J IE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWANDA : Thursday Morning, February 16, 1860 Scledcii |!oefrj. THE FRESENT IS THE GOOD TlI&E. BY TV. G. MILLS. I hate the whine of discontent That marks the age we live in, That speaks of olden times well spent, To our forefathers given ; Some sing their wealth and competence, And some their worth are humming ; While some despise their taste and sense, And sing, " The good time's coming.'' What though the future may be great, •Or past were good and pleasant, "We have no share in cither state, Our duty's in the present! They'll have their wants and trials too ; Their light is not still shining ; And we've enough within our view To keep us from repining. The landscape's love'y to the eye, When we from distance view it; Yet there are faults we may descry Whene'er we ramble through it; But while the scenes before, behind, With beauty arc abounding, We may be able liere to view Some charms our steps surrounding. The times we have, with some regret, To our seed will be " olden And they, with unborn poets yet, Will call this period golden ! And they may chant their graceful lays, Their future bliss, up-summing, Just as we sing of by-gone days, And long for better coming. Then let such murmuring feelings die. That long for other ages ; The blessings tliat we now enjoy Will shine on history's pages ; The lu-st philosophy for man. Life's present cares enduring, Is note to do the best lie can. Thus future bli ks securing. Wilson's Exposure of Disunion Threats. What was said in 1856. In bis able speech in the Senate, Mr. Wil son brought together the disunion threats of 1856, and compared them with the threats made at this time. He said : Sir, when that uncertain contest was going on, when Hie election of Fremont seemed to the leaders of the democracy not only possible but probable, the senator from Louisiana (Mr. Slidell), one of the most skilful leaders of the slave democracy—the acknowledged friend and champion of Mr. Buchanan—declared to the country that "if Fremont should be elected the Union would he disolvcd." The bold, dashing and out spoken senator from Georgia (Mr Toombs), declared, with emphasis, that "if Fremont was elected the Union wouid he dissolved and ought to he dissolved." The senator from Virginia (Mr. Maon), then, as now, at the head of the Commit tee on Foreign flairs, who avowed on the floor of the Son ate that " the South has the right to the nat ural expansion of slavery as an element of political power," declared in a public letter that, unless the aggression upon the rights of the South, as he was pleased to designate the resistance of the people of the North against slavery extension, ceased, he was for " the separation of these states." Mr. Butler, of South Carolina, then a leading member of the body, which placed him at the head of the im portant Committee on the Judiciary, said : "When Fremont is elected, we must rely upon what we have—a good state government. Kvery Governor of the South should cali the legislature of his state together, and have measures of the South decided upon. If they did not, and suffered the degradation, they\irout