. jr : vjg i fifTff Ifi' fifW Tir fffr lir ; fii rflir sr rii 'is UNION.. THE CONSTITUTION , AND THE LAtS THE GUARDIANS OF OUR LIBERTY, ;,Voi. xxxvii., niLLSBOROUGn, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 21, 1858. No. 1936. 'To Mule' Raisers, Jack Simon Pure, will (land the entiling seaeon, and Include th Fall wbhmi, it bis (table, seven mile norlh of HilUborough. I do not intend to aend bint any where el. Price fur inaurance five tlollara each, the money due when the fact ia aacertained, or the property changed. ' All possible care will be taken to prevent accident, but no responsibility for an; that may happen, s. .. '.i ,. .; -- u.-.-f. .t '.s.v. DESCRIPTION. Simon Pure will be tit year old in June; ia a aura foal-getter, and U aire'lo some aa good cult aa any other Jack. lie I very near fourteen hand high, and of excellent form. I have the cortiri' cute of John A. Vine, the gentleman of whom I obtained tb Jack, who saya be ia fron. as fine family of Jarka a any in Hie eastern part of the state,, Hi dam waa tbe largest Jenny I ever saw, tod aa black aa crow. TV KB 11. RAT. t March 16. ... - . 31 p CAROLINA BLACK HAWK. rpHE'Seasnn eommenred the lOlh of March, end wilt enU I he 101 n ol June. ,u, Ttrtus 30, if psid in the season, 35, if not paid wilbin tbe seaeon. f ' ' $40, if paid within the aeaaon, with privi lege of bav'ng tbe mare served the neat season, if she prove Dot to pa in lual. Une dollar to the groom. CAIN & STtt I'D WICK. March 16. St 2m "::;ittBGENT;:.v,: rTlHI8 thoroughbred Bullion end Race Horse, to which wa awarded the tret f rtraiura at the first SlaU fair, will stand at Hillsborough tbe present season. which will eoaimsnce the XOib dsy of March and end tbe JOib day of June, end will render service at the tow price of 10 dollars the season, due at the end of the sea son. Fifty cents to bis skillful groom ia aH ease. , . A. W. llEOGPETII. March 8. ... , 30 3w New Fall and Winter Goods. 'IHE suhsciibers era now receiving from New York su entire stock of New Goods, embracing a general variety af all kinds of goods usually kept in tins mar kt, consisting of . ... r :, , j rrlnlw, Alpaca, i:ngilti and Frencli Sicrluoen, BhawN, Ilankeriblef " ' ' and ItonurfM, Cloths, Cassimeres and Vestings, Hardware, Glass and Qucensware, BOOTS At SHOES. GROCERIES, eod many other articles not nerennry to attention, wbirh bsve been boogbl in New York very low, en tirely kr cssb ; all of which will be offered to cash buyers er punctaat dealera at small profits. 1 We ssy to one and all, eom and sea , we will lake great pleasure in showing mr goads if we do not self. dT All kinds of Country Produce takss in ei change fur Uood. W.F.tT. J. STRAYIIORN. October II. 10 CHOICE CALF 8KIN8, Shoe Thread and Shoe Asils, by ' i.C. TLRRENTIXE L SOS. Derembsrl. , 17 RAGS! RAGS 1 ! ! RAGS lit UAUd WANTED, hy ... . i. f. TLRRENTIXE & SON. Nereml.r SS. , ,.;., . .... 17 ; READY-MADE CLOTHING. I 1 1 AVI.N'O made thia diitioct branch af trade, we devote particuUt euention to it, and keeping t laiga stock of all kinds of Over Coats, ' Bueineet Costs, illsck Frock Coats. Vests and Fanu, we ate enabled generally to fit and please those who favor us with a call. We shsll keep our stock renewed from ?uue to lime. Call end eismine it. J. C. TURKKXT1NE Si SON. October SI. It R I 0 LU K Ei pressly lot Skirts, Embroidered tUtins; alao, IJrase and . Wbelcbone) IJoope. and Elaslie liella, by . J.C.TCRRENTIXEtSON. September 16. 06 TOW CLOTH! n OW CLOTH WANTED, by A J.C.TUKRE.NTINE&SOX. September 16.' 06 India Rubber Goods. (MtHBCK IIKKWI.NU CUMUS. ft4 KuW Fine Combe, RuUer Pocket Combe, , Kubher Mound Comb. Rubber Hid Com he, Rubber Puff Comhe, Rubber Hair Pine. Also, Bonnet Combe, new end eieellenl - article, at - J. C. TURREN TINE St SOX'S. July IS. . 7 YBAT POWDERS, Bell'a Jarssperilla, best, IMineidsa) Mcknspps, Col.aw assorcrd, at J. C. Tt'RKENTIXE Si SON'S. July 14. J- Mi)ii;s' iii;tiu:at. MRS. BYRNES. FEMALE PUYSICIAN . 