SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. EDITORIAL OPIWIOH8 OF TH LKADINfJ JOURNALS BPOB COBRKNT ToPIOH COMril,KD RVBRT PAT FOB TBI EVENING TKLK'JRAPH, Itrpllhllcau Alma. From the N. Y. Aation. TLere can be but little question now of the way in which the reconstruction process, as Congress Las arranged it, will end. By hook or by crook the Southern States will -come into the Union tinder it, and for the most part they will be brought in by Radical hands. The now constitutions will, of course, meet Con gressional requirements, and then all will be done for the Southern negro that the Republi can party at the North has proposed to do by direct legislation. We put aside the scheme of establishing each colored head of a family on a forty-acre farm as one which the party, as a party, has never Feriously entertained, though Borne of "its leaders may have talked of it. Whatever is to be done, if anything is to be done, towards the better distribution of landed property at the South, will have to be done by (state legislation. We are getting further au I further away every day from the possibility of Congress undertaking any such job. There will still remain the task of abolishing the odious discrimination against negroes at the North by which the legislation of several states is still disgraced. We fear the opportunity of accomplishing Ibis sieedily has, as we pointed out last week, passed away for the present, but we are satis lied, nevertheless, that the abuse will not be of very long duration. It caunot last under the battery of a free press and a free platform. The arguments by which the Ohio llepubli cans defend their oppoaitiou to it at the late election show that it cannot last very long, for they show that it rests simply on ignorauce or prejudice. If it appeared that there was any principle of government to which the body of the peoplo are deeply attached violated by the admission of the negroes to the polls, we Should look forward to a long and doubtful Struggle. 15ut when there is nothing better to be said against it than that people dislike or despise 'niggers," or that "this is a white man's government," we know that its triumph is not very far distant. But supposing, then, "equal suffrage" esta blished all over the country the millennium would still be to come. There are abundant indications on all sides of us that many good people are not of this opinion. The light against caste and privilege and inequality be fore the law has been so bitter, the prize on Which the Republican party is at last setting its hands seems so splendid and has seemed so remote, that people have naturally enough worked themselves up into the belief that, once it is attained, most of the ills by which the body politio is affected will soon disappear. The ballot during the last two years Las been constantly spoken of as if it were a kind of panacea, as if we had only to give it to persons of the male and female sex, not lunatics or criminals, in order to see the Golden Age return, to see the thorny path of pro gress, along which the race has thus far struggled with bleeding feet, sud denly converted into a path of flowers, in which "toil of heart and knees and hands" will be 110 longer necessary. Of course we do not mean to affirm that if auy individual Re publican were asked privately whether he thought impartial suffrage would briug back the Golden Age, he would not laugh the idea to scorn. But we do not hesitate to affirm that there has been widely diffused through the ranks of the party a vague notion that, the ballot once secured for all, we should Had our selves on "the shining table-lands," where questions of government would give us no more trouble, where every man would know bis duty aud do it, and the knaves and op pressors would fade into nothingness. We go further, and affirm that this notion, vague though it has been, has done much towards creating and fostering the recklessness and carelessness in the management of the party, the indifference of good men to the cor ruption and jobbery and humbug which have brought on it its recent reverses, and which render its success iu this State still doubtful. If the conviction that the ballot is, after all, but a means to an end; that in the hands of ignorant men it is but a means of defense aud of eduoation; that, like any other power, it may be nesd for good as well as for evil; and that the cause of all bad government in all ages and all nations has been the ignorauce of the mass of the people, had been general, we should not have witnessed the squandering of resources, the waste of enthusiasm, of devo tion, and of numbers during the past two years which have brought the party into its present difficulties. It is, however, because we do not believe the mission of the Republican party to be simply the work of reconstruction, or the establish ment of universal suffrage; because we do believe that even if the organization should under its present name disappear, when these ends have been accomplished, it