pliocrilaucoug —While Tom Corwin was addressing a large meeting at Springfield, Ohio, not long • since, and was soaring into the higher regions ctficoliticikelOquence ; a black,. middleved, and morose-looking bull terrier mounted the plitform,.andi •taking his place .beside. ° l. the speaker, surveyed the assembled. SOveriiOns mitt' reseiefe countenance and a inelaneholy wag of hi's caudal', stump. His Jebutj t.as • greeted with roars of laughter; and Ton:IA:Or. wittimied in- , theemiddle!of a sentende.— Turning toward the - intruding anima:. he warned his himd.courteously,• saying, "oSine, 'one at a time, if yoir pleaee." The terrier retired a few paces, and glanced quizzieally ' at 4:te speaker, when Corwin advanced t& the • edge-of the stand, and.saideto the peoplis,' .in a very confidential tone : "1 do tbelier" he intends ts' leave the other 'dogs.-andkiit r the * Republican party !" This palpable hit g ivas received with a tempest of laughter an ap plause,An the midst or which his • dolship trotted out of the hall with'his tail at a an• gle of tetense disgust. • r • ...' 'A dispatch from Washington •s l ays :. " Relithle letters from Richmond stetea that underno possible circumstances will Gaern orNirse commute Brown's sentence. t'llis. . fate rsay be Considered ai Sealed. The rope is entertained by Oppe'siticin men -I' - ere, • that Cook eyill be turned over to the 'lilted. States Court for the purpose of conlropting ' . :he calumnies and fabrications, circulate g for '?olitical effect, by bringing alt witnesse4 for ward under precessi if necessary.' Al the Idministration declined proceeding aeainst Elugh Forbes, the self-confessed consp 1- ator utd mercenary, it is not probable tha will. 1, . leek the arraignment of Cook ; as the Tor ' tmity would be afforded for explodin all :orbes's charges by indisputable prooffi ....Virginia is crying " Blood ! •Bl El qod !', - sad with nothing else than the blood eroor ed John Brown-will her thirst be sated. lis insiouated - that if Gov. \Vise should be isduced to comniute his sentance to irtiris• eiment for life, -it will he- -but tt bio for Nsrthern votte_for the Presidency, or it will • spring from some even more corrupt mOtive. There luive even been insinuations that .if ' Wise dO not hang Brown, the peciple will hong Wise !--- But this latter is only a jokre, Clough it is illustrative of a certain temper tlat preVails now quite extensively inl Vir gbia.—Phila. Bulletin. • .... A correspondent of the Hera! ..has been poking about Teterboro', N. Y., the res: icbnee of Gerrit Smith. He reports that lir. Smith is considerably exdited 'about the Earper'S Ferry affair, and "that it is probable ht would not resist a requisition from Gov ; Vise, though the residents of the vieieity cer-, tsinly would. The correspondent 'iriakbs as "sensation" a letter as he can, andt t el all he could, find out about Gerrit keeta . . l Sat-' urday for Sunday, about his family, So' Sc. • That-correspondent has in him the germs- of • a first class A 1, eopperedand copper fasten . ed Jenkins. He should be put on duty in the " metropolis." ' • . • The Administration press are just nosy doing more than ten thousand "I)Sa watatnie Browns" could do, to, excite ah in surrection among the slaves atl the South.— . Oniy convince the slat'es, (as these •,p#pers seem determined to do) that all who profess Republicanism are ready to aid such an ilisur.‘ rection, and risings, at a hundred points may be very speedily looked-for.—..-18.-Ere..rur. .. A Harrisburg.eorrespond,ent of 'lFor ney's Puess, says: "It seems to be the gen eral impression here, and is reported as con. finned by - yeorcl fromthe. west, 'that the sig nal ability and F eepeleeire of 'the present . . State Treasurer, Hon. Eli Slifer, together with the fact of a familiar precedent in other similar cases, will insure his re-election." - -... The office of ' the Free Solidi, a Re publican paper printed at . Newport, Reel.. Lucky, was assailed by a mob recently, : end 'the forms oMyoe doNirted and scattered in the steets7 • Viea?tenceinformed as to the cause of this outrage . but•setrongly suspect ' • that it *as committed in thename of ` I : De rupgric3...” ...