166 Tbseipaon, near Blcecker street. New York, ATTENDS ferrule during their confinement, and trrsu all dii peculiar In her sel. the ha enmmo li'iuv rnnrai for tb scromm'"latian of her pa Irons, and a pvient apparataa to aaait nature. A male pill, a sale and "ore remedy lor all otMtnwtiona, sent mail with full direction on rcei4 of 1. Khe bs sl a sure remedy fr Pilea, and valuable invigo rating cer.ii.L Janeary 6. tl ly NOTICE. ft AVINfl al the late term of Orana County Court, qualified a Eierulora of the last will and testa anent f William Cain, dornsed, notice Is hereby giran t all person owing aaal estate to rem forward J mIi oMni.and Iheee bavin claims atsinst It must present the same, properly authenticated, within the time presenlied by law, ele thin notrre will b plead ed In bar thereof. 'Phi 4tli December, I6R7. JAMES F. CAIN. ? r,.,t TODR.CALUVELL.$'x, DeeaaWV. U Jm M d 'A Change "in' Business - THE DRUG STORE, formerly owned by Dr. JA8. F. CAIN, will hereafter be continued by J. C. WEBB A. C(i aiha htn ha atru .IL..i: k..i- ness, and moderate prices, to merit a liberal share of iu puujic psuonange. ; January 87. ' 84 DRUG STORE . T C WEBB dr. COH will keep eonatanUy on hand, atompletaaaiortmentof . , , . Drugs, Medicines, Paints, "Oils, DjeStuHa, Varnishes, Ptriumerjr, Stationerj, s Gran and Garden Seed. Aromatic, Vinegar, Pure Liquors, &c. Ac. snd all other article in their line of business, and with the BUecial dasien of kseninir nnlw trp mini ttwilmlsik Tbey hope, by closo attention and moderate prices, to ucitt nu irwive me pmironage oi ine puulic. January 87. - Si Vinegar! Vinegar! It'ST RECEIVED AT THE DRUG STORE ONE BARREL BEST CIDER VINEGAR. . J. C. WEBB & CO. January 87. !. : . -84 Just Received at the Drug Store. O DOZEN PAPERS CORN STARCH, 1J doisn bottle I uk,asortd, , 1 doun Bell Cologne, quart and pints, I dozen Helmbold'a Eitract Buchu, , 1 groa Burdott'a Worm Candy, 5 lb, lerg Hpunge, 6 dozen Prof. Wood's Hair Restorative. 3 doxen fine Salad Oil, . 78 lbs. Durfcee's Potssb, for Suape, " 1 box PsarlSUrch, 1 doien Batcbelor' Hair Dye, 8 dozen Baleman'a Drop, I dozen Maccasvar Oil, I doxen Mitchell' Eye8ale, 6 gross Steel Pen, assorted. Jsnuary 8U. , 83- TOBACCO AND CIGARS. BOXES PINE CHEWING TOBACCO. 3,000 Extra Fin Cigare, just received and for vale at tbe . DRUG STORE. . S3 January 30. ' BARRELS FOR SALE. VI.OT of Barrel end Iron-Boond Caakajuat te ceived and for sale at tbe DRUG STOKK. December 23. SO Cheap Cookin Wines and Brandy. 1 A LAG A WINKS. it SWEET WINE8. PRE-NCH BRANDT, forealeatlho DRUGSTORE. December 33. 80 For Coughs and Colds. LEMON Ul'M DKOPS, Vanilla Gum Drop. - . - Oiange Gum Drops, Kose Gum Drepe, , Also Compound 8yrup Tolu, just received at tbe DRUG STORE, I XA VOItlX. r.ITK AC IX. Orsnge, Lemon, Vcnills, Peach, Celery Parsley, dee. Foraateattbe DRU0 STORE. Focket Knives. LOT of extra fine Pocket Knives, just received .A and for sale al tbe DRUG STORE. GRASS SEEDS. ORCHARD GRASS, Itaeda tiraas. Lucerne, Clover, -Timothy, Kentucky Dlue Grass, lust received and for aal at the .,. Wills U OlUllCn December 16. It Notice to Smiths and Farmer. THE subscriber, as tbe egenl of the King's Maun r.n ;u .ii ..- . or upwards of Iron at cent per pound, eeiA. The money must inrviailg be paid on delivery, or the charge will be 7 cents and in no esse will I sell lea man a ion tor less man i cents. . P. 0. RUFFIN. Oeioe r 14. ID- March It. 71 Fire and Life Insurance. IS your Property in.uied t 4 la vniir Life insured t la your Negro Inaured 1 ' If not, e-ll npon the subscriber, who Is Agent far the Ureensborougb Coinpauies. T 1IUMAS EIJU. Jaooary 6. SI Aw .FOR SALE. A LOT ia the town of Graham, immedialely in fron m of the Court House, on Houth ntreet, Iving be tween tbe (tore house of M'I.ean sV llanner and Al bright A Dixon. Ttrmato sail the rurrhieer. THOMAS WEBn. January 89. 83 HOUSE and LOT for Sale. 1 offer for eele, sn aeeommmlsling lerma, that desirable Houre and lt on ticen Street, now occupied by Ml i asbmglon. TIIO.MAS WEnD. October SO. 61 A CARD. 1 1 A V I. NU located in Chapel Kill.reapectfully oAVr hie proleaaional service lo tbsciiisenaof the town and aurrnunding country. Iteean produce aaliafactory teitimnnialsulhiaaiill in Hi profession. His office teal Dr.Moore'. Whenieqiitd,fml lie will be watted en at their residence. Charge are a aenable. . w j. . . i err Dr. R.will be in Hillsborough the fourth week n'eech month, slo Superior Court wetks,md efteoet (without extra t barge) if requested. Angusl 13. a 61 1 " May your rich aoil, Exuberant, natures'! better blessings pour , O'er every land." t From the Cermantown Telegraph. AN OLD FARMER'S EXPERIENCE TO NEW ..:,..;-, BEGINNERS. ;,,....