national anti-slavery standard, year 1861, mar 9

4
w atioital %ni\ VOL. XXI. NO. 43. iciutoo. NEW YORK, SATURP Rational ^ntt-JSItwwtj JStHtttfattl. PUItl.ISIIKU WKKKI.Y. ON SATDBDAY, A9IEMMN .INTI-SI.tVEnV SOCIETV, fur-jnm««i|. .l>:|lll|'l« U]..1.'-i-t.-. COMPROMISE NOSTIiCMS. ion a provision that| mi]|i( < I- eifrfiivd *y any tlie p. irnod by tbe awent of their brows, lo ennbk or the slavo States to bnninh their free col- fiWliv would 1 mi amend the Constitution [In the United Bute) Houio of RonrcfontatlvoB, lay, Feb. 57, (li* allowing resolutions, reported le ,«ln, of OHIO, from tbe Committee of Thlny-ttll dupled.] and cll'eclual guaranties interests, as rc.-iigni'.ed 1> to preserve Mil' ih-o-.-oI' tl /;. ,...r,Vr.., M.-^-r-- All.-) "I Mi- Ol.l... I!, ill. -I N-. V-.rl., Mm-" .> .ii,.;..lll,il:.-..'llilii.i, llnui.-n-l - im ns had tho other 1 tlni franchise of i' U ! •! ... of BUih persons il,. Ii.iiiiiin.iy at -lav. mTicrs may BinnncipBlo, on fiilitlii Bt <• moi al. and for the In-.- |«oplo of color who nine . bo.-.- ' „oj- .', at it] ir own expense; bat I r.. v, r .ii. 1 I,, i. r mil ...t.t. ill to this proposi- tion lor, torn. ,,_; i. ii .posing thin burden holding Sink's—are benrehi 'I and rilkd at the will of Costmaslens. Vigilance Committees, nnd lawlcsa r I lind nothing in tbia plan of adjustment for the or of a strong desire on the part of aomo State to rid itself, by aid of the federal governmind, of slavery, bo wise, arcordin;: to tbe univcraad jmi«-n.»-.1. to interfere with tb.: condili in of " persona hold to BOT- vioo." A j...- mii .. .'I i lul-. (In- first eleni'.nt of stability tin' i* d.-uiiii... of good faith among its citiieni It" tl. n ill; I any ground for tho mis- trust implied in such nn amendment ns in here pro- ,,,,..,1 (| -, i. i, i: l.,ni,i iflhe S'orlh is tobu holdback by e«n I obligation* M all. It is n itself a ,.i i.,,,<-, v «- Senate ''"'' House .>f Hopresentn- 'nitod States ol America in Congress ,at all altumpu on tbo p:irt of the States nortl iicBolved, That tbe several States ;s bo reBpeelfulIy thirds, ill- Trcliien ll.']..|liln :i Iroai Kentucky n these wicked ai entering the wai ...Hlu, ii from Ulinols n nut 1'r.un her own borders 1 i territory. No Southern worni nskaree of a hostile musket; i llage should be aWrtlr-d with tl ennnon. As the North won liemostofhoriravnl advnntiuv. linois, Kciilii, liv. Muriliiinl, S> ,|,.USi,,l, |..|.-„.l,.i„.| l.i.M-- l,-i.-., H-ii..-, M-., -,. lm-.-tt- ii ..' ' .Il-Ii?il.i..- sons who have put r the clisfratichiEe- ng along tbe shores i lrgima, urn vuiii.i, M-i.r.iu.l, nnd compelled to p: , fiva dollars for each of tbe unwelcome visitations The Senntor from Ki'iuu.-kv dots r.ot propose to right this illegal, tyraiinii-al, :m.l l.nnl. -i^niie action of tho authorities of the Obi Dumiiiioii, nor do the compro- mising 8enntom lr.nn llliu.iis nud I'ennsjlvnnis (Mr. Bigler) pro])OS« to prolcct, in nny degrca, the rijjhla otnl intiTCSts of _ North iifiiun-t null leyislntion. N'orthern men, sojourning in tbe Southern Slates, are subjected to petty nimi-yaneeJ, i.illusively watched, often for no oll'enee t'.-ivd, f-nr>-In.'I, subjected to the create;! poreon.il in-ulis nu.l inckcent indignities, impri-on.'il. lnnli.il, l,.iuif |i..-.|. nrnl ,-HinctimcB brutally niurdend "Tlicn' in land mi.ltr he eope of heaven where tie eitiama or the free Stain are fiubjecled to sucii wanton outrages of person stid pro[icrti ai in portions of the sln.-.-h.il.liiin SIjiI'-s of this Union. Mechanics pursuiiij; iluii lawful avoentions ; mer- cliantB and Wincs, nieii.cnfia^E'd in ihe almost ho[W- less Cllbrt to c.ill.-.-t p ithing from reluclant or bankrupt debtors; gentlemen siijo.irning for hcnlth. pleasure, Or bin-nn—.. are often bnhjuet to insult sometimes to dancer. To bavi; in on...'.« jiosmsmoi! n S'ortliern newspaper, to utt.-t ilie faintest word ol explanation or jintifnaiioii of Ibfir action, to uphold tbo Union nnd vindu hi.- tin- government, often, - portions of tbe Souili. pulijeets tin: Northern gentle- man to insult ttnd personal Jaeger. These outrages upon Northern men are known, admitted, often jue- lifli ret, Mil- Senator from Kentucky proposes notbui!! I.ir their protectionno. nothing whatever. The rights and iniere-i.J of Northern Treeinen are of .in, rhi-.o eleuvibers. Mul the Senator from K.'iitin V\ T-ks us, of Ihe Norih, by irrepenlable con- ~iiTn(i..rial amen.lini'i.If. to rt.(.j.-'iiTC nnd protect -,,„,. .,, tin' T.ti idirii- in.iw iNi-tiug or berealter of 36 degrees 30 minutes; to deny » are as unwise as all the rest, and by their _ illdafoiil their own object. An inccuiis.- .ilvr.-l to frv i'vei-y l'iigiiir» by a run. a.-lnal or ended, as every slave m rccoi'd bivotnes Irt-e safe from further [.ursuil when a ririco ia pnid him. SberilT^an.l Marshal e 111 lind it an cany to get rid of n .b-i^r.. aide duty la permit a ,11 mob to take the prisoiii-i' .mt or ihcir hand*. .lekgnto to the IVaee oiuention from one ol tbo ,tcrn Stales said, in thin eity, on bin way borne, a few davit sinco, " that those in want of compromises 1'ikely to get a poo.l deal men. than they d." This one, whi.-li. alter nil, was only got through that t'univntieu by a.ei.l.M, renders the "'— of nny concision so palp;il.l.. that tlien) in liU|... that ii will mt.Th ilolVat all such piano, nnd bring Ihv al'enlioi, of the country back to tin) eorifideralinii of tin: ni-f J"itv of oiinpte obeelicnoo " n us it is,— Tribune. tin- t'oui SHERSUN M. BOOTH. TntiBE is no fight so lamentable and so e.ilculated to awaken pity, as that of a onco prominent and talented man utterly prostrated and broken down ther by unavoidable misfortonta, or by the calami- iua result of his own misconduct. " When one wilne-fi'* such a ,-pe. laele. all bitter* •as and liatreil are forgot ten, and le: sincerely begina > pity, aud wish it were otherwise. "A condition similar to this ol which wo have- spoken is now shared by Ilioili. who ii, snllering the penalty of the law tor his own niflim-f.in the county jail of tbia city. Wo are informed lhat he is com- pletely broken down, to all ap)-'aranire. and he cer- tainly must be if thorn ia a -pail, of Ihe human left in his composition. Kor to be confiued in a contracted s; ::::::. bin in in pursuance thereof, o ;;::.'.,.. Duntcn of a ch laws, and that -i.,i,, ,i ill be nnfr entitled to all the titens in tbo several i i.-.-.-.i. i>rl 'I'l iny-iinr in the *, for composition, or suffie a dissolution of tbia g negroes to bear arm day, was as little di; other rights" When •;rz l-V bill .1 Id'omi I'V-.l.-ral o .umbia Qolish a rAfi i tho fori er of slaves through frooi [«rsons of th: iBeanil to purcbnhi >ica, and send there if the United States lb: Tbe prohibitioi era Lie case with Uooth), cannot but gall t possessed of the talent and education ho hi fairly drive him to madness. a had a superior education at Tale Co e lime was regarded as one of tho mos in the State. Now, ho is mado to hen vilest of tho vile in tbo county jail, durinj confined ia a evil tho eamo I low-prisoner*. Wo are informed that thos< nerly know him would hardly recogniiu hi ibnnged is his appearance. Ilia eyes nnd e Midly sunken, his clothes feel tho want of n lenmstress, nnd he has all the appearance vho might almost as well be dead as alive. ought all this .l.tain. .1 hit rnrv-eltJ.il Ion self and u dogged obstin m sticklers for the 1 acknowledge lhat i been fully vinditi uotary of Maryland just eomper jrswhod. \r Ihf power tointt- .vnrescnistives nnd others from bringing wUh .he.u\o the i.-.m . »l » oluuibia, retniu.ng »nj taking »-ay p^^ohol,! ^^^Xt^ t r nBP °^ W ;.- iud'.t I.ndi..-! incasooVdis- -' - right of transit in ot or of sain or trade r shall Congress havi than on land. net ol" Columbia of pev for sale, or placing thi through ogainsl po.v.r i. '""n.""- is held to labor o ..i,.,, ,,r s.-rve- It sal.'. or poo uig n..." mdep&ts to be afu n. iml- trau-ferr*;! to other place, forBaloHsmercbai.ili«,i«proh.biled. Vv.b—Delaiv.ire llll.e-i... K'- "">>•> ,1 irl V"' i-'i V N,\ ".'.> N.mli '-ii; »'»'. ^'mi^lvanbt. "bode .:" " v:,:,:;"o.:;;i, «.—««* .-,-,..,- Ilm.i l-li,! o... J^Ii\^S'k1!dS. is-2. Sic ^ Tlie third pantgniph of the second see.Hot of the fourth arli.le of the ron,lilul,on ,,l,ali i'.. » construed to pr-veol an- of Hi- Mates, I.) np .r..].r .11. legislation ami tl.rvugh the a.ii ... <.f tl.c.r >'»•' - -' mo,iPL-rial olbe-rs. It.- a|.,r,,„g the doliyrj o fugitives from labor to the person to Resolved, That each State be ftlao n-spe. tlulle requested to enact such laws as will prevent ami punish a,,.- attempt whatever in such State to recog- i,e or set on foot the lawless invasion of any other late or Territory. K.solved, r bat tb" 1'resident be n.^oest".! to trail-,. ,i, .-.y.^ :ftbef:r L .ci,-,,r, :Iji: :n, i: t y-y ors of the several St.al.-s. will, a ro.|ue>t that the) bi oomuiiinii-.ileil to their re*[ireiive U-gislatores. [i^Lved, T!,at iis there are- no propoH.ions from nny tiuarter to interfere with slavery in tbe Histnet ,f (-ol.iral.ia, or in pla.a-, under the.,.,1 bifive jiiri-- 1, ( ion of Congr^s, 1 situate vm- bin the I m Is ol -tale." that r ruut the holdmj- ol slaves, or to inter- fere with the inter-Slate slave trade, tbif I oimniltee does not deem it necessary to tnke any action on resolutions were adopted, 130 against . r >3, ns foliows: Vk.ib—Messrs. A-).,... "'^^-Vj,, \'-"' s ',"" h! ''," i:j':;;:i!f '';;::.'"' ,';'": J "::v"' :'^-':-"-- #rtcrtw»3. SPEECH OF SENATOR WILSON. DT..TKX ignominious!) before the twopie, the slave propagandists rush into rebellion, threaten the sub- vtrsion of the government ; and tho Senator from Rentiieky under tliese tr.-a-iMiiable menaces, comes into tbe Senate of tl," Cnit.d Slate- au.l pr.M,o"es to out into the Consiii,.ti..iib"youil all power of change, l.o praetiial issue made bj th.-v.' slave propagan- dists- and the Senator from Illinois accepts the proposition which ho rejected at the cost ot the - » party last June. . . . .J telUbo S* drove back the He->iai.s. who .barged re[>C«tedly down tho bill to dislodge them: and so determined were tbe eneiuv in tln.-se sueeessue charges, that the day aller the battle, the lles-*ii.n folouel, upon whom thus duty had devolved, appli.-d I.. cm. hang.- ins oin- ,„„,„! ami go t„ New York b«M be dared not to 1..1.1 hU n.giment again to battle lest his men should shoot him for having caused lliem so much lo-s. t'„i,n.-.ti.-nt too raised « battalion ol l.laek s.olda-rs. u,,d Col. Humphrey, attadied to tbe nuhiary lam.lv „[ Wa,biiicto...ai.-,-ept.-d a ...iim.i.id in this _,-orpS Tlie]i-roii'.b.'lVn,-o..l Ihe lort on the be.ght-t of l.-ioton. by Col. L,.-dvnnl and his brave ,-om-adc, i<r the gl.*- /-. naoo In our history. By their side fought and ,,.. .uenV this bated race. History records that, When tho works were stormed, the British officer, try, to our race-it..- perpetual reproaches of instilled t,.a.o,l a,,.l .,olat.,l .,.,... I.-,,".-. Ha- i.te-isliliej meat of earth and of Heaven \\o fear that names will l.e enrolled, not with the benefactors o. mankind, but with those, who have betrayed the -luse of the people- We fear, should we assent to mis eterniitatien of slaver., in the Consti.uUon our latbers framed to s,-eure the l.les-singf ol liberty, that *h„ul,l fink, after life's filial fever.mle difhonor..-. , lrtve.s. amid llio e"rs.,s of a betrayed people; and that our names will be consigned to what brntUn. civil Irish orator, railed oppressions natural .. :_., .:„.. olhistory." ir labor is due. JliH-vlioeh !.-,,O-i. 1,1.1. (-min-li. il.Uela, ire.nu ode Island, Tout able, llnssJicliiisi North Carolina, OU ;, ond New Hampib DlvtDKD-Ncw York and Kansas-2. B,-c 5 The foreign -hire trade is benrby forever the limits thereof. K t k para-ia, " ., .,, .„.. r;,,(ll .|,l, 9 Ie ol ,''"' ,"", I.„i-,l,a,- there...'! -I.all .... ^amctnled or nboiished without the consent o S^5aio;^»»««^ ' "^^tioiineelii-ut. ln.lli.a.1. b-a, Mulrie Massacl: :.r;:V.; . , .-::. , -.-...'-.. , ., V ;: ^K'««--"''-s"" : " ;«iS'«t«: "l. I l! no -a"! blitlled I..in Ihe canvass. We cannot ",.'|, mii ivit'ldii ib.; limits of the Slates is beyc..- .,,'; a,.-...-..!--..-. Coiigiv-ss lias never attempted to '. ,.,-, tlmt power df-'S not now propo'e to do so nnd in'iv never deem it wise to do so. Hut tbe Sena tor ir.jui Keiiiu.-ky is not content he now proposes lo declare " Congress shall bare no power to abolish slavery in places under its exclusive iuristliction, nnd '.iliialo within lb" liu.il-- ol"llie States that permit the mlding or slaves." 'ihe right lo lake slaves in Iran- ulo and through the fre. .--lai.-s if i-lainie.l l>> [• „.„. ,] ib- slave- -late-', an. Virginia has how act .'..-u.bog in tbe Supreme Court with the State of 1m CBOrOSED JJIBNDUENT OF The resolutions printed above having been ii.lopte.l. .„ n nevt uroe-o. il.-d lo *>( upon the following merit to the Coiistilnlion, forming n , ofthet'omniilteeofTbi the n^_~ proposed part ol tin oal law a- .'vo.u.iii.l.-il be levin of Naj.aixth in } on the n...-.., i. un.l' man s sense of right is nn longerwnrped by the baleful shadow hangs over us, tho o^nce committed by [. Booth will be commended by tho press -- by the press of all Christen most forcibly illustrates Ihe o creator iniouily than thaL .- &„ _ «l'l„i "_l7^on,/ of A. besides. Tbia cast m that "there is n wlii.-b is oniinilu.il mnli //.i|..-,i (Mich.) Clitrio 3E.--toi nvgotba moral Indig -asperated I rdi.L .- .. -. ' : r^urf Wtc eoinnii s this for..'- "I ou,eilid;yo.do-"~ answered Ledyard, banding ihe olbeer his ,-. wbi.h was Instantly run tlir.-.ngh his body by the officer. Lambert, a black soldier avenged this mur- " of his cou.ini.ii.ler by rbr.isting his bayone tnrotigh tbe bod. of the I'ntifb oil,, er and then fell ..iereeil bylhirty-tbie. bayonet v. ids. Sir tn the -„..gle lor iielopen.l-iiee. in the war of 181., ml sea lb" blood ol the olor-.l u ot New EiVdVuid will, fre-elv poured out ia vindication or your liberties, rights, ami honor; ami now yoi, ask us to ,i,spoil tbe'm of their long-nofs. --sT-d rigl. s. Never, never by niv consent, in aildrcs.-,.ug lie iiermaii MM-kiiiginenol'inc at. the other day. Mr Lincoln ohUbei thafthev wet, all of the grea familyol ._.i .'i-.v.^-^ MIna rt„rt ul.nrVIo lini ,1 ,.' tln'Ol s tin TOETEACS OOXYENTWrS CQWJIOXISE. Should tbe propositions adopted by toftw Contention at Wnsl.ingt .-' a.l.le.l as aun-l dioenls .„,„„ tb- 'idled States, .1 will form ,,„- ,„ost Various chapter of political history on record. A yon,," eoious v^y. after five years of most diligent labor, wjtli one very positive dominant idea resting, for its basis, uponingrea . ,1 roieiv.lo wiili a loo-l i.iroiigli inei.-rslainlirig "....'' .....rirf A p»»i ly ;i» °!„£:l P p .pXr voi, »v« r » ? i »jd *;;«.'« flavervsmlL Sl.r l.e .-\leinle-l into the lerrilon.fi. "tl.V United States. The fusi -.vuo.i of the proposed toiiiiii-omis,,, ollere.1 by Mr. I nmkliil, proved™ no only that slavery shall be extended r" IU ne lin iielter to lift the loiit-... pile additional loads upon (hem. Ib >^^nn,.,> rtrn ri,-iiiiiui siaii-stii'iii of a Christian- propose to disfranchise forever, fork o nme'aament shall bui Biitliorlio or give Congi ,-itliln any State with I i'S'sKr™'" « K lha^' two-tiiirds'o in the Supreme Court wilu tUO Otalo ot even establish lhat right. Fearing that Congress i'.dil attomiit to |, i-.ilnl.it en bunler the lu'itbso iraffie wlibli pollule, the land the Senator from Kentucky proposes so to amend ihelonstitution as to declare that "Cong-ess,hall le,.,- no power lo pro- hibit or hinder the tn.i.spoi-tsiion ot slaves rum one State lo another, or to a Territory in wlueh slave, j.W by law permitt. -1 to be held, whether that trail ,,,r ,,i l |,vl.i,,.|iia.i„il.il,.r,v,.rs.o,-bythesen Wo of tbo North, are also asked lo put in the < onsl. tulion of our eounir) a provision denying to Congrv-s nower to prohibit the [ransp-irLilion ol slaves by Lid, navigable rivers, or by sen, into or through the - «lat.-s of ihe Cnion. C.llles of chained slaves le driven through free State-, to their dcstina- ainl ilie f..i,gr.-f--Tof ibe United Slates is to be ed all power to liiinler such ti-an-pi^tatinii and | ir,,|i,.v„il ,,,iistitiiti..lial aioereliiiiii' i.e. all a compromise, lo be adopi-.l on lenn ot tl,.- .|,s„.,-,i, ..-r- .i... Union. Congress has ample junsUiciioii of slavery in tbe Uu.tr,. lot olunil.n .Congress shall bave n i, .ower ! , hih nil ol tho gren il'v of mi'n"ai', .l "if lb-re arc sbaekles upon them, would be far l-tl-r to lift Ihe load Iron, then, than ,,,,,,1,. a,l,j,,i„„al burdens upon ihem. The Senator from Kenluoke, supported bv the collator Iron, 111,- „„,„,.-',„ .m'-irpoi-at" into tbe Constitution a ,.,..,! a.,il,..r,/.iiig the nile.l Slates 10 ae.[Uir.- .lislni-ts of .ounti-v in .Africa S.,nlh Amerie.a. lor the ,-e.loni nation, at tin- e.vpense ol Ihe ledcrai trea- sury, of such free in'g.ooS a,e ih.ttoos as tbe seve- ral' Stale- uiav wish n, have removed from their imiw and from the Uistri, , ol olnmbm, and anch nlaeoi as ma. be under the iiirisdielion or Lou- cress K This proposilion if r.oi intended to encourage inan"inalion but lo p.-rp.-tnale slavery. It does not propose to send a, .he publie ..,..« "'^^"""f! may b- hereafter emanvipat.-d b> masteri, wilLnit -K-ipale on ei..idit,.,u of i-M.atriat.on to .li.-tan Kb sir, that is not its purpose. That purriosi. i .1: r ( [be . lJ, . m f ch Territories and prohibits Congress from interfering w lb it ih.ro, but al.si.liio.1, loi-iu.ls the people them- elves of those Territori. ., Hem iii-erloriug with ,t, no ma.t.r wbai may be their sentimenis as to themoral- ,U,.. sistem, or t opinion- of it as a question „l„„ai.,..ii.„,„.,.ro.en ,,1 police regulation 1 Should ar ereb it be prop.-s.-d to the Loustitu- tmii prohibiting the ,-..|.le of Massachusela from ^,,.L,[„ S by legislation with the emstenco ol AN ENGLISH GARDENER IJCRRIED OVT. o Wo mine of ne Xtn Y.irk Tribune. Sin: I am to be sent oil from thi- place to-morrow for being suspccled of being favorable to the emnn- cipalion of the slaves and, as I waa farming ot. shares with a man «bo esp... raised tho report. I lose all my time sin".: last August, beside upwards of Still word, of seeds had from Thurhani's-seod oats and ryc-ruta-hftgus. etc., in a.hlit.on W ilbout ---.lice, whatever, 1 was anfft.d and placcdia 11U1, because the man who owned the planlatmu Jatduo was afraid I should injur., hini, or his property, and though bo could not bring any kind of proo whatever to substantiate /,,-, . I.ai-es, jet I bad to bud bail wbiel, 1 did: I"", im:,! day, tleso Lnglishmen were threatened with tho loss ol all their customers unless they gave me up consequently 1 must remain in tail and my wit" and tlm e little ones BufJerwnnl, etc or co out of ihe slave Slates. My wilo arid children are pel ...to ibe Sailor's Homo, my household efleebs scrambled together wiihout any e ," aohoc r, whe: lamia make shivery thofre Ell'orls.inhumi bv the greatest lely mado in the L roporty, The con «Sr°^^ tbi-' ftiiulional amendment in rv.lation jo t Territories. Either slavery is. Ol 11 if nt, like o into these now almost uusetllcl iv*,on=. Il it ,,„ the .-.vpeclalioi, that the two mil ions ol vole... who have so recnil 1 so emphatically recorded heir decision upon the snbje. - wil now cliiingi- tba ';„.„ loo, d.,1 upon .If lieb.-l lhat this body i0 f ,.,.,,,, oh'nobeeneducatedbya training ";,„";. up t.,.b,sp..iiit. will, bv threats of violence a„.l ai.prel.ensi.-.n- ol pedmeal uirl.uleneo.be moved forego their strongest inlelleetual eonvietioi.s ami ,„.,,.;„„.,., impulses. Is tins i.robabe! Are wo ,-; -o vacillating and ... a »v}*l |B . ')ere "1 11 "' ,|li(i,„ our past history, null holy as il is on ib, ery- subject, that can justify any such eirpeclnbon X lr <, A-.l.-.. :. ...,• (Le fiu-i that we have beea ee conviciion of what our duty is very reason why we may feel letiii'n is unalterable? hand, there is no probability m soil, eliaiate, or the habits of icly to get a foothold in those ,t thu (icoplo of (ho North will and important an act as nn '- for a purpose •" liorrow to land at New lorlt nest woo* wiuiujj aught to recompense me tor tie: lt„s of my crops and Other expectations. My object in telhug you these particulars is that 1 have ,„.i wherewilb to take a room loputmv furniture, in audit jou could put an adverliaement in your pat-^r in such a way na lo ilrsw immediate atteiilion. II ecn.e lo your OIUcl i landing, and perhaps meet with some one who ants a " farming manager," and tbeo my goods could bo fetched oil' ibe schooner, and be taken direct ,,i,„iliou. I am an englishman by birth ,„.._cd extensively m Cgland, and .. « engag. d Morth in agrieulture previous to coming hero id i<wj. My pa.ssi.m .• paid bv the wretch who reaps the ,i ,"„;..( m! i-vrii ior ihe p.Lsl five.months. WUmlnKloa. S'C-Feb. 13. t^l. G.OAttDNUt. WINTER AMUSEMENTS IN OEORGIA. On the contrary, is O.v the morning of the 1 lib iast., some two or ibro- boura before day, .lonng the abfcm-e of Mr. laaac N. Middlebrook-who re-sides some s,.< or seven m,k-a north of this place-his house was forcibly enlered by some person batt.rmg lb door down with an axe, tlrs Mhidlebrook and two or three amall eb.ldren being the only occupants of bouse, Tho noise awaking the lady, >lm bsikfl tin, mlrudor, and waa answered, after bailing the seeond lime. Willi Hit- (hreat that if »ho did not bush he would kill her, and ho Immediately sprang lo tl,.. 1 see, grasped Mrs. M by ibe throat, lilt.d her lr..m tbe bed, carried her t across the yard and threw her over tho fence, -here bo"continued lo abuse her in the most shameful .rSES r.r %?™^£™^*™^™" m r:.lunii„l,-,.", t..,,::..-' ," " <'" '; '',; n - '' ";-" i'.-nn'.ev.ii^.id.-r^ >|aod Lhe^opo °r tll 1 u , al f ^ bg me n n t of'vh n free ^m^m^k»xi *te -nt of government if tba civiliicd world, eicept our- iti.'ma? It ia little else than an nee of the- North, to submit to it i tho one case ; and injury added lo oiler the South auch a stone bread. Grant her, at least, the t refusal to her preposterous —being aroused t the fiend, heeomin| The alarm was u Sorthi ho only per. I, r children lily of purpose, thu same wai tie same utter abnegation ot m feeling, chnra.;tenia e us miscalled Compromise, .ue. confined to the general propo- tho States the management ol leaving it to the wisdom of the resa to make any occasional esigcocy ahall anse that may nee imperative- It might, for formidable servile insurrection, on inciting to such insurrection, (o be 0. negro man nan,. ' I Mr. Abel Solsoo, Sen., and who waa himl to Mr. ...in. M.-idi. i,ro...k. i' v i....."^ '," " ;ir _ ;;' i;';; r '; \'^ boy deorge had n wit".:, and thence to the residence of Mr. John Middlebrook. I tnler ihew circatnaWnces, U waa thought advisable lo arrest tbe ue(rro, which was done, and after an investigation before a Jit-dice oi tho Peace, he was duly mi tied, and placed in tie jail in this place, as we thought, lo await his trial at the April term of our Superior '.kiurt. On Monday morning last, a crowd ol men from the country assembled in our village, and made known iV-ir intention !• forcibly lake the negro "Jeorge from the jail and eicute him in defiance of law oc oppo- »i .tviciit Sin rill', Muj. 11argett, together t of our citizens, remonatrutcd, persuaded. \(

