BY ROBERT WILLIAMSON, Jr. NEW T E R M S OF THE LINCOLN REPUBLICAN TERMS OF PUBLICATION. Tiik Lixcoix Rbpcblicax is published every Wednesday at $2 50, if paid in advance, or S3 if payment be delayed three months. No subscription received for a less term than twelve months. No paper will lie discontinued hut at the optiuo fthe Editor, until all arrearages are paid. A failure to order a discontinuance, will he con sidered a new engagement. TERMS OF ADVERTISING. AnvF.iiTTsr.ET8 will lie inserted conspicuous ly for $t Ot) per square for the first inscition, and ! S3 eenu for each continuance. Court and Judicial i advertisements will be charged 25 per cent more tlian Uie alove prices. A deduction of .'):) per ceut. from the regular prices will be made to yearly advertisers. The number of insertions must be noted on the tinu.ince is ordered. TO CORRESrOXDFXTS. To insnre prompt attention to Letters addressed to the Editor, the postage should in all cases be paid. Extract from the speech of Mr. Benton on the 'Fisca! Corporation," in the Sen ate, Aug. 25, 1811. uui, v ii-uuii id inn (in muni; i)i juni ors and exclusives: what is it with which we are charged? That measure which is ihe king of measures in the eyes of the Federal parly that measure for which the 'Session was called without which we are Hot allowed to separate for balking which the 1'resident is to be unhorsed and which (change its name as you please.) is still the .1.:.... t..i: 1 it..., 1. 1 .. r-rtlllC llllll IM J.1 W MJlUl JLIU'tli IU TUI.C illC JJcmocracy. to plunder the people, and hind lis to England.' This great measure is committed to this young Committee ..mi a ii'-" iiaum upon id mit uiaru iwic- -Iiead. It baa a name-as long as the moral law half Sub-Treasury and half Bank. It is called A bill for the collection, safe keeping, transfer, and disbursement of the public moneys, by means of a fiscal Cor poration of the United States of America. i lo-tro,. u,!,,) .. ,,.! If .;tl J'coplc cannot go through . all that. We must have something shorter something that will do for every day use. CORPO ROSITV" I that woM bo a groat abridge ment; but it is still too long. It is five syl lables, and people will not-go above two syllables, or three at most, and often bang :il one,, in names which have to be incon tinently repeated. They are all economi cal at that, let them be as extravagant as . they may be in spending their money. They will not spend their breath upon Jongnames which have to be repeated eve ry day. They must have something short and pointed; and, if you don't give it 'them, .lheywill make it for themselvas. The defunct Fiscal Batik was rapidly taking the title of fiscality ; and by alliteration, rascali ty; and if it had lived, would have- been compendiously and emphatically designa ted by some brief and significant title. The Fiscal Corporation cannot expect to Itave better luck. It must undergo the fate of all great n.en, and of all greil measures overborthened with titles it must submit 'to a short name. There is much virtue in a name; and poets tell us there are many on whose conception Phoebus never smil ed, and at whose birth no muse, or grace, was present. In that predicament would seem to be this intrusive corporositv-, which -we have received from the other House, -.ml Rpnt to vonr vounr committee, and which has mutation, of title without altera ;..n nf snhstnnce. and without accession of euphony, or addition of sense. Some say a name is nothing that a rose by any other r.ame would smell as sweet. So it will; and a thorn by any other name would stick as deep. And so of these fiscal?, whether to .. . 1 1M... be called nanus or corporations. 1 ncy will still be the same thin a thorn in our side but a short name they must have. This corporositv must retrench its extrava gance of title. Mr. WOODBURY said, call it the Botts Dank. Mr. BENTON! Very well; any thing ?o it is short. I go for short names, ami will give reasons for it. The people will have short names, although they may spoil fine one: and 1 will give you an instance. "There was a most beautiful young lady in 1Ipw Orleans some years ago, as there has always been, end still are many such. febo KM 9 Creole, that is to say, born in the country, of parents from Europe. A gentleman who was building a superb Meamboat, took it into his head to honor his youg laby, by connecting her name with" his vessel; so he bsstowed upon it the captivating designation of La Beli.k Creole. This fine name was painted in golden letter on the side of the vessel and away she went, with three hundred horse rower, to Kentucky and Ohio. The ves sel was beautiful, and the name was oeau liful. and the lady was beautiful; but all the beauty on rarth could not save the - nomo frum the enlrietmnhe lO W hich all long titles are subjected. It was immedi ately abbreviated, and, in the abbreviation sadly deteriorated. At first, they called her the bell nut the French belle, which sig- nifios fi:ie or bsautiful