national anti-slavery standard, year 1861, feb 16

4
VOL. XXI. NO. 40. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1861. Rational ,anti-$lawv\| JttsMM. AMERICAN ANTI-SMYEBI sniir.TT, WHOLE NO. 1,080. PENN37T.VANI: ANTr-SLAVEHY SOCIETY, ,.,' Arch, FMladtlphta, [Jw-JWawnj. nip ni. a) ,1 .: repuhucaxs i-of.i:xTt-:i-;i(iX'i tobathirt woman lui- been »->.~Enturd117, ''"-' 19|M- "V°" a Mr. Gosfoi'lh, from Virg the warrant of United Slit! in. tin aso not being ready fc of habaa corpta, ;i was issued by the far this County, nn Lour a very large ei Iho Court House. determined lll.lt till sustained. Judge Spnulding He',, I,!," s Marshal a arrested upon sionor Li. Wl.il>.. minutlcd loour nrratiBtul the ilnt panic ,.:,. rli Ir |.-i.r iLil[.. P...I.. ii.- _ |n-.uil' iilrcmly lor the foresight nntl strategy of If il had nnt the conductor there would undoublet.-, shod. TIid Marshal and 1,,-d. |.,m U ban fired about one hundred si tin' car desperately an fortunate for the regrt , were oiitgcnornllrd and defeated In iboir purpose of ninkinj: nu attack, for tln-y would iinvo beer -- J sudor J'nr their iciiiurity. The Cleveland Plaimlcalcr's reporter ssyi i'Vi'i, \"Zu\ THE POETRY OF SLAVERY. spiny of big WMCl indent Repnblle ol oura of tlio blacks great njngs of the supremacy of hl.V for her discharge, upoi imv» of Ohio, the jnils of .;- .ill. only III- I.--..-.I for tin in,™ 'niterl Suites, of persons charged ming t but "an attempt to cscnpe ot n, crime, and tlmt it bml never by (bo most aealoiis supporters o Ohio have Wn changed from tii nil. iiu-l he in hereby uiilhoi-i/.cd etseive all prisoner* charged irilh a , his custody by Hit! authority ol the 'KHKt.V Lw Ab09Ub—Tb.6 Church Anti-Slavery Society expected lo uinko n great sensation--perhaps -Move the honor of nmnvrd -bv holding their ri.Holiili.in-. Were adopter ncn.EXcfipt n general n Dr. Chcever's book, the "Guilt, ofSlavery" (n kind of chenp coinncnsintion I'or the use of bin cl.utch us n meeting place), and n nicee.stinn to Ibe Churches of ihe five" States lo set apart the Ikird Sunday, or third DISGRACEFUL ORGIES. Asa lilting com lesion i.- tin' ri-1,-i- •!• mon-t rations the public moorings h.LI i mention Hull on Tuesday nnd IVodniada) tLo - who warn gcd in the iielniioiis conspirn.y to uierlhruw and iplo down the right of free speech in eil> d Inst even.uu; in nn elnl.inui.lv prepared jolltli-,; "cation over their sui .'cs-hlul onslaught upon popular liberty. 1 (heir clcrgym.'i lio steal, (o i;o an .little play lo bL but" " )-,),:. r, ti;,.. ei Journal; In ibe Tb.. li,-,. elio (n le : Mr. Iho: a the and c . ug, a crowd of perhaps two hundred boys gathered in front of the " Courier making the atoro ol Mr. JniucB-McGnrb (n " National Democrat ") their plnce of rend iud been announced by the " drummer"." busy in the uflernnon in enlisting pnrliclpji iiroimunl .Ic.nnnntraticn. 'Procession win. soon otlorwanls form in front of the " Courier buildinir. headed by Miller's Bra-a Dand. At tin vera perbapa a hundred men nnd boyi .iid MibsnpicTilli ihe number waa incre ecruits la about two hundred. The: iiiiii-'iiir.-iiiii-!.. eti tried in I 'ptions ns follows nn only !., n liiTiimi. Kie,e.wl,i.-1. ,1.1-1 Here line, ed by new bearing "Tin: lllilhl. of IS,,.. n; bath hearing placards with Sacun 1. Jt*v Iter. Hi-er Hull meupl. in Ihe old Mo.., r ^l.er S.nlli I'olh-... Mr. Hull (lien private, pupil a thort, black-eyed Le introduced li) the writer at Mr. " ;.' iiainm. i:,.|,in iked Mr. Bull t Hint man was a member of college t No,' said be 'he has been, but hu-< li.tt iln. .-oil.;;". Ho n(enls w that it seems stluiOT-l im^.o^ilile (o break him of it— Steals from his classmates, and anything that h, hnpi.ein. |o t;.m-,-. Ilml .nil put. his hornl- upon.' " Whether tbit. .,1 - to ollioes of hiph tii ,..,...„,.. eetly , in( of Ihe late wholesale Mint mbbi Irlenns, may bcwell n subjcol of inquiry. a 'be *' an. He Itft ollege under of (heft.—E.I. Journal. l,.lir..-,-ll) THE STANDARD. n/i-: .-t.U'.'.i.w/-'. ir COXVEXTIOX. to avoid nil reen^niliiui of sltiverv, either expressed implied. Nollnng short of thin will place our lYcrmncnt on a basis of penuanent prosperity. A.Moso the pu>.^eiij.ers bv ilie -teii ti.jin .-nviuiieili. \v:i!. Mr. 6. II. Kin- ''liyi t in tie: ...Iiiphiy of the ; in K".'i! i;.'iili-,.:,rl oiup'uii. rioriihl, Monday, the 2l«t. Inrge.but.whhtf^ Sheriff wi elinrgcd » Tne AsTi-St.An:i;v Stasdaku, !/Wii jlltndcnt don't like Mr. Seward's snee.... they do not. The one 1:«t ihe liepuidiran na.-ly kieka off' the Aboliiioni-la the betler. They baye done enough evil work t.. . utitb'.l i- an .inmed, "il" S m! 'lllili lln «l,..b- „.,,lu - lining i" ,1 «ith in: SCact'ofTuo^to ihe Ma^bul.hebad nonutlmrity for confininf, il. Ihe publie jail ,l,e l^ii.e. «.nnd;„, - rime against the United Slates. n„...l Imrdly my, whs t.\ peeled by elearli neeonline lo (he law of all parties, Hint State. The riigi...- Johnson wbo.wiib a lnrge. number of depi in for the occasion, then removed her to Slates Court room before Commissioner \ removal was clteettd wilhi "lopartoftb - SIoihIihJ tie- t'in(...t .lillyoppca,,,! tnpeJIi 1=.-."il"1 ittliigenoef- .led Heroeehingn. Iniugb.l e ilnd ribaldry. After parad Sicrfonueil thu most revo leasl.ial orgies, preparntor) Speclnlora of the scene at II iled character named Lb ion (he ".defunct Abolition ri--j.ti.-i.Ki.i-i r,iid unt'iuir. r. ith a mock prayer1—that fbminnees indulgod in on inij.'roper fauiilianti. I" r... o deep a utain et ilirtgniee upon aur eilv. There is irevaleut in the eoiumuiiity, aiuong all clasnea of espei'table citizen*, mil among men of all political 'iowB, feelings of sorrow, regret and humiliation at ithont an hour's I'OWg mail, and a native of l'ort- is mother resides. Some three to Florida, and soon obtained il engineer, in which capacity he i from thu State by mob violence. 'or opening a ditch on some part igninst his wishes. This man ited the common method now in o get rid of obnoxious persons. iM.inh.l (,. l.-l.c i„r the. South, lo (be ouired Chambers. all there, and 1 shall not lake of the mailer for two or three p from Cedar Kays one morning, son by nu armed body of some le wju. sailed by three persons, latuv would bo biet with death > taken lo a tavern near by, nnd Ai.Bus-v, Feb. G, ISiil. Tun Anli-Sbivery I'oiiv.iitinti assembled here on Monday even lug, A few dny.i before, a petition, signed by ono D. V. Kino, tm.l a hundred others, wns sent to Mayor Thntelier. iv.iin'.,iiiv him (., up-.-hi, niithorilv mod. I piiev.l mpos _. " _ '! " " l.i..l..f.-l:.l,t.iel,..|,l tree li- " - " "! f ".-iil.nl .Mall evem-! Gbowik E. TuATemm, Hayor." On Iho naseuibliae; ot the l'.,aii nlion, the Mnyor addressed the people, exhorting them lo keep thu pence, respect ihe eb-ir.o-ier of ihe city, and regard (he rights ofothets; spoke ehnpieatly of the prieelew value of free speech, nnd n = ~u r-.-. (hern that he sdiouhl esert all the power vested in hhiiiolf, as Mayor of the eitv, lo enforce law and order. LuoretU Jlort, of 1'hilndelphia, then iu!dr.->-4i d the Convention, ami give an iater..-tuie lii- the ttuli-slavery enterprise. She was heard witliout interruption. Hev- Bhiiuii G iters ojlnmeiii'c.l Mpeaking, and soon the rowdy element be^an to show iiself. In vain the Mayor exhorted the crowd to be silent; thu noise increased nnd drowned the t;p.,:.ker'n voice, so that but a small portion ol In-i retnnrka were heard. There were then loud calls for tinnim SniTir. Al last that gentleman ii'sjionded, nnd in a few words* of slinging rebuke, relie-ed lo make a speech, for ihe reason that they bad mobbed down Ihe previous speaker. Mrs. E. C. iri.M... then addressed the Convention ill nu excellent speeeh upon the horrors of mob ascendency and (he teiet-.. In, .'-.. „l (be right of free speech. She was benrd with difficulty, being cou- RiAiillr interrupt, .1 \i\ ^itimpiug and hissing. After the adjournment of the Convention, the crowd remained and .nll.'l lh for a t-peeeh from 1 " ,. ,r. His Honor spoke bridle, and again km, Mi urgr-d tbo-e |in-!-eni to rie-pjet themselves, the ^.,. 1 ...... of tb.- .it., mill the -iiercd right of free •[> b lodge l.'ob.- being called tor, respoudeil remembe elled hooted aud eursed nnnotii-ed until they were ired ol (heir own noise, i id before lidnighl kII was 1 77,. Eveni g Journal, Thatcher. s contemptuous 'he Mayor of Albani ltlack of77i Journal an 1 ihovj ol the l.'Mr eurs who bark upcrti his I rack, and though liir his firmness nnd manliness he may eiiHJrioace temporary incon- nce, yet in the end he will triumph. 'Let the friends of free speech tliron^l the land remember "liiu ; and while the Into who, in Ihe face of thousands .f foes, keeps Fort Sumter lor law nnd order, is iverywhero justly honored, lot no less houor be ren- dered to Ihe Mnvnr ot Alle.nv, who. when mob law triumphed in DeAlon, in Ihitmbi. in ^yraciiw, in Cti.-a snd in Auburn, kept the forin-.s of fr.e speech uiaiifully in the tnpiud „f tb,. Knipire S(nt«, nnd, in thu lace gf sneenag l,v|....ri.v and blaspheming ruffinuism, fearlessly iiniiuiaii.ed tin. 'iomtitudon and Donor la Mayor Thatcher! o. iv, e MICHIGAN ANTISLA VER Y CONVENTION. As.v Abhor, Fubruary 1, 1801. In accordance with a rail issued sotuu lime since, nnd published ia Thi: Suxt...rl, Tk<: lUiifi.; ami city pujiers.Hn Anli^ltliery Conventio. at Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Saturday and Sunday, January .'f. and In consequence, or i mob, a hall previously by the friends of fre. hey found the bouse ..-I of .-biiehoblcrs who any to us that and Ibis I'aiou <(« ii-l prvt<xt itatery, favorable lo freedom, tealed earnestly and eloqueiilly to his lime, but wns uftenvnrd apjical to vacate the chair an no one could be heard, the cmecIi .-? uproar of groans for Lincoln and thu Convention and cheers for Dong- las and the Union pre-ientiii;; all organization nnd all speaking, the friend* patiently r lined, until Ihe representatives of law, medicine and the classics received an accession of drunken " roughs " ; and, at laat, blows, breaking of hem ln-s. ami jhusoiiiiI iniury no of their inimlicr. compelled Mil MSOUTIQX E Aubu ^dcctioiie. „„..Dn. Hr.vrv, nn eminent nnd learned cle of the Episcopal l.-bureh, lias addre.-,- States -' "" : the loll..,. ,om|Hoi the subject i ThursiTay last. T not appear -'- and broke u[ room and oremmnne. ii pnsr..-d the .-nan! rusohil.ii '" W bib. 'i'w riot was at its height, says the reporter of TIk Union Miss Aulhonv le'itn"! over Iho desk and aid, "Why, boys, voure nothing but a baby mob ou ought to go lo ^vriiense to learn how to do It, ml iil-o leant how log.-t before the Crand Jiirvi |ir,M..„hi., a g.-ntleiie-ii well known in this city, vs. aoiuinated iho b fori leuru.ati.bn the mob ,oon found that thev bad caught a artar.atid ibnl t'l Morris wns noi to be made a tool ol to choke dow ee speech. The Union reporter describes the scene follows cry qiicMioi ,N.T, Tuesday.-Inn. 'li, ISni Mv Ds*B I have your note. Thanks. trust in God (h- Kepubleruis ar ,1 eroing to be cowardly, bu base, ami so foolish withal, as (o s render n'mb-r tbr nre>."uro ol -.-...-S--1011 and seccs." threats Good heavens Of what stull are tl made? They have only - " ,„.„ bv the but sundry colored rom nbroad rondo one or two attempts to ay hold of the woman, but r,i-eaied a|,,.lu-,i,..„- o the officers' batons .0011 iiulnee.l then, (0 desist. In iheir efforts the officers were seconded by Upon api«..ariii" ' i, upon the gro :.'iiri' show, by 1 From the sentiment doubt, ifsbo ia nUown (o be a returned to Virginia. This is the licit case that hi the present -Inw in Cleveland eases somewhat Intnoua in Wellington, in l^rniti C01 iiul shall have lung you have a n ,0 riglit to demand- ,nd difgrnceful for ,, u 11 m'.-eliiig"ol" their own, oTutions adopted by the Syrn ru., he was taken lo Ihe " store " to As yet he bad not heard the nature of the nceusnlion against him, and only knew- thnt Chambers had accused him, ami a drunken Iri-lunan who had been discharged from Hi" road had been a witne-.s in the case. He «iw u~ler.d mto.th,- rooui where ihe "Commit ice" hud <ni. when tin 1. ebt slopped forward ami said, " All von tint are in livur of the sentence jusl ngroed to P| "-1 t''" l'l,n - !l > Aye." A snvage aifirmative yell nehr- d tl -< n- "-' what the Hcntenco was he did not know, ion aseerlaiaed. lie was seated in a 1 with a pair of scissors approached, and whilo'bo was held In two others, the hair from one side of his head, ami one half of his whiskers and mustache, were closely cut oil'. He was then per miltd to -o to Ihe invent where he spent llm night. In the morning Ihe " Coniiniltee escorted hmi I the cars, nnd, under their snrveill: , be started lor Fertiandina. -Much agninst bis wishes, Ihey obli him to take a seal ia the passenger eai'n. wber. Klmrti condition would exeilo Ihe derision ot his low-iravellei-s. i'n ih- wav down, lna baggnge agaiasear.'hc-.l.l.ut nothing was. loom! ,...-|.t a -1 or At an early hour on Sunday morning the house as put ia some order, to ninke n meeting possible .r the day; and thu assembly was lnrge enough, alb In the morning and afternoon, to fill the nluce. majority of the students wore on the side of free Ctl and good order, and citizens present were desirous lo bear quietly, The following ofiicora ere chosen Trmyja (fr ijjpuii tain the what you have would be wrong, base we never will grant inve rights Hs well n( s that are our duties too, and, by the Ktor- we will stand on tbeui, come whnt may. pnper ns much as you please, Wo will war upon you for that Bill wo will inain- nreuiHCV of the Constitution nnd the laws, iewaroalhe I 'irion, we will defend it at ind Ihe guilt of blood be on your heads. Lord be judge bet. '"I'.'.lll.i.t le- The' lid nev firmly; stand nil of 1011, nnd thing" win ow ..^ They cannot help coming r.gbt. the stars in tbei e fight ngaiust m> c'-moii all lustorieal laws, all ,. pDlitJeal and economi. -si. light ngai ofgrntnln w'a'ui in 'ed like that an.inpi U carry off tbo fugiun Thu Oberlin ty, near two years oil that this case gi« .. c by stojiUb, but 1 , l«v,ui conduced 'according lo tb demandsot tl.o law. and il.r. ease coulinucd ,l„-l„..i,., a lair rbaiweofprovm,. In r lr.-.-.l Inti... W.lliug(o-.>:i- -.!:'-' "" io.,u..i ill- .1." lik'-i '•-' '-'"'I.' de.-ov the 1.1 -ro. in;d..;.-l ' > ' '' ' .I.....I - o.ilsul.- i-'. 'I"° '"'•'I ,bu slave off i" a . .rriat; - called upon ! •h.b.i iV.r w . 1 this; will e There nde a speech, nnd nt Iho a V, Miniubua bus nbout 1,500 iubahi .,:.,.,,, nothing .hang everything being at a ...ud-till ..!.' Il"ii.ililn.-v. nl -I"" ol v.iieh are organised, armed and drilled daily. Q! - t.v telei-H ami .HeV-eral -mailer piCCCS nrouUt up front the old tort of St. Augustine, which the; intend to mount at Furtmui' police forci further interrupti-,,,.,,.. bia duty, nnd the police were evidently n...... . do tbeiis. se L. Rose spoke bnelly. ntiiosv made a alirring speech, and tl, ais demonstration:! appealed which nttendei e' nt Monday evening. The crisis was ao» reaibi'tl wrsun.-ion ami t-indly rebuke had beci tried, and, as usual, bad faib-1. The uproar in th .allerv was gneil, and lh- Miner gave the word t clear Ihe galleries. In ati instant the police ---'- was done, and tins demons! _ for order produced quiet. There loml calls then for (.fiihit Smith, and now order wns established Mr. Smith rose and asked Ibat (be audience should put nnv .|ues.nons to bun louca- ;„-< anti-slavery mailers, the questions came fast, nnd were most'happily answered by Mr. Smith. An hour ol kindle eonler-nee ihus puswil, and ihe Cou- venlion adjourned until evening. The Convention met again in Ihe evening at o'clock. The Minor ag'.iu nddits^ed a lew words tc the people. G. W. 1'i'rs^i made the first speech 'lv ititernipled will, :q,plau-e and hisses L Hose followed, and was beard .[Uietlv. Fin: upii-s f>oi!ui..vsi then took the aland, nnd nindo a stirrin"- speech was oeensioually bisn.l and also am,lauded. Alio,11 Ho. b.ek 1, portion of the audience, nnmlicrii.g some stvculv-live (0 a hundred persons, Olig llie.'c were the di-iii.p.,uil. .l. who could nor leave wiibout one 1 attempt to create a disturbance The police nc seiied ono or two of then number, the gang e.l to lln' IT -.lie ot" their c..II.Hides, and IcT PI H w lite* the incitement wns intense. The Mayor, -ml collected, directed the operations ol the ikn bravo fellows, did dimr duty EtpOBM Cbi?i5«i(/«t—Josephii mil. Grilling, Jneob Vol- I'illsbnry. Diehard I'nrki Jf. Chandler. The forenoon was occupied by Mr. I'li.i.sae ho— ndilress with li-,le[,.-l to wilh a t. sm-elfol rltl on iiuite unlike the rude uproar of the preccdi ling Ihe v y. lie adinitiistcretl a "o the Mayor of (he city, 11 iho curly part of the ;;,;r hop-fall if possible, still mare ,:,l the nieeling, i-i.i-ut- jftieli.),. among all ihe „e and of the whob At ? p.m. the hon crowded. Mrs. Gairnsu im' of Ihe necessity of a friends of Ireedom at t souled cooperation lh. |:..pii'.be ms bad given imr 111 fJ.TCsDiv-- j".> t' il'. noi. of a paragraph in T> .' ' j"'""!'" paper, calling out uml '.ml' m "-' "''" ""'.'I' of Ihe determiieitioo to cri.sb lice h|H.-celi. t us tieier- mination that our friend Tillsbury should not lie heard in Ana Arbor. ... Mr. 1'iu-sbvnv occunied most of reina.mag time, the opposition iadulgiag 111 arusy .hiiinristiatioi. against him. and friends vtsltmr, resuleals m Uio 71.. !...__ .l..^:..^..o ... kr,n,. .- SliO.'O ol ill," .-,... .fluui iln-Vai nolicc- and thev lik- brave l.llows, del tb. o dull .r.v ,.-,."1..... .-»», "";' ^.^'...IVf.r-'.Vi.V :'..'! »":^S on Ihe l.lnody altar of ,0 slave-claimant Ihaiiked Ohio for the ,n, and said, "If our servants in Congress do their dntv, the people will.' Judge fcpnld- safe escort through 11 graduate of a had been in prne- Sow Orleans, and was sent Norib because »he Utlhn.l been en clcd with at. auii-sla.ery I'ap-r-it ng responded, .11 sh.ill ha. t she bad ^ I do not l„gelber -. ,.ill gopeneeably and lion Let fJiem restore thei .r ; lei fhctn atone for the let them (perhaps) sunemlei si I tbs It ,:: (rial and condign mim-lm M '' 1 " e houorably and honestly Brut RED, il go th. ay voice is to let them go. I-1 ilmm .it lh Novices. 1 sbnlfbe sorry for them. But, pe it -. Iho heat way lo open their foolish eye * ill ficd thu Union wns the only buttress ft li a result. Unh! Comprotn of whnt should s caneossiule I I .3 from (he South, and n THE FUGITIVE LUCY RETURNED. East Cleveland, Ohio, January. The renders of The Congregalionalist will havi learned, ere this meets their eye. Unit our city and on lion of a poor fugitive— / Ql * '• tb" fnder mer c-ic.s of .-outhern slaver). Mt 'a-'.'^ lor 11 lev aiouths the blessings ol R-o "' '' " ",'"''-'- m','.! THE CLEVELAND FUOITI] ickof tin ,-vnilh -. ..u will be saiisinclori- to I he iioil except such ns thu peoplu of the North will hurl y from your place* and damn yon to everlasling infur " in the territories 1 in mennins of lie Con- e.ti.m will ever consent any amendment iiilro- -lav.'h llirougli tie- fn.e roil liar to uieoupl.- lh. d with 11 pistol. Tbei ill., m .'r.sr.s at Lima tin The Cleveland Herald -li of the while people 11 ,u .li-n.nle the ncgrc-t 1 "''"',' ',„, cell ,1.1. "f "'" track ns the inon um.rVX'",'.'..l lt.-sen.vd their guns n. the earrbBC* mllllury style." The Cleveland JDanocrat says The .love pri knew 'hat 'be attempt would he ni M the train approached Lima she appeared to firow i felt at Cam- 1 baa been for 1 > impeachment of thu youespecially ot those honorable and ho have held on among you - I promote treason. It is hi, cut of such a man us Wigfn n world of good—go turtle ' a thf" " a "''or I'. t he- ':S" Lucy 'hoeo h, ,1,-,-lar. d THE EARLY LIFE Ob' SSSATOR BENJAMIN. irsrjr.sT of Tlio /«(/.-/i.'iiiA-jrf gives of Ynlo College: is one of the class ot 1829 whose ooiid ou the list ol graduates 01 fiiltell.lc ,d yelled, shouting at intervals fot compromise, and giving groans lor the May free speech. " awhile the police cleared the sia.r growth, tins ."""" »»" ', " 1- Il,.,..|,iv ,1 -- e. - II.. 1,1.^1.1 e, ^ rioUFj Ironblo in ibat class. VVnlebcs, breastpim seals, pencil eases, pen knives, two-blmle.l kme,- mur-bhided knives, e|e.,..le„et... urns of tuonoy, lying around 1 ooms, disappeared unaccountably |WLoily tit each othei l__.^ii.:nri niust be <Iol... detective rKi*!.*!. » ,r. pod tank ,', .,„,-,„[, .,H,.)il !.„ Iblcf. II.. COQfl.&K>l. On ;;,„.„;„:. ,,,, ,„!,, ... ..:- ,.,•=.».*. .w lQiii,d , X Ml of ""'•'•- v„l..u™-j™tliy. r«'« 3"J »ml b.r.l.s«r, .mujI. lo ««t , Cbitbin ise' in studont Thn losers Iteiked t., ...id auspiciously at others, thin- must be done, ami lh"; dually constituted ',-n,,nselv"s a volunteer ' J- scl for lln " ihey have not I m MM **} mer. .nary m.ne Tl,.. value of tie- g.n ih m tb- mnii.hi.riiig to tl cllbrls. Thev wish In show the :-,...Itle- 1 11 people. the Northern poopk c ,. Hie r,,„n(dicul lies! litscrcc, will BlteclllO llie lawn"! And so a weak, defenceless IcOHlrlii must be selected, by Southern chivalry, as nn oll'ering upon slavery's bloody tillar, lo appease the wrath ol (tailors and seeessionista And I blush to add, that this appeal lo Northern patriot- ism I!) has had its desired ellL-cr. It lias been iiaiuful to witness tlio dillerent tone of some prominent Repub- lican9, when compared with their utterances during tbo famous. " Rescue 'trials " ol ls51t. Soma of our Republican papers have provoked the luiints of thu Adininir.tratiou press, bv iheir wonderfully conserva- tive tone, nnd ibe -.-.g'ermss with which they have come forward to aid 111 die enforcement of ihe infa- inoiia Fugitive act. It would seem as though they verily thought, (but Lucy's rendiiion would not only save' (he great and chivalrous ffwtu of Virgi tecessionTout that it would rest/ire pence and "Uu heeged looked piteousl relenled at Ihe He bad been 1 for his like tbirty-tliree ye made, aud eat originally bor, Oatl tii'"'' bins the M.ol ssombled ia' Ibe ftrceW. ia great ..umbers. 1 "ijor, the police and eiieennec u|ion thu -M; onista, nnd awaiting ' as.ei-laiiic-d. from the- be .nil, I., e I'r. ,,„-al,le dism be exposed ; thei .tig Ins ojieniug life irite, ihe pet of his iform either tba city j, the l.'nivereity, bui ,., once and forever. lie ood President Day, obuiiocd a ' ision, nnd vanished. „u„ aHennlor in Congress, ;. .' t, no' ami (hrviil.-uing tin; rubbery H ,' '. ,,t the niililnry culler) and si,., l-.-.leral gov.-ri ril. with- ,, ,,r shadow of pretext than he bad 'radons oil bis fellow students just rs. ago. A third of a century hns never uinko, nay change in such ..,,'l, fdehings L-vii a mere thought). 1.1: (0 temptaUon uwift/, that pet Hie part of lb. mob, and immoned to assist the nolere. A Iter the, owdies were inee.ed Irom the Hall tils, ...,el most respes. table ii.ub.-i.ee remained and call.i 01.011 Mr. Ituugla-s 1.. couliaoe bis remarks, lie ill. -, lor some ,iu,.:,tii,.l.vh,-aal.eullo close, the and eontinued his rea.arl,,-, which were puiegent and , orful. until about In o'clock. Al the close, bu was grilled with a hearty round or applause, well nigu ""iri-oto nf (liauks to thu Mnyor and polica was ibeif „„",,„,„ .1 and on t-akiag tie- .piestion Cv 1: ,. si ted 'Ave! three cheers ihen called for and givea ill bo 1 n thousand C. S, Hew. theft—long-eon- ilated'and hoarded pilferings, from tifltful bosom ft Had the fel .rivate moraliiy .. ih- the secret of his c-arK rimes 1. have of the fc" who &*» '£nflw Bnd public life, I n that Inrgi for the Jlayoi ,.-..^ unction. Three more wen, given for Ibe .poll three more for free sje.-eeb. fre-edoin, law and ord oven- voice responding. It should be remark, that only a very few of these peopl.. b.-h.ng. d lo tl,- -nnka of the radical Abolitionists: ami, probably ,-ery few of them had ever attended beiore a rndicnl Abolit n Cotive 'lie- May _ jpecled a rush upot having been loud 11111 dare.l noi striken blot.. - members of thu Convention walked toward 11 ouls.ide wrappers lor. tig prnctiec. Mr, I', urnd, I,f.oouoil hill.1:111 beiogs. as nnv of von, but crave- ,ur children bul let nie .,1" ibis hondage I'nlal ..bite race. Abraham You r,,,,: unslained by urn il the resulls of , his skirls. Ai inaUtutionnl support institutional support individual, genuine tiood that asks not ', rmandiruj dillering never inkilel.oi.lv m.hCI-.x- IK' .poi-tr m the proores- ol humanity. 1 bo .-pilvrow that huibls in the mountain giies to-il"J. b'".'dH 'I- ii-.it as ilni the sparrow in tb, .la.s ,.,' 1 1.aimi, ... ^'^ (he span- tb.: sweet singer of Isra.-l; the elotb.d with thunder, in die vi.-i... were the progniitors of tie- de-it „,:,\, ih.,1 are lhepri.b:ol tie-, roe. there isainightyHrowtJiol lie: high llmucr and ,-baks ['."' logelher .,.>.[rv; llaeon did nut exjilor philosophy- ,r'-"- "" III .n«ska nh.ee.prijpliet, , lo-biy;. Itui hold. Will 11, ol vi:;! rv remember it ... giving his anil to a lady, hd ihe toll,.w,,l.aad, with a Imool pole' deseeoih.d lo the i-treet. Here Ihe Aholilioniits, the threats. I- bb'li; Iral Ihe eowanl dog, number of young inen 1 "" Mayor and the lending to preserve order. Iked toward (he Uehi- A eollc-elion was laL, each side, and the mob ounded and followed them, cursing, yelling, groaning and threatening, but yet not daring to strike ft blow'. The firmness ot the M nyor and police ,„ ,1... „,,.:,,.. .., 1,1,1 -v- mv - '' hi.d -eriTCl and ovemwed ihem, ami a- ihe mean aai:cruel am invariably i/u.r.irds. thev dared not make n>ruah unn ,l.e'ai,thorit.e.s or upon lho-e « hum they jirotccl.,.!. On nrrivipe al the Delavun House, the Mayr ^corted-tHe 'ladies to the parlor. The mob remained oul-sele, or thronged ibe passages oie.l hall below, ami 7l„ I'.r-oiial Lib heartily. [1. 1,. Twireu.1.1, and Mr. Lu.n.rr pol .br ..1 ._ from (he Ullh revolution, hot ll'-hly id-.- ..'i... 00 and freedom of speech. Onuor twooUier ynhng (ben, whose numes were not siinou .LspokV .kc-ub-dt, lo tbo snme eifeel- ifonie noise nlu) diWtrrbanui!. m thu the audience was RilmihVted.. mid a. lar^e ieyufy-tlimt reailii...-- ft) the lilin-e.- I. poke oftfi.: eaiisdtiorth-"' letiaie.-e -.I nn rcb:u,(~ linly-.rit'l ot' (he-hluilellP- Ir...- di.-ei.-si'.u. . P. 111.!,,: I'll.. -:": reUVI"''"' .ruled friend whobas so reco'ii ) slhmry cau« ' n"',',s lerigtii and'hreJidlb, his eoo-

