1 J i r 0, II' 1 U o W, II. JACOBY, Proprietor. Truth and Right God and oar Country. . Two Dollars per Annum. VOLUME 12. BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY AUGUST 22, 1860. NUMBER 33- i; I n 1 STAR OF THE NORTH PUBLISHED BVEBY WEDNE8PAT BT WM. II. JACOBY, Office on Main St., 3rd Square tclow Market, TERMS: Two Dollars per annum if paid within Fix months from the time of subscri bing : two dollars and fifty cents it not paid within the year. No subscription taken fur a leas period than fix months ; no discon tinuances permitted until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option or the editor. The terms cf advertising will be as follows : One square, twelve lines? three times, SI 00 Every subsequent insertion, 25 One 6quare, three months, 3 00 One year, 8 00 B BECK IX RIDGE, LANE JLD F0S1ER. Tune. "Yankee Doodle." Father and I went down to see The Chicago Convention, And then we saw more minicry That it would do to mention. Chorus With Breckinridge to take the lead, And General Lane to help on, Our numerous loes we will oppose. As in the days of Jackson. The friends of William, King of York, Were there, quite confidential, Brains were much needed by the crowd, But could not claim attention. . Old "Wigwag," the great Financier, Had many good advisers, . Who found at last, without a tear, He was 'mong the outsiders. Knowledge is Power, and Gold i God, So says the ancient maxim. Bat both here on a rail were rode ' In spite of this good axiom. The friends of "Honest Uncle Abe," Had the records been o;erhauling, And found, by making a grand sirike, They could give their foes a mauling. So we may talk just as we choose About qualifications, If mauling rails or towing boats Makes rulers for great nations. Our friends have met in Baltimore, And made their nomination, And Breckinridge, of Kentucky, Received their approbation. The Squatter King should join with us, Against the nation's freemen, Instead ot kicking up a fuss 'Boot niggers 'rnongst our Yeomen. The Lnne is long which has no turn, And though foes beset us fiercely, Ue'il Foster principles that live. And march straight on to victory. With Breckinridge to take the lead, And General Lane to help on, Our numerous foes we will oppose As in the days of Jackson. Philadelphia Aigvs. ADD RESS Cf the Tresideut of the V. S. to the friends of ', "BUECKIM1IDGC AND LINE The great ratification meetina of July 9th, having adjourned to the Executive Mar.sion, and paid their respects to the Chief Magis trate, Mr. Buchanan appeared and spoke as follows : Frimds and FeUovo-alizens : I thank you from ray heart for the honor of this visit. I cordially congratulate you on the preference which you have expressed for Major Breck inridge and General Lane, as candidates for the Presidency and Vice Presidency of the United States over all competitors. Ap plause. " They are men whose names are known to the country; they need no eulogy from me. They have served their country in peace and in war. They are statesmen as well as soldiers, and in the day and hour of danger they will ever be at their post. They are conservative men ; and in the coarse of their administration they wl!I be equally just to the North and to the South, to the East and to the West. Applause. Above all, and first of all, they are friends of the Constitution and the Union.cheers; and they will stand by them to the death. Renewed cheers. Bnt we ought not to forget that they are also friends to the equal ity of the sovereign States of this Unionjn 'the common Territories of the country. Cries of "Good!" They will maintain that principle, which should receive the cordial approbation of us all. Equality is equity. Every citizen of the United States is equal before the Constitution and the laws ; and wiiy should not the equality of the sovereign States composing this Union be held in like reverence? This is good democratic doctrine. Liberty and equality are the birthright of every American citizen; and just as certainly as the day succeeds the night so certain will this principle of dem ocratic justice eventually prevail overall opposition. Cheers. But, before 1 speak further upon this subject and I shall not dei&io'you very long I wish to remove one stumbling-block out of the way. Inave ever been the friend of regular Dominations. I have never struck a political ticket in my life. Now, was there anything .done at Baltimore to bind, the political con science of any sound Democrat, or to pre vent him from supporting Breckinridge and Lane? "No! no!" I was cotemporary with the abandonment of the old Congress ional convention or caucus. This occurred a long time ago j ' very few, if any, of you remember it. Under the old Congressional convention system, no person was admitted to a seat except the. Democratic members of the Senate and House of Representatives. This. rule rendered it absolutely certain that the nominee, whoever he might be, would le sustained at the election of the Demo cratic States of the Union. " By this means t was rendered impossible that those States which could not give an electoral vote for the candidate when nominated should con rcl the