Saturday, Jul, 21, 1838. The Privileges ami ItcxpotirtbiHties of the 'AMERICA PEOPLE, AW ORATltiW, Delivered at the. Presbyterian Church, SfcloomsTiii&,Pa. July4, 1888, Bx Tai ' Rev. WltLlAM TOtfEY. Friends and fellow citizens. It has cvor been customary in all coun tries to eclobralo very important events in their history, by annual festivals. The American people, in compliance With tliis ancient arid universal usage, devote to joy and gratitude the dayon which, by the voice of their representatives assembled in the capital of this elate, they renounced the dominion of Britain, and. claimed a .place among the nations of the earth. An event of greater moment in tho annals of this continent, it wp.'tfld. perhaps be impossible to, uesignate. un tnat uay a great empire spang.into beingnann a vast terutory be. came, the enfranchised homo of uncoiinl ed millions. The consequences of that event, even during the sixty-tw6 years which are now elapsed, have been immensely great, not only to the United States, but to all this western hemisphere, to Europe, .to tho whole world. How vast may be its consequences through the long train of fu- turo ages, thought becomes wearied and lost in its dfrorts to contemplate. As the fruits of the declaration of. Independence made in Philadelphia, the 4th of July, 1770, and ttio noble exertions by which it was sus tained, the people of these States, for more inan nan a century, navo been enjoying the blessings ot civil and religious liberty in a greater degree than any other people upon the earth have been dwelling in the mtust ot peace ana plenty have had full scope for commercial agricultural and me chanical enterprise, by which they have been filling every sea with their ship3, convert ing the wilderness on every side into fruit ful fields and populous cities. As the fruits of tin's, declaration seminaries of learning have been arising, literature and science have teen spreading, churches and religious, institutions have been multiplying and every thing which tends to adorn and elcy.atc a nation has had unchecked freedom to nour ish. Americans have therefore "cause to commemorate tliis event.,, 'll is good, fellow citizens, on this day, turning aside from our ordinary avocations, to assemble for the pnrposo of conteinplatipg the history of our country, its present state and future pros pects, and especially, Tor the purpose of acknowledging the goodness of the Al mighty, whose providence by a train of wonderful events, has made these lauds, but a few years since, one mighty forest, a rich and flourishing country, the abode of free dom, tho asylum of the oppressed and un fortunate of all nations, and the homo of Siftecn millions of people. Durjng the 6eriod, since the United States cast off the dominion of the fartherland, most of the nations of tho earth have been groaning under oppression, their energies 'stifled.their intellects fettered, and the fruits of their industry plundered by rigorous laws and arbitrary power. The inhabitants of Asia and Africa have, for the most part, been dragging out a servile and wretched existence under their despotic kings, their Sultans, their Pachas, and their Rajahs. Tho monarchies, aristocracies, arid hierar chies of Europe, have been keeping the great mass of its population in a state of ab ject depression. The countries of. South America have, until recently, been the sub jects of every species of tyranny and injus tice, and even now, that they have shaken off a foreign yoke, are republics but in name, since they continue still more or less under the sway of military dictatorship and papal superstition, exaction and intolerance. How different has been the condition of the people of this Union I Independent of all foreign control living under a representa live form of government, the equity of whose laws alhnust acknowledge, and the power of whose administrators cminates front our own choice; ajtd can be removed even on the suspicion of its abuse, by our united hat bur consciences enthralled by no ecclesiastical establishment, what great er degree ot civil anu religious liberty can we desire T Our form of government, and free instituti dns, cannot be charged with oppression and injustice. If they exist a niong us, their elements must be traced to the abuse of our freedom, arid, to the evil passions of the human heart. If we are not a happy people, it is not for the want of na tional privileces. It mav bo safelv affirm ed, that no country Under heaven, has equal privileges, and consequeritly,nbne has equal responsibilities. "While most other nations have had a heathen origin, arid their early. history has been stained with the dark and bloody rites of idolatry, we can say that christian ancestry commenced the settle ment of these lands, and laid the foundation ol our great republic, we can traco our nation's betMnnines to the nuritana of FW. land, Scotland arid Ireland, the Hugunots of Fiance, and to tho protestant churches o Holland and Germany. .We can indulge the pleasing reflection, (hat the plantation of these colonies; which have now crown into large and flouriflhirij,(States, was un dertaken amidst tl'ic prayers of the righteous and watered by the tears of their penitence anu gratitude. Jn an eminont degree may it be said, that this State has had a christian lgin. A century and a half have pot yet ; "tssed away, since the bark of Wi' urn ' Perm was seen eliding alone the thickly wooded shores of .tho .beautiful Delaware. 