will reappear with but very little change in its elements under another; that it is now, and must re main by whatever name it may be known, the party of progress the party which will seek to govern men through their reason rather than through their prejudices, their appetites, or their selfishness; the party of order, of education, of peace, and of national honesty ; the parly through which good and patriotic men will have to briug their convictious to bear on publio affairs that we rejoice in its successes, aud should mourn its recent reverses more if we did not feel that they will prove the means of purifying it and increas ing its efficiency. imt it must git rid of the notion at once and for ever that universal suffrage is a cure all, and that when it has secured this its work Is over. Us wrk will never be over while there are such things as knavery or corrup tion in politics- while there is a single'bit of Si, J ZT? t0 advauce th e" Z $ W ?u tUB statute-book which keeps people irom being as happy or as pros porous as they might be if it wire not there It is not the party 0f "equal woW' or of any other political pill or tonic; it Of good government, of virtue, knowled" and understanding. ial,e.e, The Democratic party will not be hereafter in any good sense of the word, a "oousorva tive" party, a party striving to keep things fixed either through caution or through a sen timental attachment to the past. Now that Slavery is gone, there is no time-honored abuse left for the lovers of old things to rally round. There is no objection here, as there is in Uurop", on the pstrt of any class of the community to frequeut legislative changes, no love of ancient ways as aucieiit; all parties are almost equally fond of change and equally ready to try experiments iu govern ment. The Democrats are not, therefore, the equivalents of the European Tories or "Junk ers." The party which the party of progress will Lere always find opposed to it will be a party oomposed of the most Ignorant aud most THE DAILY u lunn t:riiieiiiE) 1 II mtf cuniiuuuiLjr, iu i'jt men loud of power, aud anxious to use the . : . t i 1 . .. .. i : .. e it t J .J , i i. i ii.. : . .- l .l i. Vl( e and ignorance ami degradation of tlmir ) rr ti -a tti t--,i a.xV 4 attain If ami 1 tti i t-i r foil for much government or little govHrninnut, for inti'rfarfiii or uon-interferentm. for hon- iul r vjtii (1 a t i (in fnl innvnnuint r v f-v pose, as may seem most likely to gratify the passions or the prejudices of the rank and lile. To call this party "Conservative" is to degrade a term which some of the purest aul ....... i .. i. . i ii I.. iT.ii. iiit-u in m worm nave, ami'ist many er rois and many delusion'?, ennobled by tlmir self-sacrifice, their enthusiasm, ami their piety. it this be a true view of the ends for which the Republican paity exists, it must, in order to do its duty, discard at once the idea that it may or must uso the same means that the Democratic party Las been in the habit of using. As it rebts on the moral and religious hentiment of the community, and as it is to this sentiment that it must always address itself, it must pive up the idea of copying Democratic methods, Democratic discipline and oiganizatiou. Its means must, in a word, be noble as well as its aims. It must abandon the Democratic plan of throwing dust iu the people's eyes, of treating voters as if they were children, of trying to persuade people, like Macaulay's Brahmin, that a mangy dog is a line sheep, fit to sacrifice to the gods; it must give up all forms of humbug; it must not, ior instance, try to baruboo.le poor Irish men by affecting to believe the Feniaus a belligerent power, aud passing sham votes of sympathy with "the Irish re public;" it nrust not affect to believe that men can work eight hours aul yet bo entitled to as much wages as if they worked ten; it must not pretend to believe that every male voter is a perfect judge of measures aud men; that it makes no difference what a candi date's character or antecedents may be, pro vided be is "sound" ou the suffrage or the temperance or the Sunday question, or on any other question; it must not affect to consider a judge's character and learning to be considera tions of less importance than his political opinions; it must not, for instance, solemnly pretend to believe such a person as Judge Underwood "an enlightened jurist," simply because he hates Rebels; it must give up pre tending to consider the conclusions of human reason to be no obstacles to the gratification of anything on which enthusiasm or passion may have set its heart, and, above all, it must make the character of publio men the first, and their knowledge the second, qualification for cilice. Mr. Stevens is just now abusing it for its "want of courage." We presume he means by this its failure to take' some more "advanced" and less defensible position; some position whioh would bid louder defiance to the teachings of experience aud principles of human nature than any he has yet been able to urge it