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« enote ege s .. . Phenix bank; Nantucket - neer nism -o onar totems enc - . .._. Bank of Plattsburgh ~ sp1Tor a np rEorr:irror. T E RCM S. Two dollars por yearn in advance, or two dollars and fifty cents at the expiration of the year, ° . -__ Nopaper will be discontiqued (unless -at the discretion of the Proprictor,) till all:arroarages are paid. BATES OF ADVERTISING, Legal advertisements inserted atthe: rates prescribed | by law-others-at $1 per squaro for three weeks, and \25 cents for avery subsequent. insortion. A liberal diz. | count will' be: made to those who advertise by the year.\ No advertisement will be discontinued without a written - or verbal order -to the publishét, No* advertisement w - be charged less than a mquar6s\ a - 'I7° All letters and communications must be post paid. a LOOK To YOUR BANK NOTES. LIST OF BROKEN, FRAUDULENT: DOUBTEUL, \ AND CLOSED BANKS | ix THs UNICED stATE§ AyD CANADA.. MAINE: Farmers and Mechanics bk < . Bath bank #> |_. Greencastle | istine bar Harmony Institute \Ls Hallowell and Augusta Huntington bank Kennebeck bank JTuniats bank Kennebunk bank + |Lumbermans bank Oxford bank =_ and Susquehannah Old Town Bank Trading company _ Passamaqgioddy bank Northern bank of Pa Saco bank Manual Laborbank Waterville bank -_ [Northumberland Union Co. | \Winthrop bank lumbia bank Wiscasset bank JIN. Western bank of Pa NEW | , [New Salem benk bank Pa. Agri Manu. bank Yirmoxt. Silver Lake bank Jefferson Banking Co. * [Union bank of Penn Vt Gless Factory Checks .|Woestmoreland bank Windsor Bank. Wilkeabarry Bridge Co. ° MASSACMRUSKYTS. . Youghogany bank American Bank, Boston DELAWARE, Berkshire bank Bank of Laure} Commonwealth bank Wilmington Loan Co Chelsea bank. | MARYLAND. Essex bank, Salem Bank of Caroline Fulton bank Bank of Maryland Farmersbank, Belchertown|City bank, Baltimore Farmersand Mechanics b'k|Commercial b'k Millington a .-... Adaras, South Villego ..._\Conecheaque.:bank..___ . Franklin bank ___ {Elkton bank Grey Lock bank, fraud. _ [Havre do Grace bank Hancock bank - , |Planters bank (~ ~~~ Lafayette bank Poultney's (Evan,) bank Kilby bank {Somerset bank & branches Mendon bank Susquehannsh Bridge Co Middlesex bank Susquehanna bank Nahant bank DISTAICT OF. COLUMBJA. Norfolk Bank Bank of Alexandria ° Sutton bank - % Central bank |_ -_. RHODE ISLAND. Franklin bank, Alexandria noo mj > ~> ~Burnllvillé bank ~*~ ~~ <[ Merchants bank ~ 'do ~~ Eagle bank, Newport;ifraud! Mechanics bank ° do FarmersEx bank, Gloucester -_ VIRGINIA. Farmers and Mechanics b'k|Monongalie Farmers Co Pautucket,, closed Virginia Saling bank Franklin bank, Providence Western bank of Virginia -l Scituate bank, closed NORTH CAROLINA. conmEcricur. Bank of Newborn Bridgeport Manufactuting SOUTH CAROLINA, Company, > Bank of Cheraw Derby bank - Grorora. Eagle bank Augusta Bridgo Co. NEW YoRK. - [Bank of Macon Aquaduct Association Farmors bk. Chatahoocheo ~ Bank of Hudson __ ALABAMA. f Bank of Niagara 'FTombuckbese bank / Bank of Columbia Richmond Bank Chartered Bank « . onto. Clinton Manufacturing Co's! Bank of Steubenville checks Bank of Cincinnati Delaware County bank . [Bank of Mansfield. Exchange bank, J. Barker (Bank of Sandusky Bay Exchange bank, Po'icecpeie|Farmars bank, Canton Franklin bank ' Farmers bank of Salom Franklin Manufacturing ColFarmeors and Mechanics bk, Greene county bink ~ Chilicothe. . Manhattan Accommodation|Fatmers-and Mechanics bk Marble Manufacturing Co. Cincinnati - - Merchants and Mechanics\German bank of Wooster e nge.company -*[Hamilion and RoasvilloMan. Middle District Hank company Potedam Manufacturing ColJeffoerson bank Wafiwfion’ 4 Manuifacturin Co. Whitehall: q ing Company Washington-andWarron bk{Ow! Creak bank . EW JEASIT. Plat (T. H.) and Co's bank Bank of New Brunswick [Zanesville Canal and Man. Franklin bank, Jersey City | | ufacturing company Hoboken Banking and Gra. ' ging company ~- Bank of the State of Ten. Jersey bank - nomsee, closed Mechanics bank, Pattorson [Farmers and Mechanics bk Monmaith bank. Nashville, closed \ New Jersey Manufacturing| Nashville bank, Nashville, Company. closed. ‘ State bank, Trenton __ WICHIGAN.. N.J. Protection and Lom-Bank of Monroe Mug” . 