BT S. B. ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1861. VOL. 7.-NO. 24. WHEN I MEAN TO MABBY. BT JOHN O. 8AXE. Whn do I mean to marry? Well 'Tis iJle to dispute with fata ; jBot if 'you choose to hear ma tell. Pray listen, while I fix the date ; "When daughters haste, with eager feet, A mother's daily toil to share ; Can make the puddings which they eat. And mend the itockiDgs whioh they wear; When maidens look upon a man At in himself what they would marry, And not as army soldiers scan A guttler or a commissary; When gentle ladies who have got The offer of a lorer's hand, Consent to share his "earthly lot," And do not mean his lot of land ; TTben young mechanics are allowed To find and wed the farmers' girls Who don't expect to be endowed With rubies, diamonds, and pearls ; When wives, in short, will freely give Their hearts and hands to aid their spouses, And live a3 they were wont to live, Within their aires' one-story houses; Tlitn, madam If I'm not too old Rejoiced to quit this lonely life, I'll brush my beaver, ceaso to scold, And look about me for a wife! THE FACE AT THE WINDOW. AN ISTEEKSTISO STORY. . It was a woman's face I saw as I drew rein at Cuthbert Hall a pale, calm, almost proud face, with large Creole eyes and coal-black hair, looped away from the cheeks in heavy and shining folds. I had seen many more beautiful faces during my winter? in New York and Washington my summers at Cape May, Newport and Nahant, and beside, I was ex pecting to meet at the Hall a certain bolle and heiress, a sister-in-law of the friend who had invited me to his borne. So I gave only a passing glance at the pale stranger, and, dis mounting, rang the bell. A servant answered the summons, and, conducting me into the library, went to call his master. In a few moments the door opened, and the lady whom I had seen at the window came in, with two curly-headed children clinging about her She bade mo good morning in a voice sweet as the thrill of a lute string, and said, with some embarrassment : "I am sorry that Mr. and Mrs. Cuthburt are both out riding.' Ah 1 and so am I," was the answer, "but I suppose they will not be long, lor, though they did not expect me to-day, I wrote to them I should probably be here this week." Then yon are Mr. Vincent ?" "Richard Vincent, at your service; and now please introduce yourself." I I I am" she paused, wound one of the little girl's ringlets about her finger in her confusion, and begun again, "I am" once more she hesitated, and I resumed "I hare guessod it: you are the governess I" She smiled, but the color mounted to her very temples. "Poor aad proud," I soliloquized, "how that blush becomes her!" At this moment we beard the tramp of horses' ieet, and saw Cuthbert and his beauti ful wife dashing up the broad avenue leading to the mansion. The governess hastily left ine, and I shortly after saw her talking to my friends on the veranda ; Their brief confer ence over, my host and hostess entered, and gave me the cordial welcome which is the characteristic of the South. When the greet ings had been interchanged, I turned to vutb bert, and said : Pray, where is Miss Dupont, the charming sister-in-law of whom you spoke ?" lie and his wife exchanged significant glances, and I continued: "I am all impatience to see this paragon don't keep me long in suspense !" "I will not you will meet at dinner !" The next moment the dressing bell rang and the host led the way to the guest chamber where be left me to make my toilet. In those days I was not indifferent to my personal ap pearance, and with the aid of an attentive servant 1 arrayed myself in the most elegant auit my wardrobe allorded. " I wonder if 1 shall suit the heiress?" I queried, mentally, as I took a last survey in the mirror and decended to the dining hall. There, near the table, sat Cuthbert and his wife, the face I had seen at the window, and, not far from the governess, a young lady with fair complexion, a blooming cheek, the sun niest of blue eyes, and a profusion of golden hair. I was a connoisseur in ladies' dress at that period, and I took in at a glance her costly India muslin robe, with frills of Mech lin lace, the splendor of her bracelets, ear drops, and necklace, and the exquisitely wrought golden comb which lopped up the rich tresses. Why was it that my face wan dered lrom her to the pale, calm governess, with her bands of raven hair, great eloquent eyes, and a dress that fell about her like a Diinruist." "Blanche," said my host, "allow me to Present an old and valued friend Richard Vincent !" The blonde beauty colored, simpered, and ith an inclination she intended to be like that of a prima donna to an applauding crowd, acknowedged my bow. "MissMarguerite," resumed Cuthbert, "this " the guest we have been expecting !" Sbo bowed with the grace of a queen, and I 15 respectfully as if she had indeed been one, I said ; "We have had the pleasure of meeting be re Cuthbert!" "As I told you," murmured the governess, '1 went down to tell him you were absent." The ceremonies of dinner now began, and ' seat had been assigned rae beside Blanche, tried to play the agreeable, but I often found tty thoughts wandering to the pale, silent girl fPPosite. When the meal was over and the dies had left the room, we lingered at our wine. Cuthbt th'D 0' m 8'8ter ask:ec I'She is very beautiful," I replied. 