V . 'harvest Of yonets. Delegates or, the Prof figiuod Aliternment rode through (6.000 and Nuill*ryw' here prevailing among the people tireo ngest attachment to - the Cow. tn.:melt i and to thaßopublie. ,The gray it to t - haired Gen.„tCoirtais called upon the redvable guard to f4lernisirwitlithe National Guard f: and thus ong all the men in arms there waS ;woo but bps prevailing thought, to support the Govermitent at whabever cost. lifeanwhifi Cot Ray bad fortified the .Hotei AI Pills; al even window, at every door, load of ;manes wire stationed, served by the grardi; - fepub/icain4 ' The Natioriil Guard of the eub t i orb,lied alstibeen ordered into the city, and by 4 d'elockthe legions 'of St. Denis were ,o n the patterns* of Paris. , l".. About Wee o'clock the procession - of the ' =lnhoreis *dialer? Field put itself in - motion. 'As it was 84nday, all were in their holiday ate tire. Alnioitt every corps had a banner carried in front, an 4 all these banners bore the inserip4 Lion : " AWition'of the exploitation of Man by Man : Qrglibiation of Labor by Association." 'flie_prooess—ion• was endless. The legions of the Nation 4 Guard several times marched a cross it, and4eparated its parts. • The Nation-, al Guard alsio kept along with it up to the Ho tel de Ville. 1.1 To main* a hostile attempt was of course no longer to i ie thought of- r at the mere alarm of one, the named men of the procession ireewould have nat once overwhelmed. The Governmentpoeived one ' by orie the deputa tions of theflithfal armed bodies, the school of -St. Cyr, rand many delegations from the friendly clubi Leaman° answered them that he bad been ponfident from ,the first that the day would Inge from a day of danger to a' day of triumph, and of recognition ilf the Pro-' , visional Govirnment. The rallying cry of / both armed and unarmed Paris must be: " The , whole undivided Provisional Government."-H Some partiei had been hoped to divide the members of the Government, and in their dif ference-to convert the whole country into% two hostile campl. Though,said be, differences of opinion may ke found amongst us, we are still united by loils for our country, for republican 'institutions b our devotion to this city and to Prance 1 T s unity is the symbol of our Re public I Co de in all of us, and, the Repub lic lie is s aved. : 0 1110 The Provisional Government then appeared ttrir i in a body at the -window of the Hotel de Ville, and hand was greetlid with such cheers as were nev ay.,e if heard befoTip . Then the ranks of the Na-. The irliluld Guard Opened and the deputation of the harrowerrs approached. They were ,received by middle .of'.k.dam wiiii rather cold words, owing no about 3 fe k to the dant of practice on the part of with the hater: Bolds Blanc, with Cremieux, nest' at the dist4wn upon the Place, and, understanding was hoed in: better' plays it with the highest iii vious to hoet. ,an concludes with these words : all taken' 0ff,,,.f0r Our friendship, the most hearty f bo4'anil covek 641, proofs of your attachment to I think was of l: Call upon your brethren to preventing theipe its, that we may show all of yoi , corn I planted '4s cif our love and.of our hopes ! corn, iuterniixethi workmen joined .. in the cry yellow. , the Provisional. Government !" • ' --e.-* hole mass of the people stood Culture or roma object on which to expend their Ens. CuLrn bent forth the cry : _4 bas /es , -notice an artic'es Ig, -Down with Blanqui ! down to rot, and Iti ! aid everything that had.lungs, same courseforie iviriiiet of condemnation passed the-means of tetaarinnists i ieuerally - pl*," *. ns 0 f the Is4tional (}cards from, the , two or four . pit, **miming through. the streete of two 'Pieces In e t the Hotel de Ville without cessa -1 • One' "(limy n the evening. They all, constant fa vie same i i • ~ ee ry against the ,communists.— small, about a fkithe city was illuminated as if it about threerweekii tr?m a great danger. Once i his are unfit tAkliaiionfhas been the ordet of the day hundred is affe,ofe population,and for the moment' -potato has becl A siord, anarchy and all the vices of! .and unripe seect . 'or immoderate desires, seem to be Also, an arivh.ir mysterious sources of the Sup, 1 subsoil," where )h ,„,,. inches long, on i ti r . 1 yours, reminds me of a • soil-ghat was alu e t • r" --- Gennany,. England, some of tho hel h f , Austria, es long. galy, Sweden, ke. - 0 . Below I i Runk Apnl 20.. 