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National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9

w

atioital %ni\VOL. XXI. NO. 43.

iciutoo.NEW YORK, SATURP

Rational ^ntt-JSItwwtj JStHtttfattl.

PUItl.ISIIKU WKKKI.Y. ON SATDBDAY,

A9IEMMN .INTI-SI.tVEnV SOCIETV,

fur-jnm««i|.

.l>:|lll|'l« U]..1.'-i-t.-.

COMPROMISE NOSTIiCMS.

ion a provision that| m i]|i(

< I- eifrfiivd *y any I tlie p.

irnod by tbe awent of their brows, lo ennbkor the slavo States to bnninh their free col-

fiWliv would 1 mi amend the Constitution

[In the United Bute) Houio of RonrcfontatlvoB,

lay, Feb. 57, (li* allowing resolutions, reported le

,«ln, of OHIO, from tbe Committee of Thlny-ttll

dupled.]

and cll'eclual guaranties .

interests, as rc.-iigni'.ed 1>

to preserve Mil' ih-o-.-oI' tl

/;. ,...r,Vr.., M.-^-r-- All.-) "I Mi- ii

Ol.l... I!, ill. -I N-. V-.rl., Mm-"

.> | 1 .ii,.;..lll,il:.-..'llilii.i, llnui.-n-l I

' - im ns had tho other

1 tlni franchise of i'

U i ! •! i ... of BUih persons

il,. Ii.iiiiiin.iy at -lav. mTicrs may BinnncipBlo, on

f iilitlii Bt <• moi al. and for the In-.- |«oplo of color

who nine . bo.-.- ', „oj- .', at it] ir own expense;

bat I r.. v, r .ii. 1 I,, i. r mil ...t.t. ill to this proposi-

tion lor, torn. ,,_; i. ii .posing thin burden

holding Sink's—are benrehi 'I and rilkd at the will of

Costmas lens. Vigilance Committees, nnd lawlcsa r

I lind nothing in tbia plan of adjustment for the

or of a strong desire on the part of aomo State to rid

itself, by aid of the federal governmind, of slave ry,

bo wise, arcordin;: to tbe univcraad jmi«-n.»-.1. to

interfere with tb.: condili in of " persona hold to BOT-

vioo." A j...- mii .. .'I i lul-. (In- first eleni'.nt of

stability tin' i* d.-uiiii... of good faith among its

citiieni It" tl. n ill; I any ground for tho mis-

trust implied in such nn amendment ns in here pro-

,,,,..,1 (| -, i. „ i, . , i: l.,ni,i iflhe S'orlh is tobu

holdback by e«n I obligation* M all. It is

n itself a

,.i i. ,,,<-,

v E«- Senate ''"'' House .>f Hopresentn-

'nitod States ol America in Congress

,at all altumpu on tbo p:irt of the

States nortl iicBolved, That tbe several States;s bo reBpeelfulIy

thirds, ill-

Trcliien

ll.']..|liln :i

Iroai Kentucky n

these wicked ai

entering the wai

...Hlu,

!

ii from Ulinols n

nut 1'r.un her own borders 1

i territory. No Southern worni

nskaree of a hostile musket; i

llage should be aWrtlr-d with tl

ennnon. As the North wonliemostofhoriravnl advnntiuv.

linois, Kciilii, liv. Muriliiinl, S>

,|,.USi,,l, |..|.-„.l,.i„.| l.i.M--

l,-i.-., H-ii..-, M-., - -,. lm-.-tt-

ii ..' ' - .Il-Ii?il.i..-

sons who have put

r the clisfratichiEe-

ng along tbe shores

i lrgima, urn vuiii.i, M-i.r.iu.l, nnd compelled to p: ,

fiva dollars for each of tbe unwelcome visitations

The Senntor from Ki'iuu.-kv dots r.ot propose to right

this illegal, tyraiinii-al, :m.l l.nnl. -i^niie action of tho

authorities of the Obi Dumiiiioii, nor do the compro-

mising 8enntom lr.nn llliu.iis nud I'ennsjlvnnis (Mr.

Bigler) pro])OS« to prolcct, in nny degrca, the rijjhla

otnl intiTCSts of _ North iifiiun-t null leyislntion.

N'orthern men, sojourning in tbe Southern Slates, are

subjected to petty nimi-yaneeJ, i. illusively watched,

often for no oll'enee t'.-ivd, f-nr> -In.'I, subjected to the

create;! poreon.il in-ulis nu.l inckcent indignities,

impri-on.'il. lnnli.il, l,.iui f |i..-.|. nrnl ,-HinctimcB brutally

niurdend "Tlicn' in u» land mi.ltr I he eope of heaven

where tie eitiama or the free Stain are fiubjecled to

sucii wanton outrages of person stid pro[icrti ai in

portions of the sln.-.-h.il.liiin SIjiI'-s of this Union.

Mechanics pursuiiij; iluii lawful avoentions ; mer-

cliantB and Win cs , nieii.cnfia^E'd in ihe almost ho[W-

less Cllbrt to c.ill.-.-t p ithing from reluclant or

bankrupt debtors; gentlemen siijo.irning for hcnlth.

pleasure, Or bin-nn—.. are often bnhjuet to insult

sometimes to dancer. To bavi; in on...'.« jiosmsmoi! n

S'ortliern newspaper, to utt.-t ilie faintest word ol

explanation or jintifnaiioii of Ibfir action, to uphold

tbo Union nnd vindu hi.- tin- government, often,-

portions of tbe Souili. pulijeets tin: Northern gentle-

man to insult ttnd personal Jaeger. These outrages

upon Northern men are known, admitted, often jue-

lifli I ret, Mil- Senator from Kentucky proposes

notbui!! I.ir their protection—no. nothing whatever.

The rights and iniere-i.J of Northern Treeinen are of

.in, rhi-.o eleuvibers. Mul the Senator fromK.'iitin V\ T-ks us, of Ihe Norih, by irrepenlable con-

I ~iiTn(i..rial amen. lini'i. If. to rt.(.j.-'iiTC nnd protect

-,,„,. .,, tin' T.ti idirii- in.iw iNi-tiug or berealter

of 36 degrees 30 minutes; to deny

» are as unwise as all the rest, and by their

_ illdafoiil their own object. An inccuiis.-

.ilvr.-l to frv i'vei-y l'iigiiir» by a run. a.-lnal or

ended, as every slave m rccoi'd bivotnes Irt-e

safe from further [.ursuil when a ririco ia pnid

him. SberilT^an.l Marshal e 111 lind it an cany,- to get rid of n .b-i^r.. aide duty la permit a

,11 mob to take the prisoiii-i' .mt or ihcir hand*.

.lekgnto to the IVaee oiuention from one ol tbo

,tcrn Stales said, in thin eity, on bin way borne, afew davit sinco, " that those in want of compromises

1'ikely to get a poo.l deal men. than they

d." This one, whi.-li. alter nil, was only got

through that t'univntieu by a.ei.l.M, renders the"'— of nny concision so palp;il.l.. that tlien) in

li U |... that ii will mt.Th ilolVat all such

piano, nnd bring Ihv al'enlioi, of the country back to

tin) eorifideralinii of tin: ni-f J"itv of oiinpte obeelicnoo" n us it is,— Tribune.tin- t'oui

SHERSUN M. BOOTH.

TntiBE is no fight so lamentable and so e.ilculated

to awaken pity, as that of a onco prominent andtalented man utterly prostrated and broken downther by unavoidable misfortonta, or by the calami-iua result of his own misconduct." When one wilne-fi'* such a ,-pe. laele. all bitter*

•as and liatreil are forgot ten, and le: sincerely begina

> pity, aud wish it were otherwise.

"A condition similar to this ol which wo have-

spoken is now shared by Ilioili. who ii, snllering the

penalty of the law tor his own niflim-f.in the countyjail of tbia city. Wo are informed lhat he is com-pletely broken down, to all a p)-' aran ire. and he cer-

tainly must be if thorn ia a :-pail, of Ihe human left

in his composition. Kor to be confiued in a contracted

s;

::::::., bin

in in pursuance thereof, o

;;::.'.,.. Duntcnof a ch laws, and that

-i.,i,, ,i ill bennfr

entitled to all the

titens in tbo several i

i.-.-.-.i. i>rl 'I'l

iny-iinr

in the

*, for

composition, or suffie

a dissolution of tbia g

negroes to bear armday, was as little di;

other rights" When

•;rz

l-V bill

.1 Id'omi

I'V-.l.-ral o

.umbia

Qolish a

rAfi

i tho fori,

er of slaves throughfrooi [«rsons of th:

iBe—anil to purcbnhi

>ica, and send there

if the United States

lb: Tbe prohibitioi

era Lie

case with Uooth), cannot but gall t

possessed of the talent and education ho hi

• fairly drive him to madness.

a had a superior education at Tale Co

e lime was regarded as one of tho mosin the State. Now, ho is mado to hen

vilest of tho vile in tbo county jail, durinj

confined ia a evil tho eamo I

low-prisoner*. Wo are informed that thos<

nerly know him would hardly recogniiu hi

ibnnged is his appearance. Ilia eyes nnd e

Midly sunken, his clothes feel tho want of n

lenmstress, nnd he has all the appearance

vho might almost as well be dead as alive.

ought all this

.l.tain. .1 hit rnrv-eltJ.il Ion

self

and u dogged obstin

m sticklers for the

1 acknowledge lhat

i been fully vinditi

uotary t

of Maryland i

just eomper

jrswhod.

\r Ihf power tointt-

.vnrescnistives nnd others from bringing

wUh .he.u\o the i.-.m . »l » oluuibia, retniu.ng »nj

taking »-ay p^^ohol,!^^^Xt^

trnBP°^ W ;.- iud'.t I. ndi..-! incasooVdis--' - right of transit in ot

.-, or of sain or trade

r shall Congress havi

> than on land.

net ol" Columbia of pev

for sale, or placing thi

throughogainsl i

po.v.r i.

'""n.""-is held to labor o..i,.,, ,, r s.-rve- It sal.'. or poo uig n..."

mdep&ts to be afu n. iml- trau-ferr*;! to other place,

forBaloHsmercbai.ili«,i«proh.biled.

Vv.b—Del aiv .ire llll.e-i... K'- ""> >•> -,1 - irl

V"' i-'i VN,\

".'.> N.mli '-ii; -»'»'. ^'mi^lvanbt. "bode

' .:" " v:,:,:;"o.:;;i, «.—««*.-,-,..,- Ilm.i l-li,! o...

J^ Ii\^S'k1!dS.,

is-2.

Sic ^ Tlie third pantgniph of the second see.Hot

of the fourth arli.le of the ron,lilul,on ,,l,ali i'.. »

construed to pr-veol an- of Hi- Mates, I.) np .r..].r .11.

legislation ami tl.rvugh the a.ii ... <.f tl.c.r >'»•'- -'

m o,i P L-rial olbe-rs. It.- a|.,r,,„g the doliyrj o

fugitives from labor to the person to

Resolved, That each State be ftlao n-spe. tlulle

requested to enact such laws as will prevent ami

punish a,,.- attempt whatever in such State to recog-

i,e or set on foot the lawless invasion of any other

late or Territory.

K.solved,r

l bat tb" 1'resident be n.^oest".! to trail-,.

,i, .-.y.^ :ftbef:r L.ci,-,,r, :Iji: :n, i: t

. y-yors of the several St.al.-s. will, a ro.|ue>t that the) bi

oomuiiinii-.ileil to their re*[ireiive U-gisla tores.

[i^Lved, T!,at iis there are- no propoH.ions from

nny tiuarter to interfere with slavery in tbe Histnet

,f (-ol.iral.ia, or in pla.a-, under the.,.,1 bifive jiiri-- 1,

(

ion of Congr^s, 1 situate vm- bin the I m Is ol

-tale." that rruut the holdmj- ol slaves, or to inter-

fere with the inter-Slate slave trade, tbif I oimniltee

does not deem it necessary to tnke any action on

resolutions were adopted, 130 against .r>3, ns

foliows:

Vk.ib—Messrs. A-).,.... "'^^-Vj,,

\'-"'s ]

,

'',""

, h!

'',"'

i:j':;;:i!f:

'';;::.'"' ,';'": ; -'

'

J"::v"'

: :'^-' :-"--

#rtcrtw»3.

SPEECH OF SENATOR WILSON.

DT..TKX ignominious!) before the two pie, the slave

propagandists rush into rebellion, threaten the sub-

vtrsion of the government ; and tho Senator from

Rentiieky under tliese tr.-a-iMiiable menaces, comes

into tbe Senate of tl," Cnit.d Slate- au.l pr.M,o"es to

out into the Consiii,.ti..iib"youil all power of change,

l.o praetiial issue made bj th.-v.' slave propagan-

dists- and the Senator from Illinois accepts the

proposition which ho rejected at the cost ot the

- » party last June. . . . .J telUbo S*

I drove back the He->iai.s. who .barged re[>C«tedly

down tho bill to dislodge them: and so determined|

were tbe eneiuv in tln.-se sueeessue charges, that the

day aller the battle, the lles-*ii.n folouel, upon whom

thus duty had devolved, appli.-d I.. cm. hang.- ins oin-

,„„,„! ami go t„ New York b«M be dared not to

1..1.1 hU n.giment again to battle lest his men should

shoot him for having caused lliem so much lo-s.

t'„i,n.-.ti.-nt too raised « battalion ol l.laek s.olda-rs.

u,,d Col. Humphrey, attadied to tbe nuhiary lam.lv

„[ Wa,biiicto...ai.-,-ept.-d a , ...iim.i.id in this _,-orp S .

Tlie]i-roii'.b.'lVn,-o..l Ihe lort on the be.ght-t of l.-ioton.

by Col. L,.-dvnnl and his brave ,-om-adc, i <r the gl.*-

/-. naoo In our history. By their side fought and

,,.. .uenV this bated race. History records that,

When tho works were stormed, the British officer,

try, to our race-it..- perpetual reproaches of instilled

t,.a.o,l a,,.l .,olat.,l .,.,... I.-,,".-. Ha- i.te-isliliej

meat of earth and of Heaven \\o fear that

names will l.e enrolled, not with the benefactors o.

mankind, but with those, who have betrayed the

-luse of the people- We fear, should we assent to

mis eterniitatien of slaver., in the Consti.uUon our

latbers framed to s,-eure the l.les-singf ol liberty, that

*h„ul,l fink, after life's filial fever.mle difhonor..-.

, lrtv e.s. amid llio e"rs.,s of a betrayed people; and

that our names will be consigned to what brntUn.

civil Irish orator, railed oppressions natural.. :_., .:„.. olhistory."

ir labor is due.

JliH-vlioeh

!.-,, O-i. 1,1.1.

(-min-li.

il.Uela, ire.nu

ode Island, Tout

able, llnssJicliiisi

North Carolina, OU

;, ond New Hampib

DlvtDKD-Ncw York and Kansas-2.

B,-c 5 The foreign -hire trade is benrby forever

the limits thereof.K t k

para-ia, ". ., .,, .„.. r; ,, (ll .|,l,

I 9Ie ol ,''"' ,"",

. i

'.

I.„i-,l,a,- there...'! -I.all ....

^amctnled or nboiished without the consent o

S^5aio;^»»««^' "^^tioiineelii-ut. ln.lli.a.1. b-a, Mulrie Massacl:

:.r;:V.;,

.

,

.-::.,

-.-...'-..,

., V ;:1

^K'««--"''-s"",

-» :

";«iS'«t«:

"l. . I I

l! no -a"! blitlled I.. i in Ihe canvass. We cannot

', ",.'|, mii ivit'ldii ib.; limits of the Slates is beyc..-

.,,'; . a,.-...-..!--..-. Coiigiv-ss lias never attempted to

,

'.,.,-, tlmt power df-'S not now propo'e to do so

nnd in 'iv never deem it wise to do so. Hut tbe Sena

tor ir.jui Keiiiu.-ky is not content;he now proposes

lo declare " Congress shall bare no power to abolish

slavery in places under its exclusive iuristliction, nnd

'.iliialo within lb" liu.il-- ol"llie States that permit the

mlding or slaves." 'ihe right lo lake slaves in Iran-

ulo and through the fre. .--lai.-s,if i-lainie.l l>> [•

„.„. ,] ib- slave- -late-', an. IVirginia has how act

.'..-u.bog in tbe Supreme Court with the State of 1m

CBOrOSED JJIBNDUENT OF

The resolutions printed above having been ii.lopte.l.

.„ n nevt uroe-o. il.-d lo *>( upon the following

merit to the Coiistilnlion, forming n

, ofthet'omniilteeofTbi

the n^_~proposedpart ol tin

oal law a- .'vo.u.iii.l.-il be levin of Naj.aixth in}

on the n...-.., i. un.l' man s sense of right

is nn longerwnrped by the baleful shadow

hangs over us, tho o^nce committed by

[. Booth will be commended by tho press-- by the press of all Christen

most forcibly illustrates Ihe

o creator iniouily than thaL.- &„ _ «l'l„i "_l7^on,/

of A.besides. Tbia cast

m that "there is n

wlii.-b is oniinilu.il mnli

//.i|..-,i (Mich.) Clitrio

3E.--toi

nvgo—tb a moral Indig

-asperated I rdi.L .- .. -. ' : r^urf Wtc

eoinnii s this for..'- "I ou,eilid;yo.do-"~

answered Ledyard, banding ihe olbeer his ,-.

wbi.h was Instantly run tlir.-.ngh his body by the

officer. Lambert, a black soldier avenged this mur-"

of his cou.ini.ii.ler by rbr.isting his bayone

tnrotigh tbe bod. of the I'ntifb oil,, er and then fell

..iereeil bylhirty-tbie. bayonet v. ids. Sir tn the1

-„..gle lor iielopen.l-iiee. in the war of 181.,

ml sea lb" blood ol the .olor-.l u ot New

EiVdVuid will, fre-elv poured out ia vindication or your

liberties, rights, ami honor; ami now yoi, ask us to

,i,spoil tbe'm of their long-nofs. --sT-d rigl. s. Never,

never by niv consent, in aildrcs.-,.ug lie iiermaii

MM-kiiiginenol'inc at. the other day. Mr Lincoln

ohUbei thafthev wet, all of the grea familyol

._.i .'i-.v.^-^ MIna rt„rt ul.nrVIo lini ,1 ,.' tln'Ol

s tin

TOETEACS OOXYENTWrS CQWJIOXISE.

Should tbe propositions adopted by toftwContention at Wnsl.ingt .-' a.l.le.l as aun-l dioenls

„ .„,„„ t tb- I 'idled States, .1 will form

,,„- ,„ ost Various chapter of political history on

record. A yon,," eoious v^y. after five

years of most diligent labor, wjtli one very positive

dominant idea resting, for its basis, uponin.

grea

. ,1 i roieiv.lo wiili a loo-l t i.iroiigli inei.-rslainlirig"....'' .....rirf A p»»i ly ;i»

°!„£:l Pp.pXr voi, »v« r»?i »jd *;;«.'«

flavervsmlL Sl.r l.e .-\leinle-l into the lerrilon.fi.

