4
JfeRmmT^ffi taitob. VOL, XXIII. NO, 23. NEW YORK, S^TURDA^ 'OCTOBER 18, 18G2 WHOLE NO.~1,lfi7, Rational ^.rti-£lHvwjj ^tmulanl, riTTii.iMHj. WE! RUI ,OS .-ATUIIDAy, UDSUICJ4 APiTI-SUTERI SHflKTV, PENNSYLVANIA ANTI-8LAVKRY SOCIETY, 10G XorOrTenlh Snd, Philadelphia. iii-s of the ,p|.".-ed to nun, whato-,-.-, ,^n *-.j-m which (bey were burn, the as rat", nod (lint by nature nil She trenta the negro as a tbe lights, ami properties ellen enclosing juliverlpiiui.s..ir rolailiin in unv i. buslnteu nlliilrs <.l Hi.- nap- r. should bo a'1 '' Selection*. .EAT/iMCIS FROM fill. 0. A. OROWJfS02T. miuudtiLity to tin; Aholith r Catholic brethren bnve_ gone'. Its fur in out I thnngtil tin Too ,.ni'y"nf Alc-rlci ' tin o knows nml unileratnnds 111 ircb knows that she is and very, and in favor of freodat their cwuj.IiH.ion or fit" "™ i tin.' niiiiy of tho cu ..rc free and ciual. H,i. nml » imji'i "Hi' "II !in individual ol Ihe ,u» negro is of lli" rate of Adam, created bv the huh" l.n.l, redeemed bj II.. .>mo Incur 'Savior. >i»il destined to .he same heaven im tin- whit.' "."»• She i"">»'.s no 'li^ren™ (o their moral and spii-ium! rcglns between white „.eo nnil black moil. Sin: bus fur belli Hit same baptismal, maxriftiw and burial service, the annie doctrine unrl Diond.lv, Hie -=" raii.orils, H"-' *""" .1.;.. .v,, >„„,,. ,-uniiniiii ihe same promise? _s the aamo privilege*, tbe same- hopes. She lakes hor'l.ovitcs nml consecrates her priests from both, ns sb- lids ib-m .|u:il,i"-d. Id tins very itry of our*, no full of prejudices against Ih- with large adioisluto of neg- „u3, through love who, In tbu onm. -•r tliil banner "i if In the Gospel and in llio ,.l.icll, during bloody contests—c . *»- "ilhor Lalnyotl Ihe groat tired IM'i Comtm - --'ft of us. Bh„ lo convert tbe if not (tbeoked bring about sects !i7 wo were among their inuiuiw^ "rr* n oor own apbere WO have done na much er man in the country, to act Csthoh nbolition movement. ,„, «,,'„! (]„• national question takes with ,'„,. ,,| tin slavery illinium- Wo would - ,.,,,• ,.,r union of llu'se S-iaies in ', - ivory nor would wo stiller the .,.., ., -,. destroyed lor the sake of pre- „, ,.,-ac V, I... urged by Ibo" of in.lopenden. ei-ntum-., Ji'ltrnced the 1 ,;i iLut BT.'iO.-jit boon, nest lo tbe . „i of IniTeppndeQCO, that nftn (renewed njinltiUHO) ; n procla- writo bis dhuio nigh in tbe annnls ut nil ages (continued nnnlnn-o). dorse thai beautiful proclamation ml who commtinda onr armies on- jlniniHton—(nplilHUBc)—a General eaat, feema lo eombino tbo OtlBrgv, ram' of youth with the nrndoni-e ami and who is to lead our artoica, il ry conclusive and final (applause). A &.N31ISLE rfEW OF TUB PRESIDENTS EDICT. burn nl" ilnvo miithei-s nltnrs. :ind St. Ao-un'- fnthers. w:n«rluinl)--. a negro. Wn hare oursulccs -lift ri negro "cvl on either >ut her mi&iooaries to Afr n,.,.r.,.'.- in Ii.t (nidi, "nil n'fUtly .-" '•' ,.r. falornlilv r^.-ivM U ,l,o k,n ? who gninteil em permission 10 convert Iiib 6ub]eela. ton c most pio:ts nil'' <krutni Oithoha ice hare . ,...,-1, irfivfuU-'A-Mkd negroes. The'momtmt it U seen Ibat the Cburcb holds Ihe ,M--..ro child ov,.. the bspiiMiial l..nt, poiiraonhia lieSd tbe baptismal wat.-r., ami ,nlrn,b,™ li.m into tl,c lii-euornlJi'ii it is -<<;" tlml -lie l,,.hl,- "... to It ,,.r„,T l,..iii the race of Ailrun, .baring Us its "iiiita ill privihsts. il.-i bopts, it.H eiorie*" If h" wure of n dill.ront nice, to bnpli'-e ., would be as iu,me,uii"i;. would lie as gninl a '.''""r.T.L.V-r'Li ihi.i tin.- ii'ircb ti'iiehci tb»t ni-i-ro "i« a 'iinn mi'l il.i-roloro. uh u. Ulan, the ill of nay other man. To onshivc bnu, tlu-n, m t^^nMiiiu'di-nc-.iihei-ey^n-.t.sb.on.lavon „,„n".i,. Tl.i* ii.".™* Ik- .[ueMmn .low H- ,,i|„ rights of mii.i,cli.i"oiit.^ Irmm it all .-mfi.t. - ions of color, nnd pule the negro nnd the wbtle tbe same category. eiice, the Church, though tolerating to a certain i, .ii nml i.ii.l-r iniiiii, ,...[iilil",i-. tin: hoMioj; •< LW is always actively an muantlpati upon which Is written 'Liberty.'" SPEECH OF I>. URAT7, RROWX- [Wo inlie Hie following Sim pawogoi ftoni n maslm iHUrtw bv U.'nuiT* Unows, ol St. niiln. bofurc thoflei „il l:i„i,„.l|..ill.n. Soiiki)' of ULaourl, Sept. 17.] eno-sL.ivF.av oeskiials. It ia, perhaps, the falo of dll revoluUuna invo ji,kr tw.inl .tu.'ij-'". [u k™* «lll,-"rv'l "I II"' "| r" ' tbo inherited repulM foregoing ti" -"" Bill." i»cast; wo du nut not yet ktww wbi..h „i, it win hi' fmiml to have fallen. It is a fear- irinv thut ha-i fiimpi, ruled th" Ir. .-doru or bomb ' -'- iDsterity '" "" 1U1 lIU" mm '"" i-»"i -...- urn- -if four million .! nr-n. Find then y^,,^.,.,.~ ..-- Conratiotifl, upon the ,|...'Mlion whether tbo tuulh, lire I worn will, thin .k-olaiin- war, will submit bomilintine li'ion of rending ccpre^ntn- o ConETO's hi-iiire die ntrt of January. I he haiLinesa or miseryof millions; black Kgypl;- a bright millennial "EufmniooTnnn worn linfli - r" sigh ,.,. I.,-(..r-.-VI- irt-ii-.K. wil-^.i.'ii V'l ''"- '•' .-''-.' - tin- lii-l'l ri.il.lv "!-.l vo.i in th..-' Hnirk.i. I"il", I'ifty 1-1^1 .'if l.ii.-ia.'-. ". v..,irb ;.. _ WLe.h-. uii^sU. .:.!..,.. ;„,., .".hi,, ,„,,. uh.l ill.[Hi- in tie- i. ! ?(,1l'--. w v «....,-..;.„ e'v','ryivhor.;'hurri!-,l mo into f.i'hy jieii-'anil ilie.i s the river to the forlirientirins. not ii.-rmiltinj: o make any preparnlion for e.imp life, lou hori.e thi- will, the ficcnstonfd |ialn'nce ol i-nce, and when un.k-T m(.r.' f(iv.,ral,le nu*piee.«, ,'iv.i 'r..e.:-iv.d cull the proteetinu due to a colB- Uu„ humanity, you have labored cheerfully and effectively. Co to your homes wilh tbo conscious- of hnving performed your duly, of ilcserniig, it do n.it n'eeivc, the proleelion of the law. arid ring with you (lie ernliind.i and respect of all honorable men. You hate learned to suffer and to ait, but in your hours of adversity remember th.it .be same f!od who baa numbered Ihe hairs of our headtt. and who watchta over even thn late of a ruw.is the Cod of your race as well ns mine. moat blond .vhe.h thin nation H n-.'v -l.-l'l"V erv pore, is an aiviul e-arnini; ol bew |,-..lul (o oppffsa tbe humblest being. Until shall again need your serv'uws, 1 bid Dutttoon ther. nirf.-i-.i-. lie- Me "it.-, il- Aei.oMe ,.i„-t ti.' nhicetosohlieraof the faith. And strange to -aj u baa over happened Unit eonj. ly with the p"'' " ii-m,mi.lion of die principle ol" (lie revolution --- jerilv i-ouline biill-h-nrte'lue-i have i,as?ed from -onnuand, ami victory hi.i r,.[.laeed dianster. Bo mueh is historic. We may lake comfort, lien lor L,,,, „f „U,,...v»n.,,.i™. ITo-lavi.rv ieneral, ,,t the bead of our at-miea are the result of pro- slavcry inlluence in ot.r niittonid eonneds, »l "' btMtaucy of Ihe government to procli.un ..lliualli lr,j distbi. puli. y of freedom baa kept ihem there. By no nuseibilily. however, can such, uvon if tbt ,utb. Wo t„.lu-,-.- .'lunneipalion is ary and a ptilin- ;.' i.ccc-"ity. J'ql-.i lUnm.-i ilifi .-...(./''.'-'. ''" .-It'-f.'l '''.'.'( .ticaUy »"i'A then' i n HUcb, Oven il iiit in possessed of the prestige of ir !1"-- ia ns naught TGent f ihe issues- which now lning el States. xSneban immense iifessioti of four million oi ;ht of properly, it was per- TW-\ victory ibis Ire- ,., ,l„. power of fresi- I ...ij ttatl well bo has o niuki ean'fully has ho tAtvi u farewell. AyOTBER BPBE0I1 UT DBS. 1UTVBEL. iImic -i'-ik t Hi'-: -."- '"' VVI1B h'1 ^' '" tncty. and 1 have K'tven sit is in my !" i-i disregHrdful Micbing., as ti in the 1. 1- 1 Stat.--, who have K«mi si it.i discipline, and so false to its avowedly vlolitla all lawa, Divine i.... cnlilled to anything u,"n lb hn-iian pity, aro at all entitled, in tbeir double tori, I" thnsUan fellow- ship, is a Liitle. Dirt)- 1jnesik.11 well worth the- con- sideration of every Chrisiinn i"itnr.t; nnd la Dr. Hnwks's No. Twelve— Tribune, Oct. 11. ir slavery will i it in this niter .,1 th, areu>n*ta'u:rs, jn-'fii. n "/ n'"" """* —' ",v -»-- qatstion of ax-mti/^tw; >•"' t'i'refore Jj-em ,1 r,ii- %*, and eren dangerous to conHnW our old hostility Tbe condilional lovalit-oi of the cxlreme Abolilion- idts, consiMinp of a lew hundreds, at most of 3 lew thousands of individuals, u.:iv he eenturable, but it Is far less to than the conditional loyaliBmoft.hu r Sr..,i..s, I..." liberty is more r.-sptetahle than bo mora easily e.vcnsod lor '--ir of liberty than on inaniipalioii of our_ Itonli.r ii bis deecy in ptay for the ilavcs. r-'pe I't'is l>--, gl"- '-!il"|,-'n'i!:iiii>""lia- j 11 ^ 1 i-l'own ihe view of tbe sub- i.-cth.ken'l.y ibe f.'hief I'nstor of the Hiurch. lor he ban just confermd a koighlahip on M. AugUHlm lo.bin,e.v|.r..s;,h f'.r Ins r ut admirable work on [be Abohlion of Slavery, lierclofore noticed .a this B«i,, while we are n-,1 aw„re that be has m,b- licly honored our illust.ion-- Archbishop |lluglc.,| for' his attack on the Abolitionists or Ins mistaken if slavery and tbe altlVO trade. ronduions il in favor nf property. You On the slavery ipjc present controversy— - re e.so.llcot Union man at , ,,ui- i'hillipaes and t'.sr ..olisl, livery; but as it it toremcD to their lib- iem or to keep them dcVu-ivcXefil.W.e a-'.i pun I.-h meet for crime, we hnveareai«ct for the Aboliiin.usis who would free tl:^MU r . /Vi L ^:b^e^sner'P Lmnpht of all u..i..t-..1- ". '^T'li.'.'li nllournatiir.A .. of "II -rccm vital .[ii 1 Mr. It <s 1«> wb0 „l„,Tncl ihe renioval ol l-r. niotu lion, the command of Ibc Department of the West-" measure. lo from the niorila of that lioiierfll. on e, „.li we pro- '- say that we have that hua proved with a „„ _.<) find ' "'''' ",'i '"!,el. I. i'.u'bii-' libcrlv fur catarrh, a 1lv.i,.i or regarded never to be admtrnl t." i- ''• " "' " ,f. ., ,,- „ii i„.i n .^ ]it ^ (1|..v ..,-,)rL|lllut ,,c-havc toTZ'i ler tb di.ionul >"^^ °C ***$> -whivh we have m It is idle, therefore, to » _liw!t(ioji!ils, tr'^a. in order I most gopraelicajly as fat ns going. Sttt tt^NaJinrraj, thkl gave bis vol command, which eecfo that he w that voted, at tl ntlnc parlisaBB for ...-_ nt il,., riibinel c 1..-II.- s hierallv ti .^"the last "member in th- i al -I ^^1^.^'^'Vnt with mititary nppoin .uiduioii'il Imnlisnioi ''"'" u,ul cannot have fur a W.ekli iirvs- of violated oath-lakini;, -ilities. or Order No. Threes, it halting advnncc-s and waste lo r DM?iXl3fli(dy *V»I It needs not thai 1 should insist how surely all such must give way before the forco of a public n mimci which, when once on tbo mrch, speedily- refuses to trust any with responsi- ilily who nro not born of the age. It whs just hiich a common Ibcghl ol" Ihe Long I'arliani.-nl lb,. en model" to llmi. tin... ami n >..-IM..ny- ncc"to tbem-lves,e.Mir] n? in stn.ei-.ty from tbo former and iti.pr„iiig sloieism and selt- S'lenbee on each other. It was a similar growth r.l i.ut.lt- opinion in [rniice lh"t n-t the guilloline "t work to keep account of lost battled with unsyru- mithi/iiig l.oncrals. Tbe lre,,uent question, then, of ! "- crisis is, how long, my countrymen, shall we nan for tbe "now model" and the " self-denying ordianneo " and the swilt pur.isb: 7UI- |iaFSIDKKl *S D—^ - iSsWstfi:«T»TSs i-.»V^:-:: ll -;':: .::::^ l S liei.l he he urage la not iu thebaic (/iu( h for States teverall). » ^ ^ ,„^„„„„/-,'« prne- Ohio was in i-....i-oi ,u, ^".''l'-'.,' 1 ',,. l U i,,..l,,- out, p.W""" cjlysc. 1 I", ,, ,'.„„ ,.,, ,.|..J on '«' !', was bound, aa loyal to Ohio, to uusiain ml cause. , ^A,r;::,X:%b;t;r ricls,helmndnSe reasonable or uicb-riile liclily er .,- - ^ all limea. in all ,.1'ieeS and «i" ;;'"• Wllthe moral tn.-e.lom oi lhl "" ' ^ I( . enthusiasm that and, though v .niTwe tell the "afford to dispeuee with the pol.Ueal support or u. MeClellan. '„r™=".'.«'.":;.- ,;;:.;...> '- ':: ;;.:i„ ... u. '-i-»» l ,°"! * . e o„' i,.r...v'i:;. tfS! b ~s:™"»:~2r" - r - ,1-,,.,-t,, .ili„.i..-l..i.tele-n-hori.al 1,. in ii,. -'-.,! "--"'; " ;, ,1, ,.,,,[ i„,o our midst- U 'S "ol t - u'1 '," things are r.cin.d; lor so far a- .,...=.-» "I,-'I 111- Ii""- '" -- ,l1 '"il-i"i "">»'-.. "- nnuld be must lis el v I" ac.oni|.li-h Ibe ob|.-ct ,.. .=, the return of the disloyal Stales lo die I uion. ,.ttio previous lime has there been even a remote prcW.diiy that such an olh-r would be accepted: thcieis now hut a bare possibility, lurlhef delay w,-.ul.| .l,-,iiMle.-s fian- uuide the chime.! of savinr; the Union by such a measure still smaller. To have braii.iL-bV.I Una weapon, as a threat, while we were ditching on the t be knliiiuony, tiling "'To- the en insula or relrealirn- from the se, end disaster ol l.ul Run, would only have e.ieitcl the derision ol oui enoiuies- and we have good reason for believing tiiai thn nroelauiiiiii.il has bee, ,! layed much longer ilmn tias ituended, for want of tbe proper victory lo give it emphasis, and secure it a ,:oiisi,lerati,.,t. Ion .li.vs before the batllo ol Ai.iietr.iu. 1 msiden said thil such a liroel'iiu'.iion wf.nbl be like lb- lot"-/. ", ,,.„",,„:, omen mo uK.uiont 1m was fully ,'\i leUan'a vielory, hfl sat down to write '" nupiTK are making a great handle ,,;. ',' but there is nn inconsistency ,, il, ,( Villi" -.U, e.it.,|,leie a discomfiture or n i'lL-'l eiiieetalions, nliorded him just Ibe opporlumly r^n'addi'tion to this repulse. Ibe fact that vaster ,,„.,. ..,,.,, ln..,. .,.[ |,Leu nour.il upon the rebel Inn- ;,.,: ,l', L„,i; win-.'- S'lrihwuh their heavy amp, will lend powerfully to impress oar enemies wilh ibo nece-sity .ii to .|,'n,e at mi'V, it tnil cy.r ;„„.,„, it, '.he opportumt) of making a lvm.'ag.-oiis peace. The rresid..nl now says.suhstant.all to he hT2: "This is u,y las, oiler, feme bank to the ,d I will guarantee you all ihe pnnl.-.,.* y,n .„e„~icTuiid to OMTcise as Stale". have b'mv hand iho destiny of soinu four million of ' ...;__ a whum ,|„. C.ii.alini.i-.'n and tli- I'tws given lo my disposal; I oflor them lo you freely il von will only cease rebellion ; accept n " terms and v .ball be seemed to you oreyer. J your inalienable pmia-rtv, subject only lo such Uws as you yourselves may he. W only hope ofp?ese,.i„g .1.1- i-I- ;»'.«' I'" 1!".'"' "I""'" t -... vo.ir "..uclio" with the I. men continue lo repel alliance, as yon are now doing, and be assure. .1,17 17 .... enormous prke to pay fur l »; on i' h-' .::v,"..,V.,,.,v.-..i.» V feivmontfisneo. ive n rn- luol d.striiytd ibc rebel n... ind had taken Kiehmot.d [both "t :mve been dntiei, a division wt_ iprung up at the South. The purty wlio Iron, II,-.- tir-i iiiiponed seee^ion n."l ".ii "ii-. w.iul. have tunicl ..n il,.'. rabid s,e.-.^i.,i,i.,i.. nml sa„l. "ion have always Bind that Ihe North meant to violate oue intht.s ami free our slaves. Wo leave been at war ior uftcea nonths and they hnve not done so. And teo the .losilion ill." width youe ...lui^-eb havo l,rouEbt u». And the pence prvrt. .i-elil h..ve ** tbe ,.-eea.le„,.v - the South. W now all-is changed. Wo did not ii, Conr.ro--. Im- rui.-.e.l and ibo I'rcsnh-< '• THE COLONIZATION SCHEME. Skcbbmri SmrAno bos addressed a letter lo tbo Secretary of the Interior, slating that the spprehen- oas of Iho people ol the Centra] American State* n-i'ard to the prono.-. d colouiitalioii e.\|.edition, uo "been wrooght up to a panic by tbo efforts of Haiti tll-disyiosed persiins.wholuivo mi-snpres.inted s objects, and that it will be advisable, thoreion;, to odil'v 11." plans in regard lo its movements. A circular, bearing due Hot. 1. HCAbaa bwrnsent from Ihe Slate Depariment to the diplomatic repn'- sentalives of Ihe did. tent governments-, on the sub- ject ol negro colonisation. This is done because many persons or that rata, en press a dcs.re in ernt- grat. »nd many gov,-,-: e- nt.s l.v r c,,, ... 1 t - ,' j H .„ ,„ to superintend nil ,, ".,,... -, ,ti. 1 are a record of ago. ndiuon, and plana of embarkation and i,,m,i iinufi ii .-' be provided, wilh [uj.lalur.s that imd.es oeed mil 1"' se|ci- u vo)age, arid such party ol emigrants allowed a special agent of their nwu choice. I kills s n'li- Slaios. Tbo [smith his I North also. At the Nortu 11 you uc „liue, I... rill ins to rut an end to I I'lganli-d f". pro-iliiven and ib-l.-.ynl. ihall be allowed a special n^eni 01 me, that of tbe United Slates, if de.sin.d. ... tbe di-stinntion. they shall be provide- -— fortablo dwellings and lands, nnd he owneM. and inied by ihem, or lun.isbi d -ill,, lent emnloymtni lire. They shall be provided wilh clothing and medicines, nnd tbeir children educau.-d in elemeiilnry knowledge—these provisions lo conlinuo fur fivo years. It bs generalh- provid-d that the children shall not bo separated from pared. that the emi- grants and their posicriry shall li.rever bo free ; thai liberty of conscioi.ee and right ol property shall be guaranle.-d,and all privileges granted which shall beenioyed by tili/en, oi the country to which lb» ? go. Provision is also mad- against neglect and suf- 1 vcrty or sickness. No monop- ven (0 any country in tho mat- will be made- with whatever Thel the state of nflairs. We have n 1 hear that there has been son irso adopted by my predecessor reward to the negro pupulntir. lulkiog about I, talk I, .... lime i-r »«.. li mm im--. puMi'i' •;«>"-; -,- the nee... U the West we l.avo ju-oieeled wle.l raels of corn and ...ttun-^opcr!;- „, rel.-l, -,.ro- cciedlheui better tl,i"tlic.,-tr..u,,s"...u|.. lae - -Ml,- be-. L:--: cl;::,-.l -Oi and 1- -.1. .... Il- ,11,-,in logalher Tbere can L.c no re. m tlint. it wv I,,, ;,r,v « -lo," [.liuiali-n, her-, by Ihe labor of the negroes, and make it pr.tillable "" muat tio 90, am i.ellt ourselves at tHi.-irexpcn.se. U k yi-.u i,ll to .-..n-iiler ilus subject carefully ,oh btl-u'll.-. „s its importance demands. _ , _ 1,0 pr.Tlil-e- wilii deep inter era in nltoii'hi. it, and with general a TWELVE LITTLE DIRTY QUESTIONS. DANIEL S. DICKENSON'S VIEW .reck.) on thst it is unne'-es-sarily made Ihe pretext for icked and vau-.h-s rebellion by ihe Souibeni 'people, I care nol how soon 1 see it end. With no Abolition procliviii.s, in a nolitical sense, but the reverse 1 wonld not have gono out of my way to look up slavery in this conflict, or lo avoid slavery, would have treated l.ko any other element, tak- it when it wonld Mive us strengd. or weaken u and employed it a.-cordinglv. 1 have never , oeanenl sue.-., tbe ostbeak when I would .- touched th- iis.viiiution tor ilsclt' aloi.e, nor whet. . ..ould not have cut it from its moorings rn one hour if it would have aided in disposing ol the re- iou, and 1 would do iho same now. I hold the power broad enough to c ot lug i o know what, in tbe ml hpiseopal = 'e.-^y^ ion, and I . trembling ,n the balanc. .0 seu it csereised when i thoroughly don like „V,-,, -,-„., ii,ii'-.vi..^—..t-~'-. I-"""' -"- .-;, j .,„,( niv.ouiislast ',,11 th- f,«' firvy.j.-' r-bvll.-.i'!-.j-;-; ';t, ,.-..' raietbo slain ;...! n iib 11,,-,.- a--iti!l-..ii :. ... ,i iv..mil in iai "" " » , , __, „. „i.ii(,(i. J1VB IHO »S""I --~ iplaled tho bloody p , f (hi! i such nuld' not have made 1 .Vo .11 good laitll. -Is, the 1'res,- ... and tnys ., ..r,-;it ,1,1,1, .inline "1,,,.,-r Ol. il" -' Seiva.l lr-lil. r.. '-' ,'. ,„ r I- ill-, ..,,1-nl, ."'. nl.il 1 'kc.'i ."' ',,. ,,,... ii |Vr;7,V-U'!i. -: i "-' ; '"- : ^.:?Vlri£ :,1 of ibe LAHOVLA jo/ift. iwithaforct nn with him who an proofs!—pronfs super- South has been in a for thirty years there ".I'll .I... r.r.-., ii.-,lion "as made ... ;',,!::,...,,. j. .,'. •.- .>» -!- -- ,-,(! d,. -ill in bis [.owl-, e.oislsleti ,- ,„;,.- u, .am bis pledges .... lb- le-- liesiiaiu:.- in btlioving .- -, lemuor the 1-risident to win back.... I :.,, ,, b. fact that we have way-, ;'„ ilns vi -ii Hi- l.c-ndi.g. has aUvi.v=. l,L"«r" ' r ,;.n Th. ,-.ru .h made it a „,, ,„-,.-.. ,,l our ,^. ._^ ^^ lU|r 1;il,i(ra ''""t ,t" nrl it on-,ii- no. a. li..alll.tbey , ti. lie In l'ran.'ugi.<'.-.nstitulioa which. ,.,-aded the il.tu. mi) ii ..^ „as so shaped while it dill not "";-;" ;. ; iiitllirll,„T ,-,se.T-|,us llmt slaveholders eonb u l- .|, v,|i,.l,l,ug P~! M *"". 'ii„i,,„.. ,--.. in™ ••npA" IgblB thn' «n ,,L ,,, ii,..|"-,-i'...ringd...ee--e ot Ii" '.' "1 ""• I ,™; ;..;,;...- ....hum™'- ^S™" ;,-. .i- s .ii»--™»": ulclatthels '.,,,,,,,1 ,.v ,l„ )..I.T,.l .....TDnu.nl. 1 would „i„,,,..., .....I.'. in.,.. -I I"-'. "ami.-. '«. I-I-' 1™ '"' """ '"' ' '"'" Zi^ii'"^".".!"!™-^ i the first day of Iber" ( AND OUARLES SVMSI [It Is almost oecllcm lossy rota llio SprlngQiM l.'-;.,.Hic ,„r editorial pise some rele S SUFPORTEHS, i-o pronipted "'", '",'., k"nf7i I "we may obiain an analyei ''S" ., ', ...i ,.( n,u ,-b. I re-inienia ,',.'",,',-,.1. a! Ibe head of 1 A Her passed since, a novel [ 'entitled 'The Partial umph of slavery and d byt wMraJtoiV forlSBl." "• I;- con- .j, are ..... .whelming and eon- *',. i„v:,-„ ibiity years to lay tbt iploiied.flndwh! ia for the grave inquiry, ,,..„ men wh- bay day aftor the this country siirv 10 li anuouncu doubt is justihed t wo are the dupes of many minds that van; slaughtering olich miii.id. relying too »"-' ,1- more ..nlr,iu.u)..^i.^^ ],||r .plli.,| i, y tll0 voluu- 'ngencie's'of ibi r opl- l-s, » J"' llio" °[ i .. „l...,li,-ni I- bis ....uuuai.d. vSay, Uiu i -"K, " „,.-, I'.rav,,-,' .j o,„. in,,;. «...- iw.-> .......1. .".-. ^ar^sr^r^iSd-i,- I,',-.,.- is Ihe "a.rai.t for these things "" ' Tint 1 carp not at such technicalities. 1 lantl thn. ^— -, j m lo l[10 negro i »» worni mane uesuiaw, •-- .-- re power il neee:sai->—give him guided !) "- I''' " " ,-ase in "ny '.n-"oss jn ,i ll!: t,-v !,::i"en-l, lie- .,i.',-rpri- s :._..ii .vol. let it be not lam ran.-, lb,- Ics u i... r . ,l,,i [,:....- .,. j lh„l nil without hupe ol f,.,-unt,V This is Dr. Hawks a Little t >h« r ..ie neon sc,.,...-. -- --- lk,,, v.. ,„„1 ..., tM;lllK ,i,|1:ln,L of the M.-'b ">J ; , tlm confidence „.,-„,. „,.,,,, , r-;-- ;'» --',', ,-, ,a, dh- \ ..„ M „,„! l-a-i d. ,- d- o 1 " » «. «W™h ^ cecssful hi "etiliii„ 'i'"» , t iiro (5ln|,iy HpeciGeally '( » Give him rather sw»ssls r ibnii words that v lion. No one will p— „„r I'oi.gres. baa b.en ,,,„ ,- to the negro at ,e ase in ""> 'iigteas few me inhere that 1'""'' rebel reg'i . ,„>'l Si ,',».!. e. lb.-l •:- ' __ -;,;".b,r,,, .,.»... .b. -T'rz:',,Zn<s\l° Liublie ad-i.rs. 11111.T '" do eo , „. 1, and bis leestan'l.i'g . rirrsS' i=!»»«. Tk'" " "' ^WiliSlfSfiiSlUu.b.^ J: b,b. .";.;:..:-. .i »-,.™i--»*» ,r»" Eb.uih.wji =..'-. >;-;" ,:;s -VbjiS. la|iital,only ((u,-st and Ion of tho whole ......fice, with proious to Ibo present. luiek response .0 ever, demand bad .be .".rag- i. - . « - rf Lw of Mi 'what do we see I A bek-agun d ., ^-o.n.-iog -. " J ^ ,|, ^-^ „, bar- In abiii"b.i,i.,g " i-ar "I .-"'- ban- l-ien snoil '- umt.ve and "- .-" ..... Z ,1... eooi-li „,.-,..,- .im freed uill.'i, '"'." n ., „.Uh« v,v' ;_,,:;/': :,:;,w of .hose who love h,m bin l.c a.U- b" is Hi- most gifted and PDl ! , . c ?'^. L : lb. - an. -e-n who do not a»k good legislator, a good "present* i of the " n any peril, cai wi1h-1.1t hope 01 iuc,eniv...j •". - iT.HawWeLittle.Dirty Question, snciuselts, a n..... -. T^K^K ,b, ...i— ...» *: great iinestions of "ncTtbe master under one ""'I ]^,^""" J^w |.,r ';.- " <»^ ""^ ..^/^"'i^nati'on'and upo J,,,,^, will. "11 |L| a| „,„! ,["„-t..e ,,,,,.. r-,..!.,;,..-..- 1-1.- ,„ ,„„,,; H,, LBVC domlliU-.l. ,r I' ,,,„,., bv bodily ,.(llal vigor. '''^ntha'na atWasliiflRlu. STaK-i.: ^ flit* or the ettle or the ufttion, 1"" . •- - ---, .,.,[,. he eiice the- called |. HI civ*...!..., -- ,1 .iiMertior-s ol ,„. ... Ml. lord,, pasture* ..ti. „,,.i.Tiif»fcV«.d v'u;.}"-" ''", iori .1 ,,,.ib... ...:-. ... -». .„ ; j ,|rc -Th. ,"...«.- ...j- "",-; '„,fi„.,,h !»? '"" i'".°: di.»bS «« ...."»'» ..,.,/.,% hut apMk of lb... ". K';.i, ..I..'. .»..d..~"'. ., . ,V.| IV- .... lb." ."""I 1,1, ...ill."'- -.-".J "'"> '";'- i |-„b.-ne nrl.^nst.-lll |..e,,",e llct "t l-ii--^ ^^ ^ ,,1 .-ir.est,nig 1- 11 IV r rim 1U ,. ,„..„-, ivle.b:.-lt"l"'<""-'. ' hlr ';- ' ; ,,.„.. s,, where ti..- i'rii"'i i, ";;;. 1, 11; ; „: ' , .. [ do say that it en icen prone heretofore L-n Griy tbousaml soldi... - enliee.l, and sis hundred i lb. s,. a,b heretofore. Wo ti ..the ally .gu Ul u«.j,..-.- fu oning Ibc ibat his terms may Maaa'aciiuseltB could iiuestionsaru not eousid-c, d pU ,oi in Tb l ) v ip-rt 1, .ii. - "' ™& b r u - ^^^^^'t l u e ;lr u o^lf i :tf»i»' «& ri. the part ot C ,',i\\ and polioy slavery, they -' «SKK»"1 iti, Gei nnd "they an ,11 tbo g peinled We have nnd conscriptions, «..« '" --- SSv '™ JS^S?^ ^1";* and ;-' 'Y.l bv liil-e l.ullel.ns or larrnshed glories, ^ r|V ,,,u, tenement in in.. ..:»,;;=;.b.;. fSir » teesia ^s : n. n^.l lo.v.n,. bur., 'I so continclili) mii| . ,.. .,,., .,.,,,.„, lL,. .1 Shall a systea ithout regiinl b rightofsoparnliu ..^^uc^tb^r^ and iiolilicol (nhrwls "f danger, and having 1 so well, baa not this n....if President nnd of I alune here sbidl be an end of multiplied disaster?, and . substitutiou of oilier polui liberty na the corner-stum - Freedom on the Ung. Thirdly. Jn< tom< FVfliwalhveco"'^"; M. Lsboulnyo conel ip uml stlrrlnn nnpos jis IhoroQ.-b.,........."'" -' ,"' '11 '-;.,,.... -ul..-.. ...I °.."' Ina °"p ; •** «t' " '* ,.".,..',, |..«..h,d 1. lb. ..„,..«. m....b .»b.,~» ;„,.„ dlb, .,11 peo,,,. .bo ..1, ....boo, I - b of .hanwltr. Ei'r»rpsi. b ri*„- .. p«. „r tabor b. P .rpcl..>l..l, »M* „a Bhalr».i .-,.... v. -.lb"..! -o d^^'^CeSS'Sll uro to a fanatieism an.-la--."- !- "b'b.iry „hich it is .....IK -^"t.sh ™.=r«^^si^^^t.S^V -*i' h » "-,,,, " ,„J 1,^.-1 >'-.'"-. "-'.. 'V .,,„„ .., ,.„„..,, ,.:. .".HO--, "b.0 1"P ' i""«"b ™-.t\ru,'hSh.d ;«iS,h,. I. .... i»,d v -j.» ,„u»«l.d ... i... > .«r...ll.i.Bi..-.-i»'"" „,.,llhS«.h. «™d i"?JSJ oS^ ,.„p.Kd.l ib-jbo^oo. ,.;. o easy to bear tlu-n lo gel rid ol. .„, very numerous, but th-j -in officeW out of it. Th of « speech at Cooper In- •wmwmmmwsmMsm cueomiuuo.. ai.i-i. '°'li:,ui.T.l..y«.ui;. "" 1 Hb.ll n^Cbur ibich avoty So. ",'",„.... il... « i" '!»'" ''"' ' , .. .,, -,.-, ISXS* " »» "" •"'"' '""" ^ "'-;;,;,';„.;;,.'.", *»• « £ :;; , ";-'" ,„,'", «i- .- ." '" -' il "; "','' " ... ..! I.' " J" ,l,,v. Li. i '" "'",,„. , . .. r.aDl...r her ...billon '- ,- win, I. lliev Inav M.tro'iuie le ,'l'ii,,. ,|,.vvu Ibis rebellion, will ri. rll7,| v"ii, n, ,ed iippr-fiation |ap- m,.| |.i -in f. Ihe I'reS.delll and to .viiumnmis, that they ruuat p.- r- upon millions of hes in with tbem in b.lb seats m m support of - - ,be "lent |.r pie "I -I" !' "\ '"^" tZltl-TU ^»™" iLrU lUaibU-deilared .locti-iue that all men are u q1 ,,,,. pi)Ua! rat, .1 alike (great ap[.|au,-, and waving o ha b i ^ ^ Hi,!™. ,„..,.-», .. ,-.- ' ...... v. , b.,.. ... pK»l r"P" . ,,1 ' and ...... '- "I' ...l.".- '""' " ,,,,. ,,„. i. 1. b. .o.nlod ,0, and 'depmlyonoftoUot.orof'v.ho, i in authorit)'' ra of thosa of .™SF '".r'»5.«lii, "• -«»s a change of