1 - . for the pastptured Austrian, Russian, and Prue.' land„- Emmons are thundering from minute to, was raise before the Hotel des Invalidestri-color- Tublishenners are floating from every window ; field, tb ar i s i s inlre streets in uniform or in gala P:ses. For ;he first time troops of the line again marching into the city ; and at; the -mel distribition of banners to all the bat -1 allions of the ational Guard' and of the line, the troops are to fraternize with the armed 'and unarmed population. Iles the first festival of the Republii shall be a festival of peace and , ' reconciliation.:„ Perchance it is also of grati tude, a Te De4m for the happy termination of theaffair of thii 166,4ben not only the mem bers of the Previsional Government, but the Republic itselr stood. in great danger, as You ' will see by my letter of the 17th.- -While the rtrty of the overthrown monarchy :I wereAreparingiall possible difficulties forthe, Prommonal (Averment in the provinces, and wereever ergaZez - i!ig a fennel conspiracy of the Departments zigamst Paris, the ultra-revela tion:7 Tarty in Park resolved to venture a great blow. erOthrow „the Provisional Govern ment Mid put it Committee -of Public ktfety" that is, a Diitatorship of Terrorism—in its place. The le* plan failed entirely, through the instantaneclin and-energetic intervention of the people. 10ar had, however, a good result, inasmuch seat; brought about a mutual Un derstanding, ati least for the time being, be tween the two parties in the Government, namelythe *Aerate" citizens' party, under' jenutitine ana - Nernst, and- ~the Socialistie* cad HevelutiOnary under Ledru-Rollin and Floeeir -i= Conciissions have been made on Uth sides. Witt-1141in has softened and Mullin- isedliX play,* on the other hand Lamar tine his %come mote thorough repablieam-- F4r-the-past tUlo days the iffoxiteur has teem ' ed' iimeasauth{with' revolutionary: deereeel== Thelenunent4tenire of judicial Wiens is libel hiked ; 'owe thiM a hundred growls, who were the Magma ot Louis Philippe have been . de, posedi . the Oetroi duties on meat and wiue are removed sad - Sikeed by taxes on equipages, horma, , dogs la serrauts. The Eadt tax is* so wholisheria4 proelamationaln a more rfr timid, jot end 2 WM speak alauguage full, of joy .to the eemii. the people. I **hire. I t o our Gorernmemeik bestammcmore Demoera 'r., ' and him highltim : italumbi.- - . , Bat the demMustrat `m , : .of the leth has " 2 . . , ittbad Oat: - it•lsailsok ths4oWiroisie i 0,:: ..:......--;-:,_ . .., •.. -...,. ~ ..,, , 14 - -. 1 r * ia this Una likeisMitio;',*4 l .9 ol 47 eat deei notanOude therlarge boil, of-profese-- -el -,idoner,o Paris. . Iheyhtswe riader: itteskdo not-a 4 with ' Writ-AMU-aid fie rates4evobrtio4sts, but are Meadfastricmott ere of*/ ind Order. • Ed. Trib. - • 1, vcrboqieg, and irritated the workmen. Mis boifglofsie now persecute all therough repel limas under the title of Commiatists and the Weiltmee who have defended thealselvei ageinst theibayonete of the ioldiers, now see that_they ,Were the bayonets of the bourgeoisie dirso4ed against them.' The elections to the National &sem* be gin in three days. In Paris they will pass !off quietly, and in 'the provinces:ith great displity. The Assembly meets on the 4th of May, end from that day the history °Me new republic takes its date. People here are tormenting their beads with speculations as to the chem.., ter and composition Of the National Assembly, What sort of decrees it will issue, whether it will be revolutionary or reactionary. All these questions are totally useless. The French Na tional Assembly of 1848 will wear exactly the espect of other great assemblies of near a thou- Una persons. There will be some men of prominent talent, some intoxicated brains, ma ny adherents of the old order,, a swarm of moderate republicans, and finally the mass of the indifferent, =determined, waver ing, who to-day vote for, and to-morrow a gainst, and at last, always join the victorious party. The l adherents of the fallen dynasty, and all those who by the overthrow of splendid posi tions have lost a great part of their property, still hope for a reaction and for the' return of the Count de Paris and the Regency of the Prince de Joinyille. ' However, if they reckon on the National Assembly to bring about they are mistaken, for at the first reactionary steps taken by that assembly the demooratio major ' ity of the population of Paris would rise, drag the Deputies recreant to freedom from the Pe i leis Bourbon, and cast them into the Seine.— Rut, as said, nothing definite can yet• be sta ted with , regard to the 4th of May. . We must first see how the elections turn out, how the Na tional Assembly is constituted on its organisa tion, how the parliamentary members stand, and what are the steps first taken. In any case, revolutionary convulsions are to be ex- Elected - in Paris, and reactionary in the depart meats, but a counter-revolution is as impossi ble as a return to the terrorism of 1793. The external political situation of France wears a much more clear aspect than the inter nal. The Republic is immediately, threatened by no foreign enemies, and has full time to es. ; tabliili itself at home, and at the same time to provide for a probable war in the future. 