"tl.V United States. The fusi -.vuo.i of the proposed

toiiiiii-omis,,, ollere.1 by Mr. I nmkliil, proved™ no

only that slavery shall be extended r"

IU ne lin iielter to lift the loiit-...

pile additional loads upon (hem. Ib

>^^nn ,.,> rtr n ri,-iiiiiui siaii-stii'iiiof a Christian-

propose to disfranchise forever,

fork I

o nme'aament shall buiBiitliorlio or give Congi

,-itliln any State with I

i'S'sKr™'"

«K

lha^' two-tiiirds'o

in the Supreme Court wilu tUO Otalo ot even

establish lhat right. Fearing that Congress

i'.dil attomiit to |, i-.ilnl.it en bunler the lu'itbso

iraffie wlibli pollule, the land the Senator from

Kentucky proposes so to amend ihelonstitution as to

declare that "Cong-ess, hall le,.,- no power lo pro-

hibit or hinder the tn.i.spoi-tsiion ot slaves I rum one

State lo another, or to a Territory in wlueh slave,

j.W by law permit t. -1 to be held, whether that trail

,,, r ,,i „

l

|,vl.i,,.|iia.i„il.il,.r,v,.rs.o,-bythesen

Wo of tbo North, are also asked lo put in the < onsl.

tulion of our eounir) a provision denying to Congrv-s

nower to prohibit the [ransp-irLilion ol slaves by

Lid, navigable rivers, or by sen, into or through the

- «lat.-s of ihe Cnion. C.llles of chained slaves

le driven through free State-, to their dcstina-

ainl ilie f..i,gr.-f--Tof ibe United Slates is to be

ed all power to liiinler such ti-an-pi^tatinii - and

|ir,,|i,.v„il ,,,iistitiiti..lial aioereliiiiii' i.e. . all a

compromise, lo be adopi-.l on lenn ot tl,.- .|,s„.,-,i, ..-r-

.i... Union. Congress has ample junsUiciioii

of slavery in tbe Uu.tr,. lot I olunil.n

.Congress shall bave n i, ].ower !

, hih nil ol tho gren

il'v of mi'n"ai',

,

.l "if lb-re arc sbaekles upon them,

would be far l-tl-r to lift Ihe load Iron, then, than

,,,,,,1,. a,l,j,,i„„al burdens upon ihem. The Senator

from Kenluoke, supported bv the collator Iron, 111,-

- „„,„,.-',„ .m'-irpoi-at" into tbe Constitution a

,.,..,! a.,il,..r,/.iiig' the I nile.l Slates 10 ae.[Uir.-

.lislni-ts of .ounti-v in .Africa I S.,nlh Amerie.a. lor

the ,-e.loni nation, at tin- e.vpense ol Ihe ledcrai trea-

sury, of such free in'g.ooS a,e ih.ttoos as tbe seve-

ral' Stale- uiav wish n, have removed from their

imiw and from the Uistri, , ol . olnmbm, and anch

nlaeoi as ma. be under the iiirisdielion or Lou-

cressK This proposilion if r.oi intended to encourage

inan "in a lion but lo p.-rp.-tnale slavery. It does not

propose to send a, .he publie ..,..«"'^^"""f!

may b- hereafter emanvipat.-d b> masteri, wilLnit

-K-ipale on ei..idit,.,u of i-M.atriat.on to .li.-tan

Kb sir, that is not its purpose. That purriosi.i .1: r ( [be

—.

lJ,.

mfch

Territories and prohibits Congress from interfering

w lb it ih.ro, but al.si.liio.1, loi-iu.ls the people them-

elves of those Territori. ., Hem iii-erloriug with ,t, no

ma.t.r wbai may be their sentimenis as to themoral-

,U,.. sistem, or topinion- of it as a question

„l„„ai.,..ii.„,„.,.ro.en ,,1 police regulation 1

Should ar ereb it be prop.-s.-d to the Loustitu-

tmii prohibiting the ,-..|.le of Massachusela from

^,,.L,[„S by legislation with the emstenco ol

AN ENGLISH GARDENER IJCRRIED OVT.

o Wo mine of ne Xtn Y.irk Tribune.

Sin: I am to be sent oil from thi- place to-morrow

for being suspccled of being favorable to the emnn-

cipalion of the slaves ; and, as I waa farming ot.

shares with a man «bo I esp... i raised tho report. I

lose all my time sin".: last August, beside upwards

of Still word, of seeds had from Thurhani's-seod

oats and ryc-ruta-hftgus. etc., in a.hlit.on W ilbout

---.lice, whatever, 1 was anfft.d and placcdia

11U1 , because the man who owned the planlatmu

Jatduo was afraid I should injur., hini, or his property,

and though bo could not bring any kind of proo

whatever to substantiate /,,-, . I.ai-es, jet I bad to bud

bail wbiel, 1 did: I"", im:,! day, tleso Lnglishmen

were threatened with tho loss ol all their customers

unless they gave me up ; consequently 1 must remain

in tail and my wit" and tlm e little ones BufJerwnnl,

etc or co out of ihe slave Slates. My wilo arid

children are pel ...to ibe Sailor's Homo, my household

efleebs scrambled together wiihout any e

," aohoc r, whe:

lamiamake shivery

thofre . Ell'orls.inhumi

bv the greatest

lely mado in the L

roporty, The con

«Sr°^^tbi-' ftiiulional amendment in rv.lation jo t

Territories. Either slavery is. Ol 11 if nt, like

o into these now almost uusetllcl iv*,on=. Il it

,,„ the .-.vpeclalioi, that the two mil ions ol vole...

who have so recnil 1 so emphatically recorded

heir decision upon the snbje. - wil now cliiingi- tba

';„.„ „ loo, d.,1 upon .If lieb.-l lhat this bodyi0

f

,.,.,,,,oh'nobeeneducatedbya training

";,„";. up t.,.b,sp..iiit. will, bv threats of violence

a„.l ai.prel.ensi.-.n- ol pedmeal uirl.uleneo.be moved

forego their strongest inlelleetual eonvietioi.s ami

,„.,,.;„„.,., impulses. Is tins i.robabe! Are wo

,-; -o vacillating and ... 1a

|» »v}*l |B.

')ere "1

11 "',| li(i „ ,„ our past history, null holy as il is on ib,

ery- subject, that can justify any such eirpeclnbon

Xlr<, A-.l.-.. :. ...,• (Le fiu-i that we have beea ee

conviciion of what our duty is

very reason why we may feel

letiii'n is unalterable?

hand, there is no probability

m soil, eliaiate, or the habits of

icly to get a foothold in those

,t thu (icoplo of (ho North will

and important an act as nn'- for a purpose •"

liorrow to land at New lorlt nest woo* wiuiujj

aught to recompense me tor tie: lt„s of my crops and

Other expectations. My object in telhug you these

particulars is that 1 have ,„.i wherewilb to take a

room loputmv furniture, in ;audit jou could put an

adverliaement in your pat-^r in such a way na lo

ilrsw immediate atteiilion. I II ecn.e lo your OIUcl

i landing, and perhaps meet with some one who

ants a " farming manager," and tbeo my goods

could bo fetched oil' ibe schooner, and be taken direct

,,i,„iliou. I am an englishman by birth

,„.._cd extensively m Cgland, and .. « engag.;

d

Morth in agrieulture previous to coming hero id i<wj.

My pa.ssi.m .• paid bv the wretch who reaps the

,i ,"„;..( m! i-vrii ior ihe p.Lsl five.months.

WUmlnKloa. S'C-Feb. 13. t^l. G.OAttDNUt.

WINTER AMUSEMENTS IN OEORGIA.

On the contrary, is

O.v the morning of the 1 lib iast., some two or ibro-

boura before day, .lonng the abfcm-e of Mr. laaac N.

Middlebrook-who re-sides some s,.< or seven m,k-a

north of this place- his house was forcibly enlered

by some person batt.rmg lb door down with an axe,

tlrs Mhidlebrook and two or three amall eb.ldren

being the only occupants of bouse, Tho noise

awaking the lady, >lm bsikfl tin, mlrudor, and waa

answered, after bailing the seeond lime. Willi Hit-

(hreat that if »ho did not bush he would kill her, and

ho Immediately sprang lo tl,.. 1 ,.-, see, grasped Mrs.

M by ibe throat, lilt.d her lr..m tbe bed, carried her

t across the yard and threw her over tho fence,

-here bo"continued lo abuse her in the most shameful

.rSES

r.r

%?™^£™^*™^™"mr :.lunii„l,-,.",

t..,,::..-' .I ," "

'

<'" ';'',;

n -'' ";-"

i'.-nn'.ev.ii^.id.-r^

>|aod Lhe^opo °r'

tll

1

u,

al

f

^ bg men

nt

of'vh

nfree ^m^m^k»xi

*te

-nt of government

if tba civiliicd world, eicept our-

iti.'ma? It ia little else than an

nee of the- North, to submit to it

i tho one case ; and injury added

lo oiler the South auch a stone

bread. Grant her, at least, the

t refusal to her preposterous

—being aroused t

the fiend, heeomin|

The alarm was u

Sorthi

ho only per.

I, r children

lily of purpose, thu same wai

tie same utter abnegation ot

m feeling, chnra.;tenia e

us miscalled Compromise, .ue.

confined to the general propo-

tho States the management ol

leaving it to the wisdom of the i

resa to make any occasional

esigcocy ahall anse that may I

nee imperative- It might, for

formidable servile insurrection,

on inciting to such insurrection,

„ (o be 0. negro man nan,. '.'

' . I I

Mr. Abel Solsoo, Sen., and who waa himl to Mr.

...in. M.-idi. i,ro...k. i' v i....."^ ',"

1

"l

; ir

1

_

,

;;'i; (

';;r

'; \'^

boy deorge had n wit".:, and thence to the residence of

Mr. John Middlebrook. I tnler ihew circatnaWnces,

U waa thought advisable lo arrest tbe ue(rro, which

was done, and after an investigation before a Jit-dice

oi tho Peace, he was duly mi tied, and placed in

tie jail in this place, as we thought, lo await his trial

at the April term of our Superior '.kiurt.

On Monday morning last, a crowd ol men from the

country assembled in our village, and made known

iV-ir intention !• forcibly lake the negro "Jeorge from

the jail and eicute him in defiance of law oc oppo-

»i .tviciit Sin rill', Muj. 11 argett, together

t of our citizens, remonatrutcd, persuaded.

\(

Page 2: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9

I I

^^^ s^besffl'I.an<1,;llUvnl,il!

li

'„->

„ ;,;,, .,! up-. !ii.'^„...l

u.'iKi-i i.i. ,.

,....„-. ,, i. in v.ni liivrni- M:

;

L- ";

'

Uni,," him in M.ymfl«..«-r !..> >.«"!:'."''"

„„ r ,;i 1 ,,.>':|""'l—"l,"C" : ' r ' 1 ""M 1" 11"* 1 ' 1

.

but oil lo no purpose..

They rushed '< l1 "-'J-

... appeasing It

:spitc of nil remon- .

1 '- - iolonlly I

.

broke tlire

"Ivuni-I

Irom lawn, where they

r«I him lo death,

gro protested his inno-

augh repeatedly urged

'

I fiu'ci' ill niliiib.-l--. n major

right* o

aomcboBrdsand tinl

a window. Alterwi

pn tiled liim lo the

INAUGURAL AD DUES

S

Ua-ol />IT.j-Mfi

ABRAHAM LINCOLN,

n 0* -EMfcm Portia tjf »« 0»J"B">1

:,.-, lf.ir-', «.';. 1"' :

l.''-'< Mtt"-J ""

,13 rrtiM'lli'/H! t.'iulrf S(0/«.

FEUOu-ClTraEsa Of Tin: IT;i=m

anee Willi a custom na old ~ "

appear before- you i,ii]r-f-i you bnollv. nnd_ 1

r.nh pi-eicrihed by IhcCoi

Slows to be taken by ibo Pre

, ),l,.ii,ly ii

minorities

[o them by alllrmnti

prohibit'— '

liudualv

Id the Cgnstltu-

. . icerning lb

be t'roTlli.'il with prnvisiun

..,, r ,' nucstioii which iii.iy

ration. No foresight

of roasonnble lenatli

te»l) JJOdaitd-.-qUOilioHJ. Shall

from labor he surrendered ., ...

Liorlly r The Constitution does hot expressly

pit Congress protect r.lnvury in the T<

C.>i.Miluti"U •I'k* mil expreiily say

Ileal ly applicable

r in practical adi

amidpMo, no i

._. f this obtssapi

minorities.

It' the minority will

or the govcrnmi'i ""'"

for continuing th

nno »ldc or tho o

accede vnlhcr ll

: nil oi i.,nal...

..!,,],[,. .1 in mi np.ii-u .. '

Jreduced a pair

to their victim, i

pro to n 'ltd tn '"'- hi :

|,i,|„„,.ii ivnfc.hi.-d I

i-.>!ic-vi»d I'V niiMlln-r iovi

iiuSntur.l-.v mi"icitim..

a-Ml<iTii' ol M" (•'"'J I' 1 '-

to AlLuny- They had

I'ricnda pot hftn into

icd Win to Pier No. I

eminent but ncqulesi

If a minority '" """'

lcq.lif--.t1iC)-

hlm on the way not

Jved at their de 'mi'

Vnrktown win t<> Kmvi" • •icon for boiiio hit

illghted mid -bad

., for Norfolk, loll-

. They

; ibo people of th;

.not aRenutlicaiiclr pence and per

being educated the • <'

I do but quote from

ccf.y -r inllrccily to inter

„ .1 il

m tha'Stalcs where ttcil..«; I belle™ 1

a lawful ri.lhltoil.-iso. and I l..i.. r.J m.1 '>"> -'"

, j i' Thoe" who nominated find elected mo did et

n full know'-de... th.; 1 1 'do ,1''»*n* n""'?rtcclar.iien I bud never n "thin ibis, they placed

and eoiphatle rcaolnlton

c ,.1-vi ,r.

precedent

i-m. torn minority

m them whenever n major-

1 by euch a minority. For

in of n new ernfed' racy. .

ily secede again. preeltcW

Iniiulus (.Minion's are no'"

,c"w Union as to produce hai

er.cived secession T I'.imly,

. is il.; .-i.-i.se c! Hi-arch)

.-.-i itc

J. I„'l ill'...'

i, howt

States, m an amendment to llio Conititolion. It had

;n confidently eipoctcl that Mr. Seivard would

this propoiilion, ond not a little Hstoolihment was

manifested when ho uked leave to submit a jsint rcio

followa In bia own name, in whleh ibo Senatoi

from Illinois (Mr. Trumbull) concurred :

Whereon, The LcuhlflHires of Ktjnlutty, Illinnia, »nd

New Jersey have upj.lic I t-. Cungri-.si to cull a Co-'

for propoiim: nui.;ndmi:im (> th* (.'unttiti:

tl,,j pnrty

force him jboard,

hold of tho pinR plank, and

pa'sp Unit the kldr.oj.pers - "

aclamatli

[.,...1 iioius'.c .ioh',01 The

. . r.d laid that they waati'd I

.1 „.:i hlro. will, otl

„c the orj<ro got a<

a hick or eldo/ar.ewoy.^-Apoiiiblo. lie

V.ui.i. -.

,. i.

-

... .. minevcrytoueh.o denth. Tbo nrsrorj

nil IT... i ih ..J. hon.'cr. aid he not

«u driven off About tco m lout.

., Mnut man. witii a muitnch

I uked officer AniilDSiig UIll.ntil hi .10 In

i there, Ihougu not

,C|.1'0' thu1 now reltcrato these seniiraenM.

oolyrr." U[." Ci.-pnt'lii Mtcni .-

itc...l.-ni.SM>f which Ibo ease is so

„^.-,-ri. noartf and security of no si

S£^i.aS,i,.tAiiitv,w.-u.»»»».~"'i«-

In the C.im.iitutiou M a»yof (Ugltlves from boi

read la n» plainly w

:rth,

Not- is tbi

ihe Judges.u in ., dim- lr.-jn, winch they.—, -. .

,, lv ,.,, 1.,i|,o'.l. it, ...(-ill I ci.>i-e thi-m ami it la no iai

,-„ ,ii- irE li'..iii...-. r.i.-.L t,i turn lliilr •)*: i=i'-'i3 to pftL

,,i r.„n„-,=..s tii,-; i..-".'il'--i' el uur cuniry L.livt

:ia tin, law. All m.-Ti.liei--. ! C-iiri-cm "«

,„,-. to ihe wliol,- (.-..n-litiiti.in. to tliu pra

much n, any other. 1- 'he ^V^^\.-,.5, wh.i..e ctl'it'i cine within Hi-- terim i t

•hall t.L il.liiei-.J.l U|i.' ihi'lreilh' niu uiiJ

no and pass n

wlwsliei- thH i

of which to keep iio.tid

,t |.ole iicoplo .i

Ions of Ibc Sunl

i in ordinary litlK

. that socb decision niiy bo

yuo. slill tho evil cdl-el fotlow-

Blconlbffl that It the policy

the vital questinca nffoclni*

bo trrevoccUly flscd by the

i Court, tho imtint tbey aro

o between parlies in poraoral

ittvo ceaaed to bo their ownodI practically resinned their

to Ihe hands of Hint emioelll inl.uniil.

this view any nmault upou tho Court or

toik. Ms

Ipurposes. One secti

other believes it

ght, and oughtrong. and ought not to

l'l,i*'is\li,. enl> snLit.inii.il .ii^iime; ami the fntjitive

-lava clause of" tho i.'..i,Mhatl...., mid ihe Uw fur the-

^ppr^.en oi Hie f...r.-i B i. --lave inule. arc each as well

3lde by Ihe dry, legal

itiipiTf-ell)

f llii) penpl

.[ it Willi h

t'a besdqunrlors,Marshal jiyndcrs j

itappear.

,lt wna mode upon which a wnA lew tnoall.s b;o. n colored io

as was taken to Itlcbmond by

. .-s io this w ), niih .ut ony w.irru

lliveaaetii'f.irva United StuiCJ Comrons

i-l J !

.. . Mnrshl-.

National §,nt\-$tmv$ StiMaxA.

NEW TORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 9. 1861.

i?.-,]i^t-ro.-T.rsTi--_ i

words, tbnt whore the peraonul liberty of a. fellow-j

being Ih nt stake, nil laws interfering with or endan-

gering it should bo construed in the Htricleat mnn-Tu|

ner and oil doubu given iu favor of liberty- This, on Cgnk

Ihe ground occupied by men, not negro-steal ere al

heart, who feel free to toko ofbco under nn oath t<

support the Constitution, with that proviaion in it

Wo think Mr, Lincoln might have spared himself and

his constituency the humiliation of this volunteered

A-oiaii nt the- footstool of Slavery.

While making it perfectly clear that ho ia as ready

M any ol his Democrntie predecessors to net hb SUvc-

cntch"er.in-Chief io the slnveholding part of the Nation,

be observes a most eloquent ailence on tbu subject of

the only question openly at issue in tho campaign tlint

resulted iu bia election. Wo were told al the time of

bis nomination and all along ibrouBh tho canvass,

that the exclusion of slavery from the Territories waa

the great practical purpose of the Republican party,

oa far as slavery was concerned. If slavery could

only be kept within its present boundaries, it must

soon die out for Inck of sustenance. This was alleged

by way of ruagnif) in* the almost infinitesimal silver

of anti-slavery dovetailed into the Chicago platform,

to that it might become visible to the naked eye. But

as the alnveholdera have their o)es quite as wide open

as wo. they were not slow to see the same thine,, and

accordingly, they raised auch a storm about the pool

Hopublicans in Congress that the majority of them

whiltlo it down yet farther, " to ihe

hulo end of nothing." To open tho Territory southof

ihe old Missouri line to slavery, and oveu to admit

i Mexico ntonea with the pro-slavery Constitution

was euro to bring with her, seemed but easy leaps

gentlemen lo make who had been vociferous

iast compromises on the stump. And so Mr. Lin-

coln, who had so much to say in behalf of tho South-

demand for the restitution of their fugitive slaves,

only thia mild question and reply as to tbo matter

ivbicb bis own election turned, and which might

lupposed ns vital to tho North as tho other lo tbo

South. " Must Congress protect slavery in the Terr

The Constitution does not expressly say

Call von that standing on your platform, and backing

your friends ? Wo fear that tho Terr

as poor a chance nt Mr. Lincoli

slnve, if they como across the track of his iidministra-

lion, if this exirnet from his cateehiam is to be taken

mi anecimea of his creed.

,wb of Mr. Lincoln as to tho mode of dealing

with the refractory cotton States partake of tho

liberality which distinguishes tho rest of bis proposed

policy, as it may affect them and the olher slavo

States. He denies tho fact of there being any Eeces-

all, and expresses his intention of executing

the laws of the Unioo in oil the Stales, lo the extent

of hia ability. Ho does not propose to invade and

subdue them, nor even to deny them the privilegea of

ihe mails, unless repelled, nnd will not insist on the

execution of the laws of the United States within the

bordera of the seceded States, since he is willing to

dispense wilh tho Federal Courta there. Bo will

hold, occupy and possess the property and place*

THE COMPROMISE XOSTRUMS.

: "Plan of Adjustment" adopted bytho-'Pcac

renco " (see Pro-Slavorj head on tho first page)

ecolved by Congreis with HtUo favor- In the

o it was referred to a Committee, i;r>niialins 'i

•j. Crittoodan, Digler, Eoword. Trumbull and

son. Tho majority of this Committee (Crittenden,

r and Thomson) reported in favor of rabmlltioj

f Ad jus

Itcsolied. That I

!Xf>r?39 their will oo tliosubjec

;eot tbo filih nrtkk. of tbeCoi

Tho report of tho majority was not directly acted

upon, precedence being given to the Corwin Cotiititu.

tional amendment, passed by the House of Representa-

tives. (Sco tho Kcsolullon, and tho veto of lha Boute

thereon, on the first page.) Tho Corwin propositi!

being before the Sennte, Sir. Pugh of Ohio moved

amend by inserting the Crittenden proposition. Lost,

Yeas H, Nays 15. Another amondment, moved by lit

Bingham of Slichijjoii, and known as the Clark proport-

ion, was lost ; Yeas 13, Nays M. Mr. Grimes of lot

iffored as an amendment tho preamble and reiolull

-f Messrs, Seward and Trumbull, printed obovo. L(

fens 11, Kays Z5, Mr. Johnson of Arkansas moved i

propositions of the Peaco Cooler en co

n, or relating In

r

s-T'li*i.'r"'i:-''(

TRE XAT10XAL rRISIS.-

very evident tint this nation is broucbt ndeliverance than over before. Nothing car,

isly peril tho truo prosperity ot the rcpublii

timidity, tiviieli.-ryan'.l .:,.(i.p r..r,ii-... Left to the n

ity of voices, even now, the clamor for th

of the old Union, upon whatever gnsmntici the

Slave Power might demand, would be overwhelming

The united South, glad of a pretext lo recede Irom >

iltuutiun which, fur theot, has become ono of tragic

lameslncsJt, would, of course, consent to It; the Bell-

Jverott, Douglas, and Brwkinridge voturs, a decided

najurity in tbeXorih, woold accept it as » return from

.helrgraves to politics! life;and pni. -•-tritken Hopab-

icaus, without whoso aid that party could nol have

:arricd a single St it,., are ready enough to end the com-

plication and uncertainty '.'f ilii. prv^ent by surrendering

-ibing distinetlvo in their principles,

t the great nsiii.iinl erijii hij pused beyond tlio

control of mojurilies. Accidents—rather let oa say

irovljeoccj—must settlo it. The enthusiasm of brale

ouls, the midneit of lha doomed advocates of wrong,

ireclpitales the coulest. and tho abnormal forces Of

evolution arrest the constitutional movements Of regu-

ar government. A minority party, strong only in nn

Idea, to which It il only hall devoted, and which It

would fab shako off,, accidentally In power by the

providential dissenoiuns of lit foee, and by i profound

popular rotes ppre li v.ti -no n, ennui Kinds the «ituation and

holda tho nation's fate In its hintls. For.had Ihe people

believed Ibo Democrats when tbey sold, " If Zfneoln Ii

tlecttd tht Union trill be dtstroytd," riot a State would

for Lincoln. Thanks to t

1, Naya I

iC.Twin

Tho is then

hoods and lalao p

pie, trustiug in t

overylhing

aelty v , long c

,] t',.r tlieni. t

'S of th

f false

>T.D-irl..r, Erie til. Crittenden,

-..'