'And have you fallen in love at first sight ?" " I have I shall not tell you," I exclaim- and then we went on chatting in a merry l'11D: When we adjourned to the great, cool, "onoua parlor, I found Mrs. Cuthbert and nd f"5ter Dut trje governess was walking to thon h n the terrace apparently absorbed in tlat U8Ual small-talk ensued, and the ! at my relueat, the heiress sat down at 1 'ki'lL a?0' an( P,aved and ang with much ijae had cb8erTe(l . harp in the boudoir forne01' and bee Del sweep its strings "I cannot," she said ; "but Miss Marguerite can ; I will call her," and moving to the win dow abe exclaimed, imperiously : "Coma, Marguerite, we wish you to play some airs on the harp." The governess hesitated a moment, and then came in and took a seat at the harp. As she sat there I noticed for the first time the superb proportion of her figure, the graceful poise of her head on the stately neck. But I forgot those when she smote the chords of the harp and began to sing. Was she an impro visatrice 7 I thought she must be, so full of soul was the music she poured forth, and when she concluded I asked Mrs. Cuthbert whose composition it was. "Her own," she replied; "and she never knows what she is going to sing when she commences." I uttered no fulsome words of commenda tion to Marguerite, but my eyes must bave spoken volumes of approval. That night when I retired to rest my dreams were not haunted by the heiress, but by the pale face I had seen at the window the face of Marguerite, the governess. The next morning I was awake at an early hour, and glancing out, saw Marguerite glid ing across the lawn. I hastened to join ber her cheeks wore a rich glow, her dark, lust rous eyes wero full of light, her lip tremulous with smiles' her white apron was lull of snowy blossoms, and she had wreathed a tpray of jessamine amid the backness of her hair. How we began to talk I scarcely know, but I was never ao entertained by any woman as by hei. I could touch upon no subject in literature or art with which she was not familiar, and Mad ame de Stael might have coveted her conversa tional powers. On the lawn we separated, but when we met at breakfast in the presence of the Cuthberts and the supercillious heiress, I saw that the old governess look had again come back to her fair face, and she was more reticent than ever. My friend proposed a horseback excursion to a boiling spring in the neighborhood, and when our party assembled on the veranda, I noticed with the keenest disappointment that the governess had been excluded. I rode at the bridle rein of the fair Blanche,' who looked very pretty in the blue habit, and with her velvet cap set coqnettish- ly above her golden tresses, but I found it an effort to interest myself in the commonplace chit-chat. I felt a sense of relief when we dismounted at the Hall, and as soon as I had led my partner in, bounded up the staircase On the way to my chamber 1 passed an open door, and through it caught a glimpse of Mar gnerite. The two children were busy at their tasks, and she sat patiently correcting a sketch which one of them had made. A portfolio lay beside her, which, I doubted not, was fill ed with her own drawings. She heard me step, and looking up, saw, me on the thres hold. "What !" she exclaimed, "have you return ed so soon ? I did not expect you for an hour or two. I hope you have enjoyed yourself." "No, I have not. I was really disappointed because you did not go." A faint smile passed over her face. "I I," she murmured, "you ean't under stand etiquette if you expect a governess is to be made an equal." I felt the blood rush to my brow as I replied : "There are many false notions in society. I am sure Mrs. Cuthbert's governess it the e qnal of any one here, and as such I regard her. Her face crimsoned, and for a time there was a silence, which I broke by saying : Is this the schoolroom " "Yes." "It looks very cool and pleasant. May I come in?" "I suppose Mrs. Cuthbert would have no objection." "I hope not !" and with these words I mov ed to the table at which she was sitting. "Does that portfolio