches calcula ted to Irritate the public mind, and still more to fire the Southern heart, and to spread a mong the Southern people that madness under wi.icli they were now acting. Mr. Gilmer then read from tbe Virginia manifesto, which declared tbat the Republicans were determin ed to precipitate civil war upon tbe South. There were two propositions, dangerous in character, in tbat manifesto. The first was that Virginia's only safety was in leaving the Union: and the second, equally fallacious, equally dangerous, equally destructive, was, that this was the only way to reconstruct the Union, ne would also refer to a letter writ ten by Scator Clingman to The Democratic Standard, a paper published in North Carolina, in which the people were warned that it was tbe determination of the Rnpublican party to subjugate the South, and finally to abolish Slavery in the States, even at the risk of civil war. This idea of reconstruction was only part and parcel of that fruitful source through which the public mind in the South was to be lulled for a time, until they were precipitated into a civil war and a disruption of the Union. But was the separation of the fifteen Slave States from the eighteen Free States the pro per mode to be pursued to secure a reconstruc tion of the Government ? There was a pur pose and design in all this; but he continued to assure them tbat if the people of tbe bor der States could be assured that the object of these men who were hurrying the South into extremes was to break np the Union, they would shudder with horror at the very idea, as the men who voted for Breckinridge would at the knowledge of tho truth, had they been told, as they ought to have been told, that the men who put Mr. Breckinridge in nomination intended to break up the union If they failed. They would have shuddered at the idea of as sisting In such a work. Tbe honest farmers and mechanics and traders of the South would shudder if they were told that the movement, represented to them as one intended for the purpose of securing Southern rights under a reconstruction of the Government, was, in fact, designed by the men of tbe Baltimore platform to dissever the Union and break up tho Government. Tbe men of the South would shudder at the great mistake they had made in voting in compliance with those se cessionists and disunionists. They might as well hope to put together tbe delicate machin ery of a watch, after it had been broken into atoms by the heavy strokes of a sledge-hammer, as to hope for a reconstruction of this Government and Union, after a virtual separa tion. He would have Virginia, North Caroli na, Tennessee, and the other border States, to remember what these Breckinridgers bad told them before the election, and w"hat these men had since done.so that they might fully under stand in time what was meant by reconstruc tidn of the Government. He would say to his Northern friends, in the face of those things, that they had it in their power, without -the surrender of an iota of a single principle, to crush out these men and their taechings in an hour. They had it In their power, by a single act in that House, to crush fovever those whom tbey considered their enemies, and the ene mies of this Government this great and glo rious country.' Let them but give tbe coun try the assurance tbat tbey are willing to meet tbe exigencies of the moment, and tbat hour consigns those secession leaders to the tomb. It was not because tbe 'secessionists consider ed the Crittenden propositions of any great value to tbe Sooth that tbey asked them, nor because it would injure tbe North' to grant them ; but because those men thought tbat they were safe in making issue- upon them, believing that tbe North would not concede. By refusing them he could assure them tbat the work of inflaming the Southern mind would go on, and it would never rest till tbe Union was irrevocably' broken np. And yet by offering tbe Missouri Compromise line they would fa fact yield no principle. There was not a man in the House who would pot his hand on his breast and say that he believed that the concession would make one Slave State more or less, or the Free States one more or less. Let them do this, and tho question would be settled forever, and those disunion ists who were still among them wonld go hence, weeping and wailing and gnashing their teeth, at the downfall of all their cherished hopes and ambitious designs. It was upon the prin ciple reconized by Southern men that Slavery should not exist in Kansas, it being North of the line of 36 S3 that the Republican party had triumphed a principle which no man in the South would to.day gainsay. Upon it they bad elected their President, and had got into power. . . . He was anxious for tbe a doption of the Crittenden resolutions, not be cause he thought them best, but because they would be acceptable to the people of the South. Give the people these propositions; but if you do not, then give the Border States propositions or the propositions of the Com mittee of Thirty-three. Let them woik to gether on this point like men who loved the country, and who desired the perpetuity of the Union. He had carefully weighed these propositions; and ho would not give a snap of his fingers for distinctions that he could not observe between them. In his own judgment, be conceived the propositions of the Commit tee of Thirty-Three were the best of the whole, inasmuch as they showed a disposition on tbe part of the Northern gentlemen of conciliation and compromise which be had not expected from them. The only question of real impor tance which had agitated the South was in connection with the fear they had been taught to eutertain. that the North at sometime or other designed to interfere with Slavery in the South. A constitutional pledge bad been proposed to