but the plain Eji"--lish bell, which in the Holy Scriptures, was defined tube a tinkling cymbal. This was bad enough; but worse was comino-. It so happens ili.it the vernacular pronunci ation of crcole, in the Kentucky waters, is crc-owl; so they began to call this beautiful boat the cre-owi ! hut things did not stop liere. It was too exiravagant to employ two syllables when one would answer as well, and be so much tnore econimical; so the first half ofihe name was dropped, and the last retained; and thus La Belle Creole the beauiiful creolo sailed up and down the Mississippi all her life by the name. style, titW-: ,aud .description of, . The 4'. i " 1, ti el i- .1 sT" W,l! (K,0arS of lauglling in the Senate, wiui exclamations irom several, that it was a good name for the bank that there was an Owl (reek Bank in Ohio once, now dead and insolvent, but in its day, as good as the best.) Mr. B. continued. I do not know whether owl will do for this child of long name, and many fathers; but we must have a name, and must continue trying till we get one. Let us hunt far and wide. Let us have recourse to the most renowned .Esop and bis fables, and to that one of his fables which tenches us how an old black cat succeeded in getting at the rats again after having eaten up too many of thcm,and becoming too well known, under the prop er form, to catch any more. She rolled herself over in a meal tub converted her black skin into while and walked forth among ihe rats as a new and innocent ani mal that they had never seen before. All were charmed to see her! but a quick ap plication of teeth and claws to the throats and bellies of the rats let them see that it was their old acquaintance, the black cat; and that whitening her skin did not alter the instinct of the animal, nor blunt the points of its teeth and claws. The rats, after that call her the meal-tub cat, aud the mealy cat. May we not call this corporosi ty the mealtub Bank? A catish name would certainly suit it in one particular; for like a cat it has many lives, and a cat you know must be killed nine times before it will die; so say the traditions of the nursery; and of all histories the traditions of chil dren are most veracious. They teach us that cats have nine lives. So of this Bank. It has been killed several times, but here it is still scratching, biting and clawing. Jackson killed it in 183a;Tvler killed it last week. But this is only a beginning. Seven times more the Fates . must cut the thread of its hydra lite before it will yield up the ghost. The meal-tub! No insignificant or vul gar name. It lives in history, and connects its fame wilh kings and statesmen. We all know the Stuarts 'of England--an hon est and bigotted race in the beginning, but always unfortunate in the end. The sec ond Charles was beset by plots and cabals. There were muiiy attempts, or supposed attempts to kill him many plots to kill him, and some very ridiculous- among the rest, one which goes by the name of meal tub plot -because the papers which discov ered it, were found in the meal tub wl.rc the conspirators or their enemies haL hid them. Now, between the meal tub plot in Kmc land, and ibis corporositv conception in America, there may be a similitude, and a striking one, (if you will pardon a pun) in this, that w hereas, each had killing for their ohicct! the English to kill a King the American to kill off a President! If so, I hope the American President may have as good luck as Charles the second. I am sure be deserves better and escape all the machinations of a meal tub, or corporations conspirators, whether the design be to kill him off. or to chain him to a bank car. Sir, 1 have given you a good deal of meal this morning; but you must take more yet It is a fruitful theme; and may give us : good name before we are done wih it. have a reminiscence, as tiie novel writer says, and I will tell it. '-en 1 was a small boy, I went to school .a a fcotcn irisu neighborhood, and learnt m-my-worus ami phrases which 1 have not met with since, but which were word- of great pith and power; among the rest shake poke. (Mr. Archer, 1 never heard that before.) Mr. Benton: you have heard of poke. You know the adage; do not buy a pig in poke; that is to say, in the bag; for poke signifies ba.r nr wallet, and fs a phrase much Used inhe North of England, . and among the Scotch Irish in America. A pig is carried to market in a poke, and if you buy it without taking it out first, you may he taken in." So corn is carried to mill i" a poke, and when brought home, ground into meal, the meal remains in the p ke, in the house of poor families, until it is used up. When the bag is, nearly empty it is turned upside and shakcn;and the meal that comes out is called the shake poke, that is to sav. the last shake of the bag. By - an easy "and natural metaphor, this term is also applied to the last child that is born m a family; especially if it is puny or a rickety concern. The last child, like the Ijsi meal: is called a shake poke; and may we not call this fisculous corporation a shake poke also, aud for the same reason! It is the last the last at all events for the ses sion! it is the last meal in their bag their shake poke! and it is certainly a tickelty concern. X. C.V I do not pretend to impose a name upon this bantling: th,at is a privilege of paternity, or of sponsorship, and I stand in neither re lation to these babes. But a name of brevi ty of brevity and significance -it must have; and, if the father and sponsors do not bestow it, the people will: for- a long name is abhorred and eschewed in all coun tries. Remember the fale of John Bare bone, the canting hypocrite of Cromwell's lime. He had a very good " name, Joi n Bone, but the knave composed a lon? vcr;a like scripture 'to sanctify himself with it, aud entitled himself thus: "Praise God Barcbone, for if Christ had not died for you, tom U'Oltil be ituutneJ, JurefjoriiiS' Now, this was very sanctimonious; but it was loo long too much of a good thing and so the people cut it all off but the last two words, and called the fellow "damned Iiarcbone." anil nothing else but damned Bnrebone, all bis life thereafter.. So let this Corporositv beware: it may get itself damned before it is done wtih us, and Ty ler too- . . . But, enough. Let us give over names, and talk over the news. Have you heard the news, Mr. President? If not, 1 am but a poor hand to tell it to j'ou; for I bear nothing but what I meet on the pavement as I walk backward aud forwards from the scfiool ro'i, ) of my children to the Senate Chamber of the U.S. 1 hear but little but that I will give you. It runs thus: Col. Drayton is out of the Jianfe. lie is out! and you know how much sorrow I ex pressed that a South Carolina gentleman had gone into it. Near three months ao, in my first speech heie, 1 expressed that sorrow. He is gone! Jiiddle is in! not corporeally for that would injure the cor poration. But he is in, and Samuel Jau don was here, and helped to write the char terof this'Corporation Fiscality,& it is all a Biddlc Bi'-nk concern!!! Look at the sub scribe' for the stock, that are to be: See section 1, line 10. Corporations! they are to subscribe! and the Biddle Bank, and its affiliations, are to take the whole. In plain English, we are rechartering the de funct U. States Bank, making it worse than ever, and giving it a charier for noth ing, which might be sold for five millions in open market. This is the news, Sir! and here we all are, beset and besieged by Kiddie's Bank! a thing too weak o pay a dollar to a creditor; but strong enough to imprison the Senate to gag the House- to menace the President with expulsion from office and to hold Congress together until it again takes the vote upon its impe rious demand for a.charier! And now, Mr. President, I have but one word more to say, that is, to comply with my promise, to show the propriety of con stituting this Committee, to whom we have committed this Fiscal Corporation, on the same principles on which was con stituted the Bank Examination Senatorial Committee of 183 1. The propriety is in this: Both Insiiitiiions are the same. They are both the same thing Biddle Banks and .both require the tender care of kindly friends ! From the Baltimore Republican. ASSERTION'S AND PROOF. During the late political campaign, it was boldly asserted from stump and press from cast to west north and south, by men who professed to have respect for hon or and truth from Daniel Webster down to the Buckeye Blacksmith; from the Log Cabin Advocate down to the Baltimore Pa triot that the affairs of the nation were conducted on a scale of extravagance and waste that would bankrupt the (iovern nient, ruin the counlry, and crush the peo ple ; and if the people would only be so kind as to extend to them their 'generous confidence,' they would not only make good their assertions by proof, but speedi ly set about to correct the enormous abuses, which they had succeeded in deluding the people into a belief actually existed. A member of Congress even went so far as to pretend to entertain fears lest the late Postmaster General should cause the Gen eral L'ost oirice-10 liu fired, m Jiidc ihe cor ruptions and abuses in that department. Well they have succeeded in reaching the reins aud have appointed cyphering com-initi?-s and committees of investigation; tbev have ransacked the Departments, the Custom-house, and the President's dwel ling, from the sink to the garret, and instead of these great frauds, startling indebtedness, and immense corruptions, they find all fair and honest. Thev can't lav a finger upon a single abuse on the part of their prede cessors while in ollice, and must now stand forth before the world branded with indeli ble marks of ihe grossest falsehoods and blackest infamy. In the' course of his re marks on the 19lh inst., Mr. Benton said, the Democratic administration, if it bad continued, would have gone through ihe year without an additional dollar, appealed to Mr. Woodbury, who confirmed it, oid gave him a written statement to that ef fect. . . ' . jow, contrast unswitn me policy pr sued bv tliis economy and reform party these patriotic immaculate Whig gentry, and mark the difference. Immediately up on the prossession of -power, they intro duce a bill to distribute the annual proceeds SEPTEMBER 22, 1841. 