1 .-

;

:

-- r

i.

. Y

.

,w, Ihe ItepuL

,v fixed

,j,F- ,t. Kin; Trnnil.ii'i, «<:.K. !(,!!:!,

, nnd d, : ,ided thot it w.miion

!lr. Pol): was

carried, two-thirds having voted in the affirmative.

Tho Resolution thus adopted by two-ibirds of Ih

Senate and House, nnd assented to by President Linceli

w ill go to the State Legislatures for their adoption i

rejection of the amendment to the Constitution therei

proposed. It remains to be aeon whether three-fourtl

of the States wdl odop[ it or not.

Tho Senate also adopted tho Corwin series of rcsol'

lions, which are printed on tho first page.

The Crittenden resolutions were subseqnenlly taken

up In tho Sonato on their own merits. The amendment

proposed by Mr. Clark of Now Hampshire was rejected.

Ycaa IS. Nays 21. Mr. Crittendon

weather ahead, did nol

rs, oven when ihey told the truth,

cans wish thai the policy of tho gov-

lato election ; the comprcmistri, of all abodes, virtoally

declare the late election a mistake, as indeed it was,

and insist that auch a pobcy "Hall be adopted a

people iroufd have adopted bad

rmlnstion of Iho slaveholders was to revolt in

defeat. In other words, they appeal from a

people, col oily and without forecast of all consoqacnccs

xprCHing their opinions, to a people terror-stricken,

nd under the duresa of threats io overthrow the gov-

rnment and break up the confederacy of States,

Tho great question now Is, ICnal uXJl ihe RtptMicans

o! If they aticcumb, as soioo of their trusted lesdorj

driac, of courao they abdicate political power; fur

Ithongh Lincoln may fill all tho offices under hia con-

rol wilh persons who gavo him their votco (though,

.fter making peace wilh his pou'ticsl fooa by going Over

o their plalform, this would bo an indecent exhibition

feeling), ihe E

belonging to the govc 1 collect ihe duties

Nays 28. Tho question was then on the adoption of the

Crittenden Compromise resolutions. Lost by Hi

Ue..sra. Bavonl, Blgler. Bright, Crittenden.

.Hminr.Jol.i f Teiiiii-J'.-e, Keini'.-.tr.

M, ,..,,. .\-,..h*L~jti, P.jUi. Pujh, Rice. 3oVi

1, Wlcfall—13. „. „

daeiintuKi /*W«il,

s:

- ail, bit-men^ truiio'Ti]

"held to be unconatitu

n-h'^imr^'frr~-,Ti_

rTT''i.i-.- '

0, hcrctof'irv i'nly mempted. I hnld tlmi. In e

X and of theConstite

-"-;since the first

Pi -lib ijt'iii.dti-'.iiir nnli-xill ConstitL

period fifteen diderent nnd greatly rtisunguial

ens have In succession ndminisiertd tho M*r""

ich of the government. They hmo condue

ugl, in mi v perils, and generally with great h

with nil ibis scope tor precedent. 1 now onto!

tamo task, for tho brief ecii-'-iutiT. il '-"" "

vears under Brest nnd pt^uliar iitli._ulty

<- , .,._ r^.l- I t-"t^.„ h^rr.t^f,.r(l OnlV ...^„^

Perpetuity is implied if

... 'f ii vhTncnt.il law

life to assert that g<

nof Ihe socti.ins than before. The foreign

le now Imperfectly suppressed, would he

revived, wiihtiut restiiciiou in one section,

itiie ol'ivi-s. now ink pnrtinlly surrendered,

; be surrendered nt all by tho "oilier. Physi-

'tiivte'ccti^^ build an

e wall between them- A bu'.bnndnnd wife may

ed nnd go out of the presence and beyond Ihe

each other: but tho different parts of our

nnnot do tlii*. They cannot but remain face

itiinii i_,jin..Jti them. Ij it posaible, thei

I cannot lie ignorant of the fact Ihnt many v

id patriotic eiti;tnn are desirous of havin

uiioni.1 Constitution emended, While I make noi

lendolion of amendment, I freely recognize tl

uiboriu* of the people over tho whole subject

xereiscd in cither of ihe modes presented

• addressed, "Posuei

:tupon

Inalion. Contin' tc all tl

jnnl Constituilon, and

npossihle to d'

;dfor in their

-bo note govt

n of States in tho natui

"fn""*!-..!!

all tho parties who I

may violate 1 1—- i i

- _ n U.

re-.ii.J.eiill in I.i.-iuily n tind ill

Descending from these general principles no find the

rJ i-,>,-„, ill ion that, in Ii s-il .jo'it.-iT,j.|.iti-in, the Lnl.in is

,,.. r icmiil. eoniirroeJ ov the history of tho Dnron itself.

The Union is much older than the Cons lit in i™ It

woa formed, in fact, by tho

ot Independence

being afforded the people t' —111 venture io :,dd -hut o, mo iLe i.'enventlon

|.t,.|-.T!ii,:--. iu 'I i.i i it alloe-.i jineiidoionis to orlpl

.-rib the people tlc-rn-.tln-e. ii.i'Cnd of only permit

ling them to take or reject propJtilior- — ; -

inotepcciiillv cluisen fur Ihe purnot be preBiioly such as Ihey X"ro noeopt nr refuse. I undiTsti....- ..

Imcnt 10 the Cor,iii(ulmn— wliieli iunviijn.eiit.

,-er I Iihv il"I sued—has j'.l-'id Ci-ngr.-ss, t'i till-

thai tho Pederal government shtill never Interfere

wilh the (iome'tic iiv.tiiu'.ii'ns 'd' Binies, including thai

if poisons held to service. To avoid niiseunstruetioi

no^t I have said, 1 depart from my purpose, not

peak of particular amendments, s

loldintf such a provision to now b

tional law, I have no objection toils

and Irrevocable. The Chief Magisl

'lorlty from tho people, and It

if Coofedc

jdc oi 'Le deelered '.!>.

:ng Ilia Co oatHut"

But if tho dos

:nly of tho Statei

'n iu'l'lU jod',' finally, in 17S7

ordaining and e-it.ibliab-

ivni io iorm a moro perfect Union.

m of tho Union by one or by n part

!t be lawfully possible, the Union la'

re, the Constitution having losl tho vital

niei.' oi ijiirpctuity.

It |,-,l|,iv.-a from tl.Oie .lev.'-, lll.lt no tl.il-.-. lip-Hi

own mere rooliuii, e.m Lie.full. get out of tho Uni

that resolve a mid M-.liuaicc-:, to tlint effect are legally

void nnd that neU of violence within any State oi

States, against tho auiboritj of the United Stales, nn

•nsur,-ei:iionary or j-e.oli.tionsrv, neeordine to tireuni

eumstnnces 1 the re ho e i.nihid.r that, in view of Ihi

'-,,],.-.ti-o'i.-.n and the laws the Unom is unbroken, and

to the extent of mv ability I shall take enre, ns thu Con-

oiituii'iii it-elt" >'mi'ivii1t enjidna upon mo, that the laws

of the Union bo faitbfullt executed in bU tho States,

Doing this I deem to be only a simple duty on my part.

I shall perfectly perform it. ao far na in practicable,

UDless my rightful ma-u'ra, the Atnericio people, shall

-withhold the reouisition. oi- in some a u ,li„ril:inie

manner direct the contrary. 1 trust this will not be

regarded ns a menace, but only as the declared purpose

of tho Union th.it It will ...imliloiionally defend and

maintain ilaolf.

In doing this there need '.,- ti : hloodrhed or violence,

nnd Ihcre shall bo none, uolc.* it Li forced upon the

nuti-Tin 1 authority. The power confided to me v.'id be

used lo hold, occupy and potaesa the property and

Slaces belonging to the govern meat, and collect tho

utics and imponts ; but b.-yoi.d nh.it may lie nece^.iry

for thc-.e nbjeet.i tliero will be no invasion—no using o

I

fiifCM ngjiiuit of auion^jt i!.v jn'-'ple anywhere.

tVh'ri- h'-'otilitv t j the United Elites shall bo so great

and so universal as W prevent competent resident

citizens from boldiDg iho Federal offices, there will'

lodbzsted will bo

experience shall i

i.ioi.r. in 1 m .

oretion «lll bo oi

stances actually ei

e I ML,

I

r nfBrnBut if there be such I

To lioao, however,notapeok! Before ct

ihe destruction of our national fabric, with a

fits, its memories and its hopes, would it notascertain why wc do It' Will you hoard so

nslep while there hi any portion of the ill., ;-

opposo

. and Wlwish Ih

dersinnd a proposed

i- implied e

i tho i

States.' The people- tli'-ms" ut the Executive

His duly is

,..- 7e|'iirali"ii

lo thia If they

s such, has nothing tt "

ed l.v bin

people' la i

o his sinule justice

tucro anv oettcr or equal hope ii

. ... our present differences, is either party

lilb of being In tho right! If the Almightyiiium). with Ilia eternal truth and justice,!. ...

sido of the North, or on your* of the South, that

truth and that ju.itioo v. ,11 so., ly prevail by the jurlg-"

'lis great tribunal— the Amen, an pei.jilv. By

of Ihe government under which wo live, thi-

pie li.no wist-l) given their public aorvanl-- ' '-ive.ivlth e,['i.il v.i.

vided ft tho nWhile tl

o their

-ation, by .

extreme wlckednc-a or lolly, can very avriuujly injure

the government in the -.b-.i-t »|.ii.e i,t tour ysita.

My eountr 1

- moii. one and nil, think calmly nnd wi

upon this wli'de aubjoet. Nothing valuable can be lost

by taking time.

If there bo an oli.-et in horn any of you, In hoi

hnelo, to n slop which v„u w.mld never Like dchtu

atelv, that unfed will he frustrated by Liltini; ilm

liuiiiog.iuJ ol.j. etoiii l,e ir ml va ti-il hyii. Such «f j

U.liiupli

.i.itisllcd still hai

lining under it

a of

. ... lmmediati„

her. If it were admitted that you who ore

i hold the right aide in the dl-putc, there still

o reason for precipitate action. Intelligence

i, Christianity and a firm reliance on Him whoyi-t forsaken this favored land, are still com-

adjust in the best way all our preuenl ililh-

In your hamr, is Hie .

it itill no

issatisQcd fcllow-coiinlrymon.nnd1 civil w

itliout being yourselves

no oath registered in II

iiovernmont, while I shall hnvo t

trve, protect and defend"not enemies, hut friends'.

Thonel, ii.ission may hav

n loth to close.

. itrnlned, it mmThe mystic chords of

memory, Btrctchiin: from oi.rrj battle-field and nt

.-rave lo every li.iint lieart and hearthstone ail

this broad loud, will yet ,nv,!l the i h,,r,is ,.f the Union,

.-.hen apaititouchi-d, in. mnely ihey will be, by tho bolter

SLAVE-UUSTISQ IX XEW TORE.

1B1X0 attempt was made on Saturday Inst, It

name if the Hi';

child, left the-.-morchant in Groenh:

died i hi

ihn Hell. who. with his wife

William Crawford, a tobaccoCounty, Vb., belt

They all travelled afoi

Wednesday, 27th u." Among

J ">>'•;.',1 HlH H!

you Dy irom. ~~. j— •=- »

tearful a miitakol AH profess

Union if all constilutioual rights ci

ehrka. alter hearing his story, said

t-ike him I i li-li'ii 1=1 who -.v., i, Id help him to g

ado. Bell wont will, the ,le,k to a place, a deier^tion

„t which would verv well aniwer for the I lined .-tale.

NUrdur* Offli-e. Here pirties wei-e very friendly

Oiwnrd him. and Imally inuuer.l him to go - '

er of Cortlondt Bnd West

tcr noon of Thursday, oni

what he deemed a princely dinner

or a. -"miiniiimonts.

io of the afternoon ho assisted io putting

PRESIDENT LINODLS'3 IXAUOUItAL.

..ast Monday was the most unlucky day in tho life

of Abraham Lincoln, thus far. More unlucky day;

may ho in store for him, very likely ;but. up to Ihi

present time, a more untoward one can hardly hav

occurred in the fifty years he has lived. Ho baa

spoken, and thus dissolved the spell which hi

silence hod thrown around his reputation. Having

shown l„mi.ell' possessed, in so singular a n

that rarest of talents, in Ibis country at least, the gift

of In I lint; oit-'s toni-'iio. he had created Ihe

mens mimls that he bnd somelhin|>'!o Bay worth

hearin;.'. <! lienover the time should opae for opening

sbnu AoV.it* "-uuiu oc iioiiorntdyiilsdnguislnio/lron-

i predecessors in apirit and in utteranct

The Hour has como and gone ;but tho Man waa no

ot for it. The speech was made with tho face

toward the South and with both knees bowed

down before the idol it worships, as have been all of

those delivered from the same place for the last quar-

century. It is only distinguished from Such

by the clumsiness of its construction and the vileness

rhetoric. It ia lucky for Mr. Lincoln that it was

not the Constitution of the English Language and the

Lawsof English Grammar that ho was called upon lo

ipport and enforce. For he would have been

forsworn on the spot before nil tho people. It was a

pnltry malice in Mr. Seward, though perhaps a natu-

ral ono in hia circumstances, to allow a State Paper

discreditublu 10 his successful competitor to go

forth lo tbo world. He knew, when he read it over,

that ho would have whipped tho ynungeat scholar he

bad when bo kept school for such a composition,

lis, however, ia tho least of the faults of ibe Inau-

gurnl.' We could havo wished that a pubHa doco-

which has been more impatiently waited for,

and will be more eagerly read, in Europe than any

the country has over produced, had not been so

flagrantly illiterate. But we could have forgiven tho

form, had tbo substance been such as tho time

demands. If it had breathed a resolute determina-

tion lo roniatnia the rights of the N'orth and the integ-

rity of the Nation, at all hazards, il might have com-

manded o respect lb at would hove disarmed criticism.

If it had plainly set forth the encroachments of slavery

upon those rights, and shown how tbey bad culminated

in the disruption of the Union, as their natural result,

proclaiming hia intention of cheeking the one and

restoring the other, by the full exercise of all his conali-

tutionnl power, lie would hnvo taken a position which

even his enemiss would have admired. He was

elected by Ihe North, in the faith that ho would

express Northern ideas as opposed to Southern ideas.

It was supposed that there would be soma Apprecia-

ble difiereneo between him nnd Buchanan and Pierce,

discernible otou on the balcony of the Capitol. Not

that any one supposed be would deny the existence ^f

the Slave-claunes in the Constitution, or proposo

prohibit ihe recapture of fugitive slaves and ropes!

tho three-Gfths representation. But it was expecled

tbnt he would make it clear that all of tho Constili

tion that recogniies tdavcry roust be construed in th

striclest manner and with the least possible detrinjenl

to liberty. Nobody supposed that he would make tlio

duty of executing the Fugitive Slave clause iho first

cardinol point of hia discourse of National obligo-

Yet this is precisely what he haa done. This Repre

Mutative Man of tho Republican party thinks ii

entirely immaterial whether tbo Constitution means

thuteluves shall be restored to their maatera by Con-

ktcsb or by 6lale action, us long as they are cnughl

arried back. And so ho advises all and Bingu-

herovur slavcn am caught in Iho free Slates,

.ibido by lawa they hold lo bo flagrantly unconsti

tional ns woll as inhuman, nnd help execute them,

ihey stand on the ritatutc-h,i-.,l; ! Wowonder

whether the President imbibed thia view of tho

Higher Law from the earlier or tho later inspirations

of bis Prime Minister. We concede that Mr. Lincnln

could not do otherwise, if he were obliged to express

id in the premises, than to affirm the right

of the Southern Shylock to his pound of Hush, next to

'» heart. But, we conceive, as tho rtprci ou-

tative of the ideas ol tin- North, he should hove added

emphatically that the Jew must see to it that he

shed no blood and cut no less nor more than a just

pound of flesh,

As makes it Uftil •' litnvy in the lUhttlBDCO

>{ tho Peace Conference t, Teas

ould a -o the le

either ipreiai

,d imports. He"thinks there need be no bloodshed

iolence. Ho doea not aay whether he intends

rering the places and property of tbo government

which hnve been seized by the seceding Sti'

inforclog Ihe (oris that aro iu danger. For any-

thing that ho aays, he may intend carrying

policy of Mr.BuehanBn in these particulars—iu which

there certainly need be no bloodshed or violent

if bo attempt to throw succors into Fort Sumter,

, recover the arms and money which South Coro-

aud Georgia nnd Louisiana have filched, he

knows just what ho has lo expect. While wo hoi

that the Cotton Revolution is complete, and that it

the part of true Btntesmanship to accept the aceoc

plisbed fact, and recognise the independence of tho:

States, before fighting, as a. thiog which must he doi

after it, wc must confess to a little shame at tho an

tudo in which tbo new bead of a great nation stands

before tho contumacious and rebellious members of

it, entreatine them tp believe thiit ho isjio^betberthao

ever were. For Ibis ia the aubatance of his exhorta-

tions to the secedera, to consider how much safer and

better oQ" thoy aro, as idavehoiders. in tho Union thnn

out of it.

Wc havo not room to ppeal: of his ready assent to

icndmcnt to tbo Constitution—before ho had

I—intended to make that instrument expressly

rccogniio slavery, which its framers had so sedulously

of sight ; nor yet of his bold hint thui

tho clause of the Constitution guaranteeing to tho

every State the privileges and immunities

ihipin every other Stale might not impro-

perly be enforced by law. This last suggeslit

well undo all his good work, militating as it does

with the sound policy of the Southern Slates, which

CEcrve the right of torturing, banishing or executing

11 auspicious Northerners without any process of

an nt all. Wo do not know how thiB Address will

ie received by Ihe party at tho North that bore its

utbor inlo power—eipsoiall) if il he followed up by

D ..I -tie.

,ElllE.

"WilllO:, ,O.V.

. M-..H.J

a. Pes*cr.TeuEyck.Trooibul

never again obtiln power. Its own self-condemnation,

In acknowledging Ibat it hod made a grave mistake In

Its policy, and Iho terror of lha dissolution of tho

Union, reinstated by its own palpable fright as a con-

trolling political Lnfinonco, would repress Its feeblest

nttompt to assert itself In the remotest Northern Statu.

To compromise, then, is simply lo aubmit to annihila-

tion ; a condltioo rather hard for a triumphant party

early flush ofa

e , ,,-. Titi-.il

Tho plan

ided the efforta in behalf of Compromise in tbo

Seuato ; the Corwin resolutions Blono having been

adopted, while every other proposition was voted down.|

In the House, the Peace Conference " Plan ot Adjusfr-

mont" waa not even cen-idercd, the efforts to briog it

up falling by the operation of the rules, which couh

not be suspended without a two-tl

of Mr. Kellogg of Illinois (not diffe

Ihe Guthrie proposition in Ihe Peace- Coiifereoet

voted down, Yeas 33, Soya 1SS. the Crittenden|

silion was rejected, Yeas SO, Nays 113. The propt

recommendiog to the several States to request Congress

to call a National Constitutional Convention (

manner prescribed io tbo Constitution) was los'

Tl, Nays 100. The act reported by tho Commi

Thirty -three for the admission of New Mexico

Union was laid nn the table. Yeas IU, Nays 71. The

ill from tho sanio Committee lo amend, the Fugitli

avn law was posted, Ye*s V2. .Nays s2. JHero it ii :

Of' the Uililal Sl'llts "/ Armricn, in t-Jnji -3J HSitmlli•— of Congreaa

For tho i

ve blow to

,t is faction

nsting struggle.

fry, the present submission of the Repub-

idering an opportunity to strike an offec-

tlivor the land from slavery; It ia tha

the conditions upon which the bonier

11 remain In the Confederacy—rcmnia In

... ..-nk nnd petted element, Bnd thoreforo to

It—remain in It to lend back tho revolted Gulf

States upon such terms sh they may dictate, and. through

them and tho thoroughly demoralized and dispirited

indcd concessions from tho poo-

jhall become tbo politicB

i'hat ever; person nrresled under thu la'

for the delivery up of fugitive, from labo

duccd before a Court, jude/r. or Cumin

is then a little i

We thinl

disintegrate tho parly and cause its elements

ke unto themselves new shnpes. That a mi

oroughly anti-slavery political party will grow (

of these attempts to daub with unteinpered mort:

cannot doubt—supposing that they should bo effec-

1 in patching up the breach for awhile.

vitHbie, in the nature of things. And thus again,

aver in the time paat. we ahull see God making the

bilion, the cunning, the solfishness and the wrath

THE XEW ADWMSTBATIOX.

confirmed by the Senato on

. .Wjr. H. Scwjrd, of N. T.. SlLHON P. ClIUjC, 1>I Utile

f-rjio:-' C.iMiiroV, cf Pent,.

.Giol.-.n iViiLLfi, of Conn.. .Cti.r.is ll iiiirn, ol ftnl.

Mb. LDtOOtJJ's Cabinet, a

Tuesday, ia thus composei!