1 he son ol an knglish High Admiral, born the heir of a great '3t3lc,.qualified byhirtli, education and talents, for tho highest. earth ly honors and distinctions, he prelerred to his opening splendid worldly prospects, the humble discinleshin of his Redeemer, and cast in his lot with a despised religious sect. Persecuted lor the singularity of his reli gious opinions and customs, disgusted with the pride and ostentation which had so ex tensively usurped the name of religion in his native land, lie turned hi3 attention to the Trans-Atlantic wilderness, and resolved to seek in its depths, an;asylura for himself and his brethren. "Haying" obtained a grant from his monarch, of an extensive tract of land in North America, a3 a commutation for a sum of money 'due for the services of his father, ho undertook tho establishment pf a new colony. Landing on the shores of tho Uelaware, in the vicinity of some In dian villages which then occupied the spot where Philadelphia now rears its temples and spreads its wealth and magnificence, he' was met by the red natives of the .soil. And how djd ho treat them? Didije. at tack them wjth artillery and musketry, with sword and, bayonet ? Did he overreach them hy superior cunning to the despoiling them 'of their possessions, oi circumvent them to their destruction by deep laid strat agems? Far otherwise. lie rn.ot ,them with the exercise of the genuine principles of that religion which he professed. He treated them as human being's, as members of the same great family, with that benevo lence and justice from which man hps no right to swerve in His intercourse with his fellow man. He purchased, of them. lands which they were willing to sell, by fair and honoiable barter. He respected their rights, and took no undu'ejulVaritagcof their igno rance., and weakness. The consequence was they became his devoted friends. The power af. kindness and iustice melted and subdued the souls of the Susquehannocks. the Delawares and the Raritans, recently burning with vengeance against the. white man. oh account of aggressions con" milted upon them by snme.of the settlers p'fyieigh boringcoloni'es.No midnight war whoop dis turbed the infant settlement of Penn. No crie3 of the wounded "& dying were heard in their peacelul dwellings. No bloody mas sacre stained the foundations of the rising city. 1 lie Indians dwelt among them as brothers, furnishing them with abund ant provisions, tho fruits of their hunting anu nsning. Amidst this dclightlul harmo. ny, the forests began to disappear, and the horrora ot the desert gradually to change in to cultivated fields and gardens and flourish ing towns. The echoes tff the wilderness, the bowlings of wild beasts', and the battle cry of tho savage, gayc .plage, to. the. voice of prayer and praise. It is refreshing to turn lrom a review ol tne iraud and treachery, the oppreasion and cruelty, which it must be acknowledged, has, with but few excep tions, characterized the Europeans toward the Aboriginees, in the colonization of this new world, to the contemplation of such sucne as this. What a contrast docs the first settlement of Pennsylvania furnish to the settlement of Mexico, Guatemala.and Peru by tho "Spaniards, and the circumven lion and butchery ol millions ofllioir confid ing natives, by the fiendish avarice and am bition of Uortes, Alvarade and Pizarro, Who traversed waves, theunknown world explored. xuu aos3 iiwir biauuaru, uuiineir rami tne swora. What a contrast to the settlement of the West India Islands ! when, " Dreadful as hurricanes, athwart the niairi, Hushed the felt legions ol invading Spain, With fraud and force, with false and fatal breath, (Submission bondage, and resistance death.) They swept the Isles. In vain the simple raco i.