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Ci.ERRITSON, Publistteir.i .ID3rlrl33ll' el •rwit.u. From dawn to dusk you might have beard the clang of Merrick *asters' ham mer on the , anvil of liammersly. Oftep l on g after the dusk of the winter's day, h a ve I watched the golden sparks as they g e s• away into outer darkness, .thro' the wide open door, like so many long im- I ntoned spirits,jiist set free after years e f bottling up. And ever and always; while work .was doing under the sloping root; I could hear a sort of anvil chorus, e ither whistled or swag by the rich voice of Merrick Masters. If it had only so happened that some musical. enthusiast had come across Mer rick Masters in his 'boyllooa, as such a one is said to have met Jenny Lind, sing iv by the wayside, there need have been uo anvil work for him, and instead of toil laz for pence and shillings, fortunes might have been showered upon him and critics miAt have talked about his eliestnotes,' and beautiful members t f upper tendons have flung bouquets at him, and even penned him love letters on the sly, as they are fund of doing too well, to no matter whom , at the opera. No musical enthusiast., however, cams to Hammersly, and it is doubtful if any body suspected Merrick of being a musi cal genius, unless, indeed, it was the old parson, who had requested him to make one of the church choir, where he bellow ed as gloriously as any basso prolundo w ho ever shook the walls of the Acade my of Music, and apologized for it to the owner of the shrill soprano, (rather cracked) yeclept Miss Squtggs. He didn't mean to go a drownding Indies' voices, but when he got a going couldn't help getting too loud. It was the fault, he reckoned, of the black•inith- rng. The deep snow was whiteon the ground me December eve, and the golden sparks r:isbed from the clanging anvil faster than ever, and the song to which the Strokes kept time were louder and clear er, when somebody leading. a horse stop[ at the forge door and looked through woh an eye that wok in the picturesque zetme at a glance. "By, Jove, it. like some of those old Dutch' piettire., - muttered a voice under s golden rnouctache. " I'd paint it if I was an artist." Then in a louder trine. "liallo, young fellow, .my horse has ;ast a shoe, and I want it looked to im me,Lat,•lr." Tne "young fellow" dropped his ham tn,r and strode toward the door, and in another moment horse and master stood twocaili the forge roof. Then as Merrick Nesters bent down to look at the foot of :'le splendid animal, the rider, as splendid a porsinage in his way, sauntered to the tire and stood ba:king in its genial warna , h, and shaking off the feathery itkes that clung to his shoulders. A h2,h!diaired, blue-eyed exquisite, as great. a contrast to the brown liercires of the forge as can well be imagined, thotorh in his way Merrick was very handsome. Just as the blacitstnith's whistle began to play about the hoof he was shoeing, and while the stranger was standing with :as back toward the fire, admiring the ;it;lit and shadow on the wall, steps came tripping through the snow, and a girl with a shawl over her head came dancing ia from the shadow. "Tea will be cold, Merrick," she said, "and your mother says"— There she stopped, covered with con fusion at the sight of a stranger—one too who stood looking at her as unconcerned ly as he might at a picture. Certainly she was well worth looking at, a pure brunette, with large brown eyes and cheeks like a rose, with la.hes long, curling like a child's, and a buxom form where not an angle was visible. It , was only a moment that she stood with her red shawl slipping from her black hair, in the full g'ow of the firelight —the next moment she was gone, and the stranger turned to the blacksmith. " A pretty girl that., your sister ?" " o, I'm glad to say," replied the blacksmith. " Glad ? Why ?" " Because she's something better than a sister to me," replied Merrick. "We are to be married in May." Then oat rung the whistle again shrill and clear, and the stranger asked no more questions. He paid Merrick'for his work, and rode away a few moments afterward, and for all the blacksmith knew or cared they had seen the last of each other. He washed his hands and went into the great kitchen, where at the tea table sat his mother and the girl who