National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18

  • Upload
    s7w5xb

  • View
    46

  • Download
    2

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18

Citation preview

Page 1: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18

JfeRmmT^ffi taitob.VOL, XXIII. NO, 23. NEW YORK, S^TURDA^ 'OCTOBER 18, 18G2 WHOLE NO.~1,lfi7,

Rational ^.rti-£lHvwjj ^tmulanl,

riTTii.iMHj. WE! RUI ,OS .-ATUIIDAy,

UDSUICJ4 APiTI-SUTERI SHflKTV,

PENNSYLVANIA ANTI-8LAVKRY SOCIETY,

10G XorOrTenlh Snd, Philadelphia.

iii-s of the i

,p|.".-ed to

nun, whato-,-.-, ,^n *-.j-m

which (bey were burn, the as

rat", nod (lint by nature nil

She trenta the negro as a )

tbe lights, ami properties '

ellen enclosing juliverlpiiui.s..ir rolailiin in unv i.

buslnteu nlliilrs <.l Hi.- nap- r. should bo a' 1 ' 1 ''

Selection*.

.EAT/iMCIS FROM fill. 0. A. OROWJfS02T.

mi- uudtiLity to tin; Aholith

r Catholic brethren bnve_ gone'.Its fur in out I

.. thnngtil tin

' Too ,.ni'y"nf Alc-rlci ' tin

o knows nml unileratnnds 111

ircb knows that she is and

very, and in favor of freodat

their cwuj.IiH.ion or fit""™

i tin.' niiiiy of tho

„cu ..rc free and ciual.

H ,i. nml » imji'i "Hi' "II

!in individual ol Ihe

,u» negro is of lli" rate of

Adam, created bv the huh" l.n.l, redeemed bj II..

.>mo Incur 'Savior. >i»il destined to .he same

heaven im tin- whit.' "."»• She i"">»'.s no 'li^ren™

(o their moral and spii-ium! rcglns between white

„.eo nnil black moil. Sin: bus fur belli Hit same

baptismal, maxriftiw and burial service, the annie

doctrine unrl Diond.lv, Hie -« -=" raii.orils, H"-' *"""

.1.;.. .v,, >„„,,. ,-uniiniiii ihe same promise?

_s the aamo privilege*, tbe same- hopes.

She lakes hor'l.ovitcs nml consecrates her priests

from both, ns sb- lids ib-m .|u:il,i"-d. Id tins very

itry of our*, no full of prejudices against Ih-

with large adioisluto of neg-

„ u3, through love

who, In tbu onm.

1 1 1 1 1 -• r tliil banner "i if

In the Gospel and in llio

,.l.icll, during

bloody contests—c .

*»- "ilhor Lalnyotl

1.', Ihe groat

tired IM'i Comtm- --'ft of us. Bh„

lo convert tbe

if not (tbeoked

bring about sects

!i7 wo were among their inuiuiw^ "rr*

n oor own apbere WO have done na much

er man in the country, to act Csthoh

nbolition movement.

,„, «,,'„! (]„• national question takes with

,'„,. ,,| tin slavery illinium- Wo would

,-

, ,,.,,,• ,.,r union of llu'se S-iaies in

i', - ivory nor would wo stiller the

.,.., ., , -,. destroyed lor the sake of pre-

„, ,.,-ac

V, I...

urged by Ibo"

of in.lopenden.

ei-ntum-., Ji'ltrnced the 1

,;i iLut BT.'iO.-jit boon, nest lo tbe

I i . „i of IniTeppndeQCO, that

nftn (renewed njinltiUHO) ; n procla-

writo bis dhuio nigh in tbe annnls

ut nil ages (continued nnnlnn-o).

dorse thai beautiful proclamation

ml who commtinda onr armies on-

jlniniHton—(nplilHUBc)—a General

eaat, feema lo eombino tbo OtlBrgv,

ram' of youth with the nrndoni-e ami

and who is to lead our artoica, il

ry conclusive and final (applause).

A &.N31ISLE rfEW OF TUB PRESIDENTSEDICT.

burn nl" ilnvo miithei-s

nltnrs. :ind St. Ao-un'-

fnthers. w:n«rluinl)--.a negro. Wn hare oursulccs

-lift ri negro "cvl on either

>ut her mi&iooaries to Afr

n,.,.r.,.'.- in Ii.t (nidi, "nil n'fUtly .-" '•' ''

,.r. falornlilv r^.-ivM U ,l,o k,n? ,

who gninteil

em permission 10 convert Iiib 6ub]eela. ton

c most pio:ts nil'' <krutni Oithoha ice hare . .

.

,...,-1, irfivfuU-'A-Mkd negroes.

The'momtmt it U seen Ibat the Cburcb holds Ihe

,M--..ro child ov,.. the bspiiMiial l..nt, poiiraonhia

lieSd tbe baptismal wat.-r., ami ,nlrn,b,™ li.m into

tl,c lii-euornlJi'ii it is -<<;" tlml -lie l,,.hl,- "... to It

,,.r„,T l,..iii the race of Ailrun, .baring Us

t» its "iiiita ill privihsts. il.-i bopts, it.H

eiorie*" If h" wure of n dill.ront nice, to bnpli'-e

., would be as iu,me,uii"i;. would lie as gninl a

'.''""r.T.L.V-r'Li ihi.i tin.- « ii'ircb ti'iiehci tb»t

ni-i-ro "i« a 'iinn mi'l il.i-roloro. uh u. Ulan, the

ill of nay other man. To onshivc bnu, tlu-n, mt^^nMiiiu'di-nc-.iihei-ey^n-.t.sb.on.lavon

„,„n".i,. Tl.i* ii.".™* Ik- .[ueMmn .low H-

,,i|„ rights of mii.i,cli.i"oiit.^ Irmm it all .-mfi.t. -

ions of color, nnd pule the negro nnd the wbtle

tbe same category.

eiice, the Church, though tolerating to a certain

i, .ii nml i.ii.l-r iniiiii, ,...[iilil",i-. tin: hoMioj; •<

LW is always actively an muantlpati

upon which Is written 'Liberty.'"

SPEECH OF I>. URAT7, RROWX-

[Wo inlie Hie following Sim pawogoi ftoni n maslm

iHUrtw bv U.'nuiT* Unows, ol St. I niiln. bofurc thoflei

„il l:i„i,„.l|..ill.n. Soiiki)' of ULaourl, Sept. 17.]

eno-sL.ivF.av oeskiials.

It ia, perhaps, the falo of dll revoluUuna invo

ji,kr tw.inl .tu.'ij-'". [u k™* «lll,-"rv'l "I II"'"|

r" '

.

tbo inherited repulM —foregoing ti"

- " "

Bill." i»cast; wo du nut not yet ktww wbi..h

„i, it win hi' fmiml to have fallen. It is a fear-

irinv thut ha-i fiimpi, ruled th" Ir. .-doru or bomb'-'-

iDsterity '" ""1U1 lIU" mm '"" i-»"i -...-urn- -if four million .! nr-n. Find then y^,,^.,.,.~ ..--

Conratiotifl, upon the ,|...'Mlion whether tbo tuulh,

lire I worn will, thin .k-olaiin- war, will submit

bomilintine li'ion of rending ccpre^ntn-

o ConETO's hi-iiire die ntrt of January. I he

haiLinesa or misery _ of millions; black Kgypl;-

a bright millennial

"EufmniooTnnn worn

linfli - r" sigh

,.,. I.,-(..r-.-VI- irt-ii-.K. wil-^.i.'ii V'l ''"- '•' .-''-.' -

tin- lii-l'l ri.il.lv "!-.l vo.i in th..-' Hnirk.i. I"il", I'ifty

1-1^1 .'if l.ii.-ia.'-. ". v..,irb ; .. _WLe.h-. uii^sU.

.:.!..,.. ;„,., .".hi,, ,„,,. uh.l ill. [Hi- in tie- i. ! 1 ?(,1l'--. w

v «....,-..;.„

e'v','ryivhor.;'hurri!-,l mo into f.i'hy jieii-'anil ilie.i

s the river to the forlirientirins. not ii.-rmiltinj:

o make any prepa rn lion for e.imp life, lou

hori.e thi- will, the ficcnstonfd |ialn'nce ol

i-nce, and when un.k-T m(.r.' f(iv.,ral,le nu*piee.«,

,'iv.i 'r..e.:-iv.d cull the proteetinu due to a colB-

Uu„ humanity, you have labored cheerfully and

effectively. Co to your homes wilh tbo conscious-

Iof hnving performed your duly, of ilcserniig, it

do n.it n'eeivc, the proleelion of the law. arid

ring with you (lie ernliind.i and respect of all

honorable men. You hate learned to suffer and to

ait, but in your hours of adversity remember th.it

.be same f!od who baa numbered Ihe hairs of our

headtt. and who watchta over even thn late of a

ruw.is the Cod of your race as well ns mine.

moat blond .vhe.h thin nation H n-.'v -l.-l'l"V

erv pore, is an aiviul e-arnini; ol bew |,-..lul

'

(o oppffsa tbe humblest being. Until

shall again need your serv'uws, 1 bid

Dutttoon ther.

I nirf.-i-.i-. lie- Me "it.-, il- Aei.oMe ,.i„-t ti.'

nhicetosohlieraof the faith. And strange to -aj.u

baa over happened Unit eonj. ly with the p"'' 1 "

ii-m, mi. lion of die principle ol" (lie revolution --- i

-

jerilv i-ouline biill-h-nrte'lue-i have i,as?ed from

-onnuand, ami victory hi.i r,.[.laeed dianster. Bo

mueh is historic. We may lake comfort, lien;lor

L,,,, „f l

„U,,...v»n.,,.i™. ITo-lavi.rv ieneral,

,,t the bead of our at-miea are the result of pro-

slavcry inlluence in ot.r niittonid eonneds, »l "'

btMtaucy of Ihe government to procli.un ..lliualli

,lr,j distbi. ( puli. y of freedom baa kept ihem there.

By no nuseibilily. however, can such, uvon if tbt

,utb. Wo t„.lu-,-.- .'lunneipalion is

ary and a ptilin- ;.' i.ccc-"ity. J'ql-.i

lUnm.-i ilifi .-...(./''.'-'. ''" .-It'-f.'l '''.'.'(

.ticaUy »"i'A then' i

n HUcb, Oven il iiit

in possessed of the

prestige of ir!1"--

ia ns naught

TGent

f ihe issues- which now lning

el States. xSneban immense

iifessioti of four million oi

;ht of properly, it was per-

TW-\ . victory ibis Ire-

,., ,l„. power of fresi-

I ...ij ttatl well bo has

o niuki , ean'fully has ho

tAtvi

u farewell.

