Aaee = i hod fl SL BS GiB + comsemPTIas. : How i; was-viewed oy ae men in 1814. Eaxtratts from’ the, Spléchis of Jeremia A Mason. the greatest lawyer [of Ne 1. and fram" CNef Justice "Daggett. th, greatest lawyer of Connecticut, delrocred wn the rv’ SUS ein 1841. "REMARKS OF MR. MASON. The honorable (gentleman, says the ernment has the co exarcizsed ap discretion Cc ny $2 our quire, of for an reguiar ar ill lately « ed by few, expressed by none. a sudden chinges dnuopinion son imp rin political subjor ro the usual forerunners | of revolutions in States, This is emp cally the case whae the foree of ment res's on the common sentinel cerely beheving the doctrine con to be dnwananted by the Constttuiisgh, an pregnant with consequences dangercu the rights and liberties of the ‘country, | unt permit it to pass with ut attempting futativnit The fmost monstrond enig- | vhen announced by high authority, |! i by plausibility, will, if per | coiiradiction ? time ’ it 003, and & mitted familiar to the mind, in their eriginal deformity. In return I take the hiberty of admonish ing the friends of the Adun:i ation, to he | eautious how they overstep the limits of the | Constituiior. 7Of all our dangers 1 see none more siarming thar apparent dis. upport to Y ose much « fl posinon to exercise arbitrary power. Rev olntie Asures ean never, with safety, Le resorted to by a regular Govern They place the mamstrate and gp: 2en ou the sane level, and nope can | into ing the hoiste ol al clemenis, the 7 7 | eRee whose hands tion «f the polit power with mil coin Falarm and & al} fear of that which | no extremity of | 0 of Hag the nation as the danger wunld justify the exorei authority. The inquiry is, whe the ! stitution gives to this Government the power | contended for ? The authority given to Congress “to raise | and support armies,” eam prise $ their whole | power on this subject thaity for ealling forth the tain circumgiunees, are the mean presen ral | the Con_ | Or the Legitiatine virtae of power, adopt she isp sed xeviption, and place by a the population of the Uait such perieds re shell bn in thevauks oi the regular a or po-tignseendant andodang Justify the exerci fda of i be plain principles, anddepend on construction or subfld fiasoning The power to. rise aud support srmies muet be constradd ‘glegrding to the inten tions nnd wm the people of the Ugited Sates, who made th nskitu- | tion’ consistantly: with all the known snd established ¢ of tha! Sudtes and of the people, eral prineiplosiof us must, Lo dvr vid from =o doubiful | istently with all the gen, ivi riatie cdg 1015 abd con uses uly, and for a ser. ¥ wits of the Un ted’ Sta en) and ander he cowibind of theiriown Stats] officers, and as fihink for shore periods of service, can this Gormnme nt the States for ther milida. From’ (hide re strictions it parent the prwer of ‘the Untted States hus a very limited nature, and that the States still retain greatest portion of spthority over Ae hd i | eal ‘on 1 B by fa milizia. Over the went of the United States power. ‘They muy use it in uli gases where military foree is needed ‘in any partiof ‘the world, under such periods ss, ey plesie There always Liava been in this eouliry im- portant distmetions between the militia aud regular army. These distinctions were sl- ways kept up, and in various instauces ex- emplificd in the war of our Revolution, and weronwetl widerstood by tbe: peopld\§t ig United States at the time of forming the Canstitation, if any such potrer as that contended for, col hae, been conceived to be granted by o Condtitation, it would have heen detce- 4 t by those so muh “alarm, | ved that such oor stras tion was nob even sug.est ied, i any of the | Conventions, ahhiugh: tho sibjedt ‘wis | there most ably discussed. 3 The power clainied 18 doubtless vastly greater aud wore dangerous, than any other possessed by the Government. Ji subjec ol ae. personal freedom of evaiy citizen, in| smparigon’' with which the rights of propor, are significant, to arbitrary discretion, | All the recruits wanted for the ariny | aght, af the Government should so please a and poitited o ed; yetitist i weber we gegtioprof the Uniony, v Hus in time of sar, except that they mist! Bok: tre power given this government to. raise s. that power of ite: § + | Tha whale opin part mays a the vieasure | = 7H ! 