BATCHELOR BILL Atone. quite alone. under ClohlJn-Rod hie Mile brown Boum,. dwelt Batchelor Bill. Right merry 010 village.girle laughed u they said, lle knit bin own stockings nod cut his oto boon 4 Abd hung dripping clothe., rbining . .nowily whim, To dry io tho glow of the moms, mooplight. Z i t w h n e en d a o n or e w n . m y e , 21 , 1. to n k g s .guns: • tner Virough ; Fall many en urchin by flower-lore prates CAme begging and bore them away un his breast, For the hermit was gentle and ultimo, sat In the low wooden por , eh,'with his great, pulring rat; not nere- • mile fora maiden he wore, A. peering they whispered and glanced at the do;r. in phabby attire, with titne.whitened ernwn, On Sunda! cone Ihiebeior Bill slowly down Tn the lotainl little ehureh.. Ills reverent elb Pe...1 IL. Ige ille VOUS farce end fair, softly Ip $ A. beset with his head beading ewer trio 'lilt the sermon rat ended, the kn. eang one. blest, Then gt inn brieranswer to greeting or elutes. IVAI4e4I slowly away, In, one in a trance. ' 1 d ire you, , Kate Roby, to tie it bouquet I,or thu ilobleh 11111 bachrdor, Valentino, day, I,trig at hie inansion, artill glnneing within, r ee If old 11 1 113 enn hake, brew and !pin. 1101 you try it A I 6) a., I enn ref, in your eye. • u will Aram lb° redoubt "—'•Yer, Kose, - 1 will try." "Tora bonny bouquet. with it. rose, so red, Thn t , Maga-0000,re, Kate Roby dread, T ilia httle ht... 91 home on ilia slope of the WI CC rh purpose of 0111.111er towartl Bachelor To win • eon word, a untie or a bow, lists Ruby hail taken this Valentine-so, The door wnte tight abut, the cat by the atone niatfully up in het Noe, nith 'a moan. It hen ehe linciekeil. No •nerter. '•Al' Kate, you hale loot; lilt the !anti, open portly, clip lightly neooso They waded for Kele, they shadowed the finer Arivrre lire sun 111114/ a.golden met of er the n4wr , m tire meet of the soft woren lire liana punting baulrarri, her cheek blench ing Ks:ell..liy came whispering —Bachelor 11.11 He rpe well on Int beel..aieeps soundly and ellll The moments ore enensieedn more bethe breath, When lag euntse_nn the dm! of !tenth: he wheel at the fountain line rusittel and stolid, Toe: link Iron the soy! o. the body %11.1.1 dropped. ine, nee how rl peritefully, pallidly lies. ~Thiateaell.ai whose owner line gone to the skies l'heriel a worn, little Ihhle —beside et a tress 11l shining heir held en the last. cold caress, And here on tire larenaton the hand seiltend cold, A woman a face pictured en stump of gold, A•t I a laarriago terfille.kla. blotted with tear!, erampled and tattered, and 'allow wills Se. Po; gt a eet.lllbleil n fib trtMlllo. pen Annie, •F'alie Annie,' again and ?gain All' Clod gots too pardon for blundering Jost, Oer the sorrowful soul whteh has just gone Cu Make us kinder And better, end leach us to care F• 4 Earth's lonely, destitute one. et ery where, 'F, speak gentle words, let er a•ktog return. IVrongra spirits grow ever so moody end stern. At the I.llllllled bough thugs out the hard, * knotted wood, Yet is' 'Amager for Nwhat it has met nod oi oloo; t l . Viten the hero eomm bark from the red fire o 1111,, 11'e• see the shrank limb, we gee the broad peer It it hereet there nre ne‘er chewing the tnark 01 the thrust in the heart, the blow in the dark ' They had ibe torn:JO flowers by Ilnibc'or Bill An I enlerwnly. 111.1wIT .le•rrnded the bill Then the vtllagers reverent laid him awhile In the quaint lithe church, at the head of the aisle, I% bile the prayer end the hymn went soaring on high. And the curious, pursing to bill +7lll good bye, Still saw in 1111 band, (face down on hie breast,) 'I he picture. and round it the dark. curling tress, And jested eo more Yet Kate Roby, still pink• on the grave, roll. him Rio Actor POLITICAL HISTORY.