-,,,. , Particularly tuck at lunt but Httlt to btqin in lit world with. . :,, In the first place, spare no pains to estab lish for yourselves a good character fur hon esty, punctuality, industry and economj. If a man's credit is good and he is in want of the loan of a few dollars, to carry on his busi ness to a better advantage, he can readily get it; but if otherwise, the lender will keep his money, and the borrower may do as he can. Never make a positive promise to par money. or do anything else on a certain day, without some proviso. Use all endeavors to meet every engagement punctually at the time. Avoia as mucn as poseiuie an jarring and differences with others; if they do arise, compromise the matter, even at some sacri fice, if it can be done ; if not, leave it to a reference, and there let it end. Re particu larly careful to guard against beinz concern ed in law suits ; in must cases it is better to give up the claim than go to law about it It is easy to get into the law, but oftentimes very hard and expensive to get out of it. If your capital is small, begin business on a moderate scale, and as your gains and ex perince increase, your business may also be increased. Let speculating very much alone, and be contented with the slower but more certain profits of regular business. Avoid entirelv all visionary sepeculative schemes, that, like the mom multicaulis, hold out a prospect of rapid accumulations, and making an independent fortune in a short time. But seethe result; all a piece of deception, at tended with the loss of much money and trouble. If the business is farming, hare your work so arranged as tu change from one thing to another arlittle as possible in the same day ; do one thing at a time, and that before begin ning another; and always remember, that if a thing ia worth doing at all it is worth doing well. LH there be no hurrying and driving of hired help, to get as much work as possi ble oat of them in a day, nor pinch them down to work for less than common wages J there is nothing gained by it but the name of a close fisted hard master, and perhaps a little addition of ill-will. Star at home, and see to the work Your selves, that it is done properly and in the right time. Deal fairly, and pay in cash or short credits ; settle with all those vou deal with at least once in every year. Keep fair accounts of debt and credit, so that you may know at any time now your anairs are going on. If rou borrow snvtliins of vour neighbor. be careful that it be not injured, and return J it as soon as you are done with it, and make the samo terms with them when they bor row. He accommodating, for it costs but little, remembering that you mar yourselves be placed in dimcuiry. Have a plare to put all your tools and im plements, in the day, when not in use, and then you will know where they are, when wanted to use asain. How often do we see (ilows, harrows, &c, left in the corner of the ence where they were last nsed. A man will never make a poor farm rich with but little money, unless these small matters are attended to. If there should be any new fangled project got np, and there is hardly a year passes wunoui, ior me purpose oi improving latiu, or making money faster and easier ; if you are disposed to try them at all, do it on a small scale, and then if it should prove blank, as they most commonly do, there will not be mu.ch loss t but if it succeeds, try it again, as one experiment in farming operations does not establish a fact. , I amirove of farmers trrins experiments on a small scale, that look likely to be bene ficial in raising crops, or improving land. There have been valuable discoveries made thereby, and perhaps as many others the re sult of accident. . Such has been the experience of one who spent a long life devoted principally to the culture and improvement of the land; one who practised what he has laid down in these essays, and whose observations of the practice of others, has conbrmed bis belief, that no man will ever make a good farmer, in any other way, save by his own experimental knowledge. A PRACTICAL FARMER. Bybtrry, 3d Me, 1659. , CHINESE SUGAR CANE. A Committee of the United States Agricul tural Hocietv which recently met at Wash ington, made a report upon the subject of the Chinese Pttgartjane, oi wntcn the follow ing is a synopsis I I. The soil and geographical range of the Chinese Sasar Cane correspond nearly with those of Indian Corn. It produces the best crop on dry uplands, but the most luxuriantly on rich bottoms of moist loams. 