1 my | n i a, i | | arr Leountry whulban its rich “| President is anthonized to ell upon the say- pe finite Fthe ¢ a va RE § be ofticered by the States. An Coslonitraton 13 THUS JusTiriEp. | Jt is openly. wrpwed by, the same gentlemen as proper, just and legai. I hike thee donetusions wre fairly deduced from tl e premises. ‘If the" power of ‘this Governisent over the militia is | in time ' « war unlimited it does indeed follow that the) freemen of this country, who are subject to the duties of militiamen’ Way be eonverted into solciers of the army of he United States during the war, or for any definite period. Phe exception that they shall not be obliged toga from the State, or an wd: Joining State, 18'a watter of form, and not of right. They may bo ordered to Canada, or any other rémote region, © But sir.’ this whale doctrine is unconstitutional; it is an Lou rane, upon its face''and its pameiples sad provisions, upon the endoubted rights wir, nnd vpn the character of ‘our liberties Hunt the powers of this Government are {himiled—that those not eranved are reserved —are position§’dnnctioned by un’ ‘amend- ment tothe Constitution, Lend uvaiversélly admitted. “'Theentire control over the mili tin, previons to the adejition of the Consti- tution, was mr the States. All that” control of the onatitution except ivhat bag been delegated to ithe Uni “ious (0 raquiraTany. reason to. de ted Stes femping. There is to 0. Tis Teowdver, In my opivion of | the Cohstitation delegating a single’ power. [ies importance than the ol her, Which nflsets | Dyer word ‘employed on the subject ‘shows Yo rights of personal liherty, as this does that itis ‘Timed, “Congress shall have Bho the peanfe | POWEr (0 provide for calling forth the militia slavery, and von may ke their proncrty | [to execute the laws of the Union, sdprreéss All within hg Hicarreet: ons, and repealifiivasions* Whe ibed azes, whatever: may bu their |£1Y¢ power to eall forth the wiilina in those ite or abndifion in hfe, must anhimit fo | 2Xigenceis if the entire (nthorits over them yoke. Priests must, ha: taken from | Whe elsewhere given? Theabsurdity is ton the altar, and Judges frora the: heneh, apparent to admwitoferfument oriilestration The hizhest officers, hoth civil nnd mili. |A£8/0 tary, muet be jens mininddly forced into the “Congress shall hase power tof rovide for ranks of the afmy. The seminaries a ring, organizing and disciplining the mil- Yearning are to he robbed of their professors | © tio, and‘iop governing such part of them ag and soholarse 7b ther tefaturie: or seirndajd hy be émployed in the service of the Unic- oxgoptt HAIR di heshvient to the military bey States. reserviugio the States, 1eapective- : « the appointment of traming the ‘militia, ing fo “the discipline precribed by Were the Government nt liberty to raise. Armics by fore reiblg, ia King men al their dis: of ¢ he Sopstia ition, support them 2 ing, A “property iu. a like munner. lhe armies fren raised, might live at free quarters on { the people, Ina similar war.;a navy might Je p rovided, by ssiziog the ships. of individ: The right in both cases would be the sam¢ ; the iajury and distress. in taking en riy the least. The States shill retaining the principaj {tower aver the. wilitia, as bas heen shawn, . uals. armies must noi be construed as to destroy | This surely an. ihe militia, | mihilates all Siaio. power over {of this. Gosernmant,. Le converted into a | repnldp army. and the nravi-ion of thé Con- in this particular. torether with destroyed, the Sdere tar v's plamachich all nroper. order a Nis To that oot of nen the states he a te levied on a : a tay within ‘he precinct of theelas pute for the peornitd, ehjee- int cur which in ordinary times wonid insurmountable, The, tax proposed « a vialation too plain Hs of pr ronerty, when and, as you please. pn the ron will Be Held in estimating, Such a weasurg; cannot, it ought not, Ja fas If it eonld in no other | > I nationly bat TH tod. | ra wonld be the ievitable fre ! i a firmer | PIOVE wanner in ul be sahmtted sto. may provide for ar to eompanie, ‘battatiors des arddivisiors, © It may: Ibe arm'd, and the hati be dene; be pr way bé'avertsd heliove, hope