-. A' conflict having I arisen between President Buchanan -'and Gbv. Wise as to which shall have the honor of hanging poor - Brown, it is respectfully suggested by a high contravening party, that be be hung between the two. .:,... ! .... The eepu t imatAs - elation of Wash i iegton City. disci man c plicity or syre • pathy leitki, The z" . rdeel, 't• , and absurd schemErVif the Harpeit's ery affair. , The National lneelligencer thinks that the cleirac e ter of the Republicans at Wre-hicgton itande • - in no need of any such exculpation. .... The departure of the mammoth steamer Great Eastern for th.is country has been postponed indefinitely... .... The Troy Whig says: " In the 'east ern part of the town of Grafton, in thiecoun ty, near the-Petersburgh line, resides a -man - - ' named James Welder', who is-115 years of , age.. He is in full posseseiop of althis!fecul ties, bodily and mental, .and can walk ten miles a day with the greatest-eaee." I - An exclange says: -"It does me -ap pear to be so Onerally known lik:it. should be, that railroad transportation destio)s the vitality of eggs! Peak them as you will, if • they are carried any. considerable, distance - e say one hundred miles—the continued shak z tag will shake the life out of them. • . ' ..: The Amount of salt manufactured at Syraciree is seven million of buShelie year .ly. 'The annual revenuete the manufactur era is $3,00b,000, and the income to the State $70,000, as a tax of one cent perbush. • el is charged by the State on all salt menu . favored. The whole amount tis•- salt menu ', factured in the United States is sixteen mill .- .• ions' of bushels yearly. ' ' .• - -.. .*.. The last-Thureday in November,- the 24th day of 'he month, will be observed" as . Thankegivingirefteen States, namely, Maine,' . New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Isli and, Connecticut: New York, New ' Jersey, . Pennsylvania, Kentucky;' Indiana, Michigan,. . Alabama, South Carolina,_ North Carolina, - and Minnesota. - Thus far the same daY. has . been fixed upon in all the States where the festival tuts been appointed. - • • I - .... Capt;Cook, the second in command of the insurrectionists, was formerly an em• • pletyee in the office of the Philadelphia {Leger. • This, according to the logic of that paper,- Jiroves the complicity of that concern" In the rebellion. It being a strong Democratic pa. - • per, it follows, by the same rule of logiP, that the Democratic party is responsible Or all 'the trouble.' • - _ 1 . .... The Washitigton Stites "thus! sone'- , rously declares that the South goes solid for - • free trade and prehslavery Democracy 4 'The - - Democracy of the - slaveholding States Alas at last measured its 'strength: It is ompiixnent . in ell those States.. There-isst not .coogress - .ional district in either'that will cast ad elec toral yote.against it. A triangular etintest, as we have all alotig esserted, is, evidently, . , in•view of the result in_ Maryland, afi utter - • . Irapouibility. Lo. the Black Bioten Repute lksne come on with their irrepressible con: Bid. They will encounter a united inflexible • foe. .. . "And man ya banner shall be tort, And many a knight to earth be borne,. And many.. a sheaf of arrows 'spent, Ts Scotland's king shall cross the Trent" A letter from Bedfo A' • . ddressed to thd Postmas. " states' at there is a girl, 1 as a live in that vieinity,,. theidaoghter of Peter MeG merchfnt.. She says that a. ing.seko ol when a. man ea' that h father had'sent for takinaer; home, however,- ISletnptis and sold her as a ty killler if She said she w LouisPentocral, in publish stys t y re; is a merchant of, drearti in that city;. but do' the truth of the letter. IrtV,O. I ' : • 1 / 4 - i The discovery of S eit.sterrEpart of Crawford Cu figo; ititZeeating &fever for ritpidlytextentls to udjoinin. easily obtained • toe gronnd a distance .of .al t4rough a certain - stratum q brpm•tli . pnce is to be pumpe pCoportion of the lntte fiiiincdi A shaft sunk'in ( is n'ciw vroducing'almost fal of Senqa oil, which is wortil cnits'pir gallon in the crii4 , it is taken from the ground t• aprirgs' &bat whiph•this licett olltaihed haveqieen k .deiintis• 7 , : _ Two" companies, of nieas, have been forme kir . the Turpose of operati while wfithiii our own ho springs been purchase. think they can discovela pure Seneca:.