AAA A II ' 1 - " ' . - - rY " . 71 - -- i --..sr.i;. .i THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HE AVEH7 SHOULD BE DISTBXSUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW. THE RICH AND THE POOR, EBENSBURG, MARCH 26, 1856. VOL. 3. KO. 22. TBIIM8: THE DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL, is publish ed every Wednesday morning, in Ebensburg, Cambria Co., Pa:, at $1 50 per annum, if paid ' T advance, if not $2 will be charged. ADVERTISEMENTS will be conspicuously in nerted at the following rates, viz : - 1 square 8 insertions, ... $100 : Every subsequent insertion, .25 1 square 3 months, 3 00 J. ' c " . 6 00 ' " ' I year, 12 00 ''col'n : 1 year, ; : SO 00 . J 4 ft 15 00 Business Cards, 5 00 CtJ-Twelve lines constitute a square. rrrljfB. ' Speeches delivered before the Demo cratic State Convention. MARCH 4 til, 1S5G. ; GEORGE W. DREWEIl. Mr President and gentlemen of the Con vention : I do not know that I can say any thing to add to the proceedings that would brighten the prospects that now sniilo over the party, "or that would inspire in the bosoms of that party more devotion fco the principles heretofore advocated by them, or around which they now cluster with the resolution to bear them aloft in triumph as in days gone by, or to fall proudly with them on the field of battle. Sir, Pennsylvania, before to-day, has been the great battle field upon which the battle of the Constitution of the country has been fought. She has been tho ground upon which that Constitution has been vindi cated, and upon which its purity and its wis dom have been proclaimed and maintained by her Democracy. In the approaching canvass, it is not, Mr. Chairman, simply : a contest of uiiuor principles or measures, but that great .palladium of the country, the great ark of the Union have been assailed, and it becomes the -jroud duty of the Democracy of Pennsylva nia once more to rally around it and preserve it from the hands of the assailant and the dagger of the assassin. Applause. No man can hrve witnessed the deliberations, of this body without pleasure and without pride ; no oue can have marked the spirit that has animated its members, or tho results that have crowned their deliberations, without feelings of exultation; but, sir, that sentiment of gratification broadens, expands and swells into afar nobler emotion, when be looks over Pennsylvania, the great Keystone of the Federal arch, and reflect that we, after all, are a mere handful of men, representing the masses of Pennsylvania in the advocacy of Mr Buchanan and his measures. I have been glad, sir, that it has been my (pleasure to listen to the dispatch that has been Tead from New Jersey. It is indeed gratify ing to see the States of this Union wheel into line. Sir, the battle to be fought next, fall is not the battle of Pennsylvania, it is the battle 'of the Union, and the people of tho Union will form the army, wish Mr. Buchanan to lead them to victory, and after victory is achieved, with statesmanship to guide the counsels of the nation, will be triumphant for free institutions the world over. Applause. ; ' The Ivuow-Nothings has been called the Dark Lantern party ; but I think this term is no longer appropriate They are no longer the Dark Lantern party. Their lamp has been extinguished, and their lantern Las been broken - Their, numbers have fled, Their lanterns arc dead, And all but Sambo departed. No, sir, we have nothing to fear from that party. The great principles brought here from tho old world by our forefathers, who were driven by tyranny to a waste into an Eden of joy and loveliness. Our forefathers, driven here by v.anny and intolerance, bleed ing with many stripes, have planted those stripes in glory upon our starry flag, and have turned the dungeon to which they were ban ished into a temple where religion can find a common shrine, and oppression tho safety of a common asylum. Applause. Mr. Chairman, while we are cheered by the prospects for our party, which are as bright as the sun which now illuminates the heavens, wc should not forget that we have a iigh wid important duty to discharge to our Belves and crar posterity. In our keeping, sir, is that integrity tho most priceless in 'heritance ever bequeathed to any people in the world ; and it depends upon the union, 'harmony, and vigor with which the Democ racy of Pennsylvania shall move in a solid column in the coming campaign, whether we '"will transmit this heritage to our posterity its glory unsullied and its honor unblotted. "Let us be tmitcd, then. Feeling the import-' 'ance of this contest, let us be animated by patriotism worthy of Pennsylvanians, worthy 'or the Union, and worthy of the man who is to lead our troops to victory: It becomes now the duty of Pennsylvania, through her people 'and .-through the delegates that have been selected to represent her at Cincinnati, to use means, to exert every energy of tho bodv .