summoned him—an orphan who 40_ lived with the •e old woman for years,ver since she was a child in fact; and had he into his heart somehow, before he knew it. The old woman was quite displeased when she found it out, for Effie was only " the help," and the blatikatuiflet4 Widow and the blacksmith's mother felt proud to say that " none of our people ever hired out" " But for all that there ara people in this village who look down on us because I shoe their horses and mend their wa gons." " More fools they to take on airs," said the old woman. "So say I," eaid Merrick, "and w 4 Would be ae:bad•ae they to look doin.on Effie. for 4 itiashing - our dishes. Slie‘l3"4li: good as you, and a detil better than ;m@, rieh or poor." - And tilerrick . Masters had hie walk and the whole place knew they were engaged in a fortnight. Now when he went into tea the first question both asked hint was ahaut hid customer "Effie says hevt=the handsomest man she ever saw," sityit the'old wolfish. "So hti•is," said Merrick, not one whit jealous, "but, who' be` is I don't know. --L He came , and 'went, and had his horse shod, distil all i-koow, and he asked me who- you were, , Effie." • " And I had ,his dreadful old aprorooti ton," said Effie. , - "He didn't notice that I guess," said Merrick. • Why not." Merrick "Oh, do. tell me?" " Well, he asked whe the pretty girl was." Effie hid her face in her apron, and Mrs. Masters turned her head. •She nev er quite admitted Effie's beauty. " What notions to put in the girl's head," she thought ; and it watt a pity, for Effie was vain enough alretidy. A greater pity too, because when - ever a horseman galloped up to the forge there after, she ran out, under some pretext, hoping it was the handsome gentleman who had asked " who that pretty girl was." Not that she meant any harm,but to be called a pretty girl by such a man was something glorious. • She saw hitm•at Inst.; and there was a look, a smile and a bow, and after that, somehow they -kept meeting. Still no harm in it at all, only Effie did not mention the fact to Merrick or to his mother ;"and Effie learned that be was a Mr. Noreland, stopping at. the great hd tel tu the village, and guessed that he was rich and t:ushionable. Often she saw him riding with elegant ly dressed ladies and gentlemen, but he always seemed the most elegant of all to her; and by and by she fell •to contrast ing Merrick with him, and wishing that Heaven had made him like Mr. Nore- . land. • From that she went on to wish that she was a lady herself, and that somebo dy else was in her place, and to feel above the forge and the cottage kitchen and the blacksmith, and his mother, who had thought her below her son because she wa. the " help." -- - One day Mr. Noreand found her shea', ding tears in a quiet little spot where they were in the habit of meeting by ac cident, and would have the reason. " It's nothing—only I'm tired," said Effie. ' • Mr. Noreland drew close to her. "Tired," said he, "no wonder; you are too good for that sort of thing ; too I good to - work in a kitchen and wear cot ton gowns—and too good to be a black- I smith's wife. It's no use in denying it— . you know you are." "Oh, hush," said Effie, " Merrick is the hest man in the world, I'm sure I'm not tired of Merrick." "Oh, of course-Dot," said Noreland, " and we can't help tkur.feelings," and he sighed. Then he whispered a good, deal that Effie could not understand entirely, but she knew it was, very fine and sentimen t:J:l, as he quoted poetry and made great eyes at her. Out ofa hovel, the girl was Kure no one ever was so charming, and she went home with the Arm conviction that if she chose she might jilt the black , smith's son, and marry the fine young gentleman. From teeling sure she Eould, she began to wonder whether Merrick cared much about her, and to feel - sure•that N - oreland loved her better than his life—and a sharp word from Mrs. Masters finished it. Something had gone to waste 'in the storeroom, and the 'old lady tbssed and fumed about it as she always did. "Them as has nothing is idlers the most wasteful," said she," you'd sorter re member that you're to be married to a man that has something to manage and to take care of. There's Peggy Grey, nev er lets a bit spoil, and darns and patches, and makes and mends year in and year out. —But she's got-$3OOO-in the--bank,be sides what will come to her when tlje•old man dies ; an d she want took in on char ity.: wislt Merrick bad, took a fancy to "SiCy gelid by, a e do so said Noridamd when the girl had told biro her new trouble. " Ab, but I have no other friends, and no other home to go to," sighed Effie. " You have," said Noreland, .