nomination and dictate to the Dem--;rVJc Sulei who should be their nominee. (This system was , abandoned whether widely or not I shall express no opinion. The National Convention was substituted in iis siead. All the States, whether Demo cratic or not, were equally to send delegates to this convention according to the number of their Senators and Representatives in Congress. A difficulty at once aroe which never could have risen under the Congressional convention system, lf.a bare majority ol the National convention thus composed could nominate a candidate, he 'might be nominated mainly by the anti-Democratic States against the will of a large majority of the Democratic States. Thus the nominating power would be separated from the electing power, which could not fail to be destruc tive to the strength and harmony of the Democratic party. To obviate this serious difficult' in the organization of a National convention, and at the same time to leave all the States their full vote, the two thirds rule was adopted. It was believed that under this rule no can didate could ever be nominated without embracing within the two thirds the votes of a decided majority of the Democratic States. This was the substitute adopted to retain, at least in a great degree, the power to the Democratic States which they would have lost by abandoning the Congressional convention system. This rule was a main pillar in the edifice of National conventions. Remove it, and the whole must become a ruin. This sustaining pillar was broken to pieces at Baltimore, by the convention which nominated Mr. Douglas. After this the body was no longer a National conven tion ; and no Democrat, however devoted to regular nominations, was bound to give the nominee his support; he was left free to act according to the dictates of his own judgment and conscience. And here, in passing, I may observe that the wisdom of the two-thirds rule is justified by the events passing around us. Had it been faithfully observed no candidate could have been nominated agair.st the will and wishes ot almost every certain Democratic State in the Union, against nearly all the Democratic Senators and more than three-fourths of the Democratic representatives in Congress. Cheers. 1 purposely avoid entering upon any dis cussion respecting the exclusion from the Convention of regularly-elected delegates from the different Democratic States If the convention which nominated Sir. Douglas was not a regular Democratic convention, it must be confessed that Breckinridge is in the same'conditiori id that respect. The convention that nominated him, although it was composed of nearly all the certain Democratic States, did not contain the two- j thirds ; and therefore every Democrat is at j perfect liberty to vote as he thinks proper, withont running counter to any regular nomination of the party. Applause, and cries of "three cheers for Breckinridge and Lane." Holding this position, I shall pre sent some of the reasons why 1 prefer Mr. Breckinridge to Mr. Douglas. This I shall do without attempting to interfere with any individual Democrat or any Stats Demo cratic organization holding different opin ions from myself. The main object of all good Democrats, whether belonging to the one or the ether wing of our unfortunate division, is to defeat the election of the Re publican candidates ; and I shall never op pose any honest and honorable course cal culated to accomplish this object. To return to the point from which I have digressed, I am in favor of Mr. Breckinridge, because be sanctions and sustains the per fect equality of all the States within their common Territories, and the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States estab lishing this equality. The sovereign States of this Union 'are one vast partnership. The Territories were acquired by the com mon blood and common treasure of them all.- Each State, and each citizen of each State, has the same right in the Territories as any other State and the citizens of any other State possess. Now, what is sought for the present i?, that a portion of these States should turn around to their sister States and say, "We are holier than you are, and while we take our property to the Ter ritories and have it protected there, yon shall not place your property ic the same position." That is precisely what is con tended for. What the Democratic party maintain, and what is the true principle of Democracy, is, that all shall enjoy the same right, and that all shall be subject to the same duties. . Property this Government was framed for the protection of life, liberty and property. They are the objects for the protection of which all enlightened govern ments were established. But it is sought now to place the property of the citizen, under what is called, the principle of squat ter sovereignty, in the. power of the Territo rial Legislature to confisicate it at their will and pleasure. ' Tnat is the principle sought to be established at present; and there seems to bo an entire mistake and misun derstanding among a portion of the public upon this subject. When was properly ever submitted to the will of the majority ? "Never." If yon hold property as an individual, you hold it independent of Con gress or of. the State Legislature, or of the Territorial Legislature it is yours ; and your Constitution was made to protect your private property against the assaults of leg islative power. Cheers. .