-and faculty of the mind, to secure the nomi- Hation'of Mr. Buchanan him, who, in davs : .gone by, has been the tower of strength him whose geaius has . thrown around his country the halo of its ' brightest glory him whose history is the triumphs of the country i -wbose integrity, whose elevated purpose, whose unswerving-patriotism are co-extensive "with the interests of this great,' mighty and growing Republic. Great applause. Let him be placed at the head of the Democratic army let him be' made the bearer of that glorious standard that has been carried trium phantly by the Democracy through - so many 'dark days ; let him whose plume has always Waved in the thickest of the battle, and whose ..TOiea baa cheered when the ). our k-A darVost - m mm &e our leader, and it needs - .. . ... . no prophet to predict that Pennsylvania, from hei green valleys, from her lofty mountains, from her hills and her dales, will roll up a majority equal to those that she rolled up in the days of the immortal and illustrious Jack son. Cheers. , And, speaking of that man, that illustrious patriot whose memory is enshrined in the heart of every American. I cannot but re mark that 1 was struck by a notice which I saw in a Berks county paper some time ago, announcing the nominations of the party that met at Philadelphia. I do not know its name Republican, Free Soil or Know-Nothing it had "Andrew Jackson" in capital letters, and " Donelson" in small type, with a small Vd" very appropriate and significant. Gentlemen, I will not detain you louger. We shall not meet agaiwiu this hall before the election takes place ; but I hope to meet every Delegate upon this floor, and not only to meet him, but the great people of this great State, at the ballot box, where one man is as good as another and a good deal better. Laughter Let us meet there, and vindi cate our principles and support our candidate, and victory will be ours. Great applause. genv wm. f. packer. Gen. Packer was loudly called for, and re sponded in the following eloquent speech : Mr. President: I am a little suprised that whilst we are congratulating ourselves upon the bright prospects of the Democracy fiom our own elevated position, that little or noth ing has been said in relation to the position and prospects of the party against which our forces will be turned on the first Tuesday of next November. What, pray, is their posi tion at this time ? Where is their platform "? Our platform has been announced here, and has received the unanimous sanction of this body, and wili be received with acclamations of joy by the great nationalDemocratic party from one end of this Union to the other. W e go forth as a unit, with our banners stream ing, and standing upon a platform to every part of which the Democracy of the country will say yea, and amen. Applause. What sir, is the platform of the opposition ? Where is it Why, sir, they have been in power iu Pennsylvania for the last year and a half ; and what is the history of that year and a half? They had the last Legislature of Peun S3'lvania. In the House of Representatives that assembled in this hall only one year ago, the dark lantern party had a majority of nearly forty. They had a Senator of the U. States to elect, but they met not in Conven tion as the Democratic party does, with open doors, and a record of their proceedings fair ly kept and published to the world ; but wind ing up that stairway with their dark lantern, at the hour of midnight, secretly and covert ly made their nomination, and when that nomination was made, and their decision pro nounced, so grossly corrupt, according to their own testimony, was the entire proceeding, that one half of their own caucus repudiated and spit upon their own nomination, and post poned the election of United States Senator indefinitely. What are the distinguishing principles of the party opposed to the Democracy '! Sir, they unite in bub- one thing, and that is in opposition to the Democratic party. They not only had t.Ris Legislature for the purpose of electing a United States Senator ; but it became their duty to carry out the will of the people in regard to tho license law, which had beeu directly expressed by the popular vote ; the question having been submitted to them by the previous Legislature for their decision, and they having decided by Eorae thousauds of a majority against prohibition. Uuderthese circumstances, what did this party do when it came to these halls ? Sir, one of its first acts was to pass a prohibitory law, and to defy the will of a mighty majority of the people. I do not object so much to the passage of that law, as to the circumstances under which it was passed, and the infamous manner in which they carried their legislation over the expressed will of a majority of the people of the State. It was an exhibition of that kind of disrespect for the popular will, which finds a proper channel through the representatives of the dark lantern party, who here, a year ago, concocted their wicked schemes. Mr President, this party not only had the Legislature of Pennsylvania within the last year, but that of our sister Stfte, Massachu