11 D. W. M,OQM pr .4‘; ,Hlttp 1 . 911 164Kat4ata i s' A Weekly Paper, will be pcblisheil thi ollcaping., tau? „ I • IR-I(.4lAtiN ADV,ANCE: $1 00. IAYIKARi, IN 3 191ON'IlIS 125 IN 0 hio • •k GO 'YF.:4It IN 9 •• DO • 115 , I:YEAI .IN :12 DO 2 00 (* -- 7.'No paper will be sent to those who pay in advance after the • expiration of the time paQfor., , . • , . . . . .M, All . letters : on business., connected gala ilic,office, to receive attention, must be post 4 paid. ! : • .• ~; „T O DIY WIF.E., 'Afar. from thee ! , The morning, breaks .. . Butporning brings no joys ,to me ; Alas my spirit only ,wakes To know, that I am far from thee ! n dreams t'stiw that.‘, blessed face, , ,thou wert,nestlea'an, my 'breast; lCtt '(lrettres,l felt, thy fond crnbraco , ,, ) And to my own thy heart was pressed. `Afar from thee I 'Tis solitude, Though smiling crowds around me be ; 'The kind, the beautiful, the good— ,' 1 . Fdit I can enlyithink of thee,. For thee; the kindest, loveliest, best, Myearliest, and my only one ; Without thee I am all'unblegt, • And wholly blest with thee alone. Afar from thee 1., The words of praise My ; listless car unheeded greet ; ,:What sweetest seemed in better,days, (. Without thee seems no longer sweet ; ,The dearest joy, fame can bestow, , ,-, Is in thy .moistened eye to see ' And, in thy, cheek's unusual glow, „!: Theu,deem'st tne not unworthy thee. , Afar from thee] The night is come, -! Btit eltiinborS from my pillow flee ; cannot rest So far from home, And my heart's home is, love, with thee! Tkneel peforelhe throne f prayer, And . then I know that thou art nigh ; 'For God, who secth everywhere, • Benda on us both a watchful eye.. „Togethor',injiis love •embrace, No distance can Our lorartS divide; Forgotten quite the' mediate space, I kneel thy kneeling form beside ; . My tranquil frame then sinks tosleep,, _But spars the spirit thr'aiid:frCe ; • welconfie be night's sluMbere deep-- , Forthen, uear love, I all With theert A iVIOIIT WITH TILE JACOBIN, CLUB. The 14dloy ing ts bn extract fr in a pot%er:iilly • ''veritlen p iperin n late itutnher ol , Auel -Muriron, orahn Advemucet ut n SlnteAtouti." 1 , ) I he narrator lens just cilenped from O . •10 th I y the I , ml thylong Along through The dnrk • tnnt:u Mid • nlleys, minhtenly enoou hie rei n Lrowd of - tiara Culuney sktio cite mti Incur ty the 'prming ~t __il the Jacoliime, Ile is compelled to Join thetu,ond 41 _ tit their r•ompaiiy Oh:elven ss lint follows: Weriow plunged 'into the darkness of a Vast pile* . oi'idently once a convent, and ` , .'tvltere the chillOf the massive walls struck' io the inatiow. I felt asifwalkingthrough • ~ a charnel-house. We hurried on; a trent- Wing light toward the end of the immense and lofty aisle, was our guide, and the crowd, Icing familiar with the way,.rushed cthibugh the intricacies, where so many `,;fectof plonk's had trod . before them, and :where perhaps many a deed that shunned the day had been perpetrated. At length ' , :ti'spiral stair brought us to a long gallery, "Where our entrance was marked-With a . .';ithOut of congratulation; and tumbling o ver the benches and each other, ;we at - length took our seats in the highest part Which, in - both the club and the National 'Assembly, was called, from its height, the Meuntain, 'and from the, characters which generally held it, WPS a mountain of flame. In , the area below, once the nave, of the, flames, sat the Jacobin club. I now, t the,:first time, Saw the memorable and M ter:' riblitaasemblage. And neilling could, be' more suited than its aspects to its deeds. Theban Wits of such extent that a large , "'ilortion of it was hardly visible, arid the few, lights which hung from the walls, scarcely diSplayed even the, remainder.