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h' """ J. ! '.in- ( i jggMBB-ga' Hi iifrirniu. in ir' , DETT0T1D TO LITERATURE, TH1 ARTS, SCISRCR, AGRICULTURE, HEWS, POLITICS, <kG., &C. "" TEEMS?ONE DOLLAR FEE ANNUM,] "Lot it bo Instilled into the Hearts of your Children that the Liberty of the Press is the Palladium of all your Rights."? Junius. *" ' [PAYABLE EST ADVANCE. VOLUME 4?NO. 9. ABBEVILLE C. II., SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY MORNING, JCLY 4, 1850. ' WHOLE-NUMBER 165. THE INDEPENDENT PRESS a PUDLIsHlED WKF.KLY, AT. ABBKVII.I.K, C., c AT O N. E DOLL A K A YEAR, L s< HAS n circulation of nearly one thousand in Abbeville District, nnd is constantly increasing. Its circulation in this State is 11 -about fourteen hundred, and its entire list of g Kubseribers ' era over sixteen hundred. It y is tlierefor- 1 to the mercantile and busi- ], oieas community ^ernlly as tlie best nuverti*ing medium ii ci.d up-country of South Car- ? olinn. i KATES OF ADVERTISING. jl \ Bquare 3 months $ 4 00 11 1 square 0 months C 00 K 1 square 12 mouths 10 00 u 2 Squares 3 months fi 00 *2 squares C months 10 00 14 Bquares 12 months 15 00 j! 3 squares 3 months 8 00 '! 3 Bquares C months 12 00 w squares 12 months 20 00 (i 4 squares 3 months 70 OO 4 squares 6 months 15 00 4 squares 12 months 25 00 l1 6 squares 3 months -? 15 00 c squares i! mouths * 20 00 is 5 squares 12 months 30 00 g Advertisements inserted for a shorter > period than three months will be charged 75 j, rents per square (12 lines or less) for first inser- v tion and 5J71 jier square for each euntinuaiiee. ^ Anyone advertising l>\* annual or semi- ii annual contract can change his advertisement af monthly, if lie desires. jg^~ Subscribers to the paper who do not pay their subscriptions within the year will he charged $1 5U. [April 20, 1855 |1 A- -. . : pi MISCELLANY. y, ^ I oi Speech of the Hon. Howell Cobb, Jl t the nreat \fasa Afr.rfinn in. Tiii/rnnittf ? V- ' . ' ;/ u once Square, Philadelphia, to ratify the ];, nomination of Buchanan and Brcckcn- jr ridge. . ? tc Fellow Citizens : All I expect lo do lo- w night, if I can gain the hearing of lliose . ni who are near lo the stand, is to offer to l'cnn-! u; -sylvania and her democracy my heart-felt ti congratulation upon the ifttioii of the Cin- si cinnati Convention. In presenting to the V people of this country the name of your tl distinguished son, the democratic party of t\ the nation lias paid a merited compliment S Dentil tn Pi?iinavlvnnia ntwl ITmIam I A ??-- v....v. -..v. L**r i " plause.] In return, we expect at}*our hands! h one of those decisive and overwhelming ex-J p j>rcssious of public sentiiftent which will j ei exhibit to your fellow citizens throughout! r< the country that Pennsylvania throughout! n the future, as Pennsylvania throughout the i si past, remains true to the Constitution, the I h rightsfpf the States, and the integrity of the. U Union.?[Loud applause, and cries, of still i tl they come.] Fellow citizens wo have always! t< looked upon Mr. I5uchananj?s one of the! highest ornaments which onr country has ! tl ?V$IVproduced. lie presents a record which tl any Pennsylvanian, which every American c may read with pride.?Throughout this q laud, wherever tins nomination is heard, it (and it will be heard in every 'hamlet in a tl very short space of time,) ^ the name ofja Mr. Buchanan falls upon tlic car of every ) It American citizen, it will be associated in the ft minds of all with safety to the constitution, i p 1 i. il l TT..! 1 - I jiuiiw^itu <|uikl iu iuc uuiou auu conimucu j ci prosperity to the pgoplc. [Applause.] One ( a of the great eleineuU which Mr. Buchanan , tl h?s always exhibited, and which has glvcu ' h l?im strength with his coiinirymen every- fi where, has Seen the idea that whenever/the p reins of government are intrusted to his, a hands, whenever the nation shall look upon o him as her helmsman, there will pervade the c: public miud the idea of its safely, of peace, : n of quietude, and of prosperity. [Contit*! u uofl applause.]