setts. So overwhelming was the majority in that State in favor of the Know-Nothing par ty, that they had a clear majority over the Democrats and Whigs combined, of 500 in the popular branch of the Legislature. And with this majority, what did they do ? There is a provision of the Constitution of the Uni ted States that Constitution which every member of the State Legislature is sworn to support, in terms something like these "This Constitution, and tho laws of the U. States passed in pursuance thereof, shall bo the supreme law of the land." One of three acts of Congress, passed in 1850, which was, therefore, the supreme law of the land, and which every member of the Massachusetts Legislature had sworn to support, prescribed the manner in which fugitives from .labor should be delivered up to the person to whom such service or labor was due. This act the members of that Legislature, with the Bible in one hand and the Constitution in the other, which they had sworn to support, they utterly repudiated and nullified, by a solemn act of Assembly. Nay, they went further, and made it a crime in the State of Massachusetts for any man to aid in delivering np a fugitive slave. What do you think, fellow-citizen3 and members of the Convention, of that par ty, which, in the administration of public af-' fairs, will take an oath to support the Consti tution of the United States, and yet will vio late the plain letter of its provisions?' So gross an outrage was this to the Constitution, that Governor Gardner refused to assent to it, and yet they passed the bill by two-thirds of a majority over his head, and it stands upon the statuto book of Massachusetts to-day to tho disgrace of that old and time-hpnorcd commonwealthJ What more has this party done? They have a majority in the lower House of the National Legislature and has ever such a scene been witnessed as that which has taken place there since that party has had the management of affairs there in its hands ? Does the so-called American party plume itself upon the manner in which it conducts the American House of Representa tives ? Look at the proceedings that have taken place at Washington City, and say whether they do not correspond with the pro ceedings of the Know-Nothing Legislature here, and with the conduct of that party wherover it has been in power. What think ye of an American majority in an American llouse of Representatives electing a Speaker without giving him a solitary vote south of Mason & Dixon's line ? " Does any man be lieve that the American people can long be deceived4!!, - Does any man believe that in the rrcat contest about to come off, that the American people will place their confidence in a party that thus administers the public af fairs? No, sir : the nominations that we have made in this Hall will be triumphantly main tained. I can imagine that I already hear the trample of our own legions returning from victory. Sir, I consider the victory has been gained. Yes, sir, " Victory's closed in the brant of the fisht, . And the" day, likea conqueror, bursts on the night; Trumpet and horn swelling choral along, The triumph already.. sweeps marching in song." R. BIDDLE ROBERTS. Mr. President, I desire to occupy tho at tention of the Convention by a statement, which, though not strictly in order, will, I trust, from its character, be a sufficient ex cuse for this interference with its regular business. " ' . ' Sir, a happy omen has just occurred in our deliberations." Last night it was unanimous ly proclaimed in this largo and respectable Convention, that James Buchanan was their choice now and forever for the Presidency of this Union, and this afternoon, ere those de liberations close a telegraphic despatch comes from the State of New Jersey, in these words : Philadelphia, March 5. Despatches have been received from the Hon. J. R. Thompson, that the members of the New Jersey Legis lature have unanimously recommended the Hon James Buchanan for the Presidency." Deafejiing applause. Sir, I have nothing more eloquent than that despatch. I can say nothing that would move the hearts or elevate the voice of this Convention more nobly or more gloriously, than this wheeling iu of sister State after State, in favor of Pennsylvania's favorite son. Cheers. From the Atlantic to the Pacific, from Georgia to the CaHfomias, State after State proclaims him their choice, and that public necessity and the public welfare re quire the nomination of James Buchanan and James Buchanan only. Elevated as his name has been in State and national halls, his late glorious, firm and dignified stand in asserting and maintaining our rights abroad, will write his name in letters of fire on tbehearts tf the Democracy and the people of this country. Cheers. HON. WM II . WELSH. Mr. President I did not come here for the purpose of making a sheech, but simply to participate in the deliberations of the Conven tion as an humble member. I came here, sir, simply to gather with the Democracy of Penn sylvania around their annual council fires