—, The French love of decoration had no placel here ; neither statues nor pictures, neither gilding nor sculpture, relieved .the heavi . ness - of the building; Nothing of the arts was visible but their rudest specimens, the drinief4 g ids of monks and martyrs, or the , coarse blaCkeriing carvings of ti barbarous' age. The hall was full; for the club con: tamed nearly two thousand members, and on this night all were present. Yet, ex- . ,' capt the 'occasional erica , of approval or anger when any speaker had concluded; , and the habitual ofevery huge as-, scrnbly, 114 - Aught have been taken for a host ofispectrea; the area had So entirely: the aspect of a huge .; v4t, the air felt so i thick a,ndthe gloom was so fecblytiispers ed by. the, chandeliers,' ;All was septilCh-' • raL- The chair of the president even stood ' On 'a tomb, an tintione structure Of black' The:olevated stand,,froM which the ,spealters generally addresSed the as sembly.. had the strongest resemblanec'of a settlfoNotttul i behind, it, coyeritag, the wall; c . suspended chainS and instrument '' of torture of every horrible kind t used , in +The dithATrits,\ Of 'old times;- , lhough' :placed' theie for' •thesitkerof Contrast Witkr 7.'the'ritercies' of it more enlightened. • agd; . ' i jet"enliiincin,g' the general idea' of a kinio ~.1,QC4c46:1,. • • ''9l'lll-*luireu Oo,'addition: to render, thd, hall+ , ofli the+ Jacobin. fearful. pibut- the , meet•L inOwere.always, held at rtight;often.prdll longed!ihroneli: the ,whole,night,,, Alwaya - stormy, and -often sangdinary, ilaggera '"';goraW 4 d, and "pistqls, fired--ait' . l • • ii3 1 ,9 4 ,.,4 1 o r street sorhetimeS :*l' .4). 1 ! ter attacks on the benches; ;Maui this pe= the mutual wrath and terror of the and 4 tint lieu Han ,do . 'at ante IMM 71ffila On ' rept IS fat/ ont pert vf vv., • u high, tor' and rk pier rust 0r,41 i ; r n 7 ti,gal ry t 0.43 BM MIMI BEE I Y E,I4TEEIfo %lief 11 ft. try. rove racil, pnervto :Y.ll I.ih.if , ) is YMP'q!lt 111;"thii 4 KVriisolr l iftUVAl l o , ''' tt i ; f •L ~i toil. ) . ' to t loaf Mem ! 1 . 110404 W WAN Stag , :Oil , A t te*, tUr• the nil 14410 1 ', 0064141 tki:lj:Sticrj . ..4i, * MIIIE ti'; , :p az w,*?4*.' BIC REV. G. W. DETEIVNE. 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A WEEKLY PAPER: DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Volume I factions had risen midi a height, that every meeting might be-only a prelude of exile' or • the axe ; and the . deliberation of this especial night must settle the question Whether the monarch or the Jacobin club was to ascend the scaffold. It was the de bate on the execution of the unhappy Lou is ;XVI. MED The arrival of the crowd, among whom I taken an unwilling seat, evidently gave new spirit to the regicides ; the mo ment was critical. Even in Jacobinistn all were not equally black,' and the fear of the national' revulsion . at so 'desperate a -deed startled many, who might not have been withheld by feelings of humanity.— The leaders had held a secret consultation While the debate was drawing on its slow length, and Danton's old expedient of“ter rors ' Was resolved . on. His • emissaries had beent sent round Paris to'summon all his banditti . ; and .the lon cafes, and every haunt of violence and every drunkenness of crime had poured forth. The remnant of the Marseilles—a gang of actual galley slaves wife had led the Massacre—the paidnwassin§ ofthe Marais, and the sub rears ofthe Royal Guard, whoofler trea son to , flie king, litid. found profitable trade in living on the robbery find blood of the nobles and.priests, formed this reinforce relent, pad their 'entrance into the gallery was reCognized by the clapping of hands from below, which they answered by a roar, accompanied with a significant sign of clashing their knives and sabres. 'Hanlon immediately rushed into the Tri bune. I had seen him before, on thofear ful night which prepared the attack on the palace; but he'was then in 'the haste and effective savageness of the . rabble. Ile the-part played the , pa of the leadet'-of a po litical Seat; andlhe eornmencementnf his address adopted something of the decorum ofpntblic council. •' itV this there was an artifice; for rest less es the club was,, it still retained a jeal nusy•of the superior' legislative raikof the' assetrihly of. national • representatites; the Convention. The forms 'Or the Conven tion were strictly imitated; and even those ' Jacobins; 'who usually led the debate, scru pulously wore the dress of the best orders. 