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intfairal Siiti-f liaifi'ii JStittitlimt,
IV. ON fATl'IKiAV,
amiwicw anti-sj,.ut;rf sonivTv,
PENNSYLVANIA AttTI-SLAYERY SOCIETY,
107 _Y. F.flh St., ohm-, Arch, Philadelphia.
-,z: llr-ciing my fcnllcrcd property, I
"iclud of clothing were missing.
J Krc.
ng morning, anil
fool. Exhausted
r[. I dr.cje'i il mi iv.eirv
e about three mik-s, wher
"
mo. and presently three in
it Mill speed, ordered mi'
iinira of Timmiii at toe south
J law in Northern Alabama
limn ill.- press bns y ado known.
^ iin.iiili- -in,-... ;in i .|i;.: iiii il friend n nil well-
known teacher.  . H. rlllis, Ksi[., at Kingston, Muss.,
v.-.iv.-l . l.-i. , nn.ild acquaintance, Mr. J. J.
'•'i-."l ^ ' iliii;iiin I'd.. A In., ollering him
"' l ". ' IV,,,. >[• .1 in mi academy (it cknnorville.
inh i-li'..il, ..| 1'bh offer .Mr. Ellis thought fit
to decline, l.iii 1.. ..in 11. Ml in., in his stead. Sep.
tcinhcr-l.-l in.mi! ! ...u... u.natinnfrom Mi-.Giers,
requesting mi- il Id. ir. .] il.. situation in question,
to visit the Ninth in A.I |, n(] been BUfltJping
for some li ti.ni j, .liu.niiri disease, my friends
thought ilmt :, wni-,,i.,i- ,li,„ rl i.. thnnonrs might prove
benoheiiil to my health, mid mlvj.-.-d mo m att6a the
oflor. I started from ll.isiou .f,.| item I ,..
r .1. lV,r North-
urn Alabama, via riinrlcston, 8. C. Among tho few
passengers upon tin. alcinior Pouth Caroh'iin, there
was /.V'« ..,v/,,,„r. 1 mndellm
..„ !, , I,/.,
n tho i
ii,...l,.,_ but n I'm
i seemed nn nlion to Ihe I'mim
some [jinn must be devised ti
,UW..,,I|I, ,,|
pro™ nil
All old law uxiala in (ho Texas nlndiics, forbiddin
ny person IVi.Fii lending with tin, slaves : hut nu on
ignrda it in iti.'ir n.j i-Uln-. rlino'i d.-idings. nni- mur
tluln the peor.li. of Indiana do lln: " little" law.
nholess, here wns a hidu^-ph...... -,. ., ,.,
eut to the su.ro of lr.S--.,,, sell,, bam, ,,,,.1
mi- p.. : t„e,-|y bought it. His fool wns in. lie
i-1-.'.-i.-.l-tn.'.ll.j il,..-r,.i,i,„iti..,.. ; ,„,l |, ,,„i,..|
'- and also
i the
The rnflinus
l
.
,
^,
..
r
?..i:!!Ml
l
sir<v!'FHit(iMv i
'ir.vw
1
;,'j,'
k with him a spel'1 first." ,ccn*ti»i; in.:
dock of a sinking i-hi
scnmi lias died out in liis
Apparently '
boys, let's talk
i'th Ihn number]. -.< oiilhs' with whieh the Ah"
nnsseeni wouttouTirnii.il their elegant speech, I...I
iiich I do not can' to repeat, In icskod, " What sent
you down South lo murder ua aLU" 1 lold him 1
""
by in v i tut i a n uf'u slaveholder, and if they would
go wilh mo 1 would proi-i- in. innocence or.anvdosign
ainsi their slaves. Thin win rec-ived wilh'jeere.
Finally, the) sniil." If you will uoufess the truth,
thtit you comu to ulir up (h.i shives, nml tell ufl who
kill you."
plitaseil, bi
rumninod niltn. find eviuecd no lenra of ue.ath, the viJ-
n
-,! PI .