AyOTBER BPBE0I1 UT DBS. 1UTVBEL.

iImic -i'-ik t Hi'-: -."--

'"' I VVI1B h'1 ^' '"

tncty. and 1 have K'tven

sit is in my !" i-i

disregHrdful

Micbing., as ti

in the 1. 1- 1 Stat.--, who have K«mi si

it.i discipline, and so false to its

avowedly vlolitla all lawa, Divine i— ....

cnlilled to anything u,"n lb hn-iian pity, aro at

all entitled, in tbeir double tori, I" thnsUan fellow-

ship, is a Liitle. Dirt)- 1jnesik.11 well worth the- con-

sideration of every Chrisiinn i"itnr.t; nnd la Dr.

Hnwks's No. Twelve— Tribune, Oct. 11.

ir slavery will i

it in this niter

.,1 th,

areu>n*ta'u:rs, jn-'fii. n "/ n'"" """* —' ",v -»--

qatstion of ax-mti/^tw; >•"' t'i'refore Jj-em ,1 r,ii-

%*, and eren dangerous to conHnW our old hostility

Tbe condilional lovalit-oi of the cxlreme Abolilion-

idts, consiMinp of a lew hundreds, at most of 3 lew

thousands of individuals, u.:iv he eenturable, but it

Is far less to than the conditional loyaliBmoft.hu

r Sr..,i..s, I..." liberty is more r.-sptetahle than

bo mora easily e.vcnsod lor

'--ir of liberty than on

. inaniipalioii of our_ i

Itonli.r

ii bis deecy in ptay for the

ilavcs. r-'pe I't'is l>--, gl"-

'-!il"|,-'n'i!:iiii>""lia- j11 ^ 1 i-l'own ihe view of tbe sub-

i.-cth.ken'l.y ibe f.'hief I'nstor of the Hiurch. lor he

ban just confermd a koighlahip on M. AugUHlm

lo.bin,e.v|.r..s ;,h f'.r Ins r ut admirable work on

[be Abohlion of Slavery, lierclofore noticed .a this

B«i,, while we are n-,1 aw„re that be has m,b-

licly honored our illust.ion-- Archbishop |lluglc.,|

for' his attack on the Abolitionists or Ins mistaken

if slavery and tbe altlVO trade.

ronduions il

in favor nf property.

You

On the slavery ipjc

present controversy—

-

re e.so.llcot Union man at

; , ,,ui- i'hillipaes and t'.sr

..olisl, livery; but as it it

toremcD to their lib-

iem or to keep them

dcVu-ivcXefil.W.e a-'.i pun I.-h meet for crime, we

hnveareai«ct for the Aboliiin.usis who would free

tl:^MUr

.. /Vi

L ^:b^e^sner'P

Lmnpht of all u..i..t-..1- ". ' '

'^T'li.'.'li

nllournatiir.A. . .. of "II

-rccmvital .[ii

1 Mr. :

It <s 1«> wb0

„l„ ; ,Tncl ihe renioval ol l-r. niotu lion, the command

of Ibc Department of the West-" measure. lo

from the niorila of that lioiierfll. on e, „.li we pro-

• '- say that we have

—that hua proved

with a

„„ _.<) find

'"''''

",'i '"!, el. I. i'.u'bii-' libcrlv fur

catarrh, a 1lv.i,.ior regarded

never to be admtrnl t." i- ''• " "''"

,f..,

,,- „ii i„.i n .^(

-

]it. ^ (1|

.. v..,-,)rL. |lllut ,,c-havc

toTZ'i ler tb di.ionul >"^^ ° C ***$>

-whivh we have m

It is idle, therefore, to »_liw!t(ioji!ils, tr'^a. in order I

most gopraelicajly as fat ns

going.

Sttt tt^NaJinrraj,

thkl gave bis vol

command, which

eecfo that he wthat voted, at tl

ntlnc parlisaBB for...-_ n t il,., riibinel

c 1..-II.- s hierallv ti

.^"the last "member in th- i al -I

^^1^.^'^'Vnt

with mititary nppoin

.uiduioii'il Imnlisnioi ''"'"

u,ul cannot have fur a W.ekli

iirvs- of violated oath-lakini;,

-ilities. or Order No. Threes, .

it halting advnncc-s and waste

lo

r

DM?iXl3fli(dy *V»I It needs not thai 1 should

insist how surely all such must give way before the

forco of a public n mimci which, when once on tbo

mrch, speedily- refuses to trust any with responsi-

ilily who nro not born of the age. It whs just

hiich a common Ibcghl ol" Ihe Long I'arliani.-nl lb,.

I

en model" to llmi. tin... ami n >..-IM..ny-

ncc"to tbem-lves,e.Mir] n? in stn.ei-.ty

from tbo former and iti.pr„iiig sloieism and selt-

S'lenbee on each other. It was a similar growth r.l

i.ut.lt- opinion in [rniice lh"t n-t the guilloline "t

work to keep account of lost battled with unsyru-

mithi/iiig l.oncrals. Tbe lre,,uent question, then, of

! "-crisis is, how long, my countrymen, shall we

nan for tbe "now model" and the " self-denying

ordianneo " and the swilt pur.isb:

7UI- |iaFSIDKKl *S D—^ -

iSsWstfi:«T»TSs

i-.»V^:-:: ll -;'::,

.::::^lS

liei.l he he

urage

la not iu thebaic(/iu( h for

States teverall). '

»'- ^ ^ ,„^„„„ :

„/-,'« prne-

Ohio was in i-....i-oi ,u, ^". 1 '' l'-'. ,,'

|

,

.

1

',,.1l

U

i,,..l,,- out, p.W"""cjlysc. 1

I I",,, ,'.„„ ,.,, ,.|..J on '«'

!', was bound, aa loyal to Ohio, to uusiain

ml cause. „ ,

^A, r;::,X:%b;t;rricls,helmndnSe

reasonable or uicb-riile liclily -er .,- -

^all limea. in all ,.1'ieeS and «i" ;;'"• Wll „

the moral tn.-e.lom oi lhl l"" 1

'^ . I(

. . ,, .

enthusiasm that

and, though v

.niTwe tell the

"afford to dispeuee with the pol.Ueal support or

u. MeClellan.

'„r™=".'.«'.":;.-,;;:.;...> '- '::

;;.:i„ , ... u. '-i-»»l ,°"! , *.eo„'

i,.r...v'i:;. tfS!b~s:™"»:~2r" -r-

,1-,,.,-t,,.ili„.i..-l..i.tele-n-hori.al 1,. i

in

ii,.

1 -'-.,!i

"-- 1 "'; " ;, ,1,

,.,,,[ i„,o our midst- U 'S " olJ°

t - u '1

',"things are r.cin.d; lor so far a- .,...=.-»

"I, -'I 111- Ii""- '" -- ,l1 ''"il-i"i "">»'-.. "-

nnuld be must lis el v I" ac.oni|.li-h Ibe ob|.-ct ,..

.=, the return of the disloyal Stales lo die I uion.

,.ttio previous lime has there been even a remote

prcW.diiy that such an olh-r would be accepted:

thcieis now hut a bare possibility, lurlhef delay

w,-.ul.| .l,-,iiMle.-s fian- uuide the chime.! of savinr; the

Union by such a measure still smaller. To have

braii.iL-bV.I Una weapon, as a threat, while we were

ditching on the t be knliiiuony, tiling "'To- the I en

insula or relrealirn- from the se, end disaster ol l.ul

Run, would only have e.ieitcl the derision ol oui

enoiuies- and we have good reason for believing

tiiai thn nroelauiiiiii.il has bee, ,! layed much longer

ilmn tias ituended, for want of tbe proper victory lo

give it emphasis, and secure it a ,:oiisi,lerati,.,t. Ion

.li.vs before the batllo ol Ai.iietr.iu. 1msiden said

thil such a liroel'iiu'.iion wf.nbl be like lb- lot"-/.

,",

:,,.„",,„:, ', omen mo uK.uiont 1m was fully

„ , ,'\i i leUan'a vielory, hfl sat down to write'"

, , nupiTK are making a great handle

,,;.

'

',',

, ,

'

but there is nn inconsistency

i ,, il, ,( Villi" -.U, e.it.,|,leie a discomfiture or

I n i'lL-'l eiiieetalions, nliorded him just Ibe opporlumly

r^n'addi'tion to this repulse. Ibe fact that vaster

,,„.,. ..,,.,, i ln ..,. .,.[ |, Leu nour.il upon the rebel Inn-

;,.,: ,l',

,

L„, i;win-.'- S'lrihwuh their heavy

amp, will lend powerfully to impress oar enemies

wilh ibo nece-sity .ii to .|,'n,e at mi'V, it tnil cy.r

;„„.,„, it, '.he opportumt) of making a lvm.'ag.-oiis

peace. The rresid..nl now says.suhstant.all,to he

hT2: "This is u,y las, oiler, feme bank to the

,d I will guarantee you all ihe pnnl.-.,.* y,n

„ .„e„~icTuiid to OMTcise as Stale". I have

b'mv hand iho destiny of soinu four million of

' ...;__a whum ,|„. C.ii.alini.i-.'n and tli- I'tws

given lo my disposal; I oflor them lo

you freely il von will only cease rebellion ;accept

n"

terms and v .ball be seemed to you oreyer.

J your inalienable pmia-rtv, subject only lo such

Uws as you yourselves may he. W only

hope ofp?ese,.i„g .1.1- i-I- ;»'.«' I'" 1 !".'"' "I""'" t-... vo.ir . "..uclio" with the I. men

icontinue lo repel

alliance, as yon are now doing, and be assure.

.1,17 17 .... enormous prke to pay fur l»;on i' h '

-'.::v,"..,V.,,.,v.-..i.»

V feivmontfisneo. ive nrn- luol d.striiytd ibc rebel n...

ind had taken Kiehmot.d [both "t

:mve been dntiei, a division wt_iprung up at the South. The purty wlio Iron, II,-.- tir-i

iiiiponed seee^ion n."l ".ii "ii-. w.iul. have tunicl ..n

il,.'. rabid s ,e.-.^i.,i,i.,i.. nml sa„l. "ion have always

Bind that Ihe North meant to violate oue intht.s ami

free our slaves. Wo leave been at war ior uftcea

nonths and they hnve not done so. And teo the

.losilion ill." width youe ...lui^-eb havo l,rou E bt u».

And the pence prvrt. .i-elil h..ve ** I tbe ,.-eea.le„,.v

-the South. W now all-is changed. Wo did not

•ii, Conr.ro--. Im- rui.-.e.l and ibo I'rcsnh-< '•

THE COLONIZATION SCHEME.

Skcbbmri SmrAno bos addressed a letter lo tbo

Secretary of the Interior, slating that the spprehen-

oas of Iho people ol the Centra] American State*

n-i'ard to the prono.-. d colouiitalioii e.\|.edition,

uo "been wrooght up to a panic by tbo efforts of

Haiti tll-disyiosed persiins.wholuivo mi-snpres.inted

s objects, and that it will be advisable, thoreion;, to

odil'v 11." plans in regard lo its movements.

A circular, bearing due Hot. 1. HCAbaa bwrnsent

from Ihe Slate Depariment to the diplomatic repn'-

sentalives of Ihe did. tent governments-, on the sub-

ject ol negro colonisation. This is done because

many persons or that rata, en press a dcs.re in ernt-

grat. »nd many gov,-,-: e- nt.s l.v r c,,, ... 1 t I-

,'

j H .„ ,„ to superintend nil

, ,, ".,,... -, ,ti. 1 are a record of ago.

ndiuon, and plana of embarkation and

i,,m,i iinufi ii .-' be provided, wilh

[uj.lalur.s that I imd.es oeed mil 1"' se|ci-

u vo)age, arid such party ol emigrants

:allowed a special agent of their nwu choice.

I kills s

n'li- Slaios. Tbo [smith his I

North also. At the Nortu 11 you uc

„liue, I... rill ins to rut an end to I

I'lganli-d f". pro-iliiven and ib-l.-.ynl.

ihall be allowed a special n^eni 01 me,

that of tbe United Slates, if de.sin.d.

... tbe di-stinntion. they shall be provide- -—

fortablo dwellings and lands, nnd he owneM. and

inied by ihem, or lun.isbi d -ill,, lent emnloymtni

lire. They shall be provided wilh clothing and

medicines, nnd tbeir children educau.-d in elemeiilnry

knowledge—these provisions lo conlinuo fur fivo

years. It bs generalh- provid-d that the children

shall not bo separated from pared.;that the emi-

grants and their posicriry shall li.rever bo free ;thai

liberty of conscioi.ee and right ol property shall be

guaranle.-d,and all privileges granted which shall

beenioyed by tili/en, oi the country to which lb»?

go. Provision is also mad- against neglect and suf-

1 — vcrty or sickness. No monop-

ven (0 any country in tho mat-

will be made- with whatever

Thel

the state of nflairs. We have n

1 hear that there has been son

irso adopted by my predecessor

reward to the negro pupulntir.

lulkiog aboutI, talk I,

. .... lime i-r »«.. li mm im--. puMi'i' •;«>"-;

-,- the nee... U the West we l.avo ju-oieeled wle.l

raels of corn and ...ttun-^opcr!;- „, rel.-l, -,.ro-

cciedlheui better tl,i"tlic.,-tr..u,,s"...u|.. lae - '

-Ml,- be-. L:--: cl;::,-.l -Oi and 1- -.1. .... Il-

,11,-, in logalher Tbere can L.c no re. m tlint. it wv

I,,, , ;, r ,v « -lo," [.liuiali-n, her-, by Ihe labor of the

negroes, and make it pr. tillable "" muat tio 90, am

i.ellt ourselves at tHi.-irexpcn.se.

1.U k yi-.u i,ll to .-..n-iiler ilus subject carefully

,o h btl-u'll.-. „s its importance demands. _. , _

1,0 pr.Tlil-e-

wilii deep inter

era in nltoii'hi.

it, and with general a

TWELVE LITTLE DIRTY QUESTIONS.

DANIEL S. DICKENSON'S VIEW

.reck.)

on thst it is unne'-es-sarily made Ihe pretext for

icked and vau-.h-s rebellion by ihe Souibeni

'people, I care nol how soon 1 see it end. With no

Abolition procliviii.s, in a nolitical sense, but the

reverse 1 wonld not have gono out of my way to

look up slavery in this conflict, or lo avoid slavery,

would have treated l.ko any other element, tak-

it when it wonld M ive us strengd. or weaken

u and employed it a.-cordinglv. 1 have never

, , oeanenl sue.-., tbe ostbeak when I would

.- touched th- iis.viiiution tor ilsclt' aloi.e, nor whet.

. ..ould not have cut it from its moorings rn one

hour if it would have aided in disposing ol the re-

iou, and 1 would do iho same now. I hold the

power broad enough to c

ot lug i

o know what, in tbe

ml hpiseopal—=

'e.-^y^

ion, and I

. trembling ,n the balanc.

.0 seu it csereised when i

thoroughly don

[ like

„V,-,, -,-„., ii,ii'-.vi..^—..t-~'-. I-"""' -"- :' .-;,

, j .,„,( niv.ouiislast

',,11 th- f,«' firvy.j.-' 'r-bvll.-.i'!-.j-;-; '

,

';t, ,.-..' raietbo slain. , ;...! n iib 11,,-,.- a--iti!l-..ii :. ... ,i iv..mil in iai "" " »

, , __, „. „i.ii(,(i.

J1VB IHO »S""I --~

iplaled tho bloody p

, f (hi!

i such :

nuld' not have made 1

.Vo

.11 good laitll.

-Is, the 1'res,-

...,

.

andtnys

,., ..r,-;it ,1,1,1, .inline "1,,,.,-r Ol. il" -' '.

Seiva.l lr-lil. r..'-'

- ,'. ,„r I - ill-, ..,,1-nl, ."'. nl.il 1

'kc.'i ',', ."' ',,. ,,,... 1 ii

|Vr;7,V-U'!i. -:l

i

1"-' ; '"- :

:^.:?Vlri£

:,1 of ibe

LAHOVLA

jo/ift.

iwithaforct

nn with him who anp roofs!—pro nfs sup e r-

. South has been in a

for thirty years there

".I'll .I... r.r.-., ii. -, lion "as made ...

;',,!::,...,,. j. .,'. •.- .>» -!- 1 --

,-,(! d,. -ill in bis [.owl-, e.oislsleti

,- ,„;,.- u, .am bis pledges

.... lb- le-- liesiiaiu:.- in btlioving .- -,

lemuor the 1-risident to win back....

'

I :.,, ,, b. fact that we have „ way-,

,

'

;'„ ilns vi -ii Hi- l.c-ndi.g. has aUvi.v=.

l,L'" l « r" '

-

r ,;.n Th. ,-.ru .h made it a„,, ,„-,.-.. ,,l our ,^. ._^ ^^ lU|r 1;il , i(

, ra

, ''""t ,t" nrl it on-, ii- no. a. li..alll.tbey

i , ti. lie In l'ran.'ugi.<'.-.nstitulioa which.,.,-aded the il.tu. mi) ii

. ..^ „as so shapedwhile it dill not "";-;" ;.

L; iiitll „ irll ,„T ,-,se.T-|,us

llmt slaveholders eonb u l-

_ .|, v ,|i,.l,l,ug

P~!M *"". 'ii„i,,„.. ,--.. in™ ••npA"

IgblB thn' «n

,,L ,,,ii,..|"-,-i'...ringd...ee--e ot Ii" 1'.' 1" 1

""•I

1

,™; ;..;,;...- ....hum™'-^S™" ;,-. i.i- s.ii»--™»":

ulclatthels

'.,,,,,,,1 ,. v ,l„ )..I.T,.l .....TDnu.nl. 1 would

I '

i „i„, ,,..., ..... I.' . in.,.. -I I"-'. —"ami.-. '«. I-I-' 1™ '"' """ '"' '

'"'"

Zi^ii'"^".".!"!™-^

i the first day of Iber"

( ANDOUARLES SVMSI

[It Is almost oecllcm lossy

rota llio SprlngQiM l.'-;.,.Hic

,„r editorial pise some rele

S SUFPORTEHS,

i-o pronipted

"'", '",'., k"nf7i I"we may obiain an analyei

''S". ., ', ...i ,.( n, u ,-b . I re-inienia

,',.'",,',-,.1. a! Ibe head of 1

A Her

I

passed since, a novel [

'entitled 'The Partial

umph of slavery and

d byt

wMraJtoiV forlSBl." "• I;- con -

.j, are ..... .whelming and eon-

*',.i„v:,-„ ibiity years to lay tbt

iploiied.flndwh!

ia for

the grave inquiry,

,,..„ men wh- bay

day aftor the this country siirv

10 li anuouncu doubt is justihed

t wo are the dupes of many minds that

van; slaughtering olich

miii.id. relying too »"-'

,1- more ..nlr,iu.u)..^i.^^], ||r

.plli .,| i,

y t l l0 voluu-

'ngencie's'of ibi r opl- l-s, » J"'llio" °[

i .. „ „l...,li,-ni I- bis ....uuuai.d. vSay, Uiu i

-"K, " „,.-, I'.rav,,-,' .j

o,„. in,,;. «...- iw.-> .......1. .".-.

^ar^sr^r^iSd-i,-1 I,',-.,.- is Ihe "a.rai.t for these things

"" ' Tint 1 carp not at such technicalities. 1 lantl thn. ^— -, jm lo l[10 negro i»» worni mane uesuiaw, •-- .--

re power il neee :sai->— give him guided !) "- I''' " "'

,-ase in "ny '.nr

-"ossjn

,ill!: t,- v !,::i"en-l, lie- .,i.',-rpri-

s

. :._..ii .vol. let it be not lam ran.-, lb,- Ics ui... r . ,l, : ,i [,:....- .,. j . lh „l nil without hupe ol

f,.,-unt,V This is Dr. Hawks a Little

t >h« r ..ie neon sc,.,...-. -- -- --. „lk,,, v .. ,„„1 ..., tM;lllK ,i,| 1:l n,L of the M.-'b ">J

; , ,

tlm confidence „.,-„,. „,.,,,, , r-;-- ;'» --',',,

,-, ,a, dh- \ ..„ M „,„! l-a-i d. ,- d- o:

1 " » «. «W™h ^

cecssful hi "etiliii„ 'i'"»|

,t

.

iiro („5 ; ln |,iy

HpeciGeally '( »

Give him rathersw»ssls

r ibnii words that v

lion. No one will p—„„r I'oi.gres. baa b.en

,,,„ ,- to the negro ;at

,e , ase in ""> ' 'iigteas

few me inhere that 1'""''

rebel reg'i

. ,„>'l Si ,',».!. e. lb.-l:

•:- '__ -;,;".b,r,,, .,.»... .b. -T'rz:',,Zn<s\l°Liublie ad-i.rs. 11111.T '" do eo

, „. 1, and bis leestan'l.i'g .

.

rirrsS' i=!»»«. Tk'"

""'

^WiliSlfSfiiSlUu.b.^J: b,b..";.;:..:-. .i

»-,.™i--»*» ,r»"

Eb.uih.wji =..'-.>;-;" ,:;s -VbjiS.

la|iital,only 1

(( u,-st and Ion

of tho whole

......fice, with proious to Ibo present. :

luiek response .0 ever, demand bad .be .".rag- i. - .« -rf Lw of Mi

'what do we see I A bek-agun d ., ^-o.n.-iog -. ", J ^ ,|, ^-^ „, bar-

In abiii"b.i,i.,g " i-ar "I .-"'- ban- l-ien snoil I'- umt.ve and

"- .-" ..... Z ,1... eooi-li „,.-,..,- .im freed uill.'i, '"'." n.. ., „.Uh«

v,v' ;_,,:;/': :,:;,w of .hose who love h,m

, bin l.c a.U- b" is Hi- most gifted and

P Dl!

,

.

,

.c?'^.

L

: *£ lb. - an. -e-n who do not a»k

good legislator, a good "present*

i of the"

n any peril, cai

wi1h-1.1t hope 01 iuc,eniv...j •". -iT.HawWeLittle.Dirty Question,

snciuselts, a n..... -.

T^K^K ,b, ...i— ...» *:

great iinestions of

"ncTtbe master under one ""'I ]^,^""":J^w |.,r 1 ';.- " <»^ ""^ ..^/^"'i^nati'on'and upo

J,,,,^, will. "11|L|

, a| „,„! ,["„-t..e ,,,,,.. r-,..!.,;,..-..- 1-1'

' .-, ,„ ,„„,,; H,,

LBV C domlliU-.l. ,r,

I'- ,,,„,., bv bodily ,. (ll al vigor.

'''^ntha'na atWasliiflRlu.

STaK-i.: ^flit* or the 1ettle or the ufttion, s» 1 1"" . •- - ---,

.,.,[,.

he 1

eiice the- I

called |.

HI civ*...!..., --

,1 .iiMertior-s ol

,„. ... Ml.lord,, pasture*

..ti.

„,,.i.Tiif»fcV«.d v'u;.}"-" ''",

iori .1 ,,,.ib. .. ...:-. ... -»..„ ; j ,| r . c

-Th. ,"...«.- ...j- "",-; '„,fi„.,,h

!»? '""i'".°: di.»bS «« ...."»'»

..,.,/.,% hut apMk of lb... ".

K';.i, ..I..'. .»..d..~"'.

., 1 . ,V.| IV- .... lb." ."""I

1,1, 1...ill."'- -.-".J "'"> '";'-

, i |-„b.-nenrl.^nst.-lll |..e,,",e llct "t l-ii-- 1

^ ^^ , ^ ;

,,1 .-ir. est,nig 1- 11 IV r rim l

.