- im . ..,., r .t,:. . Or. with weak arms their ilcrv vencoance braved : They came, they saw, they conquer'd, they enslav'd. And they destroy'd j the generous heart they broke A 1HJ UU.U U .11V 11I1I1U UWl&Ull! .110 JUUH Where'er to battlo rharch'd their fell array Thosworu of conquest plow'd resistless way ; where er lrom cruel toil they sought repose Around the fires of devotion rose. Tho Indian as he turned his Head in flight, llchcld his cottage ljaming Through the nigHt, And midst the scrcarrii of murder on the wind, Heard tho mute blood-hound s death-step close be. hind." What a contrast, I may alsp aqd, does the conductof William Penn toward tho Indians furnish to those almost numberless encroach ments, violation of treaties, deeds of fraud and violence, by which the accurate and- true historian must record, .that most of the native tribes have been driven from the lands between the Atlantic and the Missis sippi; spoliations of avarice and unrighteous exertions at superior powerupon the teebie lor which tho warmest patriot will lmu dilhcult to apologize, and which every frferid of justice and human ty must unhesi tatingly and unreservedly coridem'n Even now the poor Uherokees, lorced away lrom their well cultivated farms, their workshops their schools and churches, and nil the mon umenls of their rapidly advancing civiliza tion, look with gushing eyes, for the last time, upon their native sou, their beloved homes, the craves of their fathers, and pur sue tieirreluctarlt wayundef an armed force, to the far distant wilds of the setting sun, It must be a source of gratification to Pnnnavlvanians. to remember that euch scene of uprightness as has been described destined forever to be the admiration of the christian world, has marked the commence ment of thoir commonwealth; that its foun dations were laid in benevolence, honesty and peace Pennsylvania has cause to hon. or th" namo "f her founder The w of the erilightened and the virtuous throughout the civilized world, has long since pronoun ced hjm a 'great and a good man. To the enjoyment of luxury and ease, he. preferred the endurance ol' persecution for righteous ness' sake, and all lliq.. inconveniences and privations of a wilderness beyond the ocean. His treatment of the Indians",, showed how deeply rooted in his heart .were the princi ples which ho prolessed, and mane a. com pletely successful experiment of the efficacy of tho'se principles to protect the rights of meu,, and.totmpart to them peace anu hap piness. The eauilable and salutary laws which he formed for his infant colony.man- ? .-. i '. ri :. .i.ll!. ......... .,,! ncsicu uic greatness 01 11 is iiiiuiuguntu u wisdom.. His generous invitations to those of other cnrifitianXlcnoniihutions to settle in his territory, proved him to be a man of a large and liberal hoar., am forever redeem ed his character from the chareo of a bigoted and narrow sectarianism. The example of a pious ancestry ought to have an influence Upon their posterity,, a.nd there can be no doubt that the responsibilities of this pation are greatly increased by the fact, that it has had a religious origin. 'And not only has this nation had a favorable origin, but its lotjias been caU in a most advantageous part of the ivorld. The goodness of, Pro- videncu'ha3 been manilesteu toward tne a merican people in placing thpm neither a midst the snows of the frigidnor the sutry plains of the torrid zone, but in a temperate climate, such a one as is most favorable to the exertion of bpth the physical and the mental powers. Itjias been manifested 111 extending .them over so .wide a tetrilory, eipbraciitg such a variety of vegetable, ani mal and mineral productions, affording such facilities for internal navigation and internal commerce. This nation has been located not amidst the worn out soil of the old woild, but in the virgin mould of the. new, amidst lands fertalized by the,(decayed ve getation oi numerous , centuries; lanus a bounding m all'thatis necessary for human sustenance and comfort. , It has been loca ted along the shores of two oceans, along the shores of gulphs and bays? and the larg est, lakes in the world, and .along extensive rivers, some of which are.among the might iest in existence. The .posjtion which it occupies on the globe, affords it probably, greater advantages for universal commerce, than any other people can boast of. Its sit uation, its climate, the charactei of the race, mark it out for high pre-eminence .over all the nations of this western hemisphere, and for exerting' a mighty influence upon the destinies of the whole earth. And the God of nature has bestowed 'upon this State ad vantages lor acting a very conspicuous part in that career of improvement which this m has begun. Its territory has been fashioned for creat and imnortant ends in the advancement of the proereis of human society. Occupying the middle ground be tween the northern and the southern slates, the states on the Atlantic and tne- Missis sippi, it well deserves the name df tho Key stone oi trie union. X lie everlasting moun tains which Stretch over almost its who! extent, while they mark it as the .home of health and freedom and vigorous industry, inclose inexhaustable mineral treasures, not indeed of silver and gold, but what is far more conducive to the true prosperity of a nation, iron without which, no people yet ever attained to any great degree of civili zation', , and coal sufficient to furnish light and heat to many generations. Its roman tic and plenteous streams have been evident I., -t i r..