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National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16

VOL. XXI. NO. 40. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1861.

Rational ,anti-$lawv\| JttsMM.

AMERICAN ANTI-SMYEBI sniir.TT,

WHOLE NO. 1,080.

PENN37T.VANI: ANTr-SLAVEHY SOCIETY,,.,' Arch, FMladtlphta,

[Jw-JWawnj.

nip ni.I a) ,1 .: . .

repuhucaxs i-of.i:xTt-:i-;i(iX'i tobathirt

woman lui- been »->.~ i 1

1

l 1

1

y

Enturd 117, ''"-' 19|M - "V°"a Mr. Gosfoi'lh, from Virg

the warrant of United Slit!

in. I tin aso not being ready fc

of habaa corpta, ;i

was issued by the

far this County, nnLour a very large ei

Iho Court House.

determined lll.lt till

sustained.

Judge Spnulding

He',, I,!,"

s Marshal

i a arrested uponsionor Li. Wl.il>..

minutlcd loour

nrratiBtul the ilnt panic

,.:,. rli

Ir |.-i.r iLil[.. P...I.. ii.-I i_

C

i

|n-.uil' iilrcmly

lor the foresight nntl strategy ofIf il had nnt

the conductorthere would un doublet.-, —shod. TIid Marshal and 1,,-d. |.,m • U ban fired

about one hundred si

tin' car desperately anfortunate for the regrt

, „

were oiitgcnornllrd and defeated In iboir purpose of

ninkinj: nu attack, for tln-y would iinvo beer -- J

sudor J'nr their iciiiurity.

The Cleveland Plaimlcalcr's reporter ssyi

i'Vi'i, \"Zu\

THE POETRY OF SLAVERY.

spiny of big WMCl

indent Repnblle ol

oura of tlio blacks •

great njngs of the

supremacy of hl.V

for her discharge, upoii imv» of Ohio, the jnils of

.;- .ill. only III- I.--..-.I for tin in,™'niterl Suites, of persons chargedming t but "an attempt to cscnpeot n, crime, and tlmt it bml neverby (bo most aealoiis supporters o

' Ohio have Wn changed from tii

nil. iiu-l he in hereby uiilhoi-i/.cd

etseive all prisoner* charged irilh a, his custody by Hit! authority ol the

'KHKt.V Lw Ab09Ub—Tb.6 Church Anti-SlaverySociety expected lo uinko n great sensation--perhaps

-Move the honor of nmnvrd -bv holding their

ri.Holiili.in-. Were adopter

ncn.EXcfipt n general nDr. Chcever's book, the "Guilt, ofSlavery" (n kind ofchenp coinncnsintion I'or the use of bin cl.utch us nmeeting place), and n nicee.stinn to Ibe Churches ofihe five" States lo set apart the Ikird Sunday, or third

DISGRACEFUL ORGIES.

Asa lilting com lesion i.- tin' ri-1,-i- •!• mon-t rations|

the public moorings h.LI i mention Hull on 1

Tuesday nnd IVodniada) tLo - who warn

gcd in the iielniioiis conspirn.y to uierlhruw andj

iplo down the right of free speech in eil>

d Inst even. uu; in nn elnl.inui.lv prepared jolltli-,;

"cation over their sui .'cs-hlul onslaught upon popular

liberty.

1 (heir clcrgym.'i

lio steal, (o i;o an.little play lo bL

1 but"" )-,),:.

r, ti;,.. ei

Journal; In ibe

Tb.. li,-,.

elio (n le

: Mr. Iho:

a the

and c

. ug, a crowd of perhaps two hundredboys gathered in front of the " Courier

making the atoro ol Mr. JniucB-McGnrb (n" National Democrat ") their plnce of rend

iud been announced by the " drummer"."

busy in the uflernnon in enlisting pnrliclpji

iiroimunl .Ic.nnnntraticn.

'Procession win. soon otlorwanls form

, in front of the " Courier buildinir.

headed by Miller's Bra-a Dand. At tin

vera perbapa a hundred men nnd boyi

.iid MibsnpicTilli ihe number waa incre

ecruits la about two hundred. The:

iiiiii-'iiir.-iiiii-!.. eti tried in I

'ptions ns follows :

nn only !.,

n liiTiimi.

Kie,e.wl,i.-1.

,1.1-1 Hereline,

ed by new

bearing

"Tin: lllilhl. of

IS,,..

n; bath hearing placards with

Sacun 1. Jt*v

Iter. Hi-er Hull meupl.in Ihe old Mo.., r ^l.er

S.nlli I'olh-... Mr. Hull (lien

private, pupil a thort, black-eyedLe introduced li) the writer at Mr.

";

;.'iiainm. i:,.|,in

iked Mr. Bull t

Hint man was a member of college t' No,' said be

'he has been, but hu-< li.tt iln. .-oil.;;". Ho n(enls wthat it seems stluiOT-l im^.o^ilile (o break him of it—Steals from his classmates, and anything that h,hnpi.ein. |o t;.m-,-. Ilml b» .nil put. his hornl- upon.'

" Whether tbit. .,1 -

to ollioes of hiph tii

,..,...„,.. „

eetly ,

in( of Ihe late wholesale Mint mbbiIrlenns, may bcwell n subjcol of inquiry.

a 'be *' an. He Itft • ollege under:

of (heft.— E.I. Journal.

l,.lir..-,-ll)

THE STANDARD.n/i-: .-t.U'.'.i.w/-'. ir COXVEXTIOX.

i to avoid nil reen^niliiui of sltiverv, either expressedimplied. Nollnng short of thin will place our

lYcrmncnt on a basis of penuanent prosperity.

A.Moso the pu>.^eiij.ers bv ilie -teii

ti.jin .-nviuiieili. \v:i!. Mr. 6. II. Kin-''liyi t in tie: ...Iiiphiy of the I- ; in

K".'i! i;.'iili-,.:,rl I oiup'uii. rioriihl,

Monday, the 2l«t.

Inrge.but.whhtf^

Sheriff wi

elinrgcd »

Tne AsTi-St.An:i;v Stasdaku, !/Wii

jlltndcnt don't like Mr. Seward's snee....

they do not. The one 1:«t ihe liepuidiran na.-ly kieka

off' the Aboliiioni-la the betler. They bay e done

enough evil work t.. I . , utitb'.l i- an .inmed,

"il"

S

m! 'lllili lln «l,..b-

„.,,lu -

lining i"

,1 «ith in:

SCact'ofTuo^to ihe Ma^bul.hebad nonutlmrity

for confininf, il. Ihe publie jail ,l,e l^ii.e. «.nnd;„,

- rime against the United Slates.

n„...l Imrdly my, whs t.\ peeled by

elearli neeonline lo (he law ofall parties, Hint I

State. The riigi...- -

Johnson wbo.wiib a lnrge. number of depi

in for the occasion, then removed her to

Slates Court room before Commissioner \

removal was clteettd wilhi

"lopartoftb ' -

SIoihIihJ

tie- t'in(...t

.lillyoppca,,,!

tnpeJIi 1=.-."il"1

ittliigenoef-

.led Heroeehingn. Iniugb.l e

ilnd ribaldry. After parad

Sicrfonueil thu most revoleasl.ial orgies, preparntor)Speclnlora of the scene at II

iled character named Lb

ion (he ".defunct Abolition

ri--j.ti.-i.Ki.i-i r,iid unt'iuir. r.

ith a mock prayer1—thatfbminnees indulgod in oninij.'roper fauiilianti. -. I" r...

o deep a utain et ilirtgniee upon aur eilv. There is

irevaleut in the eoiumuiiity, aiuong all clasnea ofespei'table citizen*, mil among men of all political

'iowB, feelings of sorrow, regret and humiliation at

ithont an hour's

I'OWg mail, and a native of l'ort-

is mother resides. Some three

to Florida, and soon obtainedil engineer, in which capacity hei from thu State by mob violence.

'or opening a ditch on some partigninst his wishes. This manited the common method now in

o get rid of obnoxious persons.

iM.inh.l (,. l.-l.c i„r the. South,

lo .'' (be ouired Chambers.

all there, and 1 shall not lake

of the mailer for two or three

p from Cedar Kays one morning,son by nu armed body of somele wju. sailed by three persons,•latuv would bo biet with death> taken lo a tavern near by, nnd

Ai.Bus-v, Feb. G, ISiil.

Tun Anli-Sbivery I'oiiv.iitinti assembled here onMonday even lug, A few dny.i before, a petition, signedby ono D. V. Kino, tm.l a hundred others, wns sentto Mayor Thntelier. iv.iin'.,iiiv him (., up-.-hi, niithorilv

mod. I

piiev.l ,

mpos

_.I

" _ '! " - 1 " l.i..l..f.-l:.l,t.iel,..|,l tree

li- 1 " - " "! f ".-iil.nl .Mall evem-!

Gbowik E. TuATemm, Hayor."

On Iho naseuibliae; ot the l'.,aii nlion, the Mnyoraddressed the people, exhorting them lo keep thu

pence, respect ihe eb-ir.o-ier of ihe city, and regard(he rights ofothets; spoke ehnpieatly of the prieelewvalue of free speech, nnd n = ~u r-.-. I (hern that he sdiouhl

esert all the power vested in hhiiiolf, as Mayor of the

eitv, lo enforce law and order.

LuoretU Jlort, of 1'hilndelphia, then iu!dr.->-4i d

the Convention, ami give an iater..-tuie lii-

the ttuli-slavery enterprise. She was heard witliout

interruption.

Hev- Bhiiuii G iters ojlnmeiii'c.l Mpeaking, and soonthe rowdy element be^an to show iiself. In vain the

Mayor exhorted the crowd to be silent; thu noise

increased nnd drowned the t;p.,:.ker'n voice, so that

but a small portion ol In-i retnnrka were heard.There were then loud calls for tinnim SniTir. Allast that gentleman ii'sjionded, nnd in a few words*of slinging rebuke, relie-ed lo make a speech, for ihe

reason that they bad mobbed down Ihe previousspeaker.

Mrs. E. C. iri.M... then addressed the Conventionill nu excellent speeeh upon the horrors of mobascendency and (he teiet-.. In, .'-.. „l (be right of free

speech. She was benrd with difficulty, being cou-

RiAiillr interrupt, .1 \i\ ^itimpiug and hissing.

After the adjournment of the Convention, the

crowd remained and .nll.'l 1 lh for a t-peeeh fromt

1 " ,. ,r. His Honor spoke bridle, and againkm, Mi urgr-d tbo-e |in-!-eni to rie-pjet themselves, the

^.,. 1 ...... of tb.- .it., mill the -iiercd right of free

• [> ..-. b lodge l.'ob.- being called tor, respoudeil

remembe

elled hooted aud eursed nnnotii-ed until they wereired ol (heir own noise, i id before lidnighl kII was

1

77,. Eveni g Journal,

Thatcher. s contemptuous

'he Mayor of Albaniltlack of77i Journal an 1 ihovj ol the l.'Mr eurswho bark upcrti his I rack, and though liir his firmness

nnd manliness he may eiiHJrioace temporary incon-

nce, yet in the end he will triumph. 'Let the

friends of free speech tliron^l i the land remember"liiu ; and while the Into who, in Ihe face of thousands.f foes, keeps Fort Sumter lor law nnd order, is

iverywhero justly honored, lot no less houor be ren-

dered to Ihe Mnvnr ot Alle.nv, who. when mob lawtriumphed in DeAlon, in Ihitmbi. in ^yraciiw, in Cti.-a

snd in Auburn, kept the forin-.s of fr.e speechuiaiifully in the tnpiud „f tb,. Knipire S(nt«, nnd, inthu lace gf sneenag l,v|....ri.v and blasphemingruffinuism, fearlessly iiniiuiaii.ed tin. 'iomtitudon and

Donor la Mayor Thatcher! o. iv, e

MICHIGAN ANTISLA VER Y CONVENTION.

As.v Abhor, Fubruary 1, 1801.

In accordance with a rail issued sotuu lime since,nnd published ia Thi: Suxt. ..rl, Tk<: lUiifi.; ami citypujiers.Hn Anli^ltliery Conventio. t at Ann Arbor,Michigan, on Saturday and Sunday, January .'f. and

In consequence, or i

mob, a hall previouslyby the friends of fre.

hey found the bouse

..-I of .-biiehoblcrs who any to us that

. and Ibis I'aiou <(« ii-l prvt<xt itatery,favorable lo freedom,tealed earnestly and eloqueiilly to his

lime, but wns uftenvnrdapjical to vacate the chair anno one could be heard, the , cmecIi .-? uproar of groansfor Lincoln and thu Convention and cheers for Dong-las and the Union pre-ientiii;; all organization nnd all

speaking, the friend* patiently r lined, until Iherepresentatives of law, medicine and the classics

received an accession of drunken " roughs " ; and, at

laat, blows, breaking of hem ln-s. ami jhusoiiiiI iniury

no of their inimlicr. compelled Mil

MSOUTIQXE Aubu

^dcctioiie.

„„..Dn. Hr.vrv, nn eminent nnd learned cle

of the Episcopal l.-bureh, lias addre.-,-

States -' "": the loll..,.

,om|Hoi

the subject i

ThursiTay last. Tnot appear -'-

and broke u[

room and oremmnne. ii

pnsr..-d the .-nan! rusohil.ii

'" W bib. 'i'w riot was at its height, says the reporter of

TIk Union Miss Aulhonv le'itn"! over Iho desk and

aid, "Why, boys, voure nothing but a baby mob

ou ought to go lo ^vriiense to learn how to do It,

ml iil-o leant how log.-t before the Crand Jiirvi'

|i r .,M..„hi., a g.-ntleiie-ii well known in this city,

vs. aoiuinated !» iho b fori leuru.ati.bn the mob

,oon found that thev bad caught a I artar.atid ibnl t'l

Morris wns noi to be made a tool ol to choke dow

ee speech. The Union reporter describes the scene

ifollows

:

cry qiicMioi

,N.T, Tuesday.-Inn. 'li, ISni

Mv Ds*B : I have your note. Thanks.

trust in God (h- Kepubleruis ar ,1 eroing to be

cowardly, bu base, ami so foolish withal, as (o s

render n'mb-r tbr nre>."uro ol -.-... -S--1011 and seccs."

threats Good heavens I Of what stull are tl

made? They have only - "

,„.„ bv the

but sundry colored

rom nbroad rondo one or two attempts to

ay hold of the woman, but r,i-eaied a|,,.lu-,i,..„- o

the officers' batons .0011 iiulnee.l then, (0 desist. In

iheir efforts the officers were seconded by

Upon api«..ariii" '

i, upon the gro

:.'iiri'

show, by 1

From the sentiment

doubt, ifsbo ia nUown (o be a

returned to Virginia.