'For ~this purpose an Army of the Alps, consisting of 45,000 men, is already assembled; 15,000 men are stationed at the-Pyrenees as a corps of observation ; 10,000 men are on the Belgi an frontiers. An army. of the Rhine of 40,000 is' established; 30,000 horses have been pnr- • chased for cavalry, and 15,000 for artillery and baggage, while in all the arsenals and naval preparations are most actively going on. Be sides these provisions against sudden emergen cies, the Republic has an army of 110,000 vet eran troops in Africa, who can at a. moment's warning be embarked and thrown into Spain, Italy or Turkey, in case a decided step must be taken. With the present organization the ' epublic can send into the field an army of 500,000 men, while a million of National Guards assume the internal defence of the country. lamartine's manifesto has laid down the .principles of Foreign Policy-to be followed by the - Provisional Government : the National Assembly may adopt a more vigorous Course of eemilict, if it shill judge it appropriate and timely- Already Lamartime bat laid before Austria and Prussia two ultimatums. From each he demands a reconstitution of itheir Polish Provinces : from Austria he requires the evacuation of Lombardy. Both dentands will be complied with: Neither Austria nor Prus sia with their unreliable armies and perfectly problematic finances-min think of a war with France. Russia has declared that forthe pres ent,'she will remain neutral, and not resort to arms so long as her frontiers s,iot threatened. England has also financial difficulties on hand; She :has also Ireland more and more fiercely threatening, which, with her chartist moveMent, gitres her too much to do at home to allow Ikr, to'think of war. Nevertheless, it must net be Overlooked that she is making immense prepar ations, and at this very moment has a power ful fleet of 1,000 guns in the Mediterranean, One. equally strong in the Irish Channel; and 110 !men-of-war scattered on other seas, IL B. The condition of Austria is the most enemy passible. Lombardy and Venice are irrecover ably; lost; Hungary has already declared' her self independent, and will soon dissolve all con nection with Austria. Gallicia labors to the iamb end; and Bohemia makes unmeasured deinands.. Croatia, too, Siebenburgen, and 'even the Tyrol, now no longer true to the Emperor, speak a very decided language, and threaten a total separation at the least delay to grant their requnuments. IVith all this the monarch is perfectly use less 'the ministers irresolute and unable, as yet, to obliterate the old schoOl of Metternich, and the nobility and clergy thoroughly reactiotnuy. Add to this the Social. Question, which his al ! , ready produced its disturbances of workmen at Vienna, a universal rising against the priest, hob& and in Steiermark a crusade of the peas antry against the castles of the nobility, 'with err:cues of every kind. The t last hour of Austria has struck. The cunning structure of Kannitz and Metternich filling in pieces, indicating the day when the %rations countries and nations of the Old Ein- - iirc will be united in a FEDERATIVE REA:43- Lis. ; Still, in this time of universal disorptii sixties), it is much more probable that the.Aus tiiitt Empire will.be utterly dissolved, and Alt, the' anarchy and civil war: which_ Julie tO tollow, a part of the territory of Austria Will fall into the greedy hands of Russia, while the remainder will attach itself to Germany. P#liisiwis in the same state of disorganisa tion-With Austria. The King Frederick Wil- Rim IV. once-haughty an& arrogant as a &o p* liners - - entirely humbled thaulouil XVL Ha reigns- only inname he is a puppet ;who siosi the.decreervonitantly forced upon him by alletettliinistry ;. he profoundly hatei the new Order of thing., pekoes on his army, his - wohlea and-a tshange in attire which shall bring the; ld beloved lionare,hy. A dilettante in I eterjthing,without principles or thornughiatel- I lienje,, he its the toy .oreifetite, on account Of buatilfeess hated by his-opponents, and but *WO yt-stappo!ted by his adherents. Lap IctMria, Prunus is a harlequin's-jacket of ma ny -o**.:matte of all sorts of- heterogenona filagMents patched together. The power that uni• • tes is so weak that it tears at every move , *Wig stA.the tehes VI off: - Posen his Al sma irevait to 1 10* king *Rhine Predates W il l:ling- on. hit 4:-Settn twin 42lennany- . - the -Repub li c is dtle, Pri*kWill .i tlisSOPeOth Oniony; • • }4ltl43ermooi•itoelf there is mot - mueh to he The confueion there is so great, the pet. . '! • • , . p . ty of ideaa - so extreme, that no one can tell w. en the end of it all will come.. Every Ger , has his ovnii system ofiloiernment in bis own Chi titution, - and his own plin of o F., : n=ation . 