quiet the mind of tbe South on this point. Let that pledge be eiven. Let there be a perpetual bond against the inter ference with Slavery in the South, and that said amendment shall never be altered or a mended unless by consent of all the States of the Union, and then he could say to his people that their apprehensions as to tbe people of the North interfering with them were remov ed forever; and this would allay those feelings that had been engendered in their minds, and bring them back to the feelings of friendship and peace. He would remind them that they had fifteen great States, having 950,000 square miles of territory, possessing the best rivers in world, the most valuable and productive cli mate, and institutions most beneficial to them, and these, with all the blessings of a cheap and free Government, were guaranteed to tly?m forever. POSITION OF HON. SIMON CaMEEON, Senator Caneron arrived in Philadelphia on Saturday, January 26tb, and took lodgings at tbe Girard nouse. A number of his political friends serenaded him, and the Geperal ap peared at the front of the house, although ii was snowing at the time. He was introduced to the serenading party by Mr. John M. Cole man. Gen. C. declared bis inability to make a speech in the open air, and after a few re marks about the manufacturing interests of the city, and of bis devotion to their further ance; the party went inside of the hotel.where Gen. Cameron made a conversational speech, in which he referred to tbe secession move ments, and the deplorable condition of the country in causequence of them. He said : Xellow citizens of Philadelphia: I thank you for this demonstration. I am not vain e- nough to believe that it is because of any per sonal merit in myself. I know it arises from the deep interest you take in the unfortunate condition of public affairs. Philadelphia is the metropolis of our State, in which every Pennsylvanian takes a great pride. Tbe labor of her working men and mechanics has not on ly built up and embellished this great city, but has developed the resources and power of our Commonwealth. You believe that, in all things. I have sympathized and acted with you, and therefore you honor me by your presence. It has, indeed, been ever my pride to have at heart, and to promote, to the extent of my feeble ability, the interests of the laboring classes. Myown early life was employed in manual labor, and in after life, in every pub lic station which I have occupied, ray mind and energies have been devoted to the inter ests of the working men and the development of the resources of the country. Your ap pearance hero convinces me that my course is appreciated and approved by yon. But, you ask me to speak of tbe Union. It is in danger. Misguided men in the South, acting under imaginary wrongs, have control led public opinion there against the Union. The calm, sensible and patriotic men there I are prevented from exercising tbe influence which is due to their positions to tne public welfare. Tbe mob spirit reigns triumphant. Six States have declared themselves out of tho Union, and in several of them armies have been organized and put in the attitude of war. Our forts and onr arsenals have been seized, and the public property of the country has been forcibly taken possession of by men who set tbe Constitution and laws at defiance. , To stay the progress of this rebellion, and to preserve the integrity of the Border Slave States, which have, as yet, maintained their fidelity to tbe Union, something is required to be done on onr part to strengthen the power and. influence of the Union loving. men of those States. In Maryland, such men as the heroic Hicks, tbe tearless Davis, and tbe learn ed and patriotic Reverdy Johnson ; in Virgi nia, such spirits as Wm. C. Rives, Sherrard Clemens, John M. Botts, James Barbour, and others ; in Kentucky such patriots as Crittenden, Guthrie, Powell, Prentice, and their like ; in Tennessee, the lion-hearted Andrew Johnson, John Bell, Ethridge, Nel son, and a host of others ; in North Caroli na, such as Morehead, Graham, Badger, Gil mer, and many others like them in all the Southern States, deserve and commend them selves to our kindliest sympathy. The cob duct of these noble spirits appeals to ns for emulation of their own self-sacrificing spirit. Shall wo, my fellow citizens, be less generous than they prove themselves to be ? Unless the Border Slave States adhere to their integ rity, tbe Union will be at an end. If we but afford those men ground to stand upon, to maintain themselves in resisting the mad spir it of secession which surrounds them, the in tegrity of those States will be maintained and tbe Union be preserved. Shall Pennsylvania, herself a Border State, hesitate in this emer gency, to extead to thea ter sympathy and her support In their effort to sTe the Union. I am one of those who supported th eieo- tlon, and mean to sustain the Administration f of Mr. Lincoln, cordially and faithfully, upon the principles laid down in the Chicago plat form. But I am willing to make any reasona ble concession not involving a vital principle, to save this great country from anarchy and bloodshed, and to preserve tho proud position which it occupies lefore the world. We may have material prosperity in a Northern Re public, but a separation brings with it a loss of all influence upon the destinies of tho world. It is not necessary to take a step backwards in supporting tbe resolutions of Mr. Critten den, which seem to meet the full approbation of the people of this city, if it be amended so as not to extend to territory hereafter acquir ed, and to remove from it the feature which proposes to incorporate into tbe Constitution the doctrine of the Dred Scott decision. I prefer to leave tho Constitution on that sub ject as made, by our fathers, until