-Well, now, any set of. principles which will deprive you of your property is against the very essence of republican government, and to that extent makes you a slave ; for the man who has power over your property to confiscate it has power over your njeans of subsistence ; and yet it is contended that although the , and hands off ty the Territorial Legislature. Constitution of the United States confers no j Loud applause. With the Supreme Court such power although no State Legislature j of the United States I hold that neither Con has any such power, yet a Territorial Legis-, gress nor the Territorial Legislature has any lature, in the remote extremities of the j power to establish, impair, or abolish slavery country r can confiscate your property ! A voice. "They can't do it; they ain't going to do it." ' There is but one mode, and one alone, to abolish slavery in the Territories. That mode is pointed out in the Cincinnati plat form, which has been as much " misrepre sented as anything I have ever known. That platform declares that a majority of the actual residents in a Territory, whenever their nnmftr is sufficient to entitle them to admission as a State, possess the power "to form a Constitution with or without domes tic slavery, to be admitted into the Union upon terms of perfect equality with the other States." If there be squatter sover eignty in this resolution I have never been able to perceive it. If there be any refer ence in it to a Territorial Legislature it has entirely escaped my notice. It presents the clear principle that at the time the people from their Constitution, they shall then de cide whether they will have slavery or not. And yet it has been stated over and over again that, in accepting the nomination un der that platform, I endorsed the doctrine of squatter sovereignty. I suppose yon have all heard this repeated a thousand times. A voice. "We all knew it was a lie !" Well, 1 am glad you did. How beautifully this plain principle of Constitutional law corresponds with the best interests of the people! Under it, emigrants from the North and the South, from the East and the West, proceed to the Territo ries. They carry with them that property which they suppose will best promote their material interests ; they live together in peace afld harmony. The question of sla very will become a, foregone conclusion before they have inhabitants enough to enter the Union as a State. There will then be no "bleeding Kansas" in the Territories; they will all live together in peace and har mony, promoting the prosperity of the Ter ritory and their own prosperity, until the time shall arrive when it becomes necessary to frame a Constitution. Then the whole question will be decided to the general sat isfaction. But, upon the opposite principle, what will yon find in the Territories ? Why, there will be strife and contention all the time. One Territorial Legislature may establish slavery and another Territorial Legislature may abolish it, and so the strug gle will be continued throughout the Terri torial existence. The people, instead of devoting their energies and industry to pro mote their own prosperity, will bo in a state of constant 6trife and turmoil, just as we have witnessed in Kansas. Therefore, there is no possible principle that can be so injurious to the best interests of a Territory as what has been called squatter sover eignty. . r r . :n another point of view. The people ofi c w j w' lue ouuLiieiu ciaica inu iicici ui'uuuuu 11113 great principle of State equality in thu Union without self-degradation. ''Never!" Never without an acknowledgment that they are inferior in this respect to their sis ter States. Whilst it is vital to them to pre serve their equality, the Northern States surrender nothing by admitting this princi ple. In doing this they only yield obedience to the Constitution of their country as ex- . . j.j 1 c- : . .iberofCon pnunueu vy me supreme iourr 01 me United States. While lor the North it is comparatively a mere abstraction, with the South it is a question of co-equal Slate sov ereignty in the Union. If the decrees of the high tribunal estab lished by the Constitution for the very pur pose are to be set at naught and disregarded it will tend to render all property of every description insecure. What, then, have the North to do ? Merely to say that, as good citizens, they will yield obedience to the decision of the Supreme Court, and admit the' right of a Southern man to take his prop erty into the Territories, and hold it there, just as a Northern man may do; and it is to me the most extraordinary thing in the world that this country should' now be dis tracted and divided, because certain persons at the North will not agree that their breth ern at the South shall hare the same rights in the Territories which they enjoy. What would I, as a Pennsylvania:), say or do, supposing