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-"".'j iJ j;'-: c VOLUME XX ii-- Jfie tfl. 3)efnon 3)fciocHi!s Ssmiw Oflcs la T7oTrd' Xlock, Tiiri Etoxy TKHMS T Oollanvar unrn, tinUt Is 4- rae; $2,5f winds ix meathi; 3,0 after th x- ruft f ta 7ar. Claba of twaaty, 9M aaea. AB F llTllflllll: B e D f B 4 Vt .$.'! a.;t a. 1 1 Ui,i ri s ti t tn o.a o f ' ! MNt, 0 3 to 4 SO 4 yr, to 4 00 m oole o 1 tfMri, kmmnabl amiXlw, 10 I nlm, ayiH Mrterijr,., a mwui MMrl nmrimrtm, 1 MabI artr Twalra llaaa af Mtaia, (thia Ijpa) ara eoaa-a aa a aqaara. 1 JUT CUILDCES. Thar eleep; athwart toy white Moon-marbled caaenaat, with bTer eoletnn aaeln, Silent! watching o'er their rrwt aereae, Xjraxeth the atar-ejed Night. Mj girl, adate or will, B tarns aa plajful aa a Sammer breese, Or grave aa Night or atar-Iit Soutbera, aeaa, Serene, strange wocnaa thildl My boy, mj Irembting star! The whitest Iamb ia ApriPs tendertst fold; The bluest flower bell in the shadiest wood His gentle emblems are. They are bat t wo, and all My lonely beart'a arithmetic is done When these re coo a ted, High and Holy Ooe, O bear my trembling caJU . I ask not wealth nor fame For these my Jewels. Diadem and wreath Soothe -not the aching brow that throbs beneath, Nor cool its fevered iiame. I ask not length of life. Nor earthly honors. Weary are the ways The gifted tread: naafe the world's best praise - A ud keen iu strife. ; T ask not that to me Thoa spare them, thoagh they dearer, dearer te Tban rain to deserts, snahine to the sea, r Spnng fljwers to the bee. : Bat kneeling at tbir feet. Wbilesnilea,!ike Sammer lighten shaded streams Are glancing from their glad and sinless dreams, I would my prayer repeat. la that allaring Land, -. The Future, where, amid rreen, stately bowers. Ornate wiii. proud and crimson-fashing flowers, Pleasure, witb scaootb, white bands, Beckons the yoang1 sway, From glen and bill side to her banquet fair, Sia, the griia she-wolf, croacbetb in her lair, Beady te seise Ler prey. The. bright aod porpliog bloom Of Nightshade and Acanthus cannot bide The charred and bleaching Vtaes that are denUd Taper, and chrism and totabl ' Lord, in this midnight hoar, ; I bring my lambs to Thee. . Oh, by Thy trntb. Thy enerey, save them from th envenomed lootb And tempting poison flowers! . " 0. Cropped and Crowaed. eep as! We have so sbiold, 00 goide bat Tbeel let sorrows come let Hope's last blosnom be ; By Oriefs dark deluge drowned; " Bat lead as by Thine band, O, OefOleet Shepherd, till we rest bes'de Tbowtill, dear waters ia the pastures wide '; Z.'I 'I,- t to' Sinless Lamb. TI1E UTILE FELLOTT. Z Z Some ha.ve thongbt that in the dawning,' In 6ar being's freshest glow, " ' r: n God i?mu&chtrxm - Tbaa tbetr parw'ata ever know ' " fy i': And tbaV If jon liaeo obarp!y.T,;t - Better things tbaa yo caa leach, . ";TAow a sort of aoasie wisdom, Trickles throogh tbeir careUu speech, - -.-Hosr .it is Iaao aswwiw-ei;--fi .:-, v.- ; Bat 1 know a Tittle child. i. 4 t Who, amoag the thy ma and clover. And the bees, was ruCning wild: Ana oe Came ooe sa mmer evening, . With hie tiarleU o'er bis eyes, ' a . 'And bit bat was torn to pieces( '. '. ' Chasing bees and botlerfiies. J "Now I'U go to bed, dear mother, ; For To very tired of pUyl And be said bU MNoir I lay tne" ; I kind and careless way. , r And he drank.lhe"cooli eg water From his litile silver cn, ' 1 r ".- 5 ;Atd aa4 gaily, When jts nortts ., WiUtbt utgtl Uk sd apf v i i i-i-iS '. -. '"- -1 .. Dowa bt tank, with rogeeUb laejUer, r And the kiadly goicf slamber, is - jEbowered the pa pies o'er tit teii7: "What cod4 t36a tlirpesliri-ttraDelyr f . AkeJ ie,raarDpoihsr ibeaf;, ? WI'HWthJibotkitjwttlfj,, T . What could ha of kto!?. Zu J (Lika t lepbjr coyisj toftly.) ' ' - And "hit ci-sek: ii fttcrti '' J - taatiaj &e r car m lisiexu : If bis breathio jt could bt fcttrd - 0hT tbo Barmared, if tbt Aegelt Took mj duUsj ia li cr2I 1 . a 91 a afl'a Tl I 00 111 1 - . -, - Otj 00 T M 00 10 lr eJii lis mU, 1S 1 1 . JO REPUBLIC ATI IHTEnFEREUCE WITH "SLAVEUr Hi ZiiE ITIctt JWoZ pol CK Ucatkat V Slate tkould not exist half sum and half fret, tuut Sbetoara learned the nrpresnUskC9njiicX.'! llepabllcan Slembera r Congress AdTiae Treason nacvii war, The fvDoiag extract froia circular recooa- meoding llelper'e entire work, rereala otart Hag pbaae of tbe Bpablicaa progTatame for forcible interference with larerj where it Miata: KcwYukx, March 9, 1859. Dear Sik: If jom have read and critically ex mined the work, job will probabij agree with aa That 09 ourae of eTraaaetU au eacueurully eontrovenincihe practice of alaverj in the Uuit- d Siaiea, eafordas preciae and accarate view of its proalratioc efffcU, aod pointing- eat ih.t reesedj fir it, km eqealed tht of the vol a me entitled " The Impending Cn-U of the South how to meet it," bj Hiatos Evwau Helper. This circular tsngned by - William A. Aatboo. N. Y. S. Pa-i leford. Providence, E. L S. L &twall. IWoa, Mass. Ca n M. CUy, Wbiteball, Ky. W. B. Tboeaaa. PbiUdalphia, ; W. McCaaley. Wilmingioo. W. Gunnisoa. Baliiaiore. L. Ctepliaae. Waabiagtosv. F. P. Blair, Si. Lotus.. , Bepublicaa members -iad jrsw" to-wit: We, the aadersiraed members of the House of Representatives of the NaiiooaJ Cougrea. do cor diulljf iW&rse tbeopiiiua set Knb io ibe foreg ing circuUr. Siaed bJ 8. GoIftS, J. B 'Oid-dmgs, E B. Washharne, oT III.. Win. Ketlojfg. of III., Oco Lvi , of HL, aud Aitsoa Bur-lingame. Juhn Skormta, O. B. MtlesMi. J Farus worth, uf ML, aud fifij-aiue others. What does this book contain, which is to "cordially indorsed9 and recommeuded by these sixty-eight republican members of .Congress? Let a few extracts answer: . Not-to he an AV'txi'Miist is to be a diabolical -and wicked, instrument of ike Devil 204 of the Compendium. ' ne Oordiallr luJjfse the opiuion. John Sherman and C 7 other Coagreasmen. Slavery to be ua condition ally abolished:. . "We enter our prwtest against it aod deem it our duly to ums our moat strenuous tff rts to overturn aud abolish ic . : We are uot only in favor of keepiog slavery out of the Territories, but carrying our opposition to the institution a step further, we h-re anbesitatiarly de dare in favor of its IMMEDIATE and UNCON. pi rlON AL ABOLITION IN E VEKY S TATE iu the CoufeUeraey where it owe exists. Page 25 of the Crisis. "We cordially iodurse the opiaiou. J. R. Giddiags and 67 other Congressmen. We are told how to become patriots ; ln this axtraordtuary crisis of affairs, no man can be a true patriot, witaowt first oecoaiieg ats abohtiOQUU rire uStf Ibe Cwmpoadium. We cordially tudorsa the opinion.' E. Wade and 67 oiber republican Congress men. . Republicans aay what they think of naturalized citizens : - . :- The North baa just as good a right to ap praise the foreign emigrals, as the south has io set a price on the Atrican slave." Page 8C uf the Crisis. . We cordially indorse the pinion." . Aaron Harlan,.-. and 67 other Republican Congressmen. The difference between a free-soiler aud an abolitionist is set forth I "Freemen of the North, hitherto as free-soil- lers, ym have approached but balf way to the ine of your duly. A free-aoiler is onlv a tadpole ib aa advanced state of transfurmation; sa abolitionist i the full and perfectly developed frp.n - . ; ; I . .. . rCordially endorsed." John Sbenraa. -:. : and 67 other republican Congressmen. The original idea of Ibe ''irrepressible con. V hicb Seward and Lioeola adopted, it set forth ia the following isvngeagat "The great revolatiooarv mowemeBt which was Sft oh foot ia Chariot le, M klet berg Co , North Carolina, on the 20th day of My. 1775. baa tut yet been terminated, nor" will it be, entil every slave ia the United States is freed from the tyran ny of bis ottaeier f age 33 of Coats. Uordiny loaorsea. A. Unrimgeme, and 67 other republican Coagreasmen. ' These are chtice exiraets, truly The doe trines set forth above may be taken at a trna ex position of Republican priactples this year. They also foreshadow the manaer in which they woul l . administer the government, should they, nfortuaately for the eoaotry, aver elect a Presi- dent. 4 " ' ' " Toe next extract exbibiu a b-wrible and treas onable proposition, and shows how eooly the leading RpablicaM roeteaiplate civil war and the ravagemeoi and devastatioa cf onr coootrj. Yon that love jour country, lock at this: It seems that tbe 'ietaf aumber of actual slave uwD-rr, fndudiiig. their entire crew ul criging lickspittle, against whom we bava to contend, is but 347,525. "Against this army f.r the defense and propagation of slavery ,: weibink tt win be an easy mat tar intlependeut of the negroes, who in niae caes out uf tea would be delighted with aa upprtuaity of cutting t their master throaUt and witboat aeceptiar a single reervtl frua the free States, Eegtaad. Fraaxia or Germany to- snaste smo three tistea ' as large for its utter extinction. We hope the matter in dispute may be adjasted witboat arrarinv these amies against each tuber in hostile, attitude. ijut we are wedded ta one carouse, from which no eanhlv power can divorce ns. WE1 ABE HE I ERMINE D TO A CO LIS U SLAVE- BY AT ALL HAZARDS.