1 m these forty mi ll ions of no-, n? ro t ns to produc, a single universal one, :which I will accept, m a herculean task:. All hopes a r now pla.ftd on the German Parliament, ioh is to meet.cn the let of May, at Frank f. and organ= 411 Germany anew. But ore this Parliament whith is to be opened o g the let day of May onlilen days are now elapse. In most of the German States it hnot even yet been defined who the electors O be. At the same time Germany is i n . v , ved on the north in a war with Denmark on not of Schleswig Holstein, is threatened t i , l . ugh the Polish movement by the, immense p .s parations of Russia on the east tin Baden a . epublican movement his broken out, though . 4 yet not an important one, and for fear of t . • desires of France, an army of 80,000 men b . had to be stationed on the Rhine.' Add to t. sthe more and more vehement contest be t ' en the Republican party and that in fever o it Constitutional Monarchy, the - reactionary sithe its of the nobility and the priv il eged class the! jealousy among the thirty-four princes s their intrigues in regard to the German , . b perml Throne, the old lhostility between dif fe, nt nationalities,'the Peasants' War against t castles and public offices in Saxony, West ' li p a and other parts, . and the machinations o illussian agents, and you will agree with me t "t, for the present, there is no reason to ex "t an organization and unitary, establishment oermany. aly; which Germany has so long prUndly loeil down upon, marches in • the meanwhile' wrapid steps toward her emancipation.— TKing of Sardinia has beaten the Austri: c ant, at Goito—driven them back at Mantua. Orr' all sides Neapolitan, Roman and Tuscan ar ~ ies are approaching to force the Anstiians fo .ver out of Italy, and lay the foundations of I talian Independence. No,doubt this effort wi be successful. But whether after the vic- co" the conquerors will not fall out among tb selves is another question. The King of Sa '' inia aims to aggrandize his territories by th ' addition of the rich fields of Lombardy and V iiice ; Tuscany is speculating on Modena an Parma; Naples has long been looking i gniedily at the Roman Legations. Rut here tocithere is a radical means of settling the diffieulty ; naindly, to drive out all Kings - and 1G nd Dukes, and to transform Italy into a U on of Independent Republics like the North 1 A i lerican Confederaey, only with the difference, that the Pope chosen by all the nations of Ita ly, #ball be President. lb Spain, where' Narvaez is ruling with an irotihand, as welt as in Portugal where a Juile Mi t ''eu ministry is making a few half conces ' sioall is mainly as it was. No money, bat de i s in abundance, no principles but bayonets, no onstitution but brute force, arrests, impria-. lon ' V ents, the press overawed, and an army 2f spi :' such are the measures' and instruments of , e Government—means, however, already ex usted. Not much longer can this system of bts and soldiers endure ; the Iberian, Re-" pu lic w il l come to make an end-of the whole con n rn mark, where the national and liberal par cee ty dim have the conduct of affairs, has success.. full ~ begun the struggle against ber insurgent sub ' is Schleswig Holstein. In the course 4 afa days her veteran troops bave driven .h Sch • wig Holstein era out., of Schleswig, 440m.1 its pie the whole duchy, and taken their position on e Eider; Meanwhile the defeated party hay , i assembled in Holstein, and at the com ma oof the German Confederation 10,000 PrmiSian and 10,000 Hanoverian, Oldenburg and Br unswick troops have hastened to 'their aid.''. Up to now the German troops have taken no in the strife, but at last they have re cei d the order to engage in the war, and a de c . ive battle is expected . But the King of De na rk has already declared, that if Prussia min les in the quarrel, he will said' her, in all her , arbors ; and a Danish fleet has already appeared before Stettinand Swinemunde. As Pruasia has no navy, her commerce must suffer Segl'Os injury. Hamburg also bas shown her. se exceedingly active for Schleswig Holstein, and isthtineal by the Danes by sea. Eng lan:has eered her meditation, but in any e ven ''it is too'bite for that. The rates of inn. ran ' for the Eail N t'Sea have already risen very higl ' S t ~' eden is making great preparations for war botfi, on land and sea, and it is that she is' aliout to mako' an offensive arid ,defensive al lin+ with Ruisia. Of Holland, .13e1Oum, GreSce, and Turkey, not much is to bOsaid.