of t- i" rm B- u A- IB- it s. cc 5,: f TnnD IltTTCIIIXSOaT, Editor. rf?f E. IlX'TCimrsoa', Publisher. ".,f nf TTTrrrr t n n . 1 Ay Law, Ebensburg, Pa. JOflN"-FENLON, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. j?0ce opposite the Bank. jan24 &E0SGE M. READE, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. t i t- r n FT. 'lliiii-Mui, Attorney ac .Law, . Ebensburg, Cambria county, Pa. ... . . j . -n r: o "Uuice in uoionnaae xu. ju-t T0I1NSTON & SCANLAN, Attorneys ,) at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. -g-OfSce opposite tbe Court House. , iTjohsstox. jan24 J. e. scanlax. TIMES C EASLY, Attorney at Law, ) rtrrolltown, vamoria county f ra. v bitectural Drawings and Specifi- T . v i Iff I Tnn A a a. A fr A. fitlUri.u Aivjii, .attorney ai , Law, Ebensburg, Pa. ps.-'icalar attention paid to collections. jeTOtfice one door east of Lloyd fc Co.'s :i;nj House. jan24 xMTTVT. J1T.I.rTO A tr.irr.pv nt J Law. Ebensburg, Pa. OtSce on High west of Foster's Hotel. , . V.'.'.l practice in tbe Courts of Cambria ana ' .,'iirf rnnntif-i. ".ivS ."?tnJs also to the collection of claims iilers against tbe Government. jan24 ni nil(;i: W. OAT 31 AN, Attorney at J Li- and Claim Agent, Ebensburg, i county, l a. Pensions, Back Pay and County, and Vv...'..--y Claims collected. Real Estate c-"i sc! J. and payment of Taxes at "r C :-. Y. rok Accounts. Note3, Due Bills, y'jl'-xer.:;. collected. Deeds, Mortga ge?, JiTecsK-nts, Letters of Attorney, Bonds, r.ea:.r written, and all legal business irtful.'v "attended to. Pensions increased, l:i i :.; jalized Bounty collected. Qan24 fP J. WATERS, Justice of the Peace JJj and Scrivener. tsf OSce adjoining dwelling, on High St., : ezsburg, Pa. JfebT-Cm IT KINKEAD, Justice or the Peace and Claim Agent. 3.1 a fcj-Uir.ce removes '.o me om.ee xormerij :.; icd by M. llasson, Esq., on High street, ctsburg Pa. jan3l-6m DEYEREAUX, M. D., Physician I and Surceon, Summit, Pa. J Office east cf .Mansion House, on Rail it street. Night calls promptly attended j, ti cflice. may23 TWriSTKY. u Dr. D. W. ZmcLF.n, having opened an ce in the rooms over It. U. Thomas' store, fers his professional services to the citizens Ebensburg and vicinity. apl8-4m fnEXTISTllY. IL The undersiened, Graduate of the Bal- icre College of Dental Surgery, respectfully T3 his professional services to the citizens Ebensburg. He has spared no means to '.aroughly acquaint himself with every iru--jTtment in his art. To many years of per zi experience, Lc has sought to add the -pjTte i experience of the highest authorities i Dentil Science. He simpiy asks that an t'cr.ur.ity iaay be given for his work to s:-f V-i lis own praise. SAMUEL CELFUUU, U. D. S. - 'j: i'roi". C. A. Harris ; T. E. Bond, ; ". i;..:uly ; A. A. Blandy. P. H. Aus- o, c o.i.timore College. fc?" Will beat Ebensburg on the fourth cf each month, to stay one wiek. i::.iry 21, 18G7. C3 I LUYD & CO., Hunkers ILi EBE'crito, Pa. &-" Goli, Silver, Government Loan3 and ur Securities bought and sold. Interest ei en Tire Deposits. Collections made ill cecessiUe points in the United States, a livr-ercl P-ar.kicg Business transacted, famary 2t. li'JT. "XT M. LLOYD & Co., Bankers 'T Altooxa. Pa. I'rr.frs on the principal cities, and Silver Uo'i fur sale. Collections made. Mon- fnctived on deposit, payable on demand, r rates. nan24 K . Mnvi I'rr' jnH i.i.ftvn. f?ti1.i?T (plRST NATIONAL 13 A NIC H oPAT.TnnvA. g o rERXJirxr a Graver, ESIGSATED BEPOSITORY OF THE UNI TKI STATES. " 'a-T r-,otnorV rpiniaand Acnie 8ts:.North ard, Altooua, Paf. I'.crHORrzrD Capita. $300,000 00 a i-AfUAL VAIV IS 150.1,00 CO 1 A'l business pertaining to Banking done on 'ernal Revenue Stamps of all denomina 1 a.ways on bnnd. To purchasers of Stamp?, percentage, in ,.ps, w;U be allowed, as follows : 30 to , - J, per cent. ; $10C to $200, 3 per cent. -J find upwards, 4 per cent. fian2 )HESJ. LLOYD, Successor of It. S. Bunn RY x v n P 7 x- f 5 .' " VL- U rLfiP0aES, PATENT MEDICINES, &c. Also : Cap, and Note Papers, Pens, Pencils, Superior Ink, And other articles kept Vi v rF-T-i.r-,-. i , . . -j "t6w generally. 0V-n V'W" cartfully compounded. JatTAc r. v "fi"HB me jioun ouse, Eoensburg, Pa. rjan24 P SFIARRETTS DYSERT, 2fof 7 r- ' , "-namnraz l'axntingt Grain- V.r uU euuri nonce, and eatis- HfnarAnUe Sh in tasemVnt of s HOE STORE I SHOE STORE ! ! The subscriber bega leave to inform the people of Ebensburg that he has just received from the East and has now opened out, at his etore-room, the LARGEST ako BEST ASSORTMENT OF "WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S BOOTS asd SHOES OF ALL KINDS I . ever brought to town. The stock was made expressly to order by the BEST SHOE MANUFACTORY IN PHIL A., the subscriber having gone to the trouble and expense of visiting that city especially to order it. The work iswarraated not to rip if it rips, it will be REPAIRED FREE OF CHARGE! A visit to hi3 establishment will satisfy any one that he can not only sell a better arti cle than & competitors, but that he can