- Page 149 ; Z ewrdiallj Indorse these niatoat,,. . aOt iB tfepatljcaa , Congrasatea..r. Words ara powerless to express the aaormoas atrocity hf tbt bora tjtouiJOB from lit ilack rtjubUcaa tetv-book , Ve ntare to say that itt black-hearted lafaaij hat art been erjaajled tlnet tia days of tU'Toriet of tha IUf oUiioa. -Cardsaflyi MHt br Ed, l7adt,!Joha Shr man, J. F. Fares worth, & ,B, ' WacbborDa and aixty -foar ather repaUlcaa aatabat of Coogfett- utliftea toa-BOther tweet; toBa2tiwr.gecUact asa twjru ojibiob aus . , It U oat kes 'eoavksioa. A xfaTHa pro- :very t.avtz -rn, w3 in t ;:t itipcaalUa tur tia tz.z:'.z ;ssca cf ilt iis:aUoar dtsrve to ba sa ores rtl-cti ts 4 x ;h tie basest criul tit) lie f;"- vjthia tit eslU of ear paoiia prisons era 11 posia uu ui whole aaeaber could be gathered toxtther and trans, formed into four equal gai; of Cceaaei rob afar lent txoai their atroci tins ihaa it does sot." Page 158. -"-:.; . - '- ;' s : ' ' MWt cordially tBdona tba' opantoa.1' . -: 3L B. Washborna, - and 67 other republican Congressmen, i Thert are several bandred Virginians, Ten-, neaseeaasaa Hentackiaas, and their desoendants ia Seneca county, all of whom have mora oe leaa relatives and friends ia those States. What do ihey think of such eoaraa abaaa aa the above? How can they coanteanaca a party, the leaders of wbieb denounce their friends as so better than rof'ber, thieves, ruffian, and barglarsi " Tbey say that tba abolition of slavery at all baxards" meat be quickly accomplished must be don i a kwrryl Read tba fuUowing: "At once let tba good and trot men of this country, the patriot sons of the patriot-, fathers determine that ibe son which rises to celebrate the centennial anniversary of our national inde pendeDre shall not set on the head of any slave within the limit of ibis Republic. . Page 178. " We cordially indorse He opinion.' - Beejamia Stanton, and 67 other republican Congressmen. The republicans hereaboot are trying to escape from tba consequences which ibe avowal of these doctrines is likely to entail upon them. But it won't succeed. Joshaa R. Giddings, who organized the republican party in Ohio, sounds ibe key note to hu faithful children ia the fol iowiog language: - Wahhiwotoit, City. Feb-, 5, 1SC0. - To the editor uf the Ashtabula Sentinel t Our friends at borne should be alow to cer sure their repn-eentativee fir deserting Mr, Sherman. . They felt the humiliation of discarding a candidate because h had endorsed the doctrines . .f Hl pr's nook. EVERY SEN TEN CE OF WHICH FINDS A RESPONSE IN THE HEARTS OF ALL TRUE REPUBLICANS. - J. R. GlD&lHGS. Hold to it, Johaat Doo't let y oar party dudge the endursement of "eveiy sentence of Helper's book. If the sentences given above do not find a response io your heart,1 Mr. Conner vative Republican, you may consider that the 'true Republicans" .invite you to walk oat or their abolitionized party. Win. H, Seward tba great representative of Republicanism, and th creator of the repuWi can party almost esed the following language in a speech iu Ohio, in 1848, while "getting up" this very party, tbe leaders of which "cordially iudorse" the above extracts from Helper's book. Seward Says: . "The party of freedom seek complete and universal emancipatiou. : '-Slavery is the am of not only noma of the States. but of them all; of not one nation only, but wf all nations. . it perverted and corrupted the mtrl sanae of man kind' deeply and naiver-aally, and this corrutioa becamei a ua vernal habit Habits of thought became fixed prin si-plea. No Atuericau State baa yet delivered-itself eutirelv fro?n b"1""" V?. ' : I'sv rYscknxa'-.ks- t AlairetJait by wiibaaiirtiwg-3 the ngnt ot sun. age trom ine race we nave m tucipated. You. tz Ohio, are guilty in the una way by a system of . black taws autl more j aiatocratic and odi.oa! It is written ia the Constitution of tbe Uuited States that five slaves ball couut equal to three freemen as a oanis of representation and it is written also, in violation ot Divine law, that we shall surrender tba fugitive alave who takes refuge at our fireside from bis relentless pursuer. Yoa blush at theae things, because tbey have become as familiar as household words aod your pretended free-soil allies claim peculiar merit for maintaining these miscalled guarantees i)f slavery which tbey find in the national compact. Does not atlthis prove that tba Whig party have kept up with the spirit i of the age? That it is as true and . faithful to human freedom as the inert conscience of the American people will permit it to be? What ! then yoa say eao nothing be done for freedom because the public conscience remains inert? Yes, much can be done everything can be done Slavery can be limited to iu present bounds. It can be and n?uat be abolished, and yoa and I can and must do it. The task is simple and easy as its consummation will ba beneficent and it reward glorious. , " B . wn.muat begia deeper and lower than the compos'.tioa and coatbtBaUon of faction, or pa tie, whrnu ine v strength aud security of slavery lie. Yon answer that it Ties in the Const itui ion of the United States and the constitution and taws of alaveholding States. Not at atL It is in tba erroneous sentiment of the American people. lueulcate the love of free-dom and the equal.rights of man under the pa terual roo ; sea to it that tbey ara taught ia the school-; and ia the r-burchei reform your own eode; extend a cordial welcome to tbe Tugittva who lays his weary limbs at your door, and de-feud him as you would your paternal gods ; correct your own err- r, that slavery has any eonsti-tutiooal guarantee which may not be released, and ought not to he relinquished." - I know that you wilt tell me this is all too slow. : Well, then, go faster if yoa can, and I will go with yoa; bat, remember the instructive Iesa that was taught ia ibe words, "these thine ongbtya to have done, and tot to have left the oodoe.' " . .. . ZZZ- . .' . ' ..Aaother sweet oaa, ain't U ? 3 . '. - "Once for all, within a reaaonably abort period, let us MAKE the slaveholders do something like jufttiee tit their negroes, by giving each and every one of ihens his freedom, and sixty dollar in current money? Pa 183. -' . -X , "Cordially indorsed.! ... ,t Wra. KeUggM3-; and C7 other republican Coagreasmen.. .'l How the Repablicana love .this word '-make ft it forever on their tongne, ibey are alwajt going to "asks" aomebody do this things and Mmake someb dr else do another thing. . The way they intend to njaVe,. freedom for the alaretis illatirated in a letter . paMUhed itt the New York Hvald, Oct. 20, 1859, which detailed thVplaa to be pursued by Browa : aud hi con federates ia crime, ia case they were tuccessful at naJw'a.Ferry. The plaa watt TO MAKE WAR (openly or ecrelly a elf comstance may dictate) - apon the property of the slaveholder and : their abettor not tor tit destraetiiMt, if that eaa be easily avoided, but to convert it to the osa cf the slaves. . If, jt cannot thus ba converted then wa advise it destroettoa. Teach the slaves to burn their masters' baikiiagi to kill their cattle tad horse to destroy or conceal their farming atensils to abandon labor ia seed-time and harvest and let crops perish. MAKE slaftry cpproStabl Hii way ii a eaa be done tar no outer. ?- f Torwk bo general latarreettoa.'crtl 7E OF THE IlOUrU GO TO ;YUUi A.iiAi,i;i jarort give bo testimony o n't rct in ec port of tlave holding claims, perform." bo eoili. tar, patrol, or police services; MOB slavehold-tear courts. iaHa. and Chen? do octhing, ia tisrt, fcx gsstsSsir j Cxnrjt but Terjtiie jou or yoa are turt cf eaccets w;:-Oil cr t Ta tlao's rlliicil iattlt-iicsJ ti coos at rciiilli, ray uzes 'ta tit- govcrsrrs&t, if eaa eaiUy dij publicly end privately tat itt overthrow.:: v c ,v-h.f. ;;S-:"?:.rsn The above t bat a tmall part of a helHsh plaa .for the abolitioa of slavery. It corretpoadt to accurately with the general teBtlseat and par, pose of Helper's book that no oaocaa fail ta be. lieve that ooe hand wroto both. 1 Tho following convey a similar meaning i Frown, fret, irrj foam; prepare joar wea- nana, thraat. atrik. ahnot. Stab, brief OB civil war, dissolve the Union, nay,aaainiiaie the sotarv stem, if yoa will do all this, oaore, Jes, bet 1 ler. worse, nnvibior. do what yoa will. irs; yoffil can neither foil nor intimidate ns our position? it as 6nalr f xed as the eternal pillars of Heaveej WR. HAVF HRTKRMINED TQ ABOLISH SLAVERY, a1 SO HELP US GOD, ABOL-4 IS14 IT WJS WILL. " - ; Cordially indoraed." ; ! - ' E. B. Wathbarne. and 6? other Republican Congressmen. So they go. What farther evidence do the people want to con vi ace them that tho leaders o the Republican party are twin brothers to tW meanest abolitionists in the laod?', , . ' . . Front tbe spirit ef Demeeraer. Are the Eepaalicaui in Favcr f Uegr4 Rnffrao'et Tjrtnlr at tneir TljtftftTfl - In the Ohio Legislature, at it session of 1858 a bill was introduced, by Mr.. Cbaet of StarkJ coaoty, the object of which wat to prohibit oa lattoes, or, ia the language of the bill, persons "bavtag a viaible ad mixtare of Afrtcao ' btoodMJ from voting.: . -.. ' .' , . On page 677 of the Houae Joareal of 1859 may be found the following voUt oa this bill. Those who voted ia the affirmative were: . Messrs. Andrews. Baclea. Bate. Biebmv. Blackburn. Brooks, Carlisle, Chaae. Chancey of Frauklin, Clark. Colli na. Cox. of Perry, Co wan j uoomeyer, tAison, rnelrock, Fraxeev Uibson, GUsgo, Green, Hitch, Hughes, of Butler, Hughes, of Highland, Jackson, Jenner, Jwbnsr.n, Leete, Marshall, Morse, Mott, McEwea, MeFerran, O-dell, Paine, Parr, P.kelbiiaer, PitUaan, Rail-ton, Rea, of Guernsey, Ray, of Scioto, Riehardaon. Robinson.: of Hamilton, Rogers, of. Hamilton, Rose, SaSn, Sangsler, Seuer. Slusser. Stout, Thoocpson, Waogh, West, of Brown, West cot l, Williams, of Warren, Wilson, Williams, of Monroe, Wiener, Wright and Speaker 59. r Those who voted in tbe negative jeeres Messrs. Allen of Ashtabula, Allen wf Jefferson. Bailey, Bell, Blair. Brown, Cox of Knox. Dawes, Day, Doming, French. Furaald. Gardner. Gatch, Haymaker, Hitebcock, Habbelt. Jones, Kerr, Lanrhlta, Monroe. MeCreary, Peck. Plants, Raymond. Reese, Roach. Robinson, of Union. Rogers of Clark, SimavMs. fiperry. Stephens. Townsend, Van Vorbes, Watson, Welch and Worlhinrtoa 37. - . - - -. EVEBY DEMOCRAT TTJTED FOR THE BILL AND EVERY REPUBLIf AGAINST I f. Mr. Wi!5is, - elected tin .