belong to you ?" I inquired, laying my hand on the article in question. She bowed assent, and I resumed : "Shall I have the pleasure of examining its contents ?" "Certainly, sir." She was calm, grave, quiet, but when I drew forth the pictures and began to expatiate, then her patience vanished. Her eyes lit, the pale check glowed, her lips those mobile lips of hers parted, and she talked with the enthusi asm of girlhood. The sketches were indeed wonderful, and at last I said : "It is a shame for your genius for painting, to drudge as a governess." Again that peculiar smile flitted over her features as she murmured : "The poor must do what they can, not what they would." At this moment we wero interrupted by the children, and I left ber. In the afternoon 1 was lounging on a luxu rious sofa in the library, the door opened, and Marguerite appeared, but at sight of me she precipitately retired. "Stay ! stay I" cried I, following her. ".No, no, I cannot I did not dream you were here ; I was lonely, and came down for a book." "Come and get it." With some reluctance she entered aud took a splendidly bound copy of lasso f rom the shelf. I glanced at it and said : " What, do you read Tasso ?" "A little." "Then take a seat beside me and we will read together." She hesitated an instant, and then assented. The liquid Tuscan language sounded very beautiful in her accents, and the spell with which the governess had bound mo deepened with every passing momeut. A month wore ou and one night I sat in my chamber, holding communication with my own heart. The face I had seen at the win dow on my arrival the lace that had seemed so calm and cold, had since assumed every va riety of expression. I had come hither to woo Blanche, I had fallen in love with the m-w I . 1 i 1 1 governess, x es i i was in iove at iu&i .uar gucrite haunted all my sleeping and waking dreams. I was musing thus when i beam a tap at the door, and Cuthbert entered. "Well," said he,"apenny lor your tnongius. "I am thinking," I replied, "how mysteri ous a thing love is." "You are in love, then t giaaoi u iiiancue will be a happy woman." "'Tis not Blancho!" I stammered; "'tis not Blancho my heart has chosen I love the j governess 1" "The governess !" said Cuthbert ; "zounas, man, what do yon mean ?" "I have to-day laid my heart, band, and for tune at ber feet ; if stye accept me, I shall en vy nobody jjj the wide worhj." Cuthbert meditated awhile ere be resumed: "You must be sincere, Vincent, or you would not marry Marguerite." "Sincere ! God knows I am f " My host gazed at me and laughed a merry laugh,that rang loud and long through the hall. "My dear fellow," he began, "you are the victim of a little ruse. My sister-in-law has bad a mortal fear of falling a prey to some fortune-hunter, and when yon, on your arrival, mistook her for the governess, she could not resist the temptation to carry out the impos ture. In the bit of confab we had with her on the veranda, she begged us not to undeceive you, and we humored her whim. She coaxed the cousin who was staying with us to act the part of the heiress, and as she had taught the children during the absence of their French governess, they were -not likely to betray her secret. Blanche Marguerite Dupont, come here and confess !" "Dear, dear Richard, I know I can trust yon." Blanche is now my wife, and peeping over my shoulder at my manuscript, she bids me tell the world she has never repented the strat agem that won my love. THE "IRREPRESSIBLE CONFLICT." The doctrine of an "irrepressible conflict" between the two social systems of the North and of the South, after having been cited for a time as one of the most signal evidences of "Northern fanaticism," has come to be a most accepted criterion of "loyalty to the South and its institutions." For a while this dogma was held up to the abhorrence of every Southern citizen, and any word of explanation adven tured in the premises by way of reference to the context of Mr. Seward's Rochester speech, in which that Senator was supposed to have promulgated that idea, only subjected the can did journalist to the imputation of beiug a wil ling apologist for "Black Republican heresy." Now, however, we find this same dogma warm ly espoused at the South by those who assume to be par excellence the custodians of Southern rights and the champions of Southern inter ests. To this effect tho Charleston Mercury, echoing the language recently held in the name of South Carolina by her Commissioner, the Hon. L. W. Spratt. "before the Florida Convention, says as follows in its number of the 18th of January : "The social and political organization of the South is, in all respects, theoretically and practically, dlflerent and opposed to that