This is the licit case that hi

the present -Inw in Cleveland

eases somewhat Intnoua in

Wellington, in l^rniti C01

iiul shall have

lung you have a n,0 riglit to demand-

,nd difgrnceful for

,, u 11 m'.-eliiig"ol" their own,

oTutions adopted by the Syrnru., he was taken lo Ihe " store " to

As yet he bad not heard the nature

of the nceusnlion against him, and only knew- thnt

Chambers had accused him, ami a drunken Iri-lunan

who had been discharged from Hi" road had been a

witne-.s in the case. He «iw u~ler.d mto.th,- rooui

where ihe "Commit ice" hud <ni. when tin 1. ebt

slopped forward ami said, " All von tint are in livur

of the sentence jusl ngroed to P| • "-1 t' 1 '" l ' l,n - !l >

Aye." A snvage aifirmative yell nehr- d tl -< n-

"-' what the Hcntenco was he did not know,

ion aseerlaiaed. lie was seated in a

1 with a pair of scissors approached, and

whilo'bo was held In two others, the hair from one

side of his head, ami one half of his whiskers and

mustache, were closely cut oil'. He was then per

miltd to -o to Ihe invent where he spent llm night.

In the morning Ihe " Coniiniltee ' escorted hmi I

the cars, nnd, under their snrveill: , be started lor

Fertiandina. -Much agninst bis wishes, Ihey obli

him to take a seal ia the passenger eai'n. wber.

Klmrti condition would exeilo Ihe derision ot his

low-iravellei-s. i'n ih- wav down, lna baggnge

agaiasear.'hc-.l.l.ut nothing was. loom! ,...-|.t a -1

or

At an early hour on Sunday morning the houseas put ia some order, to ninke n meeting possible

.r the day; and thu assembly was lnrge enough,alb In the morning and afternoon, to fill the nluce.

majority of the students wore on the side of free

Ctl and good order, and citizens present weredesirous lo bear quietly, The following ofiicora

ere chosen '

Trmyja (fr ijjpuii

tain the :

. what you have

would be wrong, base

—we never will grant

inve rights Hs well n(

s that are our duties too, and, by the Ktor-

we will stand on tbeui, come whnt may.

pnper ns much as you please, Wo will

war upon you for that Bill wo will inain-

nreuiHCV of the Constitution nnd the laws,

iewaroalhe I 'irion, we will defend it at

ind Ihe guilt of blood be on your heads.

Lord be judge bet.

'"I'.'.lll.i.t le-

The'lid nev

firmly; stand nil of 1011, nnd thing" win ow ..^They cannot help coming r.gbt. the stars in tbei

e fight ngaiust m> c'-moii . all lustorieal laws, all

,. pDlitJeal and economi. -si. light ngai

ofgrntnln

w'a'ui in 1 'ed like that

an.inpi U carry off tbo fugiun

Thu Oberlin

ty, near two years

oil that this case

gi«

.. c by stojiUb, but 11

, l«v,ui conduced 'according lo tb

demandsot tl.o law. and il.r. ease coulinucd

,l„-l„..i,., a lair rbaiweofprovm,. In r lr.-.-.l

Inti... W.lliug(o-.>:i- -.!:'-' ""io.,u..i ill- .1." lik'-i '•-' ' '-'"'I.'

de.-ov the 1.1 -ro. . in;d..;.-l '>

I' ''

'

1 .I.....I - o.ilsul.- i-'. 'I"° ' '"'•'I

,bu slave off i" a . .rriat; -called upon ! •h.b.i iV.r w .

1 this;will e

There

nde a speech, nnd nt Iho a

V, Miniubua bus nbout 1,500 iubahi

. .,:.,.,,, , nothing .hang everything being at a

...ud-till ..!.' Il" ; ii.ililn.-v. nl I -I"" ol v.iieh

are organised, armed and drilled daily. Q! -

t.v telei-H ami .HeV-eral -mailer piCCCS

nrouUt up front the old tort of St. Augustine, which

the; intend to mount at Furtmui'

police forci

further interrupti-,,,.,,..

bia duty, nnd the police were evidently n ...... .

do tbeiis.

se L. Rose spoke bnelly.

ntiiosv made a alirring speech, and tl,

ais demonstration:! appealed which nttendei

e' nt Monday evening. The crisis was ao»

reaibi'tl ;wrsun.-ion ami t-indly rebuke had beci

tried, and, as usual, bad faib-1. The uproar in th

.allerv was gneil, and lh- Miner gave the word t

clear Ihe galleries. In ati instant the police

---'- was done, and tins demons!

_ for order produced quiet. There

loml calls then for (.fiihit Smith, and now

order wns established Mr. Smith rose and asked Ibat

(be audience should put nnv .|ues.nons to bun louca-

;„-< anti-slavery mailers, the questions came fast,

nnd were most'happily answered by Mr. Smith. An

hour ol kindle eonler-nee ihus puswil, and ihe Cou-

venlion adjourned until evening.

The Convention met again in Ihe evening at 1 ..

o'clock. The Minor ag'.iu nddits^ed a lew words tc

the people. G. W. 1'i'rs^i made the first speech

'lv ititernipled will, :q,plau-e and hisses

L Hose followed, and was beard .[Uietlv.

Fin: upii-s f>oi!ui..vsi then took the aland, nnd nindo

a stirrin"- speech ; was oeensioually bisn.l and also

am,lauded. Alio, 11 Ho. b.ek 1, portion of the audience,

nnmlicrii.g some stvculv-live (0 a hundred persons,

Olig llie.'c were the di-iii.p.,uil. ,

.l.

who could nor leave wiibout one

1 attempt to create a disturbance The police

nc seiied ono or two of then number, the gang

e.l to lln' IT -.lie ot" their c.. II. Hides, and IcT PI H w

lite* the incitement wns intense. The Mayor,

-ml collected, directed the operations ol the

ikn bravo fellows, did dimr duty

EtpOBM Cbi?i5«i(/«t—Josephii

mil.

Grilling, Jneob Vol-

I'illsbnry. Diehard— I'nrki

Jf. Chandler.

The forenoon was occupied by Mr. I'li.i.sae

ho— ndilress with li-,le[,.-l to wilh a t. sm-elfol rltl

on iiuite unlike the rude uproar of the preccdi

ling I Ihe v

y. lie adinitiistcretl a

"o the Mayor of (he city,

11 iho curly part of the

;;,;r

hop-fall

if possible, still mare,:,l the nieeling, i-i.i-ut-

jftieli.),. among all ihe

„e and of the whob

-

At ? p.m. the hon

crowded. Mrs. Gairnsuim' of Ihe necessity of a

friends of Ireedom at t

souled cooperation lh. |:. .pii'.be ms bad given imr 111

fJ.TCsDiv--j".> ' t' ' il'. noi. of a

paragraph in T> .' I ' j"'""!'"

paper, calling out uml • '.ml' m "-' "''" ""'.' 'I' ' >

of Ihe determiieitioo to cri.sb lice h|H.-celi. t us tieier-

mination that our friend Tillsbury should not lie

heard in Ana Arbor. ...Mr. 1'iu-sbvnv occunied most of reina.mag time,

the opposition iadulgiag 111 arusy .hiiinristiatioi.

s

against him. and friends vtsltmr, resuleals m Uio

71.. !...__ .l..^:..^..o ... kr,n,. .- SliO.'O ol ill,"

.-,... .fluui „ iln-Vai

nolicc- and thev lik- brave l.llows, del tb. o dull .r. v ,.-,."1..... .-»», "";'

^.^'...IVf.r-'.Vi.V :'..'! »":^S

on Ihe l.lnody altar of

,0 slave-claimant Ihaiiked Ohio for the

,n, and said, "If our servants in Congress

do their dntv, the people will.' Judge fcpnld-

safe escort through

11 graduate of a

had been in prne-

Sow Orleans, and was sent Norib because »he

Utlhn.l been en clcd with at. auii-sla.ery I'ap-r-it

ng responded, .11 sh.ill ha.

t she bad ^

I do not

l„gelber -.

,.ill gopeneeably and lion

Let fJiem restore thei

.r ; lei fhctn atone for the

let them (perhaps) sunemlei si I tbs It 1

,:: (rial and condign mim-lm M '' 11 " 1

e houorably and honestly Brut I RED, il go th.

ay voice is to let them go. I- 1 1 ilmm .it lh

Novices. 1 sbnlfbe sorry for them. But, pe

it -. Iho heat way lo open their foolish eye

* ill ficd thu Union wns the only buttress ft

li a result. Unh! Comprotnof whnt should

s caneossiule I I

.3 from (he South, and n

THE FUGITIVE LUCY RETURNED.

East Cleveland, Ohio, January.

The renders of The Congregalionalist will havi

learned, ere this meets their eye. Unit our city and on

lion of a poor fugitive— / Ql * '• tb" fnder mer

c-ic.s of .-outhern slaver). Mt I 'a-'.'^ lor 11 lev

aiouths the blessings ol R-o ' "' '''"

|

",'"''-'-m','.!

THE CLEVELAND FUOITI]

ickof

tin ,-vnilh-. ..u will be saiisinclori- to I he ii oil

except such ns thu peoplu of the North will hurl y

from your place* and damn yon to everlasling infur

—" in the territories 1

"

in mennins of lie Con-

e.ti.m will ever consent

any amendment iiilro-

-lav.'h llirougli tie- fn.e

roil liar to uieoupl.- lh.

d with 11 pistol. Tbei

ill., m .'r.sr.s at Lima tin

The Cleveland Herald

-li of the while people 11

,u .li-n.nle the ncgrc-t

1

1

"' 1 '"','1 ',„, cell ,1.1. "f "'" track ns the inon

um.rVX'",'.'..llt.-sen.vd their guns n. the earrbBC*

mllllury style."

The Cleveland JDanocrat says

:

• The .love pri knew 'hat 'be attempt would he ni

M the train approached Lima she appeared to firow

i felt at Cam-

1 baa been for 1

> impeachment of thu

you—especially ot those honorable andho have held on among you -I promote treason. It is hi,

cut of such a man us Wigfnn world of good—go turtle

' a thf" "

a "''or I'.

t he-

':S"

Lucy

'hoeoh, ,1,-,-lar. d

THE EARLY LIFE Ob' SSSATOR BENJAMIN.

irsrjr.sT of Tlio /«(/.-/i.'iiiA-jrf gives

of Ynlo College:

is one of the class ot 1829 whose

ooiid ou the list ol graduates 01.

fiiltell.lc,d yelled,

shouting at intervals fot

compromise, and giving groans lor the May

free speech.1 " awhile the police cleared the sia.r

growth, tins ."""" »»"',

" 1-

Il,.,..|,iv ,1 -- e. - II.. 1,1.^1.1 e, ^

rioUFj Ironblo in ibat class. VVnlebcs, breastpim

seals, pencil eases, pen knives, two-blmle.l kme,-

mur-bhided knives, e|e.,..le„et... I

urns of tuonoy, ' lying around 1

ooms, disappeared unaccountably

|WL oily tit each otheil__.^ii.:n ri niust be <Iol... .

detective

rKi*!.*!. » ,r. pod tank

,', .,„,-,„[, .,H,.)il !.„ Iblcf. II.. COQfl.&K>l. On

;;,„.„;„:. ,,,, ,„!,, ... ..:- ,.,•=.».*. .w lQiii ,d,

"

X Ml of ""'•'•- v„l..u™-j™tliy. r«'«

3"J »ml b.r.l.s«r, .mujI. lo ««t , Cbitbin

ise' in studont

Thn losers Iteiked

t ., ...id auspiciously at others,

thin- must be done, ami lh"; dually constituted

',-n,,nselv"s a volunteer 'J-

scl for lln" ihey have not I m MM **} mer. .nary m.ne

Tl,.. value of tie- g.n ih m 1 tb- mnii.hi.riiig to tl

cllbrls. Thev wish In show the :-,...Itle- 1 11 people. I

the Northern poopk - c ,. Hie r,,„n(dicul lies!

litscrcc, will BlteclllO llie lawn"! And so a weak,

defenceless IcOHlrlii must be selected, by Southern

chivalry, as nn oll'ering upon slavery's bloody tillar, lo

appease the wrath ol (tailors and seeessionista I And

I blush to add, that this appeal lo Northern patriot-

ism I!) has had its desired ellL-cr. It lias been iiaiuful

to witness tlio dillerent tone of some prominent Repub-

lican 9, when compared with their utterances during

tbo famous. " Rescue 'trials " ol ls51t. Soma of our

Republican papers have provoked the luiints of thu

Adininir.tratiou press, bv iheir wonderfully conserva-

tive tone, nnd ibe . -.-.g'ermss with which they have

come forward to aid 111 die enforcement of ihe infa-

inoiia Fugitive act. It would seem as though they

verily thought, (but Lucy's rendiiion would not only

save' (he great and chivalrous ffwtu of Virgi

tecessionTout that it would rest/ire pence and

"Uu heeged

looked piteousl

relenled at Ihe

He bad been 1

for his like

tbirty-tliree ye

made, aud eat

originally bor,

' Oatl tii'"''

bins

the M.ol

ssombled ia' Ibe ftrceW. ia great ..umbers.1 "ijor, the police and

eiieennec u|ion thu -M;

onista, nnd awaiting 'as.ei-laiiic-d. from the- be

.nil, .

I., e I I'r.

,,„-al,le dism

, be exposed ; thei

.tig Ins ojieniug life

irite, ihe pet of his

iform either tba city

j, the l.'nivereity, bui

„ ,., once and forever. lie

ood President Day, obuiiocd a'ision, nnd vanished.

„u „ aHennlor in Congress,

;. .' t, no' ami (hrviil.-uing tin; rubbery

H. ,'

,

'.

,,t the niililnry culler) and

si,., l-.-.leral gov.-ri ril. with-

1 ,, ,,r shadow of pretext than he bad

'radons oil bis fellow students just

rs. ago. A third of a century hns 1

never uinko, nay change in such

..,,'l, fdehings L-vii a mere thought).1.1:— (0 temptaUon

uwift/, that pet

Hie part of lb.

mob, andimmoned to assist the nolere.

A Iter the, owdies were inee.ed Irom the Hall tils,

...,el most respes. table ii.ub.-i.ee remained and call.i

01.011 Mr. Ituugla-s 1.. couliaoe bis remarks, lie ill.

-, lor some ,iu,.:,tii,.l.vh,-aal.eullo close, the and

eontinued his rea.arl,,-, which were puiegent and ,

orful. until about In o'clock. Al the close, bu was

grilled with a hearty round or applause, well nigu

""iri-oto nf (liauks to thu Mnyor and polica was ibeif

„„",,„,„ .1 and on t-akiag tie- .piestion Cv1: ,. si ted 'Ave!

1 three cheers

ihen called for and givea

ill bo 1

n thousand1

1

C. S, Hew. ,

theft— long-eon-

ilated'and hoarded pilferings, from

tifltful bosom ft

Had the fel

.rivate moraliiy

.. ih- the secret of his c-arK 1 rimes 1.

have I of the fc" who &*» '£nflw Bnd

public life, I n

that Inrgi

for the Jlayoi ,.-..^ .»unction. Three more wen, given for Ibe .poll

three more for free sje.-eeb. fre-edoin, law and ord

oven- voice responding. It should be remark,

that only a very few of these peopl.. b.-h.ng. d lo tl,-

-nnka of the radical Abolitionists: ami, probably

,-ery few of them had ever attended beiore a rndicnl

Abolit n Cotive

'lie- May

_ jpec led a rush upot

having been loud 11111

dare.l noi striken blot.. -

members of thu Convention walked toward

11 ouls.ide wrappers lor.

tig prnctiec. Mr, I', urnd,

.I, f.oouoil hill. 1:111 beiogs.

as nnv of von, but crave-

,ur children ibul let nie

1.,1" ibis hondage i» I'nlal

. ..bite race. Abraham

You

r,,,,:

unslained by urn

il the resulls of 1

, his skirls. Ai

inaUtutionnl support

institutional supportindividual, genuine

tiood that asks not

', „ rmandiruj

dillering never inkilel.oi.lv m.hCI-.x- IK' .poi-tr m

the proores- ol humanity. 1 bo .-pilvrow that huibls

in the mountain giies to-il"J. b'".'dH 'I- ii-.it as ilni

the sparrow in tb, , , .la.s ,.,' 1 . 1.aimi, ... ^'^(he span-tb.: sweet singer of Isra.-l; the I

elotb.d with thunder, in die vi.-i...

were the progniitors of tie- de-it 1

„,:,\, ih.,1 are lhepri.b:ol tie-, roe.

there isainightyHrowtJiol lie: high

llmucr and ,-baks ['."' logelher

.,.>.[rv; llaeon did nut exjilor

philosophy-,r'-"- ""

III .n«ska'

nh.ee.prijpliet,

, lo-biy;. Itui

hold. IWill

11, ol I

vi:;!

rv remember it

... giving his anil to a lady, hd ihe

toll,.w,,l.aad, with a Imool pole'

deseeoih.d lo the i-treet. Here

Ihe Aholilioniits, the threats.

I- bb'li; Iral Ihe eowanl dog, number of young inen 1

"" Mayor and the lending to preserve order.

Iked toward (he Uehi- 1 A eollc-elion was laL,

each side, and the mob

ounded and followed them, cursing, yelling,

groaning and threatening, but yet not daring to

strike ft blow'. The firmness ot the M nyor and police

,„ ,1... „,,.:,,.. .., 1,1,1 -v- mv - '' 'hi.d -eriTCl

and ovemwed ihem, ami a- ihe mean aai:cruel aminvariably i/u.r.irds. thev dared not make n>ruah unn

,l.e'ai,thorit.e.s or upon lho-e « hum they jirotccl.,.!.

On nrrivipe al the Delavun House, the Mayr

^corted-tHe 'ladies to the parlor. The mob remained

oul-sele, or thronged ibe passages oie.l hall below, ami

7l„ I'.r-oiial Lib

heartily.

[1. 1,. Twireu.1.1, and Mr. Lu.n.rr pol .br ..1 ._

from (he Ullh revolution, hot ll'-hly id-.- ..'i... 00

and freedom of speech. Onuor twooUier ynhng (ben,

whose numes were not siinou .LspokV .kc-ub-dt, lo

tbo snme eifeel- ifonie noise nlu) diWtrrbanui!. m thu

the audience was RilmihVted.. mid a. lar^e

ieyufy-tlimt reailii...--

ft) the lilin-e.- I.

poke oftfi.: eaiisdtiorth-"'

letiaie.-e -.I nn rcb:u,(~ 1I

linly-.rit'l ot' (he-hluilellP- . 1I

'

Ir...- di.-ei.-si'.u. .,

P. 111.!,,: I'll..-:": reUVI"''"'

'

.ruled friend whobas so reco'ii )

slhmry cau«'n "',',s lerigtii and'hreJidlb, his eoo-

Page 2: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16

mbuitng largely lo build tbnt httUBo, with its free

pliitp.riil , that "its present soiled and desolate aspect

[, ,| i.rrinr'iK i'. .Ill Hi- civil 11 1) and quiet nppcor-

i,i„ L.

l .. ; . I,,. i"„: ,,,.i t i., Hi.r^iij) there- Many of

I,.! ,,|.-'."', '' .''

.1' ,'

i.Vtl'nt'u woiihi' hacI,,,,! ,, .,, ,.ii,.

i up,,, i'i„ 1,1,11.. in c-iiliiluo find silence

ilicm', I.ni Ul- Hurl- i- (I'm"' In. n'. Parker, in appeal-

ing lo the bettor n.Unroot' the vouiig men, produced n

happy and Military effect, hilt having no facilities

for writing at lliu meeting, we cannot give a satiafnc-

lorv report of his speech.

After Ihe diHc.i--.i-Hi mid million of the following

resolutions thu Convention iidjounied, tho house not

being in n condition to he lighted and wnrmod in the

of heathen, with many intemperate perrons and many

slaveholder* among them. Their missionaries made

constnnt and vigorous opposition to Hie heathenism,

mid constant and rigorous opposition to the intern-

pornnce, lull no opposition of nny kind to the ulnyc-

holding. Oo the contrary, thoy gave to that practice

the weighty nnlhcntication and encouragement of

receiving slaveholders into their Churches ns Cbrie-

lianu, imlujeriminntcly with others.

natural under those circiimslanccn, uiu

practice of slave-holding increased in ihe Choctaw

nine-llW.ll.T.

ike A. P. Srr.oniM

RESOIATEIOXS.

I froi

loose or Bopresenintivcs of ihe Slotc oi wcu..

ironed, in bah^^nr^n ^-^^^Z^,

rHutiomU ^nti-Sluvcvu gtM&\\X&

f YORK, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY IB, 1SD1

'i.,'nl,'r

TiuajT. Sew Yom."inclosing subscription*

s, cifthe olllfe. should

sLAr&Btmxixa nr Ginmon-M^imEBs

counting slavery, hy Church discipline or other™

and so far were the Prudential Committee- and i

Donrd from requiring: tbmu to do so. that in IS

Kev. S. B. Treat, then as now one of the SacrcUm

•presonlcd the ineraaacd number of slaves id t

Cherokee and Choctaw nations, and the genet

praferonco Uiorc felt for investing money in this " s[

if properly," as one of the results of " the doc-

_j of the gospel having eserled their appropriate

influence."—[Mhniu»am Ihvaltl, Ihe official orgnn

||10 A. B. C. F. >!.. Oct., 1B18. p, 3-1D-]

Wo havo no evidence' that the Prudential Committ

ivcr spontaneously hpoke a word, or did an nut, lend-

in" to the limitation or the discouragement of slave-

holding in their mission Churches. The Board, how

over, yielded so far lo iuiporlunnte retp

minority of its memners, ns to appoint Committees,

iind require correspondence and investigation con-

cerning it. In the course of the reports and the cor-

respondence thus elicited, many pious generalities

were uttered in condcmnnlion of slavery ill general

;

hut never wore any directions or instructions given

by the Prudential Committee, requiring the mission-

aries to exclude slaveholders from the mission

Churches I The missionaries always maintained lhat

lioy awdd U-ent slaveholders as Christians, and the

I'rui initial Committee always allowed them lo do so.