-- - " " wo 4iCragtTlr woV iuct w t taors h.Ince. Oa page 35 of the Senate Journal of 1859. is the record of the vote of the Senate upon this bill, aa follower j Those, who voted ia the aSrmative were. Messrs. CantwelL Caas, Chanmaa. Corwine. Hatch. Kincade, Langdoa, Morrow Murdock, Perky. Pernll, Phelp. Beid, Safford, Shidler. Schleich, Smith, Thomas, Vanatta and West- coti 20. Those who voted in theaegativa were Messrs. Aahmuo, Backland. Can field. Gard, Gatch. Green. Heakle. McCleary, Mile, Blade, Taylor and Winana 12. - - So the bill wa passed. - EVERY DEMOCRAT IN THE SENATE VOTED IN FAVOR OF THE BILL AND EVERY REPUBLICAN AGAINST IT. Does bi not prove the party ia io favor of mulattoes voting? , , But to relieve themselves from " the odium of thi vote, aud to deceive the conservative portioa of their party, they claimed that they - voted a-gNtnst the bill becaoa it was eacoBstttatiaaal, and for that reason only. The bill became a taw notwithstanding the unanimous vote of the Republicans. Bat tbey were determined not to oea the votea of their mulatto brethren, and their Supreme Court declared the taw nneonstita- tional. This gave a plausible excuse for their vote aod to com exunt sustained their pretens that it wa 00 constitutional : grounds only, that tbey voted for the bill. But they were not to escape to easily. The Democrat were determined to prevent mulattoes from voting if possible, and at the eamo time to test the Republicans pretensions. Io th Seoate Joaraal uf 1859, pege 248 may be found the following record; ,1 . "Mr.Safford offered for adoptioa the following resolution which wa laid OB the table andI order ed to be printed: ' , " ' ' ',' " : " Wbkkxa. Ia opinion of thi General As sembly, the praetic rof extending tho elective fraacbue to person of Airican descent, w huh has neretofora,ja soma cOBauea ta , thia State, prevailed, ia highly reprehensible, and neither oouiem plated by the Tramera of the Constitution, nor couai stent with tbe genius of war government; and belwtving that the doctrine of social and po lineal equality of f at races, as advocate a by certain fottgeided philanthropiota, is not only falsa in theory, tut demoralizing ia iu tendeocier it insulting to the intelligence of the jeopIe and calculated to retard tbe moral and social advance' meat. of the white race; and with the view to a tablUh the qaalifieatioa of elector bejoail tba pretext t-f judicial Interprelatioej therefore, Resblvedi by the Gen -rat Assembly the Slats of O&iowthi ee-fifthe of the member elected ta each House concurring tLerefa That it be and is hereby proposed to the electar of thil State, to vote oa the Second Tuesday of October next, uponrito approval or rejection of the following amendment a a aabstiiuta for the aixih tectioa of the fifth article of th Constlutioa. -r,i V Sec V; No idiot or insane person cr 'perso with a" marked or visible adaiixturt tf Africaa blood, shall bo ctitlad to th privilege of too a at to remove alt douU aboat tha valliity of each law. . IThaM ii Hc iCetlicaog dc? They had stalsJ, end tlelr camc'uaa Lad report eJtlti lei olec:!c3 tsilt ini vis I:j tacca ttcosai-rj..,, i; era h.ttu pre-;;: j ta pr:ii;t tlejr- lien?-': .. ' ; : " i ? - -jy. Oa -itziiti It t-3 iZZr Tcirtj Ii ti fJ lawi--t' r- . -:"-t--- . - ..- . . - -.- 0 a motion of Ur.oirord: Ceoate Joint Ret-olatioa No, 78 relative to aa amendmeat to the UBttiiBtioB, prevenUng person of A In can de , tctU Croat tciii, rtx uza :ca tit rcl Tba qoeetwe than being on tta passare of th resolutn. tbe yas and nays were ordered, asd resulted-yea 21, bbj U.m follow. .. Those who voted in the aSrmative werej Mesar.' Can t well, Caas, Otapman, Cmrioe. Gcrd Hatch. Kincade, Langdoa, MeKelly, Marrow, Murdoch, Perkey, PerriB; Pbelpa, Safford, Shideler, Scblsich, Smith, Taomas, Vaoatta and Weseott I. . - , .; . . . Those who voted ia the oegaiivo wem . Meeara, Ashman, Bucklsnd, Cad well, , Gatch. ureen. uenkie, HoIIoway, McCleary, Malea, Tay lor aod WinanaU. V ' EVERY DEMOCRAT IN THE SENATE VOTED IN FAVOR OF THE RESOLUTION AND EVERY REPUBLICAN EXCEPT ONE VOTED AGAINST IT. " " 1 Oue Republican voted in favor of prohibiilngj muiatioe troat voUnp, ana elevea votea agaiatt it. " " : ' ; ' Which of these re presented the views of the party? Was it the one man who voted ' in the affirmative, or Was it the eleven who voted ia the negative? It is too plaio for aay man to doubt. Th Republicans are committed, beyond all escape, to the doctrine that persons having any hade, less than one-half of negro blood, may vote; and they only need to have the power secure ly in fhr-ir hands to advocate in the Southern part of the State, at ' thejr' do io the Northern part the extension of the elective franchise to full-blooded negroes.- . - Thm Abolition and IaeendiarT ExciU-: ;3 ; L-y: ... znent ia Texat ,. .' . 9 By our Texas exchangee w receive farther particulars ia regard lo the exoitemsnt growing out of the saspecled abolition conspiracy. . The Nacogdoches Chronicle, of the 7th inat, has the following item oa this subject - - :. CLUS COVKTT. ; -. . A young man who has been employed in a store at Waxahatche wat hung a few days since for giving strychnine to slaves to put in wells. . . 8H1TB CoUJfTT. - - The man who was shot in the attempt to set fire to Tyler, has been found dead. CBCRUXEC KATIOS. . ..The Paris Press speaks of aramor that a bloody fight bad taken place in the Nation, between ab- olitionisu and pro-slavery men, id which 150 of the former were killed, and seven of the latter. This story is most probably a fabrication. WOOD CttCSTT.. - On the 29th nlu an armed committee escorted the notorious J. E. Lemoa out of Wood count j. just before which ha sighed a document binding himself, under penalty . of hi life, not to return XTA-JnrTJnmjr,t-,1i Circulate Bboli- t4etr protection. . , ',; ," - : " . ; " .- IKCEVPtSBTHK. Another attempt has been made to - fire tha building! near Tyler; also at Brenham and at Georgetowa. , : ,-.rr: ' AXOTHKB 0BB4T FIBX. The Honaton Telegrajh, of the 11th ays: We learo from a gentleman who passed though Henderson, in Ruak ' county, on last Monday morning, that the town of Henderson was set on fire last Sunday night, tha 5th insU, and . wa almost entirely consumed. Every house oa the square, except one, including all tha business houses, were destroyed. The people of HeLder- oa, our informant says, pat no faith ta the re ported conspiracy; and neglected to appoint a patrol or keep watch. The fire wa discovered oa Sunday eight about 9. o'clock. . No clue had beea discovered to the perpetrator of the deed. ratACHxa ktso. ax rxat't tTAtiox. The Fun Wort Chief; of the 1st iatt, baa th following britf notice of tho execution of a ab. olition eoaspiratort-; We learn that a preacher by tbe same of Buley wa haag at Veal Station last week for being aa active aboliuoeist, A ma. jority of three hundred uta condemned him "' ' A. D18COTXBT IT BXXBAJtV - : -' "'. -:: The Brenham RaDger, of th 14th iut ay: A few days .sine .ttreral egroet were arrested on Milt creek, ia thia county, who ackoowled to their harvug potaoa gives them by white men for the purpose of poisoning their owaer and tami. lie, and that the day of election wa fixed for a general insurrection. - Tbey also implicated aom negroes about town: at being concerned ia tba murderou plot . " ' TBOUBLB Vt THB TKV1TBSBCB C0LOXT. The Fairfield Pioneer, of tha 9ih instu, ha the (bllowingt ' MrTetgae, printer is oar ofiice, ba just arrived from Tenne- Colooy, Ander-on county, and nriugs the new thafae witnc-ed tha hanging- of two white meo ia that place es Sunday,1 tbe 6th inst-, who were proven guilty of laciting insurrectioo among the slaves of that neighborbobd. They'.were engaged near the cot. osy at their trades of wagoa makiag aud black smHhing, where tbey hava been living for three or foar year. " Negroe weiw found in Uie pos se sslou of S re arms and strychnine, furnished by thfcte mcB. ,.J . 4 . .... .. . arvr?f x Firxt-XLata " TtetviVttn Civ SeiBS tbiuks that the TJn- loa wtllBot a dissolved, for .'tba following very good reaaonst- -j ;.' . -. - .-,,": Liocotn wll ntvtf ba elected. - - v ''Haoiti will never WelecUd. - ;" ' BreckiBridg i wilf sever beielectlT.v!,k: ;: f Lana will ever bo Joeied. Z . i i Bell wilt ever b elected. , Z: -,- .: . . f. terpen "A: Dodsrtaa. th ooatlttent XTatlonal Untoa pemocratie candUate far lh Presidency, wut oe eiectea oy un pope , , ; -. . ..... u: JLtolitionism and Disoaioo will to. Klaked, an5 ilia TTnioa will be eaved. - :j;.Tte citizrV cf West' Ptiot.; U"w,? tsld 23 c 2 lit It; t tr'is grJca ta fi cittc? cf a lot cf Ireatt toII til ilir?I 7 Jcl;! ctrcltnl to us:.:r cf tLat'rtiCv'Ei'.'ri rcr tier-i It--!.'c:t''li U;i::c--c.iit g r;r.lj f. cot---ace, esd ecrsaiitef t ?. t poistnd to ecmipotJ wlA Uzjzj Rulers, tt tl'i eit. The Uobile ITercurv rara tlat th house j - - that toll th traalc bat becB,madt tit vkUa cf ;ltmt cf XiorCJ: l.Ui-J. T72AT HAVE TILE HEPUBLICATS la UasaaehajctU thej hare enfraschiaed e- groe and disiranxhuad sUI iurtigm bora white taea. Ia New York they have giteft ejroea the right a saerara. : ; -. : - la Ohio, ia 1856, r. . Iloaroa. a CepaUtea member of that Lrgishtiare, introdaced a resolu tion tw sank tha word "araiia". Crosa the cob it i-Utioa of the aiata, " -.. .. ; : Tbe republican epreae eourt of Ohio says the mulatto aaSraga ia eooslkutioonl and the re- publ'O a legialature aay that - while they are ia power it ah all continue to ba conatitutional. Tba Repabiicaa Soprema Court of Ohio have decided that mulatto ara whita citixen of tbe U ntted States, and hava at rigLt to vote, hold oSre, and ait oa juries. ' . , 't--. , When the democracy ia th last Ohio legisla-t ire propped an amend ment of the coBstita- tion which woald efTectaally prevent aegro suff rage, tba repahScaa -sasjoriti defeated the aavendsBeat. -. ;f -. II '; " Ia Cleveland the Republican Board of Edoca-tkn compel white child re a , to ait aide by aide with Be roee one of the members of the board raying that "he would sooner his child sbond ait betid a negro tbaa beside a frizzle beaded Irish or a bare-beeled Dutch ona. - - .The republicans ia one of the township in Lo raa county have elected a negro to a township Sea. - - : - '. The Cleveland UeraldU a aoand repablicaa pa per, says: -We - unhesitatingly aver that even-tenths of the foreigners that land on our shore, have lets iatelligenca than full blooded Africans." The repeUicaB leaders claim that the clause in the Declaration of Indipendence which aay "all men are created free and equal mean that a negro ia a rood as a white aaan, and should eejoy the aame pdiucal rigbu Sixty republican members of Congress endors ed the sentiment coniinitn Helper's book that: "Not to be an abolitionist ia to be a will ful and diabolical instrument of the devil.' Sixty Republicaa members cf Congress voter! for a resolstion ftroduced by U. G. BlaLe of Ohio, that reads aa followst