-11 7 :arrexi (Pr Willia*Harrison, Jett, was' surtendered. Nov:. authorities,, on a'requlsition as ope of the parties implic per's Ferry riot. Ile lett ginia at three o'clock that . . . A. student of the U iversity of Vir ginia, writing. froin 'that its - Citation, states that:the marble slab that ornierly marked the;iesting plaCe - of • JetTe son has entirely dis4peared. The, visitors fo "his tomb, by chipping "or fragments; to. be carried away as nikileatos, have complete y demoli:thed imdlanuneouth granite pc )esial, disfigured, is all that remuins to mark the grave of the autlidi of the Declaration of Independence. .;.. .' ; ..-. The other day' the,. aughler of a- well knoWn citizen, a !promine it merchant - and wealthy. man, wall 'found in the ,street by soniti. friend of her father, it a. beastly state of intoxication, and taken owe. A crowd I pf idle bOys were aboutte ~ who were throw. j 1 IngleaveE on her that had llropped front the ' • , "trees.. She was tastefully-0d richly dressed. and Wore a large anioJitt of jewelry. From I some cause or other, she has become addieti edttit strong drink, and her t parents are under thellece . ssity of keeping aetiaiinual watch up. on Jter movements. Yest4rday, however, shelnanaged to get lbose,at'i what is describ ed above was the result! he is a beautiful giri,llabout Ig ykarsPid, and is to be•pitied.: —:-tabs; liaii . 4'4l:beker; .i, . A bell (4f green glapifourteen'inches hi h'''and thirteep inches in diameter; has Nllplaced in the turret tithe chapel-at the Giange,;Borrowdale. Th s we believe is tht first hell made of glass sed for ecclesias tienflpurttose in cuinherlan ~—CarlisleVtig) ~.z.c,iigiu.l.e. 1 ' . • .4 . 'iWendell Phillips.' in his abolition lecture op old Brown, said: . " - There is no'. powardice in Virginia. Th South are not CowarCowards.; The lunatiesin he Gospel were, ds.; r • ilot4Owords when theY id;." Art thOu eomp':i.to r t ormept t» before he time." . They wert:lbr..e enough, but; thep;• saw afar off.— Theksai • the-tremendous p wer that was.en: tertegin that ch:timed et Ma ; they 1,.... - itt. *Vit .. le . ViCtOrk Virginia did not trim. liteA an , , grey-headed an at Harpers Peril; they' tremble at a -I lin BroWn in ev ery ihan's conscience. He has 'been there. inan:slyears, and like that +rifle scene which Becilikst has dravim for usn his Hall . of Eh , Os, iNne he ati ran around, etch man with an ineOtabl4 wound in his boom,‘ but still an incutabl4 wound, and agreeld not to Weak of it, solfheiSopth..has been tinning up its po.• liiiciP and social life, and -very man keep hits 4ghtlhand'pressed on ice secret, and in curdble apre, with, an unde.stood agreement, in (.1410 and State, that zt never shall 'be men::ionl4d for fear the grhat gastly' fab,ric i shall coiiie to pireS at the talismanic word. proBstn uttered it, and the whole machinery tietiiiiledtat its very base." ' - -- .!,;1 - -t x l ---......•-•-• 1 0 , ,Ivqc Smint's WILL.- Oti4r %nith l an old bathe pi cite of the', towns of I llga4laclisetts, left the bul Ito dip mitnaged by trustee , lanic9int o $400,000. when locti.i . ie ivas to be summit% one:I:toy-1 who should•fatitti. tainileonUitiotts'of the will .girlill: one-eighth to fifty fc for titarr i Siage portions, atl• eighth t 1,5 the same number deseivin*g.wtdows. The r be ; iieaelied in October; 'alintit ii,9 0400 ' will: here disbui:ed among the •. boy pie l, making quite a Tor:i are , . ft tic..' enough to,securt • distOliu on is to i rbetin.ann of.bdys,.: 111 ; hi time be It handiion4ii sum to start wi , 4540 vill b y e distributed abolik tq,700 for marcia mg .5195-piece, which will the l!'ileitssary fixings-; a —. 4 10 alpaca— to the ivit teelof to fund are annual iloth4 tqwn o ffi cers, and t , fatal! is *slaty luane4l upo variikts ;towns in _the count : qualti iwith the - p;reseri; ft tr. diltabing the- prizes. 1 VF ...-.....