I came here to perform with them a solemn lus tration at the pure and limpid fountain of De mocracy I came here to look with them up on our old battle flag, that has been so often crowned with the laurel wreathes of victory, and to pledge with them my constant and un alterable devotion to its bright stars and its red stripes, which have never yet been given to the breeze, that they did not blend and mingle in harmony and beauty with the glori ous stripes and stars imprinted upon the con secrated ensign of our common country. Per haps, Mr. President, I have some little right to speak here to-day, when the name of James Buchanan is mentioned. I had the honor to be associated with him for two years, during his mission in London an honor that any man might well be proud of and, sir, iu all my intercourse with him, wherever, the place, or whatever the occasion, whether in London, in the Court, or with the people, I can say to this Convention, and can say to the people of Pennsylvania, as I hope to have the pleasure of doing in many places between this and the next election, that he was in every instance, wherever he went, under ail circumstances, thoroughly and entirely an American citizen. Applause I can say this, that the British Court never received a bolder rebuke than when amid their blazonry and trappings, their gewgaws and goldn lace James Buchanan walked proudly erect in the plain and simple dress of an American gentleman. Applause. We have met here to-day for a double pur pose for the purpose of selecting candidates for a' State ticket to be supported in the ap proaching contest, and also for the purpose of ascertaining the choice of Pennsylvania for the next Presidency, and presenting a Dem ocrat to our party in our sister States, and asking that we shall no longes be hewers of wood and drawers of water, but that the long neglected, claims of Pennsylvania shall now be recognized in the National Convention. Applause. I never in my life felt more in terest in any approaching campaign than the one now opening before us. I believe honest ly, that upon the success and permanency of the Democracy of this Union depends in a great measure the permanency of our repub lican institutions. The Democratic party has always been the party of the people. Every cardinal principle of its faith aims most stri kingly at an enlargement of the popular rights. We have always contended for an extension of the. elective franchise; battled for tho destruc tion of monopoly : taught everywhere that the people are the safest depositories of political power ; struggled for the reform of abuse ; taught that the poor mau is on the same equal ity with the rich man, that his priceless inher itance! of freedom is the same, and that the hewe of. wood and drawer of water has as muchright to be considered in the fashioning of municipal regulations as those whose good fortunes have placed them beyond the pale of labor.! And we have also taught, and have always taught it with pride and pleasure, that it matters not where a man first drew the breath of ; life, nor under what sun he may have first seen the light of Heaven, if he ful fils all our constitutional requirements, he can make a good citizen ; that a man's religion Is a matter between himself and his God ; that in this free and happy country, the raiubow, and not tb?. cloud, surrounds the blessed cross of our' RedJet- fid thatFfe'w or Gentile, Catholic or Protestant, he shall not be perse cuted on account of a faith made dear to him by the memory of his fathers, and hallowed by all the sacred recollections of the past. Applause. . M r President I have nothing more to say. I thank this Convention for the honor done me in permitting me to address it. I to day enlist in this Democratic army. I will go forth whenever I am needed in this Common wealth, from the Delaware to the Allegheuics, reuderlng any service, that I may be able to do, not only to secure the success of James Buchanan, but the success of the-Democratic party of this Union ; Applause: and if we all do our duty, and go to work iuanfulby, af ter the next Presidential election the Demo cratic standard will be floating gloriously and triumphantly over' the millions of freen-en now scattered from the icy waters of Maine to' the golden sands of the Sacramento Great applause. The Hero of New Orleans. From the Boston Tost. All our readers have often heard of Old Hickory, who fought many enemies in the course of his life ; and among them none was more powerful, fascinating and subtle than the National B&nk, with its gold and silver and paper arms, spreading like the railroad bauds all over the na.tiou. . Lion-like and in corruptible, dissimilar to many who had yielded to its bribes and accommodations, he vanquish ed the unconstitutional mammoth. Let us now for a while direct our attention to an individual much his junior in age; we mean Young Hickory, who preceded the old gentleman by many years His ancestors are traced back to Scotland : and they belonged to that band of colonists