it ‘would he uel ques when! this mengnre wae mentioned he! » honfrable member. T oealted ib ithe dis The most adioug slay es ol suhmissian prescribe ie 10 won k nf and wi Xd. O40 mature Heotion, Hor g Lem whl ¢inthal Eerie of LT res grogransenidn ml erm yopinion of tn the © States to which “they “mighe | character. Iris weak: (or itis ealealared | Be called fren dn the cases bifore specified to eflarICHS Toh AR I a ges [AL ! i Con gress may do’ to “establish » Ta i un fortiity and order which are so és i snce Hit ven Ts troy ithe Contin = ton welt regulated mil lia, (This is tion and Jihertiea of the conntrpl Tega diff. (hv 0 ivioas atid ies meatiug of the clause, cplt tn adaor fin Al fortainte iba motive | SESE mar hy! ©The President shall be Commandeér-in- HH Chingrof the Army and Navy of ‘tha United ites) and of the militia of the several States when called nto thd ‘set al” servies of the | United 'Seates,»” wasnt] Lin these articles of the Constitution, Con! unl [gress end the Preside. t ave every where lim- iin. lited, aid eviry whore the power of He States The militia earnot ba’ called of statesmen : [and Tt matters Titel to <5 and bberties are | 3orawickedness of 48 wd by lost thronzh the weakies its Public men are to be judy Px. ASULHS: blond: and ay gated in the pursuit of ano dy imo. much Te) cannot he g! IN apparent. For the fwfbsmnry: mn ¥iproner: deforcbof] furth® asa reghiar army: at all—th y may eonnire, ndicher wien mop pi nig | De walled ns a militia. They cannot be ns Are, in my pinion. to be withheld. [tres ined and ‘oi: cred iy any case, except to the pregant Admuistration, so i der the ity of the Stiles. ner com. wanded even by the President, except when ealled forth'1n the exi gencics specified, who ‘hese provisions a pret tence at ye wilitia are’ ‘constitu. ag thew continue to br ela hed with Congiitn | ! avthari vv apd sha have given) < a i ye mest uncqgniwncal and dee tien the af havine abandon i int defnsa, Low itl for that pornos, and vesnteréd «to that ahi 1 je! a wise and’ pra ot Admimasoation r, must, be. wiih in. the limi's, : and ing! respects: acearding to the Provice why CUonstituli Bevind not a, evil ris antall that eaild ba necessary under | Buch | ove the Constant of tends rely on those clauses eto Cop av = tha rig ht “to raise { sroies,’ = to provi le for crantss how dons of the thean & acd Ymits, and in altro proc iSfARe" tho Ct : thse WBE, Jad Ide 260 vrei ‘of feirgu me {en powers did aro an 50 a stances, will I consent to gn. Should the Ii the first, pavy to Congress. any power, Nat? ‘oma; d nse bag'laadoned by: the Gen joe ar, ‘the militis as such, it gaye, a genera eral Government, T “rust the p ople. if «iif An! hority, and if 80 the subsequent provis- oR, regarding them, are worse than use- retaininz a good portion of their resoniees, way rally wader the Sate” Guvarnments esse They tend only to perplex and be- nzginst Foren i asion and, rely. with | wilder. The truth 18. this clause has no HbR Biden er Ohh BE A conrae and virtoe, "ference ta the militia and more shan to lawyers or merchants. 1t JES OF MR. DAGGETT: 3, this bill {the on : [mrInies in a ma ik and by mean consistent iin Novi Curtin A814, before che Santte,) the ym 8 {with the. gr at principles of cil lilerty eral States and Territories for their respec. | tive quotas of 8) 430 ‘militia, to serve for| two years, unless sooner dischirged. They are to chdfimte part of the Rouiar Army. of the United 5 btes, and to be treated in every 1espsot as such, with! the exception | that they cannot be compelled io serve he | yond the limits of the S'ate or ‘Territory fur | nishing thew, und the limits of an ndjoining would revolt at its they would shake a State or Perruory, and’ tlialiie offfsers Ae inrome which Lr attemptit. It is alike] to be appointed by the Stare or Territorial | odious here acd T hope will remain Ro, authorities, The object of this force is de- Te ig said. however, that our country is in elared to be the defenea of the frontiers, of great perils men must be had, the army | the United States, must be filled, The! prineipteris assumed that Congress | pw, sous for res rting to unconstitutional and y by law, order the militia of the’ several} oy nrossive measures? The plea of neces- service