of the North. Southern Institutions are essentially conservative. It recognizes distinct order and classes. It establishes them. One-third of the whole Southern population do not cast a sin gle vote. They are disenfranchised. They are not recognised as citizens of the several States. They are slaves. In South Carolina one-half of the population of the State are in this cate gory. The distinctive feature of South Caro lina is its conservatism in all things its obe dience to its laws; its love ot order; its re spect for authority, divine and human. South ern society is unquestionably of an aristocratic cast. Every white man is of a favored class. He is, among others around him, a Roman citizen.' Feeling bis own authority, he recog nizes that which he has established. As the great political philosopher, Burke, defines it, he yields a proud submission and dignified obedience.' Through habit, association, and education, it becomes his second rtntur. Southern society individualizes men. North ern society conglomerates, centralizes men. They are two distinct systems of political or ganization, based on two radically different theories of government. Hence Mr. Seward is quite right when he says there exists between them an irrepressible conflict.' They are in diroct conflict, the one with the other. It is, therefore, quite impossible to conceive how, under one ballot-box, the two can co-exist in one Government. Men may theorize that if the North would adhere to the Constitution there would be no difficulty. They beg the question. The if is in opposition to the na ture of things. Men cannot be moulded, in their inherent naturo, to our wills. There are certain laws which will always govern them. Under tho existing Union the theory and in stitutions of Southern society, or that of Nor thern society, will eventually give way. For both to exist, continue and work out their own ends, they must be separated. If there exist ed no other reason, policy and theory alike would demand that the Southern people should be a separate, independent people." Here, then, we have the irrepressible con flict" doctrine set forth by the Charleston Mer eery in stronger terms than were used by its reputed author, and looking to a contingency, which he never contemplated. It remains to be seen whether Democratic editors will be as ready to denounce that dogma now, when ad vocated by the South, as they were to viUify Mr. Seward for making his Rochester speech. The Extradition Cask. An Item of newB by the last steamer, to the effect that the Court of Queen's Bench in England had granted a writ of habeas corpus in the case of the negro Anderson, a fugitive from the State of Mis souri, where he shot a gentleman, who at tempted to arrest him, now in jail at Toronto, Canada, is likely to impart much importance to the case. It has been already stated that the Canadian Court decided that he ought to be surrendered, on the requisition of the Gov ernor of Missouri, but that the surrender is delayed for such further legal proceedings as are applicable to the case. If the action of the Court of Queen's Bench shall have the effect to remove the prisoner toJSngland, and to dis charge bim from custody, it may become a subject of diplomatic correspondence between the two countries. The principle involved is similar to that in the case of Kentucky against Ohio. The offence committed is against the laws of the State from whence the fugitive fled ; but as slavery does not exist in the Brit ish dominions, it cannot be a crime there for a negro to kill the person attempting to prevent his escape from slavery. If the British Gov ernment intended to limit the operation of the treaty to crimes pronounced such by English, and uot by American law, it should have dene so by express terms, instead of seeking to e vade what appears to be a plain agreement be tween the two countries. Thavd tit a a iltrAi wA1lini at Mtlironlrld last week, at which the husband surprised the WHO wiiu picacuii ui -9 in i oai estate and stocks. your ear, and demand if be has the wrong pig THE 6EEAT SALT LAKE. Among the great natural curiosities of North America, the great saline body ot water in Utah Territory, known as the Great Salt Lake, stands in the first order. The Lake itself is not individually so great a curiosity, as when view ed in connection with correlative indications, which gives us a combination of natural won ders, truly astounding. The water-marks show that the Lake is uow a mere remnant of what was one of the mighty water-collections of the earth perhaps of a body of water that spread itself throughout the whole Utah basin. Provo Lake, a body of water distant perhaps seventy-five miles from the great Lake is sur rounded by indications of a l:ke character, that directly point to an early poriod when its indi viduality was lost within tho limits of a mighty sea that absorbed both itself and Great Salt Lake.