- jBut, my friends, if yon de-a sire'to forward the election of Mr. Buclian- t| an, Jvotces^Wg do, We do,] upon princi-1 c jjte whith v^ft en'dear-Jiia administration to . w the grateful rfem^jnbranoe pf hiseonrttfy, j tl whidn will injure the perpetuity of the tin-, p ion, which ivill place upon an imperisln-1 r ble basis that constitution whose provisions [ s< have been "so ably and eloquently presented ! I to you to-night, I ask you to bear in mind j I that it is not^nly your own follow ' a of 'Pennsylvania, your own fi^Biw oltgien of j ?1 Kentucky, who are to l$e elevated to those p ;liigh, distinguished offices, vfcat temcn^bor r you are'giving to" a great plntfioifcHhc* ?? o proral,and. continuance jaf your support. , t; jAetHjl, to order that you may be indncedT to. -b mfike every appeal wit,hio jour power to ti your neighbors and fri?p'?ls everywhere, and ]S on pvery occasion, allow me to call your at-ja teiiition to one or two ideas connected with'"b VtbisWresidetitial election. fHear hlm.1ie?r .ti him.) My fritsfads, when the framcrs ofottf* ti institution gjeembled and adopted that in- $ ^trupaent, tbfero were the " men ' from tb^ ^ tfdflfcgrom the South, and from cvoryjpor<>. fi ti^p'of tliiibrbad land, met together ii pufpose of or^a'nizinga government for,my- a protection a&d .^gencj^l prosperity. c When they fti?6ed th^votues to H?|ren ^ and asked its blessings on* iho I abb** In n wliidh they were ?ig^ed, tbft son's of Geor- e gift' and, or Pennsylvania knel^side by side t 4t the ittqe altar and addressed a^pdmpion t b rrreyer tothri-Bame God, nSntbusiastioap- I - plause.) TJjejbfe*Jkg$bf Heaveti^pond- 1 ? od to thosb prayenjiq theadoptlfB|P your ? federal aft ^on&t cop- I aervativea, opponents$f democratic par- 1 tion for^to Oi? %mo?^J^^^e!W?Se 1 this night in tndepjppdeoftftaqd form i another constitoticrh wiW wnol^Vnion, ,1 inel Kitr.hu onfl'fla *th?t rout f ' f A4lnUn?ft l I f Til? W ii'Wl?? lmve not the #Wf, tie Bioul, 1 * I u,' '~>V lid the spirits to form such a constitution, .1 au you entrust thorn with its preservation ? 1 No, 110 ; applause.] My friends, why is it a 0 ? Why cannot these republican leaders t nd these Know Nothing leaders assemble jc >1 your independence Ilall, and organize a ! s ;overnment similar to the one under which | ' .0 live ? Why is it they cannot unite 11 icart, body and soul with their brethren of 1 thcr sections of the Union ? [A voice: > .'iiey are all alive.) The answer is a plain I nd n civil one. These men have excited s 11 tlioir own breasts?have, aroused in the ft mnds of their country?terror, hostility, t indying hatred trough all other sections of I lie Union. The result is not merely an im- i ginary line dividing them, ;is the North t toih the South, hut they have built up a \ rail of fire, which will burn those who at- 1 :mpt on either Bide to approach those c 11 the other side. [Hear, hear. Ap- c lause.] Carry that feeling into such a s onventiou as we have supposed, the result \ i, after labor, deliberation, and ellbrt, the r outh would retire, tp, her section and the fl forth to hers. Is it not true of the Black c Republicans ? Is it not true of the Know a ouiings* mere w but one- oilier parly t ) lite Union. The .dense mass of people ambled here have met together to offer s leir congratulations one to the other at a d oiniuation which that oilier party has made, c lear, hear. Applause.] What of the t ie.ture at this moment presented before li 3U ? An immense multitude of men bom a i the soil of the North, and under the in- d itutioiiR of the North, and edueated in all v ic prejudices of the North, standing here ' stoning to the humble voice of one born v i a distant State, u|>on another soil, educa- p :d under different