------ • TF-- 11E' ; AKING OF Tlr Merit• thlt : the appiAntmenti, Mi6hari to take the censin notificeOn a few. dais hall; to anr lumns from some thin k it roper to state tha nof e ointed before Sp of tfk ,, 4 . rk of the next et con4neleed before the firs IVaii,hin-pon Star. • li - . g 'I I Foieign Ne*. Tlie stiwner North America, .I•oni Lireipool '26th O_Cto6r, aseed Father Point y stenlay ai -2: 15 p. ni4.oin4g three days' later ,; ewe. Nothing ne.ir, had tninVired with reference the Zurich treaty. QuOnstorn is to be made a por of call Tor ihe Cu nanlstempershetween Livery 1 and Boston. The strike of to London builders. till continued, and therti*/ indications of eirfferir on their part. —. The I;tiin nis expressed in the ress_that arupture . -- betw e en kmFe arid England w imminent. Gen. :',I e Bedeau :10 Dr. Landesat, oval ' g themselves of the amne'aty;)actietyrned.to Franc . The 'diticulti be tween Spain and Morocco has re ched iterisis, 'Spain . hayigae c l t'lounced its intention via commeitee .hostili ties. i, toigi Ralmerston declare: that England will it • l 4 not aufferApain 'to occupy both aides of the Straits, and :Will4pose it with force. "Iltere had been a re bellitin lqthe Papitisprovinc.es,.and Palermo was Ina stat4!ofttge, there having bet r collision between the ietipll and:the•troops: It expected that . the Spatlish I rtes would attack • and ..Tangiers: Thelreirlh expeilitiottarY ' ready to take the ifielq . cotton; and ' . were firm; and .quotitioq# undiaged. 9649/71.-,-2Wi, County, Tenn., er of St. Louis, 2 years old,- held ho claims to be r earty, a„Si.Louis , e was at a board ' e and told her her. Instead of e carried her - to l‘T, threatening .13 free. The St ins the account he name of Mc s not • vouch' for Die Weitegaeqf. OIR • tyLATION, 2328. ineci oil in' the nty,sa.few week peculation, which I counties. 'The by boring into Tout 70 . feet, l or f sandr.tone, and .d with •Water— r we are snot iti ..;rawford County' bulobs quantities, ih at least forty i state or just as L Several uatur-I kind of., oil has in own Warren, omposed of men -in this county g in Crawford, det s several oil by pere:ons\who ast quantity'. of .) Ledger. alias Albert He i c iith; to the Va. froniGov. Wise, I ted i n the Har arlisle for ,Virl fternoon. O. F. RF.AD cf. IL lI..FRAZIER, EDITORS. . , • COIZRESF" . O4VDIE'd EDITOR OBT.110:1"S- 2 .11 ) .8.; (C l 74+/ , 47, 01 1 ,,,.• 9, /z." 5.7 9.- , 1 - Dr tVp havc,received a copy of the Practical ilachiSisi, a handsoine :quarto sheet,* published weeklyi'by; T. 11. Leavitt* co., 37 Park Rob, •New York; St due (Junin- per annum in advance; or 10 cop; ies for eight dollars, 20 'copies for fifteen .dollar S— . charricter and.object,of this publication may lie inferred . Oom its title.: We are much, pleased -with the nuniqr before us, and find irr it much 'ialeahle practical information. . • . f ar ,silice his return from the West, Mr. Grow has beer(Opeaking at carious points in New York.— Be seemsko be as popular with the, people of the Empire Skate, as among the pioneers of the great West; cry at home. In commenting on his recent 'speech in Buffalo, the iforning E.rpiess of that city says - : • The 1) held the close, tha Take of fluent, sti er been di lido, and the mind: ed from most deal pleasure licatt part, met at the St. Lawrence 7 llotel; Philadel phia, on Thursday evening of last week. A• resolu tion was passed directing Ike Chairman of the Coln mince to iscue a call for a-State Convention to be hold at ll'rrisburg to nominate a candidate for Gov ernor, an' to choose two Senatorial' Delegates . . to. a National Convention to be held for the purpose of nominating candidittea for Preidentand Vice Presi dent of tlie Unites States. Theresolution provides, also, that [the Stat 'Convention shall indicate the time and ruarc i r for the choice of Representative Dela ti. gates tote N - atiorial Convention, which are ,to be elected ii the respect&e Congressional Districts of -the State , The action of trio Committee; was arrived at, as we)earn, after a very interesting discussion, which was characterized by the utmost harmony and good feelinE. .WI Klipe,,the.Chairman of the Com mittee, itits,untler tood, will fix the time for the State-Cunfrtntion tan early ;lay, so that.our friends . througho4t the State may commence to prepare for action. 4 ' , . . • • r . . or Arnpng th 9 members elect to the Legislature of Penns3llvaniailMr. H. R. Beardslee, editor of the Hone: sci 4 herald ,We only know thiinew Repre .entative ; i through his, paper. We have observed that froth the first he has mocked at Senator Sum ner's Sufi *rings from 'the brutal assault of Bully _ Brooks, a i nd that he calls him " sore-head Sumner," and pretefuls to believe that he is shamming the ail ments thw i t•have kept him so long under the physi cians' care. Hour recollection is correct; when the down ,by . 1 1-pro-sTavery, assassin, tilts - editor alleged that it will; only t rough cowardice that he permitted himself tebe beatn, and that anti-slavery men were generallyleoWards as compared with the Southern chivalry. 1 Wheal r later events—such as the man ner in which the order Ruffian invaders of Kansas were rep atedly eaten by forces not ltalf.their num il, ber—the ay Grow gave Keitt the floor, on a certain i r occasioni the pa isof the Harper's Ferryites. whe:n old Browit cpturcd their town—may have induced him to change hi . opinion, Wel cannot say. I Now tlytt he h 5 ito opportunity, it is-to:be hoped that Mr. 4eards,le will exemplify to the good people Of Pennsyllvania it his own 'person his idea of a mod el ligislat!or. Thbugh he may not prove a Deme4- thena, or - alitn4ter, in eloquence, be will doubtless be founds --.-- valor. Wee venture to say' that tiobOd; !al up behind him with a club, and Ca; im senseless in the Capi tol; but wh has eyes behind him; as he seenit n. Sumner should have had, or becai legislators are not in the habit of rest leans of enforcing.- their logic, may.! -Many years ago ilor, who resided IL, Pam pshire_con n ty • of - Ins property , until it should one half of the _given to twenty illy perform cer one-fourth!to 13 7ur young women d the -remaining of indight and . quired sum will and accordingly, fter annually be A—ationt *516 a e .for those who, it ; and as .this r• The when about read 'with (1, emu_ he me admitted thittlle la a remarkable _ respects an admirable man. The retiojrters state that many of the Virgin' -iane openly ex4.ess their admiration of his bravery and firmness under all circumstances. 1;le seems 4incerrof the justiee o 6 the cense. in (gaged, and , to possess enough Ai spirit to be willing to seal his faith to be fully con whielihe has e the old martyr I thing, an army furnished- with 'I. The snm of . mong the e, portions, malt- pay for many of id the same sum (lows, Th e Ares . y elected, like-all e principal of the real estate in the . We are unac. led :requirements with his blood The Demon party . capital o we believe the John Brown is party, nor, we and his moth slavery is w - ho l i by our party. Jefferson, Hen that slat:pry WI of America ; and conaiituti. ry within its ple of the Slav_ States, by both moral and pecuniary considerations ta abolish the. institution. While t there ieno party of any magnitude in the North that contemplates a resort to violence is opposing slavery, .the fact that a few—even the handful of med who made the desperate descent upon Bar per's Ferry—have been so. frenzied by the wrongs and outrages committed by the champions ofilave ry as to retaliate violence for 'violence apd to . '".car: ry the liar into Africa," and - ill; terrible and wide spread consternation among" aliveholders that fol loWed so incoasiderable an outbreak, may perhaps Induce the slayery Propagandists to pause in . their career:off 'ln—may possibly lead the general its authority to suppress the ;hich are now se frequently South, some to import more idlothersi to extend the area. of itivery or Mt: - They may be brought to reflect on ity that, if these crimes in be half of slat re to be committed and to go unpunishi of Northern fanatics :of the "old Broi May. grow' into-a , formidable, body, and te inture time mike an inked into slave it It will not be so easily put down. We do'not think that such an occurrence is likely - to takeplace we'do nut believe that 'it will. take place-re peciiilly if ire car. get a National ids:finis iteration that rill impartially 'put in force the laws against all offeadera, both North \an South ,' • But the imilbilitylof such an. mat; aug. tested by -the mad foray and his coMpani ons; ought to indict the rtful, conserratiie men of. the South, ( if' 17 such, - ) to cbe ek the fatasti• ciantr mhos and wleko I slivery prop. *Pm sz.s.- 7 —The state. of the Assistant t r . was to be an- Fug been.copied in other source, we these officers will r 'rig, as the details ttnsus will not be of June, 1860. Governmt piratical et fitted out slaves fret lEEE ech of Mr. grow was a lengthy one, but. 