3. It endures cold much better than corn, nd experiences no injury from the autumnal frosts. It will also withstand excessive drouths. Ripens its seeds in Meptember, in dry and warm soils, in many parte of the New England State J in the extreme South it may be planted as late as the 20th of June. J. its cost and culture is about the same as Indian Corn. " , ' . : "' 4. Height of plant, when fully grown, varies from 0 to 18 feet, and stalks vary from half an inch to two inches in diameter. The weight of the entire crop, when fully grown, taken before drying, is from 10 to 40 tons. Of seed, the amount is reported from 13 to 60 bushels. 5. During the early stages of its growth it makes but little progress; so slow indeed, as to have discouraged many cultivators ; but -L . l .e. . ... ma npproacn ut warm weainer imparts to u a wondertul rapidity, the period ot growth varies from 90 to 120 days. .'The yield of juice was about 50 per cent, trie number ot gallons required to make a gallon of syrup varies from 5 to 10; in New lirunswicK, 10 to 1 ; in Indiana and Illinois, 7 to 1 : and in Maryland and Vir ginia, 5 to 1. The yield of syrup varies from 140 to 400 gallons. The amount of pore alcohol ranged from 5 to 9 per cent. Ripe cane, grown on a light, warm soil, gives 11 per cent, of well defined crystalized sugar. 7. palatable bread was made from the flour ground from the seed. 8. By accounts from all parts of the coun try, this plant is universally admitted to be wholesome, nutritious and economical food for animals ; all parts of it being greedily de voured, in a green or dry state, by horses, cattle, sheep and swine,' without injurious effects ; the latter, especially, fattening upon it asVwell as upon corn. 9. Paper of various dualities has been manufactured from the fibrous parts of the stalk, some of which appear to be peculiarly nttea ior a special use. Poisonous Pboperties or Graao. A scrap of information in regard to this subject hav ing accidentally reached us, through a friend, we give it to our readers. As the season is near at hand when guano is handled most, it is proved of some value: A planter in our district, who had used a w ater trough in which to pulverize or dis solve guano, instructed that the trough should be thoroughly cleaned before used. It seems that the work was but imperfectly or partially performed, and that a number of his hogs drank from it in that condition. Some five or six of these died a short time afterwards. Their necks and throats were very much swollen before death ensued. A call, which also dratik, died in a similar v.ay. These statement we regard- as being entirely re liable. Great caution sliuuld, therefore, be employed in the use of guano. Sumlcr (.& C.) VI alchmaa. CURE FOR CANCER. We find the follow ing statement of a cure for cancers, in the Milwaukee True Demo crat. If it is what it is claimed to be, it is a discovery of great raloe, and we advise our readers t preerve a paper containing it. Some eight months ago, Dr.T. B. Mason who keeps a music store on Washington street, and whu is brother of the well-known Lowell Mason ascertained that he had a cancer on his face of the size of a pea. It was cut out by Dr. Wolcott, and the wound partially healed. Subsequently it ere a- gain, and while he was in Cincinnati on bu siness it attained the size of a hickory nut. He has remained there since Christmas under treatment, aod has come back perfectly cur ed. The process is this t A piece of sticking plaster wss put over the cancer, with a circular piece cut out ot the centre a little larger than the eancer, so that the cancer and a small rim of healthy skin next to it was exposed. Then a plaster made of cloride of zinc, blood root and wheat flour, was spread on a piece of muslin of the size