institutions, and imbued t itIi different prejudices. But you, the Li inltitude and your liumblo speaker, stand I' pon one common platform?the consti- c jtiok ok our country, which must and s .all lw? ..?.1 rT.,? -1 Tl'l ..... |..vuvi *W* | XIWIIILIIUUIIS UUCCI M 11 V by is it so ??My friends, Tt arises from ' ic fact llmt there is a bond of union be- n veen yon and the people of your own 0 tale and the democracy of my own State P hieli is stronger than the chord which ' olds men together other than these.?All c arties tell you the Union must he prescrv- j 1 J. f'A voice : Yes, that's so.] The black 11 ^publicans will announce that the Union- -i lust be ])reserved ; the kriow.nothings will s ly the Union must b'6 preserved?but.s ow ? how ??Our fathcrp; wlio framed tbis't 'nion, when they adopted our constituti<S#'|' ley did not sit with armed sentinels to pro-' 1 set them iif their deliberations. j1 "When they sent this constitution out to ! * ic people, no armed soldiery marched '1 irough your streets and "'thronged your ? enmtry, commanding obedience to its re- j.t uirements, but on the hearts of our fathers I , was formed, upon your own soil, and by j c ic hearts of j'our fathers it was welcomed j s nd received throughout the breadth and j f ngth of the land. The same heart which jrmed the constitution is neccssary for i'.a |' rotection and preservation. If you and I j 5 an feel towards each other as your fathers nd my fathers feit?if I can clasp you by . J Ise hand and feel thy warm vol'urn of friend-U ; aud brotherly intercourse, then, my,' iends, the days of our constitution will be j erpetuatcd, and the days-of our Union ji re rendered forever permanent in the hearts ( c f the people. [Applause.] But whenev-: c r von Riinnnti* vnnp 1-- ' w ? II J? laintnined and your Union preserved byis lerc physical power?l?y armed soldiers') nd sentinels stationed torgfrftrd and watch \ I people in any portion or section of the :s Difotry, you htiv&>'fallen into a blunder! rhich may result in the utter ruin of all c liat is near and dear to the hearts of the ' eople.?My friends, we must live as breth- ' en, or we must part. [A voice: ''That's 1 o,1'] There is no other alternative. When $ place roy foot on tho soil of Pennsylvania, ? must feel that I am in tho midst pf friends t nd brethren, [applause,] and when you > ball pa& into Georgia the same feeling must ; ] grvade your heAfts. Tell me, can ?* black j1 eoublican travel betffcnrt th<? lintttc t\f- w?a-! wt(i section, and feel that he is entitled to j ] he friendship, to the cordial welcome, of liis! i rethren or fellow citizens of another por- J ion of the repuUjc ? [5fc>! nol' iipplftuse.] < fy-frigpda^ in llie content wlileH wo are' 1 cogagefiHlow me tq raise oqe word J T wllrpin^to your ear*. Theqninoiples of -i liO demboratic'pnrty, baylMfvtlieTi%/<>Utjdaioft in^e minds of tSe people, approved t I'c^uuKMicufcPrPHMCMuiwq- Pj uio country, ! rftf nSwVi|, will meet on4#e fwfii, no open 1 f av^ipd^netpy of those priaripke. Now,* lafce'tbe prediction. " Tii^ repuhii- t ans and knot? nt^hingtf^wHhgo into this t onte?t, and from tbo beginning to tlio efid t boy will to draw off the public' I nijid from tbe real issues involved iu the lection?outside issue# which may ad dross benfcdv* to tltf)pasiieps ot prejudices . of ' be one'or tlve >o?sjr'se<!tiooof the coup try. J ^et ib?m co<#4?d ftfatod before tW&afrople, ! ' {ifeaentjtiw cori^itution "ind tho rtpnts it | riuuranties to tfrft oeoole of GeorciA. anH i ffi-tEffplo a cj^evefy other sectiett ofNhe ' Ifflorr. W^.i meet mo Oir 1Mb ques- 1 it u J?rfcihat great doctrine gbicli y**? won*oy tne'blSatf of our revolu- 1 ioi?wy fathers?the ri^bX of. the people W j ?lf-go*9rnrdw?t. I st*r?6 here to def^d j he people <^Ket^Va And ttofe people of * /".v" j-- ? * iny other Territory, as I would defend the >eopleof Pennsylvania and of Georgia from my and every body who would seek to inerfere with the' organization of their gov rnment upon such principles as they thein<?lves may desire to establish. [Applause.] Will.the black republicans and know 110hings meet mo upon the issue ? [No, no, 10.] No, my friends,' they will not. [A roicc : We arc to finall for them.] You enow the principle $; they commend tliem;elves to your heart; but when these prinsiples are addressed to the people?when he judgment of the people is invoked to lass on the groat questions, instead of rneclfi,? 