- i ; iy cnannuueu, y.m. ior uteniai navigation, and the extensive operation of the mechanic al and manufacturing arts', hi beautiful valleys, covered with a fertile rnoul'd", afford abundant advantages to the agriculturalist presenting even now, some of the finest specimens of faiming in the Union, and destined, probably, to experience the high est degree of cultivation. It has slso everv facility , for. being a great commercial state havintr water communications on everv side the lakes on the north, the Delaware on the east, the Chesapeake Bay on the south, and the Ohio opening into immense regions on the west, i ho numerous eairals and rait roads wnicn nave oeen constructed during a few years past, and wlijc.h are continuing to multiply, prove that flie .citizens of this state aro not insensible to their commercial advantages, and do not intend to slumber over the blessings which a bountiful Provi has bestowed, . ' t flsa further evidence of the distinguish ing privileges .wilh which this nation b favored, it is worthy of remark, that it nas commences its career in a most lavor- able period of time. According to the, most accurate chronologists,. nearly CQ00 years have clansed since the creation. The A- merican people, beginning thoir empire at wis. iaip agv, ui me wuiiu, navu lur uieir in struction, the' example of the many- nations which have preceded them, and whose course history records. They have access tq the, literature and science of 4000 years, the treasured knowledge of the enlightened .and ancient kingdoms fron which they sprang, recorded 'n their own angu3ge.-r-Th'ey can enrich' themselves with the intel lectual spoils of one hundred centuries.- Above all, they have the whole canon of divine revelation with the evidences of its truth which eighteen centurjes have accu mulated. It is an, age moreover, when the arts and sciences have advanced to a pitch they never reached before, and have the prospect of advancing to a height which tran scend the highest efforts of the imagination to contemplate, an age when jhe invention of the art of prilling, tho discovery of tho ronnrer1 c"Tipas, and th" sppil'-a'-or of the power of steamf have given a new..im pilso to the energies of tbcwiuiman mind, & are awakoning the great mass ofthe-popu lation of tho civilized wor,ld to oxcrtions unparalleled in the history of our race. This nation has ever); facility for sailing directly onward in- this tide of improve ment, and the inveiitlvo and enterprising genius, by which many of its citizens have signaiizeu tnemscives, provo main is quali fied for advancing on its foremost wave. And this is not only an ago of increasing, light but it is an age of benevolent action. 1 he growing zeal ol the proiesiani Christ endom for the universal propogation of the gospel, and the astonishing success which, in many instaiiices has attended christian missions among the heathen, mark this as an Hge preparatory to the moral renova tion of tho earth. Now and wonderful scenes aro'.cvidently ab.outbopcn. What facilities have the American people for act ing a glorious part in that greatest of ,all .en terprises the christianization of Hie world! Who can tell but that anall wi?e Providence has nourished up colonies in thcwulds of this continent, conducted them to national .independence, defended and sustained them, alter becoming sovereign states, through ev ery trying crifi? ol their history, and lur ni'shed them with such vast resources that they may exert a mighty instrumentality in the moral improvement of the whole hu man family ? So far as we can gather lrom prophecy the'concluding scenes of time are hastening to their devclopcraent. Ameri ca has commenced her career at a period when, after doing much to usher, them . in, she may.hathe.hcrself jn m0 noonday splen dors of millennial glory. " Hope, waits the rhornirig of celestial light;. Time plume his wings for everlasting flight, Unchanging seasons have their march begun, Millennial years aro hastening to the sun. Seen thro thick clouds by faith's .transpiring eyes, The New Creation shines in purer skies." . Nor should the'vosilion ivhich the Amer ican people occupy bvfore other nations be overlovked ,in e.iti)naiing (heir privileges and responsibilities. We have.cast off the incumberance of a monarchical govern ment, and all