of tit is circular opening, and applied to the cancer for twenty-lour hours. On remov ing it the cancer will be found to be burnt into, and appear of the color and hardness of an old shoe sole, and the circular rim outside of it will appear white and parboiled, as if scsided uy hot steam. I he wound is now dressed, and the ontside rim soou suppurates onu tne cancer comes out a nard lump, and the place heals up. The plaster kuli the cancer, so that it sloughs out like dead flesh, and never grown again. This remedy was discovered by Dr. Fell of London, snd has been used by him for six or eight years, with I unfailing success, and not a esse has been1 known ol the re-appearance of a caneir where this remedy has been applied. It has the sanction of the most eminent physicians and surgeons of London, but hat not not il recent ly been asrd in this country, and many of the faculty, with their proverbial opposition to innovations, look upon it with distrust. We saw Mr. Mason at charch yesterday, and have sines conversed with him, and took par-1 ticutar notire of the cicatrized wound, and we can only uy that if the cure is perma nentand from the evidence of sit or eight years' experience in other cases, wa have no doubt it is the remedy ought to be univer sally known. Wt have referred to this case, because Mr, Mason ia well known, both hers and at the EaU The experiment excited much interest in Cincinnati, and we rail the attention of this State to the remedy. If it is what is claimed for it, this terrible disease will be shorn of most of its terrors. The ap plication is painful, but the nam is of com paratively brief duration, which any on so amiciea would cneeriuny enuure. " Her you little rascal, walk sp here and give an account of yourself whete have y'oo been?" "Alter the tirls. lether." "Did rod ever know me to do so when I was a boy ? " N. sir ; but mother did." " My son, you had better go to bed." Gen. Wm. T. Haskell, of Tennessee, has azsin become deranged, aud is now confined in the Lunatic Asylum at llupkmsviiie, Ky UNHAPPY JOHN. tX OB. CtUBLIS a'XAT. ' Unhappy John doubta woman'a truth, And vowa true love ia dead and goue j Why t He waa jilted in his youth i A false lair maid abandon'd John : Dccauae he found one cankor'd peach, All fruit are worthless in hi eye. Come forth, ye gentle souls, and teach Tbe selfish craven how he lies ; Come forth, ye ladies, bright and (jiir, Point at him your reproving hands, And let your eyes, your truth declare, And ahame him where he atanJs. Unhappy John la aick of schemes ; He doubts the use of striving on Why 1 Something is amis, it eeemr, And failure haa dishearten'd John ; He moana in pitilul distress, Becauae hia projects topple down. Come forth, ye mastera of success, Ye builders of your own renown, Who dig the mine and fell the oak ; Show him your bard and blister'd handa, Tall him the worth of stroke on stroke, Aod shsme him where he ata.ids. Unhappy John distrusts his kiu J ; He gives the world hia mansion ; Why ! He was somewhat weak and blind, And a false rogua.defrauded John. Ha thiuka misanthropy is right, If he be cheated of hi pelf. Come forth, true souls, sndjn your light Depict the bigot to himself, Come forth, ye generous and gooJ, With pot leas hearts and liberal hands, - Show him the lace of brotherhood, And ahame him where he stands. THE OLD TIME GRANDFATHER. BY T. S. ABTHL'R. Dear old man! He was a gentleman of the old school, ripened by sge and experience. 1 see him now, as I look back through more than forty rears, with his courtly eartnents and courtly manners, his cheerful countenance and cheerlut words, his manly bearing and elegant address, lie had seen the world in most of its aspects; had served his country both as a statesman and a soldier; ha4 brav ed, in his time, peril by land and peril by sea ; yet, in growing older, he had grown gentler and more refined. The attrition of life had polished, instead of abrading the surface of his character and marring its beauty. At seventy, he was the model of an old man. - Grandfather Deering he was called by the half score of boys and girls in the third generation, train two years old and upwards, who spent many weeks of each recurring winter and summer at the old homestead, to