into. We, too, think it is want of courage that has brought it to grief; but it is not the kind of courage he has in his mind; it is the courage to discard base arts and crooked ways and mean compliances; the courage to trust everything to humanity, the conscience, the good sense, and the love of truth and justice of the American people, and nothing whatever to "management" and chi cane aud balderdash. Some of the sages who Lave had charge of it have been all alon under the delusion that if they only shouted loud enough for "equal rights" it made no diflerence how many knaves got office, and how much humbug they embodied in speeches and resolutions; but they are gradually awakening from it. There are already strong indications that the men of intluence are finding out what the matter is. The New York Tribune aud we re'er to it not because we wish to cast any special blame ou it for recent reverses, but because it is the most influential journal of the party is doin now what, had it been done a year or two years ago, would, we verily be lieve, have prevented these reverses warning t.liA ' Muri ialnriva ililiova" tiY On. nni. . u jw.ti.i? vi bun VUUIO, ailLl advising voters not simply to "seratch" but to "bolt," not simply to strike bad names off ll A A 1 X 1 A. A 1 iue pan uckci oui xo put gooo. ones on it; in other words, to make iha irutt; t J v. irilA men into ollice the first of party aims; and mis it eviuentiy uoes in tne belief, which is and always has been ours, that in no way can the Republican party secure so lon t . . ... .p. icuuio ui power, so morouguiy root itselt in tLe confidence of the people, as by showing that it considers victory at the polls not a blessing but a curse if it has been won through processes which harden the popular heart, blunt the popular conscience, or provide knaves with the reward of their hypocrisy. We sincerely trust that now that they are shaking, off the delusion that they must swal low nominations whole, the Republicans of this State and elsewhere will show that they have clearer views of what the functions aud value of the party are than many of their leaders, and that they will, while saving their consciences, give it their hearty support. The Pretldeutlnl Question -The Coali tion Afc'aluat Ucutitl Uraut. R om the N. Y. Herald. There seems to be a common understanding and a sort of coalition among radicals and Copperheads, Chase Republicans, and Seymour and Pendleton Democrats, to kill off General Grant as a Presidential candidate. Nor is there any mystery in this strange alliance. With the nomination of General Grant as the Republican candidate, the issue of the Presi dential election is a foregone conclusion. Kx cepting, perhaps, Delaware, Maryland, and Kentucky, Grant would sweep the whole country, North, South, Kast, and West. The result would be the same with one opposition candidate or a dozen such candidates in the light. There would not be the ghost of a chance tor Seymour, Pendleton, or McClellau running singly or all together. This is well understood by the Democratic leaders. Hence they are doing, aud will do, all they can to put Grant on the shelf and put Chase into the foreground as the Republican candidate. With Chafe in the field, and Grant set aside, the campaign will be fought, not upon the grand achievements and high claims of the man upon the gratitude of a grateful people, but upon the principle which he represents. Thus, aaiust the universal negro suffrage aud Southern negro supremacy schemes, and against the financial policy and principles of Mr. Chae the Democrats, with Chase's nomination, will make their fight in the nomination of Seymour or Pendleton, and the Republicans will hive to meet them on these issues. The glories of uie war will be thrown out of the canvass, aud nt,VrUO,r,tLeirlotika of Sauwon, the Re- 3 ffi'S.Xfi " only that leSls toPIatnf,the "?xiety of the Erratic andto bringfM eTialUi:ant Ut f the wa' Republican6 lCrV learned, not only from n r ,lhujr have Jackson, but from Xt of P,lU,ari1ty,Iof Veu' and General Taylor UBral 1Iarrili(n glory; and they know"," .f "J"1"' tlenry Clay, that the mort dlat&i-V'i f man, of whom everything LEG 11 API! PHIL ADEL PII A, SATURDAY f defeated by a second-rate obscure politician if put on a popular platform. The Chase faction. however, believe in the discipline of the Re publican party, and that, with bis neirro po litical pystem in the South, ami with his finan cial system, including his legion of national uaiiKS in tne iNortli and liis bondholders, he has the machinery for holding the Republican elements together. And so the Chase Republi cans are as anxious as the Seymour Demo, crats of New York, or the Pendleton Demo crats of Ohio, to shelve General Grant. The Chase managers and bankers of tin New York Republican camp are working lilce weavers to reverse, in our November election. the tremendous October verdict of Ohio against Chase and bis universal panacea of universal ana immediate negro sufirage. Thy hold that Mr. Chase is not