00 , __ (Detroit bank * - Salem and Phil Manu Co - C e Washington Banking Co ~ [Manufacturing bank of FH FHRXHTFLYANTA. ' .._ Carapa. : - [Canada bank, Kingston . . [Gommercial b'k, Brockville Mechanics bank, St. Johns [Mechanics bank, Montreal Morchants bank, do Merchants bank, Toronto City bank, Pittab aimee fookes Ortaws bank Farmers and Mechanics bk -THE NORTHERN JOURNAL |- . Js published Thursday Mornings, at Lowville, Lewis Co. {- AMBROFE W. CLARK, | + | __ voubme n 0 _*MISCELLANY. _ MYSTERIES OP LIFE.: v1 KEV, 033m.“- BEWEY: ; I ecting mind, especially if it is touch-. ed with any influences of religious coimtempla-. tion or poetic sensiliility, there is nothing more: extraordinary, than to observewith what, obtuse, dull and common-plit¢e impressions most men - pass through this wonderful life, which heaven has ozjdainecf for us. Life, to which such a mind, means every thing moraentous, mysterious, pro. .phetic, monitory, trying to the:reflections, and touching to the heart, to the many is but a round of cares and toils, of familiar pursuits and formal Their fathers have lived ; their chils, the way is plains the «dren: will live after-hem ; ~ business is obvious ;: boundaries fro definite ;, | and this to 'them is life. They look tipen this world as a vast domicil, or an extensive pleas. ure ground ; the objects are familiar ; the imple- ments are. worn ; the very skies are old ; the earth is a pathway for those that come and 'on earthly errands ; the world is a Working-figs . [a ware.housd, a market place pand this is life. ._ Butlife indéed -the intelectual life, struggling «with its earthly load, coming it knows not whence, going it knows not whither, with an eternity | unimaginable behind it, with an eternity to be «tperienced before it, with all its strange and mystic remembrances, now exploring its past. years as if they were periods beforé the flood, and then gathering them within a space as brief. | and unsubstantial as if they were the dream of a day-with all its dark and its Bright visions of mortal fear and hope;. life, such a life, is, full of |- mysteries. In the simplest actions, indeed, as wellas the loftiest contemplations, in the most: Y ordinary feelings, as well as in the most abstruse. speculations, mysteries meet us every where, | mingle \with all our employments, terminate in all our views, ® The bare act of walking has enough in it to fill us with astonishment. If we were brought into existence in the full maturity of our facul. ties, if experience had not made us. dull -as well |- as confident, we should feel a strange and thrill., ing doubt, when we took one step, whether an. other would follow, - TY e. stould pause at every step, with awe, at the wonders of that familiar action. For who knows any tling of the mys. terious connection and process, by which the in- visible will governs the visible framo ? Whohas seen the swift and silent messengers, which the mind sends out to the sub} body 1 Philoso have talk Bank-of: Golunibia--«--~} t : members of the hers have reasoned upon this, of nerves, and. have talked of delicate fluids, as transmitting the mandates of the wilt; but they‘hwgknown nothing. No eye of man, nor penotrating-glance of his under. out those hidden chan. of the soul in its mor. Agency and Exchange bk (Merchants and Planters bk 'standing, has search | nels, those secret agence tal tenement. Man-fndeséd cur construct ma. chinery, curious, complicated and delicate,though Aar less so than that of the human frame, and with the aid of certain other contrivances and powers, he can cause it to be moved ; 'but to cause it to, move itself, to im wer to direct its motions whithersoover this is the mysterious work of God. - ay, the bare connection .of mind with mat-. ter, is itself a mystery. The extromes of the creation are here brought together, its most op. posite and incongruous eloments.aré blended, not. weet harmony, but in the most intimate. sympathy. Celestial life and light mingle, nay, and sympathize, with dark, dull and senseless The boundless thought hath bodily or. fans. That which in a moment glances through. he immeasurable hosts of heaven; hath its-abodé within the narrow bounds of nerves,; and limbs, seqses. The clay bentath our feet is built up into the palace of the soul. The sordid dust we tread upon, forms, in the mystic frame of our humanity, the. dwelling-place of high-roason. fashions the chambers of imagery,. he heart, that beats every lofty ard generous affection. \Yes the fellings thatsoar [ to heaven, the virtue -that is to win the heavenly crown, flows in the lifeblood, that in itself is as senseless as the. soil from which it derivesits nourishment. Who shall explain to us this mys. . terious union--tell us where sensation onds, and | organization in. | been philosdpggrs' who havo reasoned aboft this, materialists and im.. | materialists ; and under theip direction, the pow.