also sell CHEAPER'TIIAN THE CHEAPEST I He also continues to manufacture Boots and Shoes to order, on short notice and in the most workmanlike style. A VERY SUPERIOR LOT or REAL FRENCH CALF SKINS ON HAND! s3" Stand one door east of Crawford's Hotel, High street, and immediately oppo site V. S. Barker's store. feb21 JOHN D. THOMAS. SADDLERY AND HARNESS ! The undersigned kesp3 constantly on hand and i3 still manufacturing all articles in his line, such as ' SADDLES, FINE SINGLE AND DOUBLE HARNESS, DRAFT HARNESS, ELIND BRIDLES, RIDING BRIDLES, CHECK LINES, nALTERS, "WHIPS, BRICHBANDS, tc, 4c. All which he will dispose of at low prices for cash. His work is all warranted, and being expe rienced in the business, he uses only the best of leather. Thankful far past favors, he hopes by attention to business to merit a continuance of the patronage heretofore so liberally extended to him. jan24 Shop above the store of E. Hughes k Co. Persons wishing good and substantial Harness can be accommodated. HUGH A. M'COY. VALUABLE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE ! The subscriber offers at private sale the Farm on which he now resides, situate in Cambria Township, Cambria county, con taining about 50 acres, nearly all ot which are cleared, and having thereon erected a Two-story Frane Dwelling House, a new Frame Barn, and all the necessary Outbuild ings. There is a good Orchard on the Farm, and an excellent Well of Water at the kitch en door. Only five minutes' walk from the Railroad Depot. Terms moderate, and title indisputable. Apply to the undersigned on the premises, or address SAMUEL TIBBOTT, apll.3m Ebensburg, Pa, WOMAN'S WORK IN THE CIVIL T f WAR. A work of real value, absorb ing interest and universal popularity. The press and literary people everywhere commend and endorse it. It records the consecrated work of woman in organized and united effort, and the names of nearly C00 of our country's noblest women, with what they did for hu manity and for the nation in its darkest hour3. Beautiful steel portraits of a number of these ladies adorn, the work, and it i3 acknowledged to be one of the finest works ever published. Clergymen, Teachers, Experienced Agents, and Ladies will find it to their advantage to canvass for this work. Address ZEIGLER, M'CURDY i CO., 5cl Chestnut st, Philadel delphia, Pa. jel3-3m LIME! LIME 1 LIME! Farmers, look to your Interests ! The subscriber is now prepared to furnish any quantity of good fresh LIME ASHES! By the car-load of 300 bushels, at the follow ing prices : ESs" 5 cents per bushel, or $15.00 per car," .LOADED AT THE BANK. Also, Building Lime in any quantity at reasonable rates. All orders will be promptly attended to. Address MTM. H. CAN AN, apll-3m El Dorado, Bliir county, Pa. ATEW CHEAP CASH STORE ! ! The subscriber would inform the eitizens of Ebensburg and vicinity that he keeps con Stantlv on hand everything in the GROCERY AND CONFECTIONERY line, such as Flour, Tea, Coffee, Sugar, all kinds of Crackers, Cheese, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, Cigars, &c. CAXXED rE AGUES AND TOU170ES! Also, Buckskin and Woolen Gloves, Wool en Socks, Neck ties, &c., all of which will be 6old as cheap if not cheaper than elsewhere. A full assortment of Candies ! JDSr Ice Cream every evening. -jan24 R. R. THOMAS. . COAL! COAL! COAL ! The subscriber is now carrying on the Colliery of Win. Tiley, Sr., at Lily Station, on the Pennsylvania Railroad, Cambria coun ty, and will be glad to fill all orders, to any amount, of citizens of Ebensburg and vicin ity. Satisfaction as to quality of Coal guar antied in all cases. WM. TILEY, Jr. Hemlock P. O., Jan. 24, 1867. RICKS ! BRICKS I BRICKS ! The JOHNSTOWN MANUFACTURING CO. have constantly on hand and for sale at very lout prices, a superior article of COMMON and PRESSED BRICK! XST Special rates of freight t6 all points On the Penna. Railroad- Address O. N. RAMSEY, Supt., May 9-era. Johnstown, Pa. OK. CURTAIN FIXTURE. Has no superior in the world 1 Is pronounced faultless by all who have seen it. It is predicted it will supersede all other Curtain Fixtures now in use. IS? For ial br Q. HUNTLEY, msr2l . Ebntmr, Pa. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hskrt Clay. EBENSBXJRG, PA., THURSDAY, JULY FOURTH OF JULY, 1826. ORATION DELIVERED IN EBENSBURG ON INDEPENDENCE DAY, 1826, BY MOSES CANAN, Esq. Fjellow-Citizens : Fifty years have passed half a century has rolled away since the cages ot America proclaimed to the world that these United btates should be free and independent. That which our statesmen dared to proclaim, our sol diers ventured to support. They fought -they bled they conquered. Tbe genius of man, which had long been shackled by the thralaom of tyranny, expanded into power ; and Freedom then shone forth in all its brightness of beauty. The favor of my fellow-citizens has conferred upcu me the pleasing duty of proclaiming, on this day of jubilee, from the heights of the Alleghanies, that America is yet free ; that after the lapse