1.1 ?- 1 - ug uiu loauu C40 IIIUJ 111 UU, out ns hey dare not do, [(jlood,] a know nothing vill gut up, and he will become terribly lorrilied at the idea that either an Irishman >r a Catholic is about to takeaway the libsrties of the country.?[Applause, and houts of that's so. J 'J'he black republican vill rise up nnd present to you the most toriblo picturo of men shot down in cold blood md slaughtered in Kansas, and every one >f them stays killed until after the election, md then they mysteriously revive. [Laugher.] Those and other such questions are pre ented to 3*011, my friends, not only as a lomocrat, as a Georgian, and as an A'fneri nn, uui tia it jiairiui, hs a man who lives in liis Union, who loves this constitution, who ms devoted to the protection of tiie one nd the preservation of the other the better lays of younger mauhood. 1 appeal to on this night; he not led oft' hy these false isnes ; stand upon the noble principles rliich your party hag established as the ilatforin upon which they intend to conduct lie issue, and let know nothings howl aiout Irishmen and Catholics; let black reniblicans republish and reprint their false lair.or about the violation of law in Kanas. I give to-night, to one and all of them, lie same answer which I trust you will give rhen they '"ill upon yon to join in iudfglation meetings to raise shouts and huzzahs ver'these outside issues. There is one reily, my friends. It is not mine; it is yours; t is the reply which the fathers of ihe revilutiou prepared for you in Independence lull?let the constitution and the law be; naintained and preserved. [Applause.] I, ,s a southern man, will stand by the contitution ; you and Pennsylvanians will land by the constitution and all laws passid in pursuance thereof ; and if the constiutmn and tile taws bear upon me and my : ireju dices, with the fortitude of a true pa-1 riot, with a heart that loves niv country, I vill say to mere sectional prejudices that ise up in my breast, "Get thee behind me, iatan." I stand firm for theconslitution and lie Union. [Applause.] The speaker proceeded to urge, in a for-1 ;ible manner, the duty of persons in Kan-1 as to abide by the decisions of constituted' mtborities of the country. lie then addressed himself to any know lothing friends who might be present, hough it appeared very much like "shoot!'.g at a dead duck." Why, he asked, have *ou abandoned your passwords and distharged your sentinels ? Why were they ight last year and wrong now ? How could Mr. Filmore?having sworn, f appointed, to remove every lioinan Cath>lic and to select none for office?take an >atlkto support the constitution, one clause >f which provides. that no religious t3>?l hall be required ? How could lie'disharge lis duty and save bis conscience free from 10th oaths?jP To prevent his takini? the cconil oath was tho only mode. If there atirs in your vein#, he added, >ne particle of revolutionary blood?if th^re emains ongS&ininant of devotion to the ncmory of tue Father of his Country?if bere is room in your soul upon which tho institution of the republic can plant one ingle foot-hold. I beg and entreat, you, Bis night, to abandon not only your lives ind obligations, but the unconstitutional principles which they enjoin.?Return frotb lie path Which you have strayed. If .a democrat, I appeal to you by al) 70ur past, associations, by tho