'Robespierre wastlaberafely dressed when ever he appeared in the tribune, and Dan `ton abandoned 'the canailla!Costailie ofthe time. I was 'Struck with his showy' stiture, his bold forehead and "his commanding at tittide,.a6 he stood' waving his hand over the. multitude below, as if lie waved ti. scep ter. His'appearance was received with a, general shout from the gallery; which he returned with a prefopral bow, and then stood erect till all sounds had sunk. Ilis powerful voice then rang througluthe ex tent of the hall. Ile began with congmtu kiting the people on their haying' relieved the republic from its •exteryal• angers.— His language at first was moderate, and his recapitulation of the perils which must, have betidlen a conquered country *us sufficiently true and even touching; fah his tone soon changed , and saw the true Ja 4-obin. "What," he crilY, "are tho;e per ils to the honor of doinestiO•perlidy t What arc the ravages on the frontier to the poi son and dagger of our fireside? What is the' gallant death in the field to assassina ,r don in cold blood? Listen, fellow,citizens; !there is . , at this hour, a' deeper plot laid for I your destruCtion than .ever existed in the ~'shiillo~v steads, Gr ever'could be 'executed bY'the cowardly hearts' of •their soldiery. Where'ks that plot? In the 'st reets? No. The courage. of". Oar' brave. liatriois is as proof against corruption as against war." This was followed by - ti.shout from the gal lery. "Is it in' the :I'uilleries? No; there the nationat'ssabre 'has etit -down the tree .fruit a ft-lc:mg 'the na- I trot). ''Where then is the 'lls6oB'of thisplot !L-..adiero - th 'gathering' of 'the- storm -that ig to shak'e'the bahlementS:bithe'repnblie I'Lwheresthat ierrible'detiesite of combos tibleS%whicli the noble has pitheredi the prieselias piled; and the king - i has prepar ,ed to 'kindle? liralie-citiiens; that plot' is arid looked mysteriously aroithd ? ivhde stlence deep as ea per .Vaded 'ititidtifutles then; as if Sudden- IY : 4 l peeiveririg he l tilintiderOd outer . . "thd' TeniPle." . " .'" '.• • • hiriguage ,Can'deseiibe the shauftiad the= belie that.'folloWed. 'The darin,,mliiiird itikstndiV . SpOleii i iiihibli 'all `iiiitielptad, but 'whidh Ddritori' - itilOne had - udaCiti - i' to titter'Sereanied , datieed';tlbutiSHed WeaPons;,and Sting the' lilittire'ellred The club below were scarcely less violent in ,theit'dthi l iopStration of`-titrieus. joy. Dan 'ton 'hit'tl'hOW tieonipliSlied 'his' ttiSk';' 'but thlestbd . for edditionai applattse;• and lip entered, into a catalogue' Of hiS'Ser i kllde..s"tO ' the iiAdst of nhiStileticiir, 'a relit' but 'sing,tila 'out Fvloio' 1,6,4 1 ,14 i t 'd' fitini'; the - tiettaiiji 'ar the - ha 1 I lieddefidl man thitsSader' - ', "" , ‘' .• ilDantoit"iddrt lie' had , been' • ' Shot.' -"At N lengi'• reeiivering I hit; tbkiiili; 'Said i"'' . • • '• 1 "t OigidiiS,' Whet effril ticdu4dd?"'' Ahrtle (epteniber;" ut= . tgreifthe-:irbiee : 'again; 41'1; ' strongpy l'ty.-'.geputchitir;!thiif itived the j , '!,. 97 • ..:1 1 4 tVlio'lg its that it guite4 ht ?- who' dares! to malign me? What spy of the Giron- dists, what traitor of the Bourbons, what hireling of the gold of Pitt is among us ir exclaimed the bold ruffian, yet with a vis age which oven at a distance I could ob serve had lost its fiery hue, and turned clay color. " I!" replied the voice, and I saw a tall figure stalk up the length of the hall and stand at . the foot of the tribune. " De scend !" was the word which .he spoke ; and Danton, as if under a spell, to my as : , tonishment, obeyed, without a word, and' came down. The stranuertook his place; none knew his ntinie ; and the rapidity & boldness of hiS' assault suspended all in wonder like my own. I can give but a most incomplete conception attic extraor dinary eloquence of this mysteri6uS intru der. Ile openly charged Danton with having constructed the whole sonspiracy