of fty years, our wise institutions have been found efficient to distribute happiness and prosperity to this widely extended community; that our Constitution, founded in wisdom and supported by virtue, is sufficiently energetic without the aid of kingly power or hereditary grandeur; that a representative Republican govern ment, where the rights of all are equally protected, and where every person has his due proportionate weight, is sufficient to regulate millions of lreemen. My pleasure on tbe present occasion is much increased when I look around me and observe the kind of audience I address. Not only native Americans, but emigrants from England, from Ireland, from Wales, from Scotland, from Germany, are listen ing to my voice We have met together as friends and fellow-citizens ought divested of all party rancour and national enmity to celebrate one of the greatest events in the history of man the birth day of a free nation. I hope we all come deeply impressed with gratitude to the Great Disposer of all events, who has cast our lot in a land cf religious and civil libcrtywhere all are equally protected in their conscience, in their life, their liberty, their character, and their property. It also gives me much pleasure to see this little band cf hoary veterans, whose exertions in early life were devoted to the cause of their country, and who have survived the wreck of time lonz enouzh to see the perfection of those free institu tions for which they contended. j Defenders of your country ! companions of the brave in arms ! how exquisite must bo your pleasure, and that of your few surviving compatriots, who are now con vened in various parts of the United States to celebrate this anniversary of In dependence, when you reflect that you contributed a part in procuring freedom for your country; you have now seen the experience of half a century successfully tried on the genius, the virtue and dispo sition of the people of the United States; you have found that liberty is congenial to them, and that they prosper under its auspices ; you are now but a small rem nant of that heroic band who shielded the rights of your country, and opposed their breasts as a bulwark against tyranny. Your country owes you a vast debt of gratitude. It has, it is true, permitted many of its defenders to descend to the grave in poverty. I hope that better feelings will dictate a better course, and that the declining years of those few sol diers of the Revolution who remain may be made comfortable by that wealth which their exertions, their blood, their sacrifi ces gained to their country. Those men who gained our Independence, who fought Lout the fight of liberty, deserve the great est praise. They acted nobly under the most discouraging circumstances. They were exposed to every possible hardship. They were badly fed, badly clothed, and badly paid. Frequently, they had no raiment sufficient to defend them from the winter storm. They often marked their steps with blood upon the frozen soil. But under all those difficulties, they struggled on, and gained their coun try's freedom the great object of'their pursuit. It is not my intention to enter into a detailed account of the early situation of the affairs of America, of the rise and progress of those causes which led to the Revolution, and of the many battles, diffi culties and hardships which attended the arduous struggle that finally terminated in the freedom of our country. Although the subject would be one in which your feelings would be deeply interested, yet I could not expect your indulgence long enough to describe it. Tho extended length of the day, at this season, would be too short for the purpose. The sun would descend below yonder horizon be fore the tale could half be told. From the earliest settlement of the col onists in America, they had many dangers and difficulties to encounter. Driven by oppression from their native land, they entered upon the arduous task of reducing the wilderness to a state of cultivation, and of either conciliating the Aborigines of the country, or of resisting their at tacks. Removed a great distance from the rest of civilized man, and navigation being then in an imperfect state, they en joyed but little opportunity of foreign aid Six old men who had ben soldiers of the RtTolutioa wer sitting near, tbe speaker. or support Some few whom the same causes had forced to brave the same dan gers occasionally joined the first emigrants. .f In process of time, from the unremitted industry of our hardy ancestors, the wil derness became checkered with cultivated fields j and cities and towns arose upon tho margins of our bays and rivers. "The busy hum of commerce" commenced; and happiness and prosperity began to dawn in our land. This state of prosperitv aroused the jealousy of the mother country. The British ministry, either willing to fill their coffers, which had been drained jy the long wars in which the nations had been engaged, or dreading the increase of power, and resolving to