anybody was to contend that the Legislature of any Territory could outlaw iron and coal within the Territory ? Laugh ter and cheers. The principle is precisely the. same. The Supreme Court ot the United States have decided what was known to us all to have been the existing slate of affairs for fifty years that slaves are property. .Admit that fact, and you ad rait everything. Then that property in the Territories mnst be protected precisely in the same manner with any other property. Ii it be not so protected in the Territories, the holders of it are degraded before the world. - ' We have been told that non-intervention on the part of Congress with slavery in the Territories is the true policy. ' Very well. I most cheerfully admit that Congress has no right to pass any law to establish, impair, or abolish slavery in the Territories. Let this principle of non-intervenCTon be exten ded to the Territorial Legislatures, and let it be declared that they in like manner have no power to establish; impair, or destroy slavery, and then the controversy , is in ef fect, ended. This is all 'that is required at present, and f Verily believe all that will erer be required. Hands off by Congress in the Territories. But if, in the face of this positive prohibition, the Territorial Legisla ture should exercise the power of interven ing, then this would be a mere transfer of the Wilmot proviso and :he Buffalo plat form from Congress, to be carried into exe cution in the Territories to the destruction of all property in slaves. Renewod ap plause. An attempt of this kind, if made in Con gress, would be resisted by able men on the floor ot both Houses, and probably de feated. Not so in a remote Territory. To every new Territory there will be a rush of Free Soilers from the Northern States. They would elect the first Territorial Legislature before the people of the South could arrive with their property, and this Legislature would probably settle forever the question of slavery according to their own will. And shall we for the sake of squatter sovereignty, which, from ils nature, can only continue during the brief period of Territorial existence, incur the risk of divi ding the great Democratic party of the country into two sectional parties, the one North and the other South? Shall this great party which has governed the country in peace and war, which has raised it from humble beginnings to be ono of the most prosperous and powerful nations in the world shall this party be broken up for such a cause ? That is the question. The numerous, powerful, pious and respectable Methodist Church has thus been divided. The division was a severe 6hock to the Union. A similar division of the great Democratic party, should it continue, would rend assunder one of the most powerful links which bind the Union together. I entertained no such fearful apprehen sions, lne present issue is transitory, ana will speedily pass away. In the nature of things it cannot continue. There is but one possible contingency which can endanger the Union ; and against this all Democrats, whether squatter sovereigns or popular sov ereigns will present a united resistance. Should the time ever arrive when Northern agitation and fanaticism shall proceed so far as to render the domestic firesides of the South insecure, then and not till then will the Union be in danger. A united Northern Democracy will present a wall of fire against such a catastrophe ! There are in our midst numerous persons who predict the dissolution of the great Democratic party, and others who contend that it has already been dissolved. The wish is father to the thought. It has been heretofore in great peril ; but when divided for the moment, it has always closed up its ranks and become more powerful, even from defeat. It will never die whilst the Constiiutionmd the Union survive. It will live to protect and defend both. It has its roots in the very vitals of the Constitution, , ... , - , , r ' ad, I'ke ore of the ancient cedars of Leb- anon, it will flourish to afford shelter and protection to that sacred instrument, and to shield it against every storm of faction. Re newed applause. Now, friends and fellow-citizens it is probable that this is the last political speech that I shall ever make. A voice, "We hope not !" It is now nearly forty years since I first came to Washington as a mem- gress, and I wish to say this night that during the whole period I have received nothing but kindness and attention from your fathers and from j-ourselves. Washington was then comparatively a small town ; now it has grown to be a great and beautiful city ; and the first wish of my heart is that its citizens may enjoy uninter rupted health and prosperity. 1 thank you for the kind attention you have paid to me, and now bid you all a good night. Pro longed cheering The Broker and his Clerk. One of the leading brokers of New York had a young man in his employ. The vast amont of money in his bands was a great temptation to him. Small sums were missed day after day ; a quarter once then fifty cents, then one dollar, then two dollars were missed. He was charged with speculation. The bro ker showed him how he could detect the abstraction of the smallest sum of money ; the young mar. stammered and confessed. "Nowj said the broker, "I shall not dis charge, I shall not dishonor you. I intend to keep, you, and make a man of you. You will be a vagabond if you go along in this way. Now let me see no more of this." He went to his work. He not disappoint confidence. He did honor to the employ er;.' and the other day he was inducted into one of our banks in an honorable position, and his employer became his bondsman to the amount of $10,000. Had he conducted as some would have done sent the boy away, proclaimed his dishonor perhaps he would have ended his days in the States Prison, and been sent to his tomb in the garb of a convict. But a young man was rescued from ruin who had been placed amid the temptation of money, and for a moment was overcome. Irish Wit. A Roman Catholic peasant boy in Ireland is reported to have listened attentively to a priest earnestly denouncing the "revival," and warning the people against it as the work of the devil. ."Ah ! thin, "your liverence," replied the lad,, "it mnst be a new devil, for that's not the ould divd used to make the people be have themselves. ; ! OUR CHILDHOOD. BY CEO. D. PRENTICE. 'Tis sad yet sweet to listen To the soft winds gentle swell, And think we hear the music Our childhood knew so well ; To gaze out on the even And the boundless fields of air, And feel again our boyish wish To be like angels there ! There are many dreams of gladness That cling around the past And from the tomb of feeling Old thoughts come throbbing fast The form we love so dearly, In the-happy days now gone, The beautiful and lovely, So fair to look upon. Those bright and lovely maidens Who seemed so formed for bliss, Too glorious and loo heavenly For such a world a this ! Whose soft dark eyes seemed swimming In a sea of liquid light, And whose locks of gold seem'd streaming O'er brows so sunny bright. "Whose smiles were like the sunshine In the spring time of the year Like the changeful gleams of April, They followed every tear ! They have passed like hope away All thoir loveliness has fled Oh ! many a heart is mourning That they are with the dead. And yet the thought is saddening To muse on such a they And feel that all the beautiful Are passing fast away ; That the fair ones whom we leave, Grow to each loving breast, Like tendrils of the clinging vine, Then perish where they rest. And can we but think of these In the soft and gentle Spring, When the trees are waving o'er us. And the flowers are blossoming ! For we know that Winter's corring, With his cold and stormy sky And the glorious beauty 'round us, Is blooming but to die ? A Rake Chance for Editors. The pro prietors cf "Our Home' a Water Cure, lo- caled Dansville, Livingston county, N. Y , r.ies. Let us separate ; they are unworthy kept by Dr. Jackson, formerly of Glen Hav- j to be our brethren. Let us renounce them: en, publish through the Herald of that place and, instead of eupplications, as formerly an invitation to all editors of newspapers , for their prosperity and happiness, let us throughout the United States who are 6ick, 1 beseech the Almighty to blast their coun to become their guests without charge, for sels and brinir. to nought all their devices." three month, to take a course of treatment for that time. It says: "Those of you who are addicted to the use of Tobacco, Ardent spirits, Drug poisons,Tea, Coffee, or Opium, and would like to be relieved from jour dependence on them, to you we extend this invitation. j ft blowed great guns, and carried away the Wtalk or Life. Wo talk of human life bowsprit ; a heavy sea washed overboard as a journey, but how variously is that jour- j the binnacle and companion; the captain ney performed ! There are those who lost his squadrant and couid not take an ob come forth girt, and shod, and mantled, to servation for fifteen days ; at last we arriv walk on velvet lawns and smooth terracess, ed safe at Halifax !" where every gale is arrested and every beam j Ti,e old woman who could not read her is tempered. There are others who walk ; self, got a neighbor to repeat it to her three on the Alpine paths of life, against driving cr four times, until she thought she had got misery, and through stormy sorrows, over j it by heart, she then sallied out to tell the sharp araictions ; walk wnn bare leet and naked breast jaded, mangled, and chilled. A Hard Name. A man named Stone ex- ! claimed in a. bar-room, "I'll bet I have the hardesr name in the company." "Done," said one ot tho company, "what's your narue?" "Stone," cried the first. 1 1 ami me the money," said the other, my name is Harder." A country parson was addicted to using the phrase, "I flatter myself," instead of "I believe." Having occasion to exhort his congregation, during a revival, he "flatter ed" that more than one half of them would be damned. An Inhuman Order. A captain of a rifle company, out west, was guilty of an unheard-of piece of barbarity on one very I cold day recently. He actually marehed his men to the very brink of the canal, and then coolly commanded them to "full in." A person asked another if tolling a bell didn't put him in mind of Lis latter end. He replied (knowing that his interrogator was a man of more than questional morals,) "No, sir ; but tho rope remids rae of yours." An incorrigibl3 wac. who lent his minis ter a horse, who ran avay and threw his clerical rider, thought he should have some credit for his aid iu "spreading the gospel." The following no'ice might have been seen some time ago stuck up iu corset-maker's shop in Glasgow : "Ail sorts of ladies 6tays here." Many beautiful women, when walking or. the street, seem to be very angry if they are gazed at, and sadly disappointed if they are not. Two girls, cousins, aged 15 and 16, hung themselves in Jackson county, Iowa, re cently, on account of loving the same man. The Chinese picture of ambition is "a Mandarin trying to catch a comet, by put ting salt on his tail." Picture of despair a poor pig with his nose through a garden fence, almost touch ing a cabbage stalk. Pcrsons most suridly rise to eloquence not by distinction, but by seeking a worthy end. Ccltivate true sentiments, - and good j Tlie wife of John Adams. In a few wests the proclamation reached the colonies at several ports. Abagail Smith, the wife of John Adams, was at the time in their home near the foot of Penn Hill, charged with the sole care of their lit tle brood of children ; managing the farm ; keeping house with frugality, though open ing her doors to the houseless and giving with a good will a part of her scant portion to the poor; seeking work for her own hands, and ever busily occupied, now at the spinning wheel, now making amends for having never been sent to school by learning French, though with the aid of books alone. Since the departure of her husband for Congress, the arrow of death had sped near her by day, and the pesti lence that walks in darkness had entered her humble mansion ; she herself was still weak after a violent illness ; her house was a hospital in every part ; and such was the distress of the neighborhood, she could hardly find a well person to assist in look ing after the sick. Her youngest eon had been rescued from the grave by her nurs ing : her own mother had been taken away, and, after the austere manner of her fore fa;hers, buried without prayer. Woe followed- woe, and one atflction trod on the heels of another. Winter was hurrying on ; during the day family affairs took off her attention, but her long evenings, broken by the sound of the storm on the ocean, or the enemy's artilery at Boston, were lonesome and melancholly. Ever in the silent night ruminating on the love and tecdernes of her departed parent ; she needed the consola tion of her husband's presence ; but when, in November, she read the King's procla mation, she williiigly gave up her nearest friend exclusively to his perilous duties,and 6ent him her cheering message : "This in telligence will make a plain path for you, though a dangerous one ; I could not join to day in the petitions of our worthy pastor for a reconiliation between our no longer parent State, but tyrant state, and these cob' George Bancroft. The Sailor's Letter. A Sailor writing to his mother, gave the following account ; of a storm : "We have been driven into tho Bay of Fundy by a pampoosa right in the teeth ; eiu'y "Oh, my poor son." "Why, what's the matter he's not lost?" inquited a sympathizing friend. "O, lhank God, he's safe, but he has been driven into the Cay of Firmament by a bamboozle right into the teeth it blowed great guns, and they carried away the pul pit a heavy sea washed overboard the pin nacle of the tabernacle the captain lost his conjuration, and could'nt get any salva tion for fifteen days at last they arrived at Hallelujah." A wag thus plays upon the names of some of the United States Senators : A Senator of metal Bell. A shining Senator Bright. A verdant Senator Green. A greasy Senator Chandler. A depillions Senator Wigwall. A lazy Senator Doolittle. A healthy Senator Hale. A grave Senator Toombs. A royal Senator King. A brick of a Senator Mason. Sporting Senators Hunter and Chase. A pious Senator Tugh. A provisional Senator Rice. A colored Senator Brown. A lowly Senator Foot. An old "salt" Seward. A hard nut lor Sumner to crack Chest nut. A Good Dog. A Worth7 Dutchman sued his neighbor, a "gentleman from Erin," for killing his dog. In the course of his ex amination, the Dutchman being asked wbat was the value of his dog replied. "Ash for ter dog, lie vos wort Bhust nothing at all ; but ash Pat vos so mean ash to kill him, py tarn, I make him pay de full value of him." Another Meteor. Another billiant me teor passed through the heavens on Mon day evening of last week, between seven and eight o'clock. Its oourse was nearly from east to west. The rose has its thorns, the diamond its specks, and the best man his failings. To-morrcw is the day on which lazy peo ple work and foois reform. Why is a fool like a needle? has an eye but no head. Because he Did the horseman who "scoured the plain" use soap ? If you want to keep your health, don't The Destiny of ths Republic. ty JUDGE STOHT. 