Resolved, "That, the committee on jadiciary te, and the same are bertbv instructed to en quire into the expediency- of reporting a bill giving freedom to every human being." - A republican member of the legislature of Ohio inirodBced a bill to nullify that section of the ConstilBtion of the . United ; States, that provides lor the rendition of fugitive alavea. , XX.Xt..Zm Mkt.Va r$ im m shot dowa and murdered inoiTensive citixens be-caase they, were gailty of holding slaves. - When John Browa was convicted of murder, the republicans 10 roaay places held sympathy meet iug. and toiled bells, and passed resolutions that Joha Brown was a eh rial ia a martyr, and the gal-tow upon which he was hung, more glorious t&aa the cross of Christ. Samuel J. Kirk wood, the republican Governor of Iowa, refused to deliver np Barclay O-p pic, one of the Harper's Ferry insurrection Uts, upon a requisition made upon htm by th Govervr of Virgiuie, ' Tbe Republican Goveror of Iinnois pardoned a negro convict out of the. .enitetitiary aud seat him off to Canada, in order to prevent him from being taken to Kentucky where be was ovnt-d a a alave. - William DeonisoB, the Republican. Governor of Obio, refused to deliver: ap Owen Browa and Francis J. Merriam, two (f the Harper's Ferry laaarvec'iobist, upon the requisition of the Governor of Virginia. RepublicaD every where opose the Dred Scott decision, because it eaunciatet the doctrine that negroes are not white men. These, are a few of the'ocfr of Republicans; 1 hey show what Ahey will do wbea tbey have tbe power.' It is truo taar profess conservatism in acme quarter, but actions apeak louder than word. . . " . . . . " . . , Democrat t of Qhto ponder over these things aid whew yoa hear "republicans claiming to ti- long to the white man a party, - cram the acta of their leader duw o their throats.; . The leader of the republican party refuse to obey the taw of their . countryj and sanctiou and encourage negro tteaTTng'n - " ! . j s- The New York Daily News, which strongly opposed the Domination of" Mr. DoooLaa, bow says that no candidate, with the exception of Jacxjwx, ever inspired o much enthusiasm ItSaySt. . . , . t . ' - Oar exchanges are filled with the records of popular demoniratkB and popular movements in, favor" of the Dumocratio nominee. Douglas meetings, Uougia ciuns. Uougia - oeieits. tlougla cmmittea. Douglas sereasdes, Doug hts excursioas, Douglas bail, Donxia hope DBgla eatartaiumeuts, Douglas diooere and Doe Us apeenbe are all the go at present. Tbey spring spontaneously from he peop'ethemselves,- aud eaa not ba - repressed. ' They speak the name voice that was heard on too hill ut New Earland aud the nth bottom land of New York that waked np the echoes of tha Alle sanies, and rolled over the prairies of tbe Weet aed rich savannah of - tba -Soath ia 1832; and. in addition thereto, tt bow Uke a .,. f r wider Western sweep, aod also wind . along thv d is tant golden borM of Cali,orjia, the far vfT O e-goa; rod cheer the heart of the miner ii tht paaae and ba the hill-u!a vf the Srra 2 tva aa."---"- A - - - i. .. .: . Ia rxuctatioa It aJJst. . i , J : "Past thrsegk ll ktrretl of tht dty and along osr aasaeroat wharves, aa4 convr with tbons- anda of hoaeat labors, those who earn their bread by the wet of their brow aal they will tell yoe alaost t maa that they are for DMrglaa. Coeveraa wwk oar hundred ttvasaud mar. chants, their clerks aad employe, eg .tbey meet ia their reading and c-'nbrooma, or aropnd tliaif ova Eretilee, as J very UT tsvjTrity. will tell y?r tley ia!l cart tl:?-r vets fjr Dong!ix Conve a with our twolloutand poncmaa, n4 tie U a tlcrsinS tT:l nd lalorert ia tie pao-i: j t.Zii J c-i t.17, la tit Csstaa her sd i;T--rarJ, and a Ut .tley dare err?!r t ic aitU la frcr cf Dtxla.. ?X't3 our nuoteroei ship-yard, a d amo(j oori.cri and boaieion. ad into our ten tha inaa fas-tartar iablihonls, and listen K th d-W. aSrmative response ih m e? as tit tarj ct-; ra ftl f Doo-IaJ ? v. --'tfSW. Ctr .T.vi'-.:-j.c c Wa call the attention of t!., fTiusky ler te th followu:? declarator! izil ? hri ing tnea f. the jTj-nblicea ptrtj .lw..-a Joshaa R- Giddiogt, Sslmoa P4 Chase, et;a mia F. Wade, Ctntii,- Erowo . Zzi Isr IX all considered -prettJ Tod; repntlhatr ia CLL:; and, if we miitake of, in Cl3 LLU ' tt1 ' a republicaa papen Tex Laps tl H:jLlzr folk never read these ti-acut S'.S1 - j "The negro It a heaven! ictLtu'Joa, trl I. It Godlike la maa to elevate lata ta u tzzL:j with the whiteJoW 1 CL'::-;;,itia xpeecA th I-tylfxc ZLztt C-rrr.'.' " f .185?.. -' - - ZZ t 1 ' VI embrace wiih pleatare ill pportirlrj cl declaring my disapprobaiioa cf thai exacts in the Const it atioa which tent to a ponies cf Ho colored people the right cf , P. Chats, Ex-Governor and U. S. Senear Cxi by the Republican qf the StnUf Clia, I loathe from the bcUoxa of my aoU, ary ta who refuse to anything ia humaa ttp a!l tlm right and privilege ha claims for iaMcll' I know no high, no low, no black, no wil:-a3 are created by one God, and all aaea ara &C Jed to the same privileget. Bemj. F. I7de R JL lican U, S. Senator from Oknj, . - - "As far as the right of urage ot aay other right of citiaeasbip is concerned, k (tbe negre) should be placed a aa' equatit f with the rU af mankiod. Ohio Sai Journal July 6tl, 1857 "The commiueeoncla3e tL air lab ra by auS-miuing two resolutions; one .recon3Bis?aa amendment to the Constitution, by which tl elective franchise shall be er tended tocolortl people.' Republican Senator Can field, Brov and Taylor in their report to the Ohio Senate. - CentUM cf Cities &&d Tovcm iZ i The following hava been reported to data, tla most of which ara aecarate, ahile a few aroap proximate eUatate: .... . , . K porcLxrior. 168. 1853. 1 1 Mis -,cis Cincinoati. aa 159 101 Cleveland, aw a Hei 43 550 20,009 lB.fcU ia.784 7.800-T.OvO 63l9 200 fi.00 64 : 4,5:3 4.203 . 3 evi 3 527 Daron (raUiaPwViJra Jlt1ttflpm lt Toledo, ......... ... CbilUcoiba,...... ............ Springfield, . . ' seeesseaes aPOTtal tYiO IU D aa Two Otsss 8t0bnVlUvaH..wawwaw aHsee-e. Cf bwl Baaa tm a waiaawe at IS CwfaVr. M&lim&R1! w.eestaae.assa.e,a aVin ILaVn ease sim - Ml Verbon,- - . .2,020 3.S54 3,175 5T4 1,4:5 1.CC5 Ironioup, Bucyraa,.. Free moot, ... .wy 2 t!24 2.20a. Hinsboro 2es.stifal SentinenU "It it up-hill work, said General Caas, la tl Senate of tbe U aited State oa the 25th of 2Ijt 1854, "io- ihi country, for aay tnaa, toatrcg splendid bis talents, or commanding Lit to contend against thia doctrine (the doctrin cS eelf-government ia the Terrilorler.) -It landed wi'.h oar father on lb ba?b of Jamestuwa axui the Rock of Ply month, and ha keen treasurai ist their hearts throuf b all their dial and aHct'-ties to this, the great day of it gloriaeonsuia--mat'oa. It has accompanied tho pioneer throaga the paare of th Rocky Hottntainx.ar ba planted itself with th beloved Hag of our country, upon tbe very shores that took oat epo China aud Japan." That wax a beautifulecti--ment, which would reflect honor epoa aay staUt-oao ta an age. . V. ; . - .- ; " Z': Dn&kicg PlAce in London. Ia Londoa there are 19,083 places for tha Si! of Intoxicating liquor, aal the -Uniled Clog' dom Temperance aod General Provtlent Inttitu-tioo propuata to counteract their ' iaaeac bj tbe erection of water fountains. 'Thia Sodet have already erected" "ia London aboct forty driuking foantaiat aad about aixiy si r 1 process of constructioav -It my be dot.ti4 whether thi plaa will iacrenee the spread of Ut-totalUm; but it will d cidedly tncreaaa Ut rroci fort of metropolitan citixens. - - Ttoriztr.V - - ' ' A young lady, residia g with Ler grand alr ia BrookljB,"New York, was seat last Tuesday, to New York to pay a bill for the old lady, XTct retoraiog, fcef graadmother p; Ced jtotle 0r'Fiday, Whea it Wat ascertained tba-L yoaag lady, after pa vie g the bill, bad tstcr'3 carriage with aa elderly broker, doing fccz.;:j on Wall street, and had wot beea heard cf s:ncr. The Lothario ia said to be a married jaaa rit iv. family livirr in New York,, " ' - ; Scmve or periai Ta cxiscet cf HZ lzZ ' '' '-v'-'PeatJu ' .-:.-..i-t--'., - - Wo ohaerv that a mathine forexxtlej tn!!:.' capable of turntxg out one haudred and t'z'j nti ball per minute, ha been started at Vsfl ington. Twice as much attention is paid to tl science of killing a to that of curing. 7 IT.; re than five hundred inatrameau of whclesa's trociioo bare been patented niihia tit Izzt l?z ty years, and only two great curatives. He"" way Pill and. Ointment, have beea iatroiactX within that time. It would aeem, however, tlU these medicines pretty Curl balance the accsxsS between the healing art and tha science of z traction. The probability is. that they save y mach grater aamber of live than patent r.IJj, pistole and caanoa dasir) j and at their cca touptioa is facreating ta almost geomstricsJ t' tio ia thi xietry, : tba odd U their favor c z augmenting every year. , Tbe late Call.", .re ' per represent these remedies a accotr': the' most extrnordinarr ' ceres ia tlu Cu.' , 1 . especially ia th placcres, wet -i . dry. 11 mott i bartons 0 internal dixeaess, jvi..;-, ts said to have lost all it terror'ia tl ej" T the miners, siao it iBtrodoctioa cf the i . ; aad th. viruk-Bt emptiioat ;t!ccroct C ! : , eoatracted by workisg ia ezatriit LUf r- with waur. aadera hot anf are to rapl-.'y ts daced by th ppUcxtiM of tl Ciatasct, lls.1 thedirers era le:i cnre:l tlaa they oc-Li t beioavoii err": 1 :.:z re::.:r'.3, tri iaterahteBt Urti2, Lvo LtrtJbr l;?st:?:l-hle eccm ii tls vaT.sy cf t't C: aad ia tbe rf c::ooIcftltvT where t1 e presr nee ef gotl In r uuoe; L-i tow, tie ysper iy t : dart a; ;it tor La drieg cot t-" r tl iar and paifing operation of lie f. r-aration. Thia a betr new tlni ' rnee f new void d.i'ivvt;;iy--i..' i2 UjisUr.n 1:2 ls.e:9 7,103 6,t3
Object Description
| Title | Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1860-10-02 |
| Place | Mount Vernon (Ohio) |
| Date of Original | 1860-10-02 |
| Source | LCCN: sn86079142, Mt. Vernon Democratic banner (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1853), 1860-10-02, Vol. 24, No. 24 |