whereby England designed to establish permanent dominion iu Ireland, after she had subjugated that ill-fated nation Young Hickory's grandfather was christened Hugh. He was a linen draper near Carrickfergus in the north-east of the Emerald Isle ; and had four sons, the 3'oung est of whom was named Andrew. In the same year that the infamous stamp act was passed, in 17G5, British oppression compelled this 3-oungest son, with his family, to leave their native country. They accordingly em barked for America, and settled in South Carolina. . . J Just eighty-nice years ago, this day, was born the infant Hickory; and though a native American himself, ' his unfortunato parents were nothing but industrious, liberty-loving, fugutive foreigners ; and worse than this, they were Irish ! An Irish family in free America, the only asylum on earth for the down trodden. Yes, down in South Carolina, one of our glorious thirteen, this Irish family settled ; and a poor American Irish 01? Irish American infant dared to be -born, in two years afterwards ; and he also dared to breathe American soil, after he was born. This da ring child was no less than Young Hickory, the subject of our brief sketch ; and while a lad, his father died and left him an orphan, in no opulent circumstances. His mother gave his two brothers a common education, but desirous to see this daring youngster, this half-Irish orphan, in the church, sent him to an academy, where he progressed rapidly in his studies. But the revolutionary war roused his friends and neighbors, who were also Irish and Scotch, to join the resistance to Britain. They were but a few of thousands of Irish men who helped the colonies throw off the British yoke. In 1780, August G, at the age of thirteen, this daring youth, with his broth er Robert, was fighting under Sumpter against the English. garrison at Rocky Mount. Noxt year, we find him battling a party of torks. (Know-Nothings,) who were endeavoring to waylay and kill the patriot Lands then shel tered in our young hero's house. At two different vollies, three men were shot down close by his side, while he was firing at these marauders. In each instance Providence fa vored this half Irish boy, for he was uninju red. Shortly after thi3 Lord Cornwallis sent a detachment of dragoons in pursuit of him and his comrades. They were successful. -These reckless soldiers seived the household property of his mother pretty much as were the patriot Jefferson's crops, slaves, fences, barns and live stock, served directly under the eye of Cornwallis. No effort was made by the commanding officer to save her proper ty from destruction. Nor were the juvenile prisoners treated civilly. This was the same Cornwallis that, on his return home, decora ted and enriched hi house with the silver and other aicveables his myrmidons had filched from Americans It was Zjord Cornwallis Young Hickory was sent to jail in Camden, where he remained till released by means of his mother, a common Irish woman. How could she have influence ? Not long after this, exhausted with her constant efforts to aid the sufferings of American prisoners at Char leston, she died. " When near eighteen he began to study law. At the are of twenty he was appointed Dis trict Solicitor for part of North Carolina. We soon find him aetivej in skirmishes with the Indians. They styled him "Sharp Knife," and ? Pointed Arrow." His legal. practice became extensive and lucrative. In 1705 ho was chosen a member of the Tennessee con vention to frame a consiitution, for he was then a resident of west Tennessee ; and Dec. 5th he was a member of the llouse of Rep resentatives. Next year, at the age of thirty, Nov. 22, he was in the U. S. Senate While Senator he was chosen Major-General of the Tennessee militia, which office ho held till 1814, when he took the same rank in the U. States army. In 1790 he resigned his teat in the Senate, and was appointed a judge of the Supreme Court in Tenneee. Hero he displayed much talent, sound judgment, and indomitable resolution, even to arrest ing arm ed ruffians, who kept the Sheriffs at bay. This office he soon resigned and retired to an excellent farm ten miles from Nashville, where he cnjo3"ed himself in agricultural pursuits for several years. Iu the war of 1812 he rallied and headed a body of twentyrfivc hundred volunteers, in the midst of a very rigoroujt filter, on a march to Natchez ; but, circumstances shortly allow ed him to disband them. By this time it will be perceived that the half Irish boy, the da ring orphan, had grown to manhood Now, w e suppose some of our exquisites would call him a half Irishman. Well, so be it nobody cares, lie was courageous. The Creek Indi ans began to commit barbarities on the fron tiers. Tecumseh was the warrior. Hickory was called upon to protect our countrymen. Thirty-five hundred troops tame under his command. In October, 1813, he was after the savages, routed them with a loss of 2'J9 warriors, marched his army back to camp, where he and they endured many privations. Intrepid and