humble and de press in infamy that strength which after wards made their lion to crouch and tremble in his den, imposed upon the colonists the taxations and burden, and inflicted the indignities, which are so feelingly complained of, and so well de scribed, in the Declaration of our Inde pendence, which has been read to you. The cupidity of the British ministry was frustrated by the firmness of tho American people by the self-denial of those luxuries to which they had been fcr a while accustomed, and which they had begun to considar as necessary for their comfort. A due sense of the inju ries they were suffering, and of the ille gality of the impositions to which they had been subjected, aroused their appre hension and awakened their pride. A fixed resolution to resist the march of tyranny dictated the non-intercourse and non-importation acts. A firm and general resolve not to use nor to buy tho merchan dise of England pervaded almost every breast. Even ladies who had been used to all the finery of luxurious extravagance, cheerfully sumitted to the scanty and rude supply which the then infant state of our manufactures afforded. After having endured sufferings and indignities beyond measure after the cup of humiliation had been drained to the very dregs after every appeal to the feelings and the justice of the mother country had beer iu vain made, the resort to arms was had. The God of Hosts was invoked, and the energies ot the country were brought into action, in defense of invaded right. 'Our fathers rose with giant strength and burst the shackles of bondage. The struggle was long and arduous, but patriotism inspired the breasts love of Liberty nerved the arms and Washington, under the auspices of a benign Deity, directed the destinies of our country. When we consider the comparative strength of Great Britain and America at the commencement of the Revolution we are tilled with astonishment at the bold ness of that bravery which dared to resist in what appeared almost a hopeless strug gle, almost the effect of unthinking des peration. Great Britain was then one of tbe mosc powerful cations on earth. Her navies were ridiDg triumphant on every ocean. Her armies were marching to sure victory wherever the safety of the country or the ambition of the Ministry directed them. Proud of the talents and bravery of bcr naval and military officers, strong in the number and discipline of her armies, and, although immensely in debt, yet powerful in. resources, she considered our opposition as a mere Pjgniean resistance, ono that she looked upon with contempt, as easily to be put down by the mere f rown3 of her gigantic power. The Amer icans were destitute of a navy and an army. They wero almost destitute of officers experienced in the arts of war, and they were destitute of the necessary funds for carrying it on. An undisciplined militia had to oppose the prowess of veteran troops unused to defeat. But the recol lection of their wrongs, and certain misery if defeated, inspired the Americans with irresistible bravery and herculean strength. Although the times were fearful and gloomy, yet few deserted the cause of their country. We had but one Arnold. Heaven averted the consequences of his treachery ; and the contempt of the world has followed him. At first, but few dared to hope for In dependence. The opposition was consid ered by many as only the means of procu ring redress of the grievances under which they labored. Such men as Patrick Henry only looked forward with a prophet's eye to tho future destinies ot their country ; and by the irresistible power of their eloquence prepared the minds of the people for the pang of political separation from the mother country. When Independence was proclaimed, an almost universal burst of approbation followed. The spirit of resistance spread over the whole country. The people knew that the Rubicon had been passed, that there was no safe retreat, that they must support the Declaration, or sink into an abject state of subjection. If our Revo lution had failed, miserable would have been the fate of at least the leaders of that time. They would have suffered all the punishment annexed to the crime ot trea son in the sanguinary penal code of England. Like the illustrious Emmet, the youthful Hero of Ireland, our beloved Washington would have been dragged to an ignominious death, for having dared to defend the rights of his country. But Heaven directed otherwise Washington lived to see his country free to enjoy the blissingi of his countrymen, and the 4, 1867. highest honors they cculd confer; and died in'a good old age, lamented by their tears, leaving a character as a soldier, a statesman and a man, unequalod by any in any age. But, my fellow-citizens, although our heroes were clothed with honor in the war of the Revolution, yet it is from their conduct in the day of peace, and from the result of their glorious struggle that they are entitled to the greatest praise. After having achieved the freedom of the country