| Format | newspapers; microfilm |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| Digitization Information | 300dpi, 8-bit Grayscale, Model: NextScan Phoenix Upgrade, Software: iArchives, Inc., 3.240 |
Description
| Title | page 1 |
| Source | Reel number: 00000000003 |
| Format | newspaper |
| Extent | 7941.71KB |
| Submitting Institution | Knox County Public Library |
| Type | Text |
| File Name | 0530 |
| File Size | 7941.71KB |
| Full Text | -"".'j iJ j;'-: c VOLUME XX ii-- Jfie tfl. 3)efnon 3)fciocHi!s Ssmiw Oflcs la T7oTrd' Xlock, Tiiri Etoxy TKHMS T Oollanvar unrn, tinUt Is 4- rae; $2,5f winds ix meathi; 3,0 after th x- ruft f ta 7ar. Claba of twaaty, 9M aaea. AB F llTllflllll: B e D f B 4 Vt .$.'! a.;t a. 1 1 Ui,i ri s ti t tn o.a o f ' ! MNt, 0 3 to 4 SO 4 yr, to 4 00 m oole o 1 tfMri, kmmnabl amiXlw, 10 I nlm, ayiH Mrterijr,., a mwui MMrl nmrimrtm, 1 MabI artr Twalra llaaa af Mtaia, (thia Ijpa) ara eoaa-a aa a aqaara. 1 JUT CUILDCES. Thar eleep; athwart toy white Moon-marbled caaenaat, with bTer eoletnn aaeln, Silent! watching o'er their rrwt aereae, Xjraxeth the atar-ejed Night. Mj girl, adate or will, B tarns aa plajful aa a Sammer breese, Or grave aa Night or atar-Iit Soutbera, aeaa, Serene, strange wocnaa thildl My boy, mj Irembting star! The whitest Iamb ia ApriPs tendertst fold; The bluest flower bell in the shadiest wood His gentle emblems are. They are bat t wo, and all My lonely beart'a arithmetic is done When these re coo a ted, High and Holy Ooe, O bear my trembling caJU . I ask not wealth nor fame For these my Jewels. Diadem and wreath Soothe -not the aching brow that throbs beneath, Nor cool its fevered iiame. I ask not length of life. Nor earthly honors. Weary are the ways The gifted tread: naafe the world's best praise - A ud keen iu strife. ; T ask not that to me Thoa spare them, thoagh they dearer, dearer te Tban rain to deserts, snahine to the sea, r Spnng fljwers to the bee. : Bat kneeling at tbir feet. Wbilesnilea,!ike Sammer lighten shaded streams Are glancing from their glad and sinless dreams, I would my prayer repeat. la that allaring Land, -. The Future, where, amid rreen, stately bowers. Ornate wiii. proud and crimson-fashing flowers, Pleasure, witb scaootb, white bands, Beckons the yoang1 sway, From glen and bill side to her banquet fair, Sia, the griia she-wolf, croacbetb in her lair, Beady te seise Ler prey. The. bright aod porpliog bloom Of Nightshade and Acanthus cannot bide The charred and bleaching Vtaes that are denUd Taper, and chrism and totabl ' Lord, in this midnight hoar, ; I bring my lambs to Thee. . Oh, by Thy trntb. Thy enerey, save them from th envenomed lootb And tempting poison flowers! . " 0. Cropped and Crowaed. eep as! We have so sbiold, 00 goide bat Tbeel let sorrows come let Hope's last blosnom be ; By Oriefs dark deluge drowned; " Bat lead as by Thine band, O, OefOleet Shepherd, till we rest bes'de Tbowtill, dear waters ia the pastures wide '; Z.'I 'I,- t to' Sinless Lamb. TI1E UTILE FELLOTT. Z Z Some ha.ve thongbt that in the dawning,' In 6ar being's freshest glow, " ' r: n God i?mu&chtrxm - Tbaa tbetr parw'ata ever know ' " fy i': And tbaV If jon liaeo obarp!y.T,;t - Better things tbaa yo caa leach, . ";TAow a sort of aoasie wisdom, Trickles throogh tbeir careUu speech, - -.-Hosr .it is Iaao aswwiw-ei;--fi .:-, v.- ; Bat 1 know a Tittle child. i. 4 t Who, amoag the thy ma and clover. And the bees, was ruCning wild: Ana oe Came ooe sa mmer evening, . With hie tiarleU o'er bis eyes, ' a . 'And bit bat was torn to pieces( '. '. ' Chasing bees and botlerfiies. J "Now I'U go to bed, dear mother, ; For To very tired of pUyl And be said bU MNoir I lay tne" ; I kind and careless way. , r And he drank.lhe"cooli eg water From his litile silver cn, ' 1 r ".- 5 ;Atd aa4 gaily, When jts nortts ., WiUtbt utgtl Uk sd apf v i i i-i-iS '. -. '"- -1 .. Dowa bt tank, with rogeeUb laejUer, r And the kiadly goicf slamber, is - jEbowered the pa pies o'er tit teii7: "What cod4 t36a tlirpesliri-ttraDelyr f . AkeJ ie,raarDpoihsr ibeaf;, ? WI'HWthJibotkitjwttlfj,, T . What could ha of kto!?. Zu J (Lika t lepbjr coyisj toftly.) ' ' - And "hit ci-sek: ii fttcrti '' J - taatiaj &e r car m lisiexu : If bis breathio jt could bt fcttrd - 0hT tbo Barmared, if tbt Aegelt Took mj duUsj ia li cr2I 1 . a 91 a afl'a Tl I 00 111 1 - . -, - Otj 00 T M 00 10 lr eJii lis mU, 1S 1 1 . JO REPUBLIC ATI IHTEnFEREUCE WITH "SLAVEUr Hi ZiiE ITIctt JWoZ pol CK Ucatkat V Slate tkould not exist half sum and half fret, tuut Sbetoara learned the nrpresnUskC9njiicX.'! llepabllcan Slembera r Congress AdTiae Treason nacvii war, The fvDoiag extract froia circular recooa- meoding llelper'e entire work, rereala otart Hag pbaae of tbe Bpablicaa progTatame for forcible interference with larerj where it Miata: KcwYukx, March 9, 1859. Dear Sik: If jom have read and critically ex mined the work, job will probabij agree with aa That 09 ourae of eTraaaetU au eacueurully eontrovenincihe practice of alaverj in the Uuit- d Siaiea, eafordas preciae and accarate view of its proalratioc efffcU, aod pointing- eat ih.t reesedj fir it, km eqealed tht of the vol a me entitled " The Impending Cn-U of the South how to meet it" bj Hiatos Evwau Helper. This circular tsngned by - William A. Aatboo. N. Y. S. Pa-i leford. Providence, E. L S. L &twall. IWoa, Mass. Ca n M. CUy, Wbiteball, Ky. W. B. Tboeaaa. PbiUdalphia, ; W. McCaaley. Wilmingioo. W. Gunnisoa. Baliiaiore. L. Ctepliaae. Waabiagtosv. F. P. Blair, Si. Lotus.. , Bepublicaa members -iad jrsw" to-wit: We, the aadersiraed members of the House of Representatives of the NaiiooaJ Cougrea. do cor diulljf iW&rse tbeopiiiua set Knb io ibe foreg ing circuUr. Siaed bJ 8. GoIftS, J. B 'Oid-dmgs, E B. Washharne, oT III.. Win. Ketlojfg. of III., Oco Lvi , of HL, aud Aitsoa Bur-lingame. Juhn Skormta, O. B. MtlesMi. J Farus worth, uf ML, aud fifij-aiue others. What does this book contain, which is to "cordially indorsed9 and recommeuded by these sixty-eight republican members of .Congress? Let a few extracts answer: . Not-to he an AV'txi'Miist is to be a diabolical -and wicked, instrument of ike Devil 204 of the Compendium. ' ne Oordiallr luJjfse the opiuion. John Sherman and C 7 other Coagreasmen. Slavery to be ua condition ally abolished:. . "We enter our prwtest against it aod deem it our duly to ums our moat strenuous tff rts to overturn aud abolish ic . : We are uot only in favor of keepiog slavery out of the Territories, but carrying our opposition to the institution a step further, we h-re anbesitatiarly de dare in favor of its IMMEDIATE and UNCON. pi rlON AL ABOLITION IN E VEKY S TATE iu the CoufeUeraey where it owe exists. Page 25 of the Crisis. "We cordially iodurse the opiaiou. J. R. Giddiags and 67 other Congressmen. We are told how to become patriots ; ln this axtraordtuary crisis of affairs, no man can be a true patriot, witaowt first oecoaiieg ats abohtiOQUU rire uStf Ibe Cwmpoadium. We cordially tudorsa the opinion.' E. Wade and 67 oiber republican Congress men. . Republicans aay what they think of naturalized citizens : - . :- The North baa just as good a right to ap praise the foreign emigrals, as the south has io set a price on the Atrican slave." Page 8C uf the Crisis. . We cordially indorse the pinion." . Aaron Harlan,.-. and 67 other Republican Congressmen. The difference between a free-soiler aud an abolitionist is set forth I "Freemen of the North, hitherto as free-soil- lers, ym have approached but balf way to the ine of your duly. A free-aoiler is onlv a tadpole ib aa advanced state of transfurmation; sa abolitionist i the full and perfectly developed frp.n - . ; ; I . .. . rCordially endorsed." John Sbenraa. -:. : and 67 other republican Congressmen. The original idea of Ibe ''irrepressible con. V hicb Seward and Lioeola adopted, it set forth ia the following isvngeagat "The great revolatiooarv mowemeBt which was Sft oh foot ia Chariot le, M klet berg Co , North Carolina, on the 20th day of My. 1775. baa tut yet been terminated, nor" will it be, entil every slave ia the United States is freed from the tyran ny of bis ottaeier f age 33 of Coats. Uordiny loaorsea. A. Unrimgeme, and 67 other republican Coagreasmen. ' These are chtice exiraets, truly The doe trines set forth above may be taken at a trna ex position of Republican priactples this year. They also foreshadow the manaer in which they woul l . administer the government, should they, nfortuaately for the eoaotry, aver elect a Presi- dent. 4 " ' ' " Toe next extract exbibiu a b-wrible and treas onable proposition, and shows how eooly the leading RpablicaM roeteaiplate civil war and the ravagemeoi and devastatioa cf onr coootrj. Yon that love jour country, lock at this: It seems that tbe 'ietaf aumber of actual slave uwD-rr, fndudiiig. their entire crew ul criging lickspittle, against whom we bava to contend, is but 347,525. "Against this army f.r the defense and propagation of slavery ,: weibink tt win be an easy mat tar intlependeut of the negroes, who in niae caes out uf tea would be delighted with aa upprtuaity of cutting t their master throaUt and witboat aeceptiar a single reervtl frua the free States, Eegtaad. Fraaxia or Germany to- snaste smo three tistea ' as large for its utter extinction. We hope the matter in dispute may be adjasted witboat arrarinv these amies against each tuber in hostile, attitude. ijut we are wedded ta one carouse, from which no eanhlv power can divorce ns. WE1 ABE HE I ERMINE D TO A CO LIS U SLAVE- BY AT ALL HAZARDS.- Page 149 ; Z ewrdiallj Indorse these niatoat,,. . aOt iB tfepatljcaa , Congrasatea..r. Words ara powerless to express the aaormoas atrocity hf tbt bora tjtouiJOB from lit ilack rtjubUcaa tetv-book , Ve ntare to say that itt black-hearted lafaaij hat art been erjaajled tlnet tia days of tU'Toriet of tha IUf oUiioa. -Cardsaflyi MHt br Ed, l7adt,!Joha Shr man, J. F. Fares worth, & ,B, ' WacbborDa and aixty -foar ather repaUlcaa aatabat of Coogfett- utliftea toa-BOther tweet; toBa2tiwr.gecUact asa twjru ojibiob aus . , It U oat kes 'eoavksioa. A xfaTHa pro- :very t.avtz -rn, w3 in t ;:t itipcaalUa tur tia tz.z:'.z ;ssca cf ilt iis:aUoar dtsrve to ba sa ores rtl-cti ts 4 x ;h tie basest criul tit) lie f;"- vjthia tit eslU of ear paoiia prisons era 11 posia uu ui whole aaeaber could be gathered toxtther and trans, formed into four equal gai; of Cceaaei rob afar lent txoai their atroci tins ihaa it does sot." Page 158. -"-:.; . - '- ;' s : ' ' MWt cordially tBdona tba' opantoa.1' . -: 3L B. Washborna, - and 67 other republican Congressmen, i Thert are several bandred Virginians, Ten-, neaseeaasaa Hentackiaas, and their desoendants ia Seneca county, all of whom have mora oe leaa relatives and friends ia those States. What do ihey think of such eoaraa abaaa aa the above? How can they coanteanaca a party, the leaders of wbieb denounce their friends as so better than rof'ber, thieves, ruffian, and barglarsi " Tbey say that tba abolition of slavery at all baxards" meat be quickly accomplished must be don i a kwrryl Read tba fuUowing: "At once let tba good and trot men of this country, the patriot sons of the patriot-, fathers determine that ibe son which rises to celebrate the centennial anniversary of our national inde pendeDre shall not set on the head of any slave within the limit of ibis Republic. . Page 178. " We cordially indorse He opinion.' - Beejamia Stanton, and 67 other republican Congressmen. The republicans hereaboot are trying to escape from tba consequences which ibe avowal of these doctrines is likely to entail upon them. But it won't succeed. Joshaa R. Giddings, who organized the republican party in Ohio, sounds ibe key note to hu faithful children ia the fol iowiog language: - Wahhiwotoit, City. Feb-, 5, 1SC0. - To the editor uf the Ashtabula Sentinel t Our friends at borne should be alow to cer sure their repn-eentativee fir deserting Mr, Sherman. . They felt the humiliation of discarding a candidate because h had endorsed the doctrines . .f Hl pr's nook. EVERY SEN TEN CE OF WHICH FINDS A RESPONSE IN THE HEARTS OF ALL TRUE REPUBLICANS. - J. R. GlD&lHGS. Hold to it, Johaat Doo't let y oar party dudge the endursement of "eveiy sentence of Helper's book. If the sentences given above do not find a response io your heart,1 Mr. Conner vative Republican, you may consider that the 'true Republicans" .invite you to walk oat or their abolitionized party. Win. H, Seward tba great representative of Republicanism, and th creator of the repuWi can party almost esed the following language in a speech iu Ohio, in 1848, while "getting up" this very party, tbe leaders of which "cordially iudorse" the above extracts from Helper's book. Seward Says: . "The party of freedom seek complete and universal emancipatiou. : '-Slavery is the am of not only noma of the States. but of them all; of not one nation only, but wf all nations. . it perverted and corrupted the mtrl sanae of man kind' deeply and naiver-aally, and this corrutioa becamei a ua vernal habit Habits of thought became fixed prin si-plea. No Atuericau State baa yet delivered-itself eutirelv fro?n b"1""" V?. ' : I'sv rYscknxa'-.ks- t AlairetJait by wiibaaiirtiwg-3 the ngnt ot sun. age trom ine race we nave m tucipated. You. tz Ohio, are guilty in the una way by a system of . black taws autl more j aiatocratic and odi.oa! It is written ia the Constitution of tbe Uuited States that five slaves ball couut equal to three freemen as a oanis of representation and it is written also, in violation ot Divine law, that we shall surrender tba fugitive alave who takes refuge at our fireside from bis relentless pursuer. Yoa blush at theae things, because tbey have become as familiar as household words aod your pretended free-soil allies claim peculiar merit for maintaining these miscalled guarantees i)f slavery which tbey find in the national compact. Does not atlthis prove that tba Whig party have kept up with the spirit i of the age? That it is as true and . faithful to human freedom as the inert conscience of the American people will permit it to be? What ! then yoa say eao nothing be done for freedom because the public conscience remains inert? Yes, much can be done everything can be done Slavery can be limited to iu present bounds. It can be and n?uat be abolished, and yoa and I can and must do it. The task is simple and easy as its consummation will ba beneficent and it reward glorious. , " B . wn.muat begia deeper and lower than the compos'.tioa and coatbtBaUon of faction, or pa tie, whrnu ine v strength aud security of slavery lie. Yon answer that it Ties in the Const itui ion of the United States and the constitution and taws of alaveholding States. Not at atL It is in tba erroneous sentiment of the American people. lueulcate the love of free-dom and the equal.rights of man under the pa terual roo ; sea to it that tbey ara taught ia the school-; and ia the r-burchei reform your own eode; extend a cordial welcome to tbe Tugittva who lays his weary limbs at your door, and de-feud him as you would your paternal gods ; correct your own err- r, that slavery has any eonsti-tutiooal guarantee which may not be released, and ought not to he relinquished." - I know that you wilt tell me this is all too slow. : Well, then, go faster if yoa can, and I will go with yoa; bat, remember the instructive Iesa that was taught ia ibe words, "these thine ongbtya to have done, and tot to have left the oodoe.' " . .. . ZZZ- . .' . ' ..Aaother sweet oaa, ain't U ? 3 . '. - "Once for all, within a reaaonably abort period, let us MAKE the slaveholders do something like jufttiee tit their negroes, by giving each and every one of ihens his freedom, and sixty dollar in current money? Pa 183. -' . -X , "Cordially indorsed.! ... ,t Wra. KeUggM3-; and C7 other republican Coagreasmen.. .'l How the Repablicana love .this word '-make ft it forever on their tongne, ibey are alwajt going to "asks" aomebody do this things and Mmake someb dr else do another thing. . The way they intend to njaVe,. freedom for the alaretis illatirated in a letter . paMUhed itt the New York Hvald, Oct. 20, 1859, which detailed thVplaa to be pursued by Browa : aud hi con federates ia crime, ia case they were tuccessful at naJw'a.Ferry. The plaa watt TO MAKE WAR (openly or ecrelly a elf comstance may dictate) - apon the property of the slaveholder and : their abettor not tor tit destraetiiMt, if that eaa be easily avoided, but to convert it to the osa cf the slaves. . If, jt cannot thus ba converted then wa advise it destroettoa. Teach the slaves to burn their masters' baikiiagi to kill their cattle tad horse to destroy or conceal their farming atensils to abandon labor ia seed-time and harvest and let crops perish. MAKE slaftry cpproStabl Hii way ii a eaa be done tar no outer. ?- f Torwk bo general latarreettoa.'crtl 7E OF THE IlOUrU GO TO ;YUUi A.iiAi,i;i jarort give bo testimony o n't rct in ec port of tlave holding claims, perform." bo eoili. tar, patrol, or police services; MOB slavehold-tear courts. iaHa. and Chen? do octhing, ia tisrt, fcx gsstsSsir j Cxnrjt but Terjtiie jou or yoa are turt cf eaccets w;:-Oil cr t Ta tlao's rlliicil iattlt-iicsJ ti coos at rciiilli, ray uzes 'ta tit- govcrsrrs&t, if eaa eaiUy dij publicly end privately tat itt overthrow.:: v c ,v-h.f. ;;S-:"?:.rsn The above t bat a tmall part of a helHsh plaa .for the abolitioa of slavery. It corretpoadt to accurately with the general teBtlseat and par, pose of Helper's book that no oaocaa fail ta be. lieve that ooe hand wroto both. 1 Tho following convey a similar meaning i Frown, fret, irrj foam; prepare joar wea- nana, thraat. atrik. ahnot. Stab, brief OB civil war, dissolve the Union, nay,aaainiiaie the sotarv stem, if yoa will do all this, oaore, Jes, bet 1 ler. worse, nnvibior. do what yoa will. irs; yoffil can neither foil nor intimidate ns our position? it as 6nalr f xed as the eternal pillars of Heaveej WR. HAVF HRTKRMINED TQ ABOLISH SLAVERY, a1 SO HELP US GOD, ABOL-4 IS14 IT WJS WILL. " - ; Cordially indoraed." ; ! - ' E. B. Wathbarne. and 6? other Republican Congressmen. So they go. What farther evidence do the people want to con vi ace them that tho leaders o the Republican party are twin brothers to tW meanest abolitionists in the laod?', , . ' . . Front tbe spirit ef Demeeraer. Are the Eepaalicaui in Favcr f Uegr4 Rnffrao'et Tjrtnlr at tneir TljtftftTfl - In the Ohio Legislature, at it session of 1858 a bill was introduced, by Mr.. Cbaet of StarkJ coaoty, the object of which wat to prohibit oa lattoes, or, ia the language of the bill, persons "bavtag a viaible ad mixtare of Afrtcao ' btoodMJ from voting.: . -.. ' .' , . On page 677 of the Houae Joareal of 1859 may be found the following voUt oa this bill. Those who voted ia the affirmative were: . Messrs. Andrews. Baclea. Bate. Biebmv. Blackburn. Brooks, Carlisle, Chaae. Chancey of Frauklin, Clark. Colli na. Cox. of Perry, Co wan j uoomeyer, tAison, rnelrock, Fraxeev Uibson, GUsgo, Green, Hitch, Hughes, of Butler, Hughes, of Highland, Jackson, Jenner, Jwbnsr.n, Leete, Marshall, Morse, Mott, McEwea, MeFerran, O-dell, Paine, Parr, P.kelbiiaer, PitUaan, Rail-ton, Rea, of Guernsey, Ray, of Scioto, Riehardaon. Robinson.: of Hamilton, Rogers, of. Hamilton, Rose, SaSn, Sangsler, Seuer. Slusser. Stout, Thoocpson, Waogh, West, of Brown, West cot l, Williams, of Warren, Wilson, Williams, of Monroe, Wiener, Wright and Speaker 59. r Those who voted in tbe negative jeeres Messrs. Allen of Ashtabula, Allen wf Jefferson. Bailey, Bell, Blair. Brown, Cox of Knox. Dawes, Day, Doming, French. Furaald. Gardner. Gatch, Haymaker, Hitebcock, Habbelt. Jones, Kerr, Lanrhlta, Monroe. MeCreary, Peck. Plants, Raymond. Reese, Roach. Robinson, of Union. Rogers of Clark, SimavMs. fiperry. Stephens. Townsend, Van Vorbes, Watson, Welch and Worlhinrtoa 37. - . - - -. EVEBY DEMOCRAT TTJTED FOR THE BILL AND EVERY REPUBLIf AGAINST I f. Mr. Wi!5is, - elected tin .