1 1.. 1 1.uminc and holding a man or a woman aa a

-ilave i- tliu continuous commission of robbery ! It is

an net most thoroughly nnti-( hrisli.'iii at the com-

mencement, and our condemnation of it need not wait

until it has shown the ripening of its evil fruit by

deliberately torturing ft human being to death. The

very elaim of a man that he eiwta a slave, or hii

action showing such a claim, is a sufficient reasoi

why he should bo kept out of the Churoh, if a candi

tc or excommunicated, if a member.

Bui iho burning of human beings alive, an atrocity

voi- perpetrated in this country in tho nineteenth

century- from any other cnuso, is practised upon slaves,

irely, but with increasing frequency, by the

friends of sin very. At least twenty well uuthenti-

ist-auces of this hideous wickedness exist,

claimed, in some enses, toilnvo been perpc trilled by-

most respectable " people of the particular ootu-

ty in question ! And, so awfully have the people

of slave States become depraved by thy exorcise of

irresponsible power over human beings, and by the

jnings of their legislators and clergymen in sup-

of it, that n sudden emergency may excite this

extremity of wickedness in any slave region, at

THE TWENTY-SEVENTHNiiiiofl'dl A-Rll-Slavery SubscrijiUgn-Aiiiilversary-

TnK families who entertained in Bonton the friends

of the great national and universal Cause of Freedom,

on tho evening of the 23d of January, cordially thank

those honored and beloved guests ;not only those- th

present, but no less warmly and gratefully such

greeted them by letter and subscription from oil

States nod lands.

These lire they tu whoso cooperation it is owing tl

Boston lias, throughout tbe world, the reputation c

e moral power of an niiti-elnvory city.

With an ill-oraaalicd police and on Incompetent city

magistracy—tho result of previous tlaveboldlng mnnipi

lationihaving anions her hundred and seventy Iho

sand inl.al.imms. a thousand or two of Ill-bred nil

t traders nnd manufacturers of slate products,

. rich enough tn lure about an equnl

day-lnboroni uo'less ignorant and selfish-]

been temporarily disgraced by their riotous

all law nnd order. This Is but the custoi

modic aotion of slaveholders upon theli

vnnbn whciiovoi

pecuniary

path}' and vi

hitherto nbsoi

v, lfllt More toful n

mpled wealth and

to face With the

posterity, that nothing but freedom,fflllilcWioyc

affile righteous r

lireneh ill

nun; i.pas-

thorn sei^

take advantage of the rngi

the morliucatlon of pdlitical

dofcat, to Smtignte outrages against Uie penceond rights

of the free people of tbe North.

All these disgraceful nuisances will ci

with the present revolutionary period, wl

holding Stales slinll have withdrawn their disturbing

nlemeut The cause of riot, violence and

u'ent will then be- as clearly seen by nU lh

world as by South Carolina,

slavery dayi

merchants and politicians in si

selflab and ignoranl correspondents at the North,

itlv enj"inine. on Hi.-.n to take lid!, sort of aclion;

account, in the Charleslou Jftrctiry, of the mwbleh tho 231k annual meeting of Ihe M.isincimJlnrs

\.;ri-Si icmiv .S^-ictv «;i- assailed by a

ilrol of n Mayor, was headed, "SLAVERY IN

A HBSOIDTiOS, printed with the proceedings of the

Into meeting of the Mass neh u setts Anti-Slavery Soci-

ety speake of the substantial aid yet renderedto

slavery hy ihe 'religious press," though a portion

of the newspapers nnd magazines that hoar (his title

by no means uphold slavery in lull, but only in the

Church and the American Board of Commissioners for

Foi nM'rsi

je of Tlif Independent has gi>

striking illustration of the correctness of thin distinc-

tion As n particular illustrative instance, we

pose to speak of its treatment of the dreadful fact

recently ninths known in its columns, by l'rof. S. C

BarUelt of Chicago, of the burning alive of a

woman, the mother of eight children, after sh.

vainly been thrice subjected to preliminary tori

I" the lir:

it ,,f the

l iho habit of slavcholdinE

o their

i tho i ,.| .l.immThe Anti-Slavery Afiftunibly,

were inspired with the gl«d coiisclousncsf

lives bud absolved then from nny laint of

pUcily In the- impcmiiug .iiscrace of the city of Boston.

Tnfi/hed conatnutly espustd the schemes of the South

era* tyranny to enslave tho l'reo States, nnd subdu

them lo the same terror that reigns ill nlove-lnnd ;am

they have received an ample recompense in that reno-

vation of the public mind, so clearly discerned by tbe

Southern lenders of secession. Tlvy havo never censctl

to point out in the pro-slavery compromises of Ihe Con-

ion, Hie

,n ,,,-i.v.i

low than for all Ihe past uut

rporlty, lo see our country ft

lessonso p recti

.clitode and equal justice can bind men io8eui.-.

viliwd and progressive communities.

Shivery is of Iho dark ages : hoonr and hope ni

,eer toevery uuin engaged in beating It down, In whi

,.C r shape or under whatever nomel

So matter what hi i [.oi'lifaii war-try, no matter wh

is ilieological creed, no mailer of what race or clln

o mailer what the dale of hi.H awakening—him i

v tl." Ban r-.ii.-L ami lie finds Uimseli assailed

bv ,he bint il- in-l.ii"- that slavery would niak

nwttl in Ihe American heart. Him and a I sue

patriots and statesmen, we meel with conndonc, wiiiy asking and i-eceivinf all Hie li.linn our common

c«u5o Hint each can consistently afford. Invaluable,

tlie true statesman m cooperation like

KiciN AxTi-Sr.iVKin SucUSTV, unmingled

with wrath, or doubt, or fear.

With solemn thoughts like these, our festival began.

It would be profitable, if time and spuce permitted, lo

note down the conversation lhat followed.

" What necessity for lln-Hc meetings V "' said a novice

gf Ihe old guard. " They only give this thousand

i of a defeated part}', which appears or

Washington Union Committee, and the next as a Union

iteling In Funeuil IIull,- Ihu chance lo appear once

ore in the streets us a uioli, under Ihe ilelnsion Unit

tango of form will disguise their insignificance lo th'

.ailyto-halts, the feeble-minds, and Ihe mueh-airnldi

thai infest public life in seats of government. You cai

excepting Iho one Or two or you whom the

threaten with assassin itHon. even claim the credit c

mirage in what you do, under the forcible- feebleness

.if a city government that insults the slaveholder by

public neknowlodgiiioiit ol your legal rights ;Ihe very

riuhU it is engaged in .debiting."

••All this has much show uf reason, but dm-snnl apply

to Ihe case in hand ; for none of tbeso meetings were

special but all of long previous appointment. The

attempt to binder them is an argument for lltcir necos-

y Knr a lifc-liuiMho Abolitionists have been heard,

d are busier now in watching what comes of It, than

going out of their way lo say more.

But 1'iis meeting was appointed twenty-nine- years

ago, before you, kind youth, were born;nnd so greot

mroulntion of interest and cffori docs aot admitof

ot like a mushroom meeting of

lli lire .1 flcld for itic bcueDi uftlit irhole

York docs <iir nnll-slavery work, and

iWjso; let us give aid mid .vmpthy to

i- nutliiiiR by Inlercliungc, t-lllifr mtrolly

il anil V.iur.-. Uli'i iiriivcn, f.'T llic -ul-ci-:-

Je, I am, with respect andaireetloa,

CaI1U«IKBA.F.Sibiiiiins.

th death."

sally, and the In

mil sympathy In

Mi,si PutnamM,.. Mury I'sy- IVtcrboro,

I |,ui[. .-inrl'.'r-ucli. Brwklyn. Lt.

['.rrin Sesrhnrough, "

Jlifj Litllelule

V.u-iniji "friends,"

Mrs. HinckleyMr. and Mrs, Mwin ThompsonMatthew Smith

J. >". Marshall

S. Dyer|, -. .1. Ihu word.i.-i-ii, il.ivward.Jr-

li.G S.

W. f Aitiiuon.Bsq.

C. V Ilrj-lford, Esq.

S. Newell

A, and S.J. fiickncll

Hon. James Murray Rohhiui

Mi -, i"-.,th(rine Itobblns

Kdwnr.1 L. Pierce, Esq.

IV, I. KoMcr.Esq." ibnro.haq-

Mrs. N. K.ltogers

n MAnah :

'

Sul i scrip! Ion Pest

sessions of the A

iu i'iii.1. it" 1 put. He f.in-l'i

SIahu Wr.svriN Ciurii

Xalkmal AtiU-SnTo-H

nJicol nnU-ilavory mi

n .. nr national affairs,

f.i-U-nr 1111,1 lira.. lliK..ii|:li

„e,Jr..E-iq.

und Lincoln, Esq.

Mary B. Meriani

Mrs. Dr. ThayerMrs. L. II. MenamEilwiii Thompson\V,„ |i..iirll>! >|n.orn-l'

J, N. Clark.Inmcs JacksonJeff e ItussoH

Sarah James

','w.s.

'i.lin J. -tones

TTlIV hi

i-d.'ccivei

undeimission Church ut Stockbi _

earn of Her. Cyrus llyington. one of the oldest uus-

slomiries of the American flonrd. Her mistress and

" owner " who instigated the crime, was also a, mem-

ber of Ihe snme Church. The slave woman died pro-

testing he. innoe-enee of the murder of which she was

uceused. Tho Stocluriflge- Church shortly afterwar

held" a bif meeting " for "»« <wirtwt.ua

refereneo was made to this fearful crime either by ihe

minister or the church-nicmbora.

In the correspondence which resulted

linn-tnee of the Choctaw mission (July 20th. I860).

" ;„ riVw of lh' ttoharrasments conned mlh On

miistoaary iror/c umowj tin CV«w-'«i«," not only 1= nt

complaint made of the missionaries, hut they nn

,mken of with " the tenderest aflection, pntwulm

mention being made of "our excellent friend an.

brother. Mr. DyingWn."

The American Eonrd have given the public ni

information respecting this burning nhve of one ol

their converts by another. When, however, a call

was mode by Prof, linrtlett upoo the Secretaries for

information respecting it, one of them informed him

that they had received no infonnnlion of it " while-

the Choctaw mission was enn lice led with the Board,

If this statement of Secretary Treat is true, the excel-

lent Mr. Uyingtoa chose to withhold this very import-

ant fact from his employers, as well as from the pub-

After publishing thu important correspondence fur-

nished hy rrof Hartlelt, nnd echoing his call for fur-

ther information, 2VlB Independml said nothing fur-

ther upon the subject for seven weeks. At the end

of that lime it gave a very brief statement designed

to bo exculpatory of tho Donrd, admitting, however,

that if Mr. Byinglon had accepted the peneion ollercd

him by the Board, tbey were still bound to investignle

nntl call him to account.

In the succeeding w, ,k (Ian. ill^t) appeared a slill

briefer paragraph, seemingly designed to end the con-

sideration of tbo whole mntier, as follows :

"Ri-r Mn Byisoti*.—We an- assured that lie v. Mr.

Uvu.etmiV the Uh-ciaw Minion ikclincd a pension

- m tin- Vnu'i-i> in lionnhiH he entered at once mlo

I ,,-vi.<- ol -ue,Her Hoard. That body, therefore,

i.iliiy n-lnitever fur Mr. liyingt.ni "" ''"

The Priiilenlinl Coinmitlee, the Secretaries, and the

Board, nrc well aware of this slate of things, since

the authentic record of these atrocities nppenra, from

the whole newspaper press, secular

noil " religiomi." They have chosen, however, to

shelter, in thuir Churches, the system of slaveholding

which naturally and practically leads la thia result.

They continued this course from 1317 to 18.W with

the CbocUw mission, and then discontinued it, speci

tying, as their one sullicient reason—" tho emtorrtxi

mei\U connected witli the missionary work among the

Chootaws." (P.14riof Annual Report for ISriB.) Thoy

continued the same course with ihe equally slave-

holding Cherokee Churches from 1817 to I860, nnd

then discontinued them because tbe Cberokees, having

become " •• Christian people" no longer needed mfs-

Sionart/ lnhor ; expreidy specifying that the discon-

llonnl have ,;„„„„"„ w„. .„.,„„ „r„o...it of .!««'yl (Pp. mi. a.

'""I'^r.in-'i-'i ricpor - loom "Ha "•- we now 10 be

told that tho American lionnl " haveno reaponslbility

whatever " for tlii ripened fruit of tho Upas

they hnvu been feiicmg in, nod watering, and pra-

te cti eg. for more than forty) tars? That

ipan them for ihe horriblo nllnir of

slave-bur ii i tig. "because their iv^jlarprogress through

the alpluibc! of slavery had not quite reached '/.

before Ibeir discontinuance of the t.'hoctaw mission!

No fact in the whole dreadful history ol slavery

atilies more clearly of ila pernicious iullueneo upon

the religion of the country than this. A. woman, the

mother or eight children, is burned alive hy a sister

in the Church, for an offence of which she declares

herself innocent I The Church of which these two

e members proceeds to celebrate I In- Lord's

Supper, without tukitig the slightest action upoa this

awful crime I The missionary pnstor of that Church

makes his report to tho missionary Board wjdoyi-il him, ivillintil making tin' .-lightest allu

it ! And the Board, who have always praisi

honored this missionary, nnd allowed him to ollow

the holding of loif-t>-h ihur. h-mcinbers as the abso-

lute propertvof 7iiV//,-.,..'. . bi.r. hue mbei

ofyenrs,nreileclar..| I- TL- 1-

no rcspon.-ihlit; prliali tot"! « th

ibis final act of ownership!

lain oily claimed of their fello

such agreement with wrong

porpetralcd. Clearer of vision than thei

forefathers, thoy early resolved for them

«y, at least, would let a hud example die.

This sali-faetion in their well-spent past brought the

lends of freedom together, agreeably to long prorio

.vitotiou, in unoMiiiiplc.l numberi nnd spirits. It w

itiuinlcd that upwards of three thousand guests call

uring the day rtnd evening, to pay their respccla n

Ihetr subscriptions to the cause, lo [ntorchnngo Ci

rntuln lions, lo devise plain for re efficient coSpoi

an, nnd to enjoy the festive hospitalities of the Anni-

versary.•

iot, with the danger to life nnd pro-

perty, from municipal c'.rriiption and State auplneness,

though it awakened indignant pity fur the pooi- crea-

tures of slavery about to engage in it, did not, in the

leost.cbeck the gayety or the liberality of the occasion,

•haps it stimulated both, to think of this new sort of

political demonstration of loyalty to the Slave Power,

executed by the small defeated parly or Bell and

Everett, as a Last despairing effort. Tho Sluvo Tower

thinks of it with contempt and derision, and thanks no

one for breaking owners by obeying orders.

The amount

|-,.i»tji..nemi.'iil. It is not lino

yesterday's contrivance. Eve

heard for its cause. 1)0 you

fowl—tho duek who was n di

Anderson's Story, who advi*c

ugly duck—the fun

Hint had fostered it

done, your grace.'

' Prom this urn becked interchange of th _

plane, called free speech, conies Ihe only possibility of

sufficient approximation nine

lied Hie killing ot the little

alii To which the parent

nctly replied, • That cai

Ihe truth-

»S,aoo i

irely unexpected—

i

.y Ihe friends of the cause

The difference between tl

Tho lime of i

as well as by il

i two classes is

-.-..ioired to make,=""i>* i" rramro

;delivi

i|>].i.\n\. i.

re in society together,

nnd religious ali'

iiuble. Outofit

eve thoy must triumph I

lend Phillip* Is bound ic

it, as all reformers do.

t everything begin;

ily hope of ultimate union.''

e hnvu never yet been Ihe United Stales," ndda

cr fruul. ru J a letter from tho &.uth.

rooro Ihe 0fnic.blcd Stotcs-tho mora northerly

smve SUitc- ,tbcro arc the unknigbtcd States, where

Ihe slaved) r-tbeude has displaced chlralry;but/rtt

Slates only can ever bo unite*."

we nrot pouse : of the free speech of a iolrie

there would be no end.

The pleasure of opening our anniversary 1c tt.-rs ne-

this year of tho truest and deepest kiuib How much

-vnmalhv thoy cypress til ! ll»w much cooperation they

iromisedi What,, -a^m. nt.hvj nuorded! Though

dances to subjoin them, that others may be (barer* o

Ihe benefit.

;« anniversary, so many times made holy to ou-

Of tho 'J'urCTtV-stcailA A

Mrs. ChapmanMrs. MayMrs. Child

Jlrs. Gui-rLson

Miss D. SargentMiss A. 'Wrirren Cestui

Miss 11. G. ChapmanMrs. Loring

Mrs. James M. RobblmMiss Susan C. Cabut

Mrs. Atkinson" Eddy

AitaT.G. Philbpi

Mi-s. Von Armln-•/. Samuel Mayi Theodore Parker

s Atrna Shaw Grcep. Etcai

;, u»3 00!o 09

Misses McFnrland, Leicester

lira. Kat- h. l-i.rnuiii. lllacksloliu

Mm Louisn lii'.ele, ll'iiton

Mr-.. W. Ill" nil, .11 I'avi.. lireerill.lil

M,H K.-nWnt. l.Miny. Boston

A. P. Brown

i->..',J \l:iy Holland

i. nnd M. Goddai-d,. »in««nder, Jamaica

e, Medf..rd

-. ,|. ;.!:

beloved friends, Ersss CocLi.v L'.;li-r^

,1,1,1. i-.-il ,1l:1i1

blotallc-i-tlie 0!

.--til lium llieir linnih,'''

nof o

We n«

G. WllITTIEIl, '

WIUTTIMI KODDIXO.

Il "grieved at

- - - parttcult

to this paragraph, which we present, as one evidence

nrnon" many, of the fuel that, however strongly mid

habitually The Independent may speak against

slavery in other relntions nnd conneetimiH, it ovndes,

misrepreseuls, lvinks out of sight, sophistical!/

lakes, or pluinply denies, the persislent complicity

held with this sin hy the American Board.

In it really true that that body " havo no rapOtai

l.ilil;/ uftatecer for Mr. Byingti

of slave-burning " I Let us look ftt it.

When a man dies of delirium tremens, leaving

wife and family in « Starring condition, shall

otriflod the land, has, at this fearful hour, given

th from bis trumpet "an uncertain sound." Tho

uie hand that wrote " Ichabod " On the forehead of

Webster after the 7th of March, 1850, now inscribes

• Statesman " and " Peacemaker " on the brow of Sow-

ird, whose recent utterances have su surprised nnd

mocked Ihe friends of liberty 1 And lliat vile orgnn of

the Slave Power, tho Boston Courier, praises Ihe poet as

nnd goud feeling." " It is in such

paper, " thaflBie JViend

conquers Ihe -Itoli'lionisl—wc were about to say—but

bitvo no recollection ol seeing his name mised

with any of the violent proceedings of that class,

. . . But after such a sensible avowal, wo are

Compelled to move that this too rational Quaker bo

read out of tho abolition ranks." Wo don't think Mr.

Whilller will much enjoy praise from that quarter—

especially praise offered nt Iho expense of those

whom ha has been so long identified. That, in cor

Willi all Abolitionists, he should shrink from Ihe dread

calamity of civil war, Is crcdi

but that ho should he willing to see even that calamity

averted by new concessions to slavery

We would not do Whittier the lcosl injustice, and

having said so much, perhaps wo ought lo print tho

lines to which wo refer :

WILLIAM 11. BBWAIID.

t hand. If

k yet remni

be done lo inform and strengthen the awakened public

heart against slavery; and since fresh 'hosts n

claiming thr privilege that il bus liei-etofere lie

to exercise alone, the final extinction of slavery

cnt is sure. Not only arc thu Northern t

free Ironi their guilty complicity with slavery,

but State after Stale of the Southern Confederacy will

learn from events what couusel and warning have been

:nt in vain to teach, that Iho lour millions of slaves

j men and brothers, and can no lunger bo overlooked

__ "the settlement of public affairs. Events ore every-

where teaching the people how deadly in that curse of

jj-slayery ; how fatal to the existence of nations,

i the welfare of men. Free Americans are learn-

hat their senseless political cry of " Compromise '

cs to their debased tyrants nnd to Ihe world, ft

t, not What thoy have blindly imagined, wo.-illh

trength, and length of days for themselves, nod

licir children yet more abundantly, but the free

Slates lor the slaveholder's hunting-ground

i with his blood-hounds; violence in every

of the government Slovo Power in over,

rural neighborhood ; insult and danger to evory dome.

hearth ; blood on every threshold;cowed Legish

es ; corrupted Judiciaries ;the Church n profann-

1 ; Hie State a slave-catching despotism, deprived

colic* I ,.'11 of limn.ili Iri'iinu- .111-1 liilllinu ilitcHc.t,

imbling into mean barbaric dust, upon the heads of

i that Joil« jkem that cried "Cii'i'i'iinise." e.hen they should have

vo cried, " Freedom " 1

-What constitutes a State!" More than anything

ie/the self-i:"li!-.'-i'Jil-n..J-= and fiolf-JiOBEe.isinn implied

tho refusal to violate the laws of hospitality and the

dictates of humanity. To refuse to bo ridden over

rough-shod by the hunters for slaves and refugees, is

the stnlesmnn's way ni iiicetinp invasion;and thus do

high-minded men"defeat i In- lurnr aim.

,1 former years, Ihe impress of who-e

strong on tho lives of us who yet

,ucu«ln and-Mnry Joy.

aolksov. Bedford, Mai

Mrs. Clarissa OldsNathaniel llamcy.r-aiituckct

Mrs. Moon, K. Y.

Uun-llavidJoyardMi-s Joy

Vnlr.-w Robeson, 1*1 .f-c«v Be

Mr- I Walker Irsl-i

Jay, Bedford, N. V.

Henry .G. Demi

W. G. May,"

A 1ri.nl. Hinghamliju.el Hunter, llingham

Mr.-. I u, v Tbnxter "

Wni. Llcvil Garrison, Boston

SI i-ii. Itui'b liniTiiiu, Lynn"""

'j. Garrison, Jr.

,-Mann, Stirling

iallic TJol ley

proline Pnmam

Ul.v. v N. V.

OBSO, OiTHRRKB S.SnOKNT, MjBIl LOWKI.L, Kl.ILl LEK

if Froi

nd the!

Fou.