01 the public lands among the States ; which is notning less than carrying out the nisiies.nl a set ot foreign Bankers aiiil stockjobbers lint they may be paid at the expense of the people and iIip conse quence of such an abstraction from the Treasury of a part of the means of carry ing on the Government, a loan is to be made from these self same bankers of twelve millions at bix per cent, thus pay ing them doubly for the loan of money, which Iras been squandered by the States, without any earthly benefit to the puopie -but on Ihe contrary, being a source of deep and lasting injury, encouraging'a spe cies of gambling with ihe public moneys, alike destructive -r .-.. Wnen we announce these things, we do not do it upon our mere assertions, like the Whig presses, but upon ihe proof produc ed in the Legislative Halls of the country. which have not and cannot be denied. We have Mr. Benton ami Mr. Woodbury's word, (based upon figures and facts) for saying that had the . democratic adminis tration continued it would have gone through the year without an additional dollar. In the place of this we now have nothing but one continual cry from the present Administration party in Congress, and that is money ! money ! money ! help us, Casius, or we sink ! All of which money is to be repaid by the sweat of the poor man's brow by the producers the farmers, the mechanics and laborers ! Let ihe people look to the extravagant demands of their servants before they render the;na tion bankrupt and barter away the liber ties of the country for foreign gold they have already dimmed the lustre of our na tional honor, let them be checked before they further disgrace us, by making us the slaves of foreign Bankers, stockjobbers and money lenders for it is as true of govern ments as individual that the borrower is slave to the lender. ,Vom the Globe. Mr. Van Buren's Letters does him great honor. It is just such a frank, high minded reply as we should expect from a statesman, who, having nioyed the high est honors of his counlry, watches, www . feeling of fraternal interest, over its desti nies: s New York, Aug. 28, 1841. Sir: In accordance with a resolution of ah immense Democratic Convention, held In the Ninth Ward of this city, 011 Thurs day, the 21 inst. we have the honor to transmit to you the enclosed copy of their proceed ings. The Democracy, in honoring John Ty- lc r for his independent conduct in the veto of the "Fiscal Bank bill, decidedly con demns the repeal of the great measure of your Administration, the Independent 1 rea sury System." That system, your Demo cratic fellow-citizens regarded as one of the chief means of sustaining, in its purity, the Constitution of the country. It is no lon ger the law of the land. This we most deeply deplore. Although our opponents have erased it from the Statute Book, that fact detracts nothing from the fame of its author, or the gratitude of the people to him, for his manifold services in the great cause of equal rights. In behalf of the immense assemblage on Thursday night, we beg leave to assure you of the high respect which is enter tained for your person and characther by a grateful people. Rcspectlully, your ob t servt s, GAIHHT GILBERT, Pres't. ED W AUD PATTERSON, Secy. Hon. Martin Van Buren. Kinderhook, Sept. 4, 1811. Gentlemen: I have received with much satis faction your letter communicating to me, by the direction of a Democratic Con vention, held in the Ninth Ward of the city of New Yotk, a copy of its proceed ings, in which the conduct of Mr. I yler, in placing bis veto mi the Fiscal Bank bill, is highly approved, and the reppal of the Independent Treasury system decidedly condemned. The compliment paid to Mr. Tyler by the convention for what has already been done was weH deserved, and if, as there seems to be good reason to hope, he shall complete the work so wisely begun, by dis approving the, bill for the creation of a Fis cal Corporation, he will be entitled to the thanks of the country. No one cm fail to see that the pi .vis ions of the new charter are not only in all respects as objectionable as ihose of the former, but have in addition been matte to assume a form infinitely more offensive to a sincere State Rights man. That the in stitution proposed to be established by the first bill would have bepn a corporation, as mil oil crt go that embraced in the second, is pertain Whv then, it msv be asked, wa the name changed from a "Fiscal Bank" to a "Fiscal - Corporation. if it wpre' not to meet the constitutional question more fully in the face, and to assert, in broader and less equivocal termsthe general