Iheir burdensome apendages, have adopted the representative and repub lican form and have undertaken to govern ourselves. Arid this, is retarded, by all the world as a,vey doubtful experiment, as it is well known that flie republics of ancient time, while they were subiect to frequent and,'grea,t popular commotions, were of.but short duration, while those of modern times have .either soon reverted into mon archies or degenerated into aristocracies. America has, therefore, tho eves of manv nations fixed upon her, with the deepest intcnsityt f I" ver since the commencement of her political existence, she has been the subject of ihe maledictions, of .princes and lords and hlerarchs". The advocates of des potism have been exulting oypr every ap pearance of her instability and. have been loud in proclaiming every token of hqr fail ure, and foreboding her downfall,. On the other hand the oppressed and the struggling, of all lands, have looked to her as their po lar star, by whose, liuhl thev honed to he guided"tp the haven of freedom and h'ap'pi- I1CSS. j.i annua, ousting oil U1C yOJiC OI UCS- potic power, have been cheered by her ex-' ampic, anu ianen ,ne.r institutions for their paitern, in the formation of their own. She has been honoured with the appellation of mo iiiuuei repuunc. l-rance in her finally misutucaaiui, uui noi altogether useless attempt to abolish her feudal' institutions was incited by her cxamnle. Tim Rimips of Central and South America, in their re cent exertions for independence have been animated and emboldened by her success, and copied her political onranizatinn. Tt is evident.thcrefore.that she has it in her power lu iingiiiy inuiience upon the politi cal and social state of tho world, and can lead the way in the enfranchisement and rtiormauon. o tho nat cms. R inn .1 h steadfastly abide by tho principles she pro- unu mo consiiiuuon anu jaws, she nas auopteu, stroma she, while she main wins nersell inviii ate from tvranv nn ili one hand, stand ajoorfrom, insubordination and anarchy on the other. nificierit Union of manv Slates, pprsUe her e.u.iuuo career ior a century to conjc, who can measure the effects of her example in doing away those rigorous aiid pjiprcssive systems of government, and those despotic and iniquitous Institutions which, all over the earth, have so long bowed down into the dust tho soul of man .Ere the dose of tins period, her influence will have shaken down the entire nncient and. friffanHc alum. tures of European feudalism, it will have rivn.thq massive chains df Asiatjc bondago; it wilt havo hurled cypryAfrican tyrant from Ilia Ii.m 1.1 j' I w .iiiyuw ui .gum .auji iyory, anu renova. ted the remotest islands of the sea. uut should Jier experiment of self-government fail, should her powerful and hap py union.be rent into fragments, should her uuiiamuiiun aim per laws bo tranipled un tier .loot by popular violence and frenzv. should her vast regions bep.ome tho prey of uiacum aim iinarciiy.iue nopo3 olstrtiggling patriots & the friends of freedom & justice, .ii.u uuiwu worm win ne wrccKcdnj atrium phant jubilee will be held thro' all the realms ft'f lir.nn,.,, Xy . 1 . ui yifliuiy, ijveu now no. tne supporters of despotism point at tho disgraceful riots wnicn tor a lew yeais past havo every now and then broken out in our cities nnd minri. pal towns. They triumph in those popu lar excitements which set at nought the re strain's of law, and madly sacrifice the rihts and property and even hw of nnr .. ''ox', that our h. af d h' tr ty is but t . riAu o. anothor-namo for Uccnti6usneJs! and that r eulogized repubiie is but a mobocracy. Iipi'mmk nvfcrv citizen to nvnt-t li!q mmnti J - - " II.IU k (litrtnrn In ilffpnt thn innlitfimnt iviclmo ( .... - ... - b . 1 1 u .i ij i ieso enemies of tho rights of man.' to tin. iiuiu niu ouiii.iiiuw v. uui iiins anil (O show to the worjd that a nation can exist that social order can be maintained without the coercion of arbitrary power. The con stitution nf lllh United States, nnr Rfiio Imlfl tlm nim.nmnnlt nf mi. In..... constitution and our statutes embody the noblest principles pi order, justice and ttuo lihortv. mill nin f-nlcnlritnil in furnish il.'