Mi«s l.u'-v Oseood, Mi'dford"

id Lee Child

. R. C. Wnteraton

Mr. Nv..-. Wei .tl>

livtil anil died in tl

isample is raising up hundreds to f

their places In the good old cause, so indispensably dei

" Let us die the death of the Righteous !

"

MARIA 1V1STON CHAPMAN.

LETTERS.

ssyoiu

iii|,l|-.?-itiK'V"i

-ll'.allhougbtli

mil Is

L Ki.l

h 1. S',..i'

I in, i linii

Milhoul the hupi.iiies; ol' ever .'telng ym

only from my ]Kjnisal of a imrtion of yi

which I have rend with pleasure and sdtomu

which I Icel sincerely grateful, I thought I cc

trntter than by sending my letter direct to yon.i

Psco imiiounccd In ihe list of those who receb

Housforiho Atui-Slavcrj- Society. -As a natlv

tlic Southern Slate--, ami nl*. " ile^ieliQalil o! Il »»=-

Hohusetts, 1 feel an uiV...ti..n..te liiiereit iii the fale or the

Nenltcrn and Souihcni iKirilous of thai fre.it eoafedera.

Hon ivlii.-h lately i-..u-tiiui..'ttliel i rM[v.l.Slates orAmerica;

illhougli. for more than seventy years, I havo ceased to

rc-'ide therein.

I beg you will have the goodness to add lo the funds ol

\nti-Sn,ivcn-Serl.H,-ttH h ui the enclosed uran,

vii bv the Haul, ol Slontvcal on tbe M .'..- Iianl.-' Hank ol

BcJlon, for Fifty Dollars, which 1 have eiulorjcil in >out

.vor.ond send ns my eujitribiilio ihe Solely'.- iiuili-

Wh'cn I conversed with ex-governors of tlio Southern

Slates, nearly fifty yearn ugo, they es pressed great regret

the oslitence ol slavery anient ll.em, and earnest hopes

_.id ospeelstlons that tho day of emenclpalloltwould arrii

Tbo change wli

PcrpeiuiUltm of i

vlllanks" Islo

Charles F.

"By Miss Tufte (contribulions)

Anna Logon"""«&.

il, Logan;'. llulehilison, Milf'.rd.N II.

...sF.lI. I-awton

Wm. H. LoganE. D. Muodrucu

1-aijelln Sn.iwden llnhnes

•a Bradfordam Bassett, Lynn;s Iresom, Lynn

J. S. No well

II. E. Whittle-}'

Mi-.'. Caroline PutnamW. W. Dntehcr, Hopedale

Mrs. M. A. Dutcher, ','

\|r. and Mrs. Mcl.authlin

J. T. HiltonMiss Susan Dunbar

I Mr.-. V \-lil,y, N.'V

What makes the Swis-s a people ?—and Ungbind n nation!

and Christendom Ihe synonym of civilization f The

shelter they give lo the political lilgillve, and the law

which only tho America ns havu infringed—" Thou Shall

not deliver unlo his master tho slave that has escaped

from his master unlo thee I" And that infringement

has made of Ihese conflicting Stales a hissing and a by-

word, as it dashes'them in pieces like a potter '« vessel,

Mot only this sacred right of asylum at the North,

but tho homes of unburn i;etiei-iilitni8 in yet unpeopled

lands havo been demanded of Iho North for the;

pctuntion of slavery. And yet it is an established

ismanship, that any govcrniiic

.duyofeil

ic enthroned ! Attempts

ic friends ofjustlee

lafety requires thei

with the since rest

our obedient sorvn

i from 1617 t

and urgent]

m lh o ruuiaoller who has sold him

i9, resisting, meanwhile,

from his friends ngainsl

When n ruined gambler blows out his braina, nfter

long robbery of hie employers to repeat his trials of

fortune at the garni ng-table, does " no responsibility

whatever" rest upon the man who has supported

that gaming table, anil lured the public lo frequent

tor forty-two years, in spile of many reiuonstrances

ii"ftinst Ihe obvious corruption it «as spreading

7

Ik such freedom from guilt shown in the least dcgi

by tbe admitted Incts that the rumscllcr and the

gniuingdiouse keeper neither counselled nor desired

such a result to their customers'/ Do we not say, and

justly, lhat they n >' re-ponsible for rvsulta so

rally flowing from the wicked business they follow '(

The American Board commenced their in'

among the I.hoctaws in 1S17, finding Iheiu a i

Ming.. I in

"i

Li,',.-.

nnd Truth and flight

c

In ihe sweet and holywise calm words Hint

Not In defiance of th

The olfvo branch,' at

To Christian charity

If, without damageIf Reed. unrd of its lnw«~Hi, .,h-;.-.i,.r.l,.r il- Im. -

iS'SfiS'if:':-,,-,li,lli„i l.l.n-,.1. iifjlitliy Ipn.i

•' m-r- in. invii.li- .uii

indes, shall rest;

;r bu forever blest,

a tree

sally sl

urrender, would

zed ns degraded

Mbs.JUi-.ii 1

accopi my thai

of lid, It sec

II,.- call

his name iltsll be

verbis ting contempt.

t to east out slavery

in nre'the free States

deservedly and

and dishonored. T

people nro obliged

lo degradation, at t

loud tyranny 1 llis best hop

forgotten gin

remembered only with shnm

All that is now needed is

,' the refusal to couipromiai

saved—ultimately to becomi

slave States too. Whatever border Stnto (and they

ill nil become herder States in turn) shall desire

abolish Its fllovery, can, nJUr having dmir il, join the fi

States ;with whatever help of loans and advances I

transition rosy reipiirc from Northern freemen,

compensation—no indemnity; nothing lhat eon beetled

as nn acknowledgment of property in man. Hut nil

help, succor, tbe North is bound, by past complicity, lo

e ihe result 1.

1

n l„.-s, instead of iiamli ulnhle

GEBiirrSutTu'M Sri:cut at Tuanvro.-Tho speech lately

delivered at Toronto, upon the Anderson Itendition COS'

by GKimrr Sumt, Is certainly one of that eloquent gei

tlcman's happiest efforts. As n legal argument, it Is i

nil its main position'! invincible, while as a moral pro-

test ngnlnst Rlavery and a mble vindication of American

Abolitionism it is even nil that the high character of its

author authorized us to expect. That it had a power-

ful elfoet upon all who beard It, nnd lhat it will exert a

wide and happy Influence in Canada, we rejoice to

bollevo.

i with iwith, Hit

.Minay we of politician

themselves clear,

Ihey i

length lo do by mere moral prepondt

us uinl the just— the members nnd friends of ihe

:nn Anti-Slavery Society—havo only

claiming tho abolition of slarory, ns they have begun,

s tbo Slates may lake are

enco to us. We deal with nature, and not with lines

and boundaries ; we deal with the human head nnd

heart, nnd not with Its Church or State contrirnn

'A breath unmakes them, as a breath bos made

and we immeasurably prefer the

:_jrj,UcnrJfod.in

lust week, ns though I should h

resent, ns 1 was llien in lie

in- in Sew York—and the n

Sneh is my fleeting life.

i,-,l trifle, hi l.eliuti'of llin-r

it tny that.

is larger; hut.u

oru Is breaking ! TUnnkGod! Lei Ihe darli

n there hums mid sinhVs n sun tivhhul 11.

. duydinpcrial we have waited for so long Is jnl

arencll 1Ever yours, sincerely.

TuinoEcs IIv ITT.

J.A.NOWC.it.-, nn, I Miss Hunt

Judith Hathaway, lluxbiirj

Mis. J. W. Smith. IJ-.' Ilest.-ri

Mr. and Mrs. Win. I. llowditcli

r. C. MeLanthliii, Watertown

Miss SI. E. Allen

ilV.B. BrownMrs. Earlo

Mr.. S S. DunhamD. C. WrightMrs. Mm ThompsonMiss r-riim-.es M. Itemick

Mr Lulher Melcnely, N. II.

Mrs. Slariha and Miss Loekey

John L. WhitingMrs. WhitingMarin A.Sawin"A friend

"

J. A. ai'tiui, Boston

i:„l,,l, Wnlil,, Emersonr.li/,ibelh.Tack«on

Rev. Robert WnlerstonFriends in Leominster, by Mrs, I"

Mi-s. JacobsJacobs

William 1-. Coffin, New Bedford

Sarah 11. Coffin,- - Perkins. Boston

._...: Os;;nod, Charleston

I. I', Pay. Sew licdlord

Mies w'll-m. Ileston

tiei.rge M. HogeM, Boston

Ah milder boiler, floslon

Alesouder Fosler, Boston

Sirs. Kilburna C. NowollJames Freeman Clark*

Charles S. Estabrook, Boston

S. UrhinoIra GrayGeorge W.StacySlhaJ.A. NowellJilsa L. II. Chose

A. Haskell

Dr. Henry I. llowditcli

Miii Sarah Clarke

II. Jas. Prentiss

R. T. G.

Wm Bssselt, Jr., Lynn

Mi-s limii.i hillowoyMi«s Harriet M. Carlton, Dorchester

Misn Ftebekali 11. NortheyE/ckiel and Alice Timelier. Barnsloble

Alvin and Nancv HowesJ. G. Dodge, West Cambridge>'.,pliia Tln-reau, ConcordSamuel E. SowallRichard Clnpp, DorchesterJ. U .fniis.v, Boston

Mr.=. Si^'lieuClapp. riorehestor

-"U'hhtn Chipp "

_'. C. Severance, West NewtonW, A. BrownF Weir, DorchesterW. 11. Lackey, BoetonWin. Simrrell, "

A. Merrill, llallowell, MaineJ.inie- N. llullhn^Lytini lot '

• litis W.-llinglnn

Mrs. L. ?. (.llis. BostonMiss M. J. Packman, Boston.Mrs. John rnrkmnn, "

Mrs. Caroline Spar till

Mrs. A,Min- lle.evluiiel. WorcesterMiss Sarah F- Wall

Mrs. 1!. B. Emerson, BostonDeborah Kimball

Jnhn D. Willni-d

J. II. Putnam, Brookline

T. B. DrewSimon MearsFriendH-inv flwell, Jr.

Lizzie A. FJwcllMi-s. James Hall

- ilio Jenkins, Chelsea

lichardion

Mrs. Eunice F. Cutler

Sirs. Carly

S. B, Richardson"). Lombard

I. t.'oonibe-s

i. E. A. Morrill, Concord, S. II.

Slnria S. PageNelly Sedgwick"h'dlp A. ChaseIrs. C, J. Thomas, Portland, Slaine

Sophia FordMiL.R.FL. S. PutnamMrs. Man Ann Cnrler

Mi:;.-. Siir.ili BibcockDi- Marie Zakr/.ewskft

Miss GannettMe-.-.u-al. MarstonM.i il;,II, llnakell

Mi-s. J. VT. LewisRev. Nathaniel Hull, Durchc.ler

Perley Kiny, Soulli Dnnvers

FriendMr. nod Mm. N. White, N. H.

Mrs.S.U.Voun SBourne Sruoner, I'lymuulh

Pope, Dorel

-. I.'ie-i a Bled "

Fraternally and respectfully yi

Av-i Aksob (Mich.), Jan. "il,

Db.k Mas. Gsawsos: Your Festival" day 1 always

,.,i„,,„1,,-r:andlf ii were In my power loaiel)..ii

r,,r

tio,i,om>h..e-e.,a,„lre»,,n,l,r,i [ici..l,iv,

:

,IJ

line l.'.l.e.l- Id ' '- 1'-'

1

". 'j

"""'

u,,,..-, r,,.,,>,niiiie our ,-ir..r.-,:nureiy ; owi

egmti

, del'^- T iieee^su.j »« ,.«......- - -

present aniloua and' horhooil. and State. If Massachusetts Is

.'. I.}'

]..!.. Wright

J, ,|,n Henry llaodluft

"A younc friend"

John M. Forbes, Esq., Milton

Mrs. Ives. SalemProf. A. I). While, Ann Arbor

'

A. f ftehhlns "

Hall, Jr.

„m el Barr.-tt, Concord

, younc friend," by C. K, W hippie

r'and Mrs. E. Dresser

B. R. Downes. Ilradford

Amos Pnrmenter, NewportEdward Harris, Woonsoeket

Benjamin Chose, Auburn, N. H.

Ttev. Wm. J- Poller, New Bedfnnl

Mijs ['- Cushing, llinghamaRoble

ley

lend of tho Causess Sarah O. Babcocka. I. S. Smllh-.and Mrs. G.M. Rogers

W. P. S1. !!..-!.

Mrs. WiUlanStephen BarkerOlis ShepherdP. B. Cnpirswell

Horace ShepherdMr and Mrs David Mack•.'i.tl.nii Itii har.lx.n. Wi.rr.-i

Mi'i M,„-i ManningMi,.- I'hi.het.'nrniut

J 1-lwar.U.li.er, l.yt,

Frances M.ChcevrrMr-. Be-iie-:-- Uekvvoo-10. IV. Holmes, Jr.

W. L. G. Clark

C. F. Fill

10 00

10 DO

ID QUu OO

I'fl

Page 3: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16

Geo. W. Wnlll.ndgo. &ul 0m&ThiiJ.lui i ll-nil l--.|.

Mr«. Hatch, Portsmouth,

nnd friends,,

I,,

E.B. Chase, Volley Falls, '< >

®m gssUrn trnmnHm. !•» «taW»!l<<™ «mw»»»*»*

EOnOPBAN SUllSOniPTIOKS.,,n ,n,|, ,,i in.- \V,irrinc.toii Anil.

;.,'.:.... England, lij' Anil tlolisoii,

'

',!;;'. --,..,--. -w./nyl-j '.l'l':1'-l»;r

Confessions from Boston by t

I>falih

llv-. K. Mn. [ill. .in

Mr-. TurnerMr... C. Miirliii.-im

l-ricnd; m M.mciio.-.ti-r.hyMi^ W1Friends in Italian, tiy Mr-. Itaiue

Krlcndsln HriMi.l, l>y Mrs. Mrci'hei

Thomas niwl l-Jlher Slurge

Monsieur Tourgiieneil', Pans

nlVunln'"''

C:,||.>C|...| |lVthl'MI".'ll

Mi:-. I ll.-V l.lloUMir. Tr, .'-.' M.--S,,.,-...!.. ! I

I.; Ml- J-itai >

iiSS A.KIsabella ShowLouisa PhclpiWt lliiim MaloneBy Cta

Boards, Fcbru i

i.d ynu It would nevor Jul I howyou say about its being a sensation novelty, likely, with

>kilfiil potter*, lo increase the already groat demand

yuur journal. But 1 n(]oSn protest r

hitters to niyselr, it I continue you

y should not this Impracticable fit

st on engaging to grind out your ]">

: decently in Hie f.miily lomb nn the

of llio last page? Dill y<iu not distil

should have only the moral tag nt the

puppet show! And now, forsooth, he

notes nnd glossary whenever lie

no Ura of soiTering the benefits

at.d in ill nt sort of way. What business has ln> I

iitn.' nl., "it in tliis irregular mid Intidel fashi'"

t tlii- t-ai-.-od ni'i-- of 77,c Cborltr summon in ven

uucful fraternity, nil nnd singular, to eolhip!

fallen at least

B- quite probable that

nothing will pass ttopWMBt Congress, unless possibly

the New Sli-tit<> proportion, which amounts to

Union-saving measure, and is not accopt-

.„, Java Suites. Even tills proposition, it Is

mid by those who have canvassed the Sctislo thoroughly,

.,„„„! pais Ihnt branch of Congress. Thor" -—

mission Id

r pillili-=|.lin

,e days after, Iirint

luily, willi n chuckle of compliment, Whitti

ewnrd, beginning, ''I thank Ihce, stntesnip

; it universally supposed that if the Edito

aifc hadn't tumbled down to prose in his i

e-oiV of Phillips, ho might h

!. I llM Vi.il inl.ll.l

a Ihc Compromise!

ing their purpose!'

Tlio Com

lhan Hi".'

olliing a

il conditioner

lnti-slnvcry Republicans.

,1ms, within a Tow day

sorted itself, nnd it is now absolutely certain that if

,y serious attempt at Compromise is made,

stoutly destroy the ftepubli

.lit al iviii]! will not traded off by Tburlow Weed

„__» or compromise proposed

is the fact, that the™ ia nut the slightest possibility of

" saving the Union " In tiny such fnthSotl. Pass the

Now Mc.icn proposition. Well-is the South satisfied !

Not at nil. Are the border slave Stales appeased! Not

in the lenst- Thov demand sbtrrry prottclton in the

Constitution of tlie United Slntoa. They will hove that,

or its equivalent. Hut the States which have seceded

[Carolina. Well, what if the Republicans accept th

1 organ Ir id Southern Confederacy mid cutset

on! Where nre our model Democ rati 1 Ei

tirely dLieomtitod. For their try of "no coercion

eiuiply " reconstruction " ; and once sopurato ll

alaro States from ilia free, ami all Hie powers on ll

earth or under it eannol construct n new Union. Oi

friends in the frcu States will thou flr

thenuclvei elTectiially u- '! up, mil in fill monllis would

ite slavery as intensely as they now teem to love it.

The strong-cat argument against acquiescence in thi

revolution of tho Blnve States Is the appeal of Diiioi

border slave Slates for the protect i if th'

Federal government, Winter Davis, of Baltimore, in hi

Bpeech the other dny. demmid'.-d prntcction of tho gov

eminent for the linlun men in the border slave Stotefl.

Tho free Statca will bo inclined lo give it t

whenever it Is demanded by any considerable

of S'latlieni ciliicllB.

Mr. Sluchoiuin ia rejoicing over his escape from the

White House—in advance. Never km a prlsonei

dollghled to escape jnil than our rresident will be tu

see Ihe fourth day of March. The Union may then go

to tho old Nick for all he cares, ir ho only can escape

tho responsibility of engaging in n. war with slave-

holder. Miserable old man! Corrupt and Imbecile,

cannot make hw \v i l- V . . 1 1 1.- k hi rupee table, nor his

lecllity pathetic. When he exhibits n wnnt of Intcg-

ho ia ikapisid, ami it 'u the iisuie vvlnn he -hows

iscl! weak and wavering. Avox.

r/n; soprnEff.v coxfederaoy oroaxizhi.

Init., tlie representatives of th,»

ting at Montgomery, Aln., adopted

d, "TlioCciUSlitution for the 1'r

visional Government of the Confederated States ofAmen." It is modelled upon the Federal Conslitutit

it contains sundry epcelflc provision*.

Th" ]! ifnlile reads na follows:

" We, the deputies of the sovereieu and indein'inlint

iales of Sonlh Unt-.lui.-i. fiviTfia.' Florida, Alabarlisslsslppi anil Loui-imn, invoking the favor

Almighty God, ,],, hereby, iu t" lull "I these Stall's,

d cstnbli.'.li ihi l.'.ni„liluli..ii for the proi'

i of thoigur:ili»u iif lh, i l'r.'ji.leot. or until ii pi-i-

Constiiutiou or i.'viii.-il.ii\ni"n li.tween the n.ilil

States shall be put in uperatinn, whichsoever shall first

mporlnti'on of African negroes from any far-

try other lhan the slnvcholdine St.ili -a of ihe

UUE8 is lierebv fuiliidden, and Congress is

to pass audi laws as slmll efl'vclunlly prevent

•.loin when

10 chorli

Imfl r.

K..D1..U-U<..i'-

&:;,:'i

,

Gdlttitd hy the iCItsca ffauoMoii.

to make i

r Correspim-

(ices; nnd in Ihc

i, mental brackets

j be found In uiy

genuine text.

i final darning

Or, to changi

ltforms nc c o

ing. Like the

V. K.'

'"

.. ijlwiir.1 Ki-igliH'!

iTI'...r|.. H.,-1..

all treasonable woi-ds and boi

Iters, as his bane corrupt™

r suppose you have heard that tho u

ir I'.wn held n 1'i'e ™ Tue;dnylasl fi

id patching of the national hunting

is metaphor, there was a om.lmliru:

io most tragical comedy of Union-*.

playsofCongrovonr Wycherlcy, thla slntidnrd piecc-

thoiigli possessing n mclimchuly fascination from remi

niscences of distinguished actors who in other day

look part in it-is altogether too deiuoraliitioE to relaii

possession of the stage. Wc have parted company will

the wits of Anne, rather than confess that BCduclion is

the end of man upon earth, and tho bread!

commandment tlie whole duly ofwoma:

prepared to deny ourselves nil the mil

in this masque of Union-saving, rather than

i- ever that there is no god but interest, and Hint

psgation of alavory is tho chief of In*

is rather painful to take a lost look at the ivi 11-

ropOtticB-luo favorite eagle, so skilfully Blurted

with bank notes as to lonk quite lifeliko-the pill hoses

t from Bunker mil and Lcxington-aud,

,lanuarius bottle, filled with undoubted

blood of the fathers, which tho priesthood of slavery

had so often liquefied for the edification of the faithful

The Umitcd audience nt the evening session made up iu

ileal what was wanting in numbers, and expressed a

strong approval of Ihe abandonment of the Tlepuhliean

party by Messrs. Soward and Adams. Mr. Ilillard,

according to the newspaper report, declared that the

latter gentleman had given up all that he could ml

and honorably compared him to the lover in the Blooi

ing Nun. Not being posled up in the thrilling advei

tures o( this BCnsation female, I am unable to indon

tho felicity of tho comparison; but 1 am assured

the beat lovers of the Bleeding Ni

present depletion ns the only

any measure of desirable vitality. The people of Mi

del- the Idea, of returning. Nov

border ala>o Stales could be p

crablo mixture called a romptoniisi

iciflril v

v Adm intloo go o

e the b

1 iri>7.7i FttnU ma:-.'-. nushvrx.

February, 1SG1.

Cheptt or the United Sutra Govkeqieu rx Etkove.

-Tho [toston Tranfa--.pt hi- been furnished a copy of

1 letter from a di*tin>-ui-di'.il i-:ipil!ili*t in England,

"known for the Krviics he has rendered lo American

credit in Europe in times of financial trial" (Mr. Fca-

body, the London hanker, we presume), containing the

foUoiving posjago:

" 1 cannot conceal from vou the net that the credit of

the UuikdM-ii,, t-,,v, vmiuiil ii new en trial in Europe.By tin- Lift steamer u.- hear "f I'lnni of ' concession'

and of ' compromise ' witli those who ore epenlv defying

the laws. Now, it is not my purpose to discuss the

merit or the molive of mi of these projects; but 1

must tell you that if your government entertains any-i-» ..fcuncession nt the present moment—if it have lo

the permission to pcacelully inaugurate tlm

.-In I-.il I'revideni— its cn.-<!i*t will receive a

jlow in Europe, Vou innst expvet to hawI,.|. . .. ..!