au thority of Congress to establish corpora tions, wilh nowtr to operate in the States? A grant of power to Congress to establish corporations, was, it is well known, in express terms refused by the convention, rihtirdfHtly,th flmbllnltmeni of I hrir yotctr." and the absence of such a power was dis tinctly urged by Mr. Jefferson, as the pro minent ground of his opposition to the esta blishment of the first Bank. To meet the otherwise unanswerable argument founded upon the recorded fact of ihe refusal of the convention to grant this power, it was urged by the Federal school that, in con struing the Constitution, they were not to be controlled by the intention of the con vention which framed and the people who adopted it, but were at Jul! liberty to put upon it any interpretation which the words of the instrument would, in their opinion, justify. A belter device to s.Vrl!ff.,'i,!.n t,,is heresy, so anti-Republican just rights nt the people, could not "well have been conceived than that which is to be found in the phraseology of the second bill. It would doubtless have been eminently advantageous to the country' if there had also been a concurrence in sentiment be tween the Chief Magistrate and your Con vention, in respect to the Independent Treasury and othtr important measures which have been acted upon by the two Houses fat the present session. But in expressing their approbation of the good which he has done, and in regarding with indulgence his conduct upon points in rela tion to which the Convention differs from him, the members have only given effect to the principles by which the Democracy of the United Stales have ever been gover ned. Every public servant whose intentions are pure, can always rely upon receiving, at their hands, respect for his motives and a just credit for his acts, whatever may be the character of their political relations with him, and however much they may differ fro.n him in other respects. For the avowal of approbation, respect, and regard, which you have communicated to me in behalf of the Convention, I return my sincere acknowledgment, and am, gen tlemen, with unfeigned thanks for the friend ly spirit in which you have discharged the "duty assigned you, very sincerely, your friend and obedient servant, . M. VAN BUREN. To Garrit onvrt, esq. President, aud Edward Patterson, ea. Secretary of the Convention. McLeod While the English papers are very fond of talking of "McLeod in irons," with all the pioper rhetorical flourishes, the facts are, as thus stated in the Utica "Friend of Man." "McLeod is now in jail, not a hundred rods from our office, in the rjtiict village of Whitesboro; and we can ass n re the Lon don Journal that, so far is he from being in heavy irons, that he is not even confined to the jail rooms. lie spends most of his time, and receives company, in the parlor of the jailor's house. On almost any plea sant morning he may be seen enjoying himself in a promenade upon the garden walk. Indeed, he is spending his time a mong us as one of our 'first gentlemen of leisure.'" The directors of three of the branches o the Bank of the Stale of Arkansas have borrowed nn iheir own notes $181 871 00 As security - - - 290 253 00 Total amount borrowed - $475 127 00 Pretty good financiers, considering their youth and inexperience ! Arkansas is fur nishing good evidence of possessing quali fied spirits to take charge of a branch of a National Bank. From the Index. NATIONAL OMENS. The American people are a peculiar peo ple. Their fathers laid the deep founda tion of their mighty republic in the win'.er snows and on the lempest-beateti shore of the dreary ocea! The wilderness and the solitary places gave them a shelter, and the cold biast from the iceberg of I l I... t !l I .1. . . I ...mn from merry England. They had left be hind the smiling village and the crowded mart, the lazy lord and the persecuting biggol, the gothic tower and the long drawn aisle, the King in his tapestried chamber, and tins laborer dying with hun ger upon the soil which his own hand had tilled, antl from which a plentiful harvest hail been reaped, to find a last and an abi ding resting place in a land of savages in a counlry covered with the foresis of centu ries, and teeming with perils. The sword, the rack, and lire, were behind them, and an ocean roared in solemn majes'V before. Like the Israelites, Vey crossed the deep and journeyed in the wilderness; and like them, the fathers saw not the promised land which the children-now behold in that Canaan which stretches itself in beauty and fertility from the nwky shores of the Bay of Fundy to the banks of the vine-clad Sa bine. And had they no pillar of fire by night no cloud by day to guide them amid the desert, and to hover above their resting places ! Was there no special Providence manifested in the Pilgrims march to glory? The finger of God marked the ir path, and the roobt sceptical VOLUME V, NO 1?, among the nations of the earth . pronoun-1 ces them to