‘.‘ a friend who will never cease to love you, and a home spell as you .:41.eservv. Share my home and my life, Then :be put his arms _around her and kissed her, and called her loving' names, and she, prOnllBoina that,-be asked of her. She was to meet him, on Monday eve ning at a miiliuer's shop in the village, an 4 there they were to take a carriage and'go to meet thelrain. , .The first, prat. tipbje moment they -,sv,ere to be married, and.after that, their bliss , was to have no I end. • r. " And" j 4 ,19y blackamittr4rAmeered ,Naretiatt,' 'tam byre •Pieggy,: .rtta MOTI`ROSE, r.,NOY, 'l3, kno,W; no you need not ,fret about time Effie." For ell- that, Effie's conscience .seinte her when... Merrick was kinder/than banal; end so full of joy,es the time was•now near at hand when she was-to be his wife, tnt they sat together on the porch on that Sunday; and when Monday came she broke wore china and made more blurt. dors generally than had ever been laid td her charge in years before. Jabs. Masters thought that the girl quite knew how mad poet Effie really was. Tea was en the table and Mrs. Masters busy with some dish she prided - herself upon, and the , sound of Merrick's whistle grew,louder•every instant as •he tripped homeward from the forge, when she slipped up to her room, and-putting on her things, slipped down the back stair way, and away toward the village. If Mrs. Masters missed her, she knew ' that she would be only too glad to have her son to herself for a little while, and there .was uo probability of Merrick's fol lowing her. But it was bard to choke the tears down,as she plodded through the long green—for the snow had gone long ago, and it was summer now—and she only made herself brave by the thought that Noreland would die if she did not. keep her promise. " I couldn't break his heart," she said to herself, " even if I could bear to marry another." She reached the milliner's shop at last, Johnsoti. - ' The Radleal , press has filled and went to talk to one of the girls. The the air with rumors that the President' plan was that when Noreland was ready intends to abandon the Constitution bee he was to show himself at the door for a cause a majority of Congress has abed, moment, and she was to go out to meet dotted it. This letter is the voice 9f one him and say " good bye" just as if she of his most trusted advisers, assuring the was going home. country of the firni and immutable put- Effie sat with one eye on the glass door pose of the President, as " the executive which opened from the work room to the head of the nation, to maintain and pre , . shop, while she tried to chat wareless ; in I serve the Constitution as it is." a few moments she saw a man enter from WASULNGTON. D. ,C. Oct. 13, '66. the street—not Noreeind, but of all the Colonel V. people in the world, Merrick Masters.— H. Benneson and Major H. V. Sullivan, Quincy, illinoi.s. Her first thought was that he had follow el. her, but ie an instant, she saw, that he GENTLEMEN :—lt would give me great had business of his own. lie spoke some I pleasure to comply with yieur request, and words to the mistress of the shop, and visit Illielfie to meet my old friends and she brought a bandbox. neighbors, and talk to them face to face Of course the bonnet was a sueprise for upon the great questions now before the her, and it smote her to the heart to re- eemetry.. But it is not practicab i e for me member that she should be miles away be- to do so.: My public duties forbid it. fore her birth-day dawned. Poor At er - Our'geovetnment is worth preserving: rick! would be feel badly, and it was ern- No people were ever blessed witlr one el of hero better worth it.. But it ia not certain eve As she thought thus, the door opened will save it. There are now-two tenden again, letting Merrick out with two bun- thee 41 public jlEfairs4 both of which are. tiles in his hand, and two ladies in from fraught with danger. One is to a cen the hotel, whom she had often seen riding