responsible for their Ohio disaster, and that Mr. Pendleton's convenient proposition for paying off the na tional bondholders in greenbacks had much to do with the increase of the Democratic vote iu Ohio. But the approaching election in New lork will .be conclusive one wav or the other. on this Chase platform of universal n'";ro sullrage and Southern negro supremacy. The conservative Grant Republicans, therefore, can settle the question on Tuesday next in favor of their candidate, by simply letting the inase men ligbt out the battle ior themselves; tor, while the loss of New lork to the Repab licaiis, after all their other losses this fall, will leave them no alternative but General Grant. it is altogether probable that if they save New Yoik, the result will turn the scale in favor of Chase. Give them New York, and then, as Mr ("base and his engineers have possession of the Republican machinery, we apprehend that ucnerai irrant will be shelved; we gues3 that, satisfied with his present desirable position. be will consent to stand aside in favor of Chase; and if so, we may, between Chase an 1 Seymour, or Chase and Pendleton, prepare for one oi tne most exciting, sharply contested. and uncertain Presidential campaigns since mat oi ini between tlay and I'olk. Repudiating Dodge. From the JV. Y, 7Yibune. The Herald says: "No sensible person proposes, we suppose, to issue two thousand millions of Government money and pay oil the debt at once with that.' Y'es; George II. Pendleton does propose lust mat. neury ciay JJean proposes it Vallandigham proposes it. livery Western coppeiiiead ot auy account proposes it. Aud you are deceiving your readers when you assert mat tliey do not. The Jlcrald continues: "What is mennt by paying In (rreonb tcks Is to kef pas much of tuat, currency all lat as toe country run re:isnably bear, and by no means to contract the present amount till jll or a large portion oi the (loot De liquidated. 1'hat Is the proposition, aud that, we think, Is what the country will come lo. And what in justice would bo done? Who would ba in jured ? Nearly nil of the bondholders would bo paid mere than llicy gave for the bonds.' Here i3 the old game of scaling the debt, which Hamilton put his foot on in 17!'0. A man walks up to the Treasury and says, "Mr, Treasurer, here is the promise of the United States to pay tfHw to bearer on demand; want the money." "Well, here is $4'i"," re sponds the Treasurer; "it is all that the bond cost you." If this isn't the answer of a scoun drel, then there never was a scoundrel. To determine how much greenback cur rency "the country can reasonably bear," wa should resume and thereafter maintain specie payment, 'ihen, it the country wants 141)0,000,(100, or $800,000,000, or 1, 200,(100,000 of greenbacks, it will float that amount; all that are not needed in business will be sent in for redemption. Ood'a Dialing! with Nations. From the JV. 1". Jntlepcmlcnt. That penalty waits upon crime, and that punishment sooner or later overtakes the guilty, was no revelation of Moses or of Christ. The experience of mankind had taught them this truth long before the thunders of Sinai or the milder effulgence of the Mount of Olives. The heathen typified the truth and evoked divinities out of their imaginations, whom they invested with this office of chas tisement. Horace, in his sweetest and saddest strains, tells how Terror and Vengeance em bark in the beaked trireme with their vio tims, and how gloomy Carl mounts behind the swiftest horseman. But the ancients did not fully apply this philosophy to men col lected into nations, nor understand that the eame law of penalty governs the fate of em pires as well as of individuals. And the moderns, with all the light of a purer religion, and all the experience of the elder world, have not more than half discerned this preg nant truth. Nations have always deemed themselves wiser than Omniscience and mightier than Omnipotence, and have endeavored to build thetaselves on injustioe and wrong. And, though they may have seemed to flourish for a season, the divine justice has always over taken them at last. Passing by the ancient nations, though they are most signal examples of this order of Providence, let us glance at the modern world. Two centuries ago Spain was the terror of Europe, the leading power of tne worw; and now where is she r Abject, degraded, the pest of her own people aud the scorn of all other nations. The Inquisition and her colonial policy account for it all for these were injustice and cruelty orgauieliuto institutions. Two hundred years ago what seemed more established forever thau the Bourbons in France.' A despotism, the most absolute and perfect that the world had ever seen, had been consolidating itself for two centuries and more, and it loukl as if it must endure forever. But the breath of a handful of encyclopedists, aud play-writers, and pamphleteers blew the mighty fabric down their strength proceeding Imin the contempt of humau rights on which that fabric rested. And