.; .. -J 7 .M..I.WH III U most ample scope for individual and social . . . !, .1 ' . k .1 . nterprize, winio mey protect tne rights of it r. .t . i .i. .il. . uci mem nuvu. inu smut uuncrenco all (lie inhabitants of .thpen iRlnlnu nnA -, -. I i ui. y ith the divine blcssim?. thev will e prosperity arid happiness of this nation, id set it on high above all the nations of the earth. They aro our safe guards .ueainst rong, our harries agajnst violence and in justice; Let them bo trampled under foot and even a despotic government would be.a blessing to that dreadful abyss ,of, inissrulo and anarchy into which Wc fire plunged. The government of a mob is tho worst of all governments, since breaking away lrom ll law uilM icusun, unu llljGlluu l)y 1110 ierce mnlirninnt nnd vnt isirrintr nnssinna nr ..... ... . .. j .. e an excited multitude, it drives right nnwaid in a career, of devastation. disrnirni-Mi'nn nil pnnciplcs.pf justice, and all cries for mercy, anu wnuji.ii nas wrciiKcu us treasured lury .1, i,wm.I r J,- ..!: i nit ncui ui 113 viumiis, ll uuiumcnces ift wArlr nf Knlfiln!riinl"iri"n Qnr.1. its tremendpu operations in the streets of Paris, and ihrouirh all tho eitins nf Frn during the reign of terror. No combina tion oi individuals has any right to take in to its own hands tho ofnYrs nf iriilirn ,l ... j . ui.v. executioner. . We have laws and magis. tratcs fully adequate to thi.3 task, and Itlie comes every citizen of the. United States, as he values his own true interests, to take decided stand against all mobs and Lynch aws. I Ins mobbing and lynching is an omen which bodes, great evil to our coun try, and threatens us witlr such terrible scenes as deluged the French Republic with blood, and compelled it to seek rpfnn-n fmm the tumultuous passions of its own citizens. in tne rigorous pnains pi a military despo tism ...We live in zn age of excitement and conflicting opinion, and sometimes a fierce radicalism stalks abroad, -treating with con tempt, the established customs and order of society, and a bold and reckless lanaticism breathes, tho harsh and malignant epithets of denunciation.. But the opposition of mobs is calculated io increase rather than repress the evil. And this tendency to licentiousness is-riot tne only thing with which the . advocates of despotic eovern. ments have it in their nnwer in nniim;.i , I - - ""WIU1W Udl Thev can chnrno at lenst siderable portion pfour Union, with thu In consistency , of .maintaining oyer, between two and thrccmillions ofihcir fcllowmcn, a system of oppression, while attfieBamo time, uoeriy anu inaepenaencc arc their proUdeit uvaoi.,, mmiiuw cuu iiiug.uargc do answer ed? Wlmt friend of. humanity wiil snviri richt for those who decloim sn IniMlv in fii. vour of freedom and who wnnM moid ,;, their hearts blood any attemtft at their own etiliinrrnlinn (n nf.Mu.K .l.i..i!. I . . 0uujw5m1v.il, uuspouc ano almost Unbounded dominion over beings whom tho (jod of naturo has created their brethren? The very thought that this-Christian republic incloses within ita bosom "morn tlmn o.ifin.. 000 bondsmen, is an element of bitterness in the happiness which the return of this day is calculated to inspire. It is unquestionably one ot tho greatest evils m our land. Slavery is a huge and black cloud in our horizon, wmcii, tiireatcns us with wide spread devas tation. It is tt foul Stiirma Unnn nnr nnlinnnl honour. It is an evil whoso sneed v rfimnvnl the voice of justice and humanity tho exam ple of other nations, and the trim Ininrodonf the American people loudly demand. But 11 is an evu oeepiy rooted and widely spread, """"" ""5 (jn-"! nujiutui questions, vio lent and harsh invective, bitter and indis criminate denllnciation.tho ation of boy nnd femalo Icctnrpra wtiitn ihpv hfive tho. direct effect ofin.fdsing into society .11 UUWUU9 ui puiiy.spmi, are not mo pro per means of its removnl. U mmuroa tn wisdom of our most experienced and sagacious ctntncmnn 'VUnt ...... -.-.! 1 iutwiui.ui 1 uui uui iiuuuii may speeanv oe delivered from this creat jncorisisrpnnvrthnnld be tho earnest prayer and endeavor, of every guou citizen. How long my country shall thy bondsmen's criej v iui my uiuiung Buouw 01 irecuom rise! When shall thv morcv pnvnr fmm thv i0mn Dnnrpsainn r wrntnu nml Elnvnn,' 1 wi r "b- otM.wtjr a MUiuiIlg bURIutt j T ' I . - .. . . . I ui us noi nawever, lellow citizens al though manv ihintTHnnnoor ri,l.-n. r O J l'(j...JTVui uuiblDU IU II1C U- ture nrosnenlv nf rinr fiolnvollTr.: desponding, fears, , but still cherish tho hope uiut mo Borne oenihcent J'rpyidence, .which has brought it into existence, which has so greatly increased it from such smnll tiprrln nings, wliich has botho, it safely through so many seasons pf peril, will cotinuo to defend and mairliain it that whatever evils exist among vs will 4)o.speedily dono awnv that whatever clouds in our horizon nortund. dis nstrous .tcmficsts will ero long he scattered lrom before the sun. Let us hopo that our laws will reiassumo their supremacy, that bur magistrates will ho loss discharge of (heir duty, and that the time is at hand when thn nlnnkinir nf lm fpfinra of slaycry, shall no longer minglo tlioir dis " '.v mill nil onvuia unu suugs oi ireo uuill. Let us hopo that this creat and nrowin rpublie will contbi'i" to in'-ietiso in nonulH , ion, inetlicrnri. m ui'cU.A'-iiof Brt(J vir i , . ... i i