-frrrlji-v of Slats . . , .,

Vciv'.j-v ,:;' .''. JV-.iii:!-'

.SrertMi-iinr IParSiertfii'-y "ftht iVat-t/

FoiUr. n',-,'. meral Mostoosiilfemeji-ffuiernj ,

.Enwino

Tho vole of confirmation in the Si

mous except in the cases of Messrs. Blair and Bates,

who wcro opposed i,y acme of the Senators from South-

ern Stole!. Tho chief contest between the compromise

wing of tho Republican party, led by Thurlow Weed,

and tho anti-compromise wdnff, led by Horace Greeley,

turned upon tho appointment of Mr, Chase. Tho prei-

inre upon Mr Lin. "lo to induce liim not ti

genllonmn nmon;' hii, tonilitutionnl advisers was pow-

erful and persistent to ihe last. In this maWeed woa understood to reflect ihe views

Seward. From the Washington despatches

Airraid

it allow ou E ht tci the et of pa

pie, by which a

us, of tt

inf..l.l n. .mbitiot

v.- approved the 15th of September, Isiu,

r Territory wherein the arrest may be

, such production of the per-on. together

:t, such Court, Judge, or Commiai

.euch Courl, Judge, or Commitse publicly,

i-iiing those f.i

ccording to the lawn of any other Stato. Ter-

. „ ._ the District of Columbia, and escaped tlic-i c-

from, lha Court, Judge, or Commissioner ahall rnohe• ' mt or his agent, a certifl-

if tlio said fugitive shall,

upon tho decision of iho Court, Judge or Commissionerbeing made known to him, aver that be ia free, and does

- service or labor, according to iho law of thu

Territory to which ho is to bo returned, such1 shall be entered upon the certificate, and 'tho

ihall bo delivered by the Court, Judge, or Com-r to the Marahnl. to ho by him taken and deli-

__ .. tho Marshal oi the Unite'] .-uvea for Ihe State

or District from which the lujiiiii-c is ascertained lo

have lied, who shall piv ion nil niititive before one of

e judges of the Circuit Court of the United Stales for

r the l.iaMuetiu-.neJ ftate or District, svlir.se- dutv it

all bo. if said nl)e S ..l lo.-ime ahull persist in bis avcr-

. ent, forthwith, or at the next term of the Circuit

Court, lo cause a jury to bo Impanelled and sworn lo" thether such fugitive owes labor or (er-

. erson, by or on behalf of whom he ia

claimed, and a true verdict to give according to the

ienca ; on such trial the fugitive shall be entitled lo

aid of counsel ar„l :,. ,-ri'-.eM..for procuring evidence

ho cost of the United States j and upon such finding

Judge shall render judgment, and cause said fugi-

to be delivered io the claimant, or returned to Ihe

;o whore he was arrested, at tho expense of ihe

ted .-tales, a ; c:,rdm- tc. the fiudlnyot the jury ; nndlie Judge or Curt i,e net sail, lied with the verdict,

ho may cause another buy to ho impanelled forth with.

'lose verdict ahall be final. And It shall bo tho dutysaid Marshal »* dvliverine said alleged fugitive -

take from the Marshal of the Stale from which aa

fugitive Is aliened to have ,»n aped a certificate jicltto...

lcdRing that said ii'h-^. i fugitive had been delivered- '--- -Iptionof said alleged I'uititiv

s authenticated •.;; ilie I'nited

Siatea District Judpo, or a Commisvioner of a UnitedStates Court lor said State fr„in which said fugitii

.lleeed tn have estjpvJ, v.hich ertitieatc shall bn the office of tbo Clerk -,i the United itateM District

Court foi "

.if slavery, grown to

nnd insolent by euch a victory, would ultimately demoud

the repudiationof every principle of equality. Ihe denial

of a popular representation, and the extinguishment of

all tho bights of civilisation and knowledgo.

On tho other hand, if Iho Republican!, with ft bold,

sis, thoy take the only chnnco of perpetuating thclr-

ascendaney. by excluding the political influence of twalvo

fifteen States, every one of which now ia, and for e

ig time muat be, hostile lo their prlnciplca. If tbeir

in, thoy may surprise and forestall tho entire Demo-

cratic parly of tho North, and disarm Iho hostility of

tbo South, by accepting suddenly and decisively tho

both have been making for months, and

laying, "No coercion,- Irf fit sfait S!aks eennimmats

IsjoiiM (acir separation," and thus occuro tho sup-

port of ol) the timid, the only other alternative being

war—and of the commercial clissca, Ihe only olher

being Iho ruin of trade. So, the Gulf States

half in earnest, and the border States not nt

st in their demonstration of secession, and

tho Northern Democracy demanding aoa-coerrioi-. aim-

ily lo compel tho Republican! to co'itpromixo, and than

upplnnl them, find th

effectually "hoist wilh their own poiard " beyond the

r of doing any more mischief. Such will be the

political policy ot firmness.

tho country, Iho integrity of tho Republican

party will bo Ihe solution of thu vexed slavery ques-

tion, the emancipation of twenty millions of freemen

from n barbaric and aristocratic policy, dangerous to

the preservation of tho popular liberties, and their

irance, with a homogeneous nationality, upon a splcn-

I career of political and industrial prosperity. Thorth will become what the seven Protestant provinces

Netherlands, that formed the Republic of Holland,

•vi'hn,

ihcd t

lays ire.

t for s

Sec. 2. And be il/ti

State shall be compelled to aid the Marshal or ownerof any fugitive in the e iptuie „r detention ol sueli fugi-

tive, unless when 1,-rc,. coin], hived ,.,r re .lionably approhen. led to prevent -:,n,h capture --'-

fee.', of lb.i Commi-j.ioii-.-r- appointed under ('lie*

loth .-.jp.,.[],hi.-.l-oii.'t,:.ll he ilu for every caieand determined by such Commissioner.

Tho list of Yeas and Noys on this bill we reel

'All tho skill and Incenulty of Thurlow Weedavail-, I nothing The uciit b.it been .;,'"',! on nil niitht.

but Mr. Lincoln v.a, to., much tor Weed i Co. Helatued his ultimatum last nic-bl that if Mr. Chase went

nut Mr. Seward muat go also. If the latter remained in,

Mr. rtiase must also reinnin. Fr-n, this determination

Mr Lincnlu would not budtro an inch : ho put his foot

down. Seward did not per.onallj- engage in Ibu

Cabinet muss, but had the DghtiiiR dune by his squire,

Weed. Weed makes nu i-fincilinent of his chagrin ot

ie annoinlment of Cha--e. Cameron evidently ll.iolts it

rather hitter pill. Ihirac i".:. ch-i is striding about

with the Bir of n .onqiioror Tins evening he was aur-

ounded in the hall nt Wlluird's by a congra tula lory

rowd of his private friends."

The Democratic nnd Bell-Everett presses, which,

.Iter Mr. Seward's speech in the Senate, praised him as

die"great statesman of iho time, one who was ready to

Lice hia party and tnrn his back upon himsclt in

i1 to save the Union, are now denouncing him as an

i demagogue, who has deceived nnd -betrayed those

j put faith in his talk of conciliation and compro-

mise. Thoy say he has been frightened by the radicals

of his party, and point for evidence lo hi. voles in the

House of Representatives, which they declare aro a

mockery nnd a client Is it the part of a -.talesman, or,

on tho contrary, that of n mere politician, to talk so

equivocally as to mystify alike his friends and his cne-

,ail

1TJ..CI. I|,

il Ins

longer involved In the dis

bunleriny greed ol tho ala

itrcngthen our ties with

nations of Europe and civ,

from tho closer alliance

have long falsely boaiteJ,

we aboil attract, a» never

from the tecmloi

'. rtirr--!!, Ft.-r.v_-. iriij':;riiii,

Peyton.--:

IWyce . Bedgirl.-i'-U.. lap, .in, Hi.

vVvch. t\'a,i,. VY„|h..,.,. War,..if III., Wells, Whltely. Wll_ou,

Val landinghum..'-''... Wa.ti hum

Wiiulow, Woodson, Wrighl

Tbo bill, wo beheve, was not considered byate, and so bus failed to become o law. Tho bill fromtho Committee of Thirty-three, designed to enable tin

slaveholders to eaptarc in tho North persons escaping

from the South after violating'

Ycaa •_:, Nays l.G.

orld. Noputable ambitions End f.'i-

ry j.r"p.ij.in.1isto, we flhalL

Ihe libcrol and powerful

ind receive new advimtsges

Becoming, indeed, ns wei asylum for tho oppressed,

iforo, crowds of emigrants

log populations of the Old World. Com-

Dtereat and similarity of institutions will

tho colonial depeodeneies of Great Brilam

upon our frontiers Iand upon each side of Ibat natural

thoroughfare half way neross the continent at lifl great-

est breadth, the St. Lawrence and the great lakes, and

under tho latitudea most congenial to human life, we

shall build an empire under whoso ceijii the enfeebled

and exhausted provinces of the South, worn out with

anarchy nnd Intestine divisions, and weakened by the

stroggles of races for their rights, will be happy enough

to Bnd shelter on Ihe condition of making their whole

people as free aa ours. Even during the maintenance

of the scpareitoo. tbo fact that wo are foreign to the

slnve Slalca will bo the establishment of peace between

them and us. They will atlll be our customers Bnd our

producer., whllo we. rid of all responsibility for tbclr

rights ond wrongs, shall be able lo buy of them and a-JJ

to them ;we shall visit them and recclvo visits from

them, effectually protected trom outrage or inquisition

or insult, both by their interest and disposition lo let u«

slonc.andby tho power of our government to vindicaW

our rights.

Such aro Iho immense interests which urge lb*

Republican pBrty to stand firm. Will thoy do io!

Looking nt the oil prevalent apprehension of Ihe disso-

of the Union, nn apprehension inlo which all our

have sedulously educated the people, It hardly

ns likely that thoy will. Bui yet It ia astonishing

r tho ocarocrow of disunion la diminishing under

present rapid review of thr situation. Was ever a

public sentiment so rapidly maturod as that which,

through so mony voices, now demanda tho cutting of

this Gordian Knott Wc hnve only to wait, to hove that

sentiment diffused by general discussion, to male it

dominant. But we cannot wait. The crisis ia upon ns

to-day. Virginia nnd the Border Slates demand an

inslaut nod categorical answer : FPEB you -jio -J stm-

Hly for ilavtty, or M us 50 1 Thoquestlon goes 10 n«y

and many a brave heart that has forccail tie wlio.s

sequence of results, and whose answer f» prompt

enough : Co, then. But It gosa to many moro timid

_,-i™

!

Page 3: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9

rolmK who nro overtaken by on unexpected, n

them deplorable, catnstrophe ,anil, educated I

sobool o! Sunard, they gasp feebly, E'-cnflhiny mraerlflccd for Iht Union.

The very precipitation helps ua, huivi

direction, for nil oration, all diplomacy, nil blERling (

terms: into which our ampratniitri eon be inveigled

io touch I'taftisal ol 'lie demands of the Border Sta

alnveholdem (or immediate concession. The diffleulty

of on adjustment, if we wer

demand) (lmo,d«in>«riLtiOB,c«unnl. And iliolmnariouj

slaveholder*, urged by n mol

by Ibo outaide traitors, are liable any one morning ui

go off in an lnnr.-,iea,nblc Mb* a,iJ bght the train llmt

eiplodcr. tbo secession mine, all dug and stored with

oxploilres. A collision at one of the Forts in the

revolted territories, followed by a popular indlaimliou

at the North demanding aid for our bolcn,rur*d garrison,

will precipitate the separation, the populai

dividing naturally at tbo II

So nearly balanced are the forces, thai an accident

mill determine- their direction. A single skirmish, on

angry debits In Coiigrcs s or the Conference, the leaning

of the ura President to this or that policy— It nil hangs

Out WMWuotOH (CowESpontlcncc.

in nnolhcia uouncclcd at

of it Ii relet. olhogi .1 liu,im

A SPEECH BY If/?, SEWARD.

It is now condd ei.tl y ..lalmed by many frlcnda of J

Seward that he never intended to support any sctiei

of compromise inconsistent with tho Chicago platfbri

that his. talk of conciliation woa merely intended

delude tho pro -elsvery party, check the secession mo.

ment.ond scour.- the peaceable- inauguration ot Liuco

Tbey point triumphantly to bla prompt refusal to si

port the project of the Peace Conferenc

sufficient proof thnt be lias never sn

thought, from the -l".: 1

The so-called Peace Conference, or thoO

mcn'i Convention, oa 77ie Tribune calls it, 01

day closed lis labors by the adoption o£ the following

propositions as nnicndmenU to the Cocstltuti

ihey recommended Congress to lend to the pi

( i, 11 " 1*1 ..-i Conference" propositions on

Ii Oal pafip. ihey need not be p.-produced in

llr Tyli-r i eJloicly sent the pi.-, positions to both

branches of Congress. The Senate received them ot

once, and mode them the special order for Thursday, at

ono o'clock, by the votes of three Republicans—Mean.

Baker of Oregon, Minn and roller ol Connecticut.

On the tame day, the Houso toot up the report and

resolutions of the Crisis Committee of Thirty-three.

First, the proposition for a National Conventloi

voted on and woa rejected, Ycjta 74, Naye 109;then, tho

ao-callcd border Elate proposition was voted

thnt Iras olso rejected, You 33, Nays 1GB. Tho Critten-

den resolittlona neit came up, and they, In their turn,

were voted down, Yeas SO, Naya 113. The Ilouso waa

then brought to ft direct vote upon tho df^etraforjl run-

InT'ons of Mr. Cor win, ua follows :

idlvldual hnd a right to express his own -sentiment

eaidea, who should decide what was seditious or

*HmnWl Treason against a government was not in

uarantoed by tho Const!-

it, taking United State*

Our only safety «.u in free dlsuus-

ing It— that right W

THE OLABKSON ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY.

...iuli"H-

stated

Society, held ot Doo Ri

Feb. 23, 1361, tho following preamble and

wore adopted :

Whereas, when associations claiming lo be reldgli

unlle In prohibiting freedom of speech, they contribute

more powerfully than any other Instrumentality to

dcorivn ua of it everywhere, and form the strongest

entrench itself behind

:d by Jir. Corwin rout

Ke amtudnjent shall b

rcasl30,Noys63.

.titllliooal amend-

,nio up. It reads

mode to tho Con-

rlve to Congreuwith tho

i in

i lined.

and who canool

intended to lent

of Compromise,

of Die Norther

winch bis name has

• ii, not leas sagacious-

Iw influenced by per-

that he deliberately

party into tho slough

foiled by the llrmncss

and the unyielding dctermlns-

suppoicd to

o Republican

Hon of Jir. Lincoln, he beat a retreat m tne ccs

be could. Which of these theories is true we wundertake to decide ; but as we hit--., spoken -

Seward's recent course wilb wh"t we dccmi"!

eeverlty. we will do him the justice to Lay befti

roadeni the speech which ho made InlvMhlBB

Monday, juat before tho inauguration, from hi

doorstep, to a company of ciliionaot the Empire

Fr.tTMv, Fn-[0---O7[IINJ (SoNEiOHBORa: 1 ni_ ...

dcc[dv ailec-cd by this ai»-! 'v-tcd demy-nit ration -1

affcetionotuhvpnrt of Hie r>'-'l'le -'! the Sln-c ot e.c"

York. So many familiar faces, seen at this (lis•

from my home, and under the eir-Miun-inn. e,

luiriu id "- "v-niiei. '"= «' '''•' ""J -ynvothi.s

ahunhi find ii difficult

to represent

carries', Y[For Hie Yeas and Kays fee Urst page—SHtor.]

On Friday, the New llesico bill eame up and

tjecled by a vote of two to one. Tbo enly other propo-

ition which was adopted was an amendment

Fugitive Slave law, regarded by many of

iitapiii.L,

Is of the Union. Thi* day closes that sei

vice ol twelve *•'• irs— 3 rcti. ! v.l.i..h now in retrosnec

seems to short". r„,l v,i it baa filkd up the one-skt

Sirt >! tiiii L...rsi!'ijii.i'i! .lu.-aiion of this great cropin

t this hour 1 appear before you a volunury clwei

but. God he ti.iiMO.I : i ciu^n o..>r. aa always, of th

Smie of New York-one of yourseWej-your equal-

no longer beiirinc i 1 -'.- resp..-n;.liiliU.6of a reprenenli

riTO (Here one ol the D*| jtv-Miiribals at..';-.[.^ i.j:

ward and pir<n L-J 3 i.Jse ,.f tbc New York dc legal u.

to Mr. sewavd's -m smid sreat cheering.] My pul

lie acts throURtv.jr tNat i-: oa. and ... me tr; mg per :

oro all upon reenrd in tt.e journals and debates of Coi

gross. It fa alBiist fearful to thlolc that lhay are

impcrl'hslde. LooUJng backwardsay ft v.-. that Id ., I..1- ce

,tenLi..'t

the Go-.l who is lobo ou

shnuld be .ibii^r-iied.

one Stale only. 1 have bt

1 watMlsun I, i;iil.-.!..T I'-

Republic -and I am nc

j ... a fair delopiii'in ' I

" iiti'l in tin: prtjer..:.* [son Judg<

*

fK^dSm

a-k l.ilu

Qti-le.-"'] I :.u, ,].jl "Irani in 0f.r.-:3l

to the Ei,t. i.n.v «\.(t. wil.e North,

equally—and to every slate in every

frecm in e.r bciiiiirrjan, m say wbctber.

deed of mine. 1 have done him wrong,

which demanded abilities 1 could noli

wbiuj tiiKieJ tuiiie ,:i)uanlujiiy !' unit

'office. Tl'iUe i'.

1

..! one >>.,"-> in >uia ,.

1 know o

and to the Souih,

leh or Interfere within aDy Sti

lution? thereof, including that of persons

or servitude by the lawa of said State."

it trial tho vole stood Ycaa 120, Nays 71.

;n two-thirds vote, it failed of adoption,

,o House adjourned. On Thursday morn'

st was renewed by a motion to reconsider

; of tie

fortification for vie

Hoflolved, That It

Resolved, That if

holdlDg States wore

luffrago, it would 1

ilavary.

Resolved. That th

;ho foregoing resell

CAule? Oouniu Tien

for publication.

,. religio

ncompro raising w

omg previoe

ond trial. the

as 133, Nays (

n tbe e:

i hall the efforts now makii

r a dissolution of the United Slates

erlog evidence that tbe lime of thi

Is swiftly approaching; and 'w.

for tbo General government, tha

impel the South to adher« to th

tho colored men ol vlho ooo-ilavt

permitted to uicrelao their righto

asteii iho aboliliou of America

Secretary bo directed to furwer

tloni to Tht Laiicmttr Unton, U:, and Tpe &KTi-SuvrJ» Sta.idjfi

Ewntr. Knst, See'y.

piowlnR Slate ithn a...ii.. ofmnigraiing it,

Doctob r.twi'i

•I H. Pope iva. ocarlr on Ttinndav eveIn all Its fmry. OwJnB

.._ces of lue track unothing co aid be ice n

;-Vl,'l|

r

|'if "...

;i,-.r!li lii Hi ' 1.H-. IIltu. ..-lull..

-ll v.-a.< Iii mi , .11 dour i

J.Hiilii.M.-.-.liiiniohnldtbeir-

ll.m (<l Till- C-- :-.Hi' .i'N-.

ir.il._r. ire -.:"; -.-. nfj -II-k

ilse Willi iticlr honor by, put Hi. itmiK ti pon their

in't the coticentrallou ol

Ii io Ond It.

tle."—Tbe Charleston

in.-- :,

.'-i-

GKs£

he Crisis Committee and the border States to get up

ompromlse Blood as follows : Crittenden resolution.,

der Stnto compromise*, Adams or New _!c_lco

proposition, all ioled down. An amendment /cmcr

oaranteelng tho pri*ent compromise of the ConstltU'

on to the South, and a modification of the slave-catch-

\g law i'eltd up. On the whole, considering the terri-

ble pressure on tha members, and tho demands of the

' ' ictory for freedom. Mere

resolutions amount lo but Utile in those times, when

s to the Constitution, and Congressional

which give up everything to slaver

urged with terrible pertinacity. But let mo flnbh the

story of ihlo compromising business. At the evening

ssion In tho House, the Speaker attempted to

ic Peace Conference propositions, bnt objectk

ado. A motion waa made to suspend the rules,

Hod of success, and tho Compromisers gave

A Goon -L-.S' Dr.PAivrE_.-A letter juatrecein.-i from

friend in Salem, Columbiana Co, Ohio, brings tbo

dnful tidings of the death of the venerable and beloved

r. BE-.-.AUIS' STA-N-tos of that place. He died Feb.

2?th, aged C7 years, and bla remains were followed to

the grave, on tho flrat of March, by a largo concourse

of people, who had long revered him for his eminent

moral worth. Ho was one of the early aottlera of

Salens, wlioro, for nearly half a century, hi

nlicd as " iho beloved physician," n friend of the poor

and tho unfortunate of every class, nod the eupportur

of every moral and philanthropic enterprise. lie was

an unflinching Abolitionist, the early friend and coun-

-Unr of Benjamin Lundv, and hlaliou-o and purse were

waye open lo the anti-slavery lecturer and the fugi-

i-u from Southern bondage. He combined great Urm-

m with great gcntlone.s, and large Intellectual power

ilh rare modesty. His death has lei

innot he filled, not only in his family.

unity which had fo long enjoyed thi

You will pcrCL-ivt tost

members—6.1—ro fused tc

Uonal amendment Thcli

deritood. Those gentlemen, every ono of the

no right under iho Consiltuiiui

rge number of Republican

with tl

1 have iiliic gOL.'l. indeed— far lewlaw I-.-..T1 sustained and saii-

:™ York wiili a gencrosity

>w why this Is bo. Thcpeo-tually constaol.and faithful

,u , ,^ liberty, to their country, ond

tli-.iV-"..-.d. " The." '.ave- thouciit ihm 1 endeavored io

lil . «;,e falih'ii]. 1 know ihelr chors.Lter well, nod

mow that,iu the l.cv. emerEen_y which cur eonutrv

no" entering up.ji), they will i-,- equally liiiillul I

ibtn 1 have wi.bcd- _ _

ported by the people of

tha: i- i.ii[ai-iLleli:il. 1 ki

pit ot New York are ha

Institution of:

neiice in the Constitution which no other interest

iiiiCit <jtien retcivsj Thi ii^ ib iheir position.

In the Senate the samo fate awaited nil the compi

mbe measures. Criilenden v.iv, mie.1 down by a heavy

majority ;the propositions of the Peace Conv

COt bill MVfrt. i

aiional Conve

orwiu constitutional amendment, to which I bav

iferred above, was agreed to. Fessendco, of Maine, di

,t vote-if he had voted at all, it would bavo bee

alnst It, Which would havo defeated It- As It was,

)i eraclfy two-thirds of the votca east Be thankfi

mighty pressure has been brought to bear upon it1

lopubliean members of Congress in favor of compel

liso will ba eiwpli/ fhonkful that the cause of freedom

as suffered so little os it has, ibus ft

of the On i ted Si

iii.'vfi-.c and patriiuiiiu ol i— They wiU prese:

irundei ..] crnM'

Vi.;u.-tiii

_ iwn in the history

I belice 1>.-.,.• the -.hardier and [ur r

-.--

Ch'tt: Jn-i.i :i'. 1 L'llien- 'hat. v-Usle hu .-il.

I,o will '-- -.Ism '-"' io every -tale, and every

and every cilii.in: ihat he will de-lend and pre

riehlBaodinlcreile it.; pea...: and the pr.-.spentr.of all

the Frntu tauallv ;,.:! alike, nhile he will practise the

moderation ihai' spri-ge tr-.i-s .in.e and iho aUeenon

that orises from patriotism in coiil.daaied suiiea.

Ooder his gui-jo-ce. and with Hie hlc.slng of God,

believe and trust and confidently oipect, that i

Adroiniatreiido that is inaugurated

»nd [loinful apprehension, '"

restored, p "'

state --.f Ni

the States,

cilia lion ; (

'united

void which

The Tcsr in m: Apflkp—

i*-;.,,: .lnliir.n uiigllt lo lie |imriil Of Ihc r.r.il :e t

t^oivfj; ai.dk tvoiilJ nl:-. 1 II let their p.ivi.t

cav In uilmi Ihel mi li"-ii..'. hid" 'rl-.u:' 31J.1 nil. Hi;

• I.-.,-. ( n... i, Ii ilv.-i ii.-.in; .-i-.-ll'- i'i ! I" •! ••'

Igliu—auote.

fm.-l

io Lout: the Rev. Jir. Beabnty had p! hlpi; ;: . itvi -nv in niati-sthive. Imt . .tit r his Iniiar.