— Th ' e countries will be compelled by ontiof the ' ing powers to join one side or the other; an dto as usual, fight in behalf of foreign in dltd _ . . tete ts. Soh is the state of things on the Continent ofrope. It i 4 tolerably confused and in, l vol ,d, but nothing indicates a speedy solution ii of thie perplexity. A European war seems inev itab , producing new. revolutions and a wholly ne,, ngement and distribution 'of Europe., , So ~,, nob is certain, that all the'old manuals' ' of gspgraphy may be pitched. into the fire, and . tha b t i a new, course in the history of the world 4i Sinning, only to end in a &morns RILL , P1714,1C. At themoment such*. republic seems s dgam, an ima of fantastis, but we live in tiniof steam, d what once required a cell- Ils now finished in a year. Perhaps as this ter reacbea your hands there will already ttl et be a`Stato more or less in Europe, and the can non ,liota now booming in the East and on the' Po' 1111 have fotmd echoes on the Weichsel and On t e Rhine. , . . Wit happen so„ you shall kow it in due time. 'Meanwhile, farewell. Saint et Fraternise. , IV - H. B. I, W A ALL Rrortr.—The telegraph report tr oraSt. Louis, pUllished eight or ten days a iii , tiog that BINTON, the Democratic can ' ' for Superintendent of Edueatioth; had, ,defeated by HARLAN, Fed., turns out to be a mon The lowa Gazette gine the of., icialareault thus,-Barrox, 10132-.LEARLAN lI:MN—Dem. mak, 17." L.._ d : i Tis lasi Kuro!01 FlAin3, l l -4110' Nan itive Ahe following; as an extract from * Havre r ir. ".Hr. 1t.÷.—.,-crire of inyfriends, was p 't at the embarkation of the ex-King' i u a Saki ' boat, on Thursday. Philippe turned to. It------ and said,' Join: the Republic frardrh and sincerely, for I early with meth. 5 - Fre4h monsphi,*lshall deicend With it to the tOmb. I have peen *last lillag of prams,' A 416401 ... I - 1 Ociunterfait $1 Bilk on the Cit) , Bank Raven, Otrat . l., ilikint loin put in circa !in ' - The signibio s of the i and 0 • are veil P'x'rlYitiondia.. are ss's of e same bank also in circa- Rhiladc. of 11l U 116) Tht. latiol TEEV . I i.EMOCRAT. 0. G. !MIMED, Editor. - alesttose, ..I .May 18, 1548. T !IL PREI!IDINT,, JAMES BUCHANAN,. Subject to decision of the National Convention POli COII3III @STONER, ISRAEL PAINTER, Of Wastmorelaud County. Odr readers cannot fail to be interes ted in the Paritlettersibrotight by the Amer ica, in our colon:ma this week. JNB''. Some of the Whig papers, we observe, are publishing Gen. Scott's late letter to the Secretary of War, node* by us last week, but without any allusion to , the reply of Guveiner Marcy, or anything from which a reply might be inferred. • Neither has oneef them, not von Mae orthe yarge city dailies, deigned to publish the answer, or any part thereof. Why is WS.? Cannot our Democratic and Whig friends all interiret itt If they thought Gen. ScOtt had come' off with flying colors,, or Gov ernor Marcy's reply waii a failure, would they be so silent about it ? ,What we say here by implication about the Whig press generally, we mean for our neighbor of the Whig press here in particular. Last week he had an-ar ticle landatoryof Gen. Scott's feat, but was ' , as dumb as as a mummy shout any answer.— Why so silent aeighboil Are you afraid to have Whigs know that your hemlock (snap pish) General has been playing with "the fire in his rear" much to hii own hurt ? Tax CIRCIIBo-WO have been requested to call attention to the advertisement of Howes 640 Co's Circus, on our last page, but we suppose it to be useless, a,s , it is hardly probable that there is a man, ' woman or obild, who has seen ' the paper at all, who has not also seen and read that. Suffice it to say to such as take any in terest in such al'species of fun and amusement, that the . perfermance of the Messrs. Howes & . _ Co's troupe proinises to be a rich and - spendid treat. The POstage Bill at Last. It seems that. the much called-for postage reform has finally been formally introduced in to the popular branch bf Congress, and some action is likely to be soon had upon it. The following are said to be some of the principal provisions of the' bill which was ireparted by the Post Office C,,ormnittee of the House an the 4th inst. The circulaticin of all newspapers free of postage within thirty miles of the place of pub lication, not ahove the: superfices ,of 1,900 square inches. .; Under one hundred Miles and over thirty, one-half cent, over one hundred and for any *staneie onteent. Newspapers ilicros 1,900 inches to pay pam phlet and maga!ihe postage, which is two cents for the 4ist ounce, and half of one cent for all greater distances. Newspapers under 500 square inches to go free for the first thirty miles,and pay,a quarter of one cent for all greaterdistances. • Transient newspapers' pay two cents when not 'sent from the office of puhlieation. Publishers Of pamphlets, magazines and pe riodicals are allowed a free exchenge, s the same as the publiehetwof newspapers. So far, as it goes, we think the proposed re form a good one, .'which Will be decidedly pop ular. We do not think .it goes far enough, (although as fer probably AS is prudent,airpres ent,) but as half a loaf it better than no bread," we Will all be eoiiteut with this for the present,,if we da►i`get it. We have 'Atli doubt that the bOl MARYLAND Wnies roi CLAY.