THE JOURNAL. peamat rtlncimm—dtprorrin ST SMITH.] 17N PINGDON, TUESDAY, DEC• 25. 1849• TERMS: The "Roattnonom JOURNAL" is published at the following rates, viz : $1,75 a year, tf paid iq advanoe ; $2,00 if paid during the year, aid $2,30 if not paid until after the expiration of this year. The above terms to be adhered to in all eases. No subscription taken for less than six months, and no paper discontinued until all arrearages sea paid, unless at the option of the publisher. car Hon. S. Car.v., will please accept our thanks for favors from Washington. Holliday Presents. Those of our friend; who desire to make Hol• lidav presents, are referred to the cards of JAS T. SCOTT, and Narr & MILLER, in our adver• tieing columns. GitiAT 'NEWSPAPER SALe.—We learn that over 80,000 copies of the Mammoth Pictorial BHOTHEII JONATHAN for Christmas and New Years were sold during the month of November by Messrs. Wilson & Co. of New York. It is calculated that the sale will reach 150,000 cop ies before Christmas day, at nn average price of ten cents per copy. Fifteen thousand dollars for the Brother Jonathan! Who says this is not a great country Christmas. This is Christmas day ! What an animating announcement for the ears of the young. What an innumerable number of youthful hearts have been longing for the dawn of this glorious day of festivity and joy. Well, we hope all may De so circumstanced as to fully enjoy it; and especially on we wish all our patrons, and all tbeis little folks, a merry, "Happy Christmas." Poor louse. For the information of the citizens of the county generally, we would state that petitions are now circulating and being numerously signed, praying the Legislature to authorize the Com missioners of Huntingdon County to purchase a farm and erect thereon a County Poor House. We make this statement so that those opposed, If there be any, may have an opportunity to make known their opposition. Doings of CongresSr There still continues to be no organization of the House, and as a consequence, no message from the President. It is idle to recapitulate the balloting., for they afford no indication of the sentiments of the members, and no clue to the probable termination of the struggle. 0.. ned LOCO loco members held separate caucuses for the purpose of deciding upon their future action, and agreeing to a compromise if possible. At these meeting both parties appointed Commit tees of their number, confer together. These committees, after conferring together, agreed to report in favor of electing the Speaker by a plurality. On Friday evening last the Locofo co members held a caucus, and received the re port of their committee. After an animated discussion, the report was rejected by a major ity of ten or twelve. Had the report been adopted, an organization on Saturday Would have been the result. The Locofoco party is there fore fairly responsible for any further delay that may take place in organizing the House. White disorganization thus continues to hold sway in the House, the Senate is fairly under way, having communicated to the President the fact of their organization and readiness to co operate in the transaction of Executive busi ness. The President has accordingly made communications to his Constitutional advisers,, who are understood to be now acting npon them. This body has also chosen its committees, in the course of which they have given Cot. Ben ton the cold shoulder by placing him as a third man on the Committee of Foreign Relations, of which he was last year chairman. Mr. Ben ton says nothing, but is no doubt deeply morti iSed and bent upon having his revenge. It is worthy of remark, too, that the Locofo to majority in the Senate have given the South a majority on all the important committees. On Foreign relations,Mr. Webster stands "solitary and alone" to represent the Free States. The North American very aptly denominates this as the"compromising spirit" of the South. The Houee will no doubt do their best to elect • Speaker before the Holidays. If they do not succeed, we hope the President will send his Message to the Senate, and that the people may no longer be kept waiting for ti,is important document, on account of the refractory spirit manifested by their representatives. C3FIVe invite a careful reading of the article in another column from the New York Tribune, headed "Slavery and the Union—Threats of Dissolution." Every one should make him self familliar with the origin and true cause of the difficulties whic:: exist between the North and South, and which are :Jo. , threatening such sericus consequences. Those who desire to do so, will attain their object by caret . Z.'lly reading the article alluded to. trr Our Hollidaysburg cotemporaries are ecstacies about "that supper" given to the Prin ters of Hollidaysburg, by Mr. James M. Lytle, proprietor of the "Central Restaurant." The idea of giving suppers and dinners to printers is one we heartily approve of—we do ! And we have no doubt our neighbor of the Globe would ioncur with us in this opinion, even if he does take issue with us on all others. We do not mean to throw out any itLyinuations to the the keepers of Restaurants it Huntingdon. Of ovum t►at. Mr. Collector Lewis. The Perry Freeman, in alluding to the fact that a few Whig papers are urging the rejec tion of Was. D. LEWIS, Esq., Collector of the Port of Philadelphia, so fully expresses our own views, that we adopt the remarks of that paper in relation to this matter. The Freeman says Wb do not know the precise grotutd they have for suggesting his rejection; end, stripped of all insinuations and conjectures, they might perhaps not be easily or satitfactorily stated in explicit terms. But whatever their grounds may be, we feel inclined to object to the course of policy indicated by them, for the following reasons, which, after making all due and proper allowances which now occur to our mind, we deem good and substantial ones First.—Mr. Lewis' rejection, or the attempt of a portion of the conductors of the Whig press to secure it, might tend to embarrass the Ad ministration of Gen. Taylor—a course of policy certainly not desired even by those who may not think favorably of Mr. Lewis' official action in relation to apointments, &c. Second.—Mr. Lewis may yet remedy any er rors of omission or commission, which are, or may be the groimds of complaint against him by our respectable and zealous co-laborers in the good Whig cause. For these reasons, candidly stated and hon estly entertained, we do hope `that no Whig will attempt, in any way, to defeat the con firmation 01 Mr. Lewis. For we cannot now see that any good could result from it: If is, in our opinion, a bad business to advocate the !e -jection oT the Presidential nomination's. The work may be carried too far, if it is introduced by the Whigs. Gen. Taylor's nominations must be sustained by all who would sustain his Ad ministration. Any other policy is bad, and fraught with mischief to the Whig party." BACK-BITING. -A spirited articlei condemna tory of this nefarious vice, appears in the last Blair County Whig. Those addicted to the practice in Hollidaysburg will, we hope, be benefitted by this just and withering rebuke.— We rejoice to believe that we live in a commu nity so entirely free from the despicable habit of back-biting, that it is altogether unnecessary for us to publish any strictures on the subject. II:7 - We neglected to notice in our last that the "Whig" and "Standard" of Hollidaysburg had both decided against us "in the matter" pending between the editor of the "Register" and ourself—of course.' It is strange that the common jealousy of Huntingdon entertained by the people of Hollidaysburg, should be so strong as to even warp the judgment of the editors of that place ! Why, brethren, if Huntingdon is rapidly advancing, and Hollidaysburg standing still, we can't help it. You need not spit your spite at us. It is but the natural result of a train of circumstances, for which we should not be held responsible—not having the vanity to suppore that we ever did anything to produce them.' Charge to Naples. JAS. Pnwsa.Fsa.. has derlinpa tha pointment of Charge to Naples, and E. JOY Moanis, Esq., appointed in his place. We re gret to learn that Mr. Power was constrained to decline this appointment en account of the delicate state of his health. ag.'The Blue Hen's Chicken, a paper pub lished in Delaware, where slavery now exists, but is becoming very unpopular, thus speaks of Congress : CONORESS.—This body has been in session since Monday week—have had about 40 ballot ings and hove not yet elected a Speaker. The main cause is that the Southern men want to extend the curse of slavery, instead of promo ting the cause of Liberty. They want a Speak er to favor the extension of slavery in this land of freedom, instead of restricting this curse of human existence to its present limits. The party that favors a slavery Speaker ought to be defeated. The fees soilers are the salt of the Republicit is their mission to save the land from the pollution and crime of slavery exten sion—let them he faithful and the question will he settled against extension, to the glory of God and the happiness of Mart. The free soilers are right; let them keep so. DICKINSON SEMINARY, WILLIAMSPORT, PA.- Rev. CHARLES MCCLAY, Agent for this institu tion, has sent us a catalogue for 1848-9. From it we would judge that the institution is in a flourishing condition—the total number of pu pils being 210. It was opened in September 1649, under the patronage of the Baltimore and Philadelphia conferences of the M. E. Church. The purpose in view embrace a liberal course of education, so as to qualify the students for teaching, for any depariment of business, or for admission to any college. The agent, Mr. McClay will visit this place the present week, and will preach in the M. E. Church, in this place on Saturday evening next. CCr Some of the members of Congress are getting desperately short of cash, and their washerwomen and boarding-house keepers have to call on their reserved fund for patience in consequence. The members, it seems, cannot draw their appropriations till the Hpuse is or ganized. B - The hands in the employ of the State at the Parkesburg shop, stopped work on Thurs day, the 6th inst., in consequence of not having received money for several months. So says the Columbia Spy. Who is keeping the poor laborers out of their money now, we wonder CO" A Sabbath convention at York, Pa., on the sth inst., Hon. Samuel G. Bonham, presi ding, adopted a memorial to the Legislature, requ'esting that all the locks on the canals be closed, and the running of the cars on the rail idea in the State be suspended on the Sabbath (37 The editor of t country paper says that he nevel' saw but one ghost and that was the ghost of a s i n n e r who died without paying for his pa. terrible to look upon—the ghost of Hamlet warent a circumstance." PETER Nam—The Catholic Magazine gives the amount of t aonetributione for the Pope from the United States, as $1 , 1, 0 18 Pt Post Office Robberies. As we expected (says the Carlisle Herald,) most of the recent Post Office depredations can be traced home to the locofoco ranks, just as was the Susquehamfa Bank swindle. The new ad , ministration has' been foully abused foli the small nudnber of removals it has made, but as facts now show, the public safety would have been better secured icy a few mode still. Young Gearhart, who recently robbed the Danville Post Office, is as we learn from the Danville Democrat, a regular locofoco, and last week Win. S. Hunt, the Post. Master at Erwinna, Bucks county, whom the mistaken kindness of the administration had retained in office, was also arrested for depredations upon the mails! Hunt was arrested through the vigilence and energy of Col. Ottinger, of Bedford county, one of the most active agents of the Department. Suspicion having rested upon him, Col. Otting er mailed a letter at Philadelphia, containing an amount of counterfeit bills, addressed to Mauch Chunk. lie found that it got no further than Erwinna. He promptly arrested Hunt, who af terwards confessed his crime and was committed to prison. He has heretofore borne a good character, and has stood high among the Democ racy. He was a candidate for the nomination for Sheriff in Bucks county in 1818, and again for county Commissioner in 1849, and if nomi nated for either would have been elected. lie has held a commission of Postmaster for many years, and had the administration dared to re move him, there would have been no end to the groans it would have occasioned. We hope that in all cases of mail depredations the politics of the thief may be published. The locofoco press has been endeavoring to cast suspicion on the new appointments, and the pub lic want to know when robberies are committed whether the offenders are locofocos or Whigs. If the latter, let all the punishment and odium he visited upon them that they merit. But jus tice demands that when depredations are com mitted by locofoco officers who have not been removed, the fact should be made known and the administration relieved of all odium. Executive Interference. The non-interference of the President in the affairs of the House of Representatives is con strued by some of the opposition journals into an acknowledgement of weakness. 'Among all the recusants,' says one of these journals, re ferring to the imptacticables of the House, 'he has not been able td change a single vote.' The charge betrays more than it imputes. A familiarity with the usages and modes of cor ruption is often intimated unconsciously, and never more strongly or more suspiciously then when the upright course of another is ascribed to such lack of power or means as alone could keep the accuser honest. The President, we may presume, in view of his constitutional duties, does not consider him self called upon to interfere in one way or an other with the organization of the House. The people elected the members of that body, and if they have sent representatives there who will not put themselves is n ciwslitlvii so transact the public business, the constituencies have no no one to blame but themselves. The Presi dent is not responsible. Ile is ready to do his part, whenever Congress is prepared to come into its proper sphene and perform its allotted . functions.-- , -Lancast4,. Pram. We learn by the Harrisburg pap'ers that the Cotton Mill in that place is now under roof ready for the internal finish ; that the Gas Works will probably be completed in time to furnish the " wise men" of the State with light; and that the Insane Asylum, being erected there by the State, is already up. if the.Harrisburgers keep on they will soon make a great place eat of the capitol. Suicide of A Unitarian Minister. CINCINNATI, Dec. 15, 1819. The Rev. James H. Perkins, Pastor of the Unitarian church, in this city, committed sui cide last night, by jumping from a ferry boat in to the River, whilst crossing. He left his hat, cloak and memorandum book on board. It was the impression he was laboring under temporary insanity. He was much esteemed by all who knew him, and leaves an interesting family to mourn his untimely end. THE Monnis STATE BANK.—The three in dictments growing out of the failure of the State bank at Morfis N. . 1., one being against six of the directors for conspiracy, one against the President for perjury, and one against the cash ier for the same offence, were called up in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, at Morristown, and on application of Counsel, removed to the Supreme court. OY The Capitol of Alabama was consumed by fire on the 15th inst. The public documents and books in the libraries were saved, together with the principal portion of the furniture. The building is represented as having been very beautiful. 139 — The Ohio Senate still continues disorgan ized, althohgh it commenced its attempts to organize on the Ist Monday of the month. The Hamilton County Senator causes the difficulty. The Speaker pro tens. recognizes the Locofoco claimant, but the whole body of the Whigs re fuse to vote for Speaker under such circumstan ces. Drsrcc•rwe FIRE.—The 'Willow Bank Mill,' situated in Elizabeth township, Lancaster coun ty, and owned by Mr. Elias Eby, was destroy ed by fire on the 10th inst. There was about 15,000 bushels of grain stored in it. Loss, $12,000 ; of which $2,000 only is cov ered by insurance. Toe RoTacinum.-- , The N. Y. Tribune says that the Messrs. Rothchilds have concluded to establish a branch of their house in that city, at the head of which will be placed the young Rothchild, son of the Paris brother, who came to this country last year. We understand that although young he already evinces much of the financial acumen which distinguishes this fam ily. The details of the aYrangements, and what relation the present agent will bear to the new heuee have not yet been settled. The ,1 Union Right or Wrong." The above is the sentiment of HENRY CLAY. It is a glorious, patriotic, American sentiment,' . and will find a hearty response in every true American heart. Now, that a few Souihern factionists and traitors are threute ning dissolu tion in the Capitol, it becomes the lovers of Liberty and Union to Speak out in such tones as Will cause these plotteis of treason to hide their heads in shame. Immediately after the Southern members, Meade and Toomes, had hurled their impotent threats against the Union in the House last week, amid an effort at applause from the south ern Locofoco hlembers, Cdl. Banns, the Whig member from Illinois, rose and raised his voice for the Union. His remarks were received with such a shout of applause from the Whig side, and the galleries, as fairly shook the dome of the Capitol. We give an extract from this eloquent speech. Col. Baker said r Gentlemen, when you threaten a dis solution of the Union, we shall doubt. When you protest, we shall disclaim ; but no fervid declarations, no fiery ap peals to southern feeling, no solemn in vocations to the Almighty, (as if indeed he was a God of discord,) will make us believe that here, in this Hall, there is one man who chambers in his secret heart a purpose so accursed and so deadly. Sir, we do not believe that the Union can ever be dissolved. No ev idence shall convince us, until the deed is done; yet if such a thine be possible it shall not be our fault. We shall not be intimidated by threats of violence. We shall not shrink from the calm ex pression of our deliberate judgement. We are here as freemen ; tdspeak for freemen, and we will speak and act as becomes us, in the face of the world and of posterity. Gentlemen, who is there among us, amid all this talk of dissolu tion, that does not love the Union 1; Is there a man in this vast assemblage, who, on the coolest reflection, would not give his blood to cement it 1 Is not this our country, and is it not all our c3untryl—[Applause.] Sir, 1 confess this response gladdens my heart; and already I reproach myself that I could waver in my confidence but for a mo ment. It was a mournful spectacle to a true minded man, when threats of disunion, fierce and bitter, could draw forth shouts of applause fro& gentle men on the other side of the House, as triumphant as if disunion were glory, and as if, indeed, the threat were al ready accomplished. And yet, sir, the echo contradicts the utterance. This shout for the Union will be taken up by the masses until it becomes a per petual anthem of hope and joy. It will swell among the mountains of the north, and travel with the winds across the prairies of the West. It will reverber ate through all the vast extensions of the confederacy, and be repeated by a thousand advancing generations. Sir, in the name of the men of the north so rudely attacked: and speaking what I know to be their sentiments, I say a dissolution of the Union is, must be, shall be, impossible, as long as an Amer ican heart beats in an American bosom, or the Almighty sends His wisdom and His goodness to guide and bless us. important Decision. The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania made, a few weeks since, the following important deci sion under the new law for protecting the rights of married women. 1. The guardianship of fe males under age is terminated by marriage, and the husband, before the act of 1818, relative to the rights of married women, might call on the guardian to settle his account, and pay hint the balance ; but that act has worked a radical change in the conditio'n of married women.- 2. By the act of 18 , 18, a married woman must be considered as single, in iegard to any estate of whatever name or sort Owned by her before marriage, or which shall accrue to het during marriage, in any way ; and the husband is not entitled to the possession of his wife's funds.- 3. The consent of the wife that the husband shall have her funds, being a minor, is of no avail. VERY NAUGHTY.-The Boston Herald heard an abolitionist say, the other day, " that he wished the Lord would rain down the gun cot ton preparation on the cotton fields of the south let it dry in, and then send down a shaft of lightning to blow up the whole country to glo ry !" Hold him CASE or Dn. PArtamAN.—The Coroner's jury have returned a verdict that the remains found in the Massachusetts Medical College are parts of the body of Dr. PARKMAN, and that he was killed by Dr. Jolts W. WEnsTen. CHURCH AND STATE.—The Frankfort Com monwealth says that the Convention now having under revision the Constitution of the State of Kentucky, have inserted a clause, by a vote of 76 yeas to 17 nays, declaring preachers and min. isters of the bospel ineligible to seats m the Legislature. Dg' . MILLERISAr AND INSANITY.—The New Hampshire Asylum fdr the Insane was opened for the reception of patients, in the aututnn of 1812. The first one received Was rendered in sane by the doctrine of the end of the world in 18.13, generally called Millerism. During the seven years it has been in operation, 22 have been sent there from the same cause.--. Exeter _We tt , s Letter'. I:7-The Legislature of this State wifl meet at Harrisburg on Tuesday the Ist day of January next. ir ) .- The Editors of Easton, Allen. town, and several other places make it a rule to issue no papers on Christmas week. From the N. Y. Tribune, Slavery and the Union---Threals of Dissolution. For several years the right of the people of these States to petition their Representatives in Congi ens Was Paetically disallowed and an nulled, Co far as any portion of said people saw fit to exercise that right with any sort of rola tioif to Slavery. By the inflifence of Slavery, acting through its own Repfesentatives and upon the hopes and fears of others, this serious abridgment of a fundamental Righf wag/affect ed. The Free States remonstrated, expostula ted, and in a legal, peaceful manner resisted, but they never threatened to dissolve the Union.—At no time were those who threatened or contemplateddissolution a twentieth part of the voters of the Free State. As early as 1834-5, intrigues bolting to the annexation of Texas Co' the Slave holding end of the Union were conTmenced, and thence untire ingly pursued with crowned with complete sue cessin 1844-5. By this consumation Slavery obtained an accession of territory exceeding the entire area of the Revolutionary Stales now free and containing seven millions of people. Sla very obtained by this accession two Senators and two Representatives in Congress, with the' raw material for half a dozen future States. And it was distinctly avowed by her champion Calhoun ' then holding the commanding position of U. S. Secretary of State, that our Govern ment embarked in this Annexation crusade for the purpose of fortifying, securing and perpetu ating Human Slavery. That whatever of moral sense and enlighten ed conscience there was in the Free States should resist this perversion of our common Government to sectional and revolting ends, was inevitable. Before the self-styled " De mocracy" had been formerly involved in it by its Baltimore Convention of 1844, its journals and other authentic utterances were vehement in denouncing the project. It was characteri zed as " black as ink and bitter as hell" by a leading journal of New Hampshire which was in full cry for " Polk, Dallas and Texas" a few months afterward, and this is a fair sample of the spirit in which the plot was regarded by the Northern " Democracy." The Locofoco Mem bers of the. Massachusetts Legislature united in resolutions denouncing the Annexation project in the most unqUalified terms. In our State, the dpposition of Van Buren, Wright, Bryant, Barker and the greater portion of their leaders of "the Democracy" was equally determined and definite. Yet they bowed to the Baltimore flat, and keeping as still as possible about Tex as and Slavery, carried the State for Polk and Dallas. By Polk's influence and patronage, Anr.exation was driven through Congress, recei ving a bare majority of votes in the Senate. The Free spirit of the North was shocked, it was outraged ; but how many of us talked of dissolving the Union 1 What one State, among all which had resisted Annexation to the last grasp, now turned to Disunion as the remedy ? Next came war with Mexico—the natural fruit of Annexation. It was foreseen, foretold, deemed inevitable. " Annexation and War with Mexico are identical," was the warning seasonably uttered by Mr. Clay. Mr. Van Bu ren said substantially the same ; so did many others. Not, indeed, that War might not have been avoided after annexation, but that it would not. The spirit that impelled to the first wrong would be certain not to stop at that. The appetite for acquisition would be sharpen ed, not sated, by its first gratification. So it proved. Nothing could have tried the fidelity of Northern men of conscience to the Union more severely than this War. Having observed and resisted all the steps by which it had been reached, they felt a conviction of its atrocity and inexcusable perfidy which language can but faintly express. They resisted it, of course; but only by endeavoring to drive its authors from power; they resisted es loyal freemen; ,not as disorganizers ar factionists: 't frek in terposed no otstacle to the constitutional ac tion of the Government; they paid their taxes without resistance or scruple; no considerable, scarcely an audible fraction of them talked of dissolving the Union. Perplexed, distracted, revolting at the daily spectacle of their blood and treasure lavished in the prosecution of a war they knew to he unjust and detestable, they still clung with unabated tenacity to the ark of Nationality wherein their fathers had found peace and security. —.The scene changes. New and spacious conquests from Our feeble and disasterous foe become inevitable. The Representatives of the Free States in the House—some moved by principle, others by shame, and many by fear of their constituents--unite in a declaration that no Free Territory acquired by us shall in our hands become Slave Territory. The propriety of this was urgent, yet the notification was sea sonable. if the South did not chose to prosecute the war for the sake of Free Soil, she had, thro' the President, the effectual control of the Gov ernment, and might stop it at any time. Indeed her President need hut recall our troops within our own boundaries, and it 'would be stopped at once. The Smith chose to have the war go on. The Nation hail in former years acquired Louisiana, Florida, Texas—all upholding Sla- , very. We heard nothing about dividing then, —nothing but a double-and-twisted cheat in the pretended compromise with regard to Slavery in Texas. The South had uniformly assumed that territory whereof Slavery was the law when acquired must remain Slaveholding after its ac quisition—not a part of it but the whole. It is a poor rule that does not work at least as well for Freedom as for SlaVery. When they were asked to divide Texas in 1815 they scouted the proposition. With what face then, do they ask us to divide New Mexico and California ? But, argument failing, and strength proiing inadequate, we are now to be overborne by threats. The dissolution of the Union is open ly, hourly threatened in Congress if the Wilmot Proviso be applied to the new Tdritories— threatened by men who are eager for fight if any one calls them Disunionists. Their, fond ness for the thing seems to run parallel with their hatred of the name. What is this execrated Wilmot Proviso Simply a provision that Slavery shall not be ex tended to and established in territory where it has now no legal existence. It does not touch Slavery where it now is, or has any right to be. It simply provides that it will not diffuse itself elsewhere--shall not subject new realms to its sway. Thomas Jefferson, a slaveholder and the rep resentative of slaveholders, originated this pro viso in 1784, when it was adopted, by a Congress representing Slave States almost e)c elusively. It was then applied not Is legally Free but to Slave territory—to the territory north-West of the Ohio, ceeded by Virginia td the Confederatioh, and now forming the States of Ohio,lndiana, Illinois, Sze. Slaveholders voted that the magnificent domain should be freed from slavery forever, without suspecting that they were betraying the South or doing wrong to any one. They lived too near the days of the revolution to imagine or assert that 'slavery is the corner-stone of our political ed ifice,' or regard its perpetuation as one of the cardinal duties of our Government. What slaveholders did without a murmur with respect to Slave territory, we propose now to do with respect to Free territory. Is that aggression ? But they say they will dissolve the Union.— Who will ? The slaveholders ? They are but one-fourth of the free white voters of the slave States. Admit that these would desire to do It, will the other three-fourths let them 1 Why should the eight hundred thousand adult free men in the slave States, who own no slaves, consent to break up the Union because the two hundred thousand slaveholders are not author ized to sell or work their human chattels in Cal iforhia and New Mexico What interest have these non-slaveholders in the extension of slave ry t What good would it do them? Even if they want to become slaveholders, will such extension reduce the Price of negroes 7 Is it not urged as a measure calculated to increase that price? And if they with to remain as they are, why should they wish slavery extended 7 How is any man not a slave owner or overseer profitted by slavery that he shotifd Pouf out hie blood for it I See southern Illinois and Irma filled with poor white men who have fled from cheaper land and a more genial clime in Slave States, to settle where they can till the earth and follow the mechanic arts without being de graded by the competition of chatteli. Mark In hoa large measure the Military Bounty Lands won by the services of southern men (but rare- - ly sittehOldets) ih the Ilexican war have been located in free States, Why should these non slaveholtlers desire the extension of Slavery Rely on it, they do not. They may be inflamed and exasperated by cries that the North is Wag, gling to degrade them, deprive them of their rights, &c., nut when you come to ask them to' dissolve the Union because Slavery is not al lowed to enter the new territories, they will' think twice befote they do it. It is easy to bi deceived in this matter. The Southern Pfect is the mouth-piece of the slaVe.fiolditig aristo.; cracy ; Southern meetings are got up, officered and managed by them. Men who fancy their means of living depend on rich mm's favor may seem to join in the hurrah for disunion, but they can never mean it. They will show you so when the time comes for action. We think some Northern Members made a mistake when they suffered themselves to be bullied into reconsidering Gott's Resolution last winter. They doubtless acted as they thought for the best, but their course was an invitation to more bluster and new threats of dissolving the Union. We know it is best to avoid or al lay excitement when nothing vital is put in jeopardy by a concilitary course; but the truth must be spoken, even when it has an edge.— That resolution was true, and the judgement of, the country so atilt med. Being true and not ir relevant, it should have been stood by. Giving it up invites farther dictation. We would not pass such a resolution nor en act the Wilmot Proviso except to some practi cal end. Show us that either is needless and we waive ifs abstract soundness. Show us how Freedom is to gain and not lose by waiv ing the ProVisO, and we are ready to waive it, as we offered to last is-infer if we might thereby wrest lkiew kexico from the grasp of Texas.— But the sTav&ry propogandists do not make all this uproar for ar. abstraction. They mean to force a compromise which will surrender a pot. tion of the territories to slavery. That must be resisted at all hazards. The Union of the States. The newspapers are now so full of dis cussions in which the integrity of the Union is involved, as a question to be consi&red, that It may be well toremind the agitators who are fond of specula ting upon the probabilities of such an event, that the thing is utterly impossi ble. It might save a great deal of bold , talk and bluster if this fact were always kept in mind. So long as threats of disunion aro likely to create alarm in the public mind so long will they be resorted to for polit ical effect. But let it once be understood that such threats are idle, and that those who indulge in them are in a fair way to make themselves ridiculous—that the unity trF this Republic is a primary fact from which our whole political system takes its character and pursues its des tiny-- that the continuance of such unity postulate, not to be Fll fried about, nor requiring proof, not admitting of doubt —that any theory of disunion is as ab surd as it would be to suppose that the body of a man might be severed in two and both parties remain alive—if these things were rightly appreciated it might then follow that the public councils of the country would be relieved from much useless confusion, to the great benefit of the public business and to the promotion of the national welfare. The profound assurance which dwells in the public mind, in relation to the security of the Union, is so intimately blended with the very elements of our political beirrg, that all the efforts of all the agitators, different sections of the country, have not been able to disturb the calm serenity of that assurance or to excite alarm: Moderation and forbear ance are usually the characteristics of conscious strength, and tee doubt not that the great National Party which may be summoned in due time to put down disargemizers from whatever quarter they may tome Will be as magnanimous as it must be poWerfut: It will breathe the true spirit of the Constitution ; it will remember what is due to every por tion of the Union ; it will cherish the sentiment of national fraternity while its stern rebuke falls upon the factions that may seek to obliterate that senti ment. The question of slavery and oth- - er questions may have their proper prom inence; but the integrity of the Union, With its high supremacy, must rule par amount titer all.—Bait. ✓imerican. SENglßLE.—Several marriage notices lately sent for publications, were accom panied by requests to enter the bride grootn's names on our list of subscribers.. [Bucks Co. Intelligencer. This we call a sensible remark,- end no mistake. It is not to be expected that every young man shall Cake a paper while living in his father's house; but when he is about to forsake it and "cleave unto a wife," if he can content himself without a paper in the house, we warn all the dear ladies to be cautions, and remedy the detect in their lord's char acter as soon as possible. So. says the Pottstown Ledger. Falling in Love.—Getting knocked down with a frying pin by your sweet heart