what saved England, whose mediieval institutions were even less free than those of France, excepting that the wisdom of F.liot, and Vane, aud Sydney dis cerned the true rule of liberty aud justico, for the supremacy of which they labored aud died 1 And in the exact proportions that that rule was adhered to has England been great and prosperous. And it is to her devia'ions from it that she owes most of her wars aud all her iutes iue distresses, from Jacobitisui down to 1'enianism. The present Bonaparte, too, is fast learn ing how vain it is to attempt to erect au imperial pyramid by placing it on its apex and propping it up with bayonets. Having waded through slaughter to his throne, and endeavored to strengthen and perpetuate it by iujustio, and violence and fraud, at home and abroad, it seems now as if he would re ceive the punishment of his crimes iu his own day and generation. His interference in the affairs of other natiens, from those of Turkey to those of Mexico, have come to naught. His apparent sucoeHseshave built up a rival nation iu Italy, and embittered the nation he unin tentionally oreated through his attempt to maintain the Pope as a peaoe-offerlmr to the priests and peatautry France. Aud now tl e Eldest Son of the Church has had to choose between lighting with Italy to uphold the temporal power, with Prussia watching to make her opportunity of his extremity, or for feiting the superstitious support of the imio rant masses of France led by the priests. Ex. cessive taxation and a grinding conscription alone can keep him on his throne, and it will take but a slight turn of affairs to make them the histrumeuts of his fall. The condition of the I ope and of Victor Emanuel himself might be easily shown to be but inevitable complica tions arising from the eudeavor to set aside the laws of God in their dealings with their subjects and other nations. We are ourselves no obscure example of the truth of this doctrine. We, too, endeavored to build up our own prosperity aud secure our own peace on the sacrifice of the rights and happiness of men as good as ourselves. We thought by consenting with tyrants to be per mitted to enjoy a part of their plunder of the poor. And for a while we seemed to succeed. But at last He who said "Vengeance is mine" bared his arm and avenged His poor. We paid dearly in the blood of our first-born and in the spoiling of our goods for our refusing to let this people go. And we have reasou to hope that our chastisemenfhas had the effect, in some good measure, which the divine chas tisements are designed to produce. We have, under the sternest compulsion of Providence, retraced our steps, aud begun doing the justice to our fellows which we 6hould have done ninety years ago. Had our fathers laid the chains of their captives on the corner-stone of their new edifice, in stead of offering human sacrifices upon it, what a mighty and prosperous people wo should have been 1 The chain of our brethreu which we consented to hold is what has held us back and kept us down in the careor of greatness and glory. And now our future is to be shaped and colored by the wisdom with which we make absolute justice the new head of the corner of our reconstructed temple of liberty. Thi3 is the struggle in which we are now engaged, and through which we must labor to the crowning victory. When we learn that it is in righteousness aud justice only that a nation can be established, and so live as a nation, we shall enter on a great career of prosperity and true glory beyond the warmest dreams of imagination. It is this that consecrates politics, and niake3 it a religious duty to take part in them until our laws become one with the divine laws of liberty, justice, and righteousness. Tliaildeue Steven ou the Nature of Our Government Hie Sullrage Uueatlou. From the N. Y. Times. An aged statesman in retirement sometimes wields even more influence than when actively engaged in the contents of public life. The weioht and authority due to his ability and patriotic services are enhanced by the pre sumption which age affords, that his opinions are no longer affected by his passions, and that selfishness and ambition have ceased to bo among the motives which control hi3 judg ment. When Jefferson at Monticello, and Madison at Montpelier, and John Adams at Quincy, were called on, after they had with drawn nom political life, to give their views as to the true interpretation of the Constitu tion, and the real intent of its framers on tho question of State rights, or the tariff, or the limitations of Executive power, their replies carried great authority to fair-minded men of all parties, because they themselves had been foremost among the founders of the Govern ment and the authors of the Constitution by which its powers and purposes were defined. Thaddeus Stevens, at Lancaster, is trying to follow in their footsteps. Though still involved in the sharpest political struggles of the day, Ilia Wanilll? litM nrwl failinrr imnltii 'n.titu 1.;..