----PRESIDENT LINCOLN AND HON. ALEXANDER H. STEPHENS. The National Publishing Company bas is-tied it work •ntitle , l l, ,Alextiodcr II Stc ph,•ns in public and prienle, with Letters kind Speeches. before, during, and since the W k-," by Ileikry tleveland. In It we find 'h,• following exceeding'' , interesting cur .rezponkleikce, which hos never afore been published. Me. Clevlnnd snys "We are Irwin d by Mr Stephens that no person h I ever seen the letters of Mr. Lincoln to 1.1 o until mince his o rciurn from Fort War r•n , n 1805, except hie private secretaries ••for your own eye" or Mr. Lincoln like It,n, saC'redly lesser/a I, no for as possible, in long as it was et all necessary or proper. Tor letters nee is follows FROM MR. LINCOLN TO bin lITZPIIENN SPRINGFIELD, Nov. 00,1800 Inn. A. 11. Stephens Mr DKAR SIR : I Lore rend in the news n.i.ers your speech recently delivered (I thotOtiefore ihe Georgia Leg,'lettere, or ilv 'sive...bled members. If 3011 hove re vi.e.l it. se is propnble, I shall be much oh iged to you if you w Monona me a copy Yours very truly, A Lincoln =I Cfl IP rOlll.. 111.1.1 R, Dee 14, 1800 MT DEAR Vine short and polite ',two of the 30th nit , enkint for a revived cam of the speech to which you refer Se , .not received until lost night. The ,newnpaper report of the speech has never divers 'evict,' by me. The note. of the re porir wore submitted to me. and corrected to Rome catent,-before being pobliaheil, but not en titevoughly as I could have wished The report wa• actinium tally correct If I hod hail tiny idea that it would have been so ectenvivell circulated as it has been and teen repoblinhed in eo ninny pined, through out the country, I should have prepared ~.,copy for the preen in the filet place But I hod no such thought, , nnd therefore let the report go an it 111.1. There are several in noturneies in it, but the main points uppenr elemr for ell pract hoot purposes. Toe country is certainly in great peril; and no man ever liSdAsovier of , grenter re•pon nautili°. resting open tibia than you have in the present motusnlous criers Tours, most respectfully, A. II STEPHENS. lion. A. Lincoln, SPringfiird, 111 REPLT OF MIT. LINOOIOI, jFor your own eye only.] BPKII4OFIRLD, Duo. 22, IGOO My MAU Stu : Your obliging answer to my short note is just received, for 'fetich please seceitt my thanks. I fully appreci• ate the present peril the country is in, and, the weight of responsibilisy on me Do the people of the South really entertain fears 'hit • Itepublican Administration 'Gould, dtrectly or indirectly, interfere with their gloves, or with them about their slaves t If any do,l ist, tO assure you, as once a friend. im.l Ain, I hope not an enemy, that there Is nltAsustrliff, such fears. The South wnold be in es.-more danger In this respect than in the days of Washington. I suppose however this does not meet the case. You think slavery is right, and ought to be ex truded ; while we WO it is wrong, and ett,iht to be restricted. That I suppose Is the rub. It certainly is the only difference between us. Yours, very truly, Mel= •TtI•IIZY/TO 11111. LIXCOLIN CRAINTOMMIVILLC Deo. 80, 1860 Laaa Sin: Yours of the 22d instant was received two days ago. I hold it and ap• predate it as you intended rersonally I 1101 not your enemy—for from it ; mid how ever widely We may differ politically. yet I inlet we both have oo earnest desire to preserve ■od .maialain the Union of the Stotts, If it can be done upon the principles VOL. XII. , and furtherance of the objects upon which ' it was lor.netli It was with ouch feelings on my port dint I sUggested to you in my I ormer note the heavy respoutibility now resifu g on jail, and with the tame feelings I will now take the liberty of saying, in ell f llknees sod earnestuees, that Ibis greet orject can never be attained by forge. Thin istiled cony 'set it,n Consider the opin• i 1 ( r-er , wet l Ii it , end pain upon it for yourself • n error on this point may lend to the most dlsnetrons conneollmllers I will also add, that in my judgment that the people of the South do not entertajn any fears that a Re publican ndmin istrat ion, or at leant the one about to be maugurnted, would attempt to interfere, directly or immediately, / with sla very in the States. Their npprebension and disquietude do not spring from that source. They...do not nriae , from the foct,ot.tbe known 01111 slavery opinion of the President elect 4ashingion, Jefferson and other Presideni - Onre generally admitted to 'Joie been 01111 slavery in sentiment. But in ;hose day, Rini ida•ery clot not enter at an element into pert). organisations. Ques lion of other kinds—relating to the foreign policy, commerce, finance, and