against the unfortunate prisoners of Sep tember—with having deceived the people by imaginary alarms of the approach of the enemy—with having plundered the na tional treasury, to pay the assassins ; and the last and most deadly charge of all, with having formed a plan for a National Dictatorship, of which he himself was to, be the first professor. The charge was sufficiently- probable, and was not now heard for the first time. But the keen ness and fiery promptitude with which the speaker poured the charge upon him, gave it a new aspect ; and I could see in the changing physiognomies around me, that the great „Jacobin was already in danger. He obviously felt this himself; fur starting up from the bench to which he had return ed, lie cried out, or rather yelled: "Citizens, this man thirsts for ray blood. Am Ito be sacrificed'? Am Ito be ex posed to the danger of assassination ?" But no answering shout arose ; a dead ei fence reigned ; all eyes We're still turned to. the tribune. I saw Danton, after a gaze of total' helplessness on all sides, !throw up his hands like a drowning man I and staggered to his seat. Nothing could be more'unffirtunato than this interruption; for the speaker poured the renewed invec tivd, like a stream of molten iron, full on his personal charaCter and career. "Born a beggar, your only hope of bread was crime. Adopting the , profes sion of an advocate, your only, conception of law was chicanery. Coming to Paris, you took up patriotism as u trade, and turned the trade into an imposture., Train ed to dependence, you alwals hung on some one till he spurned you I. You lick ed' tholdust before Mirabeau ; you betray ed him and he trampled on you ; you tools' :refuge in the cavern of Murat, until he found you too base for even his base corn panionship; and he, too, spurned you ; you then hung to the skirts of Robespierre, clUng.on to ruin. Viper I known only by I your coil, and your poisons; like the ori ginal serpent, degraded even from the brute, even to the reptile, you already feel your sentence. I prom Vice it before all. I The man to whom yen.' now : cling will crush' you. : Maximilian Robespierre, is not your heel lifted up to tread out the life of this traitor? Maximilian Robes. pierre, do I not speak the truth ?. Have I not stripped the veil from your thoughts Am I not looking at your heart?" Ho then addressed the Jacobin leaders in a brief appeal. "Billaud Varennes stand forth—do you not long to drive the dag ger into the heart of this new tyrant? Bil let (11 lerbois, are you not sworn to des troy him .Couthon, have you not pro nounced him perjured, perfidious and unfit to live? St. Just, have you.not in your bosom the list of those who have pledged themselves that Danton shall never be dic tator? that his grave shall be dug, beibre he shall, tread :on the firin step of the throne I that his ashes shall be scattered to the four winds of Heaven? that he shall never gorge on Franco ?" : A hollow murmur, like the echo Of the 'vaults::: beneath - , .repeating the concluding wordso :.Thenuirmur had scarcely subsi ded when the extraordinary apparition, flinging around: him a long white cloak, ,whichlbe had hitherto carried en his arm and which, in dim light, gave him the look of one covered with a shroud,,pried out in a voice of still deeper solemnity," George .Jacques Danton, you havethis night pro. I .nouneed.the death of your king; I now pronounce your own. By the victims of the 20tlanie,---by the victims of the 10th of:August—by the victims of the 2d of, September—by the thousands. whom your treachery..has sent to perish in a foreign graye4-4y , the Millions , whom . the war Which you' have kindled 'will ,lay in the' field; of slaughter-,4 cite:you to appear before the: tribunal, where. sit , a Judge , ' whom no one can elude and none,ctio fy. Within one yeah and menth, teite you to meet the spirits of ,your IvietiMs.he7; :fdre the throne of the Eternal." He,Stopped;:inot'a;sound vas heard.