sA HVEY SICKIiER, Proprietor.] N -£W SERIES, |ort| Braitcji ratflrtah weekly Petnocratic ;g -- ,!*r, devoted to Pol- _ v fe?? ye*?, the Arts J&- fc -H ( jj Sciences Ac. Pub * Wednes - i :,r at Tunkhannock, ifZfr f. i' W K vowing County, Pa. / |j j 1 :y HARVEY SICKLER. ~ Terms-1 copy 1 year, (in advance) si.so. If pain within ?ix months, $2.00 will be charged ADVETITISIIMa. 10 lines ori , j j j less, make three four tiro three m.r < one one square icetks iceeks mo'th\mo'th mu'lf year i~C;r TotijTij S 2.37' mo! 5.00 2 do 2 50! 3,26 350 4,50 6.00 3 do." 3.00; 3,75< 4,75 5,50; 7.OU< 0,00 Column. 4,00' 4,30' 6.50. 9,00*10.00 13.00 j do fi.no 7.0(1 10,00 12.00' 17.00; 25,00 ido 8,00; 9,501 i4,oi: 1b,00,25,00 35,00 I do'. 10,00,12,00 17,00 22,00,23,00 40,00 Business Cards of one square, with paper, $5. JOB wobis: [fall kinds neatly executed, and at prices to suit lie times. IksiitfSS cjlofirfs. BACON STAND.—Nicholson, Pi. CT, JACKSON, Proprietor. [vln49ti ] nr sTtOOPER. PIIY9IGTAN A 81 KOF.OX 1 Newton Centre, Luzerne County Pa. pLO. . TUTTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. J Tunkhsnnock, Pa. Office m Stark's liii-.-k Hock. Tioga street. ITTM. M. PIATT. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of- IV fice in Stark's Lriek fiiock, Tiug.i St., Tank uuioi k, Pa. ITTLE it DLVVITT, \ ! ' V - AT J LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tunkhannock. B. n. LITTLE. .1 PK'.riTT. j v. smith, m. p, pin - - ;EOJ • fiffii-c on r.ri Ice Street. ne\i In rto the Pftiuo- Ai Offi'-v. Tun' J, TARVEY SII'KLEK, ATToLXEY AT 1. YYV 1 and GEXEIt.YL JXBH: \X<"': \.:I'XT Of t. Bridge street. opp.-.it.; \\ Hi's Motet. T'luk!; -n --k Pa. i W. M. JO>.. Graduate of the University of Fenv'a.) Respectfully offers Ws jiruf • n-' 1 n i -i:< to the liiens ot Tuhkbmnoc.k and vi. iniry. tin r7ih he nnd. when not jirnfessioiinlly emroircit. eit'ii-r at hi.- ■r; Store, or at his resideu e on I'utii.un Street. lit. J. C. f'ORSI'.f.IT'S, If AY'-fYt; T.OCAT / ED AT THE FALLS, WILL promptly atti-n l il calls in tl,e line of his proi'c.-?iou—m.iy io 1 ißeemer's Hotel, when r. t j r.tfessTonatlv - -nt. Fills, Oct. 10, 1861. DR/I. O. m.t is't It At 0., PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS* ii'auhl rn-eetfully announce to th.c eiliz i: -of M'y aing that thej have h i ited at M> hi.opanv, where ley will promptly ntfrnd to all call- in the line of *ir profession. May be found at bis Drug Storo ten not professionally absent. AL. CAItEV, M. I). i M. Institute, Cincinnati) would respeottnltv nance to the citizens of Wyoming an I Luzecfie Bties, that hecintinues his rcrularj ractice in th sous department? of his profession. May oe Gun i ki? office or residence, when not professionally ub- T' 5 * Partieidar attention given to the treatment Chronic Diseas. entremorelaud, YY'yoming Co. Pa.—\2u2 WALL'S HOTEL: LATE AMERICAN IIOUCE, tnkhannock, wyomini; ( , PA. ib.S establishment has recently been refittc 1 an 1 furnished in the Infest style Every atM.i h n 'be given to the oetntort and uouvcu cuee ol tho.-e tpatruuize the House. T. It. WALL. Owner an 1 Proprietor. 'Unkhannoek, September 11, lobl. ORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MEsIIOPPEX, YVVOMINR COUNTY, PA ILEY WARNER, Proper. •1Y IXff resumed the iiroprietorship of tho ahove Hotel, the undersigned will spare no effort to ! r tiie house an agreeahlo pin. Eof sojourn for 0 mn y favor it with their eustoux. , , HILEi WAKNi'.M. •eptemher 11, 1801. HOTEL, T UN KIl \\*\ T OC K'. WYOMING CO( XT Y, i'EXXA 'ohn MAY YARD, Pi-opiictor. A yw ;l ' {cn H ie Hotel, in the Borough" of lankbannrek. recently Oeeupied b v Kilov . -er, the propnetqr resp-etftaHy poli its a sb ro n't The House has b en t boroughtv "M, and tiie comforts and accomodation* of a J* V"' e b w ''l i>e I'ouud by all who tuny favor custom. Sei'tember 11 liJfil M. GILMAN: D HIST Ll,dli o OILMAN, in? permanently located in Tank- I gjianneck Borough, and respectfully tenders his tonal services to the citizens of this plaee and inding eountry. SWORK WARRANTED, TO GIVE BATI3- |#*office over Tuttou'a Law Office, near the Pos •*•11,1861. HOWARD ASSOCIATION," 'IA, J> , hhiladjelphia. hru/ Uf°f the Sick f) stressed ajftlc.'ed icith f hr■ /' Un ("hfUTiic DiaeaficSj and especially Vj " rt of Diseases f the Sexual Organs 'tjlvice given gratis, Hy the Acting Surgeon ' e Reports on Spermatorrhoea or Semuiss 1 ""d other Diseases of the Sexual Orj-ns ttit t " Sew lieru Jteiieniployed in