brilliant triluiphs at your part)'. If whigs, I appeal o y&u by sitifilar reOoHectionp. Be lernocratsor whiga you can Biid'nothingtiU ] tie lnjtory of your p^rty to justify tlriffvioatiori of the aaercd principles and provisons of the constitution. In regard to-bla^jk republicans, he said hat if i?ny one believed oijr constitution ind Union strong enough to remain four /ears under the administration of William 3. Seward, or one of eHftjlar principles? in administration based upon antagonism o every principle of justice and equality inder the constitution-?iet thai man supinrt lliom " :A RArLROAB Founduko.?-Tbo George Law brought home on Friday, from Aspin?all, a fery extritoqjHnary passenger, about ifteen months old; found amid the wreck indmins cj?it?d by the Utejrailroad calatnty there, father and tqotfier and relatives ill ktlldfcl, and 119 one knew the littlerfo?nd' iog's i?m? or nation, ffftMh' howe*ir, if luppoaftd to bfrFrendjj. innocent wis Peeked up unhwrt-nmid tH&slain and maunad, in uqoonsoiotM ignorance of t?e awful Jisaslfir. CoL Totten sent it to Now York, in eare* ofc the stewardess # th??' Gobrge Law, end itb?comea-*?.fit?kn0wv4ty>et of shanty We,?Jfev YorJk~tfgmf, | . t \ The Song of the Locomotive. Beware I beware! fori come ill my might, With a scream and a scowl of scorn; With a spend like the mountain eagle's flight, AVhcn he ride? the breeze of morn. Avaunt I avaunt! for I heed you not, Nor pause for the cry of pain ; I rejoice over the slaughter my wheels have wrought, '' Aud 1 laugh Attho mangled slain. Away?away?o'er volley and plain 1 sweep with a voice of wrath ; In a fleecy clould I wrap my truin, As I tread inV iron path. My bowels are lire and luy arm is steel, My breath is a rolling cloud ; And my voice peels out as I onward wheel, Like tho thunder rolling loud. All dny, oil day, do my sinews piny, When my sun's bright rays arc cast; At the midnight hour I fly 011 my way, Like a death-fiend howling past. I bear the wealth of a thousand climes, The pearls of tho briny sea, The produce of lands wchrc the church bell chimes, And the gold of the dark CafTrceI roar on the beach of the roaring deep, Where the sea-shells touch my wheel?, Through the desert land with a howl I sweep, A ..,1 ?11 I 4. unu JVIUMW 1IH1 VCITJl Ut'lUS. I speed through the" city's busy streets, Where tlie thronging crowds ore found, Who fly at the sound of.lny iron feet, Like the hure at the baying hond. I traverse the regions of burning heat; 'flic Equator hears my scream; And I breathe the 6ilenoc of winter's retreat, Where the glittering snow fields gleam. The wild beasts fly when mj* voice they hear Through the soundiug forest ring, And the sous of men stan<|. mute with fear ; Of earth I nm the king. Franco and 33ncrlatid. * r" ^ A hto. Londou- paper thus enumerates the advantages winch France has gained by the late war with*Russia : "France lias no reason to regret the inevitable sacrifices which the war with Rusbia has cost her. The grandeur, we may even say the preponderance, of the political part which she has been called on to perform for the last two years in the councils of Europe, and the fresh glory which has adorned her flag,' wjmbmply coinpen1... #"a.. ?1.~ Jjf il. - -- ml"; 9<IIU IICI IUI LUC ui uiu war. 1 lieeffective strength of the French mercantile marine has considerably increased; the French flag lias been everywhere seen, not only in the MediteirflD^m, but nlso in the Black Sea. ftP.d it hps visited parts where, for rcruiy years past, it lias almost ceased to appear. These relations* are destined to' survive the events which gave birth to them. Several French establishments have since the war, been formed in the principal ports of the Black Sea, where they will remain. Such are the advantages which France will derive from the war, and "they may well be placed in'thc scale against the prico which they have cost her." To these