} ers of matter and spirit have marshalled in. t to it an intelli. Lebanon and Miama Bark. 8 St. Lawrenen bk and Lnm.. and 9 y echanics bk| ber company .. ___ Recon bom monomer nes on reg mm tn mam oncom eng e onder op nere +0 given, to all persons who 'have claims against mi. “if: town of Harrisburgh, in said County, whemfit XhgAame, with the vouchers thereof, 10 adminkiritor Bmayw, adminitrator of the eatate of said John House, st his office in tlie town of Denmark, in said coin. © ty, at or before the edeventh day of September mext. ° y: 4 apy eat l Dted the 28th day of Februaty, 183¢.-Btn6, . _ . ~*~ From the Philadeiphis Saturday Gouner. DR. EVANS FAMILY PILL&. - . /'YWe have uniformly set down the various préparations that are blasoned to the public as cure all, as the mergat daackery, butin the cise of tha preperation which Mr. W. Evan prepares, 'we have been assured by severalOf | 'our ingalikge T floek is hair 15.\ but shit they ars approved. b those who well mm « bot to nature in -innumérable cred; tog ' the critical chemist as to their and vailne: -_- [l W. L:ARABTON, . C Azomforthmb of the above Pille, | PR eroare Ress sepply of Doer: Sram. | youd E3 e T ~ a t% * Hoolih ln what wa are all nearchinig for, and is onlyto be obtmined by expelling from the constitution all bad hu- np heres al a Pigou | the contest, forascendency in this human. mi crocosm ; but the war has been fruitless ; the argument futile; philosophers have-settled noth- Ing, proved nothing, for they knew nothing. __ - ursuit of science, or point 0 observation we will and It is sill the same every department of thought and study, we soon. er or later come to a. region, into which our in. quiries cannot penctrate,. ery thoughts ran out into the vast, the indefinite, the | fro | incomprehensible; time stretches to eternity, © {place to immensity, calculation to \ numbers being to Infinite Greatness.-~: | Every path of our reflections. brings us at length to the- shrine of the unknown aod the unfathom. «able, where we must set flown and receive with peekmess, if .we receive at- Commercial bank, PFEHE . Surrogates. Order..__.._..._._ 'Barrogats of theCounty of Lewin-Notice is here. Every where our devout and: childlike allfibe voice of theoracle within. hil Vph‘ . prepares, 'we have been. nee veri of |. ~ Even the puréet demonstrations in philosophy ianifrarmaithbm aararn ear ive: and the mathomatin often es Lave ibgis result in mysteries ces not Mmmm qyvary discase which | xes. . Matter that is infinite, is isible. _ A. dropof water may be balan: aid |-ced against the universe. 'That, gentle reat *|-if thou hast ever chaneed-to hear of it, is thehy. * drostatic paradox. _ But: there are pneumatic paradoxes too, and meiallic wonders, wrought §. dark and silent mine, and geologic mat. vale, avery where disclosed the c i) mea is there a plant ag humble, no hy nor flower, nor weell in the garden, that (oth. from the bosom of lait - ganized and living myiteey ~ |'abysses are not more itis n | that is. wrought in ite hiddern and was?) \together or wop by the wal, | tide «. ~The patyets of the: mtime arte for hocanse gilt-13k, that which conifitates: it,“ what itis ?. The functions: that . conti. ke growth,. flowering, and fruit; the pro: hi | cess of secretion, the organs or the 'affiirities: by .! whic pfimorgzahomflem ial thet ans sess, who-can unfold, 'or explain finxschaswma f ilosopher may pos- | which every- simplest spire of ~ W, a CHASE _ ** ~~~ it, {ders jn it in which the wisest ph same. In 6 wider; cious be. ourth, 'but it # anor. | ~ __ £ ter of the f Kee e will???” «chock mateda corupt Administration, frustrated | 'its most flagrant designs, and defeated its darling | € [project -of iniquity,is not to beset down as hav. mg dine nothing.. Such has been the glorious of the \late: ~ And, though we 'know that there is an. urgent necessity for pro.. coedings of a more direct and