-- - " " wo 4iCragtTlr woV iuct w t taors h.Ince. Oa page 35 of the Senate Journal of 1859. is the record of the vote of the Senate upon this bill, aa follower j Those, who voted ia the aSrmative were. Messrs. CantwelL Caas, Chanmaa. Corwine. Hatch. Kincade, Langdoa, Morrow Murdock, Perky. Pernll, Phelp. Beid, Safford, Shidler. Schleich, Smith, Thomas, Vanatta and West- coti 20. Those who voted in theaegativa were Messrs. Aahmuo, Backland. Can field. Gard, Gatch. Green. Heakle. McCleary, Mile, Blade, Taylor and Winana 12. - - So the bill wa passed. - EVERY DEMOCRAT IN THE SENATE VOTED IN FAVOR OF THE BILL AND EVERY REPUBLICAN AGAINST IT. Does bi not prove the party ia io favor of mulattoes voting? , , But to relieve themselves from " the odium of thi vote, aud to deceive the conservative portioa of their party, they claimed that they - voted a-gNtnst the bill becaoa it was eacoBstttatiaaal, and for that reason only. The bill became a taw notwithstanding the unanimous vote of the Republicans. Bat tbey were determined not to oea the votea of their mulatto brethren, and their Supreme Court declared the taw nneonstita- tional. This gave a plausible excuse for their vote aod to com exunt sustained their pretens that it wa 00 constitutional : grounds only, that tbey voted for the bill. But they were not to escape to easily. The Democrat were determined to prevent mulattoes from voting if possible, and at the eamo time to test the Republicans pretensions. Io th Seoate Joaraal uf 1859, pege 248 may be found the following record; ,1 . "Mr.Safford offered for adoptioa the following resolution which wa laid OB the table andI order ed to be printed: ' , " ' ' ',' " : " Wbkkxa. Ia opinion of thi General As sembly, the praetic rof extending tho elective fraacbue to person of Airican descent, w huh has neretofora,ja soma cOBauea ta , thia State, prevailed, ia highly reprehensible, and neither oouiem plated by the Tramera of the Constitution, nor couai stent with tbe genius of war government; and belwtving that the doctrine of social and po lineal equality of f at races, as advocate a by certain fottgeided philanthropiota, is not only falsa in theory, tut demoralizing ia iu tendeocier it insulting to the intelligence of the jeopIe and calculated to retard tbe moral and social advance' meat. of the white race; and with the view to a tablUh the qaalifieatioa of elector bejoail tba pretext t-f judicial Interprelatioej therefore, Resblvedi by the Gen -rat Assembly the Slats of O&iowthi ee-fifthe of the member elected ta each House concurring tLerefa That it be and is hereby proposed to the electar of thil State, to vote oa the Second Tuesday of October next, uponrito approval or rejection of the following amendment a a aabstiiuta for the aixih tectioa of the fifth article of th Constlutioa. -r,i V Sec V; No idiot or insane person cr 'perso with a" marked or visible adaiixturt tf Africaa blood, shall bo ctitlad to th privilege of too a at to remove alt douU aboat tha valliity of each law. . IThaM ii Hc iCetlicaog dc? They had stalsJ, end tlelr camc'uaa Lad report eJtlti lei olec:!c3 tsilt ini vis I:j tacca ttcosai-rj..,, i; era h.ttu pre-;;: j ta pr:ii;t tlejr- lien?-': .. ' ; : " i ? - -jy. Oa -itziiti It t-3 iZZr Tcirtj Ii ti fJ lawi--t' r- . -:"-t--- . - ..- . . - -.- 0 a motion of Ur.oirord: Ceoate Joint Ret-olatioa No, 78 relative to aa amendmeat to the UBttiiBtioB, prevenUng person of A In can de , tctU Croat tciii, rtx uza :ca tit rcl Tba qoeetwe than being on tta passare of th resolutn. tbe yas and nays were ordered, asd resulted-yea 21, bbj U.m follow. .. Those who voted in the aSrmative werej Mesar.' Can t well, Caas, Otapman, Cmrioe. Gcrd Hatch. Kincade, Langdoa, MeKelly, Marrow, Murdoch, Perkey, PerriB; Pbelpa, Safford, Shideler, Scblsich, Smith, Taomas, Vaoatta and Weseott I. . - , .; . . . Those who voted ia the oegaiivo wem . Meeara, Ashman, Bucklsnd, Cad well, , Gatch. ureen. uenkie, HoIIoway, McCleary, Malea, Tay lor aod WinanaU. V ' EVERY DEMOCRAT IN THE SENATE VOTED IN FAVOR OF THE RESOLUTION AND EVERY REPUBLICAN EXCEPT ONE VOTED AGAINST IT. " " 1 Oue Republican voted in favor of prohibiilngj muiatioe troat voUnp, ana elevea votea agaiatt it. " " : ' ; ' Which of these re presented the views of the party? Was it the one man who voted ' in the affirmative, or Was it the eleven who voted ia the negative? It is too plaio for aay man to doubt. Th Republicans are committed, beyond all escape, to the doctrine that persons having any hade, less than one-half of negro blood, may vote; and they only need to have the power secure ly in fhr-ir hands to advocate in the Southern part of the State, at ' thejr' do io the Northern part the extension of the elective franchise to full-blooded negroes.- . - Thm Abolition and IaeendiarT ExciU-: ;3 ; L-y: ... znent ia Texat ,. .' . 9 By our Texas exchangee w receive farther particulars ia regard lo the exoitemsnt growing out of the saspecled abolition conspiracy. . The Nacogdoches Chronicle, of the 7th inat, has the following item oa this subject - - :. CLUS COVKTT. ; -. . A young man who has been employed in a store at Waxahatche wat hung a few days since for giving strychnine to slaves to put in wells. . . 8H1TB CoUJfTT. - - The man who was shot in the attempt to set fire to Tyler, has been found dead. CBCRUXEC KATIOS. . ..The Paris Press speaks of aramor that a bloody fight bad taken place in the Nation, between ab- olitionisu and pro-slavery men, id which 150 of the former were killed, and seven of the latter. This story is most probably a fabrication. WOOD CttCSTT.. - On the 29th nlu an armed committee escorted the notorious J. E. Lemoa out of Wood count j. just before which ha sighed a document binding himself, under penalty . of hi life, not to return XTA-JnrTJnmjr,t-,1i Circulate Bboli- t4etr protection. . , ',; " - : " . ; " .- IKCEVPtSBTHK. Another attempt has been made to - fire tha building! near Tyler; also at Brenham and at Georgetowa. , : ,-.rr: ' AXOTHKB 0BB4T FIBX. The Honaton Telegrajh, of the 11th ays: We learo from a gentleman who passed though Henderson, in Ruak ' county, on last Monday morning, that the town of Henderson was set on fire last Sunday night, tha 5th insU, and . wa almost entirely consumed. Every house oa the square, except one, including all tha business houses, were destroyed. The people of HeLder- oa, our informant says, pat no faith ta the re ported conspiracy; and neglected to appoint a patrol or keep watch. The fire wa discovered oa Sunday eight about 9. o'clock. . No clue had beea discovered to the perpetrator of the deed. ratACHxa ktso. ax rxat't tTAtiox. The Fun Wort Chief; of the 1st iatt, baa th following britf notice of tho execution of a ab. olition eoaspiratort-; We learn that a preacher by tbe same of Buley wa haag at Veal Station last week for being aa active aboliuoeist, A ma. jority of three hundred uta condemned him "' ' A. D18COTXBT IT BXXBAJtV - : -' "'. -:: The Brenham RaDger, of th 14th iut ay: A few days .sine .ttreral egroet were arrested on Milt creek, ia thia county, who ackoowled to their harvug potaoa gives them by white men for the purpose of poisoning their owaer and tami. lie, and that the day of election wa fixed for a general insurrection. - Tbey also implicated aom negroes about town: at being concerned ia tba murderou plot . " ' TBOUBLB Vt THB TKV1TBSBCB C0LOXT. The Fairfield Pioneer, of tha 9ih instu, ha the (bllowingt ' MrTetgae, printer is oar ofiice, ba just arrived from Tenne- Colooy, Ander-on county, and nriugs the new thafae witnc-ed tha hanging- of two white meo ia that place es Sunday,1 tbe 6th inst-, who were proven guilty of laciting insurrectioo among the slaves of that neighborbobd. They'.were engaged near the cot. osy at their trades of wagoa makiag aud black smHhing, where tbey hava been living for three or foar year. " Negroe weiw found in Uie pos se sslou of S re arms and strychnine, furnished by thfcte mcB. ,.J . 4 . .... .. . arvr?f x Firxt-XLata " TtetviVttn Civ SeiBS tbiuks that the TJn- loa wtllBot a dissolved, for .'tba following very good reaaonst- -j ;.' . -. - .-,": Liocotn wll ntvtf ba elected. - - v ''Haoiti will never WelecUd. - ;" ' BreckiBridg i wilf sever beielectlT.v!,k: ;: f Lana will ever bo Joeied. Z . i i Bell wilt ever b elected. , Z: -,- .: . . f. terpen "A: Dodsrtaa. th ooatlttent XTatlonal Untoa pemocratie candUate far lh Presidency, wut oe eiectea oy un pope , , ; -. . ..... u: JLtolitionism and Disoaioo will to. Klaked, an5 ilia TTnioa will be eaved. - :j;.Tte citizrV cf West' Ptiot.; U"w,? tsld 23 c 2 lit It; t tr'is grJca ta fi cittc? cf a lot cf Ireatt toII til ilir?I 7 Jcl;! ctrcltnl to us:.:r cf tLat'rtiCv'Ei'.'ri rcr tier-i It--!.'c:t''li U;i::c--c.iit g r;r.lj f. cot---ace, esd ecrsaiitef t ?. t poistnd to ecmipotJ wlA Uzjzj Rulers, tt tl'i eit. The Uobile ITercurv rara tlat th house j - - that toll th traalc bat becB,madt tit vkUa cf ;ltmt cf XiorCJ: l.Ui-J. T72AT HAVE TILE HEPUBLICATS la UasaaehajctU thej hare enfraschiaed e- groe and disiranxhuad sUI iurtigm bora white taea. Ia New York they have giteft ejroea the right a saerara. : ; -. : - la Ohio, ia 1856, r. . Iloaroa. a CepaUtea member of that Lrgishtiare, introdaced a resolu tion tw sank tha word "araiia". Crosa the cob it i-Utioa of the aiata, " -.. .. ; : Tbe republican epreae eourt of Ohio says the mulatto aaSraga ia eooslkutioonl and the re- publ'O a legialature aay that - while they are ia power it ah all continue to ba conatitutional. Tba Repabiicaa Soprema Court of Ohio have decided that mulatto ara whita citixen of tbe U ntted States, and hava at rigLt to vote, hold oSre, and ait oa juries. ' . , 't--. , When the democracy ia th last Ohio legisla-t ire propped an amend ment of the coBstita- tion which woald efTectaally prevent aegro suff rage, tba repahScaa -sasjoriti defeated the aavendsBeat. -. ;f -. II '; " Ia Cleveland the Republican Board of Edoca-tkn compel white child re a , to ait aide by aide with Be roee one of the members of the board raying that "he would sooner his child sbond ait betid a negro tbaa beside a frizzle beaded Irish or a bare-beeled Dutch ona. - - .The republicans ia one of the township in Lo raa county have elected a negro to a township Sea. - - : - '. The Cleveland UeraldU a aoand repablicaa pa per, says: -We - unhesitatingly aver that even-tenths of the foreigners that land on our shore, have lets iatelligenca than full blooded Africans." The repeUicaB leaders claim that the clause in the Declaration of Indipendence which aay "all men are created free and equal mean that a negro ia a rood as a white