maybe added another?and-by no means an unimportant one. The war has produced-ft unity and harmony of feeling among the people, and lias checked, foiv'ttie time, at least, any tendency towards a revolution. It has been the means of establishing Napoleon moro firmly on the throne of" Fraijqe. What England has gained bjtthffwar, is a question moro difficult to rp? The Cultivation or Cotton.?The Circulars recently issued by the Commissioner of Patents, have elicited interesting information in reference to the .growth and culture of the cotton plant. We make further extracts on this subject of letters received from the United States consuls residing at Zante, Ionian Islands, and Mahon, Baliaur Islands : "Only one quality of cottoir'is cultivated at Zante, andcthe same may be raid or all the Ionian Iqjand*. The culture of cotton fc not at all regarded here worth consideration on account^f' the scarcity of soil. T(ie is1 1 '-.irl.ll -1 -1 ?!*l i IOIIU 10 miuuiillivr pittl|.?U Willi ourrani, Vfioe nntl olixe. groves^ These are tlio principal articleslof productions of these islands,, to which the inhabitants detdfe their wliolfe (imp. The cotton fi^re wanted for the annual aibnply of these placcs ^.imported" from EifglandA The letted frojn MahonnHn'sr, "I have the. honor to acknowledger the.; receipt of your circulac of February 20!h last, in answer to whicl*,"tmu?t say that no cotton is cultivated ia the Baftaur Islands. A eptton manufacture of fifty horsepower/ is Workington the Island of Majoriea, ana another, offoue hundred-horse power, will work. in;4bia place next year. 4fbe huildmg8 are altafifcdy comq&uoed. The cotton used at Majdtrica is UxPNew Gfl?aqP^ nud .jba same quality vfrlll be deed atJi&bon." v .?^r?? piutp 6Y A" V?TERAJr^-Phill^8t#Ot>^ a naff&v?? Virginia, asid'a TievoTtftiott# soldieiy died in Arlttoasaa om tb? 99 in th? JOftth year* ok hi* tap. He 4fe8-*Wo **oMvfa*to mrt+kb?tMWag*k%*0h '* '* '* w i M Conspiracy to Assassinate the Queen of Spain. The Madrid journals of the 4th, report that considerable sensation had been caused by the discovery of a conspiracy to assassinate the Queen. The following are some details of the affair given by The Diario: "A man named Rendondo Mornuw nr ganized .1 secret society three montfis ago, and a young carpenter was drawn into it. It having been resolved to kill tho Queen, this young man was designated by lot to do the deed, and lie was told that if he fired on her Majesty, a sum of 2000 piasters should he given to him, and that if he failed to do so ho should be certainly put to death" by ltife fellow conspirators. On the 28th ult., at the moment at which the carriage of tbj^ Princess of Asturins approached the Galh del A renal, a young man named Fuentcs drow a pistol from his pocket, a police agent seized his arm and prevented him frojpi discharging the weapon. On being interrogated, he made known the Piinfc nltnva riilatnil J?tjf ) ?? liendondo Marqticz went to tlic place, on pretext of making revelations representing the conspiracy. No arms have been fo;.tul in uny house of the Calli del Arenal. Marqticz is a native of Almadencios, in (he province of Cuidad Ileal. His political opinions have always been Carlist. He is a bold enterprising man', and has been imprisoned for forgery." The following are some details of the affair given by the Nacion : "The military precautions which were taken 011 the 2Gth ult., 011 the occasion of the visit of the Queen to the Theatre del Principe, and which have given rise to a good deal of conversation, "were,, it appears, caused l>v tlio discovery of a plot to destroy the Queen in the Calli del Arenal, near the Calli de la Duda, as Iter Majesty was returning from tho theatre. The Government received the information on the previous day by means of an anonymous letter sent tlirough the post. Some suggestions were given in it for baffling the conspiracy. The