tralizetion of power in the general gov with Noreland. They asked for ribbons, ernment ; the other, an absorption by the and went on with their talk while exam. legislatite• department of many of the ining them. , powers and prerogatives of the executive " Who was that person standing be- and the judiciary. fore the. door ?" The safety of . a free government is in " Oh, Noreland." keeping the power near the people. This " I thought tee how oddly he b e . was well understood by the statesmen hayed. He didn't seem to want, us to see who formed the original thirteen States, him." . and united them and their people in one " Perhaps he didn't, ho has his secrets, Federal government. They gave to the r expect. One of them is that flirtation general government only such powers as with the blacksmith's girl." were necessary for the welfare of the " Shocking ! Some one ought to write I whole people of the United States, reser to Mrs. Norelaud." I ving all other powers to .the States ree " Poor thing she is used to it. You spectively and to their people. And in know she's quite middle aged and plain, framing State Constitutions and laws, and he merried her for her money. lie's they placed as fnuch power as was cora been at his pranks ever since. Actually, patible Veitb the general welfare of the nay dear, he ran away with a girl last State in the government of counties, summer. The brother tried to shoot him township', and lesser municipalities. - To and she drowned herself. It was a shock- guard still further against abuse, or too lug scrape. If I .had such a husband as great concentration of power, they die- Noreland, I'd have a divorce." tributed the functions of government, "So would I. I hope it wont come to State and Federal, in separate bodies of that with the blacksmith's girl, she's a magistracy. The natural' tendency of very pretty creature.' power is to strengthen its hande, and en " Mrs. Print, I'll takeluur yards of the large its sphere of action; and if the Fed blue." eral government absorb 'great pow- The ribbon was out off, and the ladies era heretofore reserved to the States, or took :their departure. if one department usurp important fence Effie sat thunderstruck. They bad been tions of the others the structure of our talking of Norelaud. He was married al. complex system Will be radically changed ready, and so could nevtr mean to marry and our free government will descend into; her.. What did he mean when. And as despotism. she asked herself the question, the truth The legislative ismuob the strongest of flashed over her mind, and she saw the the departments—and the most aggres pit of shame and dishonor at her feet. I sive, because its members are responsible Love her ! oh no, no, thought Effie.— I to no power but the will of the dominant It is hate, not love, or he would not wish party for ants of usurpation. It is the on to wrong me so. Then as she shrank ly department from the encroachments of from the memory pf his false words and which any serious danger to our institn• falser smiles, the honest face of the black. tions is to he apprehended: It, has hero smith ruse before her, and in truth and tofore exercised more influence than is tenderness it grew plain to her, and she compatible with safety and entire freedom was saved. over both the executive and the judiciary. She left the girl with whom she had It has sometimes impressed a pernicious' been chatting, abruptly and ran out, of the influence upon judicial action, and where store. All she prayed was not to meet it has failed to .4ccomplish 'that in advance Noreland, and fear lent wings to her feet. of judgments, has subsequently overruled She turned her face toward the forge, and and annulled them. And, without at ali had reached the crossroad when a wagon impugning the motives of legislators, I stood across her path--Derrick's wagon may venture to say that if .the present —and lie was hard by chatting to a far. Congress were not restrained by positive suer over a gate. She heard his voice, and emphatic provisions of the Constitu and saw the dusky outline of his form, ' time they would greatly abridge, if they but she dared 'not speak to him yet. She did not ultogether annihilate, the power clambered up into the wagon and hidof appointment to and removal from off , there crying softly. The bandbox he