- Along the base of the mountain-walls of the valley, if we may so term the limits of the basin, are distinct water-marks, of various elevations. They are clearly discernible at a distance of twenty-five miles, the more eleva ted being from twenty-five to one hundred feet above the level of the valley. They ore al most conclusive evidence that a great sea onco existed in Utah valley, whose breakers have left their power indented upon the rocky front of their mountain confines as a monument of their power. The different elevations ot these water-marks show tho gradual declination of this sea from a body ot water covering, may be, tens of thousands of square miles, to the present saunas body of about sixty miles in length and lorty or fifty in width. This pre sumption is strengthened by the existence, throughout the entire valley, of aquitile de posits, such as shells, petrified fishes, water worms, rocks, etc. Upon this theorv, the in ference may be drawn that Great Salt Lake is gradually diminishing, but this is not the case ; it is now reduced to a basis of fixed causes which will give it perpetuity in its present ex tent. The moisture of the atmosphere of those latitudes is sufficient to always keep it supplied with a uniform quantity of water The melting snow of the mountains swells the riverR in the spring and summer that empty into it, and when this melting is prevented by the coldness of the fall and winter, those riv ers fall, and iby evaporation the lake rapidly declines the evaporation carrying off more water than the streams deposit. It is in this declining condition that coarse salt is obtain ed from the beach of the lake in quantities ad infinitum. Now, so long as the same meteoro logical system prevails, the lake must contm ue the same as now. No theory is settled upon by scientific men as to the cause of the salty nature of the lake. W e bave an opinion of our own, which we be lieve to be rational. The rivers emptying in to it Canaan, Jordan, Webber, Malade, and numerous smaller streams head in the moun tains, where they are supplied by myriads of mountain brooks, sotrie ot which undoubtedly nave their salt springs. These brooks impreg nate the great water-carriers of the lake with alt to so small an extent, though it be, that it is not perceptible to the taste ; and they carry it into the lake, where it must forever remain and accumulate, as evaporation increa ses the proportion of the salt to the water. The salt may bave been carried to the lake o ver a hundred miles, and it has perhaps been accumulating there for thousands of years, and thus it must continue to accumulate throngh all time if the f upply should be inexhaustible. The volcanic indications surrounding the lake are peculiarly impressive, and could well be made the subject of the natural philoso pher's study. The whole face of the country appears to have passed through caloric influen ces of the iotensest character. Enormous rocks fringe its margin, which are charred as black as ebony from the operation of heat, and their fragmentary condition bespeaks the mighty convulsions which they have passed through. Near the lake's centre there is quite a large island, upon which these volcanic in dications are equally emphatic. This island is very fertile, and is owned by the Church, which institution holds it for the exclusive purpose of grazing. All the stock which comes into the tithing-office all Mormons are compelled to pay one-tenth of everything that they make or raise, to the Church are taken to this island, and there must be thousands of head upon it. It is reached by small sailing vessels. So extremely salt is the water of the Lake that piscatory life is impossible. Its average depth is 3fty feet. Oregon News. Cot. Benton on the Slavery Agitation. In his 2d vol. of "Thirty Years in the Senate," Col. Benton says : "The regular inauguration of this slavery agitation dates from the year 1835 ; but it had commenced two years before, and in this way : nullification and disunion had commenced in 1830, upon complaint against a protective tariff. That, being put down in 1833 under President Jackson's proclamation and energetic measures, was immediately sub stituted by the slavery agitation. Mr. Cal houn, when he went home from Congress, in the Spring of that year, told his friends 'that the South could never be united against the North on the tariff question that the sugar interest of Louisiana xcould keep her out and that the basis of Southern union must be shifted to the slave question.' Then all