reason shall have again resumed her proper sway over the public mind. In other words, 1 am ready and willing that the Missouri Corn prom isr shall bo restored. The repeal of that measure led to the organization of tho Republioan party. Upon that question it gained its strength and secured its victory. If now our Union loving brethren of the Slave Border States shall be willing to unite with us in its res toration, and accept that as the basis of set tlement of existing diificujties, why should we hesitate thus to meet them 1 These sentiments I took occasion to express a few days since, in my place in the Senate of tbe United States. In doing so, I didvot mean to endorse all the sentiments expreosed by my colleague (Mr.Bigler), but only meant cordial ly to express my approbation of the spirit and sentiment in favor of the Union which he ex pressed. I did, however, express mv willing ness to support and vote for his proposition, if that would satisfy the riolcnt men of the south, and bring them back to their duty. His propo sition is simply to submit the Crittenden a mendments to a vote of tbe people ot tbe States for their adoption or rejection. As a last resort, when Congress shall prove itself incompotent to adjust existing difficulties, and when the disruption of tho Union into two Confederacies shall become inevitable, I shall bold it to be my duty to join in an appeal to the people to take the matter into their own hands, and determine it in their own way, as they may deem best. For a lifetime I have never yet seen public opinion wrong, formed after due deliberation and reflection. This is a Government, not ot States, but of tbe people of tbe States, and they will not suffer this glorious Confederacy to be destroyed at tbe dictation of selfish agi tators who may be governed by personal am bition. Failing in all efforts, either -in Con gress or by the action on the part of tbe peo ple themselves, to restoro concord and har mony, and civil strife mnst come upon ns, I shall be found among the sons of Pennsylva nia, in defence of her soil, her principles and her interests. THE N0ETH, AS A CONFEDERACY. 'As tbe tido of disunion rolls along in the son h. aid State after State is wheeling intor the line of secession, now including South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Georgia and Miss-, issippi ; with a tendency that way on the part of others, the press is beginning to canvas what the condition of tbe north would be, in case the disunion of tbe states should be con- sumated. The following view of the question. we condense from an article in the Boston Traveler : 'If the worst should come to tbe worst. and tbe Union be dissolved, though such a re sult ot .our experiment would be mortifying, mere mignt not De much loss experienced br the North as a consequence of the dissolution of the quarrelsome firm. If all tho free States could manage to hold together, and to form a Union not materia ly'dlnerent in the provisions of its Constitution from that which now (nom inally) exists, all that we could have under any circumstances would bo had. The free States could form a great nation, which would oe in some respects stronger than tho present Union, for it would not be liable to cost and convulsions of a servile war, and would not be looked upon by foreicn nations as a prac tical satire on freedom. "The population of a free States Union would not be mhch under twenty millions. and as there would not be a bondman in the whole number, save the few persons who should be deprived of their freedom as a punishment lor crime, the new Union would be physically as strong as the existing one is, and moral-' ly stronger. The free States could construct a new railway to the Pacific quite as easily, to say the least of it, as the preaent Union could construct two' such railways. They wonld have as much maritime strength as the' Union now has, for the Southern States contribute few seamen to our commercial marine, and consequently few to the national marine. A. free States Union would not have to pay tbe cost of tho post office for the slave Status, and in that way the people would get rid of heavy charge which they now fed, and which : is one of tbe items of the cost of the Union, to them which they would continue cheerful ly to pay so long as the Union could be main- ' tained on honorable, terms. In 1859, the cost- of tbe post office business in tbe seven Cotton States Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Texas, ex ceeded the revenue therefrom in the enormous sum of $2,202,879,03! This could all be saved if the Union were lost through the exertions of tbe very States which are so much benifited. by Its existence in this one respect alone. A free States Union could institute a uniform two-cents rate of postage, which would be the same thing as the English penny postage, and the system would then be self-supporting. . By a judicious system of protection, manu factures, could be as well supported as they' now are, and those engaged in them would be subjected to none of those fluctuations that have been so common in consequence of tint: erings of the tariff by politicians from year to year. Flax, which is susceptible of being '. produced to an unlimited extent in the North and West, could be largely substituted fcr ' cotton, if any change should be found necessa ry in consequence of restrictions being placed on our commerce by the South. . We should be able to import sugar, which bas ceased to ' be a luxury, and bas become one of the ne cessaries of life, free of doty, and atop paying tbe annual millions which we contribute in aid of tbe cane growers of Louisiana, Texas, and Florida. There wooli bo as end to our duties' as catchers and retsrsers of fugitive slates." . - . . : 'He who marries for wealth sails his liberty. tr' I