Government afterwards learned that another attempt was to bo made on tho 20th, and it took some new precautions. What is curious is, that, the, auonymous letter was written by the very man who was to have fired on the Queen with a pistol. Tie is a youncr married workman, named Fnenfoa. It results from his declarations, and from those of other persons who have been arrested, and who, like him, belong to the lower class,'that the chief of the conspiracy was an officer of the National Guard, named Rcndoudo Marquez, well known ill the capital. This man has hitherto escnped capture, though it is said that he is secreted at Madrid. Among his papers were found writtern permissions to enter the place and speak to the Queen. He, it appears, obtained them by pretending that ho was in a position to make disclosure^ respecting dark plots against the Queen. ?' j Massachusetts Against Sooth Carolina. Washington, Juiie 21. Mr. Rurlingame, of Massachusetts, do Tended Massachusetts against general nnd specific charges, claiming that in alt ttytt constitutes true greatness she is the firsk State in the Union, nnd that her present performances are superior to her pa9t patriotic recollections. He was sorry to fiud at the hea?f!*of the list, of her assailants the President of the* United States, who had deliberately perverted history to eulogize the^South at the expense of the North, and wlio had become tqg^chiefuiin pf SCCtionalUm Uoc..?t,..onltc k..l: 1" O'J.t otu? iunaoavnuociu) UUIIUYCU, ulUl OUUU1 Caroling the Fugitivo'Slavc luw unconstitutional* Mr. J^citt, of South Carolina, here asked Mr. Burlingame for his authomy relative to South Carolina. . ^ Mr. BUrlingamt, to prove his statement, cited the remarks of the Charleston ^ermixj, which spoke of the fugitive slave law air S* &' infringement of one of the most cberhed principles* of tho Constitution. In conclusion, he referred to Mr. Sumner's speech?to the purity and nobleness of its sentiments, mid to the severity of its strictures against tyrannj'. lie said Mr.Sumoer never bKd a personal enemy. Hia. character was as pure as the snow which falls upon iris native hills, and his heart was ever <H[erflowing with kindness for every human boingbearing tho uprigflfc rform of a map, Jje.was anjfjfcomplisliedsohBlarand acjiiv*$lfic gentleman. A member of the Honse who Jpd tgketf an onth to Arrinbrt tbe Cori4 "stitution stole info tl?e Sertata and smote titfo as Cain did bis brother. T;'' " Mr. Keitt?It ru??Jse. (Sensation.) w Mr. Burlingamo replied, h? woiild not bandy epithets. He was ratoonsiWe for bis own language,only, and;doywfess the gentleman rwas responsible his. v & Mr. Keitt.?IrSilk. ? "' "" ' Mr. Btnrlingame, iAer describing afiij severely condemning tbe assault upon. Mr. burner, you mat uuwfnty f LrwkawtiWbOronpf did you get authority g>'r izr |f we art ridt to have freedom of '-etogcb, Avbat H' ail this government worthy If ire are to* be called to acootfnC by?ome "galkfl^nj^hfew" of somelfcpllant tmoJc^ for-soyifl^fiOiuetbtog which (Iocs not the honor# are equal and en*y, we jjwf* \q I know it. Tho time may come when Massachusetts may withdraw her representatives to her own bosom, when safety cannot be fouud for them under the flft'g of our common country. But while her representatives are here, they will speak how ?fid when they will, uncaring for the consequences, and if they are pressed too long and too far they will not shrink from defending tho honor of the commonwealth of Massachusetts nnd the freedom of speech." Mr. Keitt now sought the floor, but it was i?aiuuu iu mi* viiiiiiV) wuy rt'iusca 10 yield it. Mr. Kuitt gave notice that ho sliouh^jm" Monday'i cplyn.t0 60me of the points of Mr. Burlingame's speech. "Pop goes the Weasel," has become the chorus of a thousand snatches of song, hut not ono of a thousand who sing it ever heard its origin. But its parentage is as easily traced as that of