had , flee, now confided to the Executive., and been to get was there on the seat and she • the salutary restraint which he holds over kissed it, as she crouched behind it, think ' legislation through the veto power. The ing of his kindness. is a danger always present when the ex - Then peeping out she saw some ono , ecutive and the' legislative departments sauntering up the road to the milliner's.' are in antagonised, and it is certain in It was Noreland; but the sight only mtide•, times of high teeny excitement teetnenie her 'Ellitiddee. - : fest itself, no matter what party may, be ' Ten minutes•after Merrick , was driving° in power.. -Safetyeis , to be found only in on again, sisdellened es little nbisei behind ' holding emelt department firmly and , olose , hi r i ) . 'lie gareeesudden start.. lyewithinitis orbit. . " 19baes:thif, retie esried. ' , If the proposed an3eudinebtsr of the -4i-Onlrmew-Effreel , saidirvaice. - =Thee e4e crept up to pir. , sir :}loyOnd - yptt eome141:0 tOlttv4o- " I saw the wagon on the road and got in," she said. "Oh 4errick, rine° friffht die& It's so ionesenie iattik and wretched there. I'm so . glad we are go ing hack to the , fOrtre." - So she was. He never knew how glad, for the, gover, Ohltini.Ocant bg, C9Ol years after, when they had been married for years, add the strong love that eoines with married lift.; hn4 grown' betweed them, she used to stmt from-her sleep, sometitner„,in terror and oiling .to blip sobbing, " ;leek God, ) back again at the forge." The Constitutional Amendments . . The Issues Betwern the President and Con- LETTER FROM SECRETARY BROWNING. The National intelligencer of yesterday publishes the following letter from the lion. 0. a Browning, addressed .to committee at Quincy, Illinois, in reply Lo an invitation to address his friends mid neighbors on the political issues of the day. It is a calm and powerful argument against the constitutional amendment, and a triumphant vindication of the res toration, policy of Presidents Lincoln ,and COnStiVatioDlßVlAOritedi ntiVtiftrd enot*- otis rem'erlrevill be claimed thdreteraiged by Congress as warrantedby such ttanend nsentfl, and the whole - stinambre of our govermieriv #1 perhaps igraduall3r, but yet surelli i i revolutionized. And' Ho with thp dibiarn if the proposed emends manta •beradoptedy tlley, 'may, nod' aeitain• ly 'will; be used ' , substantially to atinihr. bite the , State • The , first - section of the:. Tiropcsadd artif ole oontairs4 umoug others; the ,followiog provision tinr ebali-any State deprive any-per; son of life, liberty, et—propeny withont I dim praises of levi.rit • • Why insert such it provision intbe Fed , era), Cornititution !It already Contains the following No person shall be de prived of lifediherty, or property, with out due process of- law.? • -This is identi cally the same, exceptthat ittis a restraint upon the powersnf • the: generui govern ment alone, and has-no reference dr ' cation,LoState , gOverninentai And most of the State Constitutiona, I believe all of them, contaih A 'similar proviiion, as a lim itation upon the powers of the States re. spectively. Now, when; in the Federal COMititilliON there is this guaranty against arbitrary and..oporessive• invasions of the rights of: citizen. by Federal-authority, and a similar Ignai.4tnty in the State Con stitutions against like oppressive action by the State governments, why insert, in the Federal Constitution, anew provision which has no reference to the powers of the general government, and imposes no restraints upon it, but, is simply a repeti tion of a limitation upon the powers'of State governments Which is already pres ent in State Constitutions P The object and purpose are manifest. It is to sub. ordinate -the State judiciaries in all things, to Federal supervision and control—to annihilate, the independence and /toyer eiget y ,of 'State judiciaries in the adminis tration of, State laws, and- the authority and control of the States over matters of purely domestic and.local concern. ...If the State judiciaries are subordinated, all the departments of the State governments will be equally subordinated, for .aliState laws, let them relate to what department of government they may, or to what do mestic or local interest, will be equally open to criticism, interpretatian, and