of the United States, [sity isto ol]. to well understood to be ad- outiers and garrison thelr) j mitted. This peaple have seen times of im- 5, or for anv 50F | mine dungor, To the war of the Revolu- period, op during the war, nies tion d s'ruction assailed us on all itry is invaded, or fu imminent dan- | cao Whe, did we, fora moment, admit ENgAZ- | these doctrines ¥ n send | ded lB A pes LL always | (Om Coutterteis $3.000 bills on the Troy! adopted, and deemed sacred in a free Foy- {erment. Bat iy is utterly inconsistent A with oss pn iples to compel any man to !hocone g . soldier for hfe, duri,e (he war, or | for any fixid rime, In Great Britain, a war {like ration, a nation often the reproach here | for the Ln of its Government, no such raetics is or can be resoried to; the peogle tes into the to defend the fortresses or two yéars, where Fo vas in. This country while nowar with any nation whic b {ithe or fleets or Armies mratist' ie LEer & be in such condition and eousequently the City bank are in. circulation in differant militia are sabjec: tothe control of Congress parts of this ‘State. They are snd { Thcre is. po ligne Say: the advocates wf this to be ‘well execated with some de- | law to the power cf Congress, over the mili- | gree of skill, and the signatueds ar quite reason why women should not be allowed ; and could not fail to carry eonvietion to the | lo becowe medical men, . 1. and ‘make law,’ oN. Lez AND ‘RETALIATION IN PENNSYLVANIA.” From the Mobile Evrning | News. | “Iv was said that ‘uu blade of grars ever grew whers the horse of Aldlla had one set his foot.” Let the Conf derate army im- tate the leader of the Has in this - partien- lar.’ So holdeth forth the Richmond Dis patch, and all the ‘people say Aen ! Robert E. Lee, the rival of, Aitilla! Robert E. Lee laying as‘de the ‘mantle he hath won so fittingly ; the mantle of him whose grandson he i3‘worthv to be : ‘The firet, tho last, the bust, . Vhom avy. dare not hate; i a of him to. whom was» {‘Bequenthed tho name of W stl ietod + To make man blush théve was but Ons. ” Lying aside that unsv!fed mantle ‘for the barbaric role of Attila, the ;fScourse. .of Rovere Eu Lee. whose name is a synonym for honor, tiuth, modesty, digs)! Mankind 1”? nity. piety —all a// that constitutes moral as well us military grndenr—canying ar- som, rape, murder. destruction: and. desola- tion smong unaraed men, and onprotected women and children ! The army of Northern Vrs onith article in of Nontherns (known to the people of this country, and] ¥ . | what pride we write the sentence—thearmy Virginia! Hows have: these, our boys, ti whom 1ife Had teen bith a bright play-day, bared Uric breasts to the 8 orms of wind. and hail, and snow, and sleet, and grape, and hall, Lecoming suddenly, under the michty re Sponsi “ality resting uron them: veterans ; an invincible host ; a nation's safeguard? Now, when victors on eve TY. battle-field ; now, when they spread an un- stained banner before’ high heaven 3 now, when all earth is amazed at the reserve, strength and honor of the Southern charac. ter. a3 chown by these. ow exponents: now, now shall the army “of Northern Vir ginia our pride, cur boast, our glory, with their youug Isurels around them, become a Hunnic baud— a band of marauders—burn- mg delenceless farm houses, tearing down fences, robbing henroosts Stonewall Jack- son conquered all his foes, moral and epirit- ual, ere he had resehed his full came the greatest general this country hath produced V (Loudon Times) the est embodiment of the Christian virtues purest illustration of the ( hristian warrior, Now. when all the nations are rejoicing and houoring him az a he bla and mighty man of valor, fuller, nay rather risen to his fisting plice amid the hosta of the Lord God om nipoten.. now shall the corps, so long ani- mated by his great soul, with hs holy name for a Bartle ery, his gnardian spirit tor a guide, that corps to whom the taki ing of defended cities is but as child's play, high- s, the shall that corps smash mirrors] tear up li. thraries, cut fami'y portraits, break ofien drawers, and steal women's garments? Yet this is the retalistion wn kind— who wishes it—who, who so fallen? "The Generals of the Northern army have become a “Secon tert, 8 hissing