after its Independence was acknowledged by the King of England, they, with their beloved and almost idolized Chief, retired -to the shades ot private life to enjoy that peace and liber ty which their valor had gained. It is no little praise to them that, after having so long endured so many privations, they retired without compensation and without murmuring. Our leaders were men, un ambitious, and with their soldiers firmly devoted to the best interests of their coun tr.y. e ka no daring Caesar no am bitious Cromwell no aspiring Bonaparte, who, under pretense of giving freedom to their country, made use of the confidence and devotion of their soldiers to throw around it the chains of their own tyranny. After peace was obtained, the people of the different States adopted a regular sys tem of Government. Constitutions were formed by which their internal concern? were regulated; whilst the whole were harmoniously uuited by the Constitution of the General Government the work of the sages of our land one of the greatest efforts of the human mind an instrument calculated to perpetuate the blessings of free Government one sufficiently power ful to protect the interests of the country, and sufficiently guarded to prevent an in fraction of tho rights of the citizens. This Constitution contains within itself a provision for amendment, when tho ex perience of time or the exigency of tbe country demands if. This provision re quires such deliberate examination of the evil and of the remedy as will at all times secure the country from tho rash decision of political excitement. Under this Constitution, our country has prospered and flourished. Our com merce has been extended to every part of the globe. Our ships float upon every sea. Our national character ha3 been established ona high standing among the nations of the earth, and our flag is re spected by all. The wise policy which has lately been pursued, of placing our country in a proper state of defense, will, it is to be hoped, prevent any future insults to our national dij the commencement of the war of 1812 were the result ot our want of preparation. We had been lulled by a long peace into a fancied security, and when we should have been ready to act with effectjWe had only begun to prepare. But when proper arrangements bad been effected, and tbe power of tho country brought into opera tion, our national character was retrieved, and feats of valor were performed worthy of the successors of the heroes of tho Rev olution. Peace is the best situation for a repub lic; and the best way to procure peace is to be prepared for war. And the surest mode of preventing an insult is the exhi bition of the power to resist it. The numerous fortresses which have been erec ted the education which is now given to j ouths at our military academies and the spirit which animates the volunteers of tho country, will render us at all times impregnable to foreign force, without in curring the exnense and the danger of an extensive standing army. Let proper cn ccuragemeut be given to volunteer corps let them be enabled to meet frequently for exercise and improvement, and an ef fective force of citizen soldiers will be always at the command of theGovernment, sufficient"to execute the laws of the Union, suppress insurrection, and repel invasion" Among the blessings which have arisen from the freedom of our government may be reckoned the spring and encouragement which have been given to industry and to every kind of improvements. The People, knowing that their rights will be protec ted, that whatever property or wealth they acquire will not be wrested from them by the grasping hand of tyranny, proceed with animation and confidence in all their undertakings. When the storm of the Revolution had blown over, and the calm of peace had re turned, a system of improvement commen ced, which has been gradually increasing. Within that comparatively short period, great changes have beea made on the face of the country; the wilderness ha3 been made to "blossom as the rose;" cities, towns, and cultivated fields are f pread over the whole United States. Immense ter ritories have been acquired from the In dians and from foreign powers; not by conquest and the effusion of blood, but by purchase at a fair and adequate price. Those territories have rapidly increased in population, and some of them are now formed into States, enjoying equal rights and privileges with the original States. Within fifty years the number of States united under the same Constitution has increased from thirteen to twenty-four. I hail with pleasing anticipation the time when our whole eountry will be in tersected by Canals, Railways, and Turnpike-roads, as the eure6t means of binding TSRMS:300 1EK- ANXVM- S2.00 IX ADVAXCE, NUMBER 24. r together the whob American People, by the indissoluble ties cf commercial inter course and reciprocal interest. That such . will be the result of the spirit of improve ment which has lately arisen amoug us, ' there is little reason to