— Ho: descended, the ;steps . . O 1 the; Tribune, and , stalked Slowly through the vnot hand. was - raised against. He put. !sued ;his wav With tia much calmness as, if he bad been 'a ' tuifiernatu rot ViSitanti.Ua til lie vanished' in the darkness: This sinkultiv occurrence'. threw min.( plete.'dampi' , on their•regicidal. arclot and. as:rio onwseismedinblinedkto ,mount;the tribune; the club world-pri4bablylavel , bro. ken up for the night, when a loud knock- Clearfield, Pa., November 23, 1849. Every community; liplcN in its bosom a species of viperous bipeds called.back-bi tors, eaves-dropp,prs, or) slanderers, who go Arbont doing.. evil cOutinually, They introduce discord, where peace before resi ded—they wake up ill-will between peace able and friendly neighbors--excite sus,- piciorrin trusting . hearts, and substitute bitter Controversy for ,sociall amity and quietude. They malign private character with impunity, because they arc ,too:covi ardly and hypocritical to make., their as, saults boldly and manfully, so that those whom they traduce can have a chance to defend themselves.. They run up behind you and strike .in the dark, and then fly to .elude; detection: They put on great sua vity and friendliness to your face, but when your brielt is turned,Jook ;salt for, them .for,theY will cling ! to yeur,;lle,cla rabid:dog.' thorn ' youNifould.a, poisonous ,;roptile--;-refuse ; their ,cQtnpany ; --,-and 'above. , t 11, , do ;; 1114 / fldlPit ; fliOPl your haPPYAUTIIIyjgirGICT77-40 induct them,intoyour fireside , scercts;! for if. you dol,:they will leavathe baneful stain,of their foetsteps;, on, .youx yery,,threshhqld, , : ana happiness will flee before thorn as from a' =II ing at the door, and the beating of drums aroused the drowsy sitters on the bench es. The gallery was as much awake as ever, but seemed ,occupied with evident expectation of either a new revolt or a spectacle; pistols were taken out to be new ly primed, and the points and edges of knives duly examined. The doers at length were thrown open and a crowd, one half of whom appeared to be in the last state of intoxication, and the other half not so far from insanity, came dancing and carousing into the bo dy of the building. In the midst of their troops they carried two busts covered with laurels—the busts of the regicides, Ravail lac and Clement, with flags before them, inscribed—" They were glorious, for they slew kings !" The busts were presented to the president, and their bearers, a pair of poissaders, insisted on giving him the embrace, in sign of fraternization. The president, in return, invited them to the "honors of sittings ;" and thus rein forced, the discussion on the death of the unhappy monarch commenced once more, and the vote was carried by acclamation. The National Convention was still to be applied to for the completion of the sen tence, but the decree of the Jacobins was the law of the land. The Slonderer. fie vi ho ?teak friy purao•tenla trardt, • • • ♦ • • • Ruth vho fili hes from ine toy good name, Hob' , roe orthat which not eunehrai But =heft mo poor mdeotl."— Shokepear e All that is damntible in the black cata logue of guilt, all that is foul and corrupt in the store-house of human iniquity, all the demon-like traits of moral deformity, and the blighting mildew of detraction and defamation, tire treasured up in the base and cowardly heart of the malicious slan derer. The individual who aims a pistol at my breast, with the threat that "death's lead en messenger" shall cut the "brittle thread of life," or tells me his sword shall smoth er its vengeance in my bosom ; gives me ht least the privilege of defending myself against his-atrocious assaults; but he who, from the dark the of his perjured soul; pours forth the venom of the'esp to poison my reputation, whose breath is like the si rocco, and tongue the "destroying angel," who 'Can sport With my "good name" as a "trifle light as-iiir," and blast .at one' fell stroke all that I hold most dear, then turn and smile upon the ruins, deprives me of the power of acting on the detimsive, until character is a wreck, reputation gone to the four winds, and