positive character, | in . yet when we reflect on tho-political omplekion a I 'of both branches of Congress, and upon-the ex. |. pectitions which might reasonably have: been | formed of their doings when they assembled, we 1838 p congratulating the country on the | gre oui, and that at Collin's Bay,. In the | : estuary towards Kingston Mills,the:-marsh behind : Bell's Istand, off which,in ordinary summers, large crops of coarse hay are annuafly takep, is, now passable by vessels drawing two feet of wi { finda reason forhumility, [tic an argument for faith, . ___ ife, 'I repeat-and Tsay, let the dull in tho ét the children. of sonse be aroused by the reflec.- tion-life is full of mysteries: - If wo were wan. \deriig through the purlicus of a vast palace, and | tor.. The wharves'in..town are quite level with ' the water, and some of them overflowed, ~ Mr.. : Counter's wharf, which was faised ome foot last: winter, is much incommoded this wa are told that the waters of the lake are su . wandering ; the world is such a structure ; and | periodicalterms .of seven years gach, of alternate 'over many a door forbidding all entrance, and labyrinth, is written the start. t tells us of dur ignorance, announces to us unseen and unimaginable wonders. The ground wetread upon is not dull, coldsoil, not the mere paved way, on which the footsteps of the weary and busy are hasting, not the mere arena on which the war of mercantile competition is waged ; but, \ we troad upon en. chanted ground,\. . l The-means of communieation-with:-this out. wardscene, are all mysteries. explhin the structure of the cye and ear, but they leavainexplicablethings behind,; segingand hear. ing:ire still mysteries. 'The organ that collects within it the agitated waves of the-aix, the cham- bers of sound that lie beyond it after all dissec. tion and analysis, are still labyrinths and of mystery. And that liftle- orb, the cye, w gathers in the boundlessSandscape at a glance, which in an instant measures the near and the distant, the vast and the minute, which brings knowledge from ten thousand objects in one. com- rmanding act of vision-what a mystery 7 And: then, if the soul communicates with the outward world, through mysterious processés, . . what power has that world-its objects, its events,. its changes, its varyinghues, its many toned voices, what mysterious - strike the secret springs of and the proudest scop. | ett found. here and there a closed door, or an inae. entrance, over which the word \nxysrze. Rx\ was: written, how would ourcuriosity be: awakened by the inscription! Life is such a . risings and depressions, but should | case, two years are yet to.come, before the max: ; imum height of water is attuined, This is prob.. ly an old woman's tale-no. nitural- cause be.. over many a ma - [. ool fail to pay a parting tribute to : those by whom. this result has been accomplish. ed, and who are. now returning to their hoines, | The W hig Members of Congress are entitled to Tthe gratitude of\ all good'citizens. A minority 'in both Senate and House, they have succeeded . 'by thir persevering efforts, and «quence, in fhirly overpowering the majority. Weight has prevailed. overnumbers, appeal over argument has nullified the 'potency of party adhesion. This could never 'have been done without severe and resolute ex. | ertions-exertions all the more painful and ex. Inrusting, for being made in- the fice of an Al. ne-dofeat.~-But dospsir 'is not unfrojuently the most auspicious mood in which a battle can be commenced, and the des. perato valor of the W higleaders has at length | 'been crowned with victory. f -at lout, has been achieved, and the honor of an: . ion, if not a. triumph, should be awarded -to thos who-have gained ' ‘ The contest w Nor can we _ SENATE. i Rereir or tire Detosite following sketch; r'\s closing remarks over theo fragments, 's lost Sub-Treamity .Bil, is:commended to ration of the People. 