and a’ by-word"” wherever civilization has a foothold, Shall our Gene erals beerme 0 2 Is the “rebellion at the lust gasp’; must it Tesort to petty revenge becanse too powerless to do like unto those we So detest and despise ¢ Said Wood in New York, “We cannot compare Lincoln, and Butler and Bdrnside with Davis and Lee and Jackeon,”and thirtvthousand of our enemies applauded. Would you make it vosrible to compare them ¥ The question is not WITAT Do oUR FOES DR- BERE, (they deserve annihilation) BUT wiTAT 18 WORTHY OF US 2 Because a cur has bitten, ‘ne, MUST 1 BITE THE OUR? The nations bad | been taoght to hate and despise us, that we were semi civilized, ent-throats and assas- '8ins PAR _EXCELLENOF, : bat or. very, foes “Ihave been forced to acknowledge. that we '| Wave taught them lessons | worthy of imita~ tion lessons of maonunimiry in the haar of victory. * Now, when we have compelled this tritute—compelled if not the nominal, the real recognition, and ad niration. of the worlds when we have laid the charge’ of barbhraid brazearts and fixcft ‘it pon the fov—now shall we yield afl (hit moral digni- ty and erandear, YIELD IT FOR ALL TIME AND ALL RISTORY, for the poor pleasure of devas. tating a few acres ‘of Pennsylvania, or gut. ting a few Duct | Stores 2 No, a thousand times NO 3: Xe be to. God we have no need to aught cortemptible: a us then’ cease’ this shout so'tinworthy of Let us strive. to visita ‘TERY AND MA- rh VENGEANCE, Let their country: be "dismembered, bankrupted ; ‘their once great name a by-word } lut them be compelled to sit at the foot a they hive at the “head of | nations ; as great, as hath been their. pride, so great let their degradation be}. | “This would, indeed. avenge our ‘monrners ‘and aur exiles venge them as is deserved | of our focs, A318 WORTHY oF US. But let us néver area. of accomplishing this great What then? Are thesq Ye hEeANCE: if we bave succeeded by our in- I'kane cry, in debasing, demoralizing and dis- gracing our noble boys, our glorions army. “Great God of Ueaven! in this breathless hour make Thou Davis and Lee deaf to the (too thoughtless voice of a people exaspera- i ted by Jong suffering ¢ keep them worthy to) be a nation’s saviors, WOLF to be Thy hon ored sons ! The Luzerne Union says it sees Norling to prevent the election of Jadge Woodward | by at least one handrd th n and majority, rear eG EB p— “An Tishman says he ‘an gee no earthly f i cape or e: 1 DEMOCRATIC 4LETING. ialamp, | Qer, afd afferie usual Prelim busi. | we found this feliow porverting the nation, say- prime, be- |: | warned tha: war, bloody, and rainous, would, § finished d,’n tiotion was add that mad furbidding to give | 1b Ceasar; ov. T Alexander, Bq yof Bellefohutd laadress [it Usb imself is Ohuse a Kor 8. ho meeting. Mr. Alexander resprnded fol 3 Aud Pilate aeked him, saying ari thon the call in sn abie and eloqhent addvese of! the hing of Jews 2 And be answered | him, over an hour's davation 1, his argument being | and said, thon sayest if, . mild and temperate, and entively devoid of [04 When said Pilate to tha Chief Priests the cant pheases £0 common to politicians. | kod 10 the People, iad no fault in this He treated the republican purty in a re tun spectful manner, and attributed the many | 6. errors they hud committed and the evils tivy | Flu s have brought upon the country, to a mista [Jewsry, Le ken idea in regard to our form of ; govern. | pace, ment, and to their prejudices in? the [ 6. When Pilate heard of Gallilys lie nsked democratic party. He helicged the masses | whether tha wan were a Gallilean. of that party were honest men who w tia he belong. their countiy , but who had been misled i to he sent, him support of the repnblican partly by the fulse teachings of alolilion demagogues, ile Auld they sare the more flerce, saying surzeil up the peop ¢, teach ng \irghout gruning this {rot Ga vil to loved 7. Aud as soon as he ke (unto terod's jurisdiciion, ty Herad who hunself also was at Jurusalem at that yma. dwelt elaborately upon the cause of the war, 8. And when Herod saw Jesns he Was charging it, where it justly belongs, vpon | cx y glad for hie was desirous to the abolition and republican pariies, and by ! him for a long season, becanse he 1 conclusive proofs established the fuect, that { had henrd many things of him; and he the disregard of the plain teachings “of thie Constitution, the violations of thé law, the demial'ot the authority of the deciciors of the Supreme Court by the abolition and re Jtiopad to have seen sowe miracle dove by him, . 9- Then he questioned him in ma- ny words; for it he wnswered him noth. publican parties, under the plea of a * 1 ig. er law," way thie beginning of the civil war. | 10. ‘And the Chief Piiests and scribis That the recent riots in New York and clse-tsrond and veh ‘menently arcased pa where, were but the legitimate off pring of | 11 And Herod and his men of war get hm at nought, and moclced Aim aad array! ed him in a gorgeous ‘robe, and 8erit him again to Pinte. 12 Aud the same day Pilate and © Herod were ‘made’ friends together,” f6¥ “before they were at enmity between themselves, 13. And Pilate, when be had called tos gether thie chief priests and “rnlers, and all thé people, 14. Said unto’ them.’ Ye have Sronght this man unto me as one: that prevertheth the pecple, and nehold: I having ex min ed him before you, have found no fanitin this wan, touching thege things whereof | ye ac- cused hm.: 15. No, nor-yet Herod for T gent you to him, and lo, nochmg worthy of death is done the disregard for law ag taught and prac- ticed b; the administration itself. counted the wavy errors and crimes com ait. ted by the sdniinistralidn in its conduct of the war, showing that the ‘many lives that have been cst, the wmiilions of treasure that base been squandered nud stolen by corrapt officials, were chargeable to the im. heeility and corruption of the President him self—that 11s whole policy, as shown by proclamations and orders, was to .the end He re- that slavery shou'd perish though the Con stitation ard the Urjon should fail with it and be buried in one common grave, He closed his address amid rounds of applause] calling tpon the honest masses fo rally arcund the standard ‘of democracy for Woodward, Lowrie and Liberty, and theu, ie HH as although the Union, under the present mis- 6. , will hererons, chastise him ol re- ease him. rule may po to pieces before another presi dential election, (which he hoped Providence would prevent) the independence, the dignity and Government of the country would, at Teast, be saved from the general wreck, and the liberties of our people remain intact, Upon the conclusion of Mr, Alexander's remarks, the Indies sang the song of I am willing 10 taky his place,” said (he stranger, Pilkwson with “Youtake the place.of my. i » wreteh 1 12 teagh yan te insnit 8 di, cd woman, you vazabond 1 cried Mp Kinson, ny she discharged the dirty soapsuds in the faca ofthe di scomtbivted and astoni. hed. . substitute, wha {a3 to big Heels Just in tim, to escape having Lis head brohiei, Ly the bucket. tt) A emi LL T= As marriage was not designed for ith a. fants, A shonld not be allowed to pop the question bifore they are weaned. © to the wealth ory vty of the offander. LL is wrong to mete ont justice according Man's worth consists iy his virtue and nat in his doilars and cents, Beauty adorned in the fl ners of virt ie ia’ more lovely than (fiat arrayed in the, 9. Joes, of Golconda, The bad mechanic wilf always, “con enn his material, There are some on a ptritety © wind. 4 that they scarcel, oer dr 7 8 sober breath, We should pen. our injurioy in ‘the an bat our benetiig in brasq, He that piurs’in his rom pours out bis : reason, The way that provides not in summer, muse want in ‘winter,’ . "We should never mourn for that we can. no: have, A dollar 1 hand is generally join tan in the ledger. None of us should be idle; the Hen with one chicken is as Binge 88 "the one with” °° twelve, i adul, ER yo) n ¥ or oks ad Mn Sn never Eke truer words | shan when he said, mn his, Fours of July .. speech, that he was not prepared tomaks a speech worthy ef the occasion, Unfortuu- ; vtely, he never is prepared to make a speech worthy of the oceasion, and itis a fact be. coming tho settled conviction that =e never will be. Tt is a very bad comment on. the capacity of a Chief Magistrate that cannot. geil upon his feet and say a few ‘words to the people without blundering through his part as a stripping lawyer would ue asham- ed to bluuder. Frow