the papers in his interest, and especially the one at Washington, pub lished by Mr. Duff Green, dropped tariff' agita tion, and commenced upon slavery, and in two years had the agitation ripe for inauguration on the slavery question. And, in tracing this agitation to its present stage, and to compre hend its rationale, it is not to be forgotten that it is a mere continuation of old tariff disunion, and preferred because more available." The Union in Arkansas. Arkansas is not as reckless in plunging into the abyss of dis union as some of her Southern sisters. The bill for an immediate State Convention has been voted down, and the question whether a State Convention shall be held or not is to be referred to the people. Strong hopes are entertained that, ber people will recognize that their true interests are amongst those who can and will construct the Pacific Railroad, and that, with the exhibition of a conciliatory spirit on the part of the North, the secession move ment will be crushed out. There is an old gentleman in Georgia, named Hersbey, who has 944 grand-children, all are married and live in the same county. .The amount of property owned by them is said to be upwards of $60,000,000. Coal has been selling in Charleston, South Carolina, at $15,59 a ton. A GALLANT PENNSYLVANIA!!. Lieut. Adam J. Slemmer, born in Norrls town, Penn., was appointed a cadet at West Point from Pennsylvania in 1846, and gradu ated in 1859, entering the army as a second lieutenant of the First Regiment of Artillery. He is at present a first lieutenant of one of the companies of that regiment, and, by the tem porary absence of the captain, is in command of the company at Fort Pickens, which it oc cupies. At the commencement of the present troubles, tho artillery were quartered in the barracks near the navy-yard and the old Span ish lort' of San Carlos de Carrancas. Two very strong works. Forts Pickens and McRea, built at the entrance of the harbor, command tho harbor, navy-yard and ship channels. Finding that Florida was determined to secede, Lieut. Slemmerabandoncd his unfortified posi tion, and took post in the strongest of these two forts, Fort Pickens, which, on account of its being on an island, is more easily protec ted. Forts McRea, Barrancas and the navy yard, however, being in possession of the southern troops, and forming a crescent line of forts, by concentrating their fire on Lieut. Slemmer. can greatly annoy him and bis hand ful of men, the distance at any one point not being over a mile and half. Lieut. Slemmer has already been summond to surrender, to which bis answer was "not until he is ordered to do so by his government." Had the com mander of the navy-yard acted with the same gallantry as this young lieutenant, both Forts McKca and Pickens would have been occupied, and could have held the harbor against any force the insurgents could bring. It is to be hoped that Commander Armstrong, who is an old officer of tho navy, had good ami sufficient reason for not doing so. In a millitary point of view, Pensacola is of much more importance than Charleston harbor, and the conduct of Lieut. Slemmer is just as praiseworlbey as that of Major Anderson. The State or Europe. The coming months are most critical for the state of Europe. a poleon arms, and recommends a Congress for settling the pending questiou ; t-ngiana is uneasy ; the new King of Prussia, William I, declares, in his first manifesto to his nation, that the confidence of Europe is shaken ; Ba varia urettares for war, and Austria is still In the convulsions of a financial and political crisis. Russia, though deeply engaged in the immediate emancipation of the serfs, concen trates an army on the Pruth, and threatens Moldo-Wallachia with an invasion in case the Hungarians should try to organize an inroad from the Principalities into iransyivania. Prince Couza suddenly turns round, and after having for a time favored the schemes of Hungary,- proclaims now-the strictest neutrality, and expels tho Hungarian refugees, ine Prince of Servia is likewise frighteued, and no longer dares to put himself in opposition to Austria and Russia. But Bosnia, Bulgaria, and Montenegro are still agitated, and it is scarcely possible that tho year 1SOI will pass away without serious commotions in European Turkey. Besides these greater questions there remains still the squabble about bcnieswig Qolstein and the Constitution of Uessia, which may be a pretext, both by Napoleon and the Czar Alexander, for disturbing the state of Germany. The American difficulties greatly influence the money market, and there is an nneasy feeling prevalent that Europe is on the brink of a great war or of revolution. Heavy Fracd. The Nashville, Tennessee, Banner, of