—The Whig, State Convention of Maryland his jebt closed its sitting by 44tring Henry Clay its choice for the' Presidency, and appointing an entire set of Clay, delegates to the National Conven tion. If therevris any State in the Union that weltupposed, from appearances, would send Taylor de4egatew i to the Philidelphia, Conven tion, Maryland was that one. . , . GovEßNott Snit,Na..'=-1 1 It • [ gives us infinite pleasure to : Ntate) l ' . says the Harrisburg Union, that Gov. , Sunita is watering quite as rap idly as mad} be eiPeetedi fr* his learnt pro treated Munn. Ile is qiitetreeNfroin annoy ance from the digs se which liffliiteditim, and daily acquires atrcigth. VC have no :Danner of doubt tht4 he isperfectly restored to health ; bat• as a Mattei of emirs., it will require time to recruit and regain his usual Aretwth. BAs Gen. Taylor bas determined to run at all events, principles or no principles—the prospects of Mfr. clay look rather gloomy, even to the :Whigi ; and it would be no marvellous thing to see , the *hole Party abandon hitn,emen for the insubordinete Taylor, in helms to obtain the "spoils", rick4hey croak so much about. Tai EX= of Petmsylvania., has gone over the demi Probably beyond all hope. of re-1 f ooVery. TIC Pastier say. the Rank hes mot e ' enougitio :theym , el not anal& 'other rot ten concern, are made to suffer' A Nit termined gm* the into the of Represent the Senate fair sister of he West. Gen. We' hlo',liiittei i letter to th mem * cif Con - Mahone, 16, Belvieu, cl e a n i ng • on ail the questions of pubbe in . profiumee himielf& thnr , ough Democint, 'Welre.beeliOnr, thor, irkom wernMehl i tu9 petrie tope *ill columni during the a give the following ones After some dollen' tion, ty and improprietY wera concluded to compltth ing the right, of ets such remarks as in op bpi quires: - !' I, 1 • The Baltimere Cianventi 0 ' Mr. Eprron;—Tlida bodY *ill soot . ble. Its acts will excite 'nfOte ititeiest , has heretofore been aroused* the p ' -: • 'of any assembly of like chincter. abe tilde of the two great political parties . country is anomalons.- Heretofore; in tests for the ' Presidendy, -aoiet of 0 . • forming what is termedi the `ripolicel of ty has been advecatedk one portion an posed by the other . ;But Si the c'o'n l vase, the struggle will b' w e simply for , 4 1 ,0il the outs ; and the ins Tillliare to d e possessions. It in els evident, th - t issues have been laiaeide. ! The Bit a ik Lion : is obsolete. T/ e I Tariff is a lig stock ; and diatribe on andl;be other h prOgent of the great 1 American system" been so loog on law diet that they haire n strength nor spirit toirat i te &nether or* an be no doubt the the fatierite meatin the old Whig party are' deadl; and, one that the party, so fat in it Was bonnittn ! by those questions,: has beeome ditan . andthat the party now knoin as Whigs, art of the members of the pld Whig, . bound together now; only by a desiie•i the present administration and to seem themselves what they term spoils4f o ; Let us go backi little. Seine Whio p to doubt that the Old issues have We , aside; and they affect to believe that, the iff war (if none other of the Whig sehem to be fought over again. Rut it is Ovid t all who.know , the views of the Whigs i various-sections of the union that the tions have been consigned to the tomlxas 1 stale and unprofitable." TO I say mithi i the resolutions of various state conven the tone of leading Whig pape4s and tikes i es of the prominent members of that part general tone of inmest evert member o party inevery-- state of the cenfederecy cates that Mexico A 'to be the ba s ttle-gr of opinion ; and that there, ail it w'ere is fought the bloodless but bitter war ,'pf , The "unholy, unconstitutional and Gnu sary War," is to be the cry.lWere it no this watchword is a; Hobson'ts choice, other being left to them) we should be ins to thank the Whigs for their unwonted ness in making up an issue mi this (Ines for, in November, from every hamlet of great nation one unanimous shout will go in favor of the policy - which has gained f renown abroad and the overliewings Of p at home. To be sure, the rains