'The tmestatoof te presented. The people maylearn therefrom what litlle of good has been done, and what a mountain of evil has beenarressted-and by | exhibited -an anxio few words; is he Anatomists may flfirejudices, and stron sat, vestigate them,\ ~ _ ~ *~ ._ 'The result. of this: inves made public. to bea defiulterin a - whom. They will perceive what farther of good ought. to have been done, and by whom that has been, pre- vented. \They will so that all that has been done for: the relief of a suffering Nation, has\beore effected by Daxter W sisze®, and his political mssociatesin the Sen. ato and in: the House-but over and'above ail, by DAN. .IEL WEBSTER, as the strong, aanflinching, and ever: watchful guardian.of the Nation's honor amd -prosperity,. and the People's welfare, And they will mes that, wed. ded to a pernicious theory which har whelmed the Na. universal ruin, the Administration and its both Houses of Congross, are still borit up.. on its determination. both to rule ard ruin... . Mr. W rioxr having\moved that tlie Senate proceed to. consider the amendment of the House to the bill to mod, ify the last clause of the fifth section of the deposite act of the 23d Jurte, 1836, when , --Mr,Wepstsr-said, he- coulfd-concur-most readily in this amendment of the House, It gave: him- the truest pleasure to learn that the House had rejected the second section of the bill, and. that it had done so by so decisive a amajority.- The Housghad thus arrested the surzonder of all control over the public treasures to the Execu. d its own -high authority: in a most constitutional and salutary manner ; a | manner highly becomin free People. _. For all this (said. Mr. W.) I feel highly grateful ; and at this result, I think, the | whole country may be justly congratulated. We-hold on yet to the true doctriae, and the. rtant republican principle of legislative con- and superintendance of the public money:| and I hope, sir, we shall continue to hald on-. And now, sir, as to what remains an this bill, 1 think it is of no great importance. Etwill dono harm, and some good.. It relioves thoincapaci- ty of being received at the Treggury from bills of. 'banks which have issued soaill bitls, provided such banks shall issue no such small bills after 'the first day of October noxt too short oven if it were judicious to fix any def. inite tinge, which I do not think it is. generally will not be alile to discontinue the use of small bills within that period; nor will they have sufficient inducement to do it. 'The in. convenience will not principally fall on them, but on the people ; as no man will be able, if the law regarded, to pay his postage account, or y other debt due to Government, by notes within His reach or commands This bil, therefore, dogs little, very to remove the evile and inconveniences which: are felt, and which must-continue to be folt. Then again, sin remember that the new treas. ury circular is still in force; and that no bank: note of any bank, if it be less: than twenty dol. lars, can bo received at all. pairs the privilege secured. by the resolution of t the post.offices and at. the land-offi-' 'ces, no paper less thantwenty dollars can bere. have atready, again and 'this before the view of gentlemen. ed them if they are contented with this state of and if they think the People. will be con. Will the small purchtisers at-the land. offices besatisfied with this 1 Is ftright it 1 Certainly, sir, this is not what I pro them, nor what IMhought their interest require If we mean to maintain the principle of the. resolution of 1810-if we mean to make bank. notes receivable at all, why should woombarrass | and timvairt its operation by rejecting all notes un. der so high a sum as $werity dollars 1 Why not point at wliich the State Warm“, u; 'most certain and fo ed his office-art Ais ._ Sandusky, June 80.-A or excavating a po . dusky. Railroad, about f the *deep cuf, discojered ike nown inimgl, of extmor of which is in perfect siapc. 'The diansder at | the base of that portion which remaiie entire, is :~ ~~ ~~~ A quasi victory, he laborers: . rion. of the Monrosville and Sean re mike from thas place, C hich has thus ended, has been | 'carriéd on mainly in the Benate, And never have the gigantic powers of the great mon who . 'comiitute alarge party of that body, been nore 'eminmtly manifuted. 