the b*r. '*l e n ®' ct *d u sealed letter envelope ie wj./w wo or three stamps for postage wilf bo' Address, Dr. " ,T. BKTLLIN HOUGH •kT, ,ln S Surgeon, Howard Association, Nsoly 0 • tfeet, Philadelphia Pa, liiZJly. f Grounfl Plaater in (iuantities Q>l at priaoe to suitpurcbasers, now forsalo a nt> J * E. Mowby J* PEACE HON AND STATE RIGHTS, Speech of Hon. W. B. Reed, DELIVERED BEFORE THE DEMOCRATIC CENTRAL CLUB. OF PHILADELPHIA Saturday Evening, .March 28, 180.1. Ihe Hon. Win. B. Reed being introduced to the meeting, spoke as follows : 1 fear I 6hall poorly-repsv the honor you have done inc. by anything of interest that 1 can utter to-night. lam unused to the sound of my own voice. It has been so long repressed that it sounds strangely in my ears—for since the I7th of January, 1801 u.ore than two long years ago—l have not attended a public meeting beyond the limits ot my own neighborhood, or opened nay iips i:i public on any political question whatever. f haling, as every free man ol common intel ligence must, under the restraints which the Federal Administration has put upon ns, holding, :.s 1 d", very clear and decided opiu- I ions, J have written frankly and positively— | have not concealed, or tried t conceal, what | I have written, and am responsible for every ' word that has fallen from tnv pen—spoken ! I have uot. And f-.r thi same reason, or • resolution, ihai I would not speak, till I ! coul ! say—if not all I think, and hope, and ! lear—at least till what I did say should be my honest convictions, uttered without dis gui>e or apohgy, J l ave never been able to I reconcile it to self respect to uuite to anv extent in what, with my views, would be jI the more jargon of war and coercion, when I deplore and condemn the war, and believe coercion to have been a mistake fr >m the be ginning; and prav, and nope, and urge the necessity of peace, and if possible, '* Recon ciliation but Peace, even il the bond of sympathy be, a- I f•;r ir is ,irreparably brok ; en. And to night lam come here to speak j reasoni-ig, m ulerafc words in favor of that : provisional eesation of ho-tiliiii s which al j lows time and temper for deliberation and i conversion. And why should 1 n >t. ? Look ! hick, 1 bug you, with me, through tiie drea ry two years that have just closed—look back to the N'tti uial Hall meeting of Janua ry,'ol—think, not oi the timid and fickle men who were with us then, and who have gore from us—hut of the true men, like j your Chairman, (Mr. Ingersoll.) and others who stood by ti—tliink of our supplications and warnings then—tliink of the ghastly re alist it i >n of what we foretold, and the sorrow | now breaking the nation's heart, and then watch the great, craving of the popular mind toi the restoration of repose to this disorder ; ed people, and tell tne why, as an honest man and patriot, I should not think Mr. Secretary Seward, in his iast ditpatch to France, savs •' that no human being out of the seceded States had yet dared to raise his ! voice since the war began in favor of peace and comprotirse/' He i- very much mistak en. lie may not choose to listcN to it now But I tell him the stsil small voice which, hef re the wind and the earthquake, and tin* fire, Jong ago, whispered Peace, will soon K'well into tones which he will have to give ° heed. to. And no where is this sentiment stronger orstiu r than here amidst this great constat i ° , uency—the Democracy of Pennsylvania— That, constituency is far, very far ahead of ' its leaders, its orators, and its reputed or- gun*. The mass of the people of Pennsyl- vattia look the certain future in the face.— Its instincts shrink from standing on doubt i ful ground. That constituency has no sym pathy and means to have no co-operation with any organization of doubtful principle. I It stands by the Constitution, and it resents ! and never can give any violations of it; and I when I hear whispers of new setni-conserva tiv combinations, I say with knowledge and with emphasis, the Democracy of Pennsyl vania will have nothing to do with them.