- '.[ tl.-it I wns nriued, nntl eoinmandtid me
;iii; up mi pi. tot' Whin 1 (old thnui I Imil no
up .ii I. ' i
ih' i . ''K..I me and threw me into
oud o! wntiT by tin. r.miUide. The poad was ono
l.h. . .-. .m common in ihe -South— :i mure bog-hole,
"nn ling with venijiimui rcplili>. I sank knee-d.Tp
the mud nt the bottom. Tliu chief ruffimi cut n
large pole, with ivhirh he ihn. a(.n..l to split inv tkull
"ill.-- 1 attempted '
,vife of Rev. Tho.
he hung for violnti..„ ..
lor li.iing ai, A/Mliliouisl. Tie wna I
in ICnnans, niihont a dollar of
no llroajwct of meeting his f'atni
perhiips ii eve
Torn ii ro„*Ti:sns. ...
diatL'luirel, ortl,. mi.l. I„nl I,,!,,,,-, ,|
ArkuiiMii. fur M.yei'iil yenra. Ituwns
rin (i i-.nfti,/ ii i-i.ii nr.v i|iK.-linu, hut
lurnndf to he n iiioih.nil... HW Sliiti..
always luvn i,t ,n-ace with his mug
in.ellin
• I'SilIj nhu^-rl. l-min,. t
l
|n,?,-"
,
j'.,^!i'|ilrr"i;irc"!!I!
-. iiiie.'.i, on... of tlm Irn.ti,,, |-,..|,.,
nLS „„ „.| , |
'""I very uupru,],,,!', .p,,..,,,,,,,.,, i,i,... (lr.",onv pohticul ,-,,„,, .„.,. ,„,„,„ (||/1 , ,, r
,
™
['ixllu.g an OM',1,,,,,-1,..,,,,,,,,, ,!„„, „.,,,, n,,.,,,,
,, |h[|[
"'I'
11
' -'-"'." ' p.-'-sit.l... to control or suhdue
1 n^ngover mcidnm, ivhi.l,. ,llu „„ h ,-,, „ yu ,.
u in|(
,
" l -
•- :.,.-« I,.,; ti,.. prog.-.,-* of moii., it,.. ,„„„«(.„„„.,„ "„;
rri,,.
J, tho
iiy trunk In
Jodiir.il ion,
l.'.'lulTVil'y'ttiVunir'wl
<.f slnvery. Sin.-., hist Fubruury In,
[ holl new Th..
another Cm,,, |i,
too learned ol
ro-rue. niiii tri.,.1 him agni I :i
Ih;.. ii rh.it he would lemo il,.-
iii.'ly. II" leli, nml «imi m V,„li
Arkaii-a..,, nliereh,. had liirmerl, pr.
thilt I...- willlhl be safe IIIIIOIILI hi- .
lint he s..mii din.:..!-,:,-..,.) that the m.i
lh" aamu cominilteea, with the mhii
lliere us in T'exaa, and tlml Ihev
,|,.',l,..,ipp,„i„.
,1 . ongregatiiiu
e orgnnitatioiis
nblige
Vilh L
rose hi'fiiii. my mental'
-
I.t ii iliifi, uli in inn, .nil my mirth, it was
I. us amusing ua tin- Moutgoiinirv Ailirerliscr't
ptinn oliiiy iio.-i.' and whiskers.
I must h.ave ini.jilcuia, nml luistea to neloao.
hiding me uwuv tor s e lime, in an unfre-
ijucnleil part of the Imi.l, i,iv„i iron, light. or iinyLhing
I my locality, rind n.SMiriii^ the erowii of my' :
idinry doeumonis." with pi
•Id j
refused to u.u.u, uuniiivr,
n.^nilauls turned to It;,..- .
and tell my N'orthern
..If in the
:iv...| sM'uly.ii inn;
ighfoi-homl ot the tlrput,
hoar ; left tbe Cainrige.
lie, and two by ar-otuur.
'iepijt -
s.,ui..d nu, w-heru leni
I. Campbell on tbe
ary who had come
1 rapine, upon the
:l I', slmaslcr nt Somcrville.
>.n -h .1. i
lotl only knows h
,.s- ..I Mr. Giera. 'lie wns him-.elf
hristinn kiadiiens ili.-ir-d t.iword
, at n moment when I to -h needed
forgotten by me. As my nsmiilnuts
had threatened to burn dowu Mr. tjiera'a house if he
sheltered me. word was tent to several planters in the
neighborhood, who -him..- armed with guns. 1 slept
that night, for the first time, with a loaded revolver
under inv pillow, whieh mnpun wius given me l>y n
noble-hearted youth, himsell the son of an eslenaivo
'aveowner, with the advieo to shoot the first man
ho should oiler to molest me. SuvoroJ plan 1
.
r~
:preised their regret that 1 should hen. .11 it. i
ifavornble an inir
jiii'.iniiiiut here n.k.il ivhv ive w,
„ . I.. i
,-. I .. .,-.1.1.1. ll.U.lll
•i.r:.