-. C ) UVUIVU ."V'lLI! 11 1 111 to new modes of making his influence felt ou the current of events; aud lest he may not be able to impress his opinions upon the nation from his seat in Congress at its nnminir aaa.-inn he has sent them forth in the form of a letter to a Uerman neighbor and professedly in reply to his reouest. We doubt whether it will m m L-ii as profound an impression on the publio miud as us autnor anticipates, it lacks nearly all iue qualities wnicn gave to Kindred papers issued by the early statesmen to whom we have relerred, their great authority. Inco herent in its style, loose and inconclusive in its artmment. and nnsnnt.iina'l 1 the Constitution or history of the country, it una uoimngto command ior it any overshadow ing luuuence on puuno opinion, liven those who have leen accustomed to regard Mr. Stevens as a great authority in affairs of gov ernment, will scarcely find iu this paper any thing to augment thier admiration. The very object it is intended to serve is not calculated to win for it the respect which so pretentious a document should command. The German admirer, who applies to Mr. Stevens for his "opinion of the present prospects of our couu try," does not ask whether we are comiog back more or less slowly, but surely, to the sure foundations of our old freedom aud pros perity whether we are restoring the Constitu tion to its old supremacy aud the Union to its old integrity, and are again rearing the struc ture of our Government on the principles aud purposes of the fathers of the Republic; what he wants to know is "whether we now are likely to approach any nearer to the true prinri. pies ofUUrti) than our lathers did, under their old and constrained Constitution." Without regard just now to the opiniou of Mr. Stevens ou this point, tec do not think we are ! We shall consider the country very fortunate if it ever again approaches .. near to the "true principles of liberty" as did those who achieved our national independence and gave us the wisest, best, aud most perlc-ot constitution of government the world has ever seen ! Mr. Stevens has no hesitation iu giving his correspondent and the country to understand, that he thinks we cm do much bettor than our fathers did. Ho thinks we can now es tablish a government which will embody and protect the "true principles of liberty," much more Verfectlv than did (lint nn tvhinli tr. isted, and which still exists, under the Consti tution of 17M). And the one thing to be done for the attainment of that mul lliu m. nt by which this more perfect form of liberty can 1. ci,.i-ii Iu l.uli-l L.. M Uinn 1... .1... no pctuicu lis iioiu ttj mi. uvcrrua iu uc, ma assertion and exorcise by Congress of absolute finrl r'niniiltp! Aiithoritv nvr tliu ivliril mira tion of suffrage in all the States so that no State finau nave, uere.uter, auy rigut or power ,i unv Tclin cliH.ll. and who k1i:iI1 lint, vnta (nr any ollicer, legislative or executive, in the - .lnflm. That rrcia f t ... 1 ,i I right that power which lies at the basis vf nil rmvurimient. Anil nf All AiiOmritir ia 11 11 fcjv.v.- J .a to be denied to the Status, aud to be ab sorbed heM absolutely and exclusively by the central authority of the nation. And itf and thus we shall "approach much nearer to the true principles of liberty" ll.n.i nro usnr could do llllilur Ilia "ni l an.l constrained Constitution" of cur fathers 1 1.1 . J . . r. ... I 1 11.1 1 1 1 flir. Dieveiin uuoo uuii pinicuu luav vue uiu Constitution ever permitted any such couceu- i..i!i.ti a! nnlitical TlOWftr. k ennnrit liiinv and In effect he admits, that it prohibited its exercise by the Federal authority. But be maintains that the fathers of the Republio intended to establish just Such a government NOV EM HER 2, 18G7. Old Bye ' THE LAUGEST AND BliiST STOCK OF F I N c OLD RYE VV li 8 K I C S IN THE LAND IS NOW TOSSRSSliD BY HENRY'S, II ANN IS & CO., Nos. 218 and 220 SOUTH X-T.OET STREET, WHO OH Ell THE SAME TO THE TIlADIt IN fcOT OK HIT 4nVANT4urri T Kit MM. T,V.r '0f.Jly WhUklM.IW BI)P,M.,rl,.ll th f.rorlt, br. Ii?ent d"trU"" throuta tl varloua uoKlba of IbCS.'Otf, aud oftlit. y,r, Ii .!! 1 contracts anada toir lot to arrlva at Pit Hi lvtuU lta II road Uni.ii fc.,rlc.o, I,,.. M h.rf, r at Uond.d W.r.h...,., .. pirt tuaralaot ' CARPETING S, OIL CLOTHS AND DKUGGliJTy. I1EEVE L. V12thstu2ui as he describes that this was their ideal of gov ernment as well as his and that while they could not carry it out, we can and must. Aud to sustain this most extraordinary and pre posterous pretense, Mr. Stevens pretends ,to appeal to the Declaration of Independence. AVe copy from his letter the following passage in which his argument, if argument it can be called, is set forth: "The Constitution of 1783 did cot carrv out tho rlnclplesof government wliich were Intended y the fathprs. when In 1778 they lal-l the foun dation of the Government on which this na tion was to be built. Then they had been iu spired with sucli a light from ou high as never man was inspired with before, in the groat work of providing