_u id tho Continent 1'eople will not tru« n govern-

whieh, whun ils I'oiiiul.iiii-ii.-: in-'' ull.-iekcd, instead

„f„i.|,..|.l,n.- l-i ii and '..r.ler.i'.iiipromiscs w"

'

'*- v -ve had emiueh of I'eriiviaii an-] M>-

•» le eai-elul not lo ivtaiu tlio;.' ..f i

j...||.._v i. eoiiiefsion lo anarchy."

W.- h,-

This provision is a t

border slave States, to be r

mp.'i-ari

muved, o doubt, after IhosD

Slates shall put their feet

11 Article second —Cong,i-., hil.ii ll... mlro'lint,. i

n tho BC

also have pow rlo

orind.oi- paid fur if they

slim

g tlie foul humors

ilitic by vigorouis application of leech a

urth the preaeriptioi

t the old 1'

i, for which,

jood lady's ooly elmuc

y, came near placing .

but, fortunately, failed

, a mercy the precedent

,1 tl.-ewliere

Mrt. Uakar.i

Jcuopb CrookMrs. J.Orook.Chombi

llenn-,' Slim'

Mrs. i'.W. Ileal

Sir-. M.i"-ro|,

Join, Burnt ,

I-Vom M-i«iJs ii hfanobt!

Mi.. . i;. won elegge

tVllfln.-oii, Ksq.

JVmpi *Vioiili II 01<I3Q0

lancet

rhole Fnuenil flail lull of

Mediums and Inflnitessimal Doeloi

Let the poor Nun bleed on, theu, for the pi

clearly one of moral prriloni

licnl boola instruct us, there ia n

good blood-letting. If her lovers feel fni

peratlon, they had hotter rotiro and lea

nnds of the faculty, who arc confident tin

f her plethoric condition is the good lady

>r a happy recovery.

nut i.te-i-dntui-e, the otli

olive butt to Governor 1]

y some half doren ballots, lt is a i

i-ns not established! If one Governor desert

or trimming successfully to political breezes,

.uotber? Give Bank* a bust, and nothing 1c.

tatne will do for Henry J. Gardner. Beside,

he members from. Cranberry Centre

adint would be more appropriate Ihnn an oil painlu

rpioce, lo keep their memories verdant beneath ll

-oil fish t The Ushers, too, would clearly be entitled

\ Slato photograph, at llio very least;nnd If the Page

lidn't have the liberty of admiring bis features in a

public ombrolype. his case wouhfeertainly be a hard

one. Wo breathe more freely ns these deplorable

itpoued for a acnaou.

ore Eeriuus subject, havo yi

i"Incidents in tho Life of

as absorbing, from Ihe aimplo

f the narrative, as Undo Tom was from the genius

liieh reproduced the life of the lowly. 1

leans an extreme picture of the delicate

he writer never suffers personal chastisement, nnd

loots wilh white friends who comfort and assist. Hi

chief persecutor, a physician In good repute and prn

lice, ecems to haw Leen siibjei-lod lo all restraints th

Southern public opinion enn put upon a profession

man directly dependent upon it for support. That

did exert a restraint Hint one in Ibis exceptional posi-

tion would never have felt, is very evident. The book

has a vivid dramatic power ns n narrative, nnd should

have a wide circulation. The writer's truth and chat

actor are indorsed by persons of the highest social

station, who have long known her. A few sentences,

in which the moral is rather oppressively displayed,

might have been omitted wilh advantage. These, it is

I to be wished, Mrs. Child had felt herself authorized to

expunge. They are the strongest

ur.otuba

what they demand, nod they atuy in th.- Union, the

Mr. Lincoln attempts to collect the r'edora]

at 01inr!cs!on, Moulin "i- New Oil.:

-tnntly cries out, " Hands oil I So cc

and Kentucky t.tk;s up the song, " No cocrclc

duea not stop lo n?k either Virginia

tucky ns tu the performance of bis duly, but blockades

those ports, nnd reinforces the torta slill in out- possos-

Blon, and tbu boi-der slave Slates join the scccdem!

That is precisely the way the thing will work. While

the North is asked to concede awny all her rights to

save the L"oion, slave Stales still roniniiiing in that

Umoo wdl nm ngreo to maintain tho Union even upon

There. Is still nuother aspect of the question which

hashad an excellent effect upon Congress ; ij is, thu fact

Hint compromise With States which hold tu the right

any moment to break up the Confederacy in foolish and

purposeless. fiucB a Union Isn't worth sacrificing

thing for-certainly not the sacrifice of principle. It

is just no Ujilon nt all—any Duo Slate cou smash it

in twenty-four hours. Yet for such n Confederacy

States are expected to give up all which they hold

•I Give Constitutional protection to slavery

keep Virginia in the Union, when die still asserts li

ght to go out of that Union at pleasure. ilo

diculous I

The Republicans in Congress have been pondori

lis great question in all its aspects, and I know lh

line who, nt one time, were inclined to such cnnci

ena, are now resolved not to stir a single inch town

uvcry or the Smith. Still do not mistake me—a co

romiso oiuy pnss Congress, but I believe there is h

probability of it than there was a weeek ago. I feoi

very cunfident that the recommendation of the Com-

missioners' Convention will not bo adopted. The

Southern Commissioners will demand protection for

slavery, in some shnpo or other, nnd il is possible—yea,

probable— that two or three Northern States will. fall in

withit, sons to pass it in a vote of States. New Jersey

is represented by a wretched set of pro-slavery Demo-

crats. It is said that u majority of the Pennsylvania

Commissioners will vote for slavery protection—in

other words, though they are nominally republicans,

they will now swallow the Breckinridge platform

wliole 1 Tliis would give to tho Crittenden proposition

a dear majority of Stales in tho Coovcnilon, and it

would easily be carried in the form of arccomraendn-

on to Congress.

Congress will uoili.itenioiiiiynuch re, oinnien.lntionn..

Siu i Your Washington Correspondent, in

paper, says, " We are rapidly approaching, the crisis ui i

tho slavery agitation." Many here, In till Old Bay

State, are willing iu auccumh to the slnw oHsu i I

instead of having "our heels upon II l ' "'

Slave l'owei-," us lion. Henry Wihi.m I.™-.!..I

in a

speech on the result of tho election of Lincoln, they nre

perfectly willing to have the Slave Tower have ils

feet on the Liberty Power or llio free States. Blanks

for petitions lo have (.'ongre-.s adopt iheCrittcmlen pro-

positions are sent to every town in the State, i suppose.

" lerinr town, where I re-aide, -if o little over MO., had sudui petition in circulation, which obtained

about twenty signatures. Breckinridge Democrats,

Douglas Democrats, lldl-Everett men, signed it ;but I

love not ono llepubllean among them. It Is a little

loiih how Douglaa Democrats should sign such a

petition ; it being nothing less than the old Brcckin-

idgc platform remodelled nnd made more infamous

lii id objectionable, which platfoini was the i

Douglas party disagreeing wilh tho old

llrcckinridgo-De ralie parly; and brought tlie party

end, and paved the way for the election of the

Iiepublicon candidnle. But I find that acme of tho?

who signed that petition are heartily sorry for having

done so, nnd say when they put their names to it they

did not know its import, not having rend it.

The fact is, hero in Ma.-> iihusi tts, the greatest effort

from, all the moneyed aristocracy nnd pro-slavcryisn

in the State, has been pill in reiiiilsilion to grant nil tin

slaveholders nsk. The effort was Hrat made to prepare

the people's minds for a repeal of the Personal Liberty

bills on our statute books, BO that our Legislature

woidl repeal them immediately upon their coming

together. Ea-Govornor Banks was induced, contrary

to precedent, to deliver what was called n l'ui.-ificforu

Address, uot to the Legislature of which he was Gov-

ernor (as tltat. was cstinet), but to the new Legislature

over which Governor Andrew had just been chosen. It

, to influence tho new Legis-

iLiberty biU, and cnuse its

Andrew would be against its

member of this Confed

Fugitive staves nro to 1

" A slave in one State neaping l.i amdelivered up on the claim of the party ..

'lave may belong, by the l'i' euli.-o authority of the

Stale io which such ilnv-- i".>i I"' '' d 1 and In en

of iiuv iil,di|..-ti.,li or fon-il'l- r.-.iui, full i onioem-ali,

in. hi.liui; Hie value "f tin tlnv,; .lit I all coats und e^,,

• is, skill Le- mad,.- to lie p.irly by ilie tiate in win

...o.li iii-l-i.-ii.iii or ri-v no 'lull lako place."

One section relates to the division of the Fede

The AiJiixrCnsvENTuvy.—We are disappointed in nol

i-eeemiig for publication this week: the olflcial reporlof

lh" proceedings of the State Aiili-Sbivory Convention

held hist week in Albany. The Secretary, Mr. Putnam

of Telci-boro, was not able, on account ot illness, to pre-

pare tho report as early as bo expected. Wo «hall

doubtless get it in time for our nest number. Mean-

Convention in a letter on the first pogo, from which

they will see that tho efl'nrl of a mob to break up the

Convention was frustrated by Ihe lirmni-M of the Mayor

in maintaining the freedom ot speech. Though ho only

srgrd his sworn duty, lie is •i.lillvd to the warm

j not only of the Abolitionists but of the whole

it hereby inslitut.

-,uity

.shall take in

- of r.

iim.ity.

d good

On Saturday the Covoiitiun elected as President

ti uow Confederacy, Jelleroon Davis of Mufi=-iippi

;

ice President, Ale.vnnder II. Stephens of Georgi

e firnt to please the Arc-colors, the last to concilinta

o more modcrntc alaveholdi

South Carolina is said to be displeased wilh the

:tion of the Convention, and to threaten

om the now Confederacy.

WoHAX'fl RlOBTS in Onto—A few dara since, Mrs.

Jones, Mrs. Cutler and Mrs. Gage addressed a Commit-

tee of both branches of the Ohio Legislnlure, in the

i Chamber, in favor of certain important amello-

a of the laws in respect to women. The Chamber

rawded to its utninst capacity. 77if Onto Stato-

fieuiocratie organ) eouuneiitls die addresses for

their eloquence and argumentative force. Trof. Monroe,

if Oberliu, a member of tho Senate, moved a vote of

hunks to Ihe speakers, which met a unanimous aye

rom Ihe assembled throng.

A Will-IE Mahk nm AUI.U.T.—The Anti Slavery C<

venlion was held in Albany almost undisturbed;

'

noise nnd confusion, lit the worst, being no tnuro lhan

usually attends escitcil political cm

Mayor and the police did their duty

citizens of position mid influence ntlendcd the meetings

and helped to sustain order. On Wednesday, Gi

Surra, and on Friday Mrs. Sta.vtos, Mrs. ifost: and Mrs.

Mott delivered nblu addresses in the Assembly Chnm-

i the. Capitol, before Senators, representatives

io leading public men of tins State. On both

mis the large hall was densely crowded. Perfect

was maintained, and the whole proceedings f-'ev

conduclcd wilh dlgoity and decorum. Mr. Smith

argued against the repeal of the Pe:

Save rut: CojiMokwealth I "—The Springfield

Jtipablican, which, a few weeks ago, sawn "lively pros-

pect " that Ihe Legislature nf Massachusetts would

ipeal the Personal Liberty law in order to conciliate

i0 South, now confesses that such expectation " ficoms

ss Bkely to bo realized." The effort to bring Massn-

iiisclls to her kue cs before the Slave Power is destined,

letui

AMRItlCAN ANTI-SI.AVE11V SOCIETY-

i- tin- e,

e Legislature will not repeal

If they get a small majority to do no, I think that

Andrew will iin-i |-

o Republican parly dc

i the Slave Power, to e

Republicans—anti -slavcry r

back down, and yield

vo the Union, they will

I havo heard several

say, if.thoy yield, nnd

JitCtlpUfor I7ie &iintliir<l,from Jan. 1 'o 1

10TJ Miss Boss, rortlaml, Maine,

11 ll l!ev. F. I'lotliinghnni, Portland. Maimll^f, J. 11. Williams, Augusta, "

]I1M llcv. Moses Kidder. Woodsloek. \ I..

lPill Hon. James Hid. bins. Bo-ton, Ma.--'.,

!P:l ld-v. Ji.hu T Mr-ellt, "

11-1 Gcorgo I'.Bi'odford, " "

127 IT. Phillips, r '

ectcd w it the d Mrs.

Stanton spoko in favor of changes

great number of nnli-alavcry iraeis na-ve- omiu

billed amen; Hie legislators and publie ollkers.

indication of (ippusjiimi his b en manifested.

c ether hand, the tracts are generally read, nnd sent

to the country by the members, where their infli

ill be felt nnd seen in after limes.

t-l'Cl-EItlMlI);

Ir.M.lilui.

llil Mrs. II. C. 1-itit-ld, Wi.-y

IV2* Mrs. .l.-.iiub llnyward. Sal.

1102 Mrs. B. V. Reynolds,

112S Mi '

'

-.[ ~.

Lincoln, Uinpjlniiu, Mas

„D. Kisko,

112G lir. 0. M.Totil". New il

1127 tt'm. Pope, dr., Harrison aij

1125 Samuel Cbilds, BurnstaLle.

IOfi-1 Adams Foster, Worcester,

IlifJ Den. J. Wnshtiurne. Worce-

l:!0 Mirs Sarah Clny, Lowell.

Oliti Iter. John Moore, Sir- "lit 11. -\- I'ase. M.'lf-o.l

Suitor.].

,-, Kuril, Cars

:. ijili-nei

tho Bl

.ll- .I.:- .

ii the judge, i

ind directness of tbism

'Hi.- geiill.-mni. ..oioplnin. d of in the first part of

pistle sends you nothing better than the fly leafol

hymn book.

AT THE MUSIC HALL.

Tn-E of our elder iioii,Ih„-iIV Imdihy nerve.

Brave, top gli-vuk- ed Tilun of reloilio or cheer,

Ilo near ml Illy imfuils lied work Is here.

Come, n rikc us tlodiviinl ! It: I iignln we ssvervei

Kor whe lesser sloruis. Chrisl's spires would ei

And, lien. ling, |ht,Iii1 lo paths "lure sinilCM ran,

Once given lo minis. Con one so nobly manFade to Inactive spirit ! We have hopo

Willi purer icnl among us Ibon dost stand,

,ud sllll, through fnlnlor natures, iluigu'H to cope

Wo I, ,-

.. ropini. I. tl

His. J. IVoodsldu

tVllllam Siin-ul

Margaret Bmealllobcrt SmisilMrs. Itabort Itayo

l!m. It. C. ChnptnnnUrn. Jon" SmithPelcr StewartMrs. Mary Weir

John lletlderwiek

John Crnbblira. J. Bell

Hrs.r

Templeiou

The friends, Loth n

entreated to inform ll

erors in thu above li

Tni: AsiKitlt'SN Lviu.i.vs.—Mr. John JJecson, of Oregon,

having visited many parts of the United States during

the last three years, making known to tho public llio

wrongs nnd outrages inflicted upon our Western Indians,

is awakened so much itii'-ic-t in their condition, that

Convention is to be held in Boston on tho 2Qlh, 21st

and i-ii of this month, to take such measures as may-

be deemed necessary to assure the Indians thai, here-

after, they shall be protected in their natural rights.

Let that Convention be attended by suitable delegates

from nil parts of our country, that, nt last, justice shnll

be (lone and mercy shown to tho remnants of the

iboriginnls of our country. t- " V.

P. Potf-

i. -ider.t

home nnd abroad, nro ei

, not only of any mere

t, but especially of ends;

from Wil

Diieb there be, lost on the way.

Cotiisij Horn:.—A p

ki.i., formerly of this city, but who r

of Liverpool for ninny years, informs us that ho wmabout to return lo tho United States. Ilo soys: " I sai

Wednesday, Jan. loth, for Philadelphia, in Ihe ahi|

Wyoming, and, under Ihe good providence of God, hopi

to see you early in March." Mr. Powell will lake up

his abode at Now Bedford, Mass. He belongs to tl

class Of colored men who have on intelligent npprcci

lion of the Anti-Slavery Movement and o willingness

help it to the extent of their ability, lie will bo c(

diully welcomed by a wide circle of personal friends.

members of Congress who will support the Crltt-nJei

compromise— there nro not many who will support tin

border State compromise.

tho Southern C mis-iouers in the Convention an

•teous and concilialory— if they make no demnndi

lover, but o.iA" rtsptdf'&Uj for a AViuin' t'opiern'i'ii

id if they will agree to abide by the result of tin

venlion, nnd the vole ot the States which follows it,

ding by the Union in any event—then it is possible

:Congress will call n National Convention. It is

probaWc, but the thing may be done, nnd If it is, it

tho least objectionable of nny of the projects

gestcd, to get over, to got past this time of panic in

Ihe stave States. The people should have nmplo time

ider the questions n"w agitated, and, of course,

under the Constitute, three-fourths nf flic States mast

ratify the nets of the Xatioool Convention before they

:ill become parts ot the Corjtitulion. There are

outhern men here who declare that wbolovcr might

o the result of "och n Convention, ho

people might vote, by the time the decision vos mado

Ihe secession fever would have died out and the L'nion

would be safe. Cut there nro sorioos objections to

this plan; and Senator tolinmer wns right when he sai

in ihe Senate last wffk that the domiind of Statca for

limitation of the power of the government shoul

receive the attention of the State Legislatures, and not

of Congress. When it is dcsirnble to exltwl the power

of the General government, it is nppropt'inlc for Con-

gress to *ill n National Convention; in

case it belongs lo the States to call the Cc

it is to be called at all.

Some ofMr.Sewar. Is most imioiaicfri. nds here claim

that he will never be found rofinj for a compromise

tith slavery, and that Ids speeches nre mado to gain

line nnd to allay the excitement at the South. Wo shall

oon see, for if there is to bo votidg at nil in Congre&s

upon tho proposition- h.-nu-i ii,"it must *onn commence

Then we shall see how men will put themselves on

record who now talk both ways. Certain I am that

more than ono lleputiliean in Congress desires, if possi-

ivo oh" nny vote upon the subject, and it IsI

possible that no vote will bo reached by tho present

Congress.

of no more " caving " in Ihe Bipublicon ranks,

of Illinois, made a speech on Friday, in (u»or

of the border State proposition. It is a modified sort

ian for sinvdry hi tho Territories. Kellogg

indicated that he was about to mako tbu plunge two

Brer siitec, he has been hum wo.i'ly called

ith t\iic ol Elinois." Ho has no followers, I

heliove, though it is possible Ihnt there may bo i fow

members ready to vole with him In favor of the birder

-late compromise.

Undoubtedly the Union feeling is strengthening in tho

irder slave States, and if it were pos.-ible for the free

States to give up nil that Soulh Carolina demands, the

Union might be preserved—perhaps foi another four

years. But the present indications of a Mror.g Unio

feeling ill Virginia, Kentucky and Maryland are ver

deceptive. They nro for Union if they can got nil the

demand, nnd if the Stales which havo seceded can t

id back into the Union. The gulf nnd cotton Stall

cannot bo coaxed back, and therefore it follows that,

Virginia and the other slave Slates still In

Union will eventually join tho seceders. It Is

ible the Northern i.'ont.ileriny will, on the pit

eeesjity, hold on lo Maryland, Delaware, W.slovn

inia, und Mlasourrl. If there ia separation, Ihe >

ould not permit the line between the two Republics to I

follow exactly that of Mason sod Dixon. The Poto-

veould bo the southern boundary of the free

.blic and a porti t" Virginia would join iL Mis-

souri could not hi periliitled to join Hit- sin. i;.J..11-,.-

—she in tho way of Ihe great Pacific li.iilroad. and

must not block op tlie great highway ! Ir. t |. r>i

between California and tho East. It wore an eosy

matter fur the new Republic of freedom, relieved of

the dead weight of the slave States, to emancipate the

slaves in these two or thrco slave States, oven if tlie

slaves were purchased o! their masters for this

Thin may be counting the chickens before

e batched, but our Northern democracy is

so piteous!)- of lata against tho execution of

tho laws in tho rebel States, that it may be well to con-

sider n peaceful proposition for separation. These

Democrats declare that they won't allow the new Re-

publican Administration to enforce tho lows in South

liiu.-h ll,„l

S TMcra-an party

is, they will ji

inrty. Yes, I have heard those

been bitter againt Garrisonism. ins

uuhl noi read Garrison'" paper. 1now, in the event that tho llepubli

prDves/o':--e to mertij, they will join the Garri

and arc willing to "let the Union slide," and have n

free government. Wendell Phillips's speech against the

repeal of tho Personal Liberty bill, before the Com-

mittccc of the Legislature, has been extenscly circu-

lated and read ; also his address at Music Hall. They

highly approved. Men who formerly would not

read his speeches or writings, i find, are now anxioui

to read what he says, and fully approve of his senli

This is really encouraging.

• other hand, we havo men here who sympn

ith Ihc South—men who nro willing to giv.

tho South all she aska—willing to mob Abolitiouista am

silence free speech—men who nre bo mean na to sa;

with Lucius Slnde (ono of the only two Democrats i

ur State Sonata), who wrote to the South, saying thn'

to-day a fugitive- slave would be. returned from thi

tate, if it cost the blood of thousands." Such mc

would sign the Crittenden resolutions, or anything els

which the Slave Power demands. The abolition pai

if the Republican party arc becoming awakened to Ihe

truo state of things. They arc opposed to all conipro-

belicving that wo have had enough of them.

Stand for the right—no backing down— ia their motto.

They nre afraid, however, that their fieprvscutnti

iu Congress will not have hackbuna enough

the immense pressure made to crush them uuv

that slnveholding community in Ihe Capital ol

nation. But I hope for tho best. S

:.i.vs,ts.—The latest reports from Kansas

i doubt that thousands there arc almosl

rishing for want of food and raiment. Tho talcs o:

ffering nre really heart-rending. Mr. C. H. lirainan

Boston, writing from Atchison Feb. a, says: "Thi

ad on hand at tho warehouses in this city, and on thi

ay hither, is barely enough to Inst thirty days, and yi

...6 Mrs. C. Hi11-:. Mr,. I'll/:'

lo;-J David P"i

I IT" lV.lli.iui 1

112-t JiitniT. /

... C.inihridge.

ol Ilo.- ptiip iving Ii nod mo:

r. Voili ll'."

ll-i, C-.iihi.rine A. Post,

lii'i: John ketehuro. J.-iif.