of ;ii have descended at the propezi'amtson, 1 an, sun has warmed the _Soil into liroductive but the great levers 1 of trade and cOie .. have been under - the Care of the Govern and to it belong; thelpmise and contiden all. The factories which were to sten , are clattering an incessant dini; the inoun Ate,.4pheavin rrg under t eoritt tat . hardy mini anti , a:S q . -- k - rfcii' . produce more abun tly because of the g er resources which: a beneficent . govien imposing but light taxes and inspiring en has produced.Glor and prbsperitylat have been secured fo cus by Our govern..; and abroad we are the " model republie" which the old nations from i . rhich wi sp are taking their lessons in liberty.' The Whigs will, in all probability, nom Mr. Clay . Should they do so, the Wihhot vise will not _enter the canvass. The political life of Mr. Clay,objetionablqas has been expressive lof his . - rews'alion, qUestfon; and I. think we cannot be ipis when we say that there is not a man' in Lruien whose views ;of the Constitution more in opposition to the_Proffso thanitho that gentleman. We know hits to bq a who would sacrifice much at the shrine of bition ; but eve have -Yet to learn that Ihe has deplored that be would I rather be than Plesident?' wouldcompromise his earned fame by overOreason to his eonn for, as sure as the inn' shinea above,s H Clay believes that the Proviso! woulill be gal. His course id respftt ta. the M • war -has not been dictated by the pureat p otism ; but the effects of that "conduht been only incidental ; ' the effects of the so would be the subversion of; our Ceps Lion; perhaps- the dissolutions of the' U. Such being the case, this project no made a question in th'e commit camp vol ii will be like some of the now Useless . ancient temples : a' landmark , )nerely 't superstructure i . , big, 'unlike them, - it .1 b firm founded ",no stable ll, no elabo capital: it stands in in min n Live , defo Thus, happily, will this questi be laiiii And here a comparison su is itself: Proviso resembles -General aylor... •It brought into camp with ma 'al strains i s colors flying; but the one hat{ died upon breeze; and the other) that breeze has:to tatters. Taylorism *loops by 'the sill of contemporary. We- Shall gto gg o, t hen, i' mtstrule trittiout thie '" applelof d' rd' the democratmonks. 1,, Shall there be any i er? '., 1. --- i DIMOC 0 :. ....., r .—. . i REMAINS ON TIM FOIMOOINO.-1.. 9IT , respondent may be correct;aahe mai h iriot _l , in saying that the Bank; Tariff;,Distribut , and other 'exploded Whig meastirea ,, ara,_, " solete." No one could bite donbted,th j' had he relied'on Whig declarations, that Bank was an " obsolete idea" Ain. BCC , . q withstanding all their, aiseven4ions to o . the people, to the ()eatery, we tbal,one t Seat acts, after their accession Wpm to the institution of this very monster • R ! der a more specious and sednetiva mine "The FiscialAgent." ; Nore*oe, thi*. can bo planed upon 'Whig prVailij ou 0 , • gard or opposition to iamb' redly anta schemes. ...Ippeararice& may, abd-in t do indicate the truthhinessi of .;our aortles , o dent's views; but'•Nipiasrersies4ilie,o tia deceptive, and we think them full as • ell be sou, this case as any other. Alba:a ,* for, us, therefore; appears to be to` an 'tip the wars: from - our , l opopente, ; while. e , a also-be prepared for, the beat, to imp In ,the minds of the people, as far IS prsaiiaal • the de fik WuPonsin' the douse pus 114100m8 llie %?4* fheiProbabflifY, that in th e avei l t.b,c'theia.ntwitminiSit hill, the whole em s , 1 44-Oetheig Ocr*iii. oo rest 'Whet soietat i wirrsiso,l , 'Will be re-enacted gad tuftje4l4l!pon 4°[ °OlMtry to PO* and clog itsl 'trim* fort he ensuing four y east Bees nett purliOrreapOl4ellt agree with us o s this pointt 2. -ht the =remarks °fluor correspondent ti t , on the ] 4 : PrOviact" quOtion, of mule Ne not be expected to coincide, although w e w g remark here that'we did' not designio tr ist Wi i thelmbject again in 4 columns, unt il th w the nominations; at least p and not erne the; unless the .exigenCies s b dNd seem to Nei :s i t Bat an an anti-Prors,o correspondent' ha s claimed the tight to express his riots in oar columns, Which has beep; granted, of emirate reasonable person will think it amiss inns 4 0 to give,Oor opinion, u:be has done. -heti. sing this, thereforeote pass to remark.,. • 1. That theProvisoWill not be made in is. sue in the next Presidential canvas!, we w s inclined, with our correspondent, to Wes t; nevertheleas, Winch depends upon eiretmet ss . ces, and who shill be the candiiliteit of the val parties. The Baltimore Convention it'll may have inuckweighf is shaping this pe s . tidy. ; it wominaten candidate who les pledged his opposition, liw,any