" uy hlni, whip him,.inline-. '!i»v.. hi-

lit:tf, wilb null- Mich limilalloii.

,„; ,r,:-.ll„,l,l i.f hi- Let:- .:.!

... i.T own i.-i.-i 1

...mi.- i'i! tin 1

e :l,h of pli'.i'auiiy.

.ll-livulil-i

l< l.i II. I..

Ihe !»IImhji

r. Pope win equal lo i he imelfivltalciiergieilii u-vlc>- aiiei

.r.'[. '.red i.. c-iuii [lie 'f-.i' I.

iiinnner. lie illsenfueed ldi

!,...! ciff III, name; .; he il inotie- he hud Willi lilm. ei:.i

;

Hell,, ii iS.;..lthi I

'. i<l: I-.

i.. i u : r

il ii :.:.:].. un.-.ii

ulfcied

ipenl [he nlglil. tv. hum'!:irn.i;r In M . ]--:i HOI" ilie

in .i,.[.,ll..-.> 11. i. -K.ri.i. iiini lii

liliehed III. lairhfal j|. ,.! e.

Iill lo his jstienl ai

ic n tinned into

._. __iany a popnlnr.. ...ii \iioad US. She iveiil i>ecr tl:o

inr.ln [."..|tili"ii)uallv il;--;niit J. Iirlnpinp; In maav nn..

J

;;<;- " tho enl.ir.;..u.ei.i el' ..i.m:i,,\. fiihtre, !'• "'

from death.—]tornt (Jf. T.) '

CoscBSHOS.—P. and W. met on Mniu street ibe

her day, Jusl filer n fresh baieh uf •Crisis" notvi bsd

. roil urn! the' Smith ni-.-.-.j ih.in ive htive- nlie.idv

ode. We h.ive ..i.iviji I .v.r-.ii.h...- •! eld. ii.-l

evvti-thlr.L- IniaKiiial'If. V."e li.in ^rented nil ihey ashed

?• ii.i

.[in. '...: • .1 :.,,..

r .

I, .in i.rratliei-. ! la.- and ( ill,, i - v. havo i.i.t lllem

.',V,'rV1

|'i.''v-

,

'"V.!i'\-.

,

.''':'...i'l'.

l

!

,

.|.'.'l'r

,

| .''u 'ihaMveliavo nOI

Bui 1 hareihonpht of one more cor.r'-loii 1 -uppoie

'''''i

l

;r.'''.h!"V.,

il, n |

l;

"ai*,xlonrJydrinandsl>." l'oii i.l.::er.e I I lie lleni In '.I.', if,.

1

,-':. paper, '

Hire I. -HI, 11., I ut. en AliulClui.I

t. :,[,.! r. ,11.-1 .iliu lee.

Ml. s |jiippl th

—In!

„..^rX,.-Ven-wellt

"

Willi, if that ihlap Is

•- '-- eoopcriu:

aad— fnrnlsli iliei

Don't y™ Ihlnk

'-It', tar

i Concen Ball', on Wonmn'.- BJ gbu. Her fjm..

ol.ieniiioitlvv.etiiicdio Lliem-r tomity ;Imt,

., tinvl.-falo c'k-imii;e "ill niafco n ivohieh cs.c-

.. lei, fair !: I..:e..iine ividelv knoivn.

ten-oil wbj ptalulv dre,:t.|, fuel lul-i the air ot

,11 limn. it] V unci ihe vi old r, "A clliltce 10 tet-,. 1

ic e.e- i„rnv.|n.:,-l hv .til-. Lucieih. Moll, v.-lm

bcr confldnKf In tho'linal™™ of tl.n .torc-

manner of ihe speaker.-..-.= :i 1 nk of coherence; l

t, ihe leuflV nmde- a m^i. Ii liiei

t since II wa« io jjlorloui Tor U[n-'-( soldiers, It ceriiilnlv ivss d«m;

ih.k siiier3 ai phv*l:iani. Ai io

ivotnaii eon Id i;o sraei z a cio-.-l

\ mm 1

? iiiriilac; l.iivtr, idie

I;- ! -

!i-e irii d by a oji-y o

• tiful. Any di,|i:..l[i.>i. lor aid r l;

.tol itatlilJt-j.-PfiilaJtt.'.iiJ 'f.ti

.Ifoieh, thr-ion, Jia.^.,

i A, Andrews, Dostun, Mb."*,Jc.ii ill (.Hiinty. Jr., lloiinn, Jliuis.,

Luihev Parks,... y, .M.ln.li. I, .11 Hiter,

.il M. ii h.i.ie, CMnttJn, "

rriVE KTanpnnr.

....- -.: 1

1

. —

pnicllcal Aholllfoniii.

to blm. bol io Bpca,. pionplly in-

own frit -ids. T«rme-:oui ho-rs ia>

-: He icn-lnJcl Mr Mnco.: l*ut

Mi Ii-.cla.. -W.! iplnv.l LIji

tber a prophet

iture to predict,

ifter'the" Bepnbllcoti Marshals and other

Uniteil States functionaries aro fairly installed, they

-ill be required to execute the Fugitive Klnve law. The

President ond bla

order that tl

.tching n

Wait aad >

erlty i. of si

£ummari$.

Pai*on Browniow ebts that South Carolina Ib In

,e ,n,„hl[.... el U,e lelh-.i iVIiv !"!•]. !'• Ui 1...tlil:i«IO|,*it

,.,nv:,J,'..itltLhellie];eepliou ; e." Ii ii pretty much mj.

Punch, ever ready lo nssiut nil who are in ditti-

.i„ ami „,,.|,T.i ...'iu„- Mini the tcee-il-n Staf. .ire

nil,.T,-! in in,,' ,i 111 n.ime h.rtlielcii^iv empire. lc.p.-:i.

WiniTisQ a Slave to Dra-

'id imprisoned clKlilc

While the Presie

,Y.,n certain gent!

ad rsithcr forced l< il|

i-L-re .vhippliu.

nanoaP"

ll

>Mr'

n'l.'.'u'i'. "llr. LI..!

—At Charleston, S.O.,' ofcaiiiiut: Ihei.eiutinv.l^.W

The Inaugnrstk

ery reaped. /

;en disturbed I

The Message you

sperfand not en accident

ie dsy's proceedings,

i, and will, of course,

t. Ii certainly eihib-

certain pisiajjCB.

Avo!-.

way of coneiflatlon Ii iho way of wist

Mr. Seward, soys Thi Times, wa

during the delivery of bis speech, wh

applauded, and followed by three h

leave It for iho present without r

•iprosa tbe hope that the closing set

understood as an iotituallon that the

cillotion " lately defeated by Congresi

and promoted by tin Adtiutiiiieai.on-

greally utJecled

A WORD FBOif PHILADELPHIA.

Lwcoln'3 admini st ration opens well. His Inaugun

la refreshing from its originality. There can ho o

it with mine own hand " is inscribed on every pan

graph. Its tone is unesceptiouable. It Is disfigured by

no cheap religion. Buchanan's messages were always,

disgustingly pious. The more diabolical hie sentiment!

tbe more deroul his pbrn50. This address ot Lincoln'

is in pleasing contrast. Then it contsuiB no censure i

Abolitionists, and no deprecation of the anti-slaver

agilaiionl This ia a new thing under the sun! It i

only ihe old men among us that can remember a Pres

ii-.v pr;-.e

nfroi

iiieeli. lOnie

:h :..,-..e_pi-.;.

loldets lii Vitclola at

ame etlecl. When

v'iilch'lt mil ha ear

til m ijc-olaie i>i th

nail f~M*r ihon oi

The Richmond EIroiildih'e.-'ilt parts of (lieSl-c.

• Of ihoUHV 1 ill *

iiepmniloiia foi --

impede Hull once.. lie, i

life

ural dlilrlcis v.

J, ,in ni.::.. Evelin-.-.n.: liie.d,-

rue ,luveholder.

:..; n, -ij'

•aiaa'ih; ' the sir,: : v-i: [t.ji-

liMMi..: and le..w..f ll.um-iii.d-- '-' l-n .e l^n 1-. .'he:

r.-.i.-M-i.aiL .!,. ;,.-!.u-riLo :;!.»' !' tee itme.— Kic-

Ditpntch.

The MlsaiSalPPl Srie.r.inof.—Thnt the reporla of

itaivailef, iii in=.i-E'[.:i ^ere. net .ini..i..,ded, > pt.,i-:u uy

the fullnvvlne remnr^.u'.le -:•:, ia..-i,i from ihe Brand—(Ml ... B™iol£con.- , _

"lli.l.-.r H.' Lin-i- lie." on Li-! i.i;- >'. ill-, l^iiaii -'J

,. 11.

:'>'

I., p..'... a.

Uavilcn government, io

On thin oecailon she canUUe.nliU lie: ..,-. ,ne el

,le.V 10].la.,lll.(' e -.-1,1..,

irfonutd his duly, and eifccd Mr.

ajjira roft Haiti.—The brig

iimei RcdriAih, ihe nqetii of tbe

earrv eiiili-nmt- lo lhai country.|rj ,v.n. e.-dure-J einlj/Miili, «hoii- Havilei, iovernment, with a

Ihe" i.iiiliif of i-ollo". Nine,

r f.-ir.l-:..-. nro re',, .;.;. i flelll

York yvmoiiR then h Cipi- Qr.id.lid:. a 'i.-il known pilot ol

Charlelton, ivlio lei: ! ''hi' I' he t.jeld

not illipo'e of. So II ;,: ..oil.!. me 1 ' ' Ua v.nfe Hnd het

moili"r,'vH., if iJveor. old. Mr. W. E. Iterry, nr,eih.:r oi

. lie i harli !l=.n eimi;runlj. ,l carf^nrcr hi iriiOc.lj -i man o.

I„,k l, mi^lhi-eiiee. The e.ihii- eui.eran:- (OII,[-rije "lie

r.uDlie (I'll UOIIi B-ilii'.. Loi.I.eCli-'J J Kll.)J.| 1 1:111-1,

btjidl-l -lii|!l- i.ei-^.,.,:. :i".:ir,-.- nli l.-ve '.'. ..! Jt lln; Sniib,

.: I e. .tt..

.-.Wd'p.'-"-'-"..''^'--.!!'. :'.'- !e|..--.i .ettling. One of

i.,.-'he.t n..d. v,'r,i..,,n lle.me .hi li-,=ioi.,U fl good ear-

peiuec. Scvei-iil se-nii-jiii. n ."i'i l.in-. "ill go down the

lm,i.vt will. In: -•-el. and ,.:lih-io... services will be held

llu'i r IVndergss',

1109 S. I.. Drake, Epringfleld,

1073 Thomaa Mmnlell, Sow JJodford.

10iy Jamej Arnold,1M2 Dourne Spooner, Plymouth, -

1092 II. N'. Sponncr.lOTif David Teuocy, Manchester,>::-. i en.::- !.. i, ?::i, ::•:....

i32 P. 17. Jlorrell,

130 Charles E. Jenkins, flari lion Squoiv. >i«.31 Female iVoti -Slavery Society, Plymouth. "

I!:, .: o. i ! . ilunr. .'.'..ilhampton,

U3 LMivIfi Wiibur. Little Cnmptoo, R. I„

073 Rev. flenry Blcbv, New iiavou, Conn.,

. lui It. Owen, ijoneivango, K. V-,

illl Jin Geo. Ames. Oiirugo, N. V.,

L. H. Gidord. Eastun,

D. J. Slorbird, Poruvllle, "

112:- Tin-mail Wolbcc, Comv.aU, S. Y.,

1073 A. IJ. TVrtflit. D«r RlcD r,**

lu9'" Re'-.i. J- Jlny, Srracuso,

l'HJS E. J. Johnson, Oiivego,

.HI il • . ?'::;!;. rj---; '-r .

11(11 Jlrv.. E. Reed, Coicnoiia,

iOi P. de Clerg,

Hi: T. Downing, Mexico,"in:. L\ O. Ikile. ;-.'ii,v I'oritClty.

1031 Uir. West.LOS.* Mr^. liahellaitsivart, Xevf York City.

1070 M. C. Bryant,|u;ii Kev. G.u.F. Soyes.

el-. re..ie,i .Ie in

-; iii'.l il Is the. l.eioc- llei.-t

e l..-,-i,l:

'leiitl-in of Uniuito li.;ve ..•ii lei

idliia. Plorida;

_.. o'.ilv otlenee, be nllvaes.

at he was a native of liusacbusetii.

The Boor on T'ornEE Leu.—The Fbiludclphia L-;Jge>

me line' ni.ee .::.:. ii i.e. I ih 1 ' ledO'-inj aOveOJumeei .

'Wnnl.-.l nv a Ii i 1-...1 .-' colored loraily, a '.hllc hev

eirlt.-n or :lMi:-. ie:lt. ot ,1(0, 10 w -It oil the Ulule atld

,.,i.v hiiii^iif hEiimahyuioful about tbe bouse.

Tobacco.— If there ever woo n weed whose roots

en: .hum till i'e t dr* sap fti tn. below,^"-J*^*^

*

',,'-'" [-'e -l'

' ' fie is noi !it i.j v.ind in ordjiii.r-.

,V-, --lei-- ,.• t e in urJIiwiir feuiilitb] He ib.it

""i^rslo hear! let him hoar-BtnrSI Word BwAv-Low Wbitc Pcoptr."—The Mobile .V-rr^ry^n

[ubllsumentofoSeet^ri^otM-e^-llelt life*, ivecksslnce:

•Slaves aro conitaully

-..„. , ....J'.] I,- e

|

.i..(,:i-l.-.ll.'li.eh..fh

Ur. L'-cen,'i nil... 71,1.ellelieJ a hiss from ..

end Mi. Clile-iid: rei T'e i -y -'

- f r. i n ,; II...1 il ihe ,=-r-

mon'll, hi ifich^a condition thin he e.-',u:.j n-.i reimtir

niwr-U'tfii f'-i ii 'Vei-k !.- .iiiL..-. Tin r.-.i|,..ri Mr ..re.-r£\

"rteniv, ,,1 .-J-ji-l".:.-.;, iroin '.In lii..-. and ,Hied il.tf.

was 'the .Ihlhi.ii iiili.id.,,.1, eud thai hv held him..iw.nsii.lenvnht intihod In ivhleh he had uunpr.roi-ci ef"

cllihcrnll'

""o"cloi'

qnar

How r...Irlece ,,

del. [--'tl'-.-

ai.hl

^soelatlug ivllh ion; itditt pee;;',

-neh I.e. .pie lire daoccious 10• 'oleaccourcffy?'

iladdre with

i eQ'ee liven es.v On the i

to the people that ihej

ia own thinking, and

(DiU Stoi.

Gen. Butler, of Lowell,

gion ihe other day, am

In- i-l' there i'i mi huie.sl Ul'ail In Mlia.,1,,.,-,'- ,-,!!.. i- r,. I,-, n-jded. -I heg io

,'llel, I uieti .'!. I-" p=T,OU U l." Tin* 0.

great many

'

1 happened ioal

replying to tbe a

Wisunvotos, March 6.

r. Seward's to-nisht. jusl as hives-ess from the Illinois ciliiens wholed to pay their respecte, 1 could-- hear distinctly, but caught tho

rani io fare lids AdmhilsirMlon.

said Farewell "-

followinB aigniiicaiit i

"GatiLCKEN: If yoand br.ve It suceeiifi

Implore yon 10 rvmeinheen fouplit and Wot»ver tvosln .Itineei-. i-'e. , -

<Av " tn.l-.ii-' l.f. il ..-! he «*'d H.ut lh- liepul.

i,iriv. 1 the ri.n.d i.'-i". t it, hi-t, last and only vl.

Siei'mc di -hue .-.fthe Union."

The scene ivliieh followed when the delegation took

ts leave, ivon a tnuehlnp; demonstration of

""''loul'ii!

,- Bhook him by tbo bond, and

iddlog somo peculiar expre

bca for tbe AJnuibtrall--".

p, said :

o integrity of tho HepubUw

r, tha

party is by nminlnininE iho Dnloo. Tlamen

point at ivhi'.h ilit- enemy sttlLej ia always '

-where you should defend."

Mr. Lovejov. 1 lllm it. riandiue mnr, ml*

"And rcmeinher thi: the l nhjii I-, w...rlh nuthit.

t,o Ion; i'.-i there is freedom in it."

Mr. Seward .eti...-n led : "Freedom is nlwaj

We hove no room for comment ot present ; «

put these declarations of Sir. Soward on re

hla Cabinet advisers.

. plain, homely, strai

if the eddreas will com

popularity for its auth

ea of llr. Lincoln's adn

i time should bo as we

inUtra s, all tl

cord. But a

ipied. If tho ronialnde

I filled up. he will leave

•wallow doesn't make

are. Dissolution Is upo

l i!,n dj-ranfe. It niay tid abolition Is looi

ry well for Mr. Lii

Constitution tho Union ia unbroken"ibut he knows,

and everybody else knows, that, in view of fact, th<

Onion b dissolved. The question is—What 1

t tho Fugitive

11 be done.

GEORQE 1 CURTIS OX FREE SPEECH.

I conneeti.

illinium! . end Aould be

The Syracuse Standard enva thin while tho

ere bntiiiiu- Kev. Mr. May In vinry. when ihe miK-.-itnj- iliSviitftiiC ivus l.|--e-:0n up a fell lleeKS

.-.-eieiid feiillcinen tv.e. eurr. trie i.ionsiuOb '... I In

linmeol Iheilr.inUeii [illfl'.ii. ,v[n, veert eoniml

Charleston for flvn ttiousoiid buihel.. of eot

„ niei. lii.Miin-.iiee.e'eiv replied, f..li e.lr.fih.

. [,. Illl .heh belli. . -.vltheelU.it: llial ivni «£

ladelpliln, hut they I— '—

,tlug city.—itUford

lie wns in Wash-

glan, said: " 1

1

s ibo

which t

i, the 1 rs separated then

,—Wn have the name ol* o

v. he. it.-ued lili name tn the

haVliwasslmplyapeiln. One canvaiter iclll

.ihet liidr.ldn:

ey eu'ned ft-.t!

the Dinanufsciunnp c^iuuili

"'he proprietor lo so:

the proprietor was frli

ild not inierrupi the

oil ilie pay

el requeued pemil:

the i

He accordingly did so,

gnnl to the sljuatores

..,1-i f.-.vltl:..

,,r In f.i.ei

eiindlnnr l:u

i'iem 1.,- red ihai slaty emlitraiir

iei*." Apor-Dci-A^iiiii

111 oinv parody of a iiuenl

- ferninl. .,.-! .-M. Ilie I:

d.-.i.v i, ..ie.i.l.-

!o» IVpecfliT. Ftb

-The followin;

1

1

1

.".' .-

;-..!.<_,. I'd

orth,

y.ivrM.I./

., S. Shore, L.I., "J

. K. J.. i

.,Kocheilter,S.Y.. i

Aittl' •.=.,!, .vltllln

y,ll:i„p his full,

Olti Jatkum, viri

llh di

I heel uf SOid, Buchanan bold

-fl-.-.i-lei:!

i the ve.lce of old

"Xary!

I hlTTI .-!(

' The spirit shook bll tn

il-jbed.

.-Ji. nil t-.d.

then sal '..

: Mi eh.

Biidlbnty'ilii

subJtnoiiaied— fi„.,v,. u'The S-jciheiis SL-ircTii.tuE Btw.—The Confederais

iiiBicss has lu;t pasicrl -a hid hi ivlJiivii io the slave

tele i.n. 1 in j.„i.t,h i.,r.--- .-.i.:i..!i.i.: therein. " It Is a

i-i.-.|. ,l!'iii- ..-it.in.-.J p-.i.-ile '.in n v. i..-.Il-:-l.bio dre.id ef

e I-.-., -eeli I..-

• .u' ic--i-.ni..- ... ir i ill-. I-''-: t.ineedei,unii.;ed

,plracv by Koien.Ui. nt. '. -'J •id

I uir !'• i.ef.--l.it- Hull

Jn-nie.oud p.inlv IV.. „i ,, I,-.,-: ilml the Lelder Si.ite,

,„il- i.-e-pi It ... :t :l--.htl I* .for «lit=h tliey eee.ld d...

-, ie'-iti:-.i' Mil Ihe e.ttn.l.nier- "f the Onion L'n r*deni.

he Ijiv i.iu'vMe= thm ii ii .In..- 'hull Ie imported .-.-...epl

,-.nill.ui.l:i.-el,.-d.ii.ie--itil-iol thetjnind bsl-" -

en. and that , I, :,, anil-...!: -it'll lethiddei

II,.- ...r.ertil i.Te-e. and .3i,lih;u The r.-.'-il [,!;!;!

Be came again. In more npfulhiij; pllsht,

And 'he.... I ihe UBiiid Ihet i.lI-i-.jnifaoWiSt.

And lol Buchanan's name led o/i the tcsl!

A White Suave EtiTua.sED.—A slave waa reoei

sent back from Ulinoi,, xb; -..ime-J :: I.f Titell. ..'.I'e.

anti hnd ev.ivapi-.-tir,...,. e ol" Lrhic ;..-. Ihe Cairo I fiULOi.-i

Ontet-'jijives ihe !uilc-.ii-ii.-i'-.couiitcl the affair:

.l,el;-.n-!.'..i '...: --- '.'!ii'-^--' '-'-'- '

Heiirv J.1I.H ihe ,.n.i»-n., ei ij.-.W.i;. FnuHmei, el in

,.2l- i'. , t., Si,,/.. |. '. ..J .nr..:-e:d In ll.n : ii -|.-.in

* jver io [he cnsiody ef h

:!er:iihie.-.. .U,,,i:- i-v o>i ei-

ght Join him in f ..

-.-.

ti mre "line; itmt they,

drlue when he "a, *er-. v. j. hit hliu In cbBvec of s

slaveTtioldcr In Alabama, who raised him In Unverv. and

'aiins ihin bhiiinie "i" -h-n-Sed '- ih<" hii ..i-le.il..--.

ight never .eeki-j r.;!oiit '' '.;tn '-o'lenre. Uhen n.

[i hie in,.,'..: r:n -d-.-i.-n-pi. n,-i >-j--.n,oe-. ...i.-.i™.---

i,.-.[lier i'Uie tu run ell tvith him, and siolc. n Lam ane

l.ur.i n. lii-Jiitltle (h-.ir .i:iB Alter li-niellu.e il.irt.-,- 01

forty miles, ho concluded Ihe corai-aiiy of -'-

ll'cllnboro,.

ll!'l Raehel l.ukeii,, Three Tom, Pa-,

1133 lirs. V. R. Tilden, Cleveland, Ohio,

113s Mr.. Angoline khull, Clovabmtl, Ohio,

1126 A. n.Senrinc, Oberiin,

1133 Win. Parker, Rcdfard, lileh.,

II- .. ..e.eiit.t- e. !