, iiud those who •
ol
there first should wnit for the oiIi.t.i. She hud been
in iho Territory two weeks when I anw her, and
nothing was heard of her buaband. She was in the
---'distressing auspeuse.nnd could notapeakol him
*
agitation. It was her premonition tlml
he wns hung, na In- hud been .so oflen threatened
that fate. Ilo was nr, old friend of Rev. Mr. Uewley
uld l advi,
remain licit
13, a
Via ham
lesion!
u gl.... ..g . .,1.
rr,v,-.I .,
rriVfc Democrat, whieh givti :i detailed account
of the occurrence. To thin art. le 1 he- have to refer
those who may he disposed lo oueatimi Iho truth or
,v narraiive. Wiii.iam J. Bkewstke.
lloslon. I.i,:t. IT.lsi.n.
HOW ANOTHER SClIOOLMASTlilJ WAS SERVED.
whoso death by hanging for the same oflenco haa benu
widely published, and they were but eighteen miles
apart when ambushed in the mounl.-.ina of Arkansas.
It was rumored that they wanted them both to lake
back to Tasns a-^ nn n.vample. One they Imvo had,
and 1 fear for the other.
Alter leaving Mrs. Willetle I learned fi-oma getitle-
unin who had just been ii.ro.s ihe line into Missouri,
..I an incident that may or may nut have application
loth, sauieen-e. lie said that down some neventy-
ules in the Stale a man and a bov had ree.niiy
relied on su.spieion and urj;ed to eoiife.Ss llleir
j.-sniiil ih-.linaii.iu. Afo-r being clinked several
lie; bov at la. I told them that iliee wr iie-
iiBaa, and that the n had a wite 'there he wa.s
ponug to meet. "  .-II, '
.« : ,i,l n,e Missnuriniifl, " that
'"'.'!"' -'' aii.h..,. 1 well take' him back for
'I toi I mil he wns taken buck K
dealer.
South, for the purpose ol
of Hiiriard I olleg,,.
^r
Mm
lb-re. I.
1 Jong r from yuu
.ejrj.l..,.|
VTll, s. lloCov.
'
When tho Judge fiii.-Led rt-mlin^ the letter, there
iirooe Irouj the cuwd a Eenornl yell of execration,
with erica of" llaug him! ' " Shoot him !"
As soon as 1 could make my voice audible, I
demanded my right aa un American citizen to be
li,..ird in iulf-di.-teii.e, and oil. -red, if opportunity were
given me, to vindicate myself li.un an accusation so
utterly false. The honorable .liidge replied in the fol-
lowing language :
" Vaji arc a ti—d d—n black-
hearted Abolition isl. Von eoinu from Eoaion, and
tb. ii ,. pi n .le-h ngain.sl nni. lou needn't try to
to send to Mr liiers-, ami iuouir.-
I
e.mie.-:.,ulh. and ask the various
-, if I hud -pokeu to thriu ol freedom, or Uni-
vith them
wered, "'1 kno-.v eon lou.' doiie
notlun yet. You are more sly than your
co of our unsuspecting people, hv
i teachur, and then, by nml by, giv-pr. 1. i
.ii.-s.i~ s^nehntii.-
When the Judge had ended, a young lawyer named
Patterson mounted a sugnr-bon, and apoke substan-
tially id follows: " Felh.iw-i'iiiieiL-i, Imvo you not
heard or the horrible outruges in Texas, cnuned by
the il—d Abolilioiii.it leathers '.'
Have you not heard
of tbe pluts in Tnlleilga t.'ouuly, lo poison Ihe apr"
ami murder our tidlow-iuliicns, all cauaed by
d—il Yankees/ And now, te.llow^itiieiia, into
midst coincs nnother of this d—u black-buarlcd ,
t.i incite our uiog.-rs to died, of liolenco. Tho er
ia iu our aiidst — what thall we do with hit.
|i.,i,,.,,1 " K,ll I, iii,;- '
Han- linn,
'-
I'uilunillir.uigh ! ,„ . ,....,1,1,. [,],„. that '.-ill
.. e-.. Ill I.:... .1. 1. r. mi..._ °. ' <r ^
There came nnsscogcra on the So.ith Coroli
this porl leiterday ;;.... I l.arie-tou Mr, "William C.
Wood .anil Mr. Blr-lgittt. - -
Wood, it appears,
teaching, lie was
He wns destined f,: 1""' Vd. IV.-.. h. Burn .veil eitract
District, .=. D. Ho look pna.«ago in tho cars from
Charleston for Lis destination, in company wilh Mr.