the time he enuuciat- ed the “nobody hurt” joke to the present, he bas placed himself and the country in a. mortifying posiiion alevery public appear- aner. We can survive bis ancedotes but his speeches are tou much for equaniuity, There iy probably but one other peculianty, that can rival thew, and that is hig vein of letter writing Considering that the nation allows him to dv the goveruing, the least _ he can do to show his gratitude 18 to make uo maie specches and writs no more jetters, ac = > 1 2 Et dn Sufehienee of A ffevt " hit - The weeting was a great snecess; and | re uitlavoll ty i a previous snnoancement 4 5 the Detnberatic CIHGItHE Bofors Kool TY. i showed that the b rit of demotracy is not Me. Pilkinson, s small farmer in Pan. " ; and cannot be crushed cat in the borous gh! sylvania, was some time ago drafied for the ionviile, mer at the schocl-honse on Satar- aid: fowaship of U { f hi day evening tie 25th of July. Al Hous bi wuship 0 0. 55 vice of hil country. Hrs wife, (ho" ihe |} te wElither Wess asl HE, ie, ‘Widrd a A voice of thanks wastendered to the la. |! 1 possessed general informaiion, is one of the ‘ i c mocracy turhed nt in this night hol a) Qies for their song, and to the speakers for | best cenjugal partners, avd she was much i g ay ently hie (RG . J ’ i 2 Th jaar elo yuent and insiructive speeches, fp at the thougot of paring with her i ) $ GIL g + 3 ladies ot rs p is 3 ‘ 50 ap os | wherenpon, the meeting adjourned to meet bi usband. | AN'she wes dngaged vi serdbhi g 8. 0 MESS 07 anchi 1 8 3 4 3 : AL | again in four Beis Jassson lott her doorsteps, a rough luoking siranger spirit of patriots, and ear e to cheor with ini cams up end add Thi : 8 dd. esved her} their presence, those engazed in the ‘good’ CASE IN JUDGES PON ys PILA° £3 wf hear ma'am, iw bushaudn! ¢ i 14 , that sou 8 cause of restoring the democracy (6 power. | i SOUET. bon Ghia. ? RL SUar.Lashaugy | ay ey, al ois; ISiraticliisee y the laws | +e . ; (odes 8 They, alth a fitsed ty the 1 ’ hi, SEO ‘ v i o Yes sir, he has" mvowercd Mrs tas of the Tand) a 1¥Enes 1hvol d CANTER Xxx. ki = ji #; e and “hate Qadir | ftps : sen on ugh di £ knows thers is Fe Si a =e > wen thaico 43 t 0 mined to't of rH Tr aflaence! 1. Aud Yhes whole mul til y, oT e i : ae Wi tei pr he Paid thei {4 ides Amis on the ‘side of hy dogide FAR. Ortle “Présit| ardsci and led hionnrito Pilate 1 1 WN BRAT pp ——— dent of the (IaH Ehitel tho ment to ‘or 2. dndihey began toageuse him, saying In am, 1 have coms to offer wy ad 909 gna a aw £ i fasdw > A young man in Oalifornta, Whos H friends at howe hod neglected to writs ta © him for 8 Ding time, adopted” the expedient of sending letters to variods business ‘men men mn the neighborhood. inquiring the prices of land and glock, intimating that' fio had large sums 'to “invest, By return mail he received no loss than seven letters all anxionsly inquiring afc hig heaith, when he was coming howe & . incleding some warn anes from an oki aad tery cold Sivesihbacts 4 1g a Bre ar nd Sr To The Tribune Was once ® Yesrtarian ‘and antisw-r. . Is New. Orleans corre spon dent having related that in a btile at Porgy “Hudson, * one nemo was observed with a rebel soldier in his grasp, tearing tho Hesh from his face with his_ teeth’ wi hus) exclaims ibe Lrrbuns, “prgses one regiment blacks to everlasting fume." 1a ig, yesrn Greeley will advocate cantiiniine OAD = If the {et papers are full o treason, and of enmity to the solders, i. dow’ the BlazkRepublizan anthorities lot the soldicas sce them 2 Lm te Gebrmemg Among the diated meu 1n Boston ‘sre two- a Ja Catholic Clergymen, six editors the United: States District Attorney, the Provost-Mars: shall General, an artillery Air gs three John Smitha. busgssib | Bt Brean s A young doctor on being asked x contri: bute toward enclosing and omamenting. a . cemetery, very cooly replied that. in fl Bag... oc : it he should do his part. - dic b> Deiir me, how Ruidly Beles m said Mrs. “Partington pecently at af Neuiphtanteiis 80, meeting. *“T dm always rejoiced when he mounts the nosnil for hig’ eloquence warty [TF Always look up. Every good thing heart of any honest mun that ever ware a {cometh from above, me in every eatiriise of my body.» —— @ Ra ascribe vy the WatcHMAY, wd &%