— When, as lately, 1 see two of the volatile politicians of the city <.f New York lighting on a branch of the blasted tree of Abolition ism, and chirping, and twittering, and plum ing iheir well-worn and ragged feathers with I f.iie idea that they can draw others around them, and 1 tell you that the wing of the true Democracy of Pennsylvania is too strong and its flight too high for sueii companion ship. Mr. Brady and Mr. Van Burcn are not leaders of us. If, to-morrow, there could be an election—if this constituency Could he polled, and every man be allowed to put into the ballot-box his opinion on the great questions agitating this country—T tell you, my friends, in every county of the State there would come up a vast surge of popu lar sentiment in favor of staying the bloody tide of war—arresting the increase of debt and taxation--calling back to peaceful in dustry the gallant men now wasting away in camps and pickets—caring and unweary ing gentleness for the sick anil wounded—lurl ing the flag of aggressive strife,—and gather ing up and nursing for the evil days hereaf ter, those local resources and energies which will be needed, and must be invoked before long, to withstand the fearful march of cen tralized dominion, and maintain within the Union, or, if t be destroyed by no conniv "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RlGHT."— Thomas Jefferson* TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1863. ance of ours, without it, tho sovereignty of 1 the Commonwealth. In my opinion, the next political contest in Pennsylvania will turn mainly upon the great question of local sovereignty and national consolidation. Un less some stop be interposed to the frightful march of Federal power—swelling and rag ng already beyond any limits that the most insane and speculative politician ever dream ed of-—unless the war having in its train, or for its tierce companion, the hideous thing called " military necessity," be soon ended, such most be the contest ; and I have no more doubt of its issue than I have of my ex istence. Ido not believe the grasp of power was ever tighter round our throats than it is now, and we must loosen it or perish. I watch with deep solicitude every sign or sjmplon of decay of the local sentiment which is all that the processes of this ghast ly strife has left us. We, in Pennsv Ivania, have just passed a crisis, the gravity of which was hardly measured outside our limits, and perhaps not fully within them. 1 refer to it H"W with a shudder at the narrow escape we made. It was the question whether Pennsylvania should honestly pay the inter est on her public debt, or pay it iu paper, legal tcudei notes' tiic iluent trash which the Federal Government is furnishing s > profusely. Ail around her were those who were singing and soothing strains of credit in its vulgar acceptation—Revenue Oouimip siom rs, advising lower taxation, counselling against local impositions which honesty might render necessary, and tempting her into the paths of dishonor. The Banks, who had contributed or pretended to contribute, much of iheir capital to the National loan, were re- 1 luciant to aid the State that create 1 them. | But the Democracy of Pennsylvania did not \ falter. They determinod, cost what it might to maintain the Slate credit, and they paid this pi rt ion of their debt like honest men. Had it not been done, Pennsylvania would nqw have been in the trough of the sea of repute 1 bankruptv, and woul i have keen only fit to he the appendage of a centra'ized | domination. State honor would have been j gone lorever, and sovereignty would not have I long su-vivod. S(ale,c.e lit now would suit 1 the Federal financiers exactly. The Demo crats mean to save the power and the' honor of the S'ate. Let no one a imagine, when I speak of this local sentiment and of its efficiency to save us, that I am talking of disloyalty or revolu tion. lam but speaking in behalf of the great principle of home government, and lo cal authority, which we inherit from our an cestors—which carried us through one Revo lution, arid may save us in another. Does any man imagine that we should have sur vived the YVar of Independence, or even at tempted it, had there been hut one Colonial Nation on this side the Atlantic ? It was not the man, Washington, speaking to the man, Hancock, or Adams, that made the gn at Revolt. It was Virginia speaking to Massa chusetts, and South Carolina to Pennsylvan ia, uWich stirred the Revolution and creates the Congress, as tho representative of States. Consolidation, in one form or another, is the great machine of power. It has been the engine that has kept Ireland in subjection. After Canada threatened revolt, her Provin cos were consolidated, and they have never murmured since. When the South is con quered, the lines of states, here and there, for the purpose of convenient government, are to be