honor as though it 'hall not been. See the degraded wretch, a's he issues from the charnel house of sin and pollution, the green earth is too pure! for his unhallowed step, the light from the "glorious orb" of day has no charms for, him, virtue and innocence fly from his ap proach, or arc crushed beneath the wheel of his ire, and he slinks back again to the society of congenial spirits, whose unholy communion is more horrid than the "ming ling" of Macbeth's hitches. Hainan Frailly. Lifi is a fountain, fed by a thousand streams which perish if one be dried; it is .a silver cord, twisted with 'a thousand strings, that part asunder ifone be broken. Frail and thoughtless mortals arc surroun ded by innumerable dangers, which make it more strange that they escape so long, than that they almost all perish so sudden ly' and surely' at last. We 'arc encom passed with accidents ever ready to crush the mouldering tenements that we. inhabit. The seeds of disease are planted, in our constitutions by' the hand of Nattne. The earth and the atmosphere Whence we draw Our life, are impregnated with • death: health is made to operate in its own de struction., The food that nourishes the body contains the Clements of its decay--- the soul that animates it by' the vivifying fire, tends to wear it out by its abtion.— Death lurks in 'ambush along our paths— "in the'midst of life we arc in death." Back-Biters. ME Nuptiber. 22. deadly foe. For the love of peace, of or der and of friendship, do not countenance their slanderous imputations against your friends and neighbors. CAPITAL.—A good story is told of a fellow who had spent hundreds of dollars at the bar of a certain groggcry, being one day feeble and out of change, asked the landlord to trust him for a glass of li quor. "No," was the surly reply ;"I nev er made a practice of doing such things." The poor fellow turned to a gentleman, who was sitting by, and whom he had known in better days, saying, "Sir, will you lend me a sixpence?" "Certainly," was the reply. The landlord with alacrity placed the decanter and glass before him ; he took a pretty good horn and having swallowed it, replaced it with evident satisfaction; he turned to the man who had lent him the sixpence and. said, "Here sir, I owe you, I make it a point, degraded as I ani, al ways to pay borrowed money before I pay my grog bill !" PIOUS FIGHTING.—At the battle of Gainsborough f Cromy;ell told his men in a general order —"Trust in the Lord and keep your powder dry." On the eve of the battle of Nascby, ho issued another or der to his infantry saying, "Call upon the Lord and trust in your pikes." Before the battle of Ltunbitr, he said, "Sock the Lord and look to your flints." Bofors the battlo of Worcester, he said, "The prayers of the godly to scatter the wicked arc heard by the Lord. Then trust in the Lord, take good aim and strike hard." Tho following 'scrap,' going the rounds of the papers, may be found to, have prac tical application in, every community.— Let ladies read it, attentively and candid ly, and profit by it so far as it may be a dapted to their particular cases: "FEMALE SA - RCM:U.—Few things are .more liable to.be abused in society—espe cially by young ladies—than the ,gift of, liveliness. No doubt it gains present, ad; miration while they continuo young and pretty, but it leads to no esteemr—produ ces no affection, if. it be carried , beyond the' bounds of graceful good humor. She for instanee, who is distinguished for the odd freedom of her remarks—.- whose laugh is, loudest—whose wit is the most piquant—Who gathers a group of laughers around her—of whom shy and quiet people are afraid—this is a sort ofl person who tnay be invited out—who May he thought no inconsiderable acquisition to parties of which the general opprobrium is dullness—but this is not the sort ofa person likely, to become the honored finis- tress of a respectable home." J9SEPIL M.Azzot.