1U ,. ,„..„-, ivle.b:.-lt"l"'<""-'. 'hlr ';- '

; 1,,.„..

s ,, where ti..- i'rii "'i i,

";;;.l

,

L

1,

11;

,

;

,

l

,

„:' , ..

[ do say that it en

icen prone heretofore

L-n Griy tbousaml soldi...

-

enliee.l, and sis hundred

i lb. s,. a ,b heretofore. Wo ti

..the

ally

.gu Ul u«.j,..-.-

f u oning Ibc

ibat his terms

may

Maaa'aciiuseltB could

iiuestionsaru not eousid-c, d

pU,oi

in

Tbl

) v ip-rt 1 1, .ii. -"' ™& bru-^^^^^'t l

ue;lr

uo^lf

i:tf»i»'«& ri.

the part ot C

,',i\\ and polioy

slavery, they

-' «SKK»"1iti, Gei

nnd "they an,11 tbo g

peinled We have

nnd conscriptions, «..« '" ---

SSv'™ JS^S?^^1";* and

;-' '.

'Y.l bv liil-e l.ullel.ns or larrnshed glories, ^ r|V ,,, u , tenement in in..

..:»,;;=;.b.;. fSir -» »teesia ,

- - ^s :

n.

n ^.l lo.v.n,. bur., 'I so continclili) mii|. . ,.. .,,., .,. ,,,.„, | lL ,. . .1

Shall a systea

ithout regiinl b

rightofsoparnliu..^^uc^tb^r^and iiolilicol (nhrwls "f

danger, and having 1

so well, baa not this n....—

if President nnd of I alune

here sbidl be an end of

multiplied disaster?, and .

substitutiou of oilier polui

liberty na the corner-stum- Freedom on the Ung.

Thirdly. Jn< tom<

FVfliwalhveco"'^";

M. Lsboulnyo conel

ip uml stlrrlnn nnpos

jis IhoroQ.-b.,........."'"1 -' ,"'

'11 '-;.,, .... -ul..-.. ...I °.."' Ina °"p;

•** «t' "'* ,.".,..',, |..«..h,d 1. lb.

..„,..«. m....b .»b.,~» ;„,.„ „dlb, .,11

peo,,,. .bo ..1, ....boo, I -

b , of .hanwltr.

Ei'r»rpsi.bri*„- .. p«.

„r tabor b. P.rpcl..>l..l,»M*

„a Bhalr».i .-,.... v. -.lb"..! -o

d^^'^CeSS'Sll

uro to a fanatieism an.-la--."- !- "b'b.iry„hich it is

.....IK -» -^"t.sh ™.=r«^^si^^^t.S^V -*i'h»"-,,,,

"f,„J

1,^.-1 >'-.'"-. "-'..'V : , , .,,„„ .., ,.„„..,, ,.:. .

.".HO--, "b.01"P

' i""«"b™-.t\ru,'hSh.d ;«iS,h,. I. .... i»,dv-j.»

,„u»«l.d ... i... >.«r...ll.i.Bi..-.-i»'""

„,.,llhS«.h. «™di"?JSJ oS^

,.„p.Kd.lib-jbo^oo. ,.;.

o easy to bear tlu-n lo gel rid ol.

.„, very numerous, but th-j

-in officeW out of it. Th

of «

.speech at Cooper In-

•wmwmmmwsmMsmcueomiuuo.. ai.i-i.

'°'li:,ui.T.l..y«.ui;. ""1 Hb.ll n^Cbur ibich avoty So.

",'",„.... il... « i" '!»'" ''"' ''

, .. .,,.

-,.-, „ .

ISXS* " »» "" •"'"' '"""^ "'-;;,;,';„.;;,.'.", • *»•

«

£ :;;,

";-'"i

,„,'", «i- .- ." '" , -'i

il";

-

"','' " ...'

i ..!I.'

'" -J "

,l,,v. Li. i '" "'",,„., 1 1 . .. r.aDl...r her ...billon '-

,- win, I. lliev Inav M.tro'iuie le

,'l'ii,,. ,|,.vvu Ibis rebellion, will ri.

i rll7,| . v"ii, n, ,ed iippr-fiation |ap-

m,.| |.i -in f. Ihe I'reS.delll and to

.viiumnmis, that they ruuat p.-r—

-, upon millions of hes

'

in with tbem inb.lb seatsm m support of - -

,be "lent |.r pie "I -I" !' ^» "\ '"^" tZltl-TU =« ^»™" ™iLrU lUaibU-deilared .locti-iue that all men are u

q1-

,,,,. pi)Ua!

, r , at, .1 alike (great ap[.|au,-, and waving o ha,

b i ^ ^

Hi,!™. ,„..,.-», .. ,-.- • ' ...... • v. , b.,.. ... pK»l r"P". ,,1 ' and ...... '- "I' ...l.".- ' '""' "

',

, , ,,,,. ,,„. „ i. 1. b. .o.nlod ,0, and

'depmlyonoftoUot.orof'v.ho, i

in authorit)''

ra of thosa of

.™SF'".r'»5.«lii, "• -«»s

a change of

Page 2: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18

:" ''" :V i ,'ih'i

"j

'"

rnl'm^K"!.i

,

,,

"l.mtn| -Li-h >" '"""Vl'tenia it lo »• '""'"1 «<"">""'.1 1, ,h„ !,„!! State., and .' « -

jppllinor.

nrelh.r Mr-Sumo1, b«s DO S|»cinl

reprcsenta

S. tt . il i—Mr S-..,nr..

wilhwhoru

'

.ulllo at V " Ttun.

nied >ue. by onolhe

,n.lcd iu I""

). "sly consolation

g (hey U-M 1

1

.

.;"II.- Il I

nia«ti t»l rid Ibem of Itiuir bonds,

,?t",,

b!'j

' l,uI jiTomtoent among them, is a further couipli

"iiTn'st \].""

1 '1>« puxile. But, we may truly say, thai,

uf nil par.

' lies thnt have over appeared in any country when

bwiuiTC

'oio1

1 oatliCT ncu PMsible <,1" s ia tba vi[ut "'° """' nb

-i,:c

ami especially the moroleritie has lold us that H it a masterpi- V !

n further couipli.mioii <.fargument ""J -Clement

;ili.it il .l.:;pl:iy:= »•

i. if, ,

,od stidJcnlylcd her Into tho rnnK o

jcr lost lienor among the t;

,,r, ''j

nrtli. I* no» wniun>; until l-cr w>

„ nt a- ^''"^^Hatto"7T>«dore TOo". ft "Jlis JndrjjenoVnf.

OHAltLES SVitXERS SPEECH.

still, a trnnilioibv '

',. hi a

0,VB OF Wi: -HMD Of U.l

-SamcUiinii i< «»." lokoow."

-. weary s.iMirrs havedtand IHI- ol VirginU. -

ndtt

alwi IL' for tbu parties

iininl.ii>-.' .'.

a freed

history and pnllilt

partisan M>-;

'' Wwith

Them hi

which the history of tbo

been inherently miBchiovons. The Catholics

maintained tt'.' Infallible Church against the attacks

of Protestantism hud the nutborilv ol ninny centu

ries of fuith lo pallialo even their cruelties in bei

ciosc. Tbi. Cavaliers who stood up lor Church not

King against Cromwell and (he Puritans have to thii

day a glamor ol ohivalric admiration thrown around

them ("or their devotion io .1 tolling

'eaglily phllo-

and thoroughly practical view of tw subject

relations. Yet it ii juit such ideas>B«1 just

such expressions as these which bnvo brought upon

Mr.Sumner n perfect hailstorm oi opprobrlon ifpi

(bets, and caused tin: iutensest malignity of reeling *n J

neliim to be manifest.

nscs^ malignity ofl

iwsrdj him.

if tbo»

f the orlin

rapb.t « lies

n Torim bad son

etor which mndit I lien

(be king under who*

..,, recorded in a aow«papiT p^ra-r;

fore' in. It relntci thnt an need eolirrvd nn

d In Iho ZineiiillO (Ohio) loflrmjiiy, who w i

ive in Fairfax Couni,-. Virsjinli, in the day« «' "'a- 1'-

gton,and was IhlcWen year, of a^o at the liw- ol

-.„!,], .tf* detcsL DurInS h««biv<jlifetn

Uh (J,, nrramjevuiitl •/ Mi^««T«J (THM.'.v-f, I" 1

l: " 1

. wive:

i CiiAJ. I loyal

it behnif. The English Toi

UntiOHRl ^lUi-^hu'cry ^tnnflatil. --'-^-^^J^Tm" 1 il,.- ,

Ibey may be

wit say about

ust for ilni^u-

tct which Mr i

;ultii:n read" throogli Ibo woode

"I'lir'.'iL" . ,i

dcaircd end ci

lie wrote: "Before Icamebcflioald not llinik no badly MIho "laic Slair' I- 'i I monny braoty in Die eysicni

NEW i-ORK. SATORDAY. (lClnm.lt l«. 1

Utter* unrbtine mnn...- „ua,;'r..bonlTbe

l.elicn.ri.r: u i..:t"' ''• •• • •ll "'

..... i,„. i.-. i.

Of -iw ,i)tii.Si.»vc»v Sr»f.i.«Ku.No- ! »'

N*w YOBI."

PKNNSYLVANI4 STATE MEETING.uJ.llU-.ot cvn.rniif I

"nM JilKTwenlyflflli/l''.

._ .. . :. ....I ^~lil i.t ...:..:l ,. Rnel

t the

,.rd you .

Id lure-

".;.-

u»a. nv.'in uv.1 i..1

-,.

Mm. H I.,,..,..!, H ,-[-l-,||.l VI. .1 1.1' ii- t'...i '' -li

la.; I all I. I....- M.-.-.-1 l.i

J you ctcr hear of Ji.bc

. i to ilirin a> 11 is

ellog <.f Ibc I'cnnaylv

>o held in Uortlcuitur

Cheater, on Saturday, tbu 2ilh inst-, at

o'clook, am. A full attendonco ol (heii-.einh.no

(Keiids of (bo Society i* rcquesled, wbilo a cor.ilel ut

i is oatended to nil oilier* fnvoroblo to the cao

out of the Stale, lo he pretest and parl'.eipato

ibo proccedingt ol the m.ciloa:.

TheanltMjbveryrao.ciiKHitiapte.eolinB IweM "

Bw atpccl II l-v "-« , "'' , n P-" 1 ln lu<lr°31

'

,bll»aiini>» aro devol-od Hf-oo ilm-e w.to

ft'c are now entering upen Ibo coimmo-

odi enlerpritc. tboduUoaol which, Oioogh

e in k^aic rripcota lean or.eroui than

hcretoCoro dtmar.ded our cnorgieB.

at Iho nparoachioK tncetlnB'. It la

iho iivcjcut to eiy th it topics of ibe most

nd ebtet-ineplrinp. character will bo con-

ih:it partic* in all respect* competent will

j (jlto vojuo to tlioii- discussion.

.i j) .' ., i rropoodius Secretary.

bigotry for Ibo yood old institutions of (bo csclu-

ion oi Diesentem, (bii puraecution of Catholics, Hot

lenborough I'lirliament- imd the eorli-lans. iloi

uern is nothing about thy ioi-di*tml ConBervativei

f onr d.ayfl (but can ever inspire a poet or romance

inter wilb tbo wish to make an heroic inmrmit

jut of (heirs- Thoy must ever remain ibe niisties

collection of the dregs and tbo scum of polities tha

,i,«r ran together lo be ft Blench in (he nostrils of

honest men, now nnd forever. Slave-overseers with-

out pay, volunteer slavc-pntrols, amateur blave-

entchere and slave-jailers, without the. excuse of

immediate interest or of lieredilnry habiluil.'— there

ia nothing in history that unaware to them. Xoibme

but n system of slavery like ours could have bred

liku these out of ils slime. Willing iblTi >,

their necks to the foot of their masters and

striking at the life's life of the men who would make

them freo indeed! It is one of the penalli

Virginia has b en pre .«i .'iilli tl . itavc-trtallnu

-(sic. To suppl) tho '- (I(intialcr Pi which ,i" oml-

lent Ylrfiinian 1 is snrl nsly .pi

ouree of the we lib uf

aa carefully mad b, .1, •lave-in

u of I

necustnined to r

Il m 1

fact th.it lAeir el lilrtc e ould hri R hielier piled «

the market), amn such

nge production What hi •f*could be tmn

let with this »yst

ority of thum nt

Slhnut thought o,

isepnrai,ble from such a a slavery that such

io calls that system by ii

oolless arduous, a

those which have

What ihtiJ new i

Tho late of tbu country would be wretehcil.iudcL'd,

if such men could gain thu mastery in its nlhiira for

which they are ploltinfi. Tbero is no demund of the

enemy that tbey would not anticipate by their bare-

ness to purchase his favor, For, with all their pro-

f.Miciu of loyally to the Constitution, tbey

rebcU t:. ihzmJ.-iiVr: a Davit Vorh s will

ing to leavu us a

whereas they nro i

servile of bis slav.

malignant faeli

THE OUTLOOK.

of.lh.TliKprochiuiMi.m ha? .handed tho huh-

parncs aid Lim bieonii' ilrell the basis 01

party, gniberiiii; into iis n.nls .ill the earin'et su|>

wrl ;.r.M .:.f ilie -.i.mment. There com,

great body of (he common people, who, h" 1

lied from thi-ir fa(bei

of the country, but a

hieb ttite sprana,

only the Ireii uist.tul

spirit of freedom oi

i retolved tbnt (bo ,

•riCce* of (Lo t •, I. In.

... slinll bo recompenred wnivcrsal liberty •'••:• <. i •' <l>o " :'

f tho opposition, innpi red wiihno*

i Inch, bmc put fotib for their pin

„.t..U.tul i.

lie ep I j i

in-.1(Jf u~...l-fW'Wc.Vrr- Ifl

y .. ;i, ilneger. Andyttl

iocs placed aboicrlculy I moke mu io consider wbai

or in UicSi-oateci

•uooot ol hardtblp. H .it tie und 1

troly free. II mu war could ouly n.

i .!. il (,rim an if I ceuld say, ' Nc

I I bad surh news I had. .1 I ,i ..I ',

isr'-r.d II

jar'leht.an.1 licit He riciit will (-.muuer nt

i.etlmnfrari.l it i"ii-'lit

'

llni ol.."' plokoU, whioh

am] by ft bouse where fl t

c., nd .n him ti.il li"." .i !;««

C1>SSEBYArtS3l.

the North to our own devices

inspiring to mnku us all the mo?

( . We trust and believe thnt tbi

prill bo troddcu out of existene

and urges iU stipprCi

The Church !s awali

km ; but of the create

tho Church has been t

If ItaminiMtorahoddo

enjoining riRhtcouine

ember, from the moirued bin inlluenco

It it

Ihilt his labors fur

leplmi

by Iho people of iho North ac;

ilobed under tlie tread of

n that it will, it' tbero ia but nn act

a united rally. The enemy ivilbiu oui

ore lo be dreaded than he that is [hi

i. Forewarned should be forearmed.

ORA J.ES SWiA'i'fl.

mil many

el a Srow

f;-ffp..'-

forward tn

sky.

Listen, this moipasscrs-hy arr tall

-:.|-. il ,m after™

for and near, tomi

IVI.eo I p.-.. I the e. Lirtiiieii'. laler, I -t.

.nine lad clw.iping ""..I. "i'h a Wok l",--^i ,. |, ., ., i. I _.!.. d him whs: l.e did wiih it. lie

l.e minted very much te '.. nrn l.i le.ld. ',-'l thai

boy of iii je.ir" «(• leadn^ I-"... "I'.l imi-i

w.iuH Ii. .iV.i-. lb.it uu.ril.tii l,-.il,ie lis letlei-a

IlllleOiliUi't yvin.o!.l! I >n-li I ''• an ill'lint,

I „ . .1.1 I i .1 Iii the course ol ..a ""H e„nv

,i i t.ll nic he tad I I "u why bin

.... .... i i., .. , . i r eul|. mi, to work I

II.; '.., i>.| I. .i.l ii„l..l ii, mi ".'

.::.,! i, i nil. U.M,.-,nr

to «ork for the tchei army, j" much it ll.'., "• i

t be (he 5..MICI

let Ii

1.i - that .1.. e tbo country so v ide a unan.mit)'

the governmentyet so long wero.V tit hi »ston that

ie hod not begua

be public temper

i left Immc and families, all thai

was near aoil dear ti (hem. I ha>e taken nomo polns

I., llni "Ut (he undr.ii Ma of these ireun.l me. si id

olniu.l to n mno, they say »e ciin never have permn-

... m ncBee till slnverv h atiiili-ln-ii. Here are two

I.. -.I-.. J (hmi-and iiitii ready to an lurlli, nt the iwnl.

to Victory or D.-ath. am I 1 l.eli.-ve ih.y i.e.. generally

desirous (0 See l-'nuiliuii t.i All iiin'rlbcil lipun lliuilr

banners. I will nut believe ilmt the I'lnrmu-i ..pp..r.

liiiilly.stoslipbv u^. finely, tied "ill not pennilii

He 1 e.;rs the jiniyer. of ibe \<a»r slaves, and nf thoie

uli.. have been wurkiiii; iiinl prayinu lor them fur

years. I still pray on. nnd hope on. I want to do

much ; but how can 1 do inure Umn 1 > I"i'^' 1

,: ] eilorm my duly, und wait fur (be wheel* ol

t ivernment to move. Tliey teem lo inn in no slew!,,

in u I loog to pot my shoulder to the wheels and puj.1i

the oi along."-

I I.OI impe.1lllll.iid, I ju.ls.-e We flllli! have a lelllle

sooa. When (be ii lor neiiori "iue:i 1 shall try lo

do my duty, God helpiog me. 1 have written myvlonslo you fully, ili.n il it -luml'l be my lot t.. lull in

battle. you may fcin.w "iih »!eit inlmjjj 1 go into the

conflict. The cstcrminniinn ul slavery, nod freedom

iur nil throupb (lie whole length anil brcndih of the

lni.,1 is the idea thai nerve* my arm. May linil gi

ii ul! ulb.r ihnp baa Inn ain.i), emnest against slut cry, and Ibnc bo ai

tl e In elf-ine ibe niigiiitn I i ' il.eyue

|.t burning In luea's

it ia best ganged by possible oo ly by

... - « Mill.

|.-le.l,s...nu

hurried that I hni

its uiuil now. I wi

. niter the fight

1 tights again 1 And (u (hlnk they had

(o be left (n Iho mercy nl (ho rebclil OU, it was tue

painfull But (bey were nil pudenl, ..ut n murmur ur

rumplaint. What a ' k---i.ni it taught rnel

-Now wo have a little rcif. and as I sit near the

Lanka of Jun.cs liivee, mv mind in busy with reQec

tio-s iimeernlng the last live bn [ need outspeak

ut tbu great meritlces .1 life nnd prujiorly, of the

recent bloody battles and ibe itetent ol our army

If'yuu will tieor with n.e yet lunger in nlluaioas

which I make will, r.luname. I .bail quote at —unoniworablo defence (bo wurd. el lilmuod Ilur

. ,. „ h0le k1i.ii n.!d.cts.o;h.*ccOsUloeiittalI)riatol;

:ZulJ~^ ibu^ir't ol 'Sie^Urd Aod now. gcotlcraeo,os tbt. M rlousdW.wn (n 1 to

wed that soniethiiij in wni-.por.iiblo fur ih is defeat 7 1

...i.iur Boldicri ought to

lonclaturc of panics has always been

jsiiiraof Oisiory. In ulioost every inelanco

o nftmea ol pariios have heon bestowed upon thei

reproach nnd derision ami accepted as honorary

stinctions. nnd made the inspiriting watchwonh

political contests and of eonllicts in arms. Whig i

Tory. Jacobite, Jacobin and Dcmocr:'

others, were bapliaiua bestowed by

ed and used in n sort of defiance as eharaclur-

sullieieiillydescri|.live. H:idieal reformers wero

shortencl inlo KnJiwls in England and made the

appellation of lie branch of their assailants they moat

bataii, by tbnse who were in Iho enjoyment of hered-

itary privilege* or antiquated iifanw». The Radicals

did not disdain tho denomination, but turned it to lliair

own account against their adversaries. When the

a0otl old distinctions of Whig and Tory began to

nntked in the confusions of parly occn-

1 Con-.-n ni.o *m- miM'it up out ol' laatc-

:hrialenL.l it-elf the literal party, the one

; the idea of retardation and the other that

of progress.

These styles have been imparled into this country,

on.1 ihcre is now a Bet of men who call themselves

Con»ervn lives, nnd apply as a term ol contumnly Ibe

name uf IW.icals to the public men and their sup-

pnrtcra who would have the present wnr carried on,

if not for the destruction of slavery, at least without

regard to its [.reservation, if it stand in Iho way of

victory. These last have not taken the title tolbem-

eelves, though they well might, as it expresses what

is most honnnbte and all that is historical iu out

current annals. The word Conservative, thus boi

rowed from English politic, has been used as a (lis

guise for thoso who wished lo do sail nnd service ol

tbo u.imi abject ualun: to slavery nnd yet were un-

willinc to call and profess thejtsalv^ Democrats, tho

r .li l.i winch this class of politicians lormerly pre-

.(trm! to dislingui-b themselves. The thing they

ie will, g to be. hut ihn name (Ley bad

-ergih of mind to endure And here we may remark

liaising to ihc circumstance that parties oct

|i i lirelj i '. ingo their nature while holding

st resolutely to their names. Tho D,

parly in its origin was gathered to oppose the policy

of the Federalists to organizes strong governmental

Washington, nnd to vindicate (he rights and powers

if ibe separate Stales. Hut for the last thirty years

tinlil tho slaveholder.-, abtlicateil (be throne of the

they were masters of the situation,

the Dsmaurnla were (he most servile of tools

bauds for centralizing the National government and

milking IheCnngresn anil the irupreme Court nbaoluti

theSlato Lfgislai lire., nnd Judiciaries. The term

Oraioerat Blood for precisely opposite ideas in 18011

1850. Since tho slnveholdera fell back from

us with the single purpose of coming on again and

tftblishing their power the. mure absolutely over ns,

Ihi! portion of the Democrats who really had an

honest purpuse and who were deceived as to the

designs of their alaveholding allies, have rallied to

(he flidu of iho President ,- whihi Ihe worser part has

slid by the moral graviiaiieu which direela the mo-

lions of political bodies to the lower depth in which

ihu Conservalives wallow ia the mire.

Thero is nothing in Ibe word Conservative tbnt is

inherently disgusting or revolting. Like the word

"accommodate" in Bardolph's time, " it was ft good

word enough until it was ill-sorted." Iliit so ill-sorted

hss it become that there is no lerm in all polilieal

twhrjology so nauseous and repulsive. It is worse

iban tlnvocracy or sluvc-drivim;, fur it Btunda for the

«ry meanest or the slaves ol the slaveholders nnd

Ibo slave-drivers— for llm willing slaves, those who

lave their servitude and prefur it to virtuous freedom,

nnd who not meroly do not welcome tho prospect of

tneir deliverance, but do all iu their power to hind

iU over eoinieg to pass for themselves ar for atbe:

ll is tho most uuitnconnlablo of all persuasions tba

black slave, kindly treated from infancy in his ml

let's family, and who has. formed tbo strong nlTecti

of tbu African rnco for its members, should prefer

tho house where ho was bora and bnd

grown up, when iho chance of freedom and eelf.

i).i|wiidmiee is offered

ruth is

rk and accomplice,

n opposing sin and

imner might have,

ihnut being needed

nd every chureh-

ining the Church,

and the WW'-

if |h0 popular

humanity nml

mcht ii

upon his head, that ho

ly uf his own noble Sinte, bat

of every one of those States which are called free. If,

by and by, nil of us, North and South, get released

from our connection will, the inf.imous system of

tudo, his onmo will stand hitfli in the 1'=' "'

anvo fought tho good, flithi. nod won the

,ory. Meantime, let (be friends ol freedom

late remember, that tho meal duty of

, e tho Prcs-uJout's baud, to carry out, unfal-

, nrucbiinaiiou of freedom whioh I

A ut: will go hair ovor the world wl

ng on her haots, the wisdom, of ages tells us.

This activity gives falsehood a great advantage ai

lie start, and truth llml. her progress seriously uli-

tructcd by calu ies, sown befurehund by tbo grunt

dvorsnry, nnd springing up nil along her path,

Through the constant repetition ol such calumnies

poken and printed by the urgans of nppusition to

otoriu—and diffutc.l wilbenual zeal by ribalds in IU

•Itrald and PharlsMS in 2n= Jbunail Of" OrmiraCTM—Mr,

JniSLTS Suslskr bns come to ho spoken of as a radical,

ipecch. 'sothina could bo innro absurdly nt varianci

with tho reality. Those who know lun. understand

hot two of his most decided charaeleriatit s

lion or thought, a oonsti lotion si l..-.itaney

speech shall not go beyond b.s lbou K bt. Ho heloogs It

Ihc ctsss o( moderate, iu conir.vlibiin.tinn (n fauntica

ii^iii?^m;el;\v;,-un. ,;.-',;,i;

,

;.Tu;;:'npj;nrJ

ommiding himself lo them, but beforo roentaHj accept

ng (heni. Aud both before and after such ciaraimi

ion, ho is scrupulously careful not lo let Ids languagi

oprcsent to others a aitualiun, a fact ur an idea miin

strongly than he feels it.

Tboogh this couslilutional leniency of Mr, Sumner's

mind remains unchanged, he has been forced by cir-

cumstances to the frequent use of strong language, and

lo a position in public debate [uitagdiiimic to that of n

majority of his fellow-cillicns. Growing up in a Cum-

munity wbeso liberties, rights and interests were con-

stantly more and more infringed upoo by Southern

slave.), anl uudlng the ihsracier and tendencies ol

that iiijlitulijn vehemently debuted by many persons

around him. it became indLiponwible that he should

examine nnd understand thnt subject. In advance ol

such deliberate etimiealiun, and even far throufc-b the

process of making il. bo shrank Irooi the views taught

by Sir. Garrison, and the policy whioh that gentleman

recommended in regard to slavery. Not ooly was h.

not attracted to mingle in the eseited debates to which

published, will now he best

who have most vigoro

erforn , 1.

1. i u i i ! i i

-

WJIATJS THE MATTER I

Tnt; Springlleld Hepirfjlicon is a journal which one

o

imtoyed the good npinion ol tho friends of freedom,

both in and out of Massachusetts. Hut of late, whetbei

io conseo.uei.ee ol the absence in Europe ol its leading

editor, or for auun mure unapparent reason. It play-

on- day fair and thu nest day falso will, the Good

Cau^o of which it tvas unco an able advocate. It

strikes blows ut its old friends and eichnuges compU-

Just now, while the general eentu.

salts is cnlbusiitM Lie ally .leiuimdin

Charles Sumner to the Senate, that j

i chum: of bitter iijipositiuti 1" Mr "

r.-ii iii better motive thiin personal

Iho retu

Miner, apni

inlligl.ity.

now staining i's good name in tho va ii iitteinpt

ipposltion to a public

i, based on a good reason, ia creditable to his orilica.

!Gut the course of the SpringOeld Bsjuiiliean, if conti-

S at present, must soon entitle ibat newspaper to

pped frooi the roll, not only of thu steadfast

;, but of the honorable enemies, i>i the Ilepubli-

rty of Massachusetts.

lli.it sdl.j,...

ii..,-. Lineiiiw

mght

«li of si

respecting it.

B light lo Mr.

Sumner's mind. It showed h

strange anomaly in tho midst of inttitutious called

free, Republican and Christian, bu

corrupter and depraver of those in

its influence manifestly exerted '

quality and reduce iho amount of the civilization, the

morality, the intelligence and the religion oxi,

among Us. And after clearly seeing this, and si

that tl prngressive dcpravnlioa so extensive an

pernicious required the most vigorous efforts to ni

it, he manfully stepped forward tu do his part la this

work, hdJ, in a speech tho vigor of which iruprcE

itsell alike upou triouds and enemies, held up slavery

In tho detestation of the world as " Barbarls

No ooo expression used by Mr. Sumner 1

sn much rage among tho defenders of slavery, North

and South, as this ; and it is mainly on

his that the jlossiohusetls Senator has

j, a fanatic. Never was au epithet

nisplaced. llo has used language u! unusual energy

lUd emphasis, but only after having demonstrated thai

io terms lets iiri.ni: will aJcquat.-ly describe the pbe

lonienoa in question. De has spoken strongly, becausi

,11 around him wero sleepers, whoso own welfare (ai

veil as Iho i.ubliu snlety) required ihitt they should b,

.wakened. lie has raiaed his voice tu tones that com

mailed otlviiii-in, bee,iu-e, while tbusn who needed hii

ippcal were sleeping, lotarosted pi

to mainlain tho torpor, nod lo pravi

But a

it all i

..-oked hi

if debate nor opportunity of ri

ly more than absolutu 1

11 nny candid mm will

ei-[i.jjiti'.

say t

iih hit

mpellod to admit tbnt Mr. Sui

a fur, either ia language or aclii

m a fanatic, or a radical, or i

urse in regard to slavery, Is asi

guogu as to apply '

COLONIZATION.

Ion. S. S PoHEBor, (Wonfaii

Dew Sin : As you seem to have dillleuliy in finding

place wherein to locate colored persons, why n it

ike Florida, whioh wo bought from Spain and noi/

wa 1 The Stale authorit

id Union

;l admitting Flori.

Huiy Ie peal ing their

CnnEress also re[ioal lb

Union, as a State, nnd then i

helnnging In the United St:

belongs to the government

luviug been uwncd by trai

Act is now vested in the government.

By sending a small force thero or 0,000 men, all Iho

rebels will retreat north and clcur tbo State, leaving

only those white persons who arc willing to remain as

teachers, guardian, ar.J employers of 111

There nro maoy soch already there from

(or the benefit uf their health, aad aa aooo

-rnment wooid extend the proper protection, thou-

inndi i from ihn North, in lulling health, would

eek that deliglnful chusir i" winter, and act ns (he

o tho

itucy,

Much of the land jet

t, and nearly all of the rest,

.iters, under the CunOjcnlion

i there nf G,CH

ho North,

is the gov-

Isof U,1 soon ban- 300,000

i. of the South, and w

i Ihu n Of c

ill Nll.lV,

,...l„„)k.l

should be thoruugldy nrniid and drills

ary wo could have 5(1,000 of Ihu best si

i few experienced whites, nhle to ho

against tho whole rebel army.

When Florida shall become full, the southeri

lion of Snuih l.'Ai-oliiiii uii.l (je ui-giii could be nn

if more roam Was needed. I suggested those vl.

the War Department, Aug. 'Juth, 1301, but tho ci

his been uomewhat educated since by expei

The idea of sendiog the-.o peoplo to South Amci

my other foreign njiioa, willi

cjiuint prolei

and by I nee

iers, nided by

tbnt country

(hero without

k-l.iiin cry gen

ug-'MIed that the remanding ut flurl,

fanatics to po

With all ol

eminently aj

t the i

1st, for his

schoolmaster, the

puplla should compel him to iujhd

:1th great energy ami einphnjiis upun the fact that two

nd two make four.

Is there anything, fauatical intho lollowing eentenco'

The Slave I'liwer eouslitiites the most formidahh

ntnKonist to civdi; :.l projjre.i wliieli lev. iippi-ared lei

n.iny eenlurii'S, rein-.-eiiuiij j "jutein ul -i.".:i'.-ly n

„„.. L. reli-svade ami iigiirosslvo,

.in (.prina, gr.i;

em Anil .

,.,iiiu.,,.

from Whioh ituproveu

.tably tuiviinla h.irbar!

impelled by esigeiieies, inherent in n.i t

j l.iiieua^e

rj syllahlo

ction ol an

untiku

.i' TFliIeli >

'. ttu tr'i,

be has been called

breast* no vengeance

indeed, lhat such ca.e» exbt, tbuiif;b tbey

iro much fewer than the dufeadcrs ol slavery proleni-

fent that white men, generally of good estates an

loterable education, should be so besotted by theirliln ,od l0

siavC-m as tern that they choose itliDlil

-

ia and a calumniator, it was written, uowo

v when it is offered to them, is one L ot tlJ, Mr.Samncr, but by J. E Cuirnes, Profe^o

-si enigmas of the time. And that Jurisprudence and Political Economy ia Queen's

Ihis loyalty to their masters to a|cge, Galwoy, wheso eicellcnt work on the Charat

ceils in ihem tho most mah'-nant Career and rrobshle Deigns ol the Slave fewer

rir.' Futo?™ lhat ho was| ^e,i andinvelerab, malieo ngaia=t all who would

|just been repubU.hed here. Of this work a Competent

Calhoun's extreme views, he was

.ic.il iuju. In 1811, 1 was present at

iw between him and IIou, Chetscldon,

Ellis, then a Member uf Congee. s from tbi'i Stale, when

?slion of Texas annexalion was abjorbing Iho

,n Df the country ond Cuigress,

is theft apparent it would fail In iho Senalo

tho Treaty-making power, fur tho wont of a

rd vole. Tho .[uesUou was, how it could bo

accomplUbcd in lhat event. Mr. Calhoun said, " By »" at resolution pis.ie.1 hj Ivitli Houses of Congrvsa.*'

Mr. Ellis suggcslcd, "That wuuld not bo warranted by

Constitution, nnd the country might nol acquiesce."

Calhoun replied, "Pots tht bill and anntsalion

nasi -i i--«ct, oi.d Oiat i. IW w- thai can

. Ellis i

id when dally oroots are making Hie most iioporta

itory tho world bu oier recorded, would guide tl

Ship of SlalO through Iho storm, lighted by Irulb, un

ichored ujion jusiico as a fact.

Yours. tl F. Bcujjiu.

Wstorfbrd, N. V.

.:rj» Cu.sTt:.-TiiiN baibcenlnses-

eek.ln Dr. Farley i tlhurcb.

lo.iiv ,.

of.llr. .

f

tr

Page 3: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18

- OWKMSti ,1 J'liLZT/i'MiV'.S KtVO/,7'.

Ihe multitude, and t

ii ft Co,

A Goon politician audit to I

the over-changing opinions o

Over-changing platforms uf til

likely to be chosen for a Blttl

attractions which will not '

party of lain [ricndj, but dm"bin enemies. If tlic Republici

to find tho man whn hoit horololbro spoken moat ir

pralso of tho Democrats? So It happens that, foi

- parly purpose.1 .It is well, In tine's speeches, lo havi

(aid something in favnr m botll lldei. Tito only in

convenience resulting from tills plan in. Unit wberess

ono's record ofpnsl inounlistoncy II msdon virtue ol by

present friends,!! sometimes furnishes occasion to nn

opponent to efllcli up Ills man nn tho fork of criticism.

Wu hue been wading tin- T n « « speech of Horatio

ScjroQurfDemnoriilic candid nto lor Governor o( Now

York, in reply to a speech by Lyman Trctuniii, llepub-

lScaticaodid.no for Lieutenant-Governor. Mr.Troniain,

tteinir not long ago a thorough-going Democrat and n

coadjutor of Mr. Seymour, and since made n oandi

dale against his eld trie-nil, ii made the victim of

sumo dinngrooablo comments by his adversary, in n

showlng-np of uld records mhioli, lo sny the leant,

would be rather mortifying to any man but a politi-

cian. We make some extract", as follows

:

They any lhat ho is n patriot and ilmt 1 am n traitor

Why; Less Ibftn iwoi.ar- -i ho Warn membersofti Convention balled to (iTert M

iai***, tin onlinii-

the hope, and llio

anti-aim

.ve been consummated, ilmt it is " Hearing its end.

iero Is a very good lilllo book by Eliot, the title of

lich I' " Tiik Disciruye UF Sonanw " lie lesson is

it, I1 nigh iorrow, wu nre chastened In spirit, and

, i. mto tho paths ill reclitnde and hulinens, from

,:- »e had wandered. Thtia 1 trust will It prove

Hi ihuse among idiom we have In years pwt labored

the service of the nnli-slnvery cause. Pointing out

Ir complicity with slavery, religiously, politically,

nmcrrlnlly nod socially, wo entreated them in llio

nn or outraged ami suOerlng Immunity, «nd for eon-

etice mike, tu ropont nnd do works meet for ropont-

:o. We were disregarded, and our i uscls scorned,

1 nfier n qunrtcr of o century of audi effort, for-

n, indeed, seemed Hie hope uf the slave. At last

»0 war, as the acute anil more external development

ilie long-standing disease of slavery. For n year

;1 « half, during the progress of the bloody tragedy,

lb ilfl hundreds of thousands uf sncrillees, olEcial

volian to slavery continued. |N'ur ha- il v< i • iscd.)

And fur three months prior i t tiv.htv iliir-l .if

September last,

nihily. imploring ly. hut

who had triumphed nt

country, ami lo "pari- il

width teaches III

,'.', ,,,-oe,

..V.|." Aio d olbi

uilii.uid 'ibsi'iic from my oiue, nnd neglect of

fairs, mad o It a. great Mien

l,i..i,:.|) dill, llli* ConiTIII ,ee, a majority oi

were pidilic-lllv opposed 1

i ol Oneida, liii! Huh lies.

,,rmrv.-iili I iBiIloi: [In- or.

iline, ll,.„l..h,.ll r.ddnr

.Mr. linn.

iitnnlv. Ii

er Convitrio i. Why

ticntioualy believ

miv.' this oountri . an. I which I have nlwaysauppi

nnd simply becsc-i- Mi. Tremnin h:w been " suitably

rewarded "by a pari v lie Una nl'.v.iya denounced

oppostd. It mav be (Evero tu call me a traitor, b

LT.TTEH FllQM A WON 21, POWELL.

. a, 18GS.

®ut W«slri»nuin ffiotrtsponntntr.

,t r.j.

Gbsst, K. V., Ot

ilclng that I am able to exprtta

tV/,tliat the work of tho fji-dfr .,.i....-

iv before been kun

ealiicd in anxlom solieihi'.:

i and st

Milieu, I.

.., of KM there would at

illitary exodus for

tho slave.

Willi tho continued madness of the rebels (about which

ero is not muob ronni for doubt), [he proclamation of

iiancipatlon by the President nlvSvei and atrenpthens

i|ie. A ifaj/ lias li<eu nanitd ojfichlly ulitnon t/ic qrtal

yjarily of our diaits art morally tmialn to be dcclarrd

ncvKit rnr-E. Ilis not the .lny uppninti-il of truuropi'iit-

icc. That is always /o-day. Tho doors of Compromise

0 thrown ivido open, and temptingly large is tho oiler

Ilia rebels 10 come back again to their whilom ollo-

inco in llio undlslurbed worship of their idol of

slavery. Terrlhlo Indeed Is the contingency, and

vful the contemplation of audi n future as would bo

e slavn-s and ottrs. if Ihe oQera of coiupromuie so

visbly given are neccpted. But it io tbo llaok flat],

.Lher than concession, which tho proelnmntiun has

iggested to the rebels. Telegraphed by this lime

from cabin lo cabin among the enslaved throughout the

South, it his pointed to Ihe hour on tlio dial ol time

hen tho Saipi, Robert Smalls, and l)rcd», yet in

nvery, are tu become the O.-iviil- "f n new force In

mdoi • i f.,rti-e

labored for by i Ii m-i

One result ot the proclaim

intl oceaaion fur much rejoii

;ipated in the Norlh largo n

ifttavay. It has rendered more definite

politics. Tho " Radienis," represented by

talk now, not ol

liithei

(that

upon), but ot [jitnniiiulion. They accept the proela-

mntlon as nioaning. in elleet, univer-al omaneipntioo.

Tho " Conservatives," represented by Seymour, swear

that slavery shall bo preserved, and curse llio procla-

mation, for slavery un.|niilifi-i.lli, or agaiost slavery

iquail lied ly, is Ihe notivo tendency in public opinii

obtervnble since Ihe proclamation. In Ibis there

jjrciit eneournporotnt. There are unmialaknble e 1

deuces Ilmt ibo year and n hall of " The DlMipllnB

Sorrow " has not been lout upon the people. The Ii:

time of ono generation will have been consumed

achieving the decree of utiiier-il emancipation. He

many gineralion" mill it require til net rid of the sea

and traces ot slavery T At this period let every inll

once within our reach he brought to bear in ureolinj

public opinion wliich Khali not only sustain tho part:

meaaore inaugurated by the I'reildent, but demand

second pruclatnation, which shall, nn or before the :

of January, 16G5, decree uxiVEitiii. ESi.tNCir-iTiox.

LETTER FROM AXDREIV 1

.Ur.Tn-iu. iapi irlot!

Tho following conlaiiu a double alh

Curtis Koycs, President of tho meeting at which Sir.

Tremain made his speech, and to Daniel S. Dickinson,

Trim spoke at the tame meeting :

I have o'doded to one of the speakers ot Ibo meeting

held at ildi place n-i Wednesday lasl "lien llio Preai

dent of that o— riuiiloge linlened c mpl.-ccnily to the

BOKKiSiion of )lr. Treniair. whu. after vainly nltcmpl-

in- i

. -.1, . i•

'" ['i

'T'n' ''-

k:'

pressihly grateful for this. For it

in blessed freedom to all in oil the

Laud, t think lhat you, and the rest of us who have

taken tho same posiiiun, have Ihe clearesl evidence wo

mid desire that Ihal posiilon was a right ono. Not one

failed to

Dickn

supported Mr. Ill

irs r,o< in mn» <i;.iins: [he couolry, beadc

iiidldnto for Prrihlcat. llo thco, in ruslic

u-. intTodiiced lo hit i i.limco tbo U;u ft'•

2 Blebi (rit

.. _. tho last l>ii did en lint

i. Mr. Diekinsoo also addressed meotings

Viillinoi I., \iiii. .-v. nnd |j mi- -uuleniui.e to liisd

rilioii that Ihe i.ii.dil '-nelit In "ithJnv.i lt-n

Union in ihe cunl ol Mr. L.iiicilii'n eleeiiun. i

thai eiet.t, in u i-pitth pi.tdialn d nadcr hn, re pen

"All the p:

ivnkened simila

i 111 delay has

oposo to obey thy commnod lo'

ter the first of January, 1S0J, ir

the Stales, and parts of States,

Tilt -\".< ,':'."

TUE ISSUE I

ply a per*.

WlSlIISUTON, OOL 13, 1603.

I BqiuMican, of Salurday morning, ha) »

nl in its editorial columns, in fact, it is

Ihe first editorial In the paper. The statement is

that Ihe President made his recent visit to Gen. UcClcl-

headquartor. nl„m,t entirely to ascertain, if poss.-

liecauao for lhee\iiaordin;iry d-lsis ! hn nrnij.

11 goes on to stale further lhat the FrtiiJtal returned to

injsftinjfoii «/!% vraaliifitil. 1 should not havo yen-

lured lo open the subject, but as 77ie BepuUfoan 1".«

nade n deliberate statement upon ll.lt can do no harm

, add that llio object of the l'reslrh-nt I villi 10 I a -

cr'l Ferry lis* been very fr-1ly dl I

' "" ' t]'

il over- .luce lie left, and very liollj' '"-

Ren. MeClellnn'a friends say lhat Mr l.m. In Wi per-

fcetly satisfied with Gen. McClellan's explanntiims,

dill his budget of facts, and returned to Washington

Uisfled lhat Little Mao is duing all Hint he eau. On

io other band, those persona nmong us who have

..ever had any confldenco in Gen. JJcClullnti slate posi-

tively Hint the President received no adequate expla-

Geu. SicClellan for his great delay, and

that the President returned to this city very nearly

-mined lu remove McClelloo from his present cum-

I. This I givo ns tho Btate of tbo case, so far ns

irs and general statements go, not expressing an

nn of my own upun tbo suhjeet. An enemy oi

McClellsiid, and by ihe word enemy I mean si ra-

a who has never had nny confidence in Gen.

McGlcilnu's military obililica and who desires that he

.red from his command, an enemy ot Gen.

McOlcllnr's assures me that Hie President is on the eve

of appointing a new General to the command of tho

my of tbo l'otomnc-thal bo is angry with MeOiellan

his disgraceful delays-and that bo believes that

n. MeClellnn mtauli to spend another winter un the

laniBe line I On the other hand, an ardent friend ol

I Genernl'a lells nm that he knows that Mr. Lincoln

urned from his trip lalisfitd, and that henceforth

when he gels ready and not before, and so on. Which

o of these two parsons lella tho true Blory it i«

possible Tor me tu Ray. I can say Ibis mnch.hnw-

er-llint Hie President, lien, lialleek and Mr. Stantor.

re nngry and excllcd over tho news of tho Invasion

Pennsylvania. aKitt Otn. ifoCMIan trus maftins a

sit to rhiliohlp'iia. Tho real invasion of a frei

Slnto has nclually taken place, afier Gen. McClellai

Gov. Curtin liavu been bowing llmnka In earl

Other fur having saved Pennsylvania from invasion

It is disgraceful and nstouuding. Il is Ihcso things

which are rapidly demornliilng the enliro Norlh. Peo-

ple everywhere exclaim : " If it ho « fact that all

executive and inilitnry ability resides in the Soulbcrn

Stales, wc may as well succumb first as last, and even

Aire Davis nnd his follow- traitors lo rule over us!" If

lliuy, the rebels, can do such brilliant ncls.tr'ii/ noiire?

WhV did not Gen. McClellan by movements of bis own

prtlxtrt the rnld inlo Pennsylvania I Is he always lo be

at the mercy of the rebel cavalry t Is il impussible lo

prevent tho rebels from cutting into (he rear or our

armies at their pleasure and escaping without Ihe loss

of n man whenever they get ready lo retreat? These

are tho questions naked nil oround me—nnd iiu ono can

answer (hem.

But it is a dangerous busineps lo attack McClellan,

and your correspondent does not propose at present to

embark in that enterprise. When n General is first a

hero, and then after n year's trial n failure ond in dis-

grace, and is then nblo to make himself n greater hero

than lie was at first, it becomes almost certain that ho

pussessca certain qualities which givo him power over

bis fellow-men. It is an undeniable fact that the Pre-

hident after having given up McClellan as If ho Were in

deep dingraco, called upon him again lo tnko command

of all tho troops near Washington, and that the dis-

graced General won a groat battle. After auch things

hare been, llioso persons who disbelieve in McClellnn,if

Ihoy are wise, will desist from all violent attacks

against him. For these ore two unquestioned facia of

the past— first, that Gen. McClellan is beloved by the

army, and second, that the President fins never

at, or bad the courage, to remove him from

' THE FALL ELBCTI01

Iln Hi

"Coufldlns Wilton » fieti rather badly heal

Tut dishoiKtii- ol (he Abolitionists in attempting to

cover up and inen out of sight tlm true issue of ihe

political eninpWii ,, ,i ,1-nili.nil lommcntsry on tho

oral delation „f ,, |,.,rly which "'-'"

iwnslllp, Chcstf County

e riguii t il,.i

ralb:..:i.lJidHl

,Thev contend that c

o against the v

i.li-lito'n

Letussn,,> that by bandying

' not support Mr.

believed that Ihe

r. large majority.