freedom for tha human race, through a Government In which no oppression could Mud a resting place. "They contemplated the ereotlon of a vast empire over this whole continent, which in Us national character should be governed by laws of a supreme, unvarying character. While municipal Institutions might be grautod with fcolf control, for convenience, it w .8 novor la tended that one-half of tuls nation should bo governed by one set of laws, aud the other half by another and conflicting set, on the same subject. Tho law, the principle, whloh was to apply to the dwellers ou the l'enobscot, was to apply to those on the savannah aud Susque hanna, else the declaration would have pro claimed the eue the people on the l'enobscot or Kuhquehanna were born free and equal, and those ou the Savannah with a modified equality; that the oue had Inalienable rights, among which was liberty; that the other had Inalienable rights, but perfect liberty was not among them. "The grand Idea of those immortal mon was that there were certain rights, privileges and Immunities which belonged to every being who had an Immortal soul, none of which should be taken lrom him, nor could he surrender them in any arrangement with society. Ho es sential to the repose of the whole community was It that every man should possess eao a of these right, privileges aud Immunities, that he was loroiuun oy ins creator lo pare with them lie could not sell himself, he conld not sell hid children into slavery, lie could not sell his life for a price. He oould not surrender the right to pursue his own happiness. Every at tempt to do so was nugatory. Every instru ment fo.iudeJ on suoh a contract, no matter how solemn, no matter how hedged about by broad seals, no matter how stamped by Htate legislation and executive approval, none of these things gave It life. It was null aud void; iii nua a tui pne mcupHuie oi animation. "I am (ineakini now of thn nriuiiml dualcrn nt the framers of the Declaration of Independ ence, who had determined that there were cer tain principles wnioh, to give perfect liberty, ouuuiu tij'ij nuiLo iu every mortal ueing. nititR? Without excluding otherx. th ren art w uav ur mose ni'niH.nn Vinson mi immn. specifically enumerated; Life, liberty, and the mtmun oi mippiuess. xuese are universal and inalienable. It follows that evnrvMilmr nnnuo. sary for their establishment and defense is within thosd rights. ' Yon grant a lot or easement in the midst of your estate, you inereoy grant the right of way lo it by Ingress and egress. "Disarm a community, and you rob them of iue means or cieiendtng nie. Take away their weapons or ueense, aud you take away the lu alienable right of defending liberty. This brings us now directly to the argument bv which w prove that the elective franchise is a right of "ib ueoiuraiioD. anu not merely a privilege, and is oue of the rights and lminuuitias uro nounced by thai lustrumeutto be 'Inalienable.' '11.' as our lathers declared, 'all Just govern ment is derived from the usaout of the go v- erneu,' ii in leuerat republics that assent can be ascertained and established oulv through the ballot, it follows that to take away that menu oi commuaicaiiou is to raue away from the citizen his great weapon of dofense, and re duce him to helpless bondage, It doprives him of an Inalienable right. This cleurly provos that the elective franchise ranks with 'life' and -uueriy in its sacred inalienable character." Mr. Stevens thus assarts that the elective franchise is one of the inherent "inalienable rights" with which every human being is eu dowed by his Creator; that any law, consti tution, or compact, no matter how solemn it may be, which deprives any human being of 11 .1 - 1 4 .1 1 il . . . mai rigut, me elective irancuise is "null and void;" aud that our fathers, who framed tne ueeiaration ot independence and esta blished our Government held precisely that view of the case, and intended "the erection of a vast empire over this whole continent which in its national character should be governed by laws of a supreme, unvarying character," recognizing these principles and making them the rule of its conduct aud the ioundation of its authority 1 And now we say in reply that all this is utterly untrue. It is purely aud wholly a iigmeut ot Mr. htovens' imagination. Ue may entertain all these crude aud absurd ideas of government, but the fathers of this republio never did. lie cannot find, in anything they ever did, or ever said, anything to justify or excuse him for imputing to them any suoh opinions or ideas. We defy him to the in quiry, lie cannot support his assertions, as to what they intended, aud as to what they believed, by any evidence whatever. In point of historical fact, they never had any suoh ideas, either of abstract right or of the future destiny of this nation. The idea that votine was a right absolute and universal, or even a right at all, was iu that day entertained no where, outside of a restricted circle of specula tive, closet theorists. Not a single statesman