ILIO i;,-v. A. il.Moyo, Albiiu;

1U32 Dr. H.J. Burton, "

ll-'-l J.Jin M. Tilhns.-.n. King

Mary'

'W York,

rry.N.V.

.-. :t!!,-: M. I

ol.l anil starvation "ill enter llmujiiilds of

ionics if the supplies of food and clothing nre

! Money is wauled to pay freights, the

resources of General I'omeroy being about

exhausted, more than six thousand dollars having been

ithin tho last four days. From Ihuusaiids of

homes the cry comes over the prairies, min-

gled with the wintry blasts, ' Savo us, or wo perish!'

"

Subscriptions of money may bo sent to the treasurer,

John E. Williams, Metropolitan Bank, New York.

nf clo tiling may bo sent to the room So. 25

Cooper Institute.

Lixi-or.B .it DvnKimv.—A correspondent of the Bucks

Co. (Pa.) JM(s%mcer informs that popce that Anne E.

Dickinson, of Philadelphia, ,l,-i-,-,•.. .1 -i i-ior,- .n

Byborry Dull, on the ove of 31st ult., to a large ami

attentive audience. The writer says :" Anno is n

whole-souled girl, of only s«*nf<ot summers, and, hav-

ing heartily espoused tho cause of the poor slaves, sho

speaks powerfully when upon that subject ; her fooling

nnd slcor.g nnd toucliing appeals lo Ihe eou-

failod not. to moisten the eyes of very man)

pe presi at. Upon lb,- snbject of Compromist

;> South' sV spoke w.tb a force nnd ability

latnrer ytatv. It was a remarkable

j.rl o/ stwnreoi, uithoul a single

keeping tho multitude spell-bound, an it w

in- nnd three-qunrlora ; and when done,

people would

:.ll, o.on.tiewburgh, "

,ilb. Iloneoye Palls,

T. Marriott, Stanfonlvillc, N- i

lliti A. WndhoulK, Yorkville,

-c M. Morey, Sarnloga Spa.,

a J. A. Ilurr, Ludlow villo.

; William Thomas, Lyons,

I Ceorge I.. Iti-uifcett. .Albany, "

I Laura liai-lve. W,:-t K.ilK

3 Mrs. l'lieb... Mniin, Milton, "

1038 T. Downing, Locust Glen,

ICai'J Mrs. Mainline, NVw York City.

1US12 l-.lc.ai- Kelt-haunt,

11)11 Hubert Kiiunett,

iiii; John Woodgate, "

.ILi Thomas II. Curtis,

1(192 11. L. -lacnuea,

IMward Kellogg,

mxvFVTIOX AT AUnURX.

itnt /aJ-rpfiitleiif

bat l.osrenchci"

lately held ii

g article, ftom ITis AVThe follow!

f last weok. contams the only .-.ecu

ii cf the Anti-Slnvery Convent

MOB IN' At'LU'llS'-

; Ion; I.

iceful .u,..- o.

i • |i.ttr-.'. p<

itcad of In

'}'

, nn i nc ti

f, until she consented

, deliver nuothei

I it:.'.'

?!!

ii. V. Bussell.

amhaVlOillt

'

nili C, H. I1

1U02 Henry i-rom'

11132 J.O. rtroim,

1103 H. G. Chain

u

112f. Samuel W. C.

1DU2 Marcua Sprii

10112 Dr. James Di

1092 Mary Bowne1128 li. li. Helper•5 Mrs. Sen '

:. Stev100S Mrsin.1

] .1. W. llonnell,

!!:•! William Grtdg.Lo.li, Now1107 Itavid Voreloirt. Alvira, 1

1102 J. II. Connolly, Candor,

lult John S, .Mann, f.'onder-por

lo71 (leorgoSlieknev.Clevelnn

1032 Marvin flibbar

. II. Wnl

.- II in- :ii'l-.|

Cut tin olit- would li ,."1 Hi

null)* liirge n Her

But• aller inland

r.gs as a police are hardly known,nken rowdies of this cuuntry nrosway of mobs shall be confined

largo cities, nnd thi-y ora dolor-

tie provincial town shall

II .-. Bodies-

nt i'.-.o iii-ih. a: -j n.iw at last. Auburni-li-nu ol dis|-r.iec. Ihe iuioi.-diale .

displays las been the -vinio io nil instn

(nfer

ices, namely, nnl.a-ttatl,n list

a.-, D. Anthony

gl.est respecta-

. t .killed anti

rhiiol We hm.-rings could bt

tcJ. Demitriple nio-i-lei ui our dly-

.urili i { 10- i alio", lh it

n the oli=cuet-st ,"unte>" place nt Coming

lot nlnitliao-: .,-,-, -.l,-ll ill

..„,.-ssiblo to bo"

,,,,-elinj wa- [.ol'liclv -ol.l'

Wright, Esq.,

orderly niaiili

dL*grai-et"ul fnciihei- iiione

H-tlOlf i

quiet, but in the e

Hill

aw togethei

lirse, wo are assured by those win, uram -

pertinent, practical, and impressive. In the nftel-

of the same ,1,1V -lie spoke in friends' meeting in

Brooklyn. Tae Stt -Jf'osl (which by Ihe way e.iiig-

s her nge by some 1C or 17 years) says i" Mrs.

Mott bears her weight of yea.- gracefully, ller appear-

s that of a -woman of lifiy. oud her sharp, lingular

fnco is relieved by nn abundance of black hair. Like

:0 members of her sect, she dresses with great

-aa. An she has been preaching ninret.r les-s nince

na twenty-sis years nf oge, she speaks without

embarrassment nnd talks well, using elegant oud

even eloquent latiguago."

Tllllll Tl- i ieoBOEIE pA[;sKit.-C.overuor Andrew, in

Sonata of Mnasnclmsetts Df Theodore

Parker's bequest lo (he Co tomo nwealth of his father's

revolutionary musket nnd a king's arm (n largo-

kit 1 captured by bun from the

Mrs. Sarah S. Itussell,

I'rcderiek Cabot, Boston,

CallictlM by II. Ford Dm.uiiinlinrg - - - -

much noise that

heard, ^ind llio nntislaver,

mrned to the bouse of David. business was flnished in nn

.f the i edinte agents in this

of little consequence—having

raged 1

|.:iii

...

the eggs n

_. .. is said that they

a class who pretend It

. How true it is, wo cannot say

;> ,.,,,., r oi" lh.. city jn-tille-.i Ilo

,uiio- ii .it- -in il v < llt-ni. .ei-alii measure.

htsn iliil -!.' "" " i" 'ho parly cordlallv

mm m, i-.,l ivbukeil it "ii the "'

!!m.i

"

i'.t Hi'-ii- 'ii'lnet to the law, w

mtitly enforced against Iheiii.nnd our

hat tho more guilty cues-more guilty,

re knowing—who I,ml the satri.city to ke-.-p

-,i unwhipt of jusii.-o. while the silly tooLs

'employe. --

battle ef

Losington— tho Drst trophy of the Bevolution—look

occasion to express himself as follows concerning Mr

Parker: "Speaking from my own private knowtedg.

of the man whose rare' learning, rarer willingness It

impart lo others his wealth of knowledge, and whom

many virtues, it is impo-ible lo forgot, I may benlluwe.

to assure tho Senate that 1 believe that Massnehusetls

has rarely cradled a son who loved his native Statelier

history, her principles, her honor and her soil with

alio devotion than did lie whose last gin lo

to tlie patriotism of his blood nnd his name,"

s"a LEimntE at Nkwtowk.—A writer In the

Pa.) InleUigaicer sayi

:

lure of Theodore Tiltuu. K-,| .,[' lie- Sew

Vo.k 'fo./- i-i.Jro'. nt Newtown 1 hill on Friday "-"-'

Jan. 2ith, '- T

brilliant a

Ashloinihaii;,ir.lii-.-|--

111'.-. TempiLeicester

Oak dale

commit the

Tin; Tfst

Cuim.Bi SuiiiEit took the opportunity afforded by

the presentation of n compromise petition from Massa-

chusetts, by Mr. Crittenden, on Tuesday, to avow, in

a brief address to the Senate, liis earnest and unyield-

ing hostility to the scheme of concession proposed by

that gentleman, and to every other proposition of new

guaranties to slavery. Mr. Sumner, no doubt, spokt

the sentiments of an immense majority of the people of table by a

Massachusetts.

J7|[,o/.i [/.ol be ChtiwjrJ,' wi. The lector, i- was ha

is subject was one that ndmittei

r;til, cultivated intellect and V. ac

roiigious'lioart would invito :— '

'

ol great numbers and nu less

passed oQ' quietly, notwitlistani

i-..-.ipei-t.ibility. Everything

landing certain noisy little

\. ...;. ..i .lii-i-eaiiiii! D..-iii'"-iia. hud proelaimetl that Mr.

Tllton heeaui-e he was -mp. cted ofholiling stron k- anli-

slav cry sentiments, should not he heard on the evening

in question. Tin- people of Newl.,wn and vicinity nre

not yet prepared •- "free speech."

render the great privilege of

Special iloticfji.

ith) Mury Grow and i

nd.lrt-.'.. Ihc meeting.

erctlng .-i

eaker-i will

^(U'cvtiaciiKiits.

i—In tho Illinois lloute of Reprc-

,Mr.Newportof (irundy introduced

repeal the infnmoua statutes known in that

Ihc " Black laws." The bill was laid on the

a 10, thuugh n majority of the

Republicans 1 Comment is unnecessary,

l"iu;u!.'."i-.". ';.

,

r

^,;*/,

.

L

::

,

;!.r

' ,

..;:r,;i,M.y.

Page 4: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16

xrda tie was Utandrtrd of revolt against the p"

. | paratilig tliOl,,-

d.-rntlon l'«r ihcins.-'lvi.

ilio saveral States, i

lofaoinooi them woul

jn of fulfilling il

jflo a certain

Nuy more; liny European

i.orllct liberty to mako Tvknt-

wilh thou: who luiva seceded,

i.iH irilt "till sxlisifl, ircoJ.wd

,,f „,<™v «"''«'* ™ 9 iH "">

itiihly (lows from the nature ol

- have explained it.

nicnt, they

; nut lueir conduct

Ilia relations of the

should be possible in tlto nineteenth t

A rtsolulionwasnIi'oti<1(.i>li:>l,'lir«-tinEtLolpriu,tsli

should only be admitted lo the luioii when tlicir I

pre;: .- wa.i required by any of tho inmates.—Lon-\

,1 /' Ml \LLEL T<-< THE ANDERSON SLAVECASE.

r. Andenon kiso, which in exciting "> 1 " UL:11

il,,,, lh |--,n.|im.l iiikI i ana. In. I"»1k » parallel mi-t-rv iif a Wtlrh sailor, a slave in Spam. 'I lie

tni/are relal.d in Mollis - History ol tin-

\ ;l I-.." lie rcpre.-enti, the ^mi.ish Ar-

,., - , ,i,.,ot in a severe alorni in the Da. "1

'hitia. lon.mencing at pne.1

,. that both Kutlrar and Li

i record ol Ibe so., t I of llu

I, but later wrili n bayc bad

stnoiis religioi

> top »< ifore

..all-> .-H.

iiliouanmh of notle-lieaitcd. men anil

,;„ iln North i" Unites Who have a hearty

1 it' that m.-T-il eouiplicity in (lie bi.rier ol

I,||,,d, anil hhio.l nbi.li bun been forced

_

upon

by (l"'ie mililienl organization. '1

|,1r,f,i"ll.,S which iholOCSol

in tlnir republican

arise tVom U>o pre

qiui essentially "Mi.-

1 lllllllhl. .-.[

ol ilio greatTeat galley, Ibe Vusnnn, out; of

„,„,-,, Is hv which llie S"h,Ui;:l1uu. oi

us native limn 10 Spain ami Houi" ".is to I Ilcctcd

,'..,, nalnrallv, among tli.' ships " I'" '' imllcred n.os

n tbo gi.lo were the four tin-' .,mv..-l.|lj- gallop-,

ji[uadron or lour under I Di-go do Media. Io-w,n

and oii.li waists. '1 l,e chnpeh-.pulpita and gildei

lonn^i- |..-..i...lo|-li..l^.v,.iilin iiliu.neiie.;. I In

„., Pir-eit .-.f llu- four, wont do.." .villi all I «i-.

l'r.u.-"s was lnl.i-.rinj; severely in tin- lioogli of

- -ind llie Vii.'iM.a'wi.s likewise in imminent

fc'o tlie niasler of Ibis galley asked llu?

\\. l-'h

NEW SERIES Of 1 1 ACTS

AMERICAN ASTI-SLA f.i: if SOt iv.tv.

Anti-Slave rv OEccs, r. Beekmn eet, Now Vorlci

101 Filth aire 1G Steuben itt. ci

Albany 'ii

llar'ui Child lad

Co. on in W'ii.i.- anil Mr*. i, ol \ irgllliii. i

Sin .rv witli letter!

Tocquov lo, Mnailii. Hi MIL... It, Lalajtlu-, &«,

Mo 3 AnAeeou tofEoiineof tbo f i i cinfllSbivi'lBaur.

euiptidK to overtake (bo Armiul

mi belaid, na (be Diana bail n

rtb hns liLiai iu u..j|

^odVbVAlr.: n ld- 1 '.-|.r

M

;.^.^ilf.

SCENES OF THE POETRY OF BURNS.

n^,ScoUaud, January 1,1861.

to the middle of Dteaoiber, wi._

, ,-iili Sl».vI"..'' 1"-" »" 1 "

:,l ^w.i. ....i i.^ 1' i

elv'. ,1"""„ t.Uy, liiiii^-i, '"'"

,„ , .... ili.'vnri' inaumiucr.

s:S:*:--i-' :::;:isS;illy Iho eliiiniiing »>""' _ _, „;_

Ir, l,.,l.in..\:.'tl,.'pi.lore,.,i..-.

..-.-

in appear, na you look do

., ai.niii'l Uuru

tUough y,\„d llie o.anlry a........ ~ --

i ,™.s mid mounlaina eut.tM bi*..»—

.- -

,

l''r"'oi..l.vv,-.llillHM' ,'-

| - ,,"'U,

U,

S ' "''"!!1",i, -u, dial soi-msn neighbor /olmv

,( atine-ipbero U a sinfl"" 1'

irm liglit o.

s liii.d-iar 1'

tbo Prouiiaed !-nnd

relmllienn, or too bli

Wo bud hoped^pluloaopliienl

;!.!!"^tki"tt"ai. i'ih i..ii..»

,.,., 1

,.l,l,.fnli 1 i.l^lii"»-lull bo, I'"

»l .,.-i..n 1"iii>;^';

;„ drivellins ^"«;>" •".

l

,,,,,,„„ „

S^l-;,'tl.n b- „., ,,:-eoai^'"" hl

,,„( i.l..-..i,-..,.-.l ..iily Ibr.,-.,.!.. r<".'-.l

ere tlia groiii

iul.a. Ho fai!» to appreoand.... ,be donnind of llu

Bpprobendiiig it, falls io apeak tbc

».i a,a ; -^ i,,;

i"»i-i;i-'

;

loJideaa (roes, and fjraj BtuDl °,

nioiiatiiin slopes, ibal '"' ""'-i)iii(j t ^,, sl ,„

covered Willi nroliool A"" 1'""" " "'

Uv ,,' .„

noooirateii ami dis|-eefs "i.ly I'.f »ul.„„.,, 1o

noonday li.foiv.-e viaiied Ayrsbiro 1.Urnn to

i- ov lui.l no -mi i» -' " l1 '11 " 1

-!'"-v ,U

?W ^

«.ldon. lielonuHli.'^.b-'"-' ", ...;

> / '[liel are vorv rtlliarl.il 1 '"- illiii-ir.iin!""

io'tridl, cf tin-' .iit^.iii'i-1 ^lyiii^ ..d-Jj.lKv.-a.i.l.

,peei-li was given »n toeoiitui "'i' ";-_ ^

„ mil upon record u mi

loiiij and lit— "'

K, 'ry blow ni Unv'ry'J yoke,

Ev'ry truu wonl bol'lly Bpukv,

t;,-'ry holy Uimiehl "Itbla,

Itol llial

wmlld bll\o in

.i,; and that, bad die .lav- Swiea stood alone,

Hliiven- would prol.al.lv I-i.t- il"~ I"""" boon Innn-

1„ ,, |,a,..i..d .Hli.,u...i-I.'iiiu from seeking

Sa-toi:;;;;;;;::: ;^;'^'^rLeX

Ir

";::[;:."r;;

i

b'. hi'ioui.i d ii-^.w^ 1 .^"

„.':„.. -,.!„.. ,..,r,y ..ill llieil- nielli.' |iri:..|e..l

'*- upon (be prmee

,.iat tlioy have built

heap of oeumbliiig sand. The

jMiLvofUMlwill n.Miredly novo, re,t upon tl.nt

i ,„ ., f.iir division ol lhe emblem nl ibe

Li,,.. I'l'ini"' -I" 1 "'' 1 ntM " llli ' " ,ri I'ca "' 1,lloul Il,c

,",);! "|| il,e i.i.ii of Ibe North have a clear pereep-

inn 'of their duty and of llie true- iiiU-re«ts ol

1",^ .hi," will ,ln> lb.1

-1 «r

,VStfSShasalrea.lv r,U|..iiu-c.l,alOi,i,loe. a 1 " ea ,. ni.

ml iiilU'i- the '-""lb lo pursue uno.beeked Ha mnd

fHE COTTON SVPfiY

lliel'ri

thrv look >i

will lli-ir .

that 11." r,.

,3,=^ ok

Now Hi. r

.:;..ii

va? .bos-

1. will,. .nl weapons.

.'boy bad been BCOtuitoiued 1

and other tiillin"

oi-d blades null .

n fiiniily. Compllwl by L.

hi' (be Old Day State: An

toothpicks

,. for tale out of bvok'-v

•ruse bilt of sleel. Then

,y ....m who bad not thiw [iro

vided liiiu.ii.iU' Willi a sei-ivt atilutto. Al iiret. Uwynr..

.-..i.,|„.-d sell' with arrang.-nu-nUi lor w, ..',!ho nilg

llie yalo £o sunn, however, aa Ibe ship bad boon ±jmiKle ..oinpai-atiii-1; easy. In- lookt.l ii,-..,„.-l Inn., i ..I- ' ^,l l: „l> ihn.w down lus .;;.,.. mid ,a,-..ll.,-. l.:-.r..l I- Hi"/,,,

i,,

„,...;„.., It Kiij a lut.-oiieertod f ij>iwl. M'« next ~?a„T he slnb'b.-d iho oaplain lo die Inart, while eneh

,.f (lio callty ula.os killed the sold'ior miuretl

; thou, v.iBhiiij. btlow.lliey s.irp.-'.sed and ovor-

„„,rereU (be rest of the troop", and put them all to

^ilvci'ttecmcnts.

ENQI.ISBVJEW8QE IMERIGAITAFFAIRS.

Happily for our" motions of one of the lovely

i^n.-boi of eoii-l seeiiery iu .-....tl.iml, we ii-i

» t ,'i n . K-for' t I— of the ""usually mlU da;

,'^,„ Wi.-l-in,-holi beauty of nutumnheyond"""""'.mtuuiiinl months, nluioat mlo the

!!

,

"i'".'ma '"'b.-ili'-l-i^. i«"J l S,,!,U ei'de--ivor to give

™ "Sunt* ' ^, n ,l.«l.t.l«ljl'«'«»^-,',,, - ,,- i vr niel il- "i i-liborbood, immor-,1, localtow» '

^j,, (CBt p^S tdtU 0. I

•' i-.' -i1

ts that, anj-w,ere.

': il. h- nati.e dialect -he inspiration

a're'cl.'i

sueh gl".;elltii;.

pile, ii.

™T of some of ISurna'a most exnmsilo

vtll as bis birthplace. Ayr and Alioway

pound. ilow wonderful the rower

il,-. bv a verse, a word, a though., ..

'SrwtkW* of ordinary beauty,

oa evea of no beauty at all.nltnoat a

for the world! It U the simple expn

that lie deepest in all l.eiirta tfio, . ......

',.,„.,,[ .l|: ,L-.,l

10 lle.-iu, au.l lie is th.'

!hn-V

l.

'"""-"<l^ ,,„„.. I, Li.iw.oasla Hie line

«„ 're tbefbide. '.ad l"i"^ -bom for.l. from their

Jtth" e X- .'bio- - nobUluifl, migb,

,i .I., e- wi'i' ;'• "*'>'• i"ll,!

'. 7' u

''.

-.f .inool' Mf« '•';- r l'e,J,nib r i-or.iu. i

rost-worl.of o«ool,,...„, „(,<,„ ,l,o holly

i" 1 Crel e:"

l-.»He delicate felda ami

luavea -ind limr.i, i. i

u-a.b.or uiion tb.

;°*"™SS"11",.:.™ 't.i-~.™. .'»";»

- »i> - - ".,'"

COW. p.rl„>|. 1«> »'«"„"SOo«, ... top., .-il- -«.";,1

'-,,l,n

:, ,,!., ,,tf ...

a"r'L:i"ll.'-l l »»,"*"-.:

,bn> m.i,u,. i« I-... !•».. '"."..i,;.;;,-,.

V'lF™r»".C "fa"nil" 1«. km- "'»"

SK.-' --. '-"',",";:;:,

-, ,i H -....I.-.,,.; - ;;'.. ""

™"" n. »; ,.. ...u ,. .I...,* ti..—«™

, V .'•

t

i

x! |„

At the nnnual uit.lin.. of tbo Manchester Chamber

/Commerce, hold liinuary ! .he s.vret.ary r«d te

(l,ll„„. M ,.- [,,ior Iron. Urd John Buasell on

^n:: Hie ui,iT,i:ii..i; ivni.i, , " ii-'" l,

;

;i;

:;

iu,'„;

/>

i

;:'

„s lo the olleet thai Hie preaent pohtieal crisesi

m the

,v,to to Tall short, appear lo Lord Join, bussed in

'

t tbo oxpo.li, el inakii.e timolv m.pnry as

, ",1, ,--iliili(v of obtainiiii; l,..,u other o,uarlors

1 „.imount ,,1'eotli.n a-- mav pensate lor liny

id,i,.'i.i.'i in H"-' amount usually obtained from

I' .-pail

*tA,11. .1

Dr. M-.Hle. pr.

.1 by the

"Couiing fi-aiii upon 'dock, Uavid fiwynn descried

tbo lo,,,!!, .-uTl.-i- ot il,.; M|,iadvoii. called tbo Royal

, ouim.,u.h..l l-v" I'oi o.loro Modrado in person

bcarini. down upiu. ll.tin b-lore lhe wind. It win.