aaan, and should eejoy the aame pdiucal rigbu Sixty republican members of Congress endors ed the sentiment coniinitn Helper's book that: "Not to be an abolitionist ia to be a will ful and diabolical instrument of the devil.' Sixty Republicaa members cf Congress voter! for a resolstion ftroduced by U. G. BlaLe of Ohio, that reads aa followst Resolved, "That, the committee on jadiciary te, and the same are bertbv instructed to en quire into the expediency- of reporting a bill giving freedom to every human being." - A republican member of the legislature of Ohio inirodBced a bill to nullify that section of the ConstilBtion of the . United ; States, that provides lor the rendition of fugitive alavea. , XX.Xt..Zm Mkt.Va r$ im m shot dowa and murdered inoiTensive citixens be-caase they, were gailty of holding slaves. - When John Browa was convicted of murder, the republicans 10 roaay places held sympathy meet iug. and toiled bells, and passed resolutions that Joha Brown was a eh rial ia a martyr, and the gal-tow upon which he was hung, more glorious t&aa the cross of Christ. Samuel J. Kirk wood, the republican Governor of Iowa, refused to deliver np Barclay O-p pic, one of the Harper's Ferry insurrection Uts, upon a requisition made upon htm by th Govervr of Virgiuie, ' Tbe Republican Goveror of Iinnois pardoned a negro convict out of the. .enitetitiary aud seat him off to Canada, in order to prevent him from being taken to Kentucky where be was ovnt-d a a alave. - William DeonisoB, the Republican. Governor of Obio, refused to deliver: ap Owen Browa and Francis J. Merriam, two (f the Harper's Ferry laaarvec'iobist, upon the requisition of the Governor of Virginia. RepublicaD every where opose the Dred Scott decision, because it eaunciatet the doctrine that negroes are not white men. These, are a few of the'ocfr of Republicans; 1 hey show what Ahey will do wbea tbey have tbe power.' It is truo taar profess conservatism in acme quarter, but actions apeak louder than word. . . " . . . . " . . , Democrat t of Qhto ponder over these things aid whew yoa hear "republicans claiming to ti- long to the white man a party, - cram the acta of their leader duw o their throats.; . The leader of the republican party refuse to obey the taw of their . countryj and sanctiou and encourage negro tteaTTng'n - " ! . j s- The New York Daily News, which strongly opposed the Domination of" Mr. DoooLaa, bow says that no candidate, with the exception of Jacxjwx, ever inspired o much enthusiasm ItSaySt. . . , . t . ' - Oar exchanges are filled with the records of popular demoniratkB and popular movements in, favor" of the Dumocratio nominee. Douglas meetings, Uougia ciuns. Uougia - oeieits. tlougla cmmittea. Douglas sereasdes, Doug hts excursioas, Douglas bail, Donxia hope DBgla eatartaiumeuts, Douglas diooere and Doe Us apeenbe are all the go at present. Tbey spring spontaneously from he peop'ethemselves,- aud eaa not ba - repressed. ' They speak the name voice that was heard on too hill ut New Earland aud the nth bottom land of New York that waked np the echoes of tha Alle sanies, and rolled over the prairies of tbe Weet aed rich savannah of - tba -Soath ia 1832; and. in addition thereto, tt bow Uke a .,. f r wider Western sweep, aod also wind . along thv d is tant golden borM of Cali,orjia, the far vfT O e-goa; rod cheer the heart of the miner ii tht paaae and ba the hill-u!a vf the Srra 2 tva aa."---"- A - - - i. .. .: . Ia rxuctatioa It aJJst. . i , J : "Past thrsegk ll ktrretl of tht dty and along osr aasaeroat wharves, aa4 convr with tbons- anda of hoaeat labors, those who earn their bread by the wet of their brow aal they will tell yoe alaost t maa that they are for DMrglaa. Coeveraa wwk oar hundred ttvasaud mar. chants, their clerks aad employe, eg .tbey meet ia their reading and c-'nbrooma, or aropnd tliaif ova Eretilee, as J very UT tsvjTrity. will tell y?r tley ia!l cart tl:?-r vets fjr Dong!ix Conve a with our twolloutand poncmaa, n4 tie U a tlcrsinS tT:l nd lalorert ia tie pao-i: j t.Zii J c-i t.17, la tit Csstaa her sd i;T--rarJ, and a Ut .tley dare err?!r t ic aitU la frcr cf Dtxla.. ?X't3 our nuoteroei ship-yard, a d amo(j oori.cri and boaieion. ad into our ten tha inaa fas-tartar iablihonls, and listen K th d-W. aSrmative response ih m e? as tit tarj ct-; ra ftl f Doo-IaJ ? v. --'tfSW. Ctr .T.vi'-.:-j.c c Wa call the attention of t!., fTiusky ler te th followu:? declarator! izil ? hri ing tnea f. the jTj-nblicea ptrtj .lw..-a Joshaa R- Giddiogt, Sslmoa P4 Chase, et;a mia F. Wade, Ctntii,- Erowo . Zzi Isr IX all considered -prettJ Tod; repntlhatr ia CLL:; and, if we miitake of, in Cl3 LLU ' tt1 ' a republicaa papen Tex Laps tl H:jLlzr folk never read these ti-acut S'.S1 - j "The negro It a heaven! ictLtu'Joa, trl I. It Godlike la maa to elevate lata ta u tzzL:j with the whiteJoW 1 CL'::-;;,itia xpeecA th I-tylfxc ZLztt C-rrr.'.' " f .185?.. -' - - ZZ t 1 ' VI embrace wiih pleatare ill pportirlrj cl declaring my disapprobaiioa cf thai exacts in the Const it atioa which tent to a ponies cf Ho colored people the right cf , P. Chats, Ex-Governor and U. S. Senear Cxi by the Republican qf the StnUf Clia, I loathe from the bcUoxa of my aoU, ary ta who refuse to anything ia humaa ttp a!l tlm right and privilege ha claims for iaMcll' I know no high, no low, no black, no wil:-a3 are created by one God, and all aaea ara &C Jed to the same privileget. Bemj. F. I7de R JL lican U, S. Senator from Oknj, . - - "As far as the right of urage ot aay other right of citiaeasbip is concerned, k (tbe negre) should be placed a aa' equatit f with the rU af mankiod. Ohio Sai Journal July 6tl, 1857 "The commiueeoncla3e tL air lab ra by auS-miuing two resolutions; one .recon3Bis?aa amendment to the Constitution, by which tl elective franchise shall be er tended tocolortl people.' Republican Senator Can field, Brov and Taylor in their report to the Ohio Senate. - CentUM cf Cities &&d Tovcm iZ i The following hava been reported to data, tla most of which ara aecarate, ahile a few aroap proximate eUatate: .... . , . K porcLxrior. 168. 1853. 1 1 Mis -,cis Cincinoati. aa 159 101 Cleveland, aw a Hei 43 550 20,009 lB.fcU ia.784 7.800-T.OvO 63l9 200 fi.00 64 : 4,5:3 4.203 . 3 evi 3 527 Daron (raUiaPwViJra Jlt1ttflpm lt Toledo, ......... ... CbilUcoiba,...... ............ Springfield, . . ' seeesseaes aPOTtal tYiO IU D aa Two Otsss 8t0bnVlUvaH..wawwaw aHsee-e. Cf bwl Baaa tm a waiaawe at IS CwfaVr. M&lim&R1! w.eestaae.assa.e,a aVin ILaVn ease sim - Ml Verbon,- - . .2,020 3.S54 3,175 5T4 1,4:5 1.CC5 Ironioup, Bucyraa,.. Free moot, ... .wy 2 t!24 2.20a. Hinsboro 2es.stifal SentinenU "It it up-hill work, said General Caas, la tl Senate of tbe U aited State oa the 25th of 2Ijt 1854, "io- ihi country, for aay tnaa, toatrcg splendid bis talents, or commanding Lit to contend against thia doctrine (the doctrin cS eelf-government ia the Terrilorler.) -It landed wi'.h oar father on lb ba?b of Jamestuwa axui the Rock of Ply month, and ha keen treasurai ist their hearts throuf b all their dial and aHct'-ties to this, the great day of it gloriaeonsuia--mat'oa. It has accompanied tho pioneer throaga the paare of th Rocky Hottntainx.ar ba planted itself with th beloved Hag of our country, upon tbe very shores that took oat epo China aud Japan." That wax a beautifulecti--ment, which would reflect honor epoa aay staUt-oao ta an age. . V. ; . - .- ; " Z': Dn&kicg PlAce in London. Ia Londoa there are 19,083 places for tha Si! of Intoxicating liquor, aal the -Uniled Clog' dom Temperance aod General Provtlent Inttitu-tioo propuata to counteract their ' iaaeac bj tbe erection of water fountains. 'Thia Sodet have already erected" "ia London aboct forty driuking foantaiat aad about aixiy si r 1 process of constructioav -It my be dot.ti4 whether thi plaa will iacrenee the spread of Ut-totalUm; but it will d cidedly tncreaaa Ut rroci fort of metropolitan citixens. - - Ttoriztr.V - - ' ' A young lady, residia g with Ler grand alr ia BrookljB"New York, was seat last Tuesday, to New York to pay a bill for the old lady, XTct retoraiog, fcef graadmother p; Ced jtotle 0r'Fiday, Whea it Wat ascertained tba-L yoaag lady, after pa vie g the bill, bad tstcr'3 carriage with aa elderly broker, doing fccz.;:j on Wall street, and had wot beea heard cf s:ncr. The Lothario ia said to be a married jaaa rit iv. family livirr in New York,, " ' - ; Scmve or periai Ta cxiscet cf HZ lzZ ' '' '-v'-'PeatJu ' .-:.-..i-t--'., - - Wo ohaerv that a mathine forexxtlej tn!!:.' capable of turntxg out one haudred and t'z'j nti ball per minute, ha been started at Vsfl ington. Twice as much attention is paid to tl science of killing a to that of curing. 7 IT.; re than five hundred inatrameau of whclesa's trociioo bare been patented niihia tit Izzt l?z ty years, and only two great curatives. He"" way Pill and. Ointment, have beea iatroiactX within that time. It would aeem, however, tlU these medicines pretty Curl balance the accsxsS between the healing art and tha science of z traction. The probability is. that they save y mach grater aamber of live than patent r.IJj, pistole and caanoa dasir) j and at their cca touptioa is facreating ta almost geomstricsJ t' tio ia thi xietry, : tba odd U their favor c z augmenting every year. , Tbe late Call.", .re ' per represent these remedies a accotr': the' most extrnordinarr ' ceres ia tlu Cu.' , 1 . especially ia th placcres, wet -i . dry. 11 mott i bartons 0 internal dixeaess, jvi..;-, ts said to have lost all it terror'ia tl ej" T the miners, siao it iBtrodoctioa cf the i . ; aad th. viruk-Bt emptiioat ;t!ccroct C ! : , eoatracted by workisg ia ezatriit LUf r- with waur. aadera hot anf are to rapl-.'y ts daced by th ppUcxtiM of tl Ciatasct, lls.1 thedirers era le:i cnre:l tlaa they oc-Li t beioavoii err": 1 :.:z re::.:r'.3, tri iaterahteBt Urti2, Lvo LtrtJbr l;?st:?:l-hle eccm ii tls vaT.sy cf t't C: aad ia tbe rf c::ooIcftltvT where t1 e presr nee ef gotl In r uuoe; L-i tow, tie ysper iy t : dart a; ;it tor La drieg cot t-" r tl iar and paifing operation of lie f. r-aration. Thia a betr new tlni ' rnee f new void d.i'ivvt;;iy--i..' i2 UjisUr.n 1:2 ls.e:9 7,103 6,t3 |