manner, to measure, and the Wht4s think any rap' ciw be made Out tif it; we are by no means car* that" the tinestion will'not enter into,. ii it does not deter Mine, the eimilaign., Notnithstand. le ~,. b h tihe nadir 1 .ntribn, ti g.osm :on an ,',lk tit SU- our ).to !ion ,lie hate i i ~ reque , ompa tht e ing our Correspendent'S conclusion that Mr. ' Clay is , personally antagonistic to the Proviso, d whiclkie probably correet, we have abundant d reason to believe him joint demagogue erteagh, if a candidate, and his opponent was known to o oppose that measure; to avow himself in its fa. e vor. Thia would be characteristic of limy - Clay and Liu party, :midi is very likely, upon , the contingencies aforementioned, to be the condition:of things. We judge so particularly from Whig declaritions, and demonstrations. e One strong, evidence is the deelaration of Her e ace Greely, at - the . great Whig Meeting in Portsmouth, NI H. Upon being interrepted . e on thequestion, he declared that he would " not support Henry Clay, if opposed to the - Proviso, nor any other man of like sentiments" t —and yet it is notorious that no man in the ' Nation bat done half so much towards bringing Mr. Clay into the.field as Mr. - Greely. 2. Onricorrespoudent is pleased to speak of the principles of the Proiiso as " sitbversive of ' the• Constitution," &c. We should like to know in what way. We have heard much said about the unconstitutionality of legislation • upon this Subjeet ; but really we have seen-no ; attempt td show in what way the constitution would be Violated. If it is " subversiveef the ' Constitution" to prohibit slavery in all fret territory that we may acquire, Bow such abort of it would it be, pray tell as, to prohibit it in ep : Frt-a z oi" north sit. 36? 20!? If the Praise suiiveratve of tie ~on ' strtn~on"—aa , beyond, constitutional limits—then what is tie Midsoitri compromise ? In principle they are • verisimilar--their difference is only in Geo ; graphical limits, yet it is vast. -And yet we do not Itreiw•an inti-ProViso man in our mut - ty who does not fall back wpon, and offer the . Missouri compromise as, the grand, sovereign salvo for the whole diffieulties ! We repeat, if it is unconstitutional to prohibit the intro duction of Slavery into all free :territory, then it is also unconstitutional to prohibit it in a put ; then the Missouri Compromise is a farce, and the Ordinsoce of 'B7 the; prince of !somber, entitled only to the meatiest contempt.. The cases are exactly pica:ll4, and the argument that will show the Amns° to be "subversive of the : Constitution," will• show with equal elearnese that. the Ordinance framed by hirer son in 178 T, and , which interdicted slavery in, the North-Western-Territory , as well as the Missouri Compromise, of later date, were stn. pendonstlcheats, nay, grass otitrages upon the Magna ci*s °tour great Confederacy. and just proVoeitions 'for itsipeedy Such being: our view of the Matter we have ex pressed fray, and:we irust candidly and spectfilly.ll S. \There' 1 8.011,noilwM:.idea which is more than hinted in Abe fOrtioing communication' that may ; demand iassiwg remark,, and that is, that thit',)'rovisit, being a humbug, a star verter efitl*copatitittion; a " useless pillar of au ancient temiple," a lUnlmark without se- Per s*. as he terms it, is a matter of to tal'indifferetnr:So the pe4di, of Pennsylvania, and, of oilier iootioisi of the Union. Parlor* it • !int — ihisk that ben is, rag w ourcorrespondest shall have lived in the Keyeitone a little sae longer he willflnd his mistake.. It. cannel - be that the geed people of : Peensylvania, or of,New York, who .;have abolished Shivery at home by their own deliberate acts, iranow be to - lend their kidinencle to extend 4 over territory nowfric &We hardly think them indifferent' to it. Indeed we know no far as WU: wash' is, concerned,. the prop:dike is ss nice to ten who aro notindifferent tctii, who ma sot ap ed to eastAiii iniliteneeli favor of tit. doettines I •• . r i n l; ht ry : nry I=l Ig i . r.. , • on, ofinmMgiodism.: This + have barna from uninirinnr Pa we ham it tC`ht in ine"tner ' fact. Airistleams, a WIC , • , mused political =ltem sad wiwYonMat With ''"sentiments of his'port i l'nt / 4in et Iktrt4 _loth! equwilaythatia hioteto. ship, in the Nn Sheen part of this Coo!ity. 4tliiieeptiow could, be feud to thial tide: *eieed," added i 4 “mr: Wilmot bial ifs` candidate, 'weight rank* a Fetter Dimoiretli Wote there 1'01'11%440t than 00 421 041thnt, 0 0 41 he 1 11 = 61 _ lair.% el mh y . , were hie- Oenvietions, tune we . lvtik " 16 ', are the otisay amwth wholl IT* have^ convened upon oabiook 8011 ;i 41 ?4* -fr n0 nni With oar oorre# ol ', dent th at ewe hop the Pfetiso lin not Nebo