oilier legiii ' mate objectn'of the GenernLGovorninent— were the blink of inch nosociationa in their day The•private opinions of indi•iduals , upon the subject of kfricen sinvery, or the status of the negro wills as were eel look ed to 111 the choice of Federal officers any more titan their views upon inanely of re ligion, or any 011ier subject over whist. She Ou•erninent tinder the Constitution had no control Bid now thin subject, which i• confessedly on all aides outside of the con , tiiiitianal action of the Gorernment, no far on the Stales are concerned, is 111/00 the `.central idea" in the platform of principles nuiounced by the triumphant petty. The len/ling objects seem In he, simply end wan tonly if you please, to put the instuninoin of near'y I.lr the Sullies limier the Inn of Inttric °pit ion and netionnl ,condchinnt..m. This, mine getteral principles.. is 11111.: enough of itself to rouse it spirt cool only of 1 genernl indignntion; but of revolt, on the port of the proscribed. Let me illustrate It is generally conce Jett, by Ilia Republicans teen. (lint Con gress cannot interfere with slavery in the States It in viinnlly roncededthnt Congress cannot establish nay form of religious wor ship. Now suppose that nay one of the present faiiirist inn churches prevailed in all the Southern Stater, but had no existence in any of the NOrIIII;In States ; under such ' circumstances suppose the people of the Northern Srateli should orgiultwe political party, not upon a foreign or doniesdie poli cy. but with one leading iden of condenam• tion of the Joon inns and tenets of that pets.' flouter church, and with the avowed object of preventing iis extennion into the tom neon territories, even after the higlient Jo dicial tribunal of the land bail decided they laid no such' constitutional power' And enppose Illst n pat ty' so organiml should rairy a presidentiel cleat inn ! Is it not ap pnrent that a general feeling of resiminnce 10 the success, aims toll objects of such a party would necensurily and 00.16111 y en roe ' Would it not be the inevitable con- -,-F el.. ge sequence • And the morn no, if possible, from the admitted tact that it was n mutts beyond their control, nud one tint they ought not, in the spit it of comity bet ween co Stater, to attempt trkmiddle with:- I submit three thought. to yott for your calm reflection We nt the South do think Ain run slavery, an it exists with on, both mor ary and poluically right Thin opinion to fo inded upon the inferiority of the blank race Von, however, and perlinps a major •ty of the North, think it wrong. Admit the difference of opinion Tho some differ ence of opinion exiled to a more general extent among those who formed the Col, when it woe made and Adopted The changes have been mainly on our side An virile. were not formed ' on this differ ence of 'mutton then, why should they be now ! The some difference wdblil of course ex i't in the etippwed case (Irreligion When portico or comlunations of men, therefore, so form themneleen, must it not he onsnmed lu nlitte not from rennon or nny nesse of juettee, but from fanaticism The mutton ran evening from no oilier Aintree, and when nien conic under the influence of anaticism, there is no telling where their impulse. or missions may lend them • TIIIS in what creates our discontent and apprehension Von will also allow me to say, that it 14 neither tionatural or onrentionnble, especi ally when we see to whet extent this reck less spirit has already gone. Such, for to' stance, as the avowed dinregsed and bretch of the Constiintion in the passage of the mounts i,n a number of the Northern Sillies ageing( the redempt ion of fugii icon from ser vice. and such exhibitions of madnese as the John Drown 'lid into Virginia which Ilan received no much sympathy from twiny, anerno open eondemna non from any of the leading men of the present doudnant pony! For a very clear stmenient of tire prevailing sentiment of the most moderate men of the South upon them, I refer you to the speech of Senator Nicholson, of Tennessee, which I enclose to you. Upcitt *review of the whole, who can say lbal the general die , potent and spprehension Is not wall foun ded In addressing you thus, I would tint have you