IVm, Wontwonh. Clinton, Iowa,

1130 P. Pusey, St. Paul, Slinu^

MLm Clemeshes, LsncajhiiM. England,

Donolktn-

slartha Smith, PlainHeld, Conn.,

CrjUicfioiu/c-r Tract fW, by Cbrofiae F. Pulna

West Cain I) rid go. Ma=s., )ir;. Jas. 0, Schouler,W. C. Currier,

M.i-iS N'aitt'l B. Eor-len,

Ladles' Fualtlvo Aid Society,

Mlis S. D. Harris,Other

Dencj-j. :Je.[!., Mrs. Line,Others,

wich, Mass., Friends,OHiurtile. *de.i,. fr.eods,~

.nis, Mass., lire. Sylves

Georgia,

lying so, sir, I do noi mean neyihiiif; ptr>e.nal.'r

Colton irrowu well in aoutbern Illinois, and Mrs- *ns seen hundred, of tne

dressed In colton of their

..hi In lid In;... Ui 1,.,- -hie.- iri.-ln.n ate n:. in

Uesamemnnirer. Ihe . -en lur tndliidu

, ( ht ivuh eoutrnl.and dove:' Is lis.-d m '

-- 'luprii-eeiuelil.e-i it.OOOto !5,*00 I

n' "'-V:-.-

Cotton (*i

,,ell..put e: the enrden u

' Mods.—Tie owners.n wbleli free speech was

l.r.itp: in n.;;

theyspeakoly " jet r. heap hy," and oflc

ally Is nupropriat

of Convention Hall,

;.i..|nin ,n i

[hoiuanddolliir-i for Syracuse lo paySoehalf Etnresi.

Mr. Thnddeus Hyatt publishes

hirnjelf from iho chei.-e- nmde aein LaBienee. K. T., of havlni; e"ar.-

itiOvrinn. hi the Terrliory. Hu says (

.,.,|.ri:-.tie-i T.S.;

:nt. Aoy person k

esofAmerica. The;

ibo Territory for ilus pi

I and of General Twigp,

uieiul'Ci of tl

holding puh 1

1

-;.-..,. nii-J,

.. .eluded il.

i hlacli. might lend

•i him, nnd tlnally" ^SSL by '*.. _o roadside, anil eoiitiiiiic-1

„. .ii foot.""Tbo negro end other property Wi

recovered hy ihe owner*, lie arrived at Moue or elul.l "eeli-i ngo. and -ecored emrloyintuj... m?... ii.,,.™. ,.,-iierallv recojiilj-.d r^ -ill

1

II, n sialic-:;,! felloiv-

Centre vllle, Mi

Franlilin, Mass.

ini.er-Bajler,

... Capt. Lewis Crosby,MrJ.Ferdlua.il G Keilev.

Mra. RusucliManton, -

Rev. Wn. Thayer, -

lf.;re:i: Mass . *e; -s_:..l y r«iiiLn.

Southhrldire, Mass., Friend

Valley Falls, E. L "--

MannEast Grainwlch, B. I

. Mra. Jane C. Chase,

a, E. F, Deiter, -

,'hi. .- ii i"--=-..,l .Ie,. ..itF..-e' I:

.,.., ,!„,: -lure ere now l-,i.v.||.e leen

,...iii lite United s'.utel. Ihe '' «-., n,i i lle-e ate .ll'l..r.---d In Villi-.- :l

e,.,J :-.,i-.,..-'r,..;,!r.ei. They are .-.Id n

here 'tire -hi colored groccri

CilluH: I['lil .':-

.! tl,..,...v,j d..ll-ri. Hilt the

hi L'eue.ili is e :...' am.

hoemalter*, paint

'.'-.'-'i-iWr/ef ilieneHio race In Canada

, be Thames. 01 lis nopulailon or six ttioul

-and arc colored. 0'. Ibe n:Hui:a pt-.sp-ti uy. >! '.Il

n,,.-al .:,-: f <<-- ' fii" r.e.v Ii. L:i..;t.e-. ...- e -, ... ..

SfTccoums; uaturalFy enough, as each man v rep

,:]o;.dlvh.V .re;,: - - -< ' ;

A FiUE RfsioR.—Somo weeks aince, we gave- i

Tvney to a run.ni- ihit had reached us from GBritain, to the [[fleet that a dintingulehcd pastor of I

doo, after Inviting the Rev. Dr. William Adams, of thLs

city, to prcacb for him, withdrew the Invitation wil

tho remark that be could not admit to his pulpit

clergyman from America who was not an open ai

ssrncst opponent of slavery Sn hla own country. Tl

dialingwished pastor alluded to was the Rev. Mr. £1

oey, of London, It is now our duty to state, that v

have seen n Inter from Mr. Bioucy, In which i

declares thai tbe rumor la regard to Dr, Adams ai

himself la without c ahadow of foundation In truth.

The Cotto.v CffirffinMiel proposes to lay an

of SIOO per head on slaves Introduced from Stab

remaining In theold Union, hoping by this means to drii

Virginia and Mary Laad InW tho

I will be remembered by our rcadei

lb ihu hill series of Anti-Slavery Co:

ies of Central and Western New York, lhat at Utica

i Board of Directors of the Mechanics' Association

led to violate their contract, made by n duly nuihor

d agent, renting Mechanics' Hall for tho Ant!-

ivory Convention. Thus, in so far as they could, did

they prevent tho holdingof tho Convention— their action

mulatlng tlie mob by which Utica woa difgraeed. On

Wednesday evening, tho 27th ult, Mr. George W. Curtis

are under the ausplcesof tbe Utica Mechanics'

i, in thecourse of which, vtc arc glad to learn,

rata and Board of Directors were very justly

and fittingly rebuked. A correspondent, writing from

Plica under data of Feb. 28. alluding to Mr. Curtls'i

" Mr. Curtis last evening gave ua a glerious vindica

lion of iho right of free speech. Il waa just auch a sor

mon ni this people needed, lie told them that vvlisi

ihey struck n blow at free, speech they aimed a blow at

tho heart of the Commonwealth—whether il waa dot

in Boston, Albany, or In fjtica. I did enjoy seeing tl

members of the Associa Lion and tho iontigntora of tl

mob writhe under his plain preaching. Il was a ca]

tal thing for them to invite him here to giro them t!

reproof they deserved.

Be said ho cared not howinflammatory.aodltiousi

untimely Ihey might thlall any doctrine was, every

will dtsiroy land values at

lo the new Stale.

Good Dehaviob.—Micolor, rccenlly appointed i

iralor of Ihe Government

I trade, and prove

S. Cock-burn, a

Bio BcalNCas,—The people of Mobile tire inclined" " "

"n livery -n,.li hv, ,i, I, dcarlv evlnQ. '"

lie: f.il.u'vinj; ...|.l|. .nee '.villi Civ CoIn .V'fho'nnn

Ivanla be changed lo Montgomery meet."CEsrena of New Jeeset.—Eiam Slaves lefi

9ccrelary of Stole of Now Jersey on Tuesday presi

colored, end .-igiu

lleses, one! hi Morris1

.

Hunterdon County, tl

Hesbv W*t-in BEErriErL—Thir dialbguiiuetl divii

arrive,:) In Inv.ti fium the E.i-.t m,- neeiiuiS- :>)-.: tini:

:. at.: \r : I-

IVedee du. . .ei,in;. He iv

Ued or perplexed by the ui

made by the Lcctu

_ ufiheli

dltk.n would he Of

prised"

ih-T.—Those who haveiblyoti iho death penalty

engibofi

^d'hytioop- -.. :. -i; -. ..Ie..' nre.-i.-i. ef !'. '.!!: ...-nl.inetit In Ii * rlehl .lire.' ,.n.

A Sri.?Vthe sorloe.«. th|,,kl„e menrt (««»»••«.*evidently opposed to the pillow,..

^,?,".'. :'.

l

^.,k*J«.l

*l';

r.a.i'.

lefuslvel

. e- gallon;.

,1, Mr. Aniel'i hi

jo Irlcd.

i wriuen tMtlmonv„ i, nnd Rhode Island,

iiirely succeuful In ihoio[uthoril'les ofMichigan

1tn[t^'orlTi«eii^;,-.., ,.-.... fJeiie.ii.ir;, nniuherofpiiraor--"

'o'n~thelr trials has creeled very

Tihcirgnllt.

I.eeesi-ri a

:[ - ''-id'

Ibelieve t

o proietn law, wilb somi

Bcameiitc. Thopooplot

i,,:.]-:.-el r.

of ihe high civil

'c'lim'at o'ofCan ii'd a.- JJo iton Coiu-fer.

RETettuilO.'' asD BeooaHT.— It 11 put forth a

Oheiokce nation oi.,.lt n ,., hrfin atluirifd il.Jl '. . i.n.:t-.:cc nmi.-u u-....j .-.

m'i vi.i.' hit,, i-o'. lev., ,.-.....:!.::...

..dmilied; 111! ILe Intel., I ...ui;. inch ^ e. irodhl 0. Mll-

ii., i.,.. iri.inijfii _ ". " i- ' ' - :--vein .„-.- vil.enih. rcpndlatcdnot O" 1 - '"

debt Itself. She now propoiel io ' or

i roll oo the boll of secession. Wo lb

,o toven per vent., bni Ii might as

a waul! toTendl Ai the same timemu-ople of elcfit counties hi that State,Tp,,l i.einvcde-iiinioorconia

Mra. Whitman,

CoHtdlani by Aaron if. PoimC.

rt VaJJjyy, K. T„

Fairfield,

G. W. Cule. FalrBcld, K. Y.," V. Rice, " -

Cclleeflonj It/ Susan B. Antiicny.

Rochester," . - - • - il

Utica, N. >'., J. Anna Bice 51, Job Porior S3, J. C.

Long SS. Thus. Williams ii, olhern D5c. 11

Borne, KI., «Oortlana, N. 1'., - - Ifi

Port ftron, S T, J. Mitchell S6 25. A. A. Arm-ttrong 52, Bohu Sowv-er .'Ue.. ethers ii 90, 12

Auburn. N.Y., IB

Albanv.N. V., Gerrlt Smith ilv. D narrower%2 60, B. R.lVun-i ij.Wrti. A. Lie'iUS6, Mrs.

IHdueiv :l.Su«nn Greenwco.l Sl.Ljdla Molt' * B.Anihjny S-5. others t-S 23, - IOC

"..; vr.-id.

been di spate btil

n ihelr cofllns, If »•

LoglihUghl tint, perhaps,oaiid it. llodemtcio give the expert-

HW,i niiuVl^-d^Cbri Trlbunr.

A ScaMDaWC-s Speecd.—Albany, March 1, 1661

i,r

r.,-.;.,,,, ,-,„j It, the Clinic "*-'-•. -rlntrfsMCCh

nallunnlpohtlci, .vhi-li v.ouldl.t

i-ia*k L r itni-.-siori rattle In thch

,*,e seme ul I. .-,[. t.;:. It "-'J ""'"'''I'-.w'bave"

n^nej'hMr^.M.itneehn,,

:eior^wn?thec.

I',,;"..-", „l'....., ie.i.-l lhe:r:-.i|...|-i -.!.. l--'e '

S? .?.?._'„„..„. a .'. us nroi>:nv. and iiiiislcd tti

ibe"rcbeTj

"fflgafSiPDemocratic Senator. X;

beg Tood tor th!

idnl/iveHe Ti.eire,in....-,/,

:

reeiu.

ih,,.t..'V elite,..-:: '-.' .- ,...-.

': r-»- ,!lV'r -' ':- * raa-roguci who are ler-.Hr.c thei 5i.'*.e {

attraction 1 Eorrowlii; money on Mlsils

a fe.rf--u;i... :--- 3the high re-of tho dema -regno

'b. left

teoki loth

ursordlnary speechhusqi

1 --ibody

_ _ still In

If this eipedlcnt

jo, uu.idsl Thcfii

i i;fui - jI:-i".^r::oL.:.der.r;,:eti.e. .....

Ilia mllLens of her repudiated obllgallo;

iiicnce. ta-ves creJulliv lo !u ui—

'

I, edntihotr- .elhui.h.ii let

heihalasi, but a repcdiioo of t

,uf— jVftnn*-

Ds. BELiOWE.—A correspondent of the Bolton ft

.-.,":..:. ,.;:.! .M "ended Rev. Dr. BehoivVs church

ST?»ifc on a recent Sabbath morning, ivrltes as I

£„ s.u .» .!»..[ «• if7;s

1;,, 1SI",

d,iS

!

tf,.nnl onestioo" briefly, bin In a sirain inni i iiaifl

dnm seen t. rpss.ed. He held up a vulame recently pub-

-;-;; . . :,._:

... ..,'.:,.;. .: _.. ..-. : ... ..--- .

..t lance v-.ilh:'

imarfe that tho speech wns evidently

r fll deserved praise for candid

mcihls nrgntnent with acocoicrmincrlv iircaim. Ho lovlanedrovldeoco In brlngvoB the negro

lucnco of Americiiii slavery, and

1 molt afford hltn to lenov.- that I

SfytM gotifea.

^vilvortiscuicitts.

T> O K S THE TIMES

,:.'

ff^tl .'n'.'i:; ..' '.

:

Ten, iv«=: f'J 1-i.ilHi.*

*'«. Olcdtari. Luiin. •

Page 4: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9

put down free discussion,

iVuth iv.tli'l! .-hull we

., ,, r ,,,,., whelmed by UV.r

Ll„l,M! Shall we shr.uk

... Paradise. There it i

nnnol, Iho work of the. -. .

-> im pointing conducted, as do

Bologna of a pteoionB

,dli,n„ch f"'"'^ ^ i,,,,,,

i

, ior." •"•" »u"B"covered with bud.

,r Lb the molten,)'

duiicnte leaves, si

oppli.i.i.l Lis

-dully - v 111.)

'.,' "

Vie," wb.-ri- 'h.v <<« iVrllim-itli

' ,','[.., i,.-n l- ai .l'ili..' Iberry. The

-,'lv have now onimenced the

i dnv by Jay the lwif incronMa

,- nl- „ -.1 i.u.i-ible miles, and then

'I" '-,.!'-"

i A re.' of a week thc-y nlta.t:"' .''',"

".,. i. in |. ii.th. and havoio Ih: trans

''"' '''

|

,'

) , 2 ,,i doublu Iho lia; oftha rim ones

Mf

il 'll p'.L-PLIlt 'HI'I

l" J W 'fc 1,ftV ° ta<1 "'

;;™1 ''w'bil-t H» forw" has boon busy >r

....uedy.,,- whiii iliimiiuf* <»" W,o;

,*s ""J, ,V^h-,r,T,. tin,.h,"iiiK ri?

:.l,,..Wl,Uor,aMhdU

ofold^d^l^.mSberrytr^; whde the roofing

1,'um,' ihe .-,-ilib.ji of il>" iieasimf. .....

,'„„„ I, ..(.;<[..,! i.T atw-U mill 10...

,,i Int.. (hut, wonderful .inpro.cu.enis hav,

,.,„,,,. uoiml I...V.-T..-.I. t«-.:t...r. - !.«' l'-- "*

.;,,„ of European unichm-ry At out. at ui"

[g too WiWlt lornble massacres in lira Lahnnoi,.-

faimtert's Journo!.

;XECDOTE~OF TILE EMPEROR JOSEPB

t.Sillc, and held a lengl ..-i.e., ,

hun from" hi. Ii he concluded that he will

1well-educated person. Uc therefore taid

You eao bo of use to mo ;your house mid p

.,,-,, ,,,[,1 I Huiiiol give them bail, lo you, mm,.

,1 1 could it would not I"- ih'-s liable, l-.r lb-

,j ii(-, h „ „,,i,],.„,;n, would follow you.nndr-" 1 --

yim.iiil.Hi>].. Hut this! will do: IwdlgKcyon

,',,, 1,. v

,:,,Mu!t..ili..'(''bi.-'olyoi l rl..,J i,.ri.|--i-iy,r,,,..

',.!(,,. ,.,„.!„ g..vi-,i,.-.rotU^ia l l>Tingihi.tyoi

hi'viiiid "II

mr^o, would bo Die fearful rcaulia

,=| ,.p,..eh forever to 1... crushed. Mar,

tions tyrannized over, altars dc-ccrtmed

... defiled" would make a Pandemonium

?',.', I I..,,...,-" .1 .'' '.'-.": '" l".,

Shst'Jrs - rfflrSy - I ..'an-l l'-'l m, ...ulemed for now rr.

he I"ilwi ol aliens M froui .he lips ot ......

Bhuekks of boodog" from fl* prew. BoyalOIM- ..ud

to reslorc.lid th. i

li',''i,ui^',H h-KNifd tr-.-lv If sii.-nk rind

„„;... ,"'"",;'";

il

;;

M' ;;;„,;' J

,l,

"r1

'; ;;, ,l..f, I l-.,..u 1..i!.»wii

;

k-

,.L.,«ill tr-'nt oil nn-..n;i=. m^i.m.ii^.^ ,,.,.! ....u^y ,r

^ ^. ^^ ^^ |il:1| ..,„,,„ nnli lorjB|

mncnifiiid the daogera which tittendcu

1f, l»-.f-hr.nd..t ill" l-'tiS. 1

hHuiaclvea'

1 "..",... ..,..:. l.„.r. ,1 ,,l (,...!.. in : ll"".

Fd

r ,ir, IV. r on th" *"<> I ' wlllKt ""' w- orola

L, ,.U,,i U allv proi^L'tol Iron; rain ot ''" W!:-

"'

o r l.'url.it..- r,T .ii- ri Ir-.' ,,.,nl. t

£int which n nita, I hj Jh« »f«Otk struct.

fhe Hides of the kho..k. The .r..en..r .™« - -

r^ies ot'.t.,..l n,,i,,,rk. and ri.e one -tbove

anXt tier, ..LV tin <—'-^"""e' '^tizo of the kloot. tl,, L.vW l.-ne. atW two lect

m,.l Hi,- uwiennoat aho.it a foot Iron

',..,, «)j,.|vti are railed l>nuinn<, and

|„.ir i.'inih'T i- f. ikuind the wealth ol

'.,[ , ,, u,i ' .il'i-ilk llii-v will f.ro-

,, ,, \.',.: i,.. p:.rli..,ilnr mullwrn-

uI'Um'.m'' in. ir'uii.", in 'i^iiiniii^, r.'gulate it-

and n hall nouuds Ki.glifh.

J

//. OF AVSTRJ.

",1 i" rannv'.l miviHtrales. llint "iak..- ones nan

ulnl mi ."iid "Th.'lollTuving. however, iHtoointereat

''"tt'V,.'.T,C7,'obWo

t

Bepli travelled throngh hisdoLmeye a of the

mis ohje.'l he

.ib.u.biirfa™..«s»~™.vf" l

> '";:;:„„„.ffitm,«n.l|! »" I..e«»-"-" '"'.

,;

STh7b^.StataX".h.v»ta..rfVi»

"-. -,', "h ;i-

,i "i -- :

i

,:t "- ''

,,;,. I,,,!,. .,t...t4r,^,mb 1m. l.t|,lii.l

. _.. ^n: *l„I „ ,. llin- li^'ii^ '1 1

ewOUl tintbur yamjf my words, .0,1 oiny

Dim, would bnvo tbiuik"d tin- l.m

will, o kindly nod, [in^odTtTHTan Time,

„odr

^ U,lorg7tn

TUB CAPTURE OF PEKhV.

I...,,iv. 1- .I'- .-'' J """"""" ! '">

1 . 1. .";., ,. I-. ll.w , ' th- rl.-l.l-. I...V

inn expt'.-t ;bul "lien loaiplilin^ ntv Ireelv

;;:,';;':; iv ..L.-.i.-i < m ^ «foru,ed,!hen

,,he iJimirt bound of civil fiberi* Ihnt «

ilo in which the Cttnu ot Andersoi

mt'iitioi.e'l, Ijjrd 1

US ivhieh have been uumi™« "

,hle member for Dudley I tliiok 1

bitalinc how the case which ho hn-

notice actually slJindti. My nobh

,f Newi'JisUe wrote, on the 3th o

y, to mo novernor-Uenern. of-Cana.la lo W]

J was not lo surreoder Anderson (cheers) n

..lited Slatea until Iil had i-.-teived Ir-Jtn II'-

jirtiestv'H goveriit..ent iif-itive in-.tnietious lo do fr

lh,...r hear) Vi. i"i|.f'Si. n. ^'.f rally prevails tlm

,. \i^J„ ,,r u. 1 hv Hie Court of Queen

ll,.„.l, .1. Canada kc.M have ll.e elleet of render.n

„ „ L,, ,,arv Hi". Antler,...,, should be fiven ,,|i; In

t ha- in 'renliiv no bearing upon that point, Io. T

whether it be rijlil o. uron^.. it t-imply amoui. s lo

hs thai AnderV.,! «,« ..... lo I-,; taken onto the

,-iHto.K i» '"h lie hnplK-ucd to be placed. Wl

the liovcrnor-Geneml ol Lanndn. not with th

af Queen's laricli, i»*U tin' "lln ' nl l»-uii»s «

lor hia surrender wlmu ar.pli. utiuii

is made (hear, hear). It

Tratlling in this manner tbrough »W^:

soiled they mroU™ u,;..u ihe.r brio ed

h

„. r !, r ,, rll w". ..nll.ocBfly.

Limi„l.einbcd, TlieBtreals-

bVht EoiMi

C

ror"StnnSi""o™ook « .hem while the,

fD

T'kcd Xark,:., <

.:, lb >'

V'

^'"I'Tr.-'while'ai

y ui.L helievdl

being cleaned

the roof.

Pl""

Toll,.-! ,niter ll'-c

hut t

cpirntion of two weeks

„• worms are removeu. and spread upon the

r»iw- ..h--.ve aibele.l ". whi.-!. nave nrst been enre-

- „;J ;,„|-,|,i, : |: |, I,,,.-] trill, .nylLerrv leaves, to pre-

„ lie worn,- from M'hnp ihr,,,,^,- There » no

fcivr or tlieir stray i"S over ih, si.L-s.or clinih.iip rroio

J„„ ,),.|| i,.t 'iiit.ih.r; Mil!,-w.n,.s are .iHlnit

h- t-l,.ii,f <-rfiti.r.> and will never of then

':.'.'!• i pO '

'

,

'

".,,. !,.„ i„ --.,. tod... toobot capucilio..

'

;,....t i,„-,l,l.i>. ,..,.....rll«tl.„dtl.o"

p»rf ot item, rapidiJIy tbt Gn«H look

-.' .„:„;. ,,... uf, hat ll,.' ivonni are

the old mnt1 his autVeriiig .en it i.

„1 pali.-ii. .'

- What e-tn '.« have done that he should have to

,,rn, tin heavy ehain and b.ilUt < ^^^r :,-.v,ih,n Inuisfll.- I would net take bun for a

u.jrderer or rleapcr iriminal of any kind, un-

'.',',[' I, vile -,. rs.,f, who had gone away, ho

tup to him and „..!. " VV bat have you done, old

„ tl'tn „,„ are tin: old* <.»e who farri.-n aht.ut a

'

,d bulleff" The sound ol the «,..'"";"" • the old

Nlso-rO, China, December 1, 18G0.

1\,E allied arm,, having lin-.llv lj.r.v.1 ibe.r way i

Pekin, driven Ihe l.,n|,r,*r Hon. L.« palace, deva

tnted several c tit;-, aaeke.l and burnt otto ot Ui.

m;..rinl„,;de in-T--'^''V^T™uidi'iSfheVeoulduse nn-l .h«r g « hat .l.ey eould Ml

p.„-,o.e have mireee.letl „, wi-euehing Iron, m, linpe

ri,ir.-oniuii---sii."er (I'""™ h ""i:i '-'"nni'li"""- nl11

Tritis wliiel. have bn:n dictated by the conqueror, al

the point of the bayonet- , p.:i|,,,v iueideiitm.-.i'iie.-i.-l wiili the capture- ol icinn

nnl | the ,l,,lri,etion nl .1,1 ."If^ J» ?™"!^ ^- •l.-restiiin. Alter leavnig I.uidxn willi it.

was cuatomnry to send out n narty o recoti-

ud to aecora a camping e rouii(l lor Uie allied

forees: The !—,„ th,.- .-»1-1-);;|

''^ ^wThVettag of truce, and pnierall* " '

V,, ,h.