Coj.rEs,of Londoi

Pa., aged nearly 1!

fn the full vigor and prime of life, and in the midst

great usefulness, in a muuieiit tbo mysterious thread

of llfu was broken. The " plates that have known himIsouw him no more forever." In him has been lost

oti-l liM-ibjii.l, a kind sad in.iiilc.nt father, a true

i, the cause of humanity a sincere ndvueato nod

While we weep for our great

how he W been bs

'Jrcctry—tLW.vJ

i«r, in « , ' , "

Co-f,-)w>. ...

oiivert |.' iunncriim t

ti,td«l— llidn lyou v for'

('„„/i./i„.j CiiF^n—And whaisi-tnni. all tbriiigh lie' caiiv;

9 ri;rs uVsoinfU / moraiuadturinii-Eht

ns ft proselyte 1-

ir mnilUafo.n born fool could i

.

.

eeeisfnl eucept through emIndrwurtli mailD It n--'- ; -

"lis opinion In his

pike

and faithful enadjutura. Kruui thai day lo ibu latest

hour of his life, his heart responded promptly

the slavo ; and his voico and pen wonso of human freedom and tu bis highest Idea

In Ihe East oud in the W.-it he laborj.i |.,n>;

and faithfully, hot!) as a public Bpt'akoraud an editor,

behalf of the nnli-slavery eaase, and in him, unpop-

ir truth found nn earnest champion, and popular

-nng a faithful censor. His faith In (he principles of

ace. as taught In Christ's Sermon on (he Mount,

ver shaken, and his practical testimony to Ihis I

ter of accept-

Hut I trusted In TJio'Jrioun!. Whyni all who voted for Wadsworth at

preicnd that there was no issue

three-days old puppy

mniib for ct

1 ,,• ' "l'":'l I''' Itmp lustoptlit

iclry—lBaryiiu} lnm.si.lj Mijjiri in 'i moroiii,; p-i/irr)

such a eoll.irpiy Mr. liroclcy would have the be

It woulil, of course, be pretty much such

Irum nlfair as is here roiiresontOd. Mr. Greeli

L brilliant.

-wined nuodle who cuuld i

lerverttOlheOeoiDtrai

he State of KuwVoik,

,f(ieu. WndjwortUUou

be real Issue presiaicd

3Tib WorU, ol Now Vorl.-now

t; Vi'u believe (hat, ibrcuglioi

Ihe great mass of ttie snpporte

iM.h is, nakedly,

an endorsement oi Hie government's prop.^eil i»dlcv oi

Emanclpailou. Tlias, Sir, Seymour Iho Democraile cnndl-

dnte, whoso nomlsatton 'llio H'orld supports, coafesfej

that ttu issue, oa Ibe p;irt of [ho Republicans, Is not Q

Hidden bet anopeaone. lie saj'sil

111 ihe first place, who are Ihe partii

test! His not nu rely a eonllicl bclivi

oraiie and Hepnblicnti organiitiitlons,'

Demo-

d radical clossi

our eltliens. (I —in, .lirstoiid, ..I'd no nl".. i''.'p' '.il'iil.t Tina whs ii

. loiir in tlic I." ii.-i.'.-i ivldcb pile d Mr. lt";i,!jn.

, *.io.i. Ilnrv wl,.. - rolle.l iloil l.o.lv -

,i ell

n the :

elhat

Df self-respecl. Generals, ricloriooi in ih

called on [o elposo their troop*, union

.

i are ackoowledged. Their identity in i

rnolinn claiiiH a date ol their own bi;l

rife, whose anxiety i.ppreues me, in .n I over dreamtf iu a war fqr tho I'nion. flut il Ibo infslunlcd Northre we.k enough lo let Ihis crisis bo managed bysmall men of small molices," I nm not willing lo be

their puppet.

My dew Pet. I am lo., Is.-v, md r>.i little- tr.tcr.-st.il

dive into tho lute-ro of this " Utile box of heresu-.."i ,lu U'H me— what do Iho [leople at the North l-,h

En. nt bis residence in Kennelt Pqu

,BksjaulV S. Jones, aged -IV years,

ic AbollllonbU of Pennsylvania, whi

.ill i ml i Ion

ry ant

d bix* ) life.

In tho 1

if hisyi

itnate. n Ii

ter by lion,

has just be

home by Hi

lie says :

eoi,.l..|mi.'.|

marauding g

ihis v-ickiil

of Kviilucky ..pp. ..-.! Hie

Kenlm-kj. / nm )|.,,r -. i

nid (iliougli, bylho way. Iberemaruted lu Talleyrand] that " lanpuag.

conceal our ideas." Uul hero is a 1

speech thai does not cuneenl its idea.

0. Grior, of tho Kentucky

burned out of house nod

irillai of Ihe rebel Morgan.

ffln-miitte of tlic Wat.

flic following reniarkablo Idler was read at 1

yiiniur meeting at II..; t'onper Institute last week

WjUsHtsoroM, March 3, 1S61

Di:.in Sin: Hoping thai in a day or two (ho nc

.-..j.l.-ni u-i!l have h.ippilc p.i^.d iliro.iel. nil o

nil d sneers nnd rind bin. .-..It io-lalled an honor

-ii,?ir j| Ihe great IVublnglDH, with you ns i

iefol his Cabinet, I bog Ir -'

my victury Hiey hope i

:hcerlully put at hsit

rhuy did not conceal ll

iror their heart than

a us. To win it ihoy.ccess of their ticket.

it Ihey demanded the

a opinic

.Ciil'l:- 1 .ii

ion he lii-ld and upenlv expressed

. on Iho-.e pniut-s. They say they will

b,-iiedi ol the nomination and t'''

it only ns ngulnsl U:

which curirli

ry theories. Thmanly. It makes the issoes dis

knows what hu endoi-ocs and what he condei

policy he build.: up and what policy

who played the'

31AC1UT.

ncd, yet

rcbcllio

all it ...-Is and il

uuplhb..

toplo of freedon

„ V',,',."i. ,-,,.

II the ulrengtb, force

lite powers ufKOveni-i lo compel n State to

longer Hianli chooses

or Ibe ollieeof Lieu-

1c bolwccn Ihe Slave Power and the government must

nd in Ibe destruction of Iho Slave Power. For Hub

eason wc have sympathy in this eonlest lor tho gov-

rnment. Abraham Lincoln, ay against Jell'. Davli,

iewod from a higher Eland-point.

Well, our glorious work is nenri

mot. You ond I uLn.ll live to see j

un nnd bis friends, who laid the

land, " sh

shouliogs of grace,[

Gut as you suggest, wo need to

that tho satanic power in tbo la

eoine forth in great wroth, for its

bo foiled in its hellish purpusos,

government and reestablishing sla

ng to its full. What a satanic h

is will do little barm, lie is lot

lively devilish for that.

I hope bo will stump Massachusetts for Ihe purpose

if defeating Sumner. Such an influence will certainly

elect him.

Let ub greatly ri-joieo (hat " our labor baa not been

Full ot joy and hope your friend, A. T. Fosi

and loyal men t

Wo quote the above oil

more com tor tab I o it is, ou lb

and-out Abolitionist, from II

disagreeable retain!

islnrt, with a clear recu

ulitlcian, always ebangi

ibjcet to ibu risk ufbavi

low is Train I

openly nnd rcpul-

Tui: Tiiie or tur Pbocuiiatio;.'.—Wo mo

lowing extract Irom a late discourse on Ihe

proclamation by l!ev. James Freeman Clar

en nee It was nt i uinux, when days and iilgbts

ml mg hi seemedand n... obuui balanced

io IIiciii out ol Maryland. 1

ln-iglit. llo

baa illuuimaU il,.. N"..r i so long, tilling ii

.1 light .

ball give way

advancing cu ure Ol a great people. Ii

CJSalca U. Cur and Riciunn O'Gmti

Clay's nnti-slnvory address in Brooklyn

O'Gormsn roviewedil in a speech in New York, taking

occasion to say thai tin- i;.. puldi.. in parly wos il

liberty for Ihe block man but not for Iho

.Clay, inn subaequeni apcoob nt Cooper In stitule,

thus rolurned the compliment lo Mr. O'Gi

One of tho most mournful nights to hi

fugces from foreign tyranny - '

\",i,-!... i--i.i

,

i;..rmaii. Min I,, -I!

Mr. Cur-I say to Mr. 0'G(

if he Bnj-1 the llepublieani

liberty of the black man, an.

liberty of the while, At L-wicn

1 stood up for the rights

ic it was black.

rmou—he is In llio city,

arty is in favor of ihe

i is not in favor oi Ihe

jl" lit! (great applause)

iho Louisville 0>ui

"sod ,njoyo.

.._ .pressing ihem. Anda who would barter fo-

- m ~

! black people, wouldoilici- th..

...pl.i,,,. 1. lie iv.Hild-.i.i.H.al wh.ith.o

ran; fiber Mr., If.v.,1 the pet tyriu

..ind—Iho slave rebellion_

Ireland had no o'1-

Those Ripubiicar.s In Coogrei

the people. Nearly all Ihe raili.ols nro recuinltAtcd

the members llio Mr. Tbi :'-

-

- ti ''

[DM n -.- -- 1 - iTPrB or ni1

-•''

been permitted to stay at borne by Ibelt Republic

conslltuenw m Ibe oom.nnlicg Convontrons. Senat

Browning went home 10 Illinois 10 be t old-shoulder

by the poopla McrywLere Tbo KepubUcans cut bi

nnd the Demoernts do r.ot take blm up. Ho will i

bo elected Uoiied Stales Senator from Illinois, nnd i

President will not nominito him lo tho Supreme Hen

This is n significant lailure, for a man wbu separated

from all bis wannest friends last winter to support

iltrn conservative measures in Congress. Sonm of hi

jersonnl friotids assert that he has ruined himself in a

ittempt lo follow and support the President—lhat be

luppoacd last winter that the President was oppnsod

o all radical measures, and he endeavored In BUpport

lim inhisopiniunn end polity, and did Eoup lolhorccc

sudden turn of the President. That is Ibe way sot

'

his friends talk. It should leach Hie Senator a h

n—to do right irrespective of Presidents.

There is a dead quiet here respecting Ihe emnncipa-

,n proelnnioiion. To be sure Tlic Inlitligencir gently

iposca ii, and wo have nil been discussing Gen. MeClcl-

n'u order rospecling it. There is an end of Iho mnt-

r. I do not bear a word ul any furllior degree ol

energy in prosecuting tho war, or tbo eniorcement of

the proclnmalion. Wc ilo nothing while tho rebels are

plnuolog and exeeuiing brilliant exploits. Tho procla-

mnlion ici" prove a failure at this rale, depend upon il.

It will norer enforce itself, and if we nre stupid in our

management of national affairs, of course tho rebels

will triumph In splto of tho proclamation. We must

bo patient, 1 know, and hope for bettor things hereaf-

ter, but how much longer are we In wait lo sec a speci-

men "of the good timD comin.9." olways "coming," I

don't know. Tho stories of Cabinet changes nre all

without foundation. No member of tho Cabinet has

1 idea of quilting it for the present. Some of Ibe best

ics would like to do so, but tho condition of fhu coun-

ty will unt permit it. Those who ought to lento it

mldti't bo kicked out of tho Cabinet. They will nil

u along together, uinkint; no quarrel over tho emanci-

pation question. Mr. Blair comes back from tbo Norlh

aieter than when he left and not half su much inclined

1 make war upon radical ll.pnblu am as bo Vtos a

,onlh ngu. Sir. Seward is reticent. I do not believe.

any one bus heard a word from him on the proclnuiu-

Bo acquiesced in it, if he did not support it, in

Iho Cabinet. Beyond that single statement nu one car

ition llo occupies upun it. Is lie heartily 11

favor of emancipation T Is ho apposed to military

emonclpalioa! Who knows! Ho Is a shrewd,.

" rarely "hops oeer," as Arlemlus Ward

would say. Willi Mr. Seward and Mr. Bli

•st of tho Cabinet is known lu stand firmly

by tho President. Ohl that wo could have a llltlo

r someicAiTC in Iho prosecution nf tho

Perhaps tho Prouldont is not to blame. Wobelieve bo is not. And so with McClnllnn— bul tcfio is f

Unless I greatly mistake, Ihe daring rebel raid up

inlo Pennsylvania wiU atir our Generals up to deeds of

valor, and ibnt, too, speedily. Something musf bo done

to wipe out the disgrace of the past, and it is whispered

that Sigel, Ellon ticImnn, Cox, Burt

our fighting men nro already up and doing. We will

T111: afllicted country nt ours, after

atxo of Dr. Russell, correspondent of Ibo London

,. now toddled with Br. Charles Mack

occcsaor in oflke. If tbo former was a hsl

lunist.tho latter is a whole one, The letters

iiniHodoo, perversions and slanders. Of course, since

The Times is in sworn league with the Soulh, 11a Ameri-

con correspondent, whoever ho may be—whether one

man oao day, or nnoUiei- Ike next—must olways be In

Issor of slavery, nud must now be in favor of rebel

lioa. But was Ibe Aral correspondent so sparing of bit

iniult* to Ibo North, Hi.n bin pen inusi be given ovei

into another hand, mono skillful in chronicling faeU

lhat never occur, nnd mare facile in blotling out Hn

truth to write a lie in ils place! Wo will not marvel

after reading these late letters, if Dr. Maekny's owe

cars should bring him evidence of the conlempt will

pany should be purposely shunned by ninny bonorabli

„ (dat.

c-l,di!i..|,

orally-

115 to me that 1 nm guilty of no

lg Iho President's field of Mdeclim

lour plana ol" pro. .dure subjoined 1

mbocllity.

Una, bo is bunyou have nolblii

.lie \„ml even with a di*ruptured Union. Lt

Dealt we iiuui.iir the ili.i-lpbo. ,1 Ili-.-n.

lomucl-v win ,..,.| |,,,i victories lo the wi J*ar,.l n.ovilli Ibclr nearly allied rebel kin. Mvdea,0 ddiglii.d wh.-ri lleniycaneonioon. As

in? j no .Uld

he DU-juces ol McClellan and bis v.-rv w

my charge at iho commencement! Two nic.hr-. „ e ..

Ilred fro 1

killed nod wounded some Ibirlv nol|....ki-r started on a crude eipcditimi I

hinge i-.o„, from Hi- wnm vi digcitiiv- I,

lo.itively lij-i nu talent-. Adieu. Gel'fighting division" with Pope. ..

-i'.rof N.-w York hn.s

deiignati

iriy ; adopt tbo conciliatorv measuresnu-.d hv Mi- Critlonden or tlic I'eaeo Cnvonlion,

-iy life upon it, wo shall *"'"

-! -..il-'ll;. iII- ,''. Hid

l.u ..u.-.r. lie r-,n

-:ii. lie .-111 re.ol llo,

.ir,l--.i..ilh, o,d 1. .10 .• I>

; .-.1" tin 1. 111 ."— tl..'j.'-a

\\\-. „.„l,-,. ii.!ll,:il Hull!. 01,1 I

Ho-, in ,i,.-.,i.l.,i. 1.

lino. The lit,runno on;

l"| SelsotlOl Ver,.

,u eoillo.-t, slroni

oiori:eedoin lo

.l,i.i.-i.,:.,Jfv.,

,a':,rItlccrapli ii !

In!.- iiinii ii

e bo Is lit to lead tho Co

nloJesv by half la lennini; him

,;„., |,nn

i.y ii.- <:.

y ii

Stales which have already brolci

i. Without some equally benign

,ning slnveholding Stales will pro

join' Ihe lionlguiiiory l.'ooi'edcraey in k*s iban sislj

— when Ibis city, being included in

within it.

II .Collect ibe duties on for.ieo eooils Olltsi'tff the

oris ol which this cov emtio: nt ha- l..-t the command,

r e|n-e such [iorL-1 by net ol Congress, and blockade

III. Conquer the seceded Stat, s by invading armies.r« .in.ihr hoj n, ; ., 1 1 r I... duii.. iii two or ihiee rears bv a

1— B. Wolfe, ft Desni

il inen-1 yet gi

Aniolil If, ii^l 1 bad en lured .1 |ir»teut ni-i.ii.M (In: 1

lien. Wa.iilniiion 10 Hie J'r..,idenc-y.— Trie Irftun,

•;, Ilo.ii...

tbinl for

number by skir-

a, during , lorn

erican welcome. Hut who is 10

ho third correspondent, when this second slanderer

1 home? Gentlemen uf 'fTir 7'inies oQicel send him

-, and lot un see Ihe miracle of bow liitle stull tied

llth 300,000 (llsclplli

arrisons, and a lass of

li-ihcs, sicites. bailies,

nan life 10 ihe North and North o ..-at— with al len.it

.iniiii. .lino add. 1 tlnr.-io, and oni lidnu/ Fiflecn

, ...i .... 10. Lu- bronchi I'.t'. Ii.ira...|i

.-it lo behold fur gonoratlni

li,.,. 1 gjrrri •- i' in CJtpen quiflruplo tbo ai

ies or 1. pi iih it would he po-iihlo t-. v. 10

,1, ll.em-lollowf.l bv :i I'roKclor or 1111 Loi|..T...r.

V. Say to ihe fecoded States, ITinioirJ sisltr.s, ti

In haste, I remain, very truly, yours,Wl.VfOJLD Soott.

Ion IV" II .-I.WAHD, clc.

,1,. ,. - ' 'tale upon Ihe authority

.".m^'.'ii'in'i, -t-.-r't'. i'be [iriiO'ipl. "I" the Pre

1,Cn pro. i.inin' Cu. 11. Ii.. Id- lb. t Hie cntro

rmilitary :-ic,> J iiy lhat ive should deprive tl

emy el" the Inbdr hv ivhich bis a

clear and unr— '

"

jiialilled LIlmt indeed it

on- lb, rebcobeii .vbile .01.

_ ..._ slaves uf Hie South eoi

supplies fur Ihe lighting nrmy in

ivee million nud n half of slaves.

:d for Wind-

T.'irlfMvi*

_...rca.— Ill thi...il;.oi.:S l-.y. |i..|.,l...-r Uib.i.i li

Deiiyer lli.pj.fr, ndojili d ....... ot" J.-lin 11 11 ..1 lli.jolic Ho

iho field. I"Gen. HslU

'

Ckstbil Omis, Svvtr.uir Coumi«[o\,i

WisULiniov, October 2d, ISS'i. [

Tho inquiry being frequently made whelher tbo

Commission wishes to receive apples for the use of Ibo

wounded, it should immediately be published, as

widely as possible, that dried npples cannot be sent lo

lis depots in loo largo quantities. Town and village

relief societies nro requested to mnko orrnngemonts

for paring, cutting, and drying by their members, and

such volunteer assistance as Ihey can enlist, and lo

ility farmers lhal Ihoy will receive such gocd (rmt

they may be disposed to oiler and are uoable thcai-

Ives lo properly prepare, rjricd apples may bo sunt

barrels or bones, or in strong bags marked " To bo

kept dry." Dried fruits of other kinds, and all good

A fruits, will bo very acceptable.

F11KD. Law OutiTi'.n, General Sec'y.

;'s UEscniiTiQX oi1 HumciJ-.—Lyiuuin Tre-

can candidate for Lieutenant-Governor

gjics Ihe following description of him-

emotion of my hear

try pulsation

nbli. .nil Uni.'i.

y in. ulty nf my mind,

loarl, an unreserved and,,..cr.,I. standing upo

',,'''"n'c'.'nu.d i'iei'lb..'iiii Ihougbt, word

',„. Ue.il,,, b„.l...r.d Ion ibu el.......ir. I'nion, wlii.l,

.^ j. , vl ,„r,. inul-lcd I., >,- one and ,nd,.,.,l„hl

;„l,eei liv.d. I;i".li>ibly..ppn.-.dtu llio onto,":

. ...ii,,,,, nt any lime or under at

ssis,.". i..i..i.,„..i. 1

,.- ...

I , ,1 1. 1 lii'iuu up'.n Ihe r-nlid, perm

n̂BXUXw'' oV , ' u

,

n^ J1

i

lo,,

,

,,

f-*,,b,,,,i,1,,n

f every armed rebel b this glorious land.'

i- hnrp tlino

it this great at

A Lturosi. OmwN IS aSwve State.—Tlie Cambridge

Inftlliotnecr, one of thu most widely circuloted and

sbly i-diied ol tbo locfl journals of Maryland, and

Which is published in tho Urge nlaveholdiog County ol

Dorchester, gives a beany welcome to the proclama-

tion ol the President, and in the course ol its remarks

laya it never doubled lhal Ihe war which Hie rebels

Inaugurated would prove tho destruction ot Blorery.

;rsul liberty.

Mn. GaiELitr txtt mo Win SlEt-nsos.—At n war

moeling In behalf of tho Ironsides Regiment ot ibis

:lly,last week, Horace Greeley made some remarks

which nc Hod thiM olotcJ in The Tints .*

- Ur. Greeley commcoci-d by oaylng that he hid no!

1LD TeitMSO AOiLVST ITS ClMllDATE.— 77|0

9 up, in advance, the New York State dec.

Republicans, as follows 1

isore Mr. Seymour lhal. from present indi-

ly carry Now York city, Albany and a fuvi

irralln, of E

Ths Gmim

th Is greatly in

of the Southeis proved hy 1

eased by the eupcrl

1 elimalo and soil,

alisUcs, the labor of

AcknmcUdgments /rem &]>< 1st to Oct. Is

1221 J. L. Cutler, Augusla, Me.llai; Mnrshiil! I'ierec. Iliddeford, Me.HM-: i-.h-i Ii. Tecl, O neord, N.H.l;n- A. Chandler,

I Inn .l,.lin .-inilb,l'orl.-n..-.,'li.

liil Jus. F.Shores. " "

1M-1 E. D. Foster, Ctnlcrbury, K. O.118i Mrs. Abby C. Walker, Great fulli, N. I

[M Euech Hebaril, We.t Kundulph, \'L

UJil Itiebard Andrew-, It.indolph,

11C0 Mrs. Jas, Nowell, C.itiihrblgeptirt. Msu1MB J. W. Clarke, Dedham,121? C. W. Cook, Wort Vi'i-cnlln.n,

11C2 1.1. 1: llrighiiioin, New Bedford,

I lb I Clms linduui, Lynn,

lli;S Mary liiee, Concord,

lie:! Chiu-les G. Luring, lluslon.

11E5 Thomas Chupniao, Saionville,

1131 Thco. Duller, N'.-ivl„ir;].i,n,

181B Mo;ea II. Drown, Sntton,

1I1G Miss M. T. Cbapbam, Noi-ihampio,,, Ms

;ir, m. ,i.Siuini,i.'..iiio-..iii....t;

.in... Miniba.-iniih.riiiiiiQeld, "

lilli Her. N. A. Staple, New York Cily.