ad judication by the Federal tribunals, whose judgments end decrees- will be au _.propoc:ir.l-..:: will override -the declaims of the Siate:courte, and leave them utterly. The'Vederal judiciary has jurisdiction of all questions arising under the Constli tuition and laws of the United States; and by virtue of this oew provision, if adopt ed, every matter of judicial investigation, eivil or criminal, however insignificant, may be drawn into the vortex of the Fed eral judiciary. In a controversy between two neighbors about the ownership of a pig, the unsuccessful party may allege that the State tribunals have deprived. him 'of his property without due process of law, and take the case before the Federal tribunals for revision. So if a man be in dicted for larceny, or other crime, con victed, and sentenced, ,upon allegation of deprivation pf liberty without due process of law, be may bring the case before the Federal tribunals for revision and rever ' sal. So, too, if a murderer be arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to be hung he may, claim the protection of the new constitutional provision—allege that a State is about to deprive him of life with out due process of law and arrest all fur ther proceedings until the Federal goy , eminent shall have inquired whether a State has a right to punish its own citi zens for an infraction of its own laws, and have granted permission to the State tri bnnals to proceed. Under such a system the liberties of the people could not long be maintained. As already remarked, free governments can be preserved only by keeping the power tear the people, to be exercised through local agencies. I,lncler this new system State and local authority would not at, once disappear, For some time they would contest jurisdiction with the Fed eral government; but the inevitable and constantly increasing ,tendency would for the control of domestic affairs to steal away from the people, the States, and lo cal municipal bodies, and centralize and concentrate in the hands of the 'Federal government; and as party conflicts inten sified, and party viutories alternated, the power would be more and more inexora bly used by the dominant party to punish, its enemies, reward its friends, and strengthen them, and perpetuate its hold, upon the power and patronage of the gov ernment. Be assured, if thin new provision is in grafted in the Constitution, it will in time change the entire structure and texture of (Kir government, and sweep away all the guarantees of safety devised •and provided by our patriotic sires of the Revolution. i It s impessible to maintain our wise and happy i goverpment without pre styerovfinik,ethseAd4,epepdenca.end .sovereign-,I and constittitton4wi it i f o li b n er t siL heir T aß e p y rop a r ro ntt o e f l pritnar anU gital Kinpbrtance. The Stetea, T4Y'ettist and.n'erfOrm.their fa4Ptinnti without ,t hn.trni?l) the ;t:O 4 FO Vu i g" PO AI inert-sio ervmut ff.ntis., ilt , St*, 4,pa 04.12)44 be' lor IVOlitiNT" XX,111,. NtrMl3raft . 4 s .. " - • • • • • ;,"s "pal in digtday 7 t4inal •in • righterl46l to power—equal in the control* , .. ildli*ata and nneonditional, of all thinga•pei'taibing tb their internal and. local policy =dint. tercets: • Another 149 w Which the ,Foponad amendment :aims at- the ,gotrenrhtent yid& .our tethers ,loOnded, change of; the basis of reptesentaticie. This would be of • very • pernicious effect; Aggregate pojiulation i is the true tesivi representation. No Li:tatter:how • the eliso. tive franchise be disposed offivrhetheriez• ercisedlly few or many, all &Cies of,the cOmnidnity are: represented.. , The inter. eats of all clacses of people in the staid community are so interwoven • . and Gong mingled that they Cannot , be separated, and whoever wields the representative power must do it for the. good Or in of Mir—Perhaps not precisely in the seined& gree, hilt he .cannot-use it so as largely, to benefit one class without to some tenni benefitting all, or to injure and oppress , . one class without, to a greatei or less ex tent, ,injuring, and oppressing all. .. There,are always, even in thie , eennirYt; where the right of suffrage wh o s widr. ly extended, large numbers do net: vote st.allAwhose interests, nevertheless, are cared for, and whose nowhere, bell* computed in the apportionment of