-,-This illustrious tri umvir of the,Roman.republic is a son of. Dr. Mazzini, of Genoa, where he wasborn lin 1809, and educated foi the law, While at the university, the government seized him ; he was tried fur holding principles subversive of order, found innocent, but thrown into prison, and then banished. 110 established an Italian press in Marseilles, but Louis Philippe ordered him to leave France. In Switzerland he organized an expedition against Savoy ; it failed; Aus tria demanded his expulsion, and the Swiss drove him out. For thirteen years he was in exile in England, laboring day and night for Italian liberty ; wrote it) the press much and well; educated numbers of his countrymen; had his letters secretly open-' ed, copied, and their contents revealed, by the British government (see our almanac for 1849, p. 54 ;) joined the revolntion at .Paris, Feb., 1848; thence entered Lombar dy, and conducted an Italian journal; had to fly to Switzerland, whence he was again expelled, in time to be elected deputy rom Leghorn to the Roman republic, where his talents soon placed him at the od of the I triumvirate, which France, the instrument of Austria, Russia, and the British aristoc qtcy, has suppressed) He is thin, good'. reeking, itiid of middle height.—Piilmer's Pithiness Mims' Almanac for 1850. THEY SAY.—"They say," , tells. that which is not true, at least three quarters of the time, lie is about the worst authori ty you can produce to support the credi bility of your statement., Scarcely was ,there ever a suspicious report put; in cir culation, but this Mr. THEY SAY was' the author .of it . ; and he alWays escapes res ponsibility 'and detection, because, Ruing Just nowhere, he can never be found. • • Who said that Mr, E., the merchant, Was supposed to be ,in a failing condition? Why, "they•say"'so, ..9d What authority do they affirm that neighbor has been' in bad. Company? Why "they say". so, is it a'fact that MISS G. is 'not so chaste - and,Circurnspec,t as she should be? 'Why ? . , 'r, • "they say" so. Plagtie on this Mr. THEY' SAY lie,is a half-hrothdr to me. NoSeny; who alWays does the inisehief and' vlio lives nowhere ; but,in't te.invention of. those ,who, unde serving respect' themselves ,. , 'are desirous to pull - dewn others to their 'own laVel.-` We always suspect thc,,truth,,of report qiitnes frcirn atikhAt)i bffiTh6Y • •: ,f , Sity. • ••):: • 1 square of 15 lines. or less, 1 irui'oligpi c 159 50 1 do • do do 3 ' • • • Eaceaubsequent insettiOn't . 25 1 do • .3 months ,' ,• ~..,.. I do, '6, months' : • ••• 00 1' do • 12!Months' ' • ';1 00 : do' 'months. 2do , 6 months . ,. " , t t ol , 2 do • • ; 12 'months' • OO 3- do • 3 Months ," • ' .6 110 3 do' 6 months,,l: 9'oo do 12 months 12 00 do' or hotru'cidtimil';6'd - zot#Am 'I - 00 ' 5 do- 'Or habr a tio2umn:l2;montha‘ 20.00 10 do or one column, 6 months . 20.00 10 do or one column, 12 month's • 30 . 00 • . . Books; Jobs and Blanks Of every description, Fltited at thp Wry ihest , style, and on the shortest notice; at. 1 he COUNTRY:OOI , LAI? Office.' , Urn We'have the Atla, California neivspa. per of Oet. 1., froth Nyhich wo make .the folloming extracts : • ' /, , '". .- 7 -- tr to y,' d'' The Co? tvenlpon , up to our latest dates,.had been sessien over tliieC weeks. WO of, the, prpvr sions of the proposed constitution liad ‘ bedn acted and passed upon iticernintite6; .- pf the whole. The Bill of Rights, as ;adopted: in com mittee of the whole, embraces tWentY,soc tions, of the. usual .character of.such vision,. The .only point whiph it was .supposed a controversy would aris,e—Lttle question, of slaverey—passed withei4.4„o- bate, and unanintor(4ly, utterly prohibiting slavery. Some, few were. in faVor" of Si lb mining the matter to ; the p,e014 for fora sp crate vote ; but it, was ,not contended' for with any show of strenuosity, .arid.was vo ted down, almost ananimonsly. . . the suffer age question th'e source of considerable debate : but was ~fir ally disposed, of by admitting all male Citiqns of the U. S., six months resident in Cali ifornia, and twenty. one years of age, (In dians, Africans, and the descendants of Africans, excepted ? ), to the priviiegop,of.e , lectors The Legislature is . to: ,consist :of two . branches, an assembly and a. senate, with such general powers, privileges, and dillies as are usually given to stich bodies. ~, B an• king •king corporations and lotteries are.prohib ited, and all othericorporations, except for municipal :purposes, are to.be established under general laws, theistockheldera,to.be individually liable for all debts.