understand me as being s4perf oral enemy, but as one who would balm' you do what you can to save our common country. A word spoken" by you now would indeed be "lime apples of gold in pictures of silver " I nitres' you, be notrdesseived as to the nature and extent of the danger. or es to the remedy Conciliation and harmony, in my judgement, can never be estsblislied by force. Nor can the Union, under the Constitution, be maintained by force. The Union wan formed by the con sent of independent sovereign States. UI limate sovereignty still resides with them seperately, which can he resumed, and will be If their safety, and security, in their judgement, require it. Under our system, as I view it, there is no lawful power in the General Government to coerce Stales in ease any or them should throw herself upon her relived titbit% and re acme the full inelVille Of her sovereign powers. Force may perpetuate a , Union. That depends upon the eontingenoice elt war.- But such a Union would not be the Union of the Constitution. It would 'be nothing short of A consolidated noose roe for giving you these views. Extese the strong longtime used. Nothing but the deep inierest I feel, la proopeot of ffht '::;'ilititr4 El the mart alarming clanger. now threatening our cialman country, noted induce me to do it. Consider well what I write, end let it lin•ts such ivoight with you as,in your judo meat, under sll the responsibility resting upon your, it merits.. Your., respectifully, A is...v.tanii II &artless. lion A Lincoln, Spritiemlslp4ll TRANS-ATLANTIC VIEW OF THE SITUATION. A Isle number of Illaekitood's ..'agenott contains nn Article an Democracy in Amt., en, fr . not which we estrnet the following. (Jur English eo . nsins, free from the pa,suum and pelt) , prtjudecen which becloud the visions of too nmny people in the United Stales north of Mason nnd Docon's line, rem In here a egireet view of the 1.11113110 n which the wnr has left our country : .liree, we too may soy 41,4 10 AMC iCIC --look et it 111 it to in tiny lie blood and irennure bore bee. expended lb •ain. One section her conquered another by brute force--pnupelizeil c•crybOdy m the43,llh, the negroen an well as their ninsters—and , resolotely oechnen evert to nit oupt the rez torntion of the Union, xhich it took up arm to uphold. The Cottuiiiiiion, with us fine checks nod hal inces, ij deldro3ed or hiusied to score; Slate rightn nud local liberty--wihhoui dire tegnrd lor which it is Atjarly iteponsiblo fir the gavernment to exint is any otker elinpe Ilion tint of in militnry despot rem--art. see at naught; the chief magktrate in ,threntened w lib sot penchment, for no other (dice°, than • strict adherence to the Consliintion which lie more a solemn °gib to defend ; rind evert the , Supretue Court. the mat niegiaxt • hotly an the United Sinter. in ihrenirned with eupprensioll. becanoe the Radical fire lion I hat 11/18 a niojni it) in Ciingrea.har really no Congre• • tinker the SUIIIII 110 Ill reeenipl in it. i• opprelienvive that It deliberate judgment will he legally pro nonticeil in favor of the acme( the President and age MO their own George Wallington foreenw thnewils lint were likely to lie front lie angry anti aggreardre passions of an unlimited DEllooClrtcy, nud eatemnly warned Lis countrymen of the danger -- Jefferson. Madison, Monroe. Adams, Jack son--all these illustrious Presidents snit diem also and sounded the nlarm. Web. stei, Crutend,n and-Vdtglits--well filled to become President, but not destined for the pmlros position—also pre.beled the tad results of to day Did the Democracy had no eyes In see, no ears to bear; end in order to obtain It, destroyed the htterty et die white well of die South to give liberty o the blacks, converting the latter trout well fed laborers onto serelcbcd paupers, and reducing their number from four mil lions to about Iwo millions and n half In line process it left for the whites, both of the North and South, a crushing legacy of dad, deinornlisation, disunion,and' the eraititity of finoncial crn.ll that has 3ct to comb and astonish the wnrld by In meg- °Dude, renewed conOtct•, sectional bate•, _rind nil the crop of the dragon's teeth which the riding fuel ion are engaged in cowing, Ac If they delighted in the ',ton ged of bloodshed, pad smiled the carnage from efsr Nlfirly years ago there wins a good, man who lived at ore °flit° Italian universities One day 11. young nine roe up to hint with n firer belittling with joy find said tbst los greatest wish was now fulfilled, his parents barring just given Into ptruu•nion to lowly law .•So now Inm come," he ndded, the law school of ibis University on account of in great fame • nut! I mean to rpnre no pains in get through my studies ns welland quickly as posarble ' In Hail ;coy lie went on hiking for n long lime. When at last he Carrie to a clop, the good man, who hail been listen'ing elsisinr will, great patience. man!, ••Well‘and w lien)ou Lore got ill rstugh your course of studies, what do you mean to do then r' -Then I shall take my Doctor's degree," said the young man And then ?" smkcd St. Ftltppo Nett I= '•And then," continued die out h,, I Chid! lIOVC o 111.111ber Or diffiCillt Cligen to manage, and I shall catch people', notice by my eloquence, my zeal, my lemming, my neu!!nnti, ■nd gain a great reptita lion " • .I`nd Iltenr' reprnteA ilie Lnly mnn "And Abe.," tep:fetL the )oath: why, then there cannot be n /location. I shall be promoted to s 1111 l e It 101 office or other, be sides, I shall make money evil! grow rich " "And then•" repeated St Filippo. "And then." added the young lawyer, "then I shall live comfortably and honora bly, in health .0,1 dignity, and shell be able In look forward to a happy old age " Oh! was not adi ibis to ••look at things seen." But the holy man had not done. Again he stoked, "And then 7" "And then," said the youth, with a fal tering eoioe,—"and then—and then—then I shall die." Here St Filippp again lifted lip Lis voice and solemnly said, ••dad Thi• Met "and Ilion?" was brought home by God's Spirit to Ilia young titan's It coil. Prom that lime be sale! to look al things seen. Ile began to.feel the power of things unseen —Er. Tuts ROMAN Riu-Tists —An imtnene. majority of men in Rome never lighted a catle, unless sometimes at early dawn iletPthe custom of Rom? Vas the custom slvo of all nations that lived around the' great pond of the Nlediterranann. In Minor, Egypt, Palestine, Asia lilinor,orery /there the anoienis went to bed, like 'pod boys from /Test to nine o'clock. The Turks nail others Poole, uho succeeded In the stations and the habits of the ancients, do so at this day. The Roman, therefore, who saw no joke in sitting round a table in the dark, went off to bed as the darkness began. Everybody did so. Old Numa rompilius himself was obliged to trundle off iu the dark,. Tarquiniue utteiht be a very superb fellow; but we doubt whether he ever saw a farthing rnahlight. And though it may be thought that Okla and conspiracies would llourish...l.•,.such • oitylvieskness, it is to be considered that the conspirators themselves had no more candler than honest moo; both part Ire were in the Sark.—Ex. BECLEFONTE, PA., FRIDAY., MARCH 29, 1867 Ile his ennitoueil, with oilier•, In uthject 111 to 9 jiiri•dimiota foreign to our Corny lin I initioutit tuileknorrieiitgeil by our In log-1,14 neiirtit to their pretet.ileil acts of legoilot inn ; "AND THEN.' It hog inflicted unequal to:Fitton upon Stntex which it refuses to rrilotr Reptesen toti•es in the Legialdture of the Republic ; " It has opt only Abolished all restraint; over nu inferior, servile race, but demands their elevation to political equality—a measure dangerous to the stability of the Vovernment and the liberties of the peo ple ; It has attempted to force the Stales to adopt distasteful Alterations in the Consti tution, concocted to secure power in the bands of ilia minority ; It is Attempting to reduce len Slates to the helpless condition of province., deny• Mg them the emal rights guaranteed by the Conettiution ; It is attempting to change the Constitu tion, in violajjoy of its provisions. be (le cturing less than three Nuttily of the States o legal majority, competent to ratif; the sense ; _ - "STATE RIMER'S AND FEDERAL UNION." TORRYI6M OF 1776 AND OF 1866 The insolent cabal at Washinglon ' are ins:king, in indelible ‘llltrelelerg. earl, day 'thorn distinctly, !lie lines of resemblance riot of idenlificiftion helicon