:_ .". ..... .1.* v-c ,r ,UH ab-eady an object, or

<;....-. I,, - i'J.nl Jin- ''i.'-n

'ii'ipli.'.iion of the Democratic priiie

ZWrZ.Ml,,-;.^ ;irL-i..., ;;;»»; I-.

ni,,! „„i,,ri.,ii-jlvli-.>"i il- ale-'"" '" '"

Soulier., Sli.los are le-I a'"j n"'' 1 rt'r

^ | j |

'"'"

y BUIIEO of the term llu 1 s-nnp 'm

L-: , it lie too often r.

I

' -'I'd llial '[-"''

ij,. (i r(iia. I.. .nii-iii", i"'"I '

l '"", ' " ''

,,,', .

.,- thai tin-.

_In eonii.lia iw.Ull,.

lion ofllio .-.

i ted by lhe fore

'Comrades,' ;

in.- an oi-jt-i

, '"llud lias gi'

islies of the Culton As*

iit.-nti f l.i-i Mnj.-.-K

e,. .-ailed l.i lhe f.-o.-din- .-

n the) ronideil uliored lor

,,|nui a.el uin.'h i-.diiai.l..

A been, from ti

,™ Hepartn.enl

.iLeon mado api

-.,-IHi ,..,! i ..in. ji'ii:^, -'.Ju"J ~

„s libei-lv.an.l I.) our , ...iraj/o .vo ,u.i-t pro.j

.elvo* w.irlbj of the boon. As he *y<^: lh''K --

al.r Isi.le froi.i lb" Ljall,-) lioyal, wln..l, kil .-1 n

.jfhisi-i-e... David, nolhmg da.mt.rd. laid his ,

close aloiitreide of iho Itoviil, with such a. shock lb„.

tbo limbers .luivered again. Then, at the bead of

his libcraiod -laves, now thoroughly armed, be

dashed oa boaid the Ridley, and alter a Innous

oonlliet, il, ivhitl, be .. a- agisted by the slaves ol the

Koyal.nueceedoil in mastering the ve^.-l and pult.i.-!

all the Snniiiah soldiers 10 doalb. I b,s don.. Iho

- "iibiTied ro.vera, weh on,ir,._. li« ynu as Ibe.r de

slavery which si,-hich teemed tlioir

.0 Iho Tel

.-i.i^o for the di-i-pest anxiety as to the bite ol

ronaoemlandpoliti. il.."t '"> "-"""'-

olignrots are-atr.vmg louver them

,. f,ud ...ili.-bleiied vale louudeil b>

, ,!„„„[,.„, ,l,.|l..,-; .,n and Jay. Fur

,i ,„'. \„rili .villi il- lb-. -"'. and" ivecf er[unl

re tVau

i tbD v

of tonal ,., .there

tail ami truly. _ honorable, to hu

can. by the mugie of »"-."•'"••'

,„„;„,.,- dnral e :"" «'lb ""

atoLo

simply'by tl.

tonal objects, w.tb Ho o ,

|iam| a

i^r^-r-mat i.H 'fc- «*«* ***

the spell of sueh onchuntmenl-

BURSE'fi 0HEVN0N3.

TLc Mm »' 'IT', "" Ki 'k !' ""S"?'.W\Sr ri n, lis well as .1- b«"ks nnd br

i:! 1 ,

,

„;

,

,i'..ir,.,,,....,.1.1 ., .-..,., i.y.

'i »..".;>V","-'";"'"".,,,,:-,.;'.:,'

...... Ki,kTi,ui,«.«,

;

' or:

;i ';; '.?, a ,„; „., .v,,,.,...., ^ ^ f,,m.,«...v "'..' ».." 1 .."

. „.,, ,. Vl , r ., ^ r „|^, 1,, n,".""-'-' °' ~, I'" ",, ^,. „,. l.rl.l.-c of l).,o„ by -

«r'H\vy,;.^.:

.v ',,: ..;';.': „i

nM.cbU.fl-i slr.pi-d ! ar..- I.J '«.l re

,.,," ,„,.; t ,i,..,.l "Il r'.- »''" ',",'7

-^"Vi.-i.: ,r".,

.:.ii--i-'-

n^ the ;pb)n,. ..."> b- !'" i" o..'"c"blo

American who eo-M "..M--. -; ;

^« -- -,r

one who can but will not is a mm ,

groat things of b.m ncconlingly.- has it herelofore been Mr. S-waul - hal n I.

the wrong time or wiilioui i "j i"-i ! '"> ''''"""

"i,„ di^i"i-lni" he hal made b.-tweon lhe ,.,-n.iior 11. .1

a .a,- etini-. ,1.1-h.il.-, l.-u .00 ,n, ,

nd there have been occasion* when his

TI.1! eem-essionor the1.oi.ils ofdilforenee

.ccuon or the other is tlioooe only eo.obtio,

,i„- I'nion can be reeonslilulod. emeh co:

--. I.. -lt..r such eoi

slnva States astb

conquest? It is

alter what we ha.'

tovoring it nil for

What ia the|p

Poutli

it. i no ,ju..s.ioii ...... .-

rill be agn-ed to by the

ril'itive to sul.j.ljiriti.." hi

,,. tl„. t null of tli.- ,:l~.i-

.... 1U |.„„. ,„il lion uianolaoiori-m .n tlm. ..omi r>

^nt'cSTiationolad.. -..,.,.!) from the Urn ed

Si.i.s if lb..-v could obtain a fair climate ol the

;nou,;tor.iuiT lv..bi.l.iui,d,l ;., ol.ee b- |.r iv.-l

iron, other coui'iiit,, if it were ihought worlb while

... iond and (htCi.lt,, , ,,

I,i i.,l,„ l;,i,-ll ,l,..r.-l'.„-e..l,-i,'estoplni.-eatllie

. .

(p( |( ,[,,,, , 11.l[ ,„i^,i„n-:i-B of this country

,'"!'''-"

'.

, i ,, - vb.].. iv'riconauls residing'"'

',','"

,,,,'i,

,,, •{ ,,,|...:

i.»ii now in 11,..:

,",'.,_

,,, ([,. i , t\--. i.,ii..,i. oiler a prospect

I i"

''

i, ..lilt.- aiinpli. .. it iv,, re necessary to have

I

"V'"rd"l In. I'"'-- II would net indeed, think it right

,,

.,,,.. -„l:i should lio Illlowtd to men.'

. ,..|„,,'i.,i. ..I o.iblic im.noy on thia account, or'

. | .,[, ,|.., ||,r ,-,,,.roii t lo ihccollCctOVS

1

'" :"r

'

u, ',-/..i ,.,n,.i, wi'il.i" ili.ii- districts limit!"

fruit of their labor, would i-u.,.4, find a Briliall mar

kel. lllltlliecoii-i.l- iii.olit iiseerla.u wh;11 J'""' ';'•

-»":*::;;;!:;:t ':;:'::oS"SS"

sr—i'S, I- ..;.-.=.,. .,». ,-=«if die native dealers luol " r,,asi.nable asaiiranLe ol

finding euMomera for it at a given time.

I |,o attention of il." consuls, Lord John ltusse

:,ivU, might u-.-liilly I" .«..; bal jo ^."«"^

ilar points which might bo Kugeeated

^„ ininnltnii with ^Jl"l!l

'

,ni

.in an abject slavery wiuen see.nen .no,, .... ....

. „illio.-lv ato-piod his or<!era. The mile ha.

"-Imemilimealmiiil.al.il ,h. tv,.,.tall.y-.wai coadueled

»Mbv the exnerieneed ami intrepid \\ elsbmnii made|D"

tlieir way to Iba coast of franc, and landed at

ln> Uayonne on Ibe 31st, dividing among them the

|„ r ,; 1 « riyH, u .iJ .oard tl... two ealloya.. Ihence,

..:.'',v a,„f. tb.-lu-.ii.e-. ..,",- hundred and aisty-MS ir

the nlimbcl^-lieiiibni.n, -|.,,.„....t-. l-.i.glisbii.en, lu.s,

:t'.n, mid M. hirs—mad. .- their wav to Kochellc,"

ohnl i;.vvi,n .-a-, n.-ver ret on..; d lo fla very, lleiiry of

Navarre reward.;.! bin, lor his bravery, and the Lne-'-

- -Evening Post.

THE POPULARITY OF BYRON.

i of lliirrlti Hurtlneau'i article, in I7.s

, for r'elnliiry, on " L-J,Jy llyion," .-;.. ur

miiu-ki nl.oni die curly |-o|.,ii..rii.v ol the

!c Harold." Tlie oerloil was Jiifl before his

:is>Mllbanke.]

„,^, then the idol of much more than the

(orld. His poetry wus known by heart by* Touien who re-ad very little

a, lit this day, elderly men, who

,,nK. ,.„l:-,.l.- ol" the iv-,oii? of literature, who

believe that Ihtro never could have been sueh a

„oot bolbre. ami would sav, il they dared, that there

?_ni ha n..*t. n.inilior i in,, lie appeared al

E" w -

multitudes of m

i given .,- the.

I

The whole., — 'orifll injury

„;-ieidhs ol

.red the it

election was lo get

it the - ,-, tl.. "

ful to ...

than tbo

;i„„'ol olemouts of rural b

senpe, aueh as rarely any

|,l,;tel) saiislios and lonsli.

amy,

...Hlltiful. -

clump of fra-iaiit U

|,„„k. every orchard

had to raee ihron^li a

byd. 1'vC'J 9'ep i»

the road and river, every

ml birches, every slopin"

,hamlel. To... CSbaotor

.Hifid lane by tlu r.ver boln

u.-k lire Iron, the bridge*

ri™ itself, seen from tbo, lane, orpavement. 1 ' - ^ fc «a briK'n

Err^nLni..:,- II,- abundant and

1 W, Ire, it:-U traicll-l a-r.e-:. lhe .rune

„. „r,b l.j which ibe bridge spans the r.ver, and

',V„,o.,kr.,.i in the auli.iu.'slones, throws itael

\,- , in rich masses of folmyo baiiginE over tin

? am The Vri.l-e is said i- bo three or foul

I , iiiired wars old, and bavin- been of late yean

iet-:.':;,.:::.::^

reserve Ifor fool pi^en-ers, ami he lie.- bridge

1

nl,, illiarihordo.vl.lhi: stream. 1 In; no.v b,,.l;

V'l-ar vni.ro stately, regular a-' -

old, but aot halt so pmiuresi

„,,Jn„ iu lhe binilseape. In

rude old mr.ieliiro ait *-

engraving.- ol the mines o.

Db ld,nirynrch,spaii.iing '

I,;. p',a.

.eye:

-- >f»>»h?

meaaiircn for restrain'

l„,ni,.lai-its. urn! uiaking

,,l 'II, is ill' I" ales atoilie- up Ibis

L'oinmorco of Liverpool.

The practical know!, dge |.o-.-ss.,,| by tlio mombers

n f iho several a-sis iaiiium will enable them at once

£B iisioa:r£yt^;'xs''^

gliitiiiltlpliia JUtm'li.Muirnte.

m ; IMPI-lNHIMl i. !;.-.-i.-"

rinii; lui.i.ir l.n .. "! i'.M'I' - 11

,....|,.l.o

!e. O0AKD1NG 1II.H1SE.- U..:|>etiidbe sueh an oilier a

ic moment when sotieiy was re.sni:s.s a.iu u..

..ml disioillonted will, the fines and iho umveue u ««""«*;

.„„] all il.at it contained. 'I lie general -.-n.d.,1,.;, I.vl^Vii'Upt,',,.

none hut a pavlirnla. class had any con- \J l';^'^";/ ,';;, |.',',',',

„'.. „„. '-„,,. ,, ... ,i..i mil, ibr ».i....l. ,. ,:...,, ,,.| t^,r„ui. lav ,h solalewhen Europe lav desolaie

|

id'ei- tho ravage nntl incessant menboo of the freueb

npire—when Englandunder the

.'g.nt.

'hen lhe

king, a prolli

ministry and a corru|it par-

dminerl the kingdom of its

L'S—when there

; turing districts

,.'.'!'k[.--.,'.'

the folly of proposing

a the r

rifying a

n,omen..

Tie,, l,l,.l-,.

.- Iln.ll the

almost all of oar puoi.o .

,,, iiiin-hcin ' ihiin he said, and ol ..

i a speech at Detroit, only live abort

mired wiib that lorse loyie of lac la

, .^awuiu.'n'i of .viiieh lie is a master, the gradual

decline fo°r folly years ol th-_ govoniment aiid^ t^,e

people from the groat radi. il nl- • »l «" '| ^-^institutioua to tbo weak and lain '""'''",

_. iti „,slavery which have boon a-sct. i" "»

»^^ ^ ^il tenipnrare and p'ld-lm "i '

I'" ',-,,,

however, passe.- away .vh. n a in;,- r - - - .

l,1t,.,l-ao.-i.iis,".-verlhe|,-ss.predi.. .-.I .".Hi"

i the event of the success ol lhe Itcpul.liu

ith precisely the same measures of col

ave been so often"" , *» ™'K* ml1

South liw. -

cc. In either cas.i now, si:

I5t bo restricted within its a

hevmay now I nb-.u. liabtinj.'- " ""-> ba.l liv-l

t-w e e oi.. in si: Id,", t,,

they would see

rtiiiiUhcwoilddoes; but tiny ure ignorant of life

Inhere, and ,- -» - * »> «^— °*£$

relative slmoijlb and civ,li/i.lum o lb" .' -' -""

tieonle This i miu.-c may load them to veil-

0i:ol" L'

,. .,... .7.I...1.. .-i-.. lh s is tho thing to be

!,'.

:

,

l

„.,]

'..„l,..,,,.l tie- laboring |..,p"la-

,,1,-e ,v-i|-|-.l,t- him ill u.l.-iriiiilu; the

, ',i„,;. ni.-.n, lake a lead iu sueh

,'.,'.. ... 1 .,i.,i,.n- to allonl

,.„u every el— .

wa.- .hronii: ,lis,-.mlein m the maim

and hunger among the rural r orn,la..u.., ,, „„ ,. ,-.-

.,,,,,,,1 extension of pauperis,,,, swallow.ng up the

workin- and -veil lhe middle , -biases—whim every-

body was full of anxiety, dread, or a reactionary

as— there suddenl. appeared a now slram

vhicb seemed to espress every man s mood,

i took up the song. Uyrjm's musical woe

through the Innd. People who had not

icily wliat was the matter with thc-m, now

life w«a "bat Hvron said it was, and that

'hick of it- 1 can'well remember tbo enthu-

bettor, perhaps, for never having sbat.-d ,'-

It ifttTwM too ., g and rwa,,la FfbdnJ too

much of moods ami loo btlle o .1 or lo enalo any

Lasting alia, limon. lo l,,s poetry Hut the musie of

all ears, and the rush ol is |-,.,,...li.,-ii.

ight churlish

WM. lffiACOCK'S(

1''L;1,^Tl

L"

l

l

,

t

\:

]||};,

| (\^:l'' l 'J, ''"'

K

In tho whole ease ll

iamb Thoy do not 1

, pari;.--

denTurn Ueihanter'a midnight rule

lh,. win-btii that ia lhe Hong yon

" L'"'"

,... nl lhe locality and traverse the nur-

7 ''

,.;;!,' l^.-.l.. ^l.ak-l'earo, bo other poet

I;'': .'Je.ui-e'.-l-jiii-.Ma.nduiv s,,.t-s svilh "leal creations

_„1H

,..,i.-.l,..ble, ill-dine and '«"''^» n«« » *

.plritual presence in every cleioeat around )ou.

iniiug tiinn it was

ii her, tluw does

iu forty years or

only a little while

ty years of depll' just government,

miimt'ug"in'a', IVnUau^n ,vhM, 'sh.iVry b:

ini'imi.b "'' ''" l"""lv " li;,h lir"' '" l"" V ' i>

I'1"" 1 '"' "

.standard ol e.|.i"l rights and juati-c I, al 1met. »

, .1( i,at ~i -oniin or..-. I. is lo bo as ii-lu.-s ii

i I

*I il -i-"who leol "Hill"! it

:aeilin.lor the

l '!"" 1 *'" ".",,

A. :„,.[ in.l.n.l'. dl ,.„„,.,.-

"' '"".

'

" ,,, , .,, ,n and revnlmii.il

ss whei

,avo about their ne. k- i" > „,.,.,._ „ , li(l. .

-

.

.' '

,o lh- in.eMigati'eu of a singular obi.rge -

,„ l.,j,i|,L ,.idi i

per-. Iii-ougld against a boioa

, ., l,,i„,.-t. named lVrriii- The in.pi.ri ongnmie

, ' ::..!u,.l:i,,„..la :ani.dMa.gi.iv.ioIn

„,,„ ,„..| 1 ,..l ll.at lh" I'liist I""! sirutk l,el «. b

earn lor lle.1 goiny. I" tin- U..-av,-.j.m- '^ :^^,-,,- bis Clmreh. M,.. a. mi"

.J

.>•> '

; j ^^ (|

mere touch, and a |. in i n 11

i

ii,.. i,i-..;ast:dd,, ti.-i i; 1

';"'.,;;, I,,:.,,!,,

Ihero had been no ml. i

uspressing regret

acse

.,....!.-

ENDERDLNE A: Jl.'-:T H. L. I

pit i7,i-; MtDAi.;;

,-;'/

i

[

i,l

1;;i

liV';/t]";.i"i!^iV.T.ni'!!

,-'"«

k"' 1" 1 "

f Byn each olln.T;

lling

,,,,, .vblspored

'their next neighbor. If a man wiu)

head down and Ida lipa moving, he

.solving llvron's last n neo ;and children ..--

bean to keep albums i.rot.., m double lines, on the

™ ' pn"0, sonic alan/Ji which caugl

id, i? they W

portraits of the

drawi 1 '(

feallll

like I

lost remarkable Btatenioiil w.

g 1,,.. WOllhl

ther

.'lid tin:

young ladies'

.,l,e.„ I. Til,

,.,-,:,irslll.-.

mil n

pONFECTlOKER V -- R V Jl^^^l^^^*

a pop.da.

lie i.-l.l r. a

i all order-

JONfSswr-.N

ielia.1

amis me of a

,l,o ^r...

m»nius. Ii rem

ft vril.l old d.Ml'e bridge 1,

,„'y..vi.,:..i-l:i"d, over lhe i-oarin-

nnd tlie modem, beaulil" a. I i

,.,,l,er to iho torrent or the bridg.

l"i' forti voars hungry and thinly through" '

Ii Mr reward' means anything, V

,v unmeaning thia is, he of all„„..-Hill. e 11113 =, "- " -

.

Wo have looked io In

.„„.old him that -.

I

.| ,

, -I,,, bad taken it up huraelt,

,'h,' raid " D" you know that llllll book

adored to be burnt by lhe l'oi.o;" 'Iho

book'wltf " Unele Tom's Cabin." Ho ariiil the I'oi*

ordered, and iba, all .such robbi.h ought o bo

II,. ,,„ r sa.,1 tbatil wie, enough lo bnue.

„„. thoroughly trained scholars, loll ....-

llie general admiration, and keenly enjoyed so

uiolodioua an o.vpressioa ol a general atal;- ol bs m

ilt, in- 1,,.1'le". '-I'i's and secret studies of

. 7 ,„,.. men -in. I middens who were to

'','".' ',",';,','.".;a, aii siimi '- 'i"--r«f«°" 9 ;

I

, ,,, r,. lr,,uhle.l, when, looking to

......ami lea .

w" 1 -' ",.-!.,. 1, .i,i .vre.uL'hl upon the

illi" bed reading a ,V L,-, , ha, ,he .ha, w « ^ ^mselves 'carried

asked her who bad giv.-n .....

.(hat of a

,. ,1,,.,!- „||, tlloV 1,-1 i..e,..-,...^ ^".-

'-«,"-- tvit b--ond all [sow--.- t. "orget wbr.'. Jiey

that „

fillliH ButTrage might be left

they must miinage iheiv ..

nation al large ,a.~in,j ;-li

lion hi .£,,£.. ..—--

n that the world

^knowledge W**

..,-,„. for a rebellion., pc.pl.

il,oy may have them, if they see in t

itabh: i

i u.io I'vi.e Cloihiim

'",;^'e.'w..

ylGs'of Iho MAMMOTH H-iK. :•'„- Ti K. Fourth a tret I

«Ci-"°i.iiiu '

f^jJU,,

|j2JSSK

Tt'., nri-ni'i.'.'i'!:.

1

. ..<i .I-,.... i" '; [""[V;';'. 1^ 1'!

^„ of the

„,re udoi,ie.i Tko far aa they „„.....

:,.,.. r , l

,i„,..|.t.>hu,„li,.!s..i Ihousnmls of youths

wore at once sated with lile and ambiiious ol

ime or at least of a reputation for fastidi

onlent; young Indies declared tliat B,"~

,,-rythiiig' ibai was great and good;

best literature of ,-rilicism shows how i^..,,, ™-admiring tbo hardest reviewer* frrew. after the poet

had become the ]-?< and the idol ol "11 England.

"r-L.jYHiSsii.fiB!.

ths —q TH0SE WHO ARE UNWILLING TO SUPPORTol

\ X si.ivkki.'.— I'n"'-- ' "' ;'.',"

J'',,",;',!"[.'

lis- .™>).i... - ,..,,. ..;

Byroo miiSJ^'fiS'lS*™™»i',,«^- i.""

: L ". !

;

,

*;;1:

;',-;,

;^, °

-peellnl and 1

:',::,C.?''^1^°SuI^Vi^'irUVl^\V.*;

D

V,n tt','i

'whaV'theehadlsho wa. ,.lo.pii»i

;

H,e ivn- in lhe|

{l

|

l

;

,

f,

';;;::)|[

b

t

l

X| I'niusTU.s? tC.'i-r -o, ^..v,l-.-1„ \f,2

the pr eat say that I .elo l„n, „ l .m.

i uduicovered in _..

|ljurB

P(,and so

-^a^^who^ln^^^n^^ „,

o'her (tb ' "" r,i.'~,\... rKibnii^

""'irmeriii'iien iiioin..r.Tiing lh- dill'usion of the ill

!lLl in.-rton.,gw,hheUth d - r,^( ^ , ,in_.,mm , ) ,D Ulin

il l.i .o lo 1"V*'"1 Sn/.l.,SjTO|.,«cjl

)ll«tMj-lHl:.S« --I I - -J.l)-" I'" •• '

.

...:';': '.- ..'-,.:

;....'. •'..' .-- •Sl„„. o..-..^."."..'..^";^.^,,,,