l lie Sty TrutIi and Right God aaa oar Country. Two Dollas per Annon. 1. J T ( i i i J VOLUME 14. STIR OF THE NORTH PUBLISHED EYEBT WSDHESPAV Y ' - Uo. n. Jicocr, . ; Office en Kaiu St.. Srd Sqnarc below Slarket, 'PERMS: Two Dollars pr annum If paid within six months from the time of subscri bing: two dollars and fifty cents if not paid within the year. No subscription taken for a loss period than six mouths; no discon finance permitted ontil all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the editor. '.Iht terms cf advertising will be as follows : Oqb juare, twelva lines three limes, SI 00 Evsry subsequent insertion, ... . . . 25 On sqnare, three months, . ...... 3 00 OiH year, . . . S (Ei)oue JJoetrrj. THE BATTLE 0? CETTISBCSa. Th9 days of June were nearly done ; The field, with plenty overrun, -Wore ripening 'neaih the harvest sun, j , . In fruitful Pennsylvania? Sang birds'and children ''All is well 1" Wiienf sudden, over hill and dell, ; The gloom of coming battle fell, : . Ou peaceful Pennsylvania! : Through Maryland's historic land, W th boasttui tongue, aid spoiling hand, They burst a fierce fend famished band, Right into Pennsylvania ! In Cumberland's romantic vale Was heard tha plundered farmer's wail; . And every mother's cheek was pail ! lu blooming Pennsylvania ! s With taunt and jeer; and shont and song; Through rustic .towns. they passed, along A confident and braggart throng Through lightened Pennsylvania! Ti e tidings startled hill and glen ; ' Up sprang oar Northern men, " And there was speedy travel then f All into Pennsylvania! ' The foe langhed out in open scorn ; Ft r fjuion men were coward-born. And then they wanted alt the corn That grew in Perns) Ivania ! It was the langnid hour of pnon, When all the birds were oat of tune j A id Nature in a sultry swoon, In pleasant Peansylvai.ia ! When sadden o'er the slumbering p!ian, Rod lla-hed the battle's Grey rain Tite volleying cannon shook again ; The hills of Pennsylvania ! Beneath that curse of iron hail, Taal threshed the plain with Mashing flail, t, W ell might the stoutest soldier quail, Iti echoing Pennsylvania ! - Then l.ke a sadden Summer rain. Storm driven o'er ihe darkest plain . They burst upon our ranks ar.d main, iostanled Pennsylvania! e left the old, ancestral thrill, From ire to sou, transmitted still ; And loughi for Freedom with a will, In pleasant Pennsylvania ! Tb breathless shock the maddened toil The sadden clinch the sharp recoil And we were ruaserof the soil,' In bloody Peuiifj If -.nia! To westward fell the beaten foe The growl of battle hoarse and low, We beard anon, but dyirig slow, , In ransomed Pennsylvania! Sdo' westward, with the sinking snn, The cloud of battle dnse and don, Flashed into fireand all was won In joyful Pennsylvania! Bot ah ! the heaps of loyal slain ! ' The bloody toil ! the bitter pain ! For those who shall not stand ayain - ' - In pleasant Pennsylvania ! Back tbronah the verdant valley lands, . Fast fled the foe. in trightened bands; VkTisb broken swords and empty hand, ' - Out of Pennsylvania ! Howard Gltkdon. . . Tit TriLnne Owns np Oa Gea. Hooker. G?n. Hooker, says yesterday's Tribunt, is rcleaved of the command of the Army of the Potomac, and Major General C. Meade, lately commander or the Fifth Corps, suc ceed him. Though in ordinary circa m " utacices we should hesitate to approve a change of commander in the face of the onemy, and pending an active campaign, 's bail the present with considerable satis ifaction. Hooker has painfully disappoint' '8d the hopes and expectations, not merely of his friends, but of all those who bad learned to regard him as at least a brave . and persistent fighter. Since the battles of ChaDce!!orvil!e be has lost that character . . wiii all who know the real history of - his needless, and disastrous retreat across. the Rappahannock. Such an op portunity of annihilating the rebel army cannot be expected to present itself again. .Lee was surprised and immensely ooiunm- berd, and aught to have been destroyed. Thnt in such circumstances he was not, wa hare ever since thought a sufficient cause for th remevial of Gen. Hooker, bot we (ail to understrnd why he was not removed then instead of now. Additional causes may be found in the failure to arrest the present advance of Lee, which ought to have betm prevented, and might have been, by a prompt seizure of the Blue Ridge passes. Hen. John J. Crittenden died on the 23th ins;:. at Frankfort Kentucky in the 77th year of lu age. K9, was U. 3. Senator when the rebellion commenced, and submitted bis celebrated plan of compromise which if adopted would "have saved - thousands of fives and millions of dollars, but which the abolitionists in theif frenzy rejected. John J. Crittenden was one of the ablest and purest statesmen of the age. Posterity will honor his efforts to save his country from everlastiflg ruin, fie proved faithful io her, to the end '''.'' BLOOMS BURG. COLUMBIA The : Evils of the Time and their Remedy. BT C. B. SUCK A LEW. The capital arils that afflict the nation are, a broken Unionj civil war; an immense and increasing debt; great and unexampled bitternes in the social relations of men; and last, bat not least, multiplied and grave errors, usurpations and abuses of power by men in public authority. How these evils can be most surely removed, and ' their recurrence prevented, is the great, i . v. n i 00 i o ii-eiiroBsing question wnicn now con- j fronts cs and demands reply. That reply is furnished in declaring the policy of the Democracy of Pennsylvania a policy bo simple, so ja.t, so perfectly couformed io the necessities of the times, that none can misunderstand it, or sincere ly question its fi mess for the repression" of existing evils. That policy is connected with a sincere devotion to th laws of the land, and with a deep conviction of the necessity of main taining them in tact and nnbroken. These laws consist of the Constitution and statutes of the United Stales, and of the Constitui lions and statutes of the several States, and include much of the common law of Eng land and those guarantees of liberty which are tfce boast of British history. Thee laws of the land make up that American system of free government which has in sured our prosperity and given us a high place of honor among the nations of the earth. But those laws have been assailed that system of free government has been interrupted in its course the States are broken asunder, and sounds of violence fill the land. It is timely, then, to inquire. Who have assailed those laws, and who are now the enemies of reunion and liberty! Against whnm,againM what interests shall the voice of this great Slate be spoken and her pow er be exerted ? Unquestionably ihe radical Abolitionists of the North assailed the laws persistently and earnestly for years by incendiary doc- omen's transmitted through the mails, lo excite insurrection in the Ninth; by seduc ing negro slaves to abscond from their mas ters, assisting their escape, secreting them from pursuit, by any raising mobs to resist their reclamation. They also created and kept -up agitation in Congress by pe'itions for unconstitutional law?, and Brown raid into Virginia a mission of ra pine an'd LlofTd'w-a6asic,d by their con " tributions, and was followed by the canon ization by them of ts leader as a saint. Instigated by them, many of the Northern Legislatures enacted statutes to defeat or impede the reclamation of fugitive slaves under the law of the United States, thus giving Slate sanction to the revolutionary spirit. At lat the Republican par'y was found ed, and drew mosi of th Abolitionists into its ranks, and alonse with them obtained their passions and their fatal dogma that there are laws of the individual will higher in obligation than the laws of the land, and that the latter, when they conflict with the former, may be broken withonl guilt and without reproach It followed in doe course that the decision of the Supreme Court cf the United States cpon negro citizenship and the rights of Southern men in the Ter ritories was denounced, and acqoiesence in it refused by the Republicans, and the validity of any law establishing slavery was denied in their platform at Chicago They refused to be bound by the law, and their platform was itself a repudiation of the laws, as it denied their obligation. The Abolitionists and Ihe Republican pcrty are, therefore, first in fault, In break ing away from good faith, duty and law, and their example, and the apprehension of further acts of aggression upon South ern rights by them, provoked (althoogh tney couia not justityi the existing great .a a rebellion. That rebellion was against the laws of the United States, and put the whole body of them at defiance. Although it asserted for itself a legal ground of justification, it is most manifest that it was lawlsss and un authorized. The compact of Union being without limitation of time, musfbe held, as intended by its authors, to be perpetual; and the provision contained in it for its own amendment provides the only lawful mode by which its obligation can be limit ed or changed. Considering secession as a breach of the public law, and in view of the immense interests put in peril by it, this State concurred in measures of hostil ity against the South. But this was done to vindicate the broken law, and to secure the objects , for which the Government of the United "States was originally founded, and for no purpose of conquest, of oppression, or of fanatical experiment. Upon this ground we may justify our conduct, and submit it, without apprehension of censure to the judgment of future times. Bot the war has lasted more than two years, and its management, and the meas ures of legislation and of Executive policy which Jiave accompanied it, have given occasion for lrequent and just complaints. It has been so managed that our armies have been outnumbered where decisive battle were to be fonght, or have been rashly thrown pon impregnable positions or the enemy, Onr forces, greatly outnum bering those of ' the Confederates, have been so dispersed and so handled that their superiority has not determined the issue of campaigns or concluded tha contact j After contributing one fifth cf a million of men to the war, oar State is insulted by raids, and is made dependent upon the Friendship of neighboring Slates for her im mediate defence. But it is not the mismanagement of par. ticnlar military operations, nor other uere . error of policy of onr rulers, that has snnk into the hearts of freemen as matter of most deep and enduring complaint. Mere mismanagement or error may be imputed to Inexperience in war, to accident, to ex ceptional or . temporary causes, or, at the worst, to incompetency But what sbe.II be said of acts of Congress and acts ol the Executive n contempt of the Constitution, which, bearing upon the war, have pro tracted it uni-ed the enemy, divided our own people, and placed us in a fale posi- ( lion before the nations of the earth? The Confiscation Act and the Emancipation Proclamation are, in the opinion of a large part of our people, not only Bnwisis and injurious to our cause, but also wholly un authorized by any principle of belligerent or constitutional law. We need go but a little way beyond the doctrine of these measures before we conclude that the torch may be applied to entire towns, ar.d er yile, savage race be let loose to works of rapine and barbaric war. But not merely in the policy of the war in onr relations with the enemy has illegality, wi:h consequent evil, appeared. In these Northern States, wholly untouched by revolt, the public sense has been out raged by repeated and flagrant acta of arbi trary power. The enumeration of these would constitute a volume, and they fur nish a premonition of evil in the luture which every patriotic mind should view with deep apprehension. How lonj; can the law be habitually and offensively bro ken by the public authorities, :n peaceful and free communities, before resistance will be provoked and a reign of ociul dis order established ? Thus upon reviewing our affairs, w per ceive how the spirit of revolution hat i of disregard and opposition to law has wonted to our injury; how it pressei upon ' us with a heavy hand at the present mo ment, and threatens our future welfare. And we discover also tht parties or in erests who are, in this connection, chargeable with gnilt. The picture is dark and gloomy enough to create both abhorrence anl fear. Untortnnately there is no csrtainty of the amendment ot oar affairs by parlies or ad- j ministrations now in possession of power. The Abolitionist stands implacable i.nd in solent as of old, and gives perverled direc tion to the war. The Republican party, incapable and prone to abuse, has control of the Federal Government and of most of the State Governments North and West; and the Confederate government irimical lo reunion, holds position in the South From none ol these can we expect the firm establishment of union, order, liberty and law. We are not to look to the guilty for sal vation, nor to those who break tr e laws for their restoration. The AbolitioniM, the Sece-sior.ist, and the Republican Adminis tration and party, have each gone away from the laws ol the land, and it is because of their unfaithfulness to duty that wasting war and the other evils before mentioned afflict the country. It is idle to expt ct from either the reMoratian of good government, and a firm Union based upon the affections of the people. But for all the wrong that has been done, and for all the consequent catamit es that have fallen upon us, the great majority of the people of the United States are not re sponsible at least not responsibla in the sense of having intended them. And there can be no question that if that majority could now aci directly and fully upon pub lic affairs, they would decree immediate peace, union and lawful rule, as t ley ex isted in former times, and would put down, or put aside, all who would venturu to op pose, or would seek to delay, the reulization j of these great objects. The Abo itionists proper never commanded a majority, even . . in the North; the Republican party was in a minority of nearly a million of votes at the Presidei. tial election of I860, and it is believed that a majority of the Southern peo ple were opposed to secession even after that election, and abandoned their Union ism reluctantly, under the pressure of sub sequent events. In point of fact, active earnest minorities. North and South, have seized power and controlled the course of events, and the great mass of (he people have appeared to be unable to direct their own destinies and secure their own welfare. Thej u ere pre pared at the onset of the rebellion to have maintained peace by some settlement of existing difficulties, and if the Crittenden Compromise had been submitted to them it would have been promptly and gladly accepted. But that occasion wan permit" ted to pass by those who could have im proved it. War came, and for more than two years a great, intelligent and free peo ple, most earnestly desiring peace, have been slaughtering each other, accumulating enormous burdens ol debt to press apon themselves and opoa future generations, and have not yet been able to extricate themselves from the difficulties that sur round them. What then is the remedy for these evilsl One would think that be that rtms might read it. Surely our experience should light op the road of safety, and causa willing feet to turn away from the pathn of error to tread it. The remedy is, to call to places of power the men xcho have kept the , lavs and to eject from power those who have broken them- COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY AUGUST 19, 18G& The right of suffrage yet exists. It has not been stricken down by military force, and it remains to us as the great instrument of sovereign power prepared by the care and wisdom of our ancestors not only for pros perous times but also for the days of mis government and calamity. By wisely ex ercising it, we may yet redeem our fame, and secare the future. The Democracy of Pennsylvania stand upon this necessary and rightful principle of public morals and of national redemp tion: The restoration and the support of all the laws of the land as they, wne agrted vpon between the State, or have been enacted y Congress. This excludes all nullification, secession; proclamation-law, arbitrary ar rests, abolition mobs, and Chicago plat forms. But it is not inconsistant with the repeal or amendment or particular statutes, or with the amendment of thn constitution. The power of amendment is itself a funda mental law, and an invaluable feature of our system. With a good cause, and with candidates I worthy of the cause, we stand up once more in this Commonwealth and invoke ! the favor of the people. Our party has not struck at the Constitution, nor broken the laws, nor evoked the demon of sectional ism, nor been in any respect unfaithful to those views of union which our fathers pledged to the people of our sister States. The words of faith pronounced on behalf of Pennsylvania by the Clymers, McKeans and IngersoHs of former times, we have kept, and we intend to keep them in letter and spirit unto the end. What is proposed is, that this State shall at the coming electing, takes a frcnt rank in a general movement of the Central States for the redemption of the country from misrule, and wasting war, and im pending bankruptcy, and from utter dis-' grace. JSew lork, New Jersey, Ohio, In diana and Illinois, and the border States south of these, can stand up with us, and agree with us in ottering the words which will save ihe future from the grasp of ruin. And let it be said: The sectional Republican party 6hall go down shall be voted out of power. All laws shall be kept, and kept as well by President as by citizen. No proclamation-made law. No arbitrary arrests. No bastiles. No confiscation of private property ex cept for crime judicially ascertained. - No s.ueccjatifnv by IVsEra! power, or at the ex pense of the Federal Treasury. The laws of war shall be observed. The Confederate Government must retire from the scene, and iu. armies be disband ed or put down. The Confederate debt to be the concern of the States which incurred it. The Union shall be perpetual, and shall be declared so. The recent legislation of Congress shall be reviewed and corrected. The public debt of the United States shall be honesty paid. No duties or taxes except for revenue. A Convention of all or three-fourths of the States shall be convened. The Constitution shall expressly provide in the very machinery of government , a power of defence against sectional parties. Reduced to their simplest expression these declarations signify that we shall stand to law and duty, and provide against future dangers. And if they, or the sub stance of them were distinctly endorsed and held np to public contemplation by the States just mentioned, can any one doubt that the effect produced would be imraedi ate and extensive and salutary ? The end would then come into view, and its certain ly would accelerate events, and give them proper direction. We would have a qtes tion of weeks or of months, instead of years or of an indefinite period in reaching the day of relief. And when reached, the adjustment of our troubles would be com plete and permanent, differing in both these respects from a result achieved by force t alone. It ought not to be our desire, and it is not our interest, to make a Hayti or a Poland- of the South. But it is not here proposed to discuss generally the question of the war or the question of the recocstroction of the Union, but to present the positions of parties with reference to the principle of lawlul rule. And the point insisted upon is, that a party faithful to law and doty most take posses sion of public power before we can reason ably expect a just and honorable peace, firm reunion and enduring safety. Let this thought sink deeply into the minds of the people, and they will certainly restore the Democratic party to power, and will put down the guilty and lawless factions who have abused their confidence and be trayed their hopes. The Rebel Flag. The Rebel Congress at their last session adopted a new and certainly very handsome flag a white ground, with a bright red union, the latter crossed diagonally with two blue stripes, with white stars cn the stripes. The law directed that it should be adopted on the first day of July, and then hoisted for the first time on all her ships and forts. The Atlanta however, in honor of what she thought was to be a certain capture of the Weehawken and Nahant, hoisted it in anti cipation of the appointed day, bot instead of its continuing to float in triumph, it was hauled down in defeat. The fate of the fia? on I hia ifM firct Aimnmw In ..tinn bad omen for its future success. j . Vigor Veil Defined. We have had line upon line, paragraph upon paragraph, and column upon column in the administration press in laudation of Ihe indomitable spirit which is 6aid to an imate our rulers, and Ihe "vigor" with which Ihey prosecute the war. We have our own notions about there alleged praise worthy qualities of Mr. Lincoln and his Cabinet, and these opinions are by no means flattering to the administration and far from being in accord with those of the leading and minor organs of the Abolition party. We rather concur in the views of Sydney Smith, recorded in these words : ''Wounds and shrieks, and tears are the cheap and vulgar resources of the rulers of maakind ; they let loose hussars, and bring up artillery, and govern with lighted ma'ches, and cut, and push, and prime 1 call this not vigor, but the sloth of cruelty and ignorance. The vigor I love, consist in finding ont wherein subjects are ag grieved, in relieving them, in studying the temper and genius of a people, in consult ing their prejudices, in selecting proper persons to lead and manage them, in the laborious, watchful, and difficult task of increasing public hapjnnesa by allaying each particular discontent." This was the opinion of Rev. Sydney Smith and very sound opinion it is. A little of this kind of Christian vigor infused into the administration and exerted by tlem with wisdom and patient persever ance, would soon be felt by the people, and could not fail to be appreciated by them. From all parts of this broad land Heaven would be petitioned to shower blessings upon their heads aud to prosper them in their'good work, whereas now nothing but curses upon them is uttered by the public voice. To ehange the wicked ard absurd policy which they had been prosecuting with so many evil results to wise and better one. would be a cheap wav of chansine the wrath of a people into love. If they do not see it they are blind. If they see and will not act they are mad. ''Fortune," says the Metropolian Record, 'has given the President and bis advisers a last chance. Now therefore, let us see something of the vigor on which they prid ed themselves exerted in the glorious cause of peace aud reunion. If they let the opportunitj pass them unimproved they will look in vain for another. Opportunities come not in shoals to any man." ReleaveJ from the "pressure" of the rad ical Abolitionists, of which he has often complained, Mr. Lincoln, possibly, might respond lo the popular craving for peac and a restoration of the old order of things the Constitution supreme, the Union re cemented, and