thenpielres and the Tory party of 177h7 liver:, where die people are beginning to recognise in Ifni hoe-fluent.. of Ilse dr.poll.ol of tit-diy , the Odloll, fctnrre, NIIICII CLlllironlcli 01 lIIICCSIOPM lllthe re,olutionaly —whi c h threntened then', but ,recotled befor era e their [minty defiance the p Irby of pririlegii...,pf special exemption., the party uf gross expenilittit as, of arbitraty arrests. st it responsible powerl r of •failation wuhonl repreveiitation, in 'lle Emile iTory pint), whose tyrnnity drove the mill of the revolu tion to rernonni rite first and revolt n fie, tinrils The New II liven neve, asks what has become of the heroic spit it of Om men of 171'. 1 The Colll3no.tital l'ongreite, it ton3s, representing 11110111 three nut 10111 of people, deel ired with unessinpleil ihe King of Englind hailbeet golly of nre petite.' ipjorten and ...rpm ions, all having direct object, the establishment of on obsuluto tironny over these States " To prone this, they recited n merles of griet - Bocce. among winch nre lhrsc . • Ile (the Keg) bno made Judge, depend ent opon Ills will alone :or the tenure of their there, nod tar otnotted and pa) meat of heir oal it ten; He has cleated a mllllllll le of new of ficrs, and sent hither sn• trots b( officers lb It:mann our people net eat 0111 !heir stilt lottnce Ile he, nlieelec:; le render Iho a ilitnry, independent of nod eupertor to the civil 61012 • For (ion ri ertog 1 irge hod IP. 'o,f coned troop. nmortg u. ; ••Cur pros em log IL cm. by mock I. a I,T; am pun inhment fur any mortice.; 'which ;bey .110111,1 commit on the stillabitaAta np Illone Slob,, -—4 l For imposing lazes on CVIPC(II : il “For Wong away our eltariers, rthuluku - - ing our ninQt ralunble 4 4nrti. nod nltering fucolumenlally ibe fauns of our gore,la ••For surpending our Legitdaturce and declaring filen:moire,' inre•led wuh power In legiblate for 1111 111 ,, (11 CaIICS Snell are some at the charges which the men of 76 Nought In justifieatlon of n Den. In ratton of I:!4eporolenCe- an I nor ognirrvr Greg( Brilaill %%hot snavo of complaint hod our (tiller■ treniont King tleorge, that the tonjority of the penple of in-dnv hove not agninei the hull, on , eroptilnov faction that lion got povvevslon of oar gavel itineatt, and to !using it for ue oggrinvhsectient. regardlenv of, the prov tenon• of the Convt dnlion v II lint ore our complaints against thin Carton of Jac°. bin ii.itrilern. II has the country Ina lunwol f, Inorellomn (10111, or a centnly blet foltote4 11,1.110. lILCI 41111 feeltuv., and taught thr peoplo m darretst neolons or our cunioloo country to regnr.l enrb - It tloliberniely inciltd this loslilc frebog by forol4botg Ilia toc - 1114 1 - " ! nt`nting des ',ermines In K Ingo% nod sending John lb 'tyro and hitt intot: of cot !bowls into 1",- F Into II made War upon iln. do , neOle Iwo Ito noon of Ilie -Sow 13, And deivaleven. rt fort In 1/eneilro Inc pence 01 coon II invalsed the country lu t a f gldful civ it war, which it prolonged a, tolgef“ poi ble,nnil Intensified by every deaLitpiton of =BE It pt etended to desire only n restoration of the Union, while obstruct tug .:vet) plop 01ition rot a peaceful ...olut ion of the ion 11 mused tiro loss of tbousnoth of the best soil hinter; ellen of lint It nectlollM, nod The rotilining of imis of 111 . 9,1141. as more; It iloode.l the coutoiy with all it redeeinti.; blo 'toper corretiey, by which the indebted ors of the Curet nolent was tomiensely •5 eretteed ; It nelfored the treasury to he rolled of !methods ul milltnein of the Len rd mono, of no nrethol dotted people; It ftlled the !nod with no coley of office holder., tor Cal out 11.10 0 211obatilliee of the people; It hits refn•ed to Int, menilore, for the relief of the people (tom the burdens thus entailed noon them ; It has loitered monopolies and other mean. for impoverishing the poor and en itching ilia opulent It his de•t rayed fitotwin.l3 or millions of properly. end mow... !shed a whole section of the net oblic It imprimned in ni'ilitorp ftitatiles thou sonde of innocent men for no miler came than indei endent thought and speech uliaa public affairs ; ll refonea to permit lherentoration of the nom mol relat ions of the States to the General Gove•nment , It is threatening to depose the l'iesident fotopposing iii wicked usurpations; It is threatening to revolutionise the Supreme Court for dolloring against Ito ii lewd methods of punielling its,anemies ; It is deliberately conspiring , change ILe form of our Government from that of representative republic to on oligsroby, ruled by a sectional IMlnority faMien. jut 44thman. What is there tit the conduct of thtsosurp tng factlon, or the character of its reckless let.lers, wltfelt tthottl.l,tomninntl the longer forbearance of on otttraget! people ? The 1.1 raged nisj troy c f the people the whole country should unite in one tun, Protest again,T the clir•e of their oppres sors, Ihnit at least, posterity mu 'tattoo tbent of the charge of sitting quietly in tht Grace of enrols that wet% 10)01111g to file subvert.' ,11 of that benefiqls system of pof.- itlor government, that tirts horn of the lood, and toil, and wirulinn, and clone, of the fathers and founders of the Republic —Ere/nut;.., MEM Soya the Oil Commonetealgh . When a people are in rho iSi,as of a puhtical recoliatiitn men-atrincon capacity and bmtit pareihns Ilia surlaie. soil for tone the hot io teltei is ant loonof i Irian and ireat 114.1 not moral run an instin•tiie ahlorence at, and le ir of contamination by as ocialloll,.iirltik trim] public gIILICi and placeut pohlit irii•l Ciikglller society nu ocean The WIT, 1101,41 by the storms of opinion nod prep lice; hove rigilop.ll 111.1 t ocean lo the very bottom, nod cast to the surf tee till the Ito lain die'((, unJ gll tAge . wklell, Juridg the ntdl la.llller of pence, tvoll eettletl out 0 , right ft tonne, for n moment, at the eh ir szters nud il nog, of the persons who IrivP keen rt;141,1 into high pr19:111,11.1 through csrelessuess, pant ton oral trio I, doling the lust fewyo.iri of popular nglintion See the Boiler*, Sieranses, Ashle3s. Schenck,. 'A ilia le-t of ill It e 115... who are rite .101111.0.1.1 settlings riot:ma - We' it 'ln I hoe tot c itrorns of Isle a oceln. The whole cur rent it font ilir iti , :th which they hue rugs. ett to the surface Their presence nod ern. 11 , 4 , :0114111ve opre.l4l loiptil ily fit a Llr ttle. omitevery eli•4 of , evrl{ hi inch. niniost, — of the ptiblie nervice I tinlekl with clime ' Tune awl tplietinlo wrml.ll,ling relief 19 sending .110, filthy on 1 derttlinite ele intone hack to then ilenw•of 41kIleiA, 1.1101, ing flits they re m 434111. their lien - gtven,porrer 11p111 w;v!,.,3 I.n rp,..inil and on.l -ftre rliov Iturwii fig tin nod fig no to tho.nr hWO, where, w ith the hot!h on.l. lotto, they keep op ri 11,11 owl wk.) destruct Ike, nn 0 11110141(00120 everything Om comesit whin veldt. That they ore I per•onir of mein and ',coin] passions no one • deny Intl that, in peace. they would ask into olinvmh iv °guilty nnilentnblo So long liswevlt . r, its the people will per• nut themselves In he noted upon through their 0,110114 11111 to bo kept In n ennstont stole of nimbel e,eitetoent by those ettunittg and selfish actors. no long will the country stiffer for wont of men of Illy , merit and , I poitiothim no directors awl legislotots Patrol .3 Uoi A91114'101 s —When the Family followers of copper Itasca Oliver Cromwell were d0p0p4191,4 pop4191,4 ; Ireland—murdering awl exiling 1:11 p 911 1 , 1, 1- -. To 11tthatItiev, or la liollwith the paptiata the s!iihrtioill of the Mon) tw Pin win army That dta heh~ nl r,a it of the all walla Pat Jan hail ile•ectiil like an hen loam to, atol throng'', hta lirozeny of the P lynr mill Fork niti-1, of the Nen Weill, nil wil liens the lallowing or g ,,, Of I'rlifotnir Pin 1i411151,1, i411151,1, tile 1.1:1 Speaking of the recently reported elf trill of patties at tton to Its up a new eon! : trratniac, the Italical organ can of lire St/1111 , 1 1 1 . 11 people ..IVe bore Ink, n bock tutu Teri %tory which rebel% endeavored In trinke forer2n roil f,r u+; NV, 'lre not iinriiettlor ntiont viltot become, of the p ,, otile living on the Territory " The Wick hew! intern il" who ton Wier molt on a'roctutiv rent -vent in the fleo of tho nineteentheentuty, ileoerveo to be, no he no doubt it lineal deoceuil.t of the wom l'Urtinno vvltri drove the Irilk.to hell or U trlintloeo, nod who robbed noil murdcr