repro notation, widen the foundations of , the representative assemblies.; • Stich aro .411 persons under twenty one years of spi v females of all ages, and uenaturralised for. ; signers. ; ,Why are they pot peradtted . to, vote? And not Wog permitted, ,why, are they cetieted in fixing the retied rep-, re,sentation ? They are not allowed to voteyheeause they aro not supposed to be sufficiently inatructea in political econ omy and governmental Weirs to be en trusted with the elective franchise. Mier are computed in -fixing the.' ratio, bemuse , they are part of the same eommeuitY,With; those who do vote, , having interestaine. common with them.; and their, Intjurniegi.. ought to be felt lu shaping the laws•bill which their rights of life, 'Werth, Anil ; property are to be determined...! And lilts though _they xio pot vote,-.their infineecsit: is felt and , t heir., interests are •eared for, precisely, becayee they are counted inlfia-. ing the relative weight of the cornmeal- : ties to which they belong in . thelegielit l tire assernfilies, although , thetry'oines are not directly' heard in determining , who shill represent. them.. ,, It it not true, is is ernistontlY )':l alleged o p-4 , AL.; .: tutee sitimng_tfi - of Om ,tat, 4 s 4 hiii'h *ere iri rebellion will be iner.n by the results of the War if they fire.iiiifi allowed representation' in ,tlie, 3 ,llitrotitill Cou'n'cils. ' he 'preeent: ratio of repriliek, tatitrn is'adjosted by the census of fallllli add cannot' be changed until afte,t,the census of 1870. Till that tinie,,,there• fore, the relative strength of the eeteial, 'States of our country omt, remain pre = , cisely OS it was under the census on: no, After the census of 1870 the,p6oitive end; relative strength of the Sioutheti. - Statel in Congress and the Electoral' College. Will both be diminished, eyen if the'li - on voting black population .he included in the basis. In 18 . 60- 2 three' fifths ; of, all the black population oillie 'Southere - ,§iiitea• was counted. The census of 160iilIf show the whole of the non voting lilielt. population to he lest than the e thre fiftliii ~ of 1860. Nor is it true that a vote in the South will outweigh a vote in the North, If the non voting negro population be istande4 in the butts of representation. • 'lf the tfri;t: posed amendment be adopted, all thenc4 voting black population of the South' ' be excluded, while all thit.noii voting; iin-, naturalized foreign popOlitiOo 'o,' illei North Will be , counted. The great "OW_ ponderance of unn.sturtiliie,d,onil, * cop quently non voting Toreignera,,ie in litiori there and Northwestern Statee. ''hey and their families number hitaredd of thousands, perhapti milliont, and' yet th#. , are all counted in fixing the ratio,Cf iv-, resentation. This it right. I do.nol;6lt jeot to it. They are a part ot„theon*' munity. They help "to Make ' tip' the strength and produetive Wealth:4e the State, and ougbf to be competed iiitit ing its political Over But if it is right to count - non voting population , in Onii l State it is equally right to count .t. in, .. 4 it ! ot h er. And if counted in one and tint' ' the' other, it gives the one an ridionte . over the other incompatible with t e equality of the States, and of' danger°, and revolutionary tendency. Whlle ,il!' unnaturalized, non voting population!' t one section of the country Willi loali on: stoutly . increasing the non voting., 'Oa population of the other seetion; hy 'OW otit causes, not now necesiarlip tOriatil tinned, will Ihte as coat - anti deareiiing.' It would baletter for 'all parties niacin terests, and far more hoteffil for theliiim, petnity of our goieraMete, if something like an equilibrium of , strength between, the different telitions 'of thit ttainitry*Od' be maintained. ~ ' . ' ' . The gd section of the proposed ,ameftidi' ment disfranchises the great niajorliftif the educated Men of the &stet Which Ii ill 6 been in rebellion, excludes them frotwent p_artiolpation in the affairs of thiStittil iMd Federal governments. The'' etitire-einnf 4 trol of the gotreitinient of those' i j atmteit will be placed in the t hands le n- mit minority of 'the men Mir allittaliftege or B oob control; and 'theyias ivied= Dot of tbwasogr inteagfttlind' C. 'il . 9 : •.' il 7. it !;,1 ;it tt li. i;Eli:;'f Alt 1 " . .S • ' =SIB =EOM