rubbed out, or made so faint and indistinct that no one will care for them, and a vast colonial military tenure will be creat ed to insure easy subjection. It is local or ganization which r.ow alone protects us with in ourselves ; and should this war ripen in worse convulsions new paroxisms of agony, having sheir root and cause in morbid action of central authority—should the load of na tional debt be to heavy a burden to be borne, there will be but one refuge and one remedy, and that will be in the sovereignty and pow er of the several States. If I have to ciioose between Union without States and States without Union, I have no difficulty in saying I cling to my State. The instincts of the people know this already. It may not be necessary to make this choice. Fragmentary and dislocated as I believe the Federal Union to be—sectional ized as I know it has become—l acknowledge with faith and obedience as firm as ever, my -ibligation to obey the Constitution as long as any of it is left, and its constitutional laws ; and the path which I desire to pursue to take me out of the miseries and oppres sions up<>n us, is one which the Constitution prescribes—a popular convention—national if it can be, and it not national, a State Con vention. But I look to a convention as an end not as a means—for as a means it is too slow. We shall bleed to death before a Con vention can be initiated. Still it i? a good ultimate result, in Pennsylvania the Dem ocratic House of Representatives can demand, and m New York, the Democratic Governor can suggest and urge it—and I should like to see the party which will dare to reject it and then venture to meet the test of popu lar suffrage, the alternative being the contin uance ol fruitless war, with -anarchy nnd revolution following in its hideous train. Such Conventions, emanating from and di rectly representing the people, wooid have adequate power. They would be as the Convention was that made Hie Constitution. 1 hey could chauge, modify, abrogate ; and if the institutions under which we live are to he changed or altered, in God's name let it be done by voluntary consent—not by the bloody processes of war made by us or against us—or, what is still worse, by the subtle in fluence of Executive or legislative usurpation. And why not ? I ask the question sorrow fully, not reproachfully, nor defiantly, for I have no room for such emotion in a saddened heart. Why nLt T No other reason can be given than that it implies a confession of weakness in the face of an enemy and of the world—an abandonment of strength in a strong government. Fellow-citizens, depend upon it, it is this idea of a strong government —this faith in an idea which has destroyed ns. Had the government never gone beyond the limit? of consent—ha.l it rejected, as did its fouuders, the heresy of coercion, as appli ed to anv State or combination of States, it would have been far stronger in the true ele ments of Republican power than it is now in all the panoply and parade of war. I never hear ol this idea ot power and strength with ou recalling an illustration which fiction and romance afford. You have at! read Scott's great epic of YVaverly aud remember its ca tiwtrophe.'iwhere the heroine is found working her brother's shroud, and sh • is told, byway of support and consolation, that sho must re ly upon her strength of mind to bear up against her misery, the convulsive agonized cry is, Ah, there. It is—there is a busy devil at my heart that whispers tho'it is madne>s to listen to it, that it i a that very strength on which I prided myself has murder ed my brother." And gentlemen. I tell you. and 1 big you to meditate on what I say, that it is this idea of strength and military power in a governraennt which was never meant to have any except by State concession against foreign enemies, which has broken this gov ernment down or changed it into the military neutralized despotism which it thrtatens Co he. Our*t>nly chance of rescue is in the mode I have ventured to suggest; State action by Conventions within the forms of the Con stitution, and, in the interval at least, provis ional peace, But if neither a national Convention for what is left, nor a recognition of what is left, nor a recognition of what is gone from us, nor even a pause, be tolerable—what then re mains ? War, persevering and protracted war, with sticces at any c >st and sacrifice, and conquest and suljugation. Nay, not only subjugation, but extermina tion—ami in saying this Ido not speak with out evidence, and I adduce it if for no other reason than to a-k you to brand with deep detestation the men and the organs which fur ni-h it. In one of the pipers of this city you will find a card of the negro Frederick Doug lass, calling fu-black volunteers in Philadel - phia, to be used in promoting servile insur rection in tho South ; and in a sermon or dis course by a New England clergyman—who is now rather a pet in the social and feminine and semi-feminine circles of this afflicted city 1 find a passage which I will simply read, leaving you to make the comment which its devilish atrocity demands : '• This war, is no longer a war in defence of the Union, the Constitution, and the en forcement of the laws ; it is a war to be car ried on no longer with the aim of re-estab lishing the Union and the Constitution with all their old compromises. Gud means not to let us oft off with any half-way work. I am now convinced, and I consider it the most httmnnSf the most economical and the most States-manlike policy now to take tie most radical ground possible, to assume that this is a war of the subjugation or tho extermina tion of all persons who wish to maintain thef slave power, a war to get rid of slavery and o slave holders, whether it be constitutional or not,', And within a few days, at the Loral League, in Chestnut street another itinerant preacher said, amid applause : " \Ye know they speak tho truth when they say that the negro slays everything in his reach when he rises in insurrection, YVe all have learned the history of St. Domingo? and it would be terrible to have a St. Domin go massacre enacted upon our soil. But tho President had declared this a military neces sity, and if blcod must flow we must not dread the consequence. Blood must flow in this war " But so impressed am I with the greatness of the interest engaged in this rebelion and its suppression, so satisfied of the inconceiva ble importance of the struggle that opens np before us >n the dispersion of this lebellion* that, T speak it meaningly, and as a Christian, deliberately and calmly, that I would see ev ery woman and child in the South perish ratner than the Southern Confederacy should succeed in attaining the objects of its leaders" [Applause.] Now of this, I can only say that I wonder any gentleman, afte rapplauding such a speech as this, could go home and look at one of his own sleeping children without a shudder. Negro ruffians with their bloody pikes standing over the cradles of southern babes, is not a pleasant thing to think of. The fruit of this teaching is to be found in an Administration organ of a few days ago, which I also read : " The organs of conservatism seem to have a!! been knocked into virtuous indignation by my announcement that Gen. Ilooker was about fighting insurrection with insurrection, by tending a powerful expedition into the in terion of one of the States comprised in his department, in order to induce the slave pop ulation to rise in arms against their oppress ors. Well, what do their hypocritical pleas, in the name of a bogus humanity amount to? The deed is done. That silly and sanguinary hoax, has, before this, proved to the rebels a dire reality. Colonels Iligginson and Mont gomery, at the head of 1,000 well armed? drilled and disciplined blacks, and witli mus ket enough to arm several thousand more? after landing at Femandina astended the St. Mary's river on 1 Monday last, and, I have rea son to believe, arc at this time far from the coast, upon Georgia soil. YY r hinc away, then spurious humanitarians, at the accomplished fact, instead of denying the existence of the purpose." And the next news we may hear will he, the wail i f violated women and affrighted children shrieking in terror as Iligginson and his Sepoys, couveyed by the gunboats pursue their career of outrage up the St. Mary's and the Leagues will applaud. Conquest and subjugation are grand words —magic phrases—but let us for a moment look at them a little closely—not Rhetorical !y, but practically—with a common sense in terpretation. We have some analogies to guide u=q we know what is do.oe with tho stnr.il patches of Territory we already have, and we have a rgiht to infer, when the great conquest, is consummated, that what is doing at St. Louis, and Nashville, and New Orleans, and Port Royal, and Norfolk, is to be done through the whole of that vast region ex tending from our anxious pickets on the Rap pahannock to the tranquil anchor age of the gunboats at Hilton Head. There is to be a great military tenure " with negro regiments supported by regular troops," keeping the peace, collecting the crops and the taxes, and superintending the elections—the negroes having the rights of freemen, to vote and to be voted for. Negro overseers are to admin ister discipline on plantations, and negro women are to have the white women of the South—gentle matrons and pure virgins to do their menial work. This is no fancy sketch I have heard of the wish being expressed and the penalty suggested in this city. This is another of the realities I don't like to look at And all this under the unchecked control of the General Government at Washington Mr Lincoln and his Cabinet doing and superin tending all this by virtue of the war power. The power of the East India Company was nothing iu comparisou with this thoueh the relation of that great semi-military corpora tion to its conquered Hindoos, with its enlist ed and dependent Sepoys, is not unlike that which, as a matter of necessity, willVxist be tween the Government at Washington and he subjugated South, with its emancipated and uniformed blacks. Nor is this a new idea. It originated long ago, and not with me. I Mean this now mode of recruiting our army with Sepoys, and I am giad of the op portunity of giving credit for it where it be longs. During the canvass which resulted in Mr. Lincoln.s election, there were some very re markable speeches made, the memoryofj which rit is now nut very convenient to retain, even though facts are verifying them. Among them, of course, was Mr. Lincoln's that a nation could not be part free,and slave which, in more ways than one he is doing his best to veryfy. But there were others from men' who were supposed to measure their words more accurately. Two I will recall. Senator Seward spoke at Lansing, in Michi pan, iu October GO; and' then it was, he ut tered aud emphasized the remarkable opinion that the Army and Navy of the United States —the regular Army—was a nuisance, a de formity, an excrcscense, that ought to be got rid ef. This is literally true. That army, that protected Seward in his snug office at Wash ington, to be cut down, reduced; disbanded, be cause Raid he, "it had oynly been nsed to pro tect slavery and capture fugitives." This was bad enough. But the compliment of the sug gestion is to be found in another speech made about the same time in Philadelphia by Mr. Francis P. Blair—then a member of Congress now, a Major-General by Mr. Lincoln,s ap pointment, and brother ol Mr. Lincoln,s Post master-General. Adopting the idea of geting rid of the regular army, he proposed a substi tute' ahd suggested that the regulars—tbe enlisted soldiers—hereafter should be found in the emancipated negroes of the South. In other words he recommended a Sepoy Army. And this, to, is being verified. Gentlemen I can recall the horror with which I read this Infamous suggestion at the time it was made It has not abated yet. 1 had just returned from regions where this mode cf|mercenary employment of an ailen race—alien in color in passions, in instinct, in inteligence—had brought forth its natural fruits. I left Amer. ica for the far west in the summer of 1858, and returned in 1859. When I left niv own country, the whole world, except at one spot in China, was at peace ; but as 1 reached that continent, about whose breed the fanatics onr dav care so much.(for I heard, of it at the eape of Good Hope') there came up a wail of { I TEHMB: 81.SO PER. iLKTMTT]^ agony from the Eastern world of white men and women murdered and mutilated and rar- * ishep by black men in uniforms—from Deibi. Cawnpore—that lingers yet in my ears and haunts my dreams. And such is or will be the Negro Army which is to supercede our regular soldiers aud aid to conquer the South This is the army which Mr. Lincoln,s Secre tary of State and his Major General think ii to subjugate our brethren. I saw a printed letter a day or two ago from Mr. W. D. Kel ley to a Blockley negro, in which he says : " The field of operations for this class of troops, (negroes)will be chiefly in the Gulf States, where they will in a few month con stitute the great bulk, if not the whole of our Army. And this is conquest, this is the awful' success which the Administration promises* us, if we will only give them money and men' enough to carry on this war. But lam mistaken. They don't ask to give them