Jan. 26th, says : Wo learned yes terday from a citizen of Columbia that the com munity of Maury county have just been sub jected to a wholesale swindle by Sam'l Jones, deputy Sheriff, who absconded on Monday a week with over $100,000. Mr. Jones stood high in the confidence of every one. ne had been twice elected Sheriff, though opposed in politics to tho dominant party. The means adopted by the swindler were very novel and deliberate. He forged judgments upon good men in the country, and sold them to capital ists at a discount of twenty five per cent, at the same time agreeing to collect them with out charge. He was engaged for several weeks in selling these fictitious judgments. Shortly before he left be also borrowed money from several parlies. One gentleman in Mt. Pleas ant is mulcted for $26,000, and others in differ ent parts ot the county, in amounts from $10, 000 down to a few hundreds, the aggregate reaching over $100,000. Mr. Jones abandoned his wife and six children. His wife, we learn, is absolutely deranged on account of the affair. JNo clue to the direction which he nas taken has been obtained. The fraud, indeed, was not discovered until last Wednesday. A Motto tor the Day. And now, Sir, coming from a Slave State as I do, 1 owe it to myself. I owe It to truth, I owe U to the sub ject, to state that no earthly power conld in duce me to vote for a jpeciuc measure tor tne introduction ot Slavery where it bad not be fore existed, either south or north of that line. Coming as I do from a Slave State, it is my solemn, deliberate, and well-matured determi nation that no power no earthly power shall compel me to vote lor the positive introduc tion of Slavery cither south or north of that line. Sir, while you reproach, and justly, too. our British ancestors for the introduction of this institution upon the continent of America, I am, for one, unwilling that the posterity of the present inhabitants of California and New Mexico shall reproach us for doing just what we reproach Great Britain for doing to us. If the citizens of those Territories choose to es tablish Slavery, I am for admitting them with such provisions in their Constitutions ; but then, it will be their own work, and not ours, and their posterity will have to reproach them, and not us, for forming Constitutions allow, ing the institution of Slavery to exist among them. Henry Ciy' speech in the U. S. Senate, Jan. 20th, 1850. An Insult to Mrs. Lincoln by South Caro lina Chivalry. A box shipped from Charles ton, South Carolina, and directed to Mrs. Lin coln, was received in Springfield a few days ago. On being opened, it was found to contain a picture representing Mr. Lincoln with a ropo around his neck, his feet manacled, and bis back adorned with t coat of tar and feathers. It is said that the shippers were ladies Heav en save the mark ! A wild cat, weighing twenty pounds, was shot in Somerset county, on the 4th instant., by a Mr. William Black. "Ton bava a splendid tar, but a very poor totes," as tha organ-grinder said to the doakej. MRS. SLEMMER AND MRS. OILMAN- Mrs. Lieut. Slemmer and Mrs. Lieut. J. II. Gilman, the two ladies whose names have bee a most prominently connected with the late pro ceedings at Fort Pickens, took rooms at tho Metropolitan Hotel, New York. They are both ladies of much refinement and intelligence, and the events through which they have so lately passed have made a deep impression upon them. Tbey have related many thinga of interest concerning affUirs at Pensacola. The exodus from tho BArrancas Port was made necessarily in much haste, there being little time except to hurriedly pack up tho most valuable of their articles of furniture and wardrobe. No personal violence was offered to these retreating women and children, but the sudden aud peaceable breaking up of so many peaceful households, and the violent separation ot family ties, were cause of great distress. To mary tho parting of husband and wife was as if for the last time, and tears bedewed many a hardy cheek when the last "good-bye" was spoken. The excitement produced upon the officers when they saw their flag at the Navy yard hauled down, Mrs. Slemmer says, was most in tense. It was a sight they never expected to see, and they had never conceived of the deep feeling of humiliation aud vexation the spectacle excited in every breast. During the day and i.iglit of the evacuation of Barrancas, and tho transfer of the garrison to Fort Pickens, every person, men, the offi cers, and their wives, performed prodigies ot labor, and uever obtained a wink of sleep for nearly twenty-four hours ; and the hard work fell about equally upon all, without regard to rank or sex. The ladies cheerfully performed