doubt. The object to bo gained is great, and the means of accomplishing it are ample. But a few years will pass before every practicable improvement of this kind will bo attempt ed; and there is no impiety in venturing the assertiou that the ingenuity and puwer of free man ii sufficient to remove every obstruction, and to break down every bar- -rier which nature has interposed between the different sections of the country. " Among the blessings of a free govern- ment, that of an untrammeled Press is not the least. "The Press is the freeman's guard the tyrant's foe." I hold it to be a sound opinion that the laws are best administered when the conduct and actions of those who administer them are open to public examination and public scrutiny. Our rulers hold their stations, not by hereditary right, but by the free choice of the people ; and as by tho fre quency of election they are often brought to the bar of public opinion, it is essential that that opinion should be formed from full and correct information. This infor mation a free Press can best give.. In proportion to the - necessity of correct public information ought to bo the pun ishment and disgrace of those who abuse the freedom of the Press by inculcating slanders and unfounded reports injurious to the character of individuals in either a public or private capacity. The encouragement given to the incu bation of useful knowledge has increased the number of daily and weekly newspa pers in the United States beyond all ex ample in any other country. It is little more than a century eince tbe first Print ing Press was established in America. At the commencement of the Revolution,, there were very few newspapers, and they were confined in their circulation princi pally to our commercial cities. Now, in addition to numerous literary journals, daily and weekly newspapers are issued from almost every county, town, and principal village in the Uniou thus widely diffusing knowledge and useful information of every kind, gives to us "the passing A newspaper tidings of th times." It is a valuable and cheap book for our children. It amuses and instruct and perhaps more than anything else gives to them a taste for reading, and for seek ing after useful information. Nothing but absolute poverty should prevent any father of a family from taking at least one newspaper, conducted with a view to ra tional amusement and general instruction. In a free government, education is en couraged, and many inducements are of fered for the promotion of learning. In the government of the old world, where hereditary right prevails, "any titled blockhead may wear a crown ;" but hero it generally requires education and talent to give promotion, and good conduct to insure its continuance. The hypercritics of England have af fected to contemn the talent of American, and have asserted with all the pomp of pride, that that etherial spirit which con stitutes true genius becomes stagnant un der the influence of the American climate ; that on our soil "fancy sickens and genius dies." Their self-important and fastidious travelers give to our customs and manners a false coloring and a wilfully perverted description. They despise those simple habits which the genius cf our govern ment requires, and which we would not exchange for all the gorgeous drapery of European fashions. It is true that prior to the war cf tho Revolution, there were few instances of extensive education, and few memorials of learning remain. The people of America were then engaged in those pursuits which were necessary for tho support of life, and are incident to tho settlement of a new country. Their ne cessities confined them to a close pursuit of agriculture, of commerce and the me chanical arts, except when called upon to defend their lives and their property from tho cruelly provoked but ruthless savage ; or when called to aid the mother country in her wars with France. These wars, however bloody and disastror.3 their events, ought to be considered as real blessings to the country. It was here that the first rudiments of war were acquired by tha hardy ycomtnry of America, which after wards enabled them to withstand the numbers and the discipline of the British armies. In this school Washington was taught. It was here that Putnam and some few of the early defenders of our country acquired their military knowledge. Are Americans destitute of genius Are they deficient in the talents which adorn peace or are necessary for war T Let the people of England answer these questions. Their palaces are dv "-- from the artillery of Heaven by the of Franklin, and adorned by the pencil oi West. They have been taught the true idiom and eoustruction of their language by Lindlcy Murray. The notes of their mammoth bank have been engraved by Perlcins. Their waters are covered with steam vessels, the invention of Fulton, and Irving and Cooper re now rivaling hair "great unknown" in works of genius and fancy. Tho Congress of the United States ia Conctud:d on fourth pa$t.