1171 U. W. Smith,l-iU9 B. Lssar,l:lo S.irah Maifhall, '• "

li!2 Mrs. S. D. Tucker. Mouul Vernon, N.'

ll'Jti Iir. M. Heck witli. Nassau Village,

Dr. C. Di

ini-y aspecijn

e Ihe rebellion

..me a

1 uur hands, Gen.

n-Chiof, lie has n

:r for the considt

jioit serious studv ol t

. country. While diicussiug Ihis h

._t,Geil. Hallecl. I:i illilHtellie.l lo •

"lli.H. I,,'!.. Puller l-i loI l.-ioi-C L 11

'

" "-

,,|.„|,:lblV, .loll he .Mill.! <1| if a

opiated aie earned into i-llet

,. ;o Ibe neijr..cs lor eery viie «.

llie North, -ni;- llo: lo-neral to lied

population, nr Is thu thing son

ken frum i

,-er--...-s whoIKIhik o

b of Ibe

-t iu the fact

ens, and will,

Jmucs tniil.-y,

iperiora in all

the Pilot...

Order No. HKl, H' ' '• "l-rv,:.|

eourao Ibe duty Ol - '

-

JJ«m

things not physically impossible for him t

following letter was written hy

Kearney to 11 personal iriend, mid puts a very uuoiu

,,[jo,i,,-,.iry e-iiui.i'i- upuiiU.Ti Mi:'.'|.:ll-in:

P||,n, ;

i,..N'.il,i:-.|.t-..o Aneu-tl, IM.J.

DeshPet: Ilbaok you for your kind b.iig letic

Von i-Mend In me hep.,. Von h„W .,=i w li-.iwmg my

:„,.j niydiusion out of tub ignoble pwilioa. M»[ooe^nnn.. I w.,ulJ bre:Hhe n-,1111.

We have in, General--. MclJIellio ii Hie failure I i-v

i.reeb i-l him. lb- Ims toon [.unified, jest as 1

',,,., n,i.r,.|,indi.l the moves ol Hie parties. Ho v.

follies, mure waste id blood, tlejit-

0. Porter, Da nsvillu,

1171 Itev.J. A.T...I.I. l.irnlo.vn.

11BG Jus. Fosler, Groendeld, '

11SJ Laura Usrbee, nm l-'ubo

ll'jil Geoi-ge iV.lailer, Shirley,

1I7'J A. S. Lealon.Juhiislown,

ll.-n John Collins,

1-m Henry Gurlis, Gales, "

VUG C. V.D. Chase.Clnyvllle,

11S7 Lloyd Johnson,

Vitl Jos.Varncy.I'onliac,

ll'.n. M. Ilulcbiiiion, l.-lyoril,

1-Jili) HllHl Wing, I'.illin-.n II. ft. Dennl. :

1170 J. L. Di-othenon, AUamuehy, .N. J

M7i Jiiiiii., Wilson,

ll'JO K, llicks Warbasj, " '

IJlo George lie I'niiib. I'liibidelphia, I'.i-

11*7 .liiikTi.n l.o.vi-, Gir.ird,

111,-, John sLOolemin, Olivet,

HIS Geo. F.Arrei, Sow Wilniingl.in,

] 1UG I), I.. G.llbreath, New Garden, Ohio.

lls'S E. J. Civilian, Alliance, "

1187 T. 1!. McCormlek, Oberlin, "

\1YA IndionStuiHl,

Yin Samuel Wills, Cll-ii H-nev llogue, I

M,,L .1. II. liichirdjoll. Went Unity.

in.; J. Ii. iVtiiibini, MsrUusburg,

lilu Kobe rl Welsh.

Ul(i William Haas. Uliea,

lis: J.S. i.:.jivil..-ry, Sandusky,

Us., UMliam A. Cimpliell, Mnutpeliei

l:ll I,uiher Juwett, Lafayetle,

1173 Charles floissig, Chicago. 111.__

l':l 1 .I.iieph S. Mine

IMS Laura ' "-

ig by dribblets. He h idol-le.

Iiii'EnsoxiL EorconsuiP.— T7ia Comi

ten, bis Ibe following card in its last iss

A t.i ;'- — In ibe second number uf

laallh, my nanm appears no Ibo editor

but it Boh-i-i -iti-.il) Hppiarliig that tbo f

sons which woulJ ii.iinrully cunimun

porlaneo such ni lu make it improper

., . ,-. '..,.., -.-.I , .,.0 who edit TI.-

0>nimoni«a.%. 11 11 but just la nil to say ilinl Ibe papi

Is not ibu representstire ,1! ,„,j one person's views.

MoSLOllt 1). CuMVlf.

Tn« ST.iTi: EriotlCBiB.—As this journal goes to pre;

intelligence la received by telegrnm of Ibe result of ibo

elections in I'eunsylvnnin nnd Ohio; being, In both

Stales, 11 victory for the Union ticket, io opposiuon to

the so-called Democrats. Wo lio.ro time only to

Hon the election of Tbndo'eus Stevens in one, ai

defeat of Vallandigbam In Ibu other. That is

Sieves **<> JjuE3 Hornwis-.—We Ond

the following pnraoimi in the 1'mvidcnce Journal

K'SS";.,''. i'">« "«»«»•

„A fool and bis money are soon parted

:Mr.

vena bos been trUipnsntly elcntet).

TUB Efiscopai. Tri-i-'-i". Cosviotios is still in EC

Ihis city, uud Laiiil mgnged with Hie debato men-

med in our lost liue. Il takes Ibis body e. great

whilo to come lo Aoncluiioo whether or not lt will

express nny sympnfc- with llie gorornmei

prosecution ol Ihe vftl We inko the follow:

(mm Tlit Tribune'.* tertt

llr. Meltlll. I.", ol .:, H.l.:hllie!l.i, Invored

N.01I1 nnd ilo- .-onlli tl"-- one side a Iriend ol lus

;., „, 1'ort W.irron Mr, nn ,0 ioo.iihIij wiili the

i,,!,.i-nie..on.|.„ the. , ib- v. i-H I'bill-p-

1. 1, .rl,.-ni " hid 1

.,. ( 111 .ni.He.-

[\ per-o mil Ire 11 J, Ilii.ho e.-mleloen il tin- ni'

r.ui-irl„.l ,iiH„ lilieSi,,....lii n-[iori..-i-. "That 11,

true, bui riiiiiij-i ,md;uiiiner never nienlion it-

1. Sunn-

_ .hblundi

FairOaki. 1

Ol oil.

ously

is not nuw in bis right place, andisasm,illbrain,uHifledina .

,n:u,v" arisen en (ronlier. H««« '

-',[, Me.ico, hut in a !" .-lutuu "nu'""! dl

t lln-h in a enerilintlcbl. Hi.: -kill ,, a mytli-

poVutil rer,i..n.. .nvnparl at Hull Knn. Fort

,, coed in nature, but weak as ivater-lbe parent

nil ibis .li-Kicr tor his want (.1 genera lfilnp on t

Chiekahoininv, and Franklin arc tal.;

i,.i-d on,

„-,.„ They michl ke nood G,ner.ilt il thev ondi

,,„„( the vnloe ..1 element-- iii their esloulstluna ; 03

s, ibey are dangerous failures-^^^ ,„„.„„„ ,|mwn

a Falls,

1203 1 .. ,l,.hl,.

Joicpn 1'uit, North nempstend, I

Itev. 0. B. Froibiiigb.ini, piedgo 1

ing, N. T. City.

I know of no Olh

West I'oinl was a most runaway

flahl of ours. Gi-i part nn the i:|iickn.-.iiio.>" ; ',., „.,,,,. 11,. .viito.cra division (Ills ow-''"'

',",'' '-,'1 ,. thai -il- "at "I lir''. " a,t "ever mi

Wed tu protect llicm froi" bi-il.U sa.:r,b,id by ib

„!,,, o„.| i-ndercd a [.icy t.. their I.1I-0 p..,l'loll

wi li ru'i.d at It no .li = .rihed by Geu. 1 ay lur

i.li othi-r,. Is H sorp.i.in, ili.it I w illicit 'ni

this 1111,-v.' llelde-.thei have ienl 1U.ij-.r 1

.

,„l,bip, like all these other-, dated Iron. ittU

tuiiddled in 1 boieh of new

ulUcors. llo Ibey lore..'. Il

M. Scarboro,Mark Crook,

I!. F. achcllor,

J. D. Potts. '

Eusobius llarnard, '.

II. Itoyer,Uiisbeth ItradlorJ, 1

J. U, Uaven'port,

sll L

riltl 1t 1.

an. McDowell. <t id 01

arl<r ending Srpt. ZUIh.

3. D. Stuarl.

Ssmucl t). iii-.li....-

J. IL Price,

SsRin Peon, Tresj

special Qotlffl.

uponAiHd.i if. Powell will leclur

CBATHAII CENTRE, N. f.. Saturday, C

FKftn.u. ;tuii[j,n. i"..isui.d,iy.o,:i.

I'HILMmN 1. S. V.. Wednesday, Oct. 2-J-

M.MtriNUALi:, N. V., Tbuuday, Oci. 73

lJll.I--di.M-i;. N. V., Friday, Ort.M.

V

Page 4: National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18

Yet lei nie !-•' >"'il lmin"l'-l»' ;-'- T- Unr "* 1" unr:,

r

..,7,,,: :";::;,,;;.. 1' m.l, il »

f,,,!,1;',!'!; *- <:"<• ""«'a OWbOIUtb D g»Vo bal of l.

<"<- r,1: -'' u. nntl civil lilie.rls

o,J.TZ"'r .' — i•'»' dcalb- ratTfcliitanln- lW«t indgfl

jlTjSIf;

n, lu-nih.-rhnnd vonr wear pathi shall accord Ihem ii pliice in om

Dear Ilia ono nioro Ska tie

I my nenuitlnl from von aw n

„,,. ,,f fniih iui.l freedom, ui

mil mi Rloom, I leurn

[1 gratefulness 10 tied,

n p»Ht ago. 1 In

...... I propose lo yon to. acquit '•

Henri Ucordairc, since lie ban not gi

ellonse, Linn deported himself a- a good tili/en baa

di-f^n.lifl his God and his liberty ;and tins 1 shall do

)' life, COII 1 1 1! Ill Ell."

".!> Ml til II apcecll H i" lll'i-dlcss I" BHV lh«t 'he

iedwi

knowoloTl othci [..il,

of La-

con I aire reapon

tbo author of n

talizu Inn nampriesthood nt li

Dei

ign nowhere, nl" IIdiI."

jleiiotiild... riml useful I

y Cod. opiin lo mo! open

]„.) rriiinMin.L p.-..

TuClrSaubalbild

FREEDOM—BESTSA INT.

If wo look at lb« various rottrain la of which 1 [Dr

,vo spoken, wo shall BCD that liberty is ibu end Monk

rpoic of nil. Nature's powers aronnd 113 hem of tin

inly lo rowo. a free power wiibm us. It nets Co

j Bbonlil react. Uurdrais pro-.- on u- llei' "In I. i>, ,

ilaslic force should cmnc forth. I' ..'- '•; '

Lt wo should clear them, fbo wi L wl 1

limbs, incites us I

COTTON FROM AFRICA.

I'amlirl'l^, Urn;., pives Ilii* ImenaUtis oecou

ton district OfLa.kti Nyossa.]

Iubbv, our Consul nl Zanzibar, fays, in

Sir George Owy, that 19,000 slaves pa

lh« Custom Uoiise there annually—all,

1!, from NynssA or Shire ; mid bo adds :

"

lopped us, I-

huh chain

bids and steam, n

led lo creep. Tbo son, which 11 re

[»c(.nii'» ib'> putli I" .'i new bi'wisplii'p

ncc-shies. of life, il'l. hunger, pain

nan lo toil, wake up bis I'.iiiillics, amrider fiction. Duly restrains the [i.'i:

nt the nobler faculties and allcctimi

N , .i-s-a, ii will 1 in "il ill" lii'i supply of slaves to

tbo east coast." Without knowing ihnt penllcmnu's

I :ila[ii.t:l

and 1 sliril

(ill ii ia:n.

WIT AJ\1>\WlSDOif.

n cattcriH!; of Icarni'd rrionds, Adam Smi^um, ns LO wii- dyii'ij,', ''

I beliwi. i-t mut adjonilii.. m. iiting I oilier [llaco."

-" My poor foil

so have 1."

follow . »CCO]fl my li

eboicu of ibo rigbt

;

TTi.vi'litrc. iur sricnlllk |i,ir|»;c>. S|»:iiliifi! of hl> o

pcreoiml fscllnRi In bli ln-t ojcont, lioiaysjl

Wires we ntliiiotil ilm ln'^bt of tw.niil.-B nl

^tru., tbe temp. 'rat ntL' lia.l lallcn lo'iS". K'-.-

;rertefced tbe lifib

DISCOVERIES IT POMPEII.

Inatuofiillowlnfilnliirealli

10 you a ninfiiilarly i

bad Ibu »i)od lortiinc I

ipeii. Yon linvc n Irani

riant rctulla ol Ibo e

....ilcr Ibu cinT^clie ni

r Fioralji, Iho journiil

I,., ,. r , ...... i.

I n lo ll.is

'

i- il ml -!' nil i'i-' ri-siri.inl. H'Mr-sial,

il Ilii- cad, is a alav.Mi void-. How ntH'ti Inn.

.i'i! il,.: yoniiK spirii, liiaiid Ilii: beart and ibt

,1 nil. I made !'• ml lit--' '• 1 'andiag pool. \VV

nii'nl'. I'.ir l're-j atti'm. Tbin alone i.i lilt, and

...n, all ilmt if i;o"il mid firivit. Virlue is Ireu

; love, tbo tree embrace or Hie

a nf tbo limbs]geniui

lli-l,i ..f il

.1.1 Hint

ret I

tirikrcda slemncr/rom Glu.ynn

parte, vrblch wo bono to carry past (bu

oa our iie.vt work. WO txpocr.

'

. not pcii asvlbiblo to you or an) .

compliBht'd. " I pray to Ilim in wboaO baad

iro "our lime»." lo permit me to aocoiupliah tbia

real ECrvice; tbin a naili to tin' .J 'a by Kuvunm, nr

Some river in Ibo .lomiiiior,, of tbo Kuluui ol Zann-

lndi.d 1., tin' I'.niii:: ' Fancy tbo Tolly of our,,,.(.. ,.r I,,, t Ids a r.iirl ill tbe moiilli ol"

'.,, -.,,,1.-. :n, ,,.it,„, dues. wliila tin

... ante ol rotto do all in Uieir power to depopnlal)

bave our own outlet, (Jill COtb in /.'.', now/our Amu

ilreil iiiik-f kit'!, ii-il! '-' /'rufoi ij,."//.!' i-i Ih" iif-r-lh mil

ires/, and our own Englisli honnsl poor may livo

the ialanda aad become ldi.--in.;i in Africa, our

tweet home and lo ib.'iur.'lvez.. Tl.L=e nro my boiica,

nnd it ought lo be borne iniuind Ihut my expedition

-lionld be daied only from tbo possesion o( tbo

Pioneer. Wu weri.- f'r. .:d la r.iura by want of food,

wben, ns wc bave rtaioa 'o belie. ve, wo were in sigbt

ol llio dark mountain musscn in wliich Lake Syi

.caking of " banl linna ' il.nn

tbe -Mciupbis Argus saj-» ." Maibi

thai li'll nulls nmke ODU .•III- ft t tbo pi

.. ol wbeat wa doubt ir iweoly mill- can mi

— A lady well advanced in maidenhood, >

Tiago requested Iho choir to •ill;; tlm liymn

uienoinp :

ftl. EVS,.

Iliat unhappy ton!

lo inullitudes tbe 1

enmmnnity, whichspheres to its r

acope for thai

force lor reati

pence-olueer. Tbe si

wilbout a Roldi

iHry much by

uiion of Eociely, which denies

lortunities of [roe activity. Alould open a (.'rent vnnely or

nliers. so that all mij-ln find Ire"

lid need little army -'

:. Liberty Vfouhl prove the- In

soeial order of New EnElnt

nd aliuosl without a police, bears

is truib— William El,

A tribii of Zi

mode lerriblo b:

know why, I

lis, and never form ,-tu op

...Jeiico; hut humau akeletou;

ibo slain alrcived the chores-—'

TUB LEGION OF HONOR.

when Horn

comfort- I had e

inn. bile Mr. I

K',.• -. I,

-,!*.:• r'.c i'i-"

hi il

II , . '1 OoO.l om

I :."1

i.'S: osc'lho o'won

or* fret ics.mnrr ip tliijnl, tlm

^ 0, should see blampiur

AN ORATORICAL MASTERPIECE.

Le fese Lacord.vibe, who died Inst year at Sore it.

s lun- one of the uiesl eminent Csitholii: priest* ol

ince'ii ilevolid I'ritinl of frc.doai, a worlby com-

rc( CoMiitl ami Miis>illoli. His love lor fret-

i) rendered i.im suspected by many Calholi

,il,. bi- 1 iilndii in randen A him Ihfl satoo eerv

,1,,

,. . , -.'.. in ,. r .,ti,ri,lll,e liiL'lesI .ir.h-i.

..,. , .,,", .. ,; .. ,-. i.l v.uli i.l.'i.-i.r.-, wild" lima

am ili.fr I-—' f.'i" those noble iimilitied wC '

'

'

...... ,., 1,,..- pnhlUhed «..

aliona '•. ... .j/iSit-Md'/'om/'fiiproiuii

tbo most int. r,nunc of the mum publii-mio

w |„.|bi.-r period i.- a I or .illicrivi^-. to wl.ieli at viinf

"

ns* this titv nf the ].n-t lms iriven ,>itin-ii.m. 1

, aviilinim which led In ibis rank's iliccovtry 1

(oniiiiuntion of ibn-v wlneli bave been prneeclinc

for the lust two or three month-, and 10 which I shall

not further allude, ns a detailed description 11

ready in preparation.

Tin' Inst two d:iN> liiim v.r, 11.111- he feparalcil from

.jo rest. '1'he honre upon v.-l,kli ibc «ori;men an' nl

present tiiRnytd in ••< com-iderable fine. It displaya--- --rcrnge amount ol'llit ordinary decoration which

ills Liiiuidilh-clnss l.unpeinn houtes ;and it also

prcsoals On ils nuier ivnllii sovernl of Ihose

clnulionerrin"; addressee in which Fompei""

dales, or their friends, were wont

mill-, i.i pal eli-elilnt. Il was nol.br.

lerdav llial tlm expti.liilimi ainl ton

ol ih.i cie.'i valor- WIT( , niistd be;

.li.ene. In a corner of one of Iho

found a benp ol silver and copper ..... ,

bur of above live hundred, 'fln.-i bad seemmed, been

tied up logelher in a Utile bag, which, however, "

enlirch ilisappeared ;and at lir=t lliey were ngg

tinted 'into a iiin.-s. nltbrni^li llni h:ive since I

MT a ruled wilbout diliitullv- At the same time,

near lln; same spot, were found two lnr-e sln-ni

tcitcors. and soon afi.rsvaid.s a house mill of lln

dinar 1 il.S(-ri|itl L.|i.l.^i'llier Willi a hi lie lleajiOl i

ih.' gi'iiiiis lilacl.tmd nub-, d and Menicwhat shrive,

but yet fully preserving (heir sbnpo nnd very liLtlo

difficulty for some time.

At lh. film. Ibc barometer nail1

1 i- •'•

1

wbiah reiiuires a suhstraelivo corn .Si. .il 11'-'" in. •

.

found by coaiparison with Lord Wrotlefley's

,daril li'iromeler in-t l.efi.ire slnriiii;. belli bi 'ns

dsbip and myself, u-lm b won!.I ivducc it lo 10.8

ma, or at a beight of about0}-jf mile*. I rend

the dry bulb as minus 3 dcg. ; in updeavoring to

read Iho wet bulb I could not see the column of

niorcury. I rubbed my eye:), lln n look a lens, and

also failed. I then tried to read tbo oilier io

meats, and found 1 conbl col do (0. nir could

the bor.ds of tbe watch. 1 asked Mr. roivvell 10 help

d he said bu must r.o into the ling, oe.d bo

would wben ho came down. I ondentored lo reach

brar.dy which was lyine oti ihe Ublo at nbont

:i appeal

Jncn t vii.

tho ordinary

In 1810, that memorable yam, Ilantiie, Antwerp and

mm' proud empire. Nnpideo

rodo lip lo the re

Scrceant 10 tbo i

bent high, and h

e.li-. * of a fo:>' ard foood .1

\lnsl. I'-

ll cities ol the

,1 .-died ill"

old soldier

originally from tbo South, hadumong the Lako peoplo—y— 'l:''

a received only (iim-sidtd

i.ihewfiv t In l.i.v,„,„-l,l,

I l".|- '

Tho poiifpnii- epitaph of a . losv-fiotpd cili/eo

osed with tho lolb.wiiij; passaR.1 of .Sorinlurn .

lie that givi'th in tin- po..r lendelb le the I ord.'

Dat may bo so." snliloquiTicd Sumbo, " but whenat man died, do 1-onl didn't own 'im n red cent."

An Irish lawyer lately ndiire ..? the Court nn

gentlemen " instead of " your lienors," A brother

iho bar reminded hi

medial.dy rose to apol.^'i

Court, in the heat of deb

tkmen. I luado a mistake, y

has. - .Nl

I c-dU-,1

II.. ,.

i.elypiel

the

well for Hertford ; but wo 1

accustomed to go every day to

meat, which is scored againut

inf. tho buloher mako two mar

juntlct I 1

Unit tlif

Mnrito, or Zulus ; lliey behaved

is wo may sup]iosu old women of either sex

la if they fancied they had seen a gh(

!hb irilie wandi-riii" up so far, il stril

more work Cbrislian people atlempi,

Maaler rrivca them to perform. The Firlinp al Iho

Cape, with bis Kullir tolb-e". >? prol.alily litiinf; mis-

sionnrics to labor much nearer lli" I'ipiiitor tban ho

ovor conicuiplaled. I always rejoice to hear of

ellbrls lo spread our bltsseil reliniiin.no mailer by

whom, for I am sure ibst lie who is bead overall

tliinff» to flis Churcb, condescends lo accept the

beany thonj;h ofnu feeble oili.-riti<> of Ilii people,

and will guide all 10 a rdoriuiis 1 .u-niiimiilion. This

eollefie seems an admirable instill! I toil.

' Nod nire," be answered, wilh a frill, rine; voi

Were you not in tin- army of Italy T"

Yea, sire :drniiiun r at tbe limine nt Areolc.

'

a became n Scrgeant-MajorV"

,tMa -l.n... si

self unable 10 do •

looked at tho haromel

II inches, and ttied ti

fast, and just noted 1

Iherefore, was nt this

ing a height of about,

inch in the rrnilir.^ "f ilu barom.vi r nt lln. . levaiinu

takes place on a change ol height ol about 'ifilb

feet. 1 lelt I wan Ionian nil power, and endeavored

to rouso myself by strue^linii nnd shaking. 1 at-

tempted to speak and l-jiind I had Inst the power, 1

attempted to look nt tho barometer ugai" ; lay bead

foil on ono side. 1 atrugnlfld, aa.l got il right, and it

full on the other, and nnnlh fell hack wards. Myarm, which bad been resting on ihe inble, fell downby my side. I saw Mr. I.'iiswcll dimly in tho ring.

. „:..,.. „„.i b„.ii„ .Lirt, and I sank

CAItlllALDI-a FALL.

Ihe lettered lltclt ofllnly: iron nil! t'roivsttletnr;

Rebel or tioro, cal

Hcli llies.unei

Wl Ills nilil "'i

What then Was "!If II [ III... ilt-nip. 'I

Dniichl-tlmwilli

Stu'EBFumris t'.vniu:,.

nun. I --purr would neve

r.-ipitstinn ibo lnd= not

man tailed for ri horse

tainly," said Spu

iverj--slablo keeper

horse go mil nitliant

ie fast. One day a

ml a funeral. " Ccr-

ho added, Ibrgetlin;; Ibe

. jleiiin purpose lor which the young man ivanlod tli

horse, "don't drive last." " Why. jcat look a hero,"

Id thu somewhat oscited young mini.;' I

understand that I shall keep up wilb

the procession if il kills ihe borso!"

giiU'ettisi'Wfntp.