Blodgetb On the »*;, iuadierteuily, he enpreased
Ids preference for Lit-.co'.n aa l'residcnt.
dun) wa-i nolieed int. ..f.i l-i. ...eg to I. .
and nt tho nest stop! ' p! it. "I. ?•• '! i-arslarned ehihli.
for tin ..-i.-ipiartera ol an i.i.ui, he ...is waited upon by
a committee, who questioned him ivs to his politics,
hut be declined to give them auv satisfaction.
Mr. Wood thought no more ol" the ipie-ii inning to
"
had been siibje.l.d. "ud continued on his
journey. On nrri.iug at' Four Mile branch." tlie
place wns found lo be t.'rrihU c.-;eiieil, a tidroi-aplu.-
leapnti'b having probably informed ihciilizciiH of the
jpinions ol the new-eomcr among Ihem. He wns
immediately waited upon by a committee, who told
him that it would be inipo.iil.le to permit his stay in
tho place, nud advising him lo leave aa his beat
emirse. They, however, did not insist, on his iuime-
ale departure, nnd olTcvcd lo defray the entire
pinse of hi. reliini to the eitr.
Mr. Wood concluded that lie would retrace his
?ps without delay. He experienced no iuaulls
c curs, on tin 1
,
way If) • harlu.lon, except from a I
ingh ciistoniers. as an officer had been provided
protect him. On reaebing Ihat uiiy.at the suggest
r i.:„ c_:.„.i„ i— oeeupfed apartments at the Guard
revious lo the twiiling of the aleamer,
that being "the 'safest retreat during the OKis'tilHJ
escilemcnt. The n. ^t moriiing an ollicer ol" the city
came down with Mr. Wood to the steamer, ami put
him safely on hoard. Tb.' produce dealer, so far as
we could learn, effected tbe object of bis Southern
THE COMMOTIONS IN TEXAS.
IiAVvnENcr;, Kausna, Oct. M.
Tne present commotions ia Texas, aro in no way
caused by an atleiniiieit insurrection among tho
blanks, nor bv nnv .'.illusion among the Abolition is ta
null negroes. Net him.' of this. Neither ia it espccinlly
a raid "against the Mi'lhodisrs in that State, ua the
pai-ers bine generally told us.
[ have recently travelled through several of Ihe
Counties of Southern Kansas, and then1
learned the
most that 1 know of these matters. I wna surni
lo find in nearly even neighbor! I families win
fugitives fruni Tc-nlia, and havu lately arrive
Kansas, where they intend '
last three vears.nnd all v.]
She said they b
religious papers
lire! I... .en kepi from them :
ti in cut forbid their holding ....
inga. They could not as.se in I de together aa Northern
people for any purpose, unless some weru anion
them who believed slavery to be a divine inslitutioi
At uresent a Northern man docs not dare lo speak
d they are fast hanging oi
:t to bo unsound ol
recently emigrated
rnes nt nil classes nnd all ages.
related of a very worthy nud industrious guntle-
wlio emigrated to Texas ninny ycara ago Iroiu
Dis. He had oj-'in.d a large liirui. mail., valuable
- '"-iiy Of inleresliB"
.uld r
'!!!!!;!!"!!
- time th i.i
app'.n.nt danger
N'1-..uncd like ndrenmlo inc. t
ii the very looks and nil tho'n
^ht lo protect me that it must I
(trnunlinnry composure, even
md escaped to Ohio, (ill our people
led. IL".V'.llli n
the beM _
He rolloive.1 this
ohser ratio na of a
ic landlord
id half-align
....... limes, and then',..,,,, .
)|
S'ran^er, nr
1
you a lilncHiepabli
id be leg.ardcil Lincoln ...
fit-Id ami should support him.
scrymiim with several other
ill mora inllaminnhle nature,
ho peregrinates on the hnlf-
Iple, walked round David
"Well, jus slnnd still till I look „t young
before. Elf the boya up stnire
-'
|';,
U1 UP< nnd we'" E»e. yon a e.
urtli e estly declined tbe generoua olter
u passengers (who were moitiv Soutbei-u'
-". ivayl. uitercchd in hi, bidialf. lie was not
Our informant ia ii gentleuinn direcllv
nnsiLS who was a passenger with .Mr. Weni-
Liko fagu," Davo " spoke nn more."
enrage my per
my slavery would uaus.
[!.. linn-;
'-. ,
tantl, a,
: my
Jurgrovc nud ot
,• my prot.-i 1 1 on, advised n
ilj Walked (two bj cine
o nvