BY D. A. k C. EL BUEHLER VOLUME XXVI. The Louisville Journal says: We defy any tasteful lover of poetry to read the following lines without exclaiming—" Mow beautiful!" My soul thy sacred hinge keeps, • My midnight dreams are all of thee ; For.nature then in silence sleeps, And silence broods o'er land and sea ; Oh ; l4 t* still, mysterions hour How on from waking dreams I start, To find thee but a fancy flower, Thou cherished' idcil of my heart, Thou haat each thottght and dream of mine— Have I in turn one thought of thine ? Forever thine my dreatnewill be, Whateer may *my fortune here ; I ask not love—l 'claim from thee Only one boon, a gentle tear ; May e'er Wen visions from above Play brightly round thy happy heart, And may the heams of peace and love, Ne'er from thy glowing soul depart, Farewell I my dreams' are still with thee, Hest thou one tender thought of me ? , My joys like summer birds may fly, Sly hopes like summer flowers depart, But there's one flower that cannot die— The holy memory in my heart ; No dews that flowret's cap may fill, No sunlight to its leaves be given, But it will live and flourish still, As deathless as a thing of heaven, My soul greets thine, unmasked, unsought, Hest thou for me one gentle thought? Farewell I farewell I my far of? friend 1 Between us broad blue rivers flow, And forests wave, and plains extend, And mountains in the sunlight glow, The wind that breathes upon thy brow 13 not the wind that breathes on mine. The star beams shining ou thee now Aru not the beams that on me shine. But memory's spell is with us yet— Caust thou the holy past forget ? The bitter tears that you and I May shed when'er by anguish bowed, Exhaled into tho noon-tide sky May meet and mingle in the cloud I And thus, my well loved friend, though we Far apart must live and move 1 Our souls when God shall set them free, Can mingle in the world of :ova ; This w as an ecstncy to me— Say, would it be a joy to thee ? BeauUnd Illustrallois. Rev. Willets, of Philadelphia, in il lustrating the blessedness of cultivating a liberal spirit, uses this figure : "See that little fountain yonder—away yonder in the distant mountain, shining likes thread of silver through the thick copse: and sparkliug like a diamond in its healthful activity. It is hurrying on with tinkling feet to bear its tribute to the river. Mee. tt passes a stagnant pool, and the pool hails it : 'Whither away, master siren mlet r '1 am going to the river to hear this cup of water God has given. '— Alt. you are very foolish for that—you'll need it before the summer's ever. It has been a backward ,spring, and wq shall hate iti'ltiititininfer to. parfor is= l -yitat will dry up then.' 'Well.' said the stroandet, 'if am to die so soon, ,I had better work while the day lasts. If lam likely to lose this treasure from the heat, I had better do good with it while I have it.' So on it Ivent, blessing and rejoicing in its course. The pool stuilod complacently at its own superior foresight, and husbanded all its resources, letting not a drop steal away.— Noou the mid summer beat came down, cud it feR upon the little stream. But the trees crowded to its brink and threw out their sheltering branches over it in the day of adversity, for it brought refresh ment and life to them, and the sun peeped through tbo branches and smiled compla cently upon its dimpled face, and seemed to say, 'lee not in my heart to Kara you ;' and the birds sipped its silver tide, and sung its praises; the flowers breathed their perfume upon its bosom; the beasts. of the field seemed to linger nearits banks ; the husbandman's eye always sparkled with joy as he looked upon rho line of ver dant beauty that marked its course through his fields and meadows; and so on it went, blessing and blessed of all "And where was the 'prudent pool ? Alas in its inglorious inactivity, it grew sickly and pestilential. The beasts of the field put their lips to it, but turned away without drinking; the-brettze stooped and kissed it by mistake, but shrunk chilled away. It caught the malaria in tho con tact, end carried:the ague through the re gion, and the inhabitants caught it, and bad to move away; and at last the very frogs cast.their venom upon the pool and deserted it, and Heaven, in mercy to man, smote it w . ha hotter breath and dried it up. "But d d not the little stream exhaust jct.& ? no 1 God saw to that ; it emptied its full cup into the river, and the river bore it on to the sea, and the sea welcomed it,*and the sun smiled upon the sea.and the sea sent up its incense togreet the sum and the clouds (taught in their ea. pacious bosoms ,the. incense from the sea, and the winds, like waiting steeds, ;caught the chariots of the clouds and. bore-them away—away to the mountain that gayer the little fountain birth, and•there they sipped the brimming cup, and poured• the grate ful, baptism down;. and so God saw to it,. that the little fountain. though it gave so fully.and so freely. never tawdry. And if God so bless the fountain, will •be, not bless you, my. Month,' if, iasyq have freely. received, ye, also freely giver? .Be assured he will. • * '** UMAN I , llL—Ab I this beautiful world. Indoed,lkpow, notwhat, tothink of it:, Sonietlmetilt is all gladness and sureihine, d heaven, ii`not ;far .off ; and thob it change s and i is, dark and'aorroiful, and 'thet_eloitids eliut out the - elty. 'the trim the;'sadclest of us, there, ate some bright ; day. like this, when we feel we could take this great world in our arms Then come the gloomy hours, when the fire - Will , neither burn in 011 C hearts or Cu -our hearths,`4l24 all without and Wjthifile . dismal. cold, end . 'dark. . ' Bellii,e" Me, Avery:heart has its secret Nor. roWi l *hiah the world knows not; and oftebtiniii we tall a man cold when hels o eati.—Zimeetto to. ' Nothipl'elevitegi toi so much is the pree enoo of ei' almihir; yes it uperior rpirlt to oar owm • • • • „wag 'l)llm.e b e thee he looks ander the marpege,heed fortheitetre of the weak. .... ..... . me - , .... .;: .• ... ~ ;. , , A • '• • • 1 ''' Le ' L • ''''. '''''' • '• ' '••—• ... '. ' • 4 •• .. '' ' 'ik' s, 1 t 0..!.. . . - , . , -1.....,,-...1 • - ~ . . . . .. .. .. _ _ . .. 0. ..... ~., D. , ... .. . ...... . . E"-). * HEI .....'.. .• r ., . •I , • • . . , • . . , , LII . . - * • . . . . _ ''~ A Good Recominanadialloo. "Please, don't you want a cabin boy ?" "I do want a cabin boy, my lad, but what's that to you ? A little chap like you ain't Ht for the berth." • "Oh, sir. I'm real strong. I can do a great deal of work, if I ain't so very old. '• "Hat what are you here for 1 You don't look like r city boy. Run away from home, hey T" "Oh, no indeed, air; my father died, and. my mother is very poor, and I want to do something to help her. She let me come." "Well, sonny, where are your letters of recommendation ? Can't take any boy without these." Hero was a damper. Willie had never thought of its being necessary to have letteri from his minister, or his teachers, or from some proper person to prove to strangers that he was an honest and good boy. Now what should be do. He stood in deep thought, the captain meanwhile curiously watching the working of his 'im pressive fuco. At length he put his hand into his besom and drew out a little Bible, and without one word put it into the cap ' tain's bent. The captain opened to the blank page and read : "Willie Graham; presented as a reward for regular and punctual attendance at Sabbath School. and for his blameless con duct there and elsewhere: From his Sun day School Teacher." Captain 'McLeod was not a pious man, but he could not consider the case before him with a heart unmoved. The little fatherless child, standing humbly before him, referring him to the testimony of his Sunday School Teacher, as it was given in his little Bible, touched a tender spot in the breast of the noble seaman. and, clap ping IVillie heartily on the shoulder, he said : "You are the boy for me ; you shall sail with me ; and if you are as good a lad as I think you are, your pockets shan't bo empty when you go back to your good mother." The Dying Italian Mother's The plague broke out in a little Italian village. in one house the children were taken first. The parents watched over them, but only caught the disease which they themselves cuuld not cure. The whole family died. On the opposite side of the way, lived the family of a laborer, who' wus absent the whole week; only coming on Saturday nights to bring his earnings. His wife felt herself attacked by the fever in the night ; in the morning she was worst . ) ; and before night the plague spot showed itself. She thought of the tern ble fate of bei - neighbors— , She knew that she must die, hut sti ahe !Coked upon her dear little boys, she resolved 'hat to com municate death to them. She therefore locked the children in the room, snatched the bed clothes, lest they should leave the contagion behind her, and left the house. She even dettied herself the sad pleasure of a last embrace. Oh, think of the he. roism that enabled her to conquer her feel ings, and all she loved to die 1 Her eld est son saw her from the window. "Good bye, mother," said be, with his tenderest tone, for he wondered why his mother left him so strangely. "Good bye," repeated the youngest child, stretching his little hand out oh the window. The mother paused, her heart yearned toward her children, and she was on the point of turn ing back ; she struggled hard while the tears rolled down her cheeks at the sad sight of her helpless babes; at length she turned from them. The children contin ued to say, "Good bye, mother." The sound sent a thrill of anguish to her heart, but she pressed ou to the house of those who were to bury her. In two days she died, recommending her husband and children to their care with her last breath. I COUNTERFEITING No CRIME —Judge Metcalf made a decision at Bellefontaine, a shun time since, which will attract much attention. A man was indicted for utter. ing and forging a note for two dollars on the State Bank of Connecticut. at Hartlord. A writ of habeas corpus was sued out, and after full argument and consideration the prisoner was ditcharged, on the ground that the law of the State not only forbids the circulation, passing, or transfer of bills of loreign banks, of a less denomination than ten dollars, but in its second section it declares, "all such unlawful paper shall be held in this State to be worthless. and I all contracts in relation thereto, null and I void, and any disbursements, or paymedts, or exchange for other property of value, ar attempted to be made herewith, of no effect whatever." 'lite act charged was 'no oriole within the statute of fOrgery, be. cause no harm or advantage to apy one results, whether ihs.hill is true or false.— The genuine is declared by . the statute, worthless and void ; it has no legal axis. lance in the State, and cannot be the sub "eat of forgery, for there can be no Coun terfeit without a real thing. . TUE MOTIIER.-A• writer beautifully 'remarks that a man's mother i4.the repre sentative of his Maker., Misfortune and even'eriree, sot up no barriers between her and her son. While his mother lives he bas one friend on earth who will not W m when he is slandered, who will not de ,, serf him when ho suffers, who will soothe him is his sorrel's, and speak to him of hope when he is ready so , despair. Her affections' knoll no ebbing tide. They . flow on from a pure fountain. and speak happiness through this vale of tears, and obese'only at the ocean of eternity. ,- - . IP the days of the patriarchs, a wo man's' condlict was the index of her heart. When, for instance, the father of Rebecca asked her if she would go with the' per rant of Isaac, she immediately replied, "I will go." Rad she been a daughter of the nineteenth centusfy, she would have answered. "Pshaw, go with him ! Why Mr. Jane muss be sick I Go with hind Go with him I 'Of course I won't," and Ikea she would have gone wtih him. :.. P-47,1 Sxr.r. "..~; le* 14" t. tt.`ti GETTYSBURG, Pl., 'FRIDAY EVENI?I'G,MAY '241866. [Prom the Knickerbocker What the Young Man raw In • Broadway. , I stood on the steps o f the 'Aaron, And gazed at the living tide Of vehicles down the middle, And people up either side. And I saw a maid who was 'pumpkins,' In a shawl of real Cashmere, Jump down from the step of a carriage, While her'robe 'got caught' in the rear. . . Oh I the robe was of moire antique, (A very expensive 'rag ') But a skirt peeped out below it, And that was a coffee-bag. I knew it had once held coffee, Though now 'twas another thing ; For on it was TINE OLo JAVA,' Y-marked in store-black-iug. And I thought, as she gained tho side-walk, And the muslin' again was furled ,• How much those out-skirts and in-slrirta Were like man's heart in the world. How many a Pill:l63N humbug Plays a life-long game of brag ; His words all silk and velvet, And his heart but a coffee-bag I And I turned me in to the Arms, For my heart was beginning to sink, And I told the tale to my brother, And it rung him in for a drink. It rung him in for cock-tails, Afid then to myself I confessed, When r thought how I earns by the 'ardent,' That I was as bad as the rest. AN OLD HovenEttePsn's EXPERIENCE. I send to your paper some receipts that I have tried in my own family, and think the public should have a chance to berm. fit by the experience of an "Old house keeper." A' very nice way to cook chicken.--Cut the chicken up, put it into a pan and.rnV• er it over with water ; let it stew as usual, and when done make a thickening.of cream and flour,:Adding apiece of butter, and pep er ; have made and baked a pair of short cakes, made as for pie crust, but rolled thin end cut in small squares. This is mud) better than chicken pie and more simple to make. The crusts should be laid own di4h, and the chicken and gravy put over it while both are ho.. Dried peach and apple pies.—After the ruit eookeil, 'wish it well, and let t cool ; then to one . quart of fruit stir in a teacup full of cream and 2 eggs welt beaten, season with essence of lemon or cinnamon, bake in crusts, either with or without lop crust, as you fancy. Cakesfor Breakfast.---At night put two or three slices of light bread. broken fine, to soak in a pint' and a half of milk ; nt the morning mash it well, and add three ego and flour to make a batter. with the addition of another.,balf pint of milk; halte•ae moil. They are .e;iryt.llol.4. Should be Amu hot to the table.—Balti• more Sun. WASIIINO iNDOWS.A. correspondent of the rhnerichn rigriculturist. gives the following improved mode of washing win dows, which althongli tint entirely new to Its, may be valuable to many °four readers: —The nicest article for washing windows is deer-skin, as no particles come off to adhere to the glass and in ake it lookas H mu* with feathers. There is no need of anything larger than a hand-basin for washing windows. Flowers. Each leaflet is a tiny scroll Inscribed with holy truth, A lesson that around the heart Should keep the dew of youth; Bright missives from angelic throngs In every by-way left, How were the earth of glory shorn Were it of flowers bereft! They tremble on the Alpine heights, the fissured rock they press, The desert wild with heat and sand, Shares too their ble.s'sednes.; And wheresoe'r the weary heart Turns in its dim despair, The meek-eyed blo.som upward looks, Inviting it to prayer. [Elizabeth Oakes Smith SHOVELING UP DOI:LAM—The barque Emily Banning, which left in Deceinher last, with three of the Nautilus Submarine Company's inaahine on hoard, bound on a pearl-fishing voyage, is now engaged in elploring the wreck of the frigate am Pedro, on I dle cost of Venezuela. This frigate, supposed to have no hoard some two or three of dollars, was Wotan up at the island VI a-g , irita in 1833. Her stern being blown out, the treasure wag scattered upon the surounding Sam,. Some three hundred thousand dollars have heretofore been taken up, but owing to the inefficiency of the insellinerY rmi• ploved, operations were suspended. The company fitting out the Emily Banning ordered her to atop there, and the trial de. scent of the first machine, sent d'own in 66 feet of water, brought up one hundred dnl!ars—thirty two dollars being found within the area covered by the Ma . chine, before moving. Other articles", as caper. &a., were, brought up at the ,time. The captain, finding the advan tage of combining the work, immediately left for the seat of government to secure the necessary privilege, which was gran.' Letters have been received from on board, during the absence of the captain, which represent the operator's' “shoveling dollars.' It is the impanel' of the com pany to blow the fragments of the ship to pieces, securing the' copper, guns, shots. etc. The 'captain write/ :' "The bells are all they are said to be." One'of the en gineers writes : wish you eoulb look nun the bell when we are down on the bOttOM with our spades, digging for the almighty dollar. We can look out of the windows of the boll and tee the fish loOk ing iu at us. We can take tho bottom op in the bell. and get out on the sand, and pick up the hell; and run all around where we like." Two months; it is anticipated, will be sufficient to take up every vestige of the San Pedro ; and the captain reports he lit' another vessel near him, in the same depth of water, 68 feet, with $50,000 on board in sPecie, and another with elk -000, both of which he will take up before proceeding on hie voyage. • giFEAALESS AND ME." [From the Frankfort Clown" co nwealtb. THE AMEEICIALEAVESTIOL • Letter from Rev. Drateeidenridps , DAtrvit,LX, Kit.5...4 , 11 gar 1866... My Dear Sir :-..+Yon ate. aware that I have received two communications, both. of them signed by *number, id' the nest' reapectable eitizeni of ynuriti . wn, atnongst whom I recognite many old petsonAl (dentin, urging me Id adareal 'the people at the capitol of the State upon that pit American question Whieh Sodeeply miga ges the attention of the vihnlifeotninuoitti. II may add, that many'einilitit invitational have been sent to Me, and tstill ennikatie to he sent, from various anifYildely+ter. mated portions of the IlintiMonnitillth !signed in the aggregate hi tilarge'ntimber . ' oFpersims. And it is nothinht kiniwn tp, you that, within this" memo, T arst pre. veiled on, under peculiar .01reutninentlee, in both instanees, to ppeali,; ,. #ofilliteuhject in Cynthiana and in TAxinton.! Thant,. ject of this comrnitikAtinOs, in the first place, to say in dirtittibßiOnanner, that it does not appear tome ll'ikqe my duty to accept these;.,itivititt i irfnii ; and, in the second place, . to' • ,pm'rornt ;the duty which they, and many CiTtiti considers. tinny, do seem tome to retitpre, in the dia. tinet expression of my prlneiples on the subject itself. In doing thitt;ft (city snive l the neeensfiy of future I , tiplit boll ' to say.l that I avail mveelf of tti nof.sheefirof' an article wt ;nen he me Ilies, f rimlical pub.., ie halted in Reuther State; width., has not vet been issued ; and foetid, tiiiii it I stiippaarel there was the smallest &lb' of the issue of this contest in Kentrikv,iar that my set.' vices were comparable in *slue to the es• amain pin on them by itiirtial friends, I should pursue a very differint course from' the one I have now adopted. Polities hive atommoil S new, and to the old manngers of parties antlolections, a moat nnexpeeted phase. ""Many thing. have conspired to produrtelliis result;, And men will, no doubt, give tliii 3 Or that PI O*. nation of the movement wn 'ore willies's ing. according to the point', of v i ew etv frnin which they enneiderif. - Madreffecta may he produced by the movenfent itself, and men-will appreciate thole eTreets, and en. deavnur to 'promote or prevent them, an. cord; tie to their views of geeetal panties. of the interests of society, and Of the prop -1 er destiny of one groat country. 'Plot intrusion - tot pervading power orthie movemont itself can no longer be a matter of doubt, And to die Paint obaerver sari oils elements are inanifeetfirliich render! , , , is future progress attngetner inevitable.— + Amongst these derisive element, may he 1 awed the augmented forettinf the move-, mem itself, acquired by ,it own previous triumphs ; and the greeterrhodlngetmous-, ness of the spirit of it, tii*„startlnne of -Ant onlinlry nnllAinintlialettiiVdtilltiatilln' to the portions already conquered. It, will encounter no difficulty equal to the intense Democracy of New Hampshire. Illinois, Pennsylvania. and Michigan; the! wide-spread political immorality of New! York the Democracy of Virginia, and the) Reified anti slavery sentiment of Masan. chosen., ; the IleredliaCy Whigiam oft Kentucky. Yet all of them are master. ed by the grander - spirit of the new move• menu. What harrier remains to arrest its irresistible career 1 It is infinitely absurd for the opponents of this vast movement of the human mind, to attribute it to unworthy or insignificant valises. It is utterly ridiettloua for its Mende to imagine that it can exhaust itself urine subject+ that are feeble and indistinct. It may HIM at what is wrong, or west is unattainable ; ! hut it cannot avoid aiming' at what iv great and permanent any mote , than it could have been protium, by any thing that was feeble, indirect nr base.— A great people does tint receive such shocks from such mutes; nor when receiv• ed do they terminate without immense re sults. What. we behold is a vast and app wea ls^ spontaneous uprising of the spirit of American nationality. Bent;ath that we behold tha restoration of that primeval spirit of Protestant civilization, in which the country itself was originally cream!. And still beneath that tie Imhof(' the re newal of that profound sense of the over whelming necessity of our National Un ion —which was the grandest outbirth of our National Revolution. These are the life and heart and 1411111 of the; gigantic movement. American Nat , nality. Pro testant Civilization, National Union. 'rho country believes all three of these are in (longer. Men tiny svy the country is deluded. lint that does not alter the case so long is the 'country thinks otherwise.' The country is resolved that all danger to all of them @hal!, he thoroughly rinoved. Men may say, the cauntry is misled ; but wind of th a t, se lona at the country is le solved to be National, Protestant and Uni tnd • The country is thoroughly convinced that, it cannot trust the perpetuation of its nationality, its Protestant ci • ilintion, and its Union as one people any longer, to the keeping of existing partite, in their ordi nary action ; and so the-Country has, for the time at least, set aside all parties.— Men may say this is mere'fanaticism; but what does the country cere fortheisiyings of men whom it rejects as unworthy of being trusted with its destiny in'so gntat a crisis ? The country resolves ' to perpai: uate the union. of these State.. They who are faithlullo-the Union had better make up'the same "grestpirahle ; they iho ere' not, ought in the judgment of the e;nintry to he indiscriminately emboli,— 'rho country determines that its Protes tant civilization is its original, its most prieimiiii and its most vital inheritanee ; sod, believing it to have been betrayal, it purposes to surround it with adequate isle guirds. They who participant, its these opinions - will appltuud this profound pur pose ; they who conspire to destroy that Protestant civilization, or who abet otA°all themselves to those who do, must abide the political overthrow which so justly! and permanently awaits them. The coon- i try cherishes its glorious nationality, and i beliering it in be entlangeied, it his risen up in' its majesty to assert, to vindicate,' and to develop° still more powerfully As nationality without which the country it) , self besgnodestinl.--ho „ mission on the 1 save it must consult, must combine. II face Oftheearth. Thereitho are so lost the perfidy and ferocity of their' enemies to every.ezalietl InstineWal to be buena. compel them to observe unusual caution, Ws to thb grandeur of ditch hopes as God it only prove* the greatness. of their den ! hoe set before titijitiey'l also tfeepise the ger. Ili-point of morality, it stands pre. ,offorte by which thou hopes are to be cisely on the same footing es vote by W reaked. Nevertheless. the .monntry will lot. The object of it determines Its law. guard and assure its nationality in spite of fulness ; and it is its successenot its na ils recreant children as well as its open tore, which makes it so hateful. loss.' This is' my version of this grand If the nationality of America is to be sus movement ; one point of view from which tained, it her Protestant civilization is to its rise. its progress and its aims are be perpetuated, if the federal Union is to distinctly manifest. Let the country axe s be preserved, there is but one method of outs such a week in such a spirit Vend she stealing with the subject. The organized will.be launched anew upon her high ca. power of society must be taken out of the rear. • ' hands of those who have betrayed these • It may be of less importanee to deter- vast interests, and must be put into the mine by what means this greet spirit has hands of those who will cherish them.— been aroused and concentrated. Yet this, Public opinion is the only instrument by is not difficult. lelauifestly . whatever which this great change can he effected.— those means were,- they must have work-:Thal enlightened, the first step of the rev ed long and worked deeply. Was it 'loth; Million is political ; the second is legal.— ing that in all parts of the country, and The first step , involve' the organization, for years together, and upon the most tip. and the triumph of is party commensurate polite pretexts: the disiolution of the Un- with the cOuntry, the American party; inn was constantly threatened ? ' Was it and that involves the overthrow Of every nothing. that' political corruption, grown party that reside its ultimate objects, or mimic in the land, hail shocked all hon. ramjet the necessary means of Obtaining eat men t Was 'it nothing. that a stream those objects. Indeed. if this step were of foreign peepers ind felons flowed into fully achieved, it would be of less t ranuse. the bosom of the Republic 1 Was it moth- gnence to take a second ono : shire the ing, that minima of foreign Papists and laws. though betVare endurable'; and so. foreign infidel,. inundeting the country ciety is safe, and as soon milt has finally like a flood of Imes, were openly organ• put out of power• all men and parties, hos ized into political powers, directed against tile to our nationality. to out, Protestant the liberty, the religion and the national- civilization, and to our federal Union ; out ity of the people 1 Was it nothing, that of power, with an overthrow incapable of political parties openly 'taught and sold being repaired. the support of these fearful powers, con- And this is the reason why this great venting always for such payments in re. movement excites such, exerecisting bit tern, as were the most humiliating and the terness of hate, in its Political aspect, on most fatal 1 Was it nothing, that, die the part of all against whom it is directed, voice of patriots, the power of the prase, Its success is seen to be a finality and a the importunities of the pulpit were direct- fatality to them. • For nations do - not im. ' ed, each in its own sphere, and for years tnediately inner the same peril 'twice. nor together. against the frightful and enormous do profound national mamma:its 'speedily wickedness I Was it nothing, that at exhsuit then for Ce. Thifileinooratic par+ length, men could neither vote, nor speak, ty has,survieed the (derma of a limidred tier preach, nor pray. nor teach'ivithout years. The A inetieso . party.' strong being' liable to insult ind violence unless enough to swallow op not,only Deinecra. they would do all in each a manner as cy itself, but every oilier feebler . excite. suited the :Nettle of foreign mobs, commis. ment, will live forever: ' The legal rev°. ed of foreign Infidels and Paphos ? Yes, Munn therefore whieh Willemisunimate the verily, they were deep causes, and they political, will bemply . but tanfr'ssarily the worked long; which wrought the Ameri. notbirth of its • spirit. upon the ~ A ssaults s:an-people to that earnest and fervid, but Unien of these Stated, whether from the yet calm and settled enthusiasm, which Mirth or South, mein cones.' Conspiracies .nervadem the tuition. , against the Protestent civilization of,the No doubt religion is an element of this country, between demagogues on one, side wide spread excitement. But it is motile and papal and Mfidel foreigners on the I o n ly element, tint, %did. all men, the chief other. must terminate : A Minks noon onr one. Either of the other elements, by it. nationality, by. frostier 'made herween self—or this one by itself--ought to have foreign despot. and prelaten, under the been sufficient to have saved the country sanction of the court of Rome. and exec's from the peril which now demands the tad by millions of foreign inipistis and MO power of all three to street it. dela cast into ourhosorn. must be brought Recaure it is an element at all, they over to au end. eoreignes ',Mist he contemn) ,whttm Jon delavelLrettitmtion is impend. _miler here the blessinst pf freedoin,•dent ing scream at the • bare mention of it , as sift.' ihtfin - iiiiiryiiffikire ifilli the benefits 1 the demoniac' did when they saw Christ of civilization m ore exaltsd than any they . approach them. It is a persecution for can enjoy elsewhere ; the same civil and condolence sake, in their view, that we religious rights which we ourselves 'enjoy. hesitate to surrender our country, our lib. They must cease to rote us. americans erty and religion to the guidance of corrupt must rule atnerica, ' l men banded with forsigners ; and what I cannot be insensible that many virtu. makes it a persecution is,. that these for. otos, enlightened, and patriotic men "view eigners happen to be Papists add Infidels, this .subject in a-light Widely diffeinnt l If they had happened to be Chinese, or from that iji which it atrikealme: I have' Mationtedans, the nation would have re. no allusion to them in anything _Wave ' welted much sooner.. And yet without uttered. Ido not foga the blinding 't reason ; for we and our fathers have an Buono° of party spirit and party ties.— unsettled account with Popery, many can. I admit also that not a few of .those who tittles old. At first it was the Emperor are personally dear , to me are found array and the Pope who trod um in the dust.— ed against what I believe to, be , the very Then it was kings end bishops, who highest interests of the country. That burned puma at the stake, and drove the may make my duty painful but not lancer. reel out of all lands ititu this vrilderness. Min. Nor could I help fitting fully aware Now it is priests and mobs and dema. of the atrocity with which the public prase Rogues, who have followed us into nue sometimes assail those from whom, it is place of ref:le—a iy, our fast place of supposed, no personal peril is to be appre refuge—to renew here the combat nt cm• heeded: But I have felt long ago the !mire. in a form at once more degrading whole force of Pepe! end Infidel bitterness,' and detestable, and more likely to be fatal and have survived all their co-laborers In tie than ineither of its preceding forms. could personally attempt.. For anything Shall we be driven into the Pacific 1— more it would be strange indeed, if I Shall we succumb 1 Or shall we tent up. should look with indifference upon a scrub- On our relentless pursuers 1 They have gle, at the moment of its impending • tri. followed the lion to his last den. and utuph, after having watched its progress brought him to bay ! Did they expect longer Mid more eagerly, and vindicated him to die like a stag in his lair I the most detested principles on which it Tice revolt of the country was wholly proceeds more teuaciously than one in tea unexpected by those who impposed they thousand of my countrymen.-''All”I tisk had already secured its final subjugation ; is, that when that triumph comes, it may be used as wiaely and getiorously as it was and like every other great retribution, it takes those it falls on by surprise. It is not heroically won. therefore to be wondered at that they exe• Your friend and servant, 'l crate with peculiar hornir the special R. J. BRECKENRIDGE. means of success ;when them which their Cor.. A. G. Homo s, Fraukfort. own perfidy and ferocity had rendered ab sulutely indispensable. The comitry or. games itself for the great conflict, which, to s tliose who first einbarked in it, seemed well nigh desperate, in silence and with out obiervetion. This is the way in which all grand movements occur; even the Kingdom of. Heaven does . not come with observation. But the ,demagogues.' 1 the priests, the mobs, the foreign Papists, and infidels are shocked beyond endurance, because the handful of devoted men who first metalled to save the country, if that were any longer possible. did not call the whole of them into council. For whin'? In order bi be murdered ; or, if not mut.• dered, tradticed, and the very end for which they were willing to be traduced, end if necessary murdered—utterly defeated I. Were they called into council when their enemies bought , and sold them : f Were: they notified, when.consipt bargain. ' l ee rs Struolc, in which the liberliii of the,.peo rn , pie were put up at 'an infamous price 1-- 1 Were they • consulted when 'the atrocious schemes to break up the Union of these States were concocted? Were they advertised when the over throw of our nationality. of our constitu tions, and of our religion together, was de liberately nadertaken•by .the Popish des: pots and prelates of Europe t Was coun sel asked of them by foreign Papists and infidels, when, throughout the whole land. they conspired with the full assent of demagogues to overthrow the Protestant civilization of the country 1 Were the secrets of the confessional made known to them 1 Were the secret oaths binding every Papal ecclesiastic) with unlimited allekiance to a foreign temporal prince submitted to their scrutiny The safety of the Slate is the supreme law. And sorely it is the tint necessity ohs State tau te endamprid, sod they who would SuPPlement to the Common School Law.; A rinternta ierrianiute Tow AA for rile rolluiritkol coca ellotimilta Of I:Zit adocatiao tir Orrioatoa soteen , seereeottee of Ilan Aaao Dopilo, I, ono tbooktoo sight , aftpibur. StOTION 1. Pc 11,ftetted by O. &We end' House of Represent a tive of Me Cammonienuth of Pennsylvania in General asserablAr met. mid it is hereby enacted by the authority cf Me scree, That so much of the act:to which this la a supplement, as abolishes independent athlete at present established under special sets of aseembly. shall not take °Tett until the Britt , day of June, cue thousand eight hundred and lifty.six. Sscriox 2. That the continuance tit inde• pendent districts beyond the period named la the foregoing section, may be allowed, when on the application of the directors of any armle t I district to the Judges of the court of' common pleas of the county in which anir_portion of ( said district may be loiated, setting Awlb,die necessity for its continuance. the said. udges. may, after careful consideration, decree the. same: and that in all ca s es where tha sad court shall refuse to allows further continuance of any such district, they shall be anthtwiseti and required, also, to determine tbg rights of property vested in the Hovers l school boards ht any such district. and make proper diepositiora of the same: Provided, That the board of. school directors of chi, townships out of which any such applying independent schoofdistrict, may be formed, bindl have received ten dare nouce of the propelled application. land of the time and place of hearing. ~ , I '. Seortorr 3. That the assessor* in each and every' township. where any portion of said township may be included within the limite.or an independent school district, shall write on their duplicated, opposite to the names of the persons residing within said independent eilis F ,` trio', the letters I. D., for the information W the collector of said tax and the county ewe r Inissioners. Sitorrox 4. That in all caeca in which othooll , directors of independent districts have not •- , '4 chosen at the recent spring election', or ,1 " day specially fixed by law, it she p shell he I al for the qualified voters of any such distrid .fa c , ba meet at their usual place of holding similar elections: ten days' notice thereofihavi"Lbett'rd. 1 given by the late president of the proper and shall e,Ject two persons to serve as aching -, ' , directors for the ensuing year; and the no. I maining Members and of of the board who would have continued in office under the provisions of the supplement to the schtel law' of. Itlay,eightliVone thousand eight hundred arid Ofty.foutqle and they aro hereby continued in office until ,the expiration of the terms for which they 'were originally elected ; the,inid elections shall be held, and coeducted in tW„ ' seine manner Red by the same persons hereto- fore authorised by law.• .; Seams 5. That upon petition ofliO.,,tlan,, than twenty taxable inhabitants of any town** ship. desiring the formation of the territory upon which they reside, into a separate and I independent common school district, and set i Ling forth the bounds of such proposed dis. , : trict, the court of quarter sessions et po pro- per county. shall appoint commissioners to' '' view the premises and report to the court at its next term, the lines of the proposed mew dile 1 trict. either according to the bounds set forth [in the petition, or to such other bounds as re they shill think mo advisable, together wi th their • opinion on the expediency of establishing the same, the pmceedinga upon which petition. commission and report, and the final disposi tion thereof shall, in all other respects, he ac., cording to the act of assembly now in footle.. ' relative to the erection of new townships • I Provided, That if said proceedings result i n 1 the - ,establishment of a new common school district. the cost of the commission and do-- office fees shall bo paid by the said new die filet, but if otherwise, said costs and free , shall be paid by the petitioners themselves. Smolt 6. That whenever a new district shall be erected according to the provisions of this •act. it shall become, to all intents and purposes of the common school system of the ' e w e , a separate and independent district, sub• feet, however, to the provisions of the third and fourth sections of the net to which tide ie •t a suppleinent; and the proper court otquarter,, sessions shall'moreover determine. on hearing. r whether an undue proportion of the reel estate " and school houses belonging to the old dietries or districts are within the bounds of the new f district, and if so. how much money shall be paid therefor by the new to the old district cc districts, and in what proportions and at what i time ; and_eice versa if less than its due share lof real estate or school houses is within said new district, how much shall be paid to it by ' 1 the old district or districts, end in what pro portions and ind at what times ; the order for the payment of which several sums shall. from the. • date thereof, be in the nature of a Judgment, and the amount recoverable according to the proviaions of the twenty-first section of the act to which this is a supplement. Ssoricne 7. That at the next annual worm ment after the erection of any such new come mon school district, it shall be the duty of the county commissioners of the proper county to cause a separate assessment of the subJechtend things liable to school tax in each portion of the new district lying within his proper town ship to be made out by the proper assessor thereof, and to be returned to them, whir,- from, after adjustment, they shall cause to be .. made a correct copy of the assessment thus obtained. in every portion of the new district; land shall furnish the same to the secretaly thereof. in accordance with the twenty-ninth section of the act to which this is a supple- 'tient ; and they shall. in like manner and at the same time, cause to be made out and fur. nished, to the state superintendent of common schools.,a full list of all the taxable inhabitants of said new district, according to the provisions I of the forty-ninth section of the act to which, this is a supplement; and they shell pay mit of the county funds to said assessors, the us • ual con•pensation for the services eqieined by this section. , [ Swoon 8. Thet the state superintendent: of common schools shall, on the application of the boards of directors of a majority of the school districts iu any county of this 00111113911• wealth, stating their desire to increase the salary of the county superintendent, fixed at - any of the periods named in the thirty-ninth . . ,__ yl I section of the school law of one thousand sight 1 jIT HAT CPA IN 13 riOINCI.— ' A taw has hundred and fifty-four. or at any suberequeet • ust been enacted by the Spanish Cortes, , triennial convention of directors, appoint die' ordering all the lends, and &Welling" be- , time and place el neassembling oldie eontva, ,lion of directors, who shall have all the palm' longing to the clergy. to religious fhterni tier. and to pious and sacred worki, te b e conferred by the said thirt i rninth sconce,. • . oo . fhat the onnsyleania &hoot "old and turned into money ' ( breaking up Journal shall be recognized ea the official oelpill all accummulations of reciesisstical peeper- of the department. of common schoo s ty.and stripping the citurchmi of immense oommonwealth, in which the carnet ls alm dadeittoe possessions. I made by the superintendent of °opinion trehetile ; shalt be published free of chars*. God's people are like stars that shine , with all official circulate and suchothe t er4 a • - . brightest so the darkest ' night; they are of eXplanstion and instruction se he MY Sad like gold, the brighter fur the futnace; it necessary or advisable to to tf..... to ...." like inceose, thit becomes fragrant from time, including his annual repnrt: sad, tb, • „ burning; like the camomile plant, that superintendent is hereby authorized to sub, i "V. ' 1 'scribe for one copy of asid School Jontrisl.le . ' grows fastest when trampled on. , I be sent to each board of school directorate the ' • b ox. ,. ' state, for public use.and ensile the eget *ore. , "The cradle is a woman's, ballot Of to the contingent ,expenses of the + - Yes, aud route of them deposits in it, two ' meet e r e e mmee w h ee l s . ~ Sballots at once. Now, isn't that illegal ?ee l &ono 10. T hat . 41 um,* (tad . ..„„„__ ~., ay ? *sem. ' ships now a/tweeted Its the weipippensairmookn , BILLiBROWN says that hi e su n „ , ansoar ens ty rates and levies. shall Ilene* adddfdlideti,'-it r rooster is so tall( that, ha has to get down watt of said rates sad limb& hteepeedot of ease oth to the tliti hi' • 011' his ImaeitO crow. I opts's; sad the nom:tire Owed* ty s ,* -- • --- Ha WAS Rtgar.--The following answer was made to a young lady who had sent hor lover a kiss - -in a letter Thanks to my little abrent friend— A loin, you m ,your letter send, But, ah I the thißling charm is lost In kisses that arrive by post : That fruit can only tactful be When gathered, melting, from the tree! A country schoolmaster happened to be talking about the curious skiu of the ele phant. you ever see an elephant's skin he asked the scholars.. "I hare shouted a little "six • years old," at the foot of the clam , . "Where ?" he aaked, quite amused' at the boy's earaestueas. "Oh the elephant," *said he; with most provoking Win. iIiEM TWO DOLLARS ANNUM: XtrißEl tt, .r,f; ~,~ : , ,tkosit• r ,r. MEM rii ~.~,. MEM , tlft vr.;