'The Loto Foco lead. ers fave exhibitedunusual-yigor in the enforce. mentof their projects. - Calsoun, Wright, Buch- anan, and the rest, have all made efforts worth nine inches; butjudgi nts, and the {aper the 2.501); tin:i umwimwt have orer y foot in diameter, In slinpe, i very nesrly re. sembles the tusk of an tlephan Net bro. ken, the fine cross-grained 'is distinctly wisible,« Its color iss ligh somewhat decayed,, and ~crumbles ies pl a\ was estimated by some of thoes prosént, to 150 poundi g Wye think, that is rated. Near by me wh th enppored to Sorjsce of tin dagt: gh are Ao be portose ofthe stub. . iy, if suiotisor still remedens. , | , | | ~- 4 in a:marsby, | 's m a} j Sick ho strake. wer have they, to e soul within 1 - -__ \It may be a sound- Atone of music-summer's eve-or spring- Aflower-the wind-the qcean-which shall woun Siiking the electric chain wherewith wo are darkly of alettercause. But what shall we say of the intellectual achievements of the leaders of th sition, of Chy, and Webster, -and Preston; and Davis, and Southard, and Crit. 'tendm.-aid more than all, of,Clay snd \Web ster;and most of all, of Wansrs®.! -- W hon ware |- the Herculeim energies of this greatest of living | Amgican minds so signally and so Successfully withleld in the sorvice of tho country 1_ Not, 'certinly, since Nullification reéled, and foll dead forevr, under their tremendous grapple, | In. deed, we doubt wheter the surpassing powers of Mr. W cheater wore, even resed upon the ted aposrance of roar ___\. f. wki: al.. < j ant how and why wo Kiow not, nor tive, -_ lt had inter Home to its cloud this lightning of the mind.\ ___ But, .if nature is bound with almost magic \spells of association to our maturer years, what purs and fresh-mystery is it to our childhood !.- Ah Childhood-Beautiful mystery -how does nature lie all around theo, as a treasure house of | ; ntle season of being! | the representative of a wonders. 'Sweet and whose flowors bring on the periocd of ripening, or bloom but to wither and fade in their loveliness -time of \thick coming\ joys and tears! of tears that pass dfuickly away, as if they did -not oys that linger and abide long, birg day short-time of weak» et of power to charm the eye of sages from their lore: Childhood! what a niystery art thou, and what mystories dost thou deal with ! Whit a mystery is there in thy unfolding fucul- ties, that call forth wonder from those that gaze - upon thee, and seom to thysclf at times, almost as if they wore strange rominicences of an earlior What mystery is there in thy thou ~whon thou art first struggling to grasp the in and ctornal! when thou art told of immortal gions where thou shalt wander onward and on-. ost. oven to the foaching t.cannot, father! itwanno? ,so strongly im. oat mass of tho been in this lats Sub.Treasury con. From this cecun of finding the other It was found imbedded r T-about five from the surfaces the distance of from two to fur M and limestdoo., 'This we beierso, is 'the Hest - * andl a woll worthy the mttiation of the...... .. .......: P . « y eca oll, in tbat entam:: belong to thee, of Aus! yor of pn mber of the Finance Committee, it beciune Afr, W oobster's dity fo open the debaté r e did so in reply to 'Mr. Wright, and in a speoch Hilly answering. ® the lighest expectations, ind containing one of the doarest and most convincing explanations, of th fatal policy: hasorer ajppoared This time is much ition to. the bil. We understand that bituminous coal were \existence of petroleantor crable quantatioe, it fs not imap Yfl°mednwa 'This pottisin the it of the 'this portisia Suite, 'as theme an- »ot-srmly - curiosity, but olmach inportmes to\ a. d measure, that .: Andiow it was for others 16 flow up the work-and others did follow it up nbly.. Mr. Clay, among the foremost, pro. his happiest and most, powerful hes, and did. his full share in the combat. ult im sucess of the bill scemed beyo a doubt;-ktill the Adnainktration counted noses with confidence, and*\weent | tion of their Sub. Treasury #afes; ° die, 'the Ait the mm rance of the i + é ' t & i ® and of the moannt, to pro«pority of the Poople. iy faculy wehich be poseessel should bo untasked. in the cause. He concentrated ancw all the } powers ofthis mighty; mill upon 'the subject ; and on the 12th and ASthof March, in a speech of cight Fours, ho made a secont onslaught up. on the bill. Wabclieve we do nof overrate the B, when wosay, that, the notnont if which be took his seat, the fate of the bill was Considered settled: Its adversa. clesloole frosh Beart; its idvoeantes Aurned pale and filtered. 'Those who wavered were now -conlitmed, those who doubted were now resoly. nounced ont of hi weardforever,. and woice of authority, \ And there aro mysteries, too, thickly strowed in with the constric. [ all pong the moral path of this wonderful being. | 'There are \ mysteries of our 'holy religion.