- Some considerable debate occurred upon a,,pro vision which allows corporations _to. be formed for receiving, deposits'Of golf:A and silver. It was urged that, .under *ch : a provision, an irresponsible system of bank ing might grow up ; but the section was finally so amended as to answer all objec- tions, and in that shape passed. The members . of the assembly are to, be elected annually, and the members pf , :the senate is to hold their offices for two years. One half ofthe senate, is to;be elected each year. No 'person can be a member I of the legislature who has•not been a, res -1 ' ident oldie State one year, in addition to other qualfications. ; The number of members of :rtiVmbly is never to be less than tietfty;f9tir r , „;':no more than thirty-six, until 'the Manlier - of inhabitants in this State shall . .aiidnou to one hundred thousand,, .and, alter thafioe riod at such a ratio that the. N . V):l ' dle Mah er of inerribclis of asspinbly. 01014160'i 'be less than thirty nor more thVi ; gigto:— The senate is never to consist of r Tess than one-third nor more than onelhalfthiViim ber of the assembly. 1 . , ! . Some . diviSion of opinion arose on:a position made , •by Mr..'McCeijyer, pre vent free persons of color from settling in California, and, also to prevent slave-hold ers from bringing slaVes intelhe State for the purpose, of liberating them., It :filially passyd, incommittee of whole; 'hdi it has bevnioolied upon . sitiee jeoPaYiling the retitle:n.l9 of the, constitution by Con gress, and .as this l'qelibrr . iva.s 'gainina e t efc' ground the House probably . s it out. t: , A Governor, Lietttenorit-Limierpor, Secretary of State, Comptroller, Treasar er, Attorney-(Genera), an,d,iSurveyor-Gen eral, constitute the exeCiluve department. They are all to hold' their'' bifices 'fOr two years. The' GoVernor end tiententtrit r Governor are to. lic .'e:lo,ted by 'general ballot; the Secrettirylif State ' tei be'ap bpointed by the Govetrne'r, Mid with the ad vice. and consent of the gertatd•V the Com ptroller,'and three other State (Alecto 'are to be eledted by . the Legislature; on joint ballot'for the first tdim; 'end ; laNrwards. by the people at the general Statoglection, ;overnor has the usual bowers; in i - ing the veto, and the.PrivilegeS and. ( 'duties of his office do not Varythateritilly from those of all'otherStriteSiin the Union. l'he other State' Offrers'cOrrespondin du i ties and powers. with ,thoSe, ge' nbrally as cribed i The article . relativQ tti.•l'iniliftfry t as paSsed in cotnintiteobrthd suchlis found in otheCStat Con stitutiOns, as 1E1 . 00; also relative toamend "bents. , •- - • It was supposed the *ccithre'ntiOn" we' uld adjourn in all , the . first .weelt In' October. The followixi o et: houn'dary for the . .fitew State is proposed: ' ' Commencing at the 'northeast'&;iner of the Statb 'at ihe intersection of the para. lel of latitude forty-tWoHdegreeiv north With the paralel of longitudtr'dne' hundred and sixteen west; thence t sOuth; uienand (tient , that parelel . of longitude toltho boundary line hetwcen the United States and Mexico, estallshed'hy - the ',treaty of peaCe, 'ratified by the gaid oiircriiments at, Queretaro on the 3(ith da'rof May, 1iit48,,,. thence 'West, upon . and 'thlong 'the "-enin. .- boundary line to thciPittifie ocean in a nOrthrelyydirectien, ifiill4, l T„ r 'r ~,... course of the Pacific coast td tri , ol ) , j*, aid of foit-t‘irciv'tlegree's-'n' , '..‘ 'extending one 'nib:lithe liiigt4 l : l " c k froth the southern' tor the e i pry,. and including ap' tluN;fr" and Wands r4djaccnt 'f6 foilY:tuid"Sop4nof • i?''' , ` ` if, From _Ca I if0.g7 1 4 i:.l,' 111 i til ' i