be remembered long afterwarJs as the hap piest times in all their livea. It was a plea sant sight to see him amid these grandchil dren. With the boys he was almost a boy again. He entered into all their sports, and encouraged them to activity that bordered sometimes on daring. He had his fishing tackle, and went with them to the river; his boat, and accompanied them on water ex . .. :...! - . .l. :l L TM cursions, and picnics at the islands. There . . t U ; .. ;M wk!k flt-a n.lf a li " hums "iv.. Peering did not meet the wishes uf hi dar- ling boys. As he advanced in years, the old man crew tender neartcu. tie nau oeen something of a sportsman in his younger days; but now the sight of a bird, instead of creating a desire to ahatter its beautiful hotly with a leaden shower, awakened feelings of admiration. " Don't harm the bird." he would say to his grandsons. They have an equal right with you to life snd enjoyment." But boys has a passion for fowling-pieces, and are destructives by nature. Grandfather Deering's boy were no exceptions to this rule. They begged t-r guns; but the old man, so indulgent in all things else, was un yielding in this. " No, no, no," he would answer their im portunities "not a bird shall be harmed here. 1 love them too well. Shame on you, boys, for being m cruet-minded! It plea sure so rare, that rod roust seek it in the destruction of lifer 1 shall have to send you atl home again, I see. You are not hap py at Grandfather Deering's." And so he would conquer. The little girls, his grand-daughters, were an espocial delight to the old man. He saw their moth ers' childhood revived in them; and that must have restored in almost living freshness the sainted image of one these flagrant hu man btoMomshad never seen. Grandfather Drering was not a chi'.ilih, but a manly old man, in the last he retain ed all tht accomplishments of eady and mid dle life. In company, his graceful attention l ladies was in marked contrast wun tne awkward restrains, coin reserve, or aimon offensive indifference so often witnessed in those who are advanced in rears. t ith young men, whose society he liked, h was suable, courteous, and free from dogmatism. His mind was active and progressive; ami, though old in rears, ha was young in thot'it and feeling. It pleased him to note the ardor of impulse in young men, and his aim was to direct, never to restrain it. He was always ready to excise their errors; to sympathize w'uh them ia disappointment; to help them opwards by kind words, instesd of depres sing them br cold discouragements. With young ladies he was neither critical nor cyni cal. The new aspects of fashion never dis turbed him, though he had not changed his own style of dress for more than twenty I jean. IIjw gijiy, anu wim mem wnat ionu familiarity, would the sweet maidens gather around the dear old man in every company where he appeared. They felt no restraint no repulsion but were drawn to him by an attiaction of affinity. It was youth and beauty clustering about ripened age, mellow and lucsiciou. It is now many years since this old time grandfather passed away, and left behind him the fragrant odor of an almost perlect life. But there are hundreds yet living who will recognize him in the brief sketch we have given. Would that there were many such old time grandfathers! The world needs them. Speech of Hon. JOM A. GIL3IEB, OF NORTH CAROtlMA, Delivered In the House of Representatives, March 30th, I85S, on the Senate bill for the admission of Kansas with the Lecompton Constitution and the Green Pugh amendment. Mr. Chairman, I have been an attentive listener to tbe arguments on this Lecompton question for three months. Whilst some of the speeches have been calm and considerate, I feel constrained to say that, by far, the larger number have been violent and extreme ly sectional, tending directly to weaken the respect which the North and South should have for each other, and which is essential to the safety of the Union itself. 