\ Miracles of power, giving attestation to its truth, ushored it into Aho world. Ay mercy aro displayed in its successive truamphs Gracious inte t60o, of theteaching Spirit and a suceoring Prov» idence, hold the infirmities and struggles of the “macaw: flyWfi-‘m s | versing of hails ned -wetried Mr.\Wobster was not Wonders of heaven. This greatly im. over in tiaie ? -*’lh' t it‘uvidenxtnfimt ub‘é‘hfiflrfl itamagl ts than 1 “m‘ od, covered with pate ont iuLalflaQ'rcle-fi goog U pose that the ridge, bank of the Jake. A belicre; along near ern shore, pearticubmrly I ity, that, thes Jake And the results, moreover, of this great and solemn trial of human nature, that is passing on : earth are as mysterious as the procéss-the heavy» enly interposition and the humane cffort, and these, too, alike mysterious-the heavenly inter» position, certain but indéfinable; the human lybalanced. somewhere, but nobody here, betwoeir restessity and freedom.» Goodness, in the is a mystery. N age can dofine it, which does not equally w‘wm nh ce of tfi‘m‘s‘ x as, at some time, been memury nt theJand: Tas A Koz The most obuoxious fortarre of the\ bill was ~ soon after stricken out in the Senate. ° A sow | claus was next insorted, on Mr. Webster's own } ture, molion, rpealing the Trasury Citcular, and rolibiting any future 16 which, in s. separate Fom) Wmmmfim popufirgbmng | to vamo a ah fantly expired -and there & hep ie intaotly -an) thore £ 0a, - welsh to miki : Wfl 633i” to know well that ot! éonlmdeding‘qy‘tili Clay especially,; has - led Resins in the Ail opular branch of Conprass, I would | ex of our receded, in that branch, by a. decided me: | jority, - The published Sofficiently show thiss . _. |-. _._ .). the Parkanint canted (0C <- Thius: Wak it sing of &! British - Parliament,. during the existence of id definition. No man can fell what it is. - , but by an inward experience Goodness is a breath in the soul, we know not from whenee ; it come- | ethand gocth, like \ the wind that blaweth where . listoth ;\\. it is the inspiration of the Almighty. ___ And sin! how great arnd tremendous is that mystery ! That beneath these sorens and pure | hewens,. which bearn with the benigmity of their. . Maker; that amidst the fair earth, amidst tem |- thousand forms of perfection-that where all else | is perfect, the spoiler should 'have gone forth to : mir and crush the noblest and. fatrest--this is stery of iniquity that hath been hidden im ages; is not yet fully unfolded. This - was the theme that tasked and tried the medita.- - tions of, the old philosophers. \* Whence is evil : No man can k C at five dollars, the in mality inexp stop at five dollars, bunks have arrived 1 How‘gver, g ha owl of it-a clatse: not long afterwards ddfessed tle Senite re. eatedly: on this pirt of the sub . and the-People, L trust, every where, will. understand |- that I, and those who usuajly' act with me, have done alF in our power to give to them, in every. ntry, the just benefits. of the reap. |.3, without unreasonable ¢fibarrase. <e ik ment. _u, %. 0 *T LCQ . Tos Ful ~ { will only add, sir, because.Lbolieve itis true, that if a measure calculated to cairy into full ef.- fect the abolition of the Specie:Circualir-such a frcasure as I had the honor to propose to the. Senate-could 'have been presnited if a man. nerfo be acted on, without delay or embarrass. “srggtéféfliemfi -do no -mjutice { thers beside Mr, Webster bi g the lato session. | isplayed more thats, y skirmishes of wa cannot withhol 6. Mk“: VjWfi‘. bare nce malem, et et\ _ d why 1\ . Noble . rninded old. men! sages of the elder world !- usy and giddy-throngg, that . ut pleasure or gain, that ques=. terious life, nor_this When I look at the. bt : thisk of nothing b tion n6t this mysteriou this but to ask forthe 'wayto -gratification . - afd profit, I turn to you with venersition, and e- | pay isn homage to your - play than that which F . give to the inspiintion of apostles,: and the vis- fons of holy martyrs. -Ay. christian men of this [MUY PPP! “$30“ 16:01 beathins, and | \PPT ut the-mand, may think theimaelves entitled to: | {MWY_ 39 \EZ pon you with: pity or scorn; -But contrast« | _the:insects that sport in the beams of the one Eling | thesame is the ense with the