. ii.it.nte.l.ivf Sicilian

-..iv uij.li! (lie1

- -i'<" ilnill,

ir...ii?lllyi.i. tul.jttL. I.y ll.nl

,Kt

bad not sufficiently ,-,,c,i. .1

oven ilaelf, tbe mouthIf, i

.,,.

It became nn

unconsemusli

l"lbtn

r

|..ar.|

1 lim.il. .1-

This

ird Sir. Coxwoll say,

Tako an observntion

;

mpha'lieally,"Tako an

1 the

ter of the art of pereuasioa. A In >• < a

became a prie-i, il was m (lit Inn -.

'

Im de-fend. -I l.im-.U 7 .:l.l..i..r. a .ri .r -

against tl.e.l.nrne of .v.i'it.e liatri I . .ml. iii-.t 1

revolt, ani.inst ihe n.-iiernment ol l.ouis t tniiri

Willi bim f-a-s :is:o.::inl..d in this eharce.tlic Abbe

la Mennais. lt was based upoi

had appeared i L'Aw -, a paper ot wbiel, I

,„= conductor, Lacordaire

Tbi- noble speech lms not been reprinted since 1831,

imlil rcccoily emb eli.d by bis life Ion;; friend. Count

do Montiilembert, in a cetoorial '

From this raomi rial " traoalale it

V-ginning,

of I.ucordaii

iececce which c>

which cxciicd a

Si, ,....,™ i

ripped i II ol

when ibe cliBIBpm

pion of freedom.

nind. I'm

; tho people,

ta°vc way in the attempt, A little palicuco and care,

owever.overcanie the diilit. illy, and it was no aooner

withdrawn than we were rewarded with ihe siglii of

Hi-: entire hutch / k'H'ir., tm.n ,/:; llity >n:r.- tlrpostitd

in lilt ore;! seventeen liun-lrt.l ami tigldy-thrte yean

;-. all,

«

'I bey arc eipbtytwo in number, nnd

, ryijarda form. site, and indeed ever; cbaruclerislic

if;til and color, precisely as ibey enuio from

and Mr. Coxwell verydirnly.

'&Z^-; "a',1

,,!"!:!.k,

r. p',1. .V: ",*o!t^Wr

,

nearly." I recovered ipiicUy. anil Mr. Coswell said,

"I have lost the use of my hands ;

give me soma

brandy to bathe Ibcm." liia bands were nearly

black. I saw the Icinperalnre was mill below nero,

and the baroiaelcr reading 1 1 inches, but increasing

iiuickly. I resumed my observations nt 5h. 7m.,

reeordinr; ibo barometer reudinc ll.fnl inches, and

the lempi'raturo minus 2 deg. I then found ihtit

tho water in the vis-el Mi|'pliin^ the wet-bulb Iber-

momeler, which 1 had by Ireipient dHiurbaotts kepi

frnm fritjmn, was nne sulid uinss of ice. Mr. Cox-

well then told me that while in the ring he felt it

'cgly cold, that hoar frost was all round tin

nt !.., h,illnr.n ar.,1 on mle.

the baker's hand. Wbiibe pivsent liuie b.n two such loa'

eoitre.l. us-j: of lb- 111 i-:.p. ri . I ll.

ihertd that up to

» have been di

ink-rent of tl.

neck 0:

I bo got dowicnVss. mib

the balloon, ar.d on alleoipti

ring he fuund bis hands Iroitn, ai

bow be could ; that he f„„r.d u.e mi

quiet and placid expression on ibeci

»p,.-e 1.1 o" w.ibc'it ile itiug a Kp'.y. nnd found

n, t.siIjI.' II" ih u said be I/It liiscnsibiiily

,ta„ tl g over himself; ih. '

'I bnvu tiikiin my lliacO of all ibc great bullies.

Iho Emperor waved Ids baud, the grenadier ri

turned lu Ibe ranks. ! Napoleon spoke rapidly I

lln Coloacl for it few moments, ihe jun.-lr glunee^ of

bi- eyes toward Noel, showing that be was talking of

lie had been dial it iguished for bis bravery in several

le.itles, bul bin Icily bad prevented bia soliciting

advancement, and ho had been overlooked ir""

promotions.Tin' Inipcror re. ailed lain In Ins sale.

'You have merited the Cross of the Legion of

Honor," said he, giving him one lhat he wore." You are a brave man."Tlin preiiflditr, win. at that moment stood bttweei

tho Emperor and Colonel, could not speak, but hi

asaidmoru Ihun volume.-. Napoleon made a sigt

ilniuis beat a roll, linn.' "iiR a dead silence, aie

Colonel, tinning to" n.l the new knight, who wil

trembling bauds was placing luscrosa upon his bruaa

iid, it. a loud voice:" In Ibe mime of ibe I-.n.peror, rt.ipect Sergeant

njor Noel, us a Sub-l ieui.,iiiu,t in > our ranks.'

The regiment presented arms. Koel seemed in a

dream, and only ibo immovable features oi tho

Emperor liravcoi'ed bim trnn fulling upon bbi knees.

Another sign was made, tbo drums beat, and again

Iho Colonol spoke:.

ant Noel as Lieutenant in your ranks."

ThiH new ihunderstroke nearly overcame the gren-

adier; his knees trembled - hi- 1 vt-i, that bad not been

moist ior twenty years, were filled with tears, and he

was vainly endeavoring to stammer bis thanks, whenho beard a third roll ol the drums, and tho loud

Of his Colonel:" In the name d! tho Emperor, respect Liouleoant

Noel as a Captain in your ranks."

After Ibis promotion. Ihe Kmp.ror continued his

review with llial. e.'dui ninj.-sii. air which none who

beheld him ever forgot ,Init Koid, bursting in a Hood

of tears.faiated in llie arms of tin' Colonel, while Iroi

ibe regiment came a loud united shout of Vic e

The pill.

AnIstfihesTi.co I-'iihit.—Ageiilleui!in,wbilcwiilkiag

in tho fields at Trough, in Clare, England, recently.

In company with a Iriend, whs ai traded by a noise

in a field bordering on tlm road. On mounting a

brink which bid the held from view, ho says: "

became nn iiitereslcd s|ieetnloroflho Ibllowii

light: a liacewe, with two lambs, one one.'

of her, was standing resisting tho attacks of

fos, who was attempting (o gel at ibc lit

doubt wilb ibe internum 01 treating his w

family lo a nice lamb supper. I'or nearly"

' s my friend and 1 stood wnlcbinj

itonishmcnl, Ibis strange rccae.

the fos would mako a dash nt one

when tho ewe, forgetting :*

inspired wiib courage ir-'""

put down herb '

r.,-,,1 of ... vmtug to you Ibe Micret

„„ ,,. , r .. -1,1,1, w.ll bi- a prcot 01

merely lis jo.i rccogniic tb«n 10 1 ;C

I «nii very young. God bad pcritl

aod liberty reigned not in iu) coon

perished 1 soul, hrcause ni) cr

placed in ibe i-irl) d .»!. ul il

ainidnui-e I sn.:n.- l-.i. rt, r. ;.;,

connlry, bniu- -.In 1-••' ••'•

„ B,.,'l.ll, r ,t the si id .1

iTTbe) are of 11 ibfp br wn color,

teedingly light.

1 can hardly dc-itihi' :b- •-motion with wl.b I

found myself th'-u brought into lie ioirocdinie pre-

seuec of tbo everyday lilt of old Pompeii, nud led lo

havo nnnclual pari 1 p!ti:n;; lln 1 bed work

of eighteen ceoturies ngo. How little did ibo hoocsl

I'uuii'eeiu rraf'.-n.iiu. wben boaoaled up ibo slock lor

that it oiu only tone ibe h(;lit lbre.:gb ibe huci

.*-

,!,!, i received, -.il,

r| a- oncerning tiod.

10, and 1 tonipreb'-ude I

1 ought not 10 omit tl

.. .ive- hro'jghl inligbt amnnd interesting -ji'ipii.

jTugrainmi;. or msr:i|ilic

of wbich. as published 11

ofltom.'.conlainiiadistii

.ilcr that name.

id

hat tber. is »

cloraolly freo-

prieslly speech,

riebl lo seal mweal forth f-oa

and upon Ibc I

"If 1 have ptovokfd disubcdicuce to Ibo laws, I

bsveeoaimiiicil a en. ve fault, lor tl,v laws are t

They are cevt 10 llod, ibe sakaiiui. of natior

no ouc should bear Ibeci 11 greaicr respect tbi

priest, cba.ged lo instruct the people wl.,-.,.

ccuie* 10 them aod wLcac: comes dealt,. 1 et

fos, I do nol feel for lb.- laws of my country that

telcbratcd Live which ancni.t iniiium. hou- lo Ibu

When Utc-da.. died, ibis wan graven oil his torn

Traotlltr,tjol"l i" SparUi tint ire died In order

Obey her ea<re,t ,...". And 1,gcodeo.cn, I should not

wish this inrcripiioii graven on my touib;

I should

not wish 10" die fjr ibe holy laws of my coontry.

For the liuio nu I. ; get i-sists when (he Iiikh aie tbe

veneroblo expression of ibn iradiiious, customs ur.d

goda of a oauon, all is changed. A ibousand cj.oi-U.

n thousand opinions, iHbouwiml tyrniuiiis.,

and tbe swetd bustle in cjrccuf I b-^.tlnii

il woold be adoring glory and infamy at or.c

for such laws. Ilnlv isoce wl I r...pe t. win. b I

love, and which 1 nill defend, thoCbnrter of Frnnc

not that 1 am numbed to tbe variable forma

rep resell 1 aiivo government with imaiovablo ardor,

but becautu llni

ibe anarch) of lb

freedom.

I

I . freedom, a

1 ,,..

and ngai

Itut if ye

of bishops

nibti of exceedingly Co

as well ns many so-called

is. in co'.or cr charcoal,

ibe llollciir.o Arihctlje;b

,: ......

,BL 111- H'.WIV. I.lt I..)

uauagemtiit of so large

shall iioi

ofJ'cnd our friends in Muwneb use I is by legi-laiior

directed at the party now in tho ascendant. Novel

were a baser sul of wretches in possession of ponei

than iboso who bavo rolcd and voted in thai Sluli

over sioco tbo time of tbe Hiss Legislatoru;nod yo'

uo Stale possesses so many me ini-

I II

rule. Thy creatures bom will, sa.ldlrs on their

bockw bavo thrown ll.cir riders. The doge bn>c

escaped from Ibu kennel Uit but-. » an I il,,g» need

matten ; tl.ey cur.uot Uy li-e wuboui ihem. Tbe

present governing ela-s m M as.-. 1elm setts aro natu-

rally tbe lower layer of society. 'I'tey aroineopable

any leogth of lime, any Other offices

. . asking Mr, Coxwell wbeiLer he bad noticed

(bu temperature, bei said to coold unt. as Ihe faces ol

Ihe instruments were all towards mo; bul that ba

bad noticed lhat the centre of tho aneroid barometer,

its bloe lined, and a rope aiiachi.l to ibe car were in

tee same i-iraigbl line. II si>, the reading must have

been between soven and eight inel.es. A height nf

sis milts and a half con. -ponds lo S inches. Adelicate, s.-lftrgiolering minimum thcrm;mclet reads

minus 1- dcg : bu: iinlorlucntel) I did not read it

till 1 was out of tbo car. und 1 cannot say lhat its

index was not disturbed. On descending, whoa the

tempcratoro rose to 1" deg., it was remarked a»

warm, acd at 2d dig it was noled ii> Ki) warm.

Tbo temperature lln-ii gradually increased to :"**>/.

deg. on reaching iho earth- It was remarked lhat

Ibo sand was quita warm to the hand, and sleaci

issocd (rom it wben it was disehat(;ert. fix pigeons

w«re inker, up. Uoe was thrown cut at the bcigbt

of three miles , it emended ils wings and dropped

as a piece of paper. A second, at loic miles, ilew

vigorously round and mind. a|parerlly taking a

I,ve 11 lour and liv. 11. d, s.at.d it fell ii.->w awards. Alilto wben

MYSTIC MEMORY.

Is February, 1S2S, Sir Waller Scolt was breaking

mself dawn by over-haed literary work, and had

ally fallen to pome osteal out of health. On the

ih be ealers in bis diary, that, on tlm prvre.ling day

dinner, allbough in company wilb 1*0 or ihree

loved old friend. , lie una sln.ogidy haunted by

bat be would call "the sense of preexialencu"

imelv, a confused idea lhat nothing Lhat passe

ns ii'ml i;,g 111" lirsl tune— thai Ibe snuii! luj.ild lln

en ili.-eii-stU, :n.d tho inmo pennns bad sillied (b

.mo opinions on ihem, Tbo sensation, he addi

.

ivius so strong as to resemblu what is culled mi'i-.i;;.:

the desert, or a calenture on board of ship, whenlakes nro seen in Ibe desert, and silvan landscapes

: ~

ihe aea. . , . There waa a vile sense of want.--ality in ail ibat 1 did or said."

This experience of Scott is one which has often

been full, and nfitu commented on by authors, by

Scolt binibul! amongst others. Iu his novel of GuyMannerinif, he represents bis le 10 Hertram asretur

' what was, unknown 10 bim, bis native cast!

in absence from childhood, nnd thus musing 1

nsnlions :" Why is it that sumo stents awnk,

iiunghis whieb belong, as il were, to dreams of carl)

aad shadowy recollection, such as my old lirnhmia

Moonsbiu would havo HM-rihid to a slate of previous

existence? How often do wc find ourselves in soci-

ety which wo have noi-cr before mot, and yet feel

impressed wilb a mysttiiiuuli and ill-detined cor

Bciousucss thai neither tin: seen.., tbo speakers, no.

1 tip subject, are entirely new ; nay. feel lis if wo Could* iipato thai part of tbe conversation which baa

et taken pbi.-e." Warren and Ilulwor Lyltoa

.similar remarks iu iln-ir novels, and Teonyeo

a

adverts to the sensation iu a beautiful sonnet:

i when with duwm-ntt ryes wo mnae and brood,

t Dew mly ofie

i-,:', 1!.

.1 r'aiu

oibai Tbt

groundcarrier) hadnot bonevtt

urocd lo tbe

governs ignorance, religion

s of llni ."-.oulb bepalicat.

of subsldeiieoandHtratib-

IX,

i.io-l reus ten governi d. tba

lihibeeoiirsoof naloi

wiidoaiaod henefiivnco of Heily.

may put society wrong aido nr

powerful, and soon brings dow

of tbe balloon,

ing |,l-, unn were brought down to the

was. found to bo dead, aod ibo oiler (a

attached to its neck a note. It wiold

leave, and wfcen jerked of iho fiogir re I

After u quarter of an hour it began lo peek a

piece of rlbaod encircling ils neck, aid 1 then jerked

it "il 11, 1 lir -cr. aud ii ilew ruutd Itro or three limts

C ..

'

.' '. !vi,'u"i'r;'!!'.

asetni ibat five miles from ibo Carta lb very nearly

the limit ol human existence. It ie possible, as Ibe

cfleet of each high ofceul upon nijsi.f has been d.r.

fercnl. that on another occaaioo 1 rcigbt bo ablo to

go higher, nud ii is possilde ibat Muri persoris mighl

lio ablo lo exist with less nir aid hour a greater

degree of cold: but sidl I ibbi ibu ptmi oce

woald Bay lo all. wheoeie: lb .-. n.. 1. : n sdn.g

falls oa low as 11 incbus. open tbo v.'v ' lb

increased in rormnlion lo bu obtained is not common

turalo with Ihe increased risk.

i.'« 0*11 dibci a of

11 Hi l.r.atl..

AtIbe lambs.

idity, anddefence of ils young, would

and butt savagely at her

adversary. Tho fox, bnllled in bis first

dd then run round and try t

ihe mother, quick as thought, would then

round and again me.-i her mlversary wilh her hard' roolly heud. ""-

lis firsl ullcmpt,

10 iho olher lamb;

retired short di

e..d barking,

ng away the

pi; F Si..II I.

$150. $150.

d inlo tbe leal

I ihe old

inbelita.

The foxlbei

bis brush, and enmu

itb 'll.e evident iiilcntioii of frigin

lothcr, so that ho might sccuro at

,r duaiistie imrnoscs. At Ibis moment tnu II1HI0

,nrenl of llio 1 wo i

leen'.s ntirnettd to Ibc spot by

sly lloyaard's musieal I. ink. made bia appearance,

t a glance what had happened, mndo a

icmv.put dnwn his head, aad would, no

doubt, have destroyed bim, only licynard, teeing his

new loo and latieyi'ng the numbers loo many fur bim,

and lhat discretion "as the best pan of valor, nir

away, leltviog Ihe ram the undoubted victor of tbi

Gold."

Ttie Stobv of js Atom.—The atom of ehan

wbich lloated in tho

when tbe valleys became preea ami lu>

(here, in ils proper place, 11 received tbe

(ho dew, aiding to fling hack to heavw

of heaven's gold ;and. nt ihe same time, lo build Ihe

lough fibre of tbe plant. Tbe stem was consigned

lo Ihe tomb, when ll.e wan-rs sul.merged tbe jungled

valley. It had lain then: thoie-anda of years, and n

moiithainco was brought Im light again, imbed-

ded in u block ol" coal. Il shall be consumed to

warm our dwellings, cook our food, and mako momruddy and cheerful the hearth whereon oer children

piny ": it shall combine wilb a porliuu of the invisible

atnmsphere, ascend upward as a curling wreath to

revel in a innzy diinco high up ill ihe bluo ether;

shall reach tbo earth again, and he enlrapped into

tho embrace of a Mower;

shall livo in velvet beauly

on tbo ebeok of the apricot; shall pass into tbo

human body, giving enjoyment to tho palate, and

haalili to the blood ;shall circulate in tbe delicate

lisaues of tho brain, and aid, by entering into some

new combination, i lining ibe thoughts whieb are

now being uttered by tbe pen. lt ia but an nloui of

charcoal; it may dwell one moment in a stagnant

dilcb, and tbe next be flushing on tho lip of beauty

:

it may now bo a component ol a limestone rock, and

the next an ingredient in a held nf potatoes;

it maysluiaber for 11 thousand

single change, and die

11m: Libvr m.w is i;si-:-.i .\sitj i

1;

t hour pass through a

s only an atom of ehnr-

owa place wherever it

-Hibtcrd's llramL'.e* <mtl Bay Learex.

Llppjinl mirrors oeli re Heeling 1

Vl,iI

till nun 1 Ini.l "11. 11 mel'mind and speech."

ArrEnnuRy's Wit,—Allerbury, iho celebrated

Bishop of Koch ester, Ibn friend of iho Tory statesman

ia the lime of t.iueen .\nnt. luippeiied lo say ia the

lionso of Lords, while speaking mi a certain bill (hen

under discussion, lhat ho bad prophesied last winlet

ihia bill would be attempted in Ihe present session

and be now was sorry lo find ibai bo had proved 1

true prophet. Lord Coningaby. who spoke alter tin

bishop, aod always spoke in a passion, desired Ibc

' iusC to remark ilmi one ol" Ihe rigbt-reverund had

I bin, sell forth a-- a prophet, but, for his part.be

d not know vrlii. I pniplnl IJ liken bim lo, 011I0M1 10

at fortous prophet [minimi, who was reproved by

__B own ass. Aiierhnrj. in reply,wilh great wit and

calmness, exposed this rude attack, concluding 1"

" .Since Ibe noble lord has discovered in our maneh a similitude, 1 am well conlenl ta be compared

a ihe prophet Balaam—but, my lords, I am at n

lo;a how to make oul (be other part of Iho parallel" m sure lhat I have been reproved by nobody

is lordship."

a I.l ..-,. -,

bind iny bands,

. 1 matter little, for it would bo

would col bu oppression,

.1 V...I..I... violence woold alill remain.

do not bind my hands, you do bind my

every good prose

mnu a certain harmony of sc

bo displaced without injury lo bis

moaning. Ilia own ear has accustomed itself to

regular ineasllteaienlB uf lime, 10 which bis Iboogbls

learn ineihiiiiieally to regulate ibeir march. '"

prose, as in verse, it is tbo pause, be it long

which (he mind in compelled to make, in -

accommodate ils utterance to Iho ear, that sc

Ibo completer for million of ihe ideas convoyed; for

words, like waters, would nia oil' to their own waale

were it not for Ihe checks that compress Ihem.

Walcr-pip. -tan ei.li 'iii. . Ibeir stream so long

they r.-si-t 11- pr re ... I . rery skilled w.irkm

knows lhat I- ' "I- it them 10 last unless

smoolli, wllh .ate, lb.' material ol" which Ibey 1

™ il

j

, ." ,

1

' |,™ I

i

'"'

M

'

1 Illiichrmd.

PatLlCIIINii .

[olher, a phv:

1 Bunion.

M"5SIJI'OIA J. liUtsSF.L w

'ASMONG TDK PIS.IS," DT to'HiliiJ^lplilj.

1 011. s,u;tii l.S ;i:ci:-i-

fttttalfofyfafa giiU'evtiscmfnts.

W '

L'' 'iWl,. iv

B T' ''

L'

STOVES, I1ANGI3, LEHIGH. ,\NI) SCIRiVLICILI.

COAL, ETC.,

TJ

j- r..s[.ii.iii:.i -'. ,n '

PHIZ,HUi: Ml.ll.M. aivar.k-J i;

Catp'l lll£*, y*ll"», flnm s

m Praciiob.—Dr. thnnning had

day, a countryman in search ol ll

knocked at ihe " doctor's " door, when the

following dialogue ensued :

" Does Dr. Channing livo hero f"

" Tes, sir."

" Can 1 tee him 1

"

•• I am he."

"Who-youT'

TONES k CO., ul tho Criacent Ono Price Clothim.

ALAIlGf: luuor

Amrbican Ice —Sidney Sioilh. in l^mlon, wi

ahown a lump of American iee, upon which be r

marked. " that ho waa filad lo seo anything eoltei

eorau from America."

and proper desi

1 of suite andit lo procure peal

acet-JWoK.

11, \te I'nitT—Wben tfir Mnlthew Hale was

1 |,j,.i .lusii.n his lommis.iou was brought 10

bi Lord I'lareiidnn. ivho lold him. " If the king

1 have i'..und oul an bonesler and a i.iler man

bat employment, lie would not have advanced

i 111st have altered c

Ob, I see your mistake 11

arJief. IpraUiee."

isiderably ainoo 1 heard

;. ll'smvhrolher win.

inB lonr™

Sefwyricurcd tbo

ll happened thai ibe perron who revived the

,...- bad liuel. been m'.li.-l liiui'-lf. and hud ihe

id fresh in his mind. " He slalked up iolo the

cluh-room," relates W'alpot,-, ' stopped short, and,

with a hollow, trembling voiv;, said, ' ilr. Eelwyn,

Mr, Wal polo's compliments, and bo's got a house-

breaker for yon.'

"

uenlol PALAllANKKit KAb'l^, ul

iootbotionehyC"';

-l)EUOVAI«—Lciiltia llullock

t u.e.M.lvlMi.nil l'LN,.\... 71.\. fourthcj_.n. :-... ;.

-

.'