of that age not a single one of the men who asserted, vindicated, aud established our inde pendence, ever dreamed of regarding aud treating the suffrage as an inherent, universal right, and of making that theory the basis of our form of government. Equally unfounded is the assertion that they or any of them "contemplated the ereo tiou of a vast empire over this whole conti nent to be governed by supreme unvarying laws." It would be difficult for Mr. Steveus or" anybody else to invent a statement more directly opposite to facts than this. The his tory of the country the record of their acts and opinions provos its falsity. They did not dieam of a continental empire of any sort the most hopeful aud prophetlo of them all Scarcely dreamed of a untloa whluU should Wltislciei tJ u KNIGHT &. EON, KO. SOT OII SXIT fcTKEET. even oarry its sway across the Mississippi; and as for a nation wirldmg a concentrated.' central power over all its parts, exercising unrestrained and absolute authority over all the States which treated aud were to maiutaia its existeuce the idea, if it had been sug gested even as a possibility, would have been scouted as absurd, or would have utterly thwarted all hope of forming a Federal Uuioa at all. It seems incredible that a man so familiar with the faotB of our history as Mr. Steveus ought to be, should venture to put such asser tions as these before the world. Ue cannot believe them to be true in any historio sense. Ue may think that the fathers of the republic ought to have held these opinions to be con sistent, and that, therefore, they probably did. But this gives him no show of warrant for as serting that these were their views, and for thus pressing the authority of their great names into their support. Suoh a course of argument is not merely unfair, it is dishomst. Mr. Stevens might as well falsify the dates and events of history, to suit his purpose, as to falsify the opinions and principles of its publio men. Mr. Stevens thus finds no shadow of support, in the opinions and views of the fathers, for his doctrine that the elective frauohise ranks among the "inalienable, rights" whioh were proclaimed by the Declaration of Independence as belonging to every human being, and of which no human being could be deprived by any law, compact, or constitution whatever. Such a doctrine would have been scouted with contempt by every one of the men to whom we are indebted for our independence and our frame of government. That it is also at variance with every principle of the Constitu tion, and at war with any form whatever of safe and si able government, it will be very easy to show; but we have already exhausted our space. Mr. Stevens proceeds in his letter to urge that this "inalienable right" of universal suf frage was suspended by the Constitution of the United States, but that this suspension has been now removed by the fourteenth amend ment to that instrument, and that now the whole framework of the Government must be reconstructed on that basis. We shall refer to this branch of the subject hereafter. LOOKIfJQ-GLASSEO OF THE EK&T FRENCH PLATE, Ip Every Style of Frames, ON HAND OR MADE TO ORDER. NEW ART GALLERY, F. ROLAND & CO., U I 2ui2ij rCo. Cl-l AIt.Cli Street. QTEAJVI ENGINE PACKING. The modem and extremely popular packing, called KILXKirAi l-milK ATIV'K, OB Has already been adopted by over 20,000 Locomotive ami biuUoiiury Imikuh'H. and lx beyond queiuiou the eunieHt litd the ujuhi durable, (lit) ciifuiits.it, and uei.rH tbu iKuclnnt iy il.u leuKl of any fcleaui euulue imuklni! yi-Uutroiiucd. it Ik not liable lo burn or cut, (Joes ni t require oil, anil there Ih no wu.ile In the use, as It Ih uiade ol ail ttlzea to suit tLe boxes, from lo 2 Inched in dlHUielvr. All persons InlBrnsitxl a the use ol Ibe .leitui engine are particularly reiiuetited. toffive lblH puckiiiga lilul. A liberal Uiauouul will be luudo to Uia ers. W. '. H IDliER, KO.B39 AIU1I M lltir, i-IIILA. Role ; Agent for 1'euiiHj Ivttiiia aud Delaware. f-ee drill. i nil, below. 0'K'KOF'l'IHClSl'rKlllNTKNDBNTOFM0TlVlB ii ii . . . : ,i. 1 uuriiiiuirie lu rela- . ,u. ,.uiiii'.iiiii,c Gimiuuijr iii jiemp faeklnir as compart d nu Lubricating 1' action I will JlrJ tbat Ileum l'aek inir. ..I . . w' y pound.. osl ,, tfTo noils" Verinurruurwb e t l.ubrlcallnK l'ackinir cokIh m ... ..' .. "Z bl 2 fjceiiw pe- ouud. 1 1-JO mill r mll ..;. uJU propose lo ue H exclusively for all bteaia btuffliiK ioxes. Very truv yoiirH, ommin UltOOKS. Supt. M.r.411, P. 6.-Tiie popular JlVlUtAl HV PACKING, i HI ir i .. ,MT.,rf B" V"1 " umerenl material, 21 MUthitmp --"- arnuiB ju pmup.. EXCURSIONS. Ii ' r i .!......... . .. . .i i . i m HiflllNliTUN biHiiuiMiai i-iivfw-' LIok HIAMiK OFliWlj'lt. Kl'O. b. M. iU.'l ON and A Kill, will rim -IIowb: Leave CHI cNU'i ireet wliarlai V A. "di M leave Ull MiNiiIiin at T A. M. aurt 125' P. M t' iiplnn at cil KKTKK and HOOK e. li way.' F" lo Wilmington IS cents. KucurHlon tickets, per A. Al. bi at. m ct-uLa. kma to Liliatilur iu , 11 nok. . la CUU. IU S lav 1