determined, he fought many bat tles with various tribes, conquering and rou ting them iu all directions, die was appointed a commissioner to negotiate a treaty with the Creeks. The bat tic of Tcbopeka Lad brought them to terms. Having accomplished his objects our scar red veterans proceeded to "New Orleans, and arrived there December 1,1814. This key port of the Mississippi ho immediately began to place in a state of defence, concentrating an army there. It was a difficult task. Louisiana was poorly supplied with arms! Besides, the city was infested with emmissa ries, traitors and tories, who had been opera ting upon the fears and prejudices of the peo ple. Hearing that the cne my had captured an American flotillo stationed below, and that three thousand of them were Uiakiug a land ing about seven miles off, our hero of foreign extraction suddenly appeared in their view, promptly and energetically charged upon and drove them farther down tho river. This was done by means of militia patriotic citizens who keep armed, equipped and drilled, ready for service. Such made Burgoyne surreuder. Such we have among us to sustain our laws and keep public peace. It was at this arm of safety our last Hiss Legislature aimed its scor pion blow, when they wished to substitute a police corps in in its place. After the Ameri can breastworks had been well nigh comple ted, the British troops, ten thousand strong, headed by Sir Edward l'ackenham", came up on our veteran's forces ia solid columns ; but they were repulsed, shot down by battallions, and retreated at quick time. Paekeuham, several oScers, and nearly three thousand of their men were killed. This was on January 8, 1815. In ten daj s after the enemy re-embarked. Our half alien Hickory remained at New Oileans till news of peace reached him, when ho repaired to bis usual retreat in Tennessee. There he continued ia private life for a few years. Florida was yet possessed by the Spaniards, and served as an asylum for the Seminoks, Creeks, and runaway negroes, who were con stantly ravaging our frontiers. That he had no milk and water antagonist iu the Seminole may be collected from the following stanza descriptive of their inflexible traits : I loathe ye with my bosom, I scorn ye with my eve And I'll taunt vc with my latest breath, And light ye'till I die, I ne'er will ask ye quarter, And I ne'er will le your slave ; Cut I'll swim the sea of slaughter, I'll sink beneath the wave," In 1819 ho started, under tho orders of the United States government, fur. tho scene of action, to suppress these incursions, rented the aggressors, executed two British instiga tors, and speedily ended the campaign. Then he marched at the head of twelve hundred men to Pensacola, and occupied it with Uni ted States troops. It seems that its Gover nor, Callava, had been sheltering the enemy. Being blamed by the news journals for this act, he hastened to Washington and explain ed his reasons in person. Two years aft-r he was made commissioner and Governor of the Florida. July saw our athletic hero there organizing the territory, and in October he returned to Nashville It is obvious by this time thathc person- age we have been sketching Las attained au age which entitles him to the venerable aud honorable appeiation or uiu memory iusi sturdy Ajax 'his name as of antiquity almost prefigured j well as his exploits. And his ' eat was no more nor less than the domestic retreat famous Hermitage. Iu 1S24 he wa nouiina- ted for the Presidency, and received a greater share of the popular vets than either cf his . three competitors ; but, tlie elect 10a lulling a tailing to ; the House of Representatives, he was bam boozled out of it bv a coalition of intrigue. Four years subsequently, however, that da- ; ring infant had reached an age and a eelebri- ( ty which recommended him successfully to ' the people's suffrages. The half alien Old, Hickory left the Hermitage for Washington, ! to be President of the American republic, j How nobly, how ably he administered the ' govcrLtncnt during his double term fur he was elected twice, and his influence elected his successor as well as Polk even hi i4it- ; ical opponents acknowledge. He was dktiu truLshed for boldness if conception, resolute- ness of nuinoso. vifor of aetiou. a wide scope of cc-uf ri;Lenji:a, r r o . and a scuu l ju'Icient. In :uic caused r.y thit eiue the xziln cf tlie 1 of Mammon, with its Briarean arms. Argus eyes, and Herculean power the U. States Bank when the inflated credit system was crumbling to pieces aud crushing around him," the American Ajax 4 stood erect, a massive human column, which the heaps of falling ruins could not brea, nor bend," nor sway from its fixed foundation." Having completed his second term, the staunch republican retired from the jbtorms of publie life to pass the remnant of hi days at tho Lcai th and in the family circle of the con genial Hermitage. There he lived iu tran quility and comfort, the laurelled warrior, tho statesman sage, the reverend Ex-Presideut till age had