'

r .

local authorities ol Ihe .own.- n. ; win I, I,

a .m

i-;ij ... |.a L -s ...r 10 en. .imp. -Ml-r-"' -'""^

nrv ground and obBorunc thi i •'

|

"mi'nlry, thete per^n.- ivouhl r.'..',•

'

- '^"V ''.

., 1 „1,„( the aruiv fli I- 1 '"e '" " ',

'

-

rround. One of tli--*" panic. et-uMtjiu^

„„„„v ,,,-,,,,. ,1. all, wa- -ipl.it-...II- ','-.'_"

an'aamiv. The pan; wmi retui-nuig lo hi ... •r f a creed or a eonBu . -

,, ( , r lt.,„i,,. ^I'C.ed a convenient ,at.,p. a,, -.,,„,-,,„. utitl.nrilv of a et.v.-n.n.fiit loo ,.-.-

I,,., ih- i..!*an.,u.. troops, on ihe i„ > i"".l.j

1

, !kl ,„ )„. , ,,,.1 v*,il, iv,.r. Is ..I .n.,„try

11 „ svtT- ti.ter.-.-pn,! I.y a il.-taehineni ....

j.ang-t -,„ - > •; ^ ^ „„ a„ , ,|d [.l-rtj-lov,

[,„.:,„. „ r „,v. who carried them before the com- ^ '^^ .,,,]i(|1]

,., T ilU , b , ,ui„ln ol d.Ht.uie ":

laander-in-eduef. . „ .

,,., j,. ,., play' upon Ihe earth, so truth hi

The leader of thia party was one flan .„,„ v,„ itHlom

Thi- [ii-iii™ c... iue ,-ne. I in the mailer

\rr.,w. ,vbiel, led 10 the la.,1 A„-I*ll"

. _„.,! I'I. i,„. L ,. li,l.',,l-t, ,- "fli IL

WHEELER i WILSONS s^f,

J^°D^a 'JiES '

"KuMhere be those culling themselves wise who,

,

(

l

l'""l,a.re.l ,|„,l,v ."H.and the am bit ion

::.'.: ".:.'. ..:V.v.:.:-..', :,::v..

the variety of iin.hr.-ttan.lu,--. bi I ihi di

willa and BrJcetionfl Iit is not ue »«»

'"'„„„."—s

";" rv.s°

I u'.ire served an. Iour iulere«ts

"''"'"'""''"l'"".',

1

,!.! tl.e'r.' ,- „o cur.' for us but pioty,re pre„er*e,l, .« I th r

_ ^ _ whw lh( ,

y

V ' k "

v.,,l„,i a.,, nia.li- free by God's liberating

lr.' ,„.| , nrint'- Bll-omlwiuiim; love-

vljHisan.l ,|eii.i.i;.^ut^. hrivtue no

trull, and Got!, tremble for the

diet, on., ol ll"'

in Canada, or

conduct piirnui

which has bcei

IV, th n

.-ri1W./J"m,"M',

iviug the ^

jraon should be

.,, f.,i|li 111 litlth "I'. I'""I. "vaautv .w.

rdi.-iou and inoraU, mid prophesy of it

.hen they hear free speech ;they deem I

' A „ .. i- hi, .il, ,„ il. nil..'- ol

tliain au-i [..tueti •»•; ~j™.gentle and full of pity that the i

broom, and, looking smilingly n

_... .. r_nn.«.T. 1'n.ni dm nrovm

ol the:

fortnight i

ha.- the j--

.ae oiiice*, »j..i.,

a freeman, from too province ol Comoro,round

"about my l.ttie ,,,,. n, h- tie I la o'^ toon

"cwiahed to ge. pos-.e-s.-ion ol mi lariu.nut

: sell it because

children', Ihe cous...[ueii.

.

possible way, * '! ''. '• '

w'i-lt. .1 l.

,i' the ha. ha

.1,, li.^lves lo domestL ,,_.

oacli maturity, the appetite of

prodigious, and early anil late

i or lopping down huge branched

I what was a verdunt and beau

n some bi'k weeks before, is now n

,k.i,,„.^ of l.-alle" stems mill branches. 1 ul «

.-oiit„.ni,il is tl," . innate, an. I -o l.-rtile the sod, that u

less" than .. monlh afterwards, fresh sprouh?

thick is

loling-

again:

with tender le o'lhal

at'out the hrnnehea, that the

'iiess how recently lliey had

be Grat loaves in winter begin

m i a",iin denuded of then

, ,,-t.tln. branches arc spared

L-d by hand, and stored n[

would oil,

1 hoped to find so

:d lo, but one day

i front of my door,

a'.lWl. I In

. ,.„,pl.,y-

nstoily

had a

Uii-.ii To prinon, where I lay; B

which lime the form ofn tna

iv ru> coudetnued to be inipris

;ifo and children were tunic

.riven into wretehe.liin-.-n-

.0 my hiatory I" " But » it

'

sternly, shivering with h.-rr t

1 other- 1 blowing in his generous b off.

The brandies lopped oil' at first form a ,„ [,;„, sorrowfully and nan

vJ1,i and plentiful supply of firewood for the peasant'sj

posaiblyjl'iMi.e k. uiak.^tiii-

"The third ami laat soame •

the sii'iial for the peasaut '

__.._. .... .......l, l,i-u-liw.i,jd

-I of the won

„,l 111 the.

much brushwood as h

; months, at the end of

wuh gone through, and

;5

.So\S=^.ntei»g=^

',',,„,. ,-,i, i ...l.-. (-liH-si'i,hf'.vever, chose to regard

i ],„ |,,ri* a- spi.-,. "nd treated them with

,., ,1 iC iv"; 1M„,.leo,iht,,di,ieo,..

'.VKi-'an.l -,,l.t|,vn--.l to iu.l,gn,ti.'-=. U«l Llpu

-Miaaded the return of these pemotis before opening

^botefof the party, one of whom is Mr. Partes,

M-.r.„i,Ti,,l- t/ev.iMen.1 bo-lies. nn.«*- thorn T.

i IWll.v, sneeial ,-orresp..i,dei,t nl the London

-, ,„-, W [>.' .•soriua.i. «««'-*' .' tl"' 1;r ' LISU ^g 1

, shai.-hai. and Lieutenant Anth-r-f.n el h

"t r .turned 'I hnf at.' stud to be still .—-

!,'^'"au.l it i" believed lli.'V were beheaded by order

,Planar general "ho had been wounded at_ Ihe

|„„th. ..t 'l-ing-ehou The Chinese government I, lo

„,,, nmniai u„A, to Ihe friends- ol these persons as

.... In P ,,oi.b,i,.„t lor lb,» lit ,. iml ,«U •'••

i,|ii.r. ,1" , ami so , -„!,l,..l.v l,.t-i,i-iiig and pr.-l.a,.l-.,.e.

itircngib. Let her and lalsehood

, huit, whiih n plunder.

n.lie il.r a lig

„ ...Jrval, Ihe

Irnnnp-arenlgohleii. .l..r.a„.l the „„„„. ,,t '

'^^"^^in. a.'i.in, h.i Ih" urst tune ,n lQe' [

',

..igralon disposition. I. p they crawl neUvcl, over

Trv-Lw. -lr.,.-,, the next, until each one bna

g the twigs lor Ibr g

with

inlgruior* 'i.--i' .'--'

ibis t.iainble, down Ih

selected n fitting spot ii „

!,„ coco lU'l very wonderlu. ...

ui.etv and care with which tl.-> »

selves that iuipenetrable te.uii

ihe cocoon, i say very wond. n

them, bul the peasant wont ul.....

F.cil Kw is his dreadlnl ogis-.

->.

Uis, he locks Ihe door, and tltngM

oulsi.lea huge mass ot -day Iro

divines whctlier ihe harve.-it will

,,,h„nvi-.'.Ifthe.layadhercsea,

n„ien- il il drops oil parlli.a bad

Ms.'olbegro.uul.it.sdestruetioa

And now, whilst Ihe 1ml bis.tmu, ,.„,,.„ ....

hard a! work weaving their own w.nding-sheelM, the.

^antrv are uol ot,.- whit less butty preparing

fu? horn a cruel death. Huge, anluiue-look.ng. du«ly

old wheels, win..:!, have been hidden lor .lie his

melve .noiitlis.ar.- l,..,it:h. lo ligh' ^ain.aud brushed

T 'Xr'i^^r^VnKlh8srft

\"i" „ „||, .ir,, iratm set up, and Ihe peasants

't , ,

' ri ,.

'. 1 - a.lv against the first day of

le way c-

deep siph.

"What is tl

asked tilt: hrKr

.

of the governor of jour prison 1"

"Oh, sir! do me a favor, -"-

tlthis r rctur

t]ied up hard by

,p -vdUbiB itlick ra... -..:! ^.l--.-<^, ^-•-

lre a.-a;t,, ...u bin' fellow, .bt.tter,,,|i away y.

,,„„. ii,,,,,,.'! ol ivorking! Have yon louod anotl

soft-hearted fool willing lo listen to you,- «r,,'(at,. ...

..n.l ,.,i,ii.l'.iiits' I'.'i-haps you would like another

ttitv lad,, s, and a cba.uaud bullet tor tbeolber leg I

The man was now boiling with rage and anger, and

:„..,;„ r,.,,.-.l his Mi.k i„si.iLcil,c old man.

"The Kinperor parried tin, stroke with hia

,.. Mi,l of the oversee. Hew over his head.

.pirrahl"e«.-lainied he in a passion, " who gave

you « right to interfere with an .jlikitd in the discharge

'hia duly! 1 will arrest you, airl"

Th- Euilrtror slowly unbuttoned hi.- overcoat, a,

-bowed lo tin' enrage. I ..verseer a shilling slar. an

tiled by .be black doubl, -headed ea^le of Au-tri

,s ti.u..^.. -,———tthiti Iho pah.,,' "1 the recent Might of ™ <>,-

owner. The French had the honor of commencing

Iho Back. ,,1 i „„ „r the mostThis pnltl.-'e is r.:p...rl.-.l to have i.i-en ni in-

b, iiulifulkiiul. Tie- ground- lfc I »' llol. - wer.- I.ntl

out in the »w t

l

»' ,« l

;;;;V

,

^ llV"

,

':t',l-?

[.d.- and

oVgreTt autupuii", an.l beauty all of which has l.eeu

jSy^r^^l^l'el'nel^ilunder.thelat.et -b s . bat lb. .r a lies got a-

ion's share of .he -spoils. An Lnglisb geni Ic, i n w,

was ot, Ihe spot thus .l,-s...,l.es the fecue :"After the

French had enjoyed a day's ' looting. »'«">' ."'"'"

olliecrs ll.ercb. making large b-iiuiits, the General

gave permission to thoTSritish olhccrs lo brin

;; Miuei, us lik-d- M«»)- "'»*• f "" 1

nieces of gold, worth l„mdr..',ls ol pounds. A magin-

!; ...dd claret jug, .ifClun.-sc inaiuilaelnre, vijlu.d

rling, " wa.- tak, -n a - tie' lool- I**

in. ....a .1i'm |w itl. ombroidery of uncuin-

found and approTivinled. Pide

overed with cunous old books

,, Lare". ro - it-n-alli Hll'-.l

nnu arueie= ul *...« i-;

'rgi, ™™. ^. ....

wi.b richesl silks and satins and e-urioMti ...

siitins were used by the iroop, as .addle ,loih-. a

bla,.kets,aud were e'ven slrewn on tluigrouu, benca h

the tenia as carjiets, or were vvanlonij tiampic

underfoot. , . . ,i „

l|„. i [llln .ri,d I...1-. ban.l'.i- was enteu'l^

n^^ ^ ^

field, we tlo inin

ti:, ,„;.,loul,t her sirengin .- -. - »-

mmwmmwho envv and oppose, if » come not lirst

,

„„,.,;? ivb-ii.i i .,. -.;',.,..

-., btbor „, ,b. d.-l -,,,.,„„

'" ,"." '-" '".-, . ., „., ,!., .,.ii..,.i

t..|-,l. b- I-II--II.-"-,' -' .oik, ,.

nod defatted nil ,.,.|. '"- ^ |||v ;in lA

,:,,,. '.Iiiil ot iirj.iii'-'i.. I"' ". 0|,po„o.l lb™ lo

.bulk to try nnibn.l «""> k--|. it borrow b.idm.

of "o'oSii w im- il, L--.it-.- --> .J P"». """B':

,-,, r „.,- again-, her power;give her but ,o,.m, and

,„„! l.iudher when -l,..sle.|.i..!...r .hense |"»l.

,, , r ,„. as the ohl 1'reiie,,-. did, »i» =!''* -'e-

!"ElHnSl.tb«1

TyJrivii," fer*.il.l* to padh-k errors l.p you are .a

'. ,:.,;,,„,. ,.. it-nth h.r.lH If, too.erroradanger ol luipn-c.

^ ^ ^ lrlllll.. wi|| they alike

,d South, nto men. who,

mil the Union, do or

jf the press cry

,]|0'

; nt lo Ibis en u ii try n ('"' ' •. —*•' "":"

luld not be sent through lb-' Auieriean i.-rri.o,

;

„[ that Ihe wiit, ll,er,.'lb.v. ,a„,n,t b- e>.- old i".

„- owning ol our other lute of eouiinuuication witl

i,i,.i.Ii has taken place. .

"l ILUlv! „l,,.,h.,il.piite concur with my honorabl

Wend who l,asJ,,s.,p,.l.i,,.,n.eg"r.l... -bat por ,,,

-lheAshl.urt.,,.11 ; wbi, .i-t.hit-to.b.s."! ,o.i

„ imperleet and i,,,„„.:ll^,l,l.;

thear I, ar - Isck-ur a.s .lav, that a .runinal ought to bo elan

, ,„.,.,-;.,*„ an ae.-us;ano.. hat

,.'.» t tin- o lien. CHiueii. e.l in

,c7„y, .i.el Iha' th*cir.un,s-ar,.]

.s alleyd as

.,.,.,„.[-, L.|)4,iiel..i- his Mirieudi-r should be s

". show thai lie would he liable i- he prosed.,-.

I, ,,., IV ,U, .vbi.b li.-

Mai.,ls,.],arge.la..-....-r.l.ng

,o laws of the land in which he happened lo be

iiflny miiiln, p.-.-1'eeih i'i-'" """i

1 '" ,, ";" 1

;

rl "

goveTnme'nt inust' b,,..- tl, ;J ; f*B«d^ heir

ha ,. ,-tablish the fact thai Aiebrsou ha- .-oinini.l -d

,ui , lt,„., win. bile 1 i 'bis ..,entry coiiau.ulea

,,,,1,-r and give prortls aulbetent to sausly

Xhius.ice.-.l.h'pia.e.hatl ght to be i

iftod to be tried for lha. .....usalion. I will

ow cater into ihe question wheihet a tree man, who

kills in self-defence -„„„l„r ,altempU.

,

lo reduce

i a state ot -laiete, is rruflty tf»"""9P°5... iu-tifiable honuci.h'.or mur-ler ,

hni I thiok .

probable no English law-er would place the a

under the last-men tinned head. and,. ...at be so it

w

,,u |,o ,dear .hat no good case hies been made out lor

L surrender of Anuerson under the provisions of the

ity (cheers).

SELF-COSTUAidcTl,iS.; "1 Till: ClDLIi-

.....:!:L\!?,™1!i!::-Vi",,".i'/rH';l:'-

it f-ovoi

EELPEF'S '.JMPEKDING CRISIS"

mm PUBLIC HK f'

'' ; 5?J%Jsg£t&

of I'oniluoi

of richest silk uud sj

ihildrcn »el to work, denuding the brit

of baskets. Th™ ; -ilk harvest, i

It is a glorious and a happy right, in lhat pleasant

H.nlry al .his peculiar sea.-otiol the year, to witness

„. Bn.'ile lhat all nature s.enis lo iv.-ar. The whole

Titer.- b.

,hiirelusnis a

ncrance, or li

wl I'L, have.

T'de^rie,

:x:::rf her friends

and fetter sin.

the law ol retaliation,

thorn I'onnaitud creeds

they would not have

The idea oi the mere possibility

handing over an innocent black ....... .

,1, vi, ,,-,- -.. -i.u " 'I' -" - ' " '

,;,. 1..-.-1, „niv,-e°.lli 1 no nli agreed that .1 would

, i„i„rioi,s to our national eharader lo " ™„.|, ;,^„-,-,-i„„.".. ; , ,...,- ib.l.ty. lb-law.. .. ...

':,]"e,.|i,a".-l .]. rr.l.-s t i„estioa by ing,-

eouently cause-l a coiive)>tiiioi, u* tie iiohm

, ,.i We cannot sav that Lord Palmerstoll

'eiics to rest on Friday night, for no— lo.

isted :but be showed that the publ.

;;,h.,iec" was entirely justified. The i;overi.or-l,eiieral

SnT(dM ba:fon, a,... N-;-*r?f»piholdAu.lerst.n in h.s .-..--l* -..id ..» -r 1

S5=S3f . '

-

" ' J,iV.;, ii.lv ,!. .T...i;., c

ii-,.y.te ».)•'; -., „ -l,i..:-o ,-., robl,.-i-v for .l.-olui- bi. .lolb.is

;,..'. ,.i,.-.,.i....--i."t..-..iv. .i...-.' .ii- ".....-

,',',,.,. .|-„„.li-.i ii..-...'.,.ti-y ii..ir.. wo- :'

,i,ioi,.» llit piirt ot our l.w,.,r. ,o tb.iik Ibol

im,js,^Siy^«!

tst;>pSi.KExrCm"^ss„»-x^

- ,',:i

- 'fSKS,d

"this uioinent We.tniinslor Hall is almesl

„i„,„s tot 'ee. .ha< th,- Court et Queen,

,,,(, „, .aua.l.i has;.-.i...n a j„,lgini-i,. which cannot

: sustained before '"O^^^^l;!'*?1

^ 2T( ml ,

Th- l-restdent i. -.lav.-. iiiiniealttl to a,e ^e,u

„. ,„ r „,,p,.,„b,n.,. between tl.e l-iu.ed Mi. -s a

,..,( lb, Ian, i" regard lo the ease ol .he log.

,„ L- Vn.k-i>on. The =en«le went into .'<eeu.

-ssion uiioii I his eornsponde.ice, nnd ordered it

PABO.-ABNA H. r'°^|JiSu,u'"i

-rrjMi lH^ACOCK ..1L1 MTLil';

. ^ .^.l

'

'

'

"^

"„i", otto iloatnna and rituals

,",, , ,.|, ,'t'r think" for theni-

',| ',, p.., ,t tr.illl the current lh.--.lo-

;,,.., r ,,|,d. rlb,.-..lt...y,lo. pies. ion

, hiu'.-h' creeds. 1 do uot say that

true 1 do uot indorse their views,

v and vou too know, that Iho record

ivc'd for the most pari, is pure " '

man, they seek truth, .hey adv

il for tc.u'pei-ance; and ye. a bigoted

,,-:,„. Igii.e uiiiii-,..; .ensure, oic

ati^e and.lisfellowshipthem.

THE FAME.OF FEMALE PAINTERS.

rr..in TI..C»J«n[«iF«bru.ij.

remains of .he fame of dancers "ml

„„ ..ilh whose lianies the dictionaries su

ii]i; t„",a,.l.a f.inio..s,.,

.".s;

-.---". ihei-o.s "... '

but that of a sullied reputaOou and a nc' u depraved <••*•"

.,...» u „„^, . The whole I „ isifuLly around him, sael hull

i..lors of eoiintl.TM nwi.-j.-i- 1 „ v ;, un, of a rude and jtiliiinian

earth carpeted wuh ,-me- ;, ;„ ,l,m „> within tbeso walls!

nlv btspauyleil with tiny llowers of

.on* hues; gaud, luit-rtlies are ilnimg to and fro . TLll. !lJW „, ,lirT„„„y-

i

s tlml no o

m woodbine to woodbine; uuiHreca are in blot-' 1^1,15 gumi;,u'ihcy do not touch ii,

on. a nriint-- letter, written by an

t'.e. r !>a.- the great day of dcalruc-

., - ,,1 -,u,-l-- I,-- .-oMlinualli fr-.-ii'

tenriug the light of the sun. The

rounding piuisanlrv were nol nieir.;.!.

„„ 11abbran and

brtii... .o.y.u.1..,7;; ;;

,

'' ™i, .....

hang by iho side logins 1^ ^^ ^

:renL

ce?'and "nlenfPl«« Ma;

b."e-' U»»nin in her graceful portraits- Go .0 \«»aill' v '.'

......... .„- .I.„.n ..1 Are pre.-erv.

l..,ard «"-'"' r, o v— atel lb' - 11-.^ ''f-

^^

S*:^n^"'t'"i,.*|.iip»»S ,

." ond „.l di i.ll do, o. T... ..,. ..d

tliov care or do to the coot

id freedom die, nnd the

t ""' a'^bt"lhe free :

s.'udio for female pupil1 '. ., :.-: . 1,1 I... „,., -I... 1,

...lilies, and

01 joanof Are preserving .lie name

tj!,,.'. dau-bler. wbieli poslenly t,.,..-r would

kaowobadnolan.-bl-rar. .bau-lan-tnggiV-t.

a fao.eas lasting as the marble winch conse-

crales :t. It*')' '»u> Pvcn IT""1 "^S^

L m- cian- of the higbe-t onl-r, dance.. «» ,..-.

',,:,!!„„; :„„1 ,..|,ially uiinent k-.nale painter.. Only—'"on.als o| g.-niun tin*'

of the

mo THOSE WHO ABB ONWILLIHQ TOBpPEOBT

J. .suvBtT--ii*i

'

<

1'-:'\* 1 ;;;" .,',';'r',I^].'."-"","- ,

;<-

',":T

1"'

'it" -V"-!-» r' r'- I'l'l." -1 " .-" h*TilS:* "iS.B™

" - " „ .1,,. .„ ,„,happ', ..ui.,...i-i„..i,.,-.i:-"« -';""

;;,,;;,., ,,-,. „,..! ...- world toi,.,,^, >. i-" ,:..[.,„,, ,, ,,,.;,„„ r „„. -,,...,. -t---:

-..;:

-:

;;;;. :

•.:,:. .w-',' ", ' ,

;,- -. - . .iri„l-i-

' .«'»' t.*..* '"\. ",;

1,

!i;, ll

,'

l

,'|„, tare or do ... ,he -.u'rar I.

,1.. ,gl. r

; xm , lt ,;, -, -- ' ._'_ ;.;

''''• ll

'

,,.,.., i„ „,,!,, nt'ibe general. US works m art wh.1,lor i , ^^-^ |V(

.

i|,, [ib die, and the com- hat.,,

1 '' ^ ^ nU"^ t | 1K fin-l lo ope,, a [r^,*-. |G .-.. .,„..,...-,n,:-.-i '_„ -"'""

'-

"";: ,' '", ; S Jf J. ?S >'