be a peculiar people. . Here rest the last' hopes of liberty Here burn the altar-fires of freedom, lighted up by the torch of religion, and fanned by the breath of persecution. ' The blootl ..of martyrs sprinkled the table of sacrifice, ttm the tears of the oppressed watered the roots of the tree of shelter - ' ' . Our very existence is a miracle -0 of h'S tion is an anomaly on the page of history. Let no one, then carelessly mock the preg nant signs of the times. Before Jerusalem was battered down by the cohorts of Tims, lliR son of Judah, as he at uru the porcl of the holy temple, ami looked towards the" him io"Ur'aciructfoh''iriW iilrve vnrttM of liberty in this year of wonders this day of death to the mighty of a destruction to the high hopes of the proud. The evening: before the battle of Lexington a knight iri sable armor, wilh a while plume streaming from bis crest, mounted upon a coal-black, charger, galloped through the streets of Boston, shouting in a voice whose sepul chral tones sent a chill of fear to the breasts of. the startled ciiizens, "To arms!. to arms !" Soon the tramp of hoofs died away, and the horse and his rider were gone, but wilh the blush of dawn came pealing upon the ears, of the puritanic" sleep ers the morning gun of the Revolu tion. When we hear the death-watch ticking -in our chambers at midnight, who among us is not startled? When our business leads us to journey on Friday, who does not endeavor to put it off until the next day ? When the strange dog howls at midnight beneath our windows, or the tillage bell tolls in the night Dreete, or tno . cornsfi lights dance amid the tombs of the church-yard, who can hear or see them without feeing a Utile asTiamcd 01 tne lore bodinirs that shadow the future ? Man is a' superstitious animal by nature. There is a- fearful inyitery about nim. lie lears io penetrate the arcana of the fnturts and ar he walks abroad in the sunshine, he hears the rustling of the wings of the angel of death in the sound of the falling leaf, and mourns a friend by the side of the dying flower. We are not superstitions, hut there are sometimes circumstances in the life of art individual as well as of a nation that lead us to think of the days when omens wero regarded as indexes of the future, and to excuse the men of olden time for their credulity. - . . . . This year has been an epoch of wonders. The political strifes of a mighty people have stirred up society from its dregs, and shown us what elements are within 11s to make a second revolution, when the foot of the money god shall stamp in dust the neck of the poor and the ignorant, and the mer chant princes shall measure jusiico with a pedlar's y ardstick in the high places of the land. Had the hot blood of party beenr spilt in any portion of our country, prior l! the 3d of March last, how would the raeleo have ended? Who would sleep quietly now in his bed nor see armed men upon the night watch, nor hear the cry of the sentinels by the Capitol. Since the commencement of this year tlio head of our nation the idol of a party colored party has been removed by death', in such a manner as to cause the whole people at the command of a successor to fast and pray, and the Senate Chamber and the cloister, the pulpit and the halls of learning to echo to the strains of eulogy and the dirges of sorrow. We noticed some time since a few of tha most prominent omens which marked tho advent and the event of the hero of the. North-wesi, but since then others equally interesting and equally marvellous luv occurred, and demand a passing notice at our band r 1 TT ! i P. nr in tiie election oi general nanismi last fall, he was invited to address a iiks meeting at Zanesville, Ohio, and wnner wailing for the hour to arrive when he was to commence speaking, a sterrible thunder storm settled upon the village. Upon a liberty pole ol inimeiiM- nng.R " lorr rabin the American flag was floating eaUantlv, bearing upon its surface the su perfluous mono of "Tippecanoe, when a vivid stream of lightning descended upon the symbol of party, tore it inio a thousand pieces, and shivered the flagstaff from, Lst-hcad to step. General Harrison an.t his friends started from their festive boarJ as the terrible crash shook the logs around them, and approached the door. At tin moment a Stress dashed inm the entry and banded the General a letter informing him of the sudden death of his son. Soon af er this a man in Philadelphia by the name of Hague published aJioroscoper. iri which he stated that .."V Harrison or Mr. Van Buren would be Pre sident of the U nited Slates for the ensuing term, but ihat the office would be filled by one who had not been named for. it, and , whose acts would disappoint both pant?. This was popsidered as an idle prediction by many at the time, and scarcely any on ave heed to it : but what was the result r the fulfilment of therediction to the letter. 1 Mr Van Buren went into retirement fcov. Wwilh honor, General Harris., fog