fraternal feeling restored. But unfortunately for the country and his own fame, he is surrounded and controlled by a set of bastard statesmen and mock philanthropists, who are traitors at heart, opposed to the principles and form of the Government, and determined lo change Woth, if they can wield power enouch to do it. Their cry, their pretext is negro emancipation not that they love the negro or sympathize with him but because it rail ies around theirstandard a host of dupes, gives them the color and strength of party, in fact places in their hands the leaver by which they hope to up heave and overthrow the Government, and set up a stronger one, more congenial to their wishes and in ac cord with iheir purposes. Mr. Lincoln being thn guarded and guided, we fear that we have nothing io expect from that quarter promotive of peace, of Union, or of constitutional sway. The Albany Argus, on this subject, furnishes proof that is idle to expect any effort on the par! of the administration to stop the war and restore peace Dy just and conciliatory measures. "The response," says the Argus, "which has come from the radical press is a dis tinct repudiation Of the moderate proposi tion of the Journal. They will have no peace upon such terms. They deman that war shall be waged after the submission of the insurgents, and unlil they surrender the institution of slavey.and conquer their prej. udices against negro equality. "On this subject, according to the New York Tribune, the Cabinet is unfit. We copy its allegation on this subject : On the subject of slavey and its ultimate fate at the end of the war the Cabinet is a unit, only differing as to the means by which its annihilation shall be brought about. Messrs. Chase, Stanton, Welles and Usher are of the opinion that slavery should cease in all sections, whether covered by the proclamation or not, at the end of the war; while Messrs. Blair, Seward and Bates claim that it would be impolitic to make such a radical change that the interests of political encomy demand that emancipa tion should be gradual. To this effect these gentlemen favor the idea that all col ored people remaining in lavery at the end of the war shall ba gradually freed by special enactments. No member harbors for a moment the idea of reconstructing the Union on a basis of slavery, and no flag of truce has been or will be entertained from disheartened rebel leaders which foreshad ows an idea in conflict with the emancipa tion proclamation. Solicitor Genenral Whiting, in a letter to the Free Negro Convention in Poaghkeep sie, confirms this, as the view of the Presi dent, in very explicit words: The policy of the government is fired and im movtablc. Congress has passed irrevocable acts of emancipation. The President has issued proclamations under his hand and seal. Abraham Lincoln takes no Itackward step. A man once made free by law cannot be again made a slave. The government has no power, if it had the will, to do it. Omnipo tence alone can enslave a freeman. Fear not that the administration will ever take the back track The President wishes the aid of all Americans, of whatever descent or col or, to defend the country. He wishes ev ery citizens lo share the' perils of ihe con tel. and to reap the fruits of victory. Verj respectfully, your ob'i servant. WM, WHITING. Edward Gilbert, New Yorfc City. ''We need not say with what regret we look upon this apparent determination of the Administration to thwart the popular yearnings for peace. The people of the loyal norlhern Stales desire that this war shall stop the moment the seceding States haol down the flag of rebellion and run up the stars and stripes. Whatever may the fate of the individuals engaged in the re bellion, this is all they ack of the Stages. ''Their political organizations were car ried off, ir. many instances, by supprise, by conspiracy, and by the art? of a minority. When, the lorce ol the rebellion being bro ken, they are released, and offer lo return to their position, they should be permitted lo do so. We want the rtld Union restored, not for ihe sake of the people of the South, but for our own. We want the equality of States recognized for the sake of those which seceded, not for our own. We do not desire to live in such a government a rash and vidictive men propose a domi nant and selfish section on one side and prostrated dependencies on the other, with a consolidated government at the centre, dic tating now to one, and enforcing its decrees by arms, only to establish hp despotic will surely over the others in the end. "For us, the Constitution as it is and the Union as it was, is belter than all the de vices of the rash experimentalists who thus propose to