1 have heard and rend speeches delivered both in tin's House and in the other end of this Capitol, by gen tlemen from the Sorlh and from the South, the true spirit and meaning of which is dii union. True, moat, if not all, proen to love the Union and the Constitution. Their speeches arc filled with expressions of high veneratiua for the Constitution of our fathers. They indulge in patriotic strains. Their addresses are robed in the most beautiful habiliments. overflowing with protessions and assurances most imposing. The spirit of disunion is, however, the core. It is presented, and neru- sal snd handling secured, as you would an asp in a casaet oi oeauiuui nowers. The aesign ia evidently to infuse the poisonous SDirit of disunion where, for it, there could be no reception, were proper label attached. Pro fessions of patriotism are uttered in loud and eloquent tones, for peace and harmony, whilst the evident drift is to exasperate aiid make wider the breach. With pain and regret am I forced to the belter, there are gentlemen on this floor, who-, while they oppose iht admission of Kansas with the Lecompton Constitution, da really desire the bill to pass for the sake of cerUin consequences, disastrous to the peace and harmony of the country, which they expect to grow out of it. On the other hand, I fear that among other gentlemen, advocating this measure," there are some, whose regret is. that the Lecomp ton Constitution and the manner of securing its presentation here, were not more odious to the people of Kansas and the free States, so that their ultimate object might be the sooner secured by a bloody conflict of North ern and Southern arms on the plains of Kan sas, and, in case of a failure in this, sued bitter sectional excitement shill certainly etisue, as to produce a fusion of all political parties in the free States, combined asa purely sectional party, against a similar fusion of all parties in the slave States, by which disunion is made cerUin in the end. These speeches ; nately gone forth to the country those of I .1. V . t. . 1 , . ,, m 7 .. ... i win inn particularize, mey have unlortu- ; me or in n oe reau in tne soutii, that tner there may have samples of how Northern) people hate and despise Southern men ; and) those of the South to be read in the North, that they may kniw how they are scorned and detested by the citizens of the Sooth. The designs and purposes of both sides, it is to be feared, are the same M arouse, drill, snd prepare for strife the minds of a great people now happy, with bright pros pects lor the future, and who, by their united energies, in advancing the industrial and literary interests ol the whole country, are doing much more for the true happiness snd prosperity of us all, Uiih.iut intending to be offensive or per sonal, I must be permitted to say, I envy not the man who can look on our country a Hit, and with conijtoaure anticipate its condition, when mered and divided. The man who can contemplate that terrible day, when, by rea on of civil war, our beautiful and growini cities, towns, and villages, shall be consumed by fire our manufactories razed to the ground our commerce broken up our love ly fields and gardens made tne foraging grounds of nbal Irou soldiery all interna tional trade and communication cut o IT all municipal and family peace destroyed our sons dragged from their homes amid the sighs and tears of affectionate mothers ant sisters, to the bloody fields of civil strife J snd all this growing out ol a fietinn as to how, when, or in what manner, forty thou sand people ONLY, in Kansas, shall settle for themselves their own domestic affairs or rather, how they shall eoonett get clear of a few slaves and set two Free SjW Sena- ; tors ami one Representative in Congress. I say such a man has no feelinc in common with me and none, I trust, with the great body of the honest yeomanry of this country. We have our trouble, I admit. We have had if ct'e ul troubles uf a similar kind be of ull sections. fore. We have had, as now, disunion threat ened, but thanks to the good sense of the people, they have never yet inclined to take wm prescriptions oi mote wne bnastuigiy de cline to sing penns to the Union ! England 'trom whom wa derive our ntture and many of the free principles of which we boast, had her trouble. She has had her dissensions ber White and lied roses her land hasheen tinged with blood in civil stnU and once the bead of her King was brought to tlx block but ber people were attached