blanched his cheeks, tilrered hn locks, and dimmed his eye ; till the sable winp of death fluttered over his .brow and sealed his mortal sight forever. But death shrinks from the vivifying - touch of immortality. Though Andrew Jackson, closed htm earthly career on the evening of Suudiiy, Juue, 8, 1845,"' his name; his nets, his spirit, ae in delibly enstamped upon a human tablet which can never be demobbed, aud in characters which Time's fiugers cauuyt erase. They are impressed in the broad aud tenacious memory of a free aud grateful people. They will al ways live To him we look for a political model. ' ' To his principles we yield humble deference. HLs' propounded mcaeures and opinions we would cherish. His glorious example we would copy. - Far, very far, from us may it be to euJeavor to create prejudice cgaiust such patriots as he, or any of their defendants, by crying "foreigner, alien, Irish; or foreign extraction." The accident of birth none can control ; nor has it anything to do with the true standard of our race, that of our man hood. It is rather an imperative duty than otherwise for us to discountenance such exclu siveness, especially in a county so deeply in debted as this is for its discovery, exploration, settlement, and inePpendence, to citizens of almost every foreign civilized nation. Mod esty is more" becoming to us than self-conceit. It was our Minister Plenipotentiary James Monroe who was in December, 17'JG, thus addressed by a foreign high functionary : " The French republic expects that the suc cessors of Columbus, RaleigTi and Pcnn, al ways proud of their liberty, will never forget that they owe to France." For our part, we cheerfully accord to the illustrious general and statesman, who was so appropriately styl ed by his myriads of admirers the Old Ro man, for his sterling qualities, the meed of national praise. We venerate the name of Andrew Jackson for his sincere, and mighty. iuu. successiui enorts ior our permanent wel fare, for his defence of the Constitution, and his invaluable contributions to the perpetuity of the American Union. A Beautifcl Inscription-. In Trinity church-yard, there is an inscription on a tomb, so singularly and afiectingly beautiful, w e can not forbear to record it and the emotions it awakens iu the bosom of a stranger. It is uu oblong pile of masonry surmounted by a slab stone, on which arc deeply cut the following words : "my mother! The trvmKt sh-all sound uud the dead sliill rise." There are nrs other letters or characters to be found on the blab or pile. If there is one inscription in the thousand languages, that are, or have been, of earth, fitted to retain iu bubiime meaning through every period of time up to the resurrection morning, it is this. The writer seemed aware that names would be forgotten, and titles fade from the memory of the world. He, therefore, engraved thu name ty which ho first knew her who gave him birth on the stone and the deare.-t of all names, that of MOTHia, shall sound & thrill through thy heart of every one who may ever lean over this monumental pile. If any shall wish to know further of her, who La 1 a child to engrave her most endearing name upon a rock, he is e ublimely referred to the sounding of the trumpet, aud the rising of the dead, when may know all. Aew York Mirror. A Blcxdir. Most of the. English papers are frequently ignorant of American affair.-", and wc have often been amused at jthcir blun ders when speaking of our politics and geog raphy. But the most amusing mistake, of receDt date, is that made by the Iiuhjicnihwc Bchjer a Brussels jourual, which says, in ref erence to Mr. Banks, Speaker of the House of Representatives : "The new Speaker of tho llouse is a lAack of Massachusetts, who belongs, his cobjr sujfirit ifjij indicates, t tho extreme party of abolitionists." What will Speaker Banks think of this? for, although ! ho belongs to the Black Republican party, he is certainly not a Hack man. S" The " Tenth Legion," a sound Dem ocratic paper published at Woodstock, Va., is strcnly iu favor of Mr. Blcuanax for the l'residedc)-, and is of the opiok.11 that, iu the event of his nomination, he will " assuredly receive the electoral votes of New York, Peuu syivania. New Hampshire, -Maine, Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, .ikansas, iexas, -His- soun, inn;na, liunois, .uicnigan, lowa, aua probaLly North Caro'.iua, Tennessee, and New Jcisey." The editor says further, that ho " cannot count the same number of States for 3113- oilier candidate" named iu connexion with ih-i nomination. The FiiiMrrsEtT a know nothing low.e. A Kuow Nothiug lodge wa.s burnt out by the rcceut fire in Syracuse. Their furniture nveiitoried, according to the Staudard, four ! broku chairs, a three-legged desk, lour vol ' uiacs of The ad rent arts M-tria Movk.'K 1 lot of choice songs composed by Seth,"a copy cf tne Bible in Hindoo, aud a brazen ;, eagle with silver wings and a blue tuil. Tne bird of liberty wes dettrftTcd. ed and all the ixsX was i : 1 r A - 5 . v ' t !' inr T