an English baronet. A famous Methodist preacher by the name of Craven, was once preaching in the heart of Virginia, and spoke as follows :?"Here are a great many professors of roligion here to-day. You are sleak, fat, good-looking, yet something is the matter Vvith you. Now yvu iiiivu nt-cii wiiciii which was plump, round and good-looking to the eye, but when you weighed it, you found that it only came to fortv-five or perhaps forty-eight pounds to the bushel, when it should havo iicen sixty or sixty-three pounds. Talce a kernel of that whrnt bit ween your thumb and finger, hold it up, squeeze it, and?:Pop- ** goes the weevil. Now, you good-lootihg professors of religion, you are plump and round, but you only weigh some forty-five or forty-six pounds to the man. What is the matter ? Ah ! when you are taken between the thumb of the law and the finger of the gospel, held up to the light and squeezed, out pops tbe whiskey bottle.'* From "pop goes the weevil" to "pop goea the weasel" the transition is easy. ? ^ i m Kansas Emiguants.?Yesterday morning, a party of about fifty emigrants from" Massachusetts, armed and eouinned to "shoot the gospel at every creature," bound for Kansas, arrived in this city and proceeded, in the afternoon, in a body, to the Erio railroad station, foot of Duaue street, take the cars in Jersey City for the We&t. On arriving at Jersey City, in the ferry boat Philadelphia, they proceeded tqutflke. their baggage to the cars, which consisted of rifles, pistols arid ^egring appat$b irtftfe-V. > vious to the starting of the' 4^ o\-lock$^ib,; some of the party expresscd^their.nnwilling; I ness to go any farther, A&.it wq? >.u&^68a. ! This created a great deal of ovxi^enoent j among the party, and a fijjjht was expected, but by the timely arrival of the polieS*force,' pence was soon restored, and twenty-three | or UK* Kansas emigrants lett tor INew York, I in n body, to start for home this morning. . | Their expenses had been paid by the ^Hart* [ ford Convention" Boston Aid Society Sot | the destruction of the Union, buttbeir courage failed them, or else, on a sober second thought, they discovered what confounded fools they were to go to Kansas to. com>~ mence au aggressive war on the South, and ' ?to drive their brethren out ofa torHtbfy which belongs equally to all. " * New York Da.y BookN The Bride.?I Know of no sight, fflor$charming and touching than of a youtf^" and timid bride, in her robes of virgin ' white led up to the "Wtar. When I tfauis behold a lovely girl in ibo tenderness of fcer years forsake the boose of her fatber and the home of her childhood?flpd tbe'jfttj,, plicft confidence and the self-abandoniBfent, which5 belong to woman', g7v???up all "tho?' world for a man of her cht>jc?, I bear ber, in the good old language^ the ritu^Jj. yielding herself to him "forb$tter/or woreei;* f&f richer, for pq^rer, s|tkn<$$ and ta^ health, ^to love, honor*and ofey, . till deaths us do part," it brirtj^to the mind"theJ^Hi' tiful and affecting devotfon of' Ryjh :? "Whither thou ^oest I wtll go, jind whfira- * uiou loageai i win louge?my;people shall) be my people, and thy Oqd my God" * ^ Wj&hinglon Irving: ^ A Roman silver coin has been exhibited* at Washington, coined aa early as 4jy;fe. 30 1 OA-one side it bears tie ins^TrptiorJ*., ,,Tiberius^raperator,,' around the robed R*a<fi'. of the Ijjmperor Tiberius, on tO* throne whcSfV was eoindd; - a very mnk^ jma disfi?iipfc copntenanoe, .indeed, (5ivthd otlir-. t>r fiirlA it fipars ? ifeMuu) fie lira r>F m &> ??]** fseated)-re6t?ncr odo band on a lanea4taj??S-' log oT tbe g. ou?dV^pd bearing rtie otboi'band. -''jv ^ ; % % ^^AtE^VnoM. KxirsA8.^Ckn*gp, Jflft& T&?Se*$n<y-&W?rtefr ;Jg^* KmiHax. 250 Wiwonriaos were enc^jpwid; tbree miles ^^^jawrence^ on the twhk ?Lepveivworth bad reoewed tibe_ notW ' Zm *That it ia not %**imt$r ?k hmj int*?t*!>fi i* Wrf* tte pfijy^ifHgr^ vjfWffi 4 % -v