their part throughout the trying ordeal. On the day following the embarkation of tho families on board of the Supply, Mrs. Gilman, and Mrs. Slemmer, accompanied by officers from the storeship, went on shore under a flag of truce, to obtain a last interview with their husbands. Every step of their progress was met by armed officials. They wore obliged, first, to obtain permission from the new Com mandant of the Navy yard Randolph who ten days before had resigned bis commission in the Navy. This was very reluctantly grant ed, after appeals had been mado to him as a husband and father. They then had to pass the Barrancas forts, whose commander, after some hesitation, allowed them to pass. In this place, so lately deserted by these peace ful and happy families, all was now confusion. The undisciplined soldiers or their understrap pers had broken open some of the boxes and trunks containing the wardrobe and household relics of Colon 1 1 Winder, late commander, probably in pursuit of clothing for their own use, and they saw ladies' dresses, and family daguerreotypes, scattered about with little re gard to their Taunted respect fcr the lights of personal property. Injustice to the officers, these ladies wished to exonerate them, per sonally, from these acts of vandalism, and be lieve they were done by the baser sort, npon whom discipline had as yet exerted no control. Lieut. Slemmer asserted that ho could hold the place against five thousand men, and de clared he would doit. It is needless to sar that both these ladies exhorted their husband's to stand by their country's flag to the last, and never to haul it down except to an over powering force. All the prisoners in the Na vy Yard were permitted to leave after giving their parole, and those who could get away left. Such as decided to remain were com pelled to take the oath of allegiance to tho State of Florida. The Palmetto Flag The "Iml Republic of South Carolina" has at last fixed the design of her flag. It is to consist of a blue field, with a white palmetto tree in th middle, and a white crescent, with the horna pointing inwards, at the upper corner. Tha first attempt of a vessel to enter a foreign port under the new fl?g, was mado at Havana by a brincantine from Charleston. Shn K.iiifri in past the Moro Castle with her "Palmet to" flair flying aloft. But immediately, by order of tbs officer m command of the fortress, she was broueht to anchor under its ennx. nd Lpm there until the flag of the United States wa displayed at her mast-head, when she was per. mitted to proceed tip the harbor. We wonder what they are going to do in Palmetto-dom a- iwm mis outrage upon meir nag in a foreign port. This insult ou?ht to be avn?(-d forth. with. A new-born nationality cannot afford to nave us emblematic ensign thus dishonored. An idiot at Salsburr. Germanv. leinc vr fearless, an experiment was made to test his courage, by setting him to watch a corpse, but which was in reality a live ncrson envelnnpri. and, unfortunately, confined in a shroud. As ine supposea corpse oegan to move, the idiol told it to lav still, and Leinc riianlwvori. mItpiI a hatchet and cut off first one of the feet, and m spite ot opposition, the head of the help less imposter, after which he calmly resumed bis watching. Tenacity or the Sacrfi Tie.' It has been judicially decided in New York that where a uusuana Knoc&s nis wne down twice by blows on the nose, once by a blow on tho cheek, and men snaKes a unlet ot wood at her, "the prov ocation i,s too slight to dissolve that sacred tia which binds her to her husband for life, for better or worse." The husband must kr. doing so if he wants his wife to be freed from bim. Aut how Ions 1 A French View. The Journal i!rm Tirhnft. the most influential paper in France, says of the proposed Southern Confederacy : "Let it pursue its own way ; but once more mnst it bo pronou ced that there is not a corner upon tha' ll I .. . a . eariu wnero it win nnd sympathy and assise ance." Not very encouraging, that. ' " '' In Cincinnati, an Irishman became angry at a darkey, and broke seven or eight bricks up on bis head, without doing bin' the least inju ry. The negro, who was perfectly cool during the operation, at length exclaimed : "Struck away white man dis chile don't mind dem pebbles no bow ! yah f yah " ' 1 ' '1 John Tyler, who Imagined he had a snake in his stomach, died at Roscopel, Wis., on tba 28th ult., from starvation. He had been at tempting to starve the snake out, aud touched no food for twenty-seven days. Oca FtAG is There ! The Stars and Stripes still float in Northern Alabama, and Ibe pao ple ttiere defy tha secessionists to come and taka tbem down ! All honor to tba patriots cf Korthern Alabama. T