'merest of the audience so entirely to the he was loudly urged to proceed when he •oncluding.it It was one of the most elts• }ring, and convincing speeches that has ev nlivered before the Union Electors of Buf- Made a deep and lasting impression upon of all Who listen ed to it. He was applaud .eginning to end; and took his seat amid the • nieg demonstrations of the satisfaction and 'is address had given. ' e State Central Committee of the .Repub- eeeh of old John Brown, tenee of death,. will be Bowever . infatuaiea or cr . have-expected . to make much Cotilisliarper's Ferry affair, but are destine& be disappointed.— not a member' - of - the Republican believe, has-he , tver claimed to be of dealing with the institution of ly at variance with thus advocated Fe hope and, believe,as Washington, y, cnd Franklin, hoped and believed, iiventually disappear from the soil ut -we seek that end through. Peaceful naimeans, chiefly by confining slave- es - eat limits, and persuading the peo- ".. Mc Independent Reititt "The irrepteuible COnflicrt.l' .I(assaa. ;names :—The Democrat lo pre+ with Jts usual disregard of facts and proneness to 4nlstepre-, sentatlon his been venting its - spleen upon"! the Re. publican.party, charging it with Icotisplieliy in .the late insurrection at Iterner's Ferri, end lessoning that the whole distrirtence was theiegitlnlate fruit of the Republican doctrinis promulgated by Senator Seward. The organs, sf James Buchanan are evi dently. destitute of mmerial out of which o ,ereate political capital, or thej iouldirot resort t? so pal pable a falsehood, for the fertheranee s of 'their polit ical designs. ...When it becomes necessaryi for- airy party to charge the acts of a foolish, misgtpded; 'in. wt sane old Man Upon a political organization h which he had no Cormection, asd of which he nov i ce. was a Member, then.we may well conchide that that party ig in very reduced circumstances—that it Ls fearful lest its own political existence must soon t rminate, -and therefore is catching at straws, with all the fren zy attendant upon approaching dissolution. The Republican doctrines so,abli . set . frthattd - expounded. by Senates. Seward, had no more ,influ ence on the outbreak at Harper's Ferry than they had on the war in Its - • • I The insurrection w . purely the offspring of a dis eased mind. Brown as.a monomaniac on the sub ject of anti-slavery. e believed it to be hp destiny to emancipate the ens ved portion of the inhabitants_ of Virginia by force o, srms and like all other riot ous'reformers of the iretent dap, he failed.' -it has never been 40 'wish of the RepublTan patty to interfere with thelegil rights of the sla i ieholding population, on their/own soil; ort.the ennt ry, they have repeatedly amwol that no such purpose or wish was by them Iztertained. JJ • Mr. Giddings—thapearless champion of Elie rights of man—that glorious old war-horse of a-lfliousand battles, has not esciped the vituperative medictions of the. Democratic yes and notwithstanding their calumnies have beiti severaftimes refuted,r yet still one of the New Y 4 papers-most pertinaciously re iterates the unfou4d charge. The " jireptessibh ..amflict", doctrines of Senatir Seward are simply hese, - viz :—that leiMil:lin is the natural condition o',nutn, and that slavery is tith re snit of man's usurped dominion overman--jthat free dom is right, Mid slavery wrong—that Bight or Wrong must .cm - wally gain the ascendtcy, and consequently therels an Antagonism betw -en them that will continue tll one or the other ! isl triumph antly established. . • Let the ball roll In—peaceably and withput blood shed—till no shaciJe shall disgrace the Offr Domin ion orally other Sate—till no discordant sound of slave-a-hip shall ningle with the pleasant hum ol honest industry—till no agonizing shriek shall go up to heaven as a-wities.s against us—till the !privileges and blessings of universal liberty shall be e t ojoyed all men, whether white or black. N. L. Eor the. Independent RepUblecan More About Wintering Bees. • SCSQVIKHANNA DEIOT, Pt I proinised in a former number of the 'r Republi can" to state more partimrarly in vegsrd t 6 the in erent modes of - winterhig Bees, so as to ptieserve the lives of as great a number as possible, unit lit the same time keep them Ma situation where they