money and men. They find the' good old rule more convenient, That they should take who have the powor And they should reap who can." Congress not only taxes heavily the whole community—as to which, being the exerciso j of a lawful power, I don't complain—but, by its tender device, it vitiates the currency and disturbs every relation of society, des troying public as well as private credit, and : by its new conscription law enters into every house in the laud, and enrolls and forcibly enlists to fight in this weary war every adult man who has been left at home. This ia centralization and the application of Federal power, to individuals in the green What, j ask, will it be in the dry ?—and what be-' comes of the reserved rights of the States ? what becomes of their capacity to protect themselves against danger, foreign and domea tic, when every man and every dollar are ab* sorbed elsewhere 1 It is in view of this absorbtion of power at "Washington, that I have no more doubt than I have that to-night will succeed to day that there is a settled, well-considered, and, ac cording to my views, most pestilent design to establish in the fragmentary North, a consol idated nationality, operating, by its legislation, directly on individuals, without regard to' State relations and duties. The acta of the late Congress are tentative—are experimental on the endurance of the citizens of the States*' and if they are accepted as within the Con stitution, obeyed tnough without it, you mav call the form of Government what you please' —it is de facto revolutionized. Mr. John Van Buren, in one of his recent speeches, said, with characteristic levity, though more than ordinary discretion, that though he did not know enough of the measures of the late Con gress to express an opinion about them, he snpnosed ' ; thev were all right," and that they did make Mr. Lincoln "something like a Dictator." But he knows, and if he don't, know, and every man in the land knows,who reads a newspaper, that Congress has tried to nationalize everything has issued legal-tender notes—emitted Continental curency for the first time since the formation of the Federal Government, in the face of all authority, leg islative and judicial, and enabled and in stigated every dishonest debtor in the land to use it to defraud his creditor—tainting the very credit which it represents, by ab original fraud, and foreshadowing the repudi ation which 6iich indebtedness renders inev itable. It makes you and me take the paper and refuses to receive it itself. It pays the poor soldier his thirteen dollars in paper, and if with those paper dollars, he wants to buy a little tea or coffee, it won't take paper from him for duties. This is one exorbitant act. This is not all. Congress has virtually stricken down all State Banks, and is trying to build on the ruins a huge system' of what it calls free banking, by which credit is to be piled on credit, all resting on a great and entangled fiction called federal responsibilty I have no means of knowing if our local finan ciers are going into this scheme of folly and ruin. They are standing on the edge of it. They have stripped themselves of a good deal of their capital, and have changed their spe cie deposits for legal-tender notes, may have to take refuge under the protection of the Federal authorities to shield them from the just indignation of the stockholders who have boen wronged. I see New York demurs. Out of this is to be conjured a great pecunia ry interest wielded by the Sectetaryof the Treasury, which in combination with the'vast power of the creditor class, is to aid in crush ing out any interference on the part of re fractory States. The holders of the Federal funded debt will not acquiesce in the higher prices ofState securities and Railroad bonds: and we shall soon have Federal Legislation directed at thetn on precisely the same principle and with the same authority as the late Congress legislated against pri vate loans and contracts about gold and pa per, with which they have no more right to meddle than they have with contracts for flour, or beef, or bacon. In this connection, 1 don't speak of what is called the indemnity- Bill—hideous as I consider it—creating Mr. Lincoln a dictator and autocrat as absolute as our Imperial friend, the Czar, who is now - with bloody hand crushing down a rebellion in Poland ; or, it Ido speak of it, it is in re 'ation to ono feature only. Let roe illust rat* VDL.2, NO. 41,