9 When we reflect on what has been and wbat is, how is it possible not to feel a pro found sense of the responsibilities of this republic to all future agesl What vast motives press upon us for lofty efforts ! What solemn warnings at once demand oaf vigilance and moderate onr confidence ! The old world has aiready revealed to C3 in ils unsealed books, the beginning and end of all its marvelous struggles in the cause of liberty. Greece ! lovely Greece 1 "the land of scholars and the nurse of arms," where sister republics, in fair pro cessions, chanted the praise of liberty and the good where and what is she ? For two thousand years the oppressors have bound her to the earth. Her arts are no more. The last sad relics of her temples are the barracks of a ruthless soldiery ; the iragments of her columns and her palaces are in the dust, yet beautiful in ruin. She fell not when the mighty were pon her. Her sons were united at Thermopylae and Marathon ; and the tide of her triumph roll ed back upon the Hellespont She was conquered by her own factions. She fell by the hands of her own people. The man of Macedonia did not the work of destruc tion. It was already done by her own cor- ruptions, banishments and dissensions. Rome ! republican Rome ! whose eagles glanced in the rising and setting sun' where and what is she 1 The eternal city yet remains, proud even in her desolation) noble in her decline, venerable in the maj esty of religion, and calm as in the compo sure of death. The malaiia has but travel ed in the parts won by destroyers. More than eighteen centuries have mourned over the loss ol the empire. A mortal disease) was upon her before Caesar had crossed the Rebicon ; and Brutus did not restore her j health by the deep probings of the senate- chamber. The Goths, and Vandals, and Huns, and swarms of the north; completed only what wa3 begun at home. Romans betrayed Rome. The legions were bought and sold, but the people offered the tributo money. And where are the republics of modem times, and Genoa exist but in name. The Alps, indeed, look down upon the brave and peaceful Swiss, in their native fastness es ; but guarantee of their freedom is in their weaknessand not in their strength. The mountains are not easily crossed, and the valleys are not easily retained. When the invader comes; he moves like an aval anche, carrying destruction in his path. The peasantry 6ink before him. The coun try, too, is too poor for plunder, and too rough for a valuable conquest. Nature pre sents her eternal barrier on every 6ide, to check the wahtosess of ambition. And Switzerland remains, with her simple insti tutions, a military road to climates scarcely worth a permanent possession, and protect ed by the jealousy of her neighbors. We stand the latest, and, if we fall, proba bly the last experiment of self-government by the people. We have begun it under circumstances of the most auspices nature. We are in the vigor of youth. Our growth has never been checked by the oppression of tyranny. Our constitutions never have been enfeebled by the vice or the luxuries of the world. Such as we are. we have been from the beginning, simple, hardy, intelligent, accustomed to self government and self-respect. The Atlantic rolls betweea us and any formdable foe. Within ourown territory, stretching through many degrees of latitude, we have the choice of many products, and many means of independence The government is mild. The press is free. Religion is free knowledge reaches or may reach every home. What fairer prospects of success could be presented ? What means more adequate to accomplish the sublime end ? What more is necessary th?n for the people to preserve what.lhey themselves have created ? Already has the age caught the spirit of our institutions. It has already ascended the Andes, and suffered the breezes of both oceans. It has infustd itself into the life blood of Europe, and warmed the sunny plains of France and the lowlands of Hol land. It has touched the philosophy of Ger many and the north, and, moving onwarnd to the south, has opened to Greece the les son of her better days. Can it be, that America, under such cir cumstanccs, can betray herself ? That 6he is to be added to the catalogue of republics, the inscription upon whose ruin is, "They were, but they are not!' Forbid it, my countrymen ; forbid it, Heaven ! I call upon ou, fathers, by the shades of your ancestors, by the dear ashes which, re pose in this precious soil, by all you are, and all you hope to be, resist every project of disunion; resist every attempt to fetter your consciences, or smother your public schools, or extinguish your system of pub lic instruction. 1 call upon you, mothers, by that which never fails in woman, the love of her off spring, to teach taem, a3 they climb your knees, or lean on your bosoms, the bless ings of liberty. Swear them at the altar, as with their baptismal, vows, to be true to their country, and never forsake her. : '. 1 call upon you, young men, to remem ber whose sons you are whose inheritance you possess. Life can never be too short which brings nothing but disgrace and op pression. Death never comes loo soon, if necessary ia defence of, the liberties ci oat