practice upon the destiny of our people." Village Wedding in Sweden. I will endeavor to de-crite a village wed ding in Sweden. It shall be in summer time, that there may be flowers; and in a Southern province, that the pride may be fair. The early song of the lark and of the chanticleer are mingling in the clear morn ing air, and the sun, the heavenly bride groom with golden looks ari-es ia the east, jost as our earthly bridegroom, with her yellow hair, arises in the south. In the yard there is a sound of voices and tramp ling of hoofs, and horses saddled. The steed that is lo bear the bridegroom has a bunch of flowers upon his forehead, and a garland of corn flowers around his neck. Friends from the neighboring farms come riding in, their blue cloaks streaming in the wind ; and finally the happy bridegroom, with a whip in his hand and a monstrous nosegay in the breast cf his black jacket, comes fonh form his chamber ; and then to horse and away towards the village, where the bride already sits and waits. Foremost rides the -pokesman, followed by some half dozen village musician. Next comes the bridegroom between his two eroomsmen, and then forty or fifty friends and ihe wedding guest-, half of them perhaps, wiih pistols and guns in their hand. A kiud of baggage wagon brings up the rear, laden with food and drink for these merry pilgrims. At ihe entrance of every village stands a triumphal arch laden with flowers and ribbons, and evergreens; and as they pass beneath it, the wedding guest fire a salute, and the whole process- j ion stop , and straight from every pocket flies a black jack filled wiih punch or bran ! dy. It is passed from hand to hand among j the crowd ; provisions are brought from j the wagen, and after eating and drinking, j and hurrahing, the procession moves lorn i ward again, and at length draws near the j house of the bride. Four heralds ride for ! ward to announce that a knight and his at j tendants are in the neighboring forest, and j pray lor hospitality. 'How many are you?' j Asks the bride's father. ''At least three ' hundred," is the answer; and to this the ' bride replies, "Yes, were you seven times : as many, you should all be welcome, and in token ihereol receivethis cup. " Where upon each herald receives a can of ale, and soon after the whole jovial company come streaming into the farmer's yard, and riding round the May pole which elands in the centre, alight amid a grand salute and flour ish of music. In the hall sits the bride with a crown opoc her head and a tear in her eye, like the Virgin Mary in old church paintings. She is dressed in a red boddice and kirtle, wiih loose linen sleeves. There is a gild ed belt around her waist, and around ber neck 9trings of golden beads end a golden chain. On ihe crown re6ts a wreath ol wild rot-es, and below it another of cypress Loot-e over her shoulders falls ber flaxen hair, and ber blue innocent eyes are fixed on the gtound. O thou good soul ! thou hast hard hands but a soft heart ! Thou art poor. The very ornaments thou wearest are not thine. The blessings of heaven be upon thee ! So thinks the parish priest as he joins together the hands of the bride and bridegroom, saying in deep solemn lone, "I give thee in marriage this damsel to be thy wedded wife in all honor, to share the half of thy bed, thy lock and key, and every third penny which you two may possess, or may itherit ; and all the ligbu which Uhland laws provide, and the holy king Erie gave. The dinner is served, and the pride sits between ihe bridegroom and the priest. The spokesman delivers an oration, after the custom of hi, fathers. He interlands it well with quotations from the Bible, and in vites the Savior to be present at the mar NUMBER 43. riage feast as he wa present at the mar-riage-feast of Cana of GaUIe. The '.able is not sparingly fcet (orth. Each makes a long arm; and the feast goo cheeringly on. Punch and brandy psss rnund between the courses, and here and there a pipe is smok ed while wai ingfor the next dih. They sit long at the table ; but as all things must -haveanenil, so must a Swedish dinner. Then ihe dat ce begins. ,Il is led of! by the bride and the priest, who perform & solemn minnet together. Not till midnight comes the least dance. The girls frm a rng rounJ the bride, lo keep her from the hands ot the married women, who endeavor to break through the magic circle and seize their new siver. Alter a long struggle they succeed ; and the crown is taken from her head (he jewels from her neck and her bod dice is unlace ! end her kirtle taken off and like a vestal virgin, clad all in while she goes,1 but it is to her marriage chamber not to her grave ; and the wedding guests fol low her with lighted candles in their hands. And this is a village bridal LonfeUow. The Object Ihe Draft. It is thought In some quarters that tha Administration is preparing to not only put down the rebellion, but lo be in condition when that feat is accomplished, to be able to dsfy "the world irr arms." This is pre sumed to be ihe real cause of the present draft, tt cannot be lhat the administration thinks more soldiers than we already have necessary to conquer a rebellion which is already crumbling. 'Within Ihe past thirty days we have captured . fully one third of Ihe rebel armies, and from all accounts, the balance is fast losing hope, and becom ing entirely demoralized. The total loss of the Confederates, during the last twenty days, in killed, wonnded and missing, fully reaches one hundred thousand men. A proclamation from the President, giving pardon and protection to the Seuthern peo ple, would, we verily believe, scatter the conspirator in three months; now that the rebel armies are crippled, all that is requir ed to secure peace is the destruction ol the rebel leaders. Were peace between us firmly establish ed, our present armies, augmented by the present draft of three hundred thousand, would make a formidable power for any contingency that might arise. In the ab sence of something more serious upon the part of John Boll, Napoleon might be re quested to withdraw his invaders from Mexico; and he would have to do it. We would, in that caso, not only preach the Mnnroe doctrine, but be able to enforce it. Were it not for our present domestic troub les the French would rot now be planting a colony upon our Scath-western border. rhtsbwg Post. Lceid movements. One of ihe New York radical rper which, last week, thought it treason to even discuss the acts of the Adminstration, to say nothing o! taking arms to resist conscription now speaks out as follows : But in this countrr, where the laws are made by the people themselves, and the courts are accessible to all, there are no such causes for discontent and revolt. If our rulers do wrong we can punish them be fore the tribunals provided, or get rid of them through the ballot box. The highest ol them exist but for a day: their power are temporary and their misdeeds may all be corrected by peaceable and practicable methods. Political majorities canoot en dure unless their acta are conformed to the eternal principles of eqaity and right. All this is very well replies the World, bot the radicals will have the goodness ts understand that whatever resistance has been or may be offerpd our Irish or by any other citizens ot the United Slates to tha "acts of our rulers" has been challenged by the haughty and defiant denial of these fun damental principles on the part of the Ad ministration and the party for which they speak. In the face cf the growing popular protest against the constitutionality, and the widom of the Conscription act, and of the popular demand lhat this protest should be heard and passed upon in the courts of law, (he organs o! the administration have offi cially proclaimed that the courts shall not be ' accessible" for any such purpose. They have overridden the law so openly and so often, they have flung it aside so contemptuously, that they alone are respon sible, and will by his'ory be held responsi ble, for the passion of a peoplo mad dened by the lawless powerinto the lawless aseertiou of liberty. Get Enough Steep. We have often heard young men remark that four or five hours sleep was all ihey wanted, and all lhat the human system re quired. The habit of going without suffi cient sleep is very it jurious. Thousands, r.o dnubt, permanently injure their health in this way. We live in a fasl ace, when everybody seems to be trying to pervert the order of nature. If folks will persist in turn ing night into day, it is not to be wonder ed thai few last out the al'oled term of life. No matter what be a man's occupation physical or mental or, like Othello's 'cone and living in idleness the constitution cannot last, depend upon it, without a suffi ciency of regular and refreshing uleep. Joe Hunter, the great turgeon, died sud denly of spasmodic affection of the heart, a disease greatly encouraged by want of sleep. In a volume jot: published by a medical man, there is one great lesson that hard students and literary men learn, and that is that Homer probably killed himself by tak ing loo little sleep. "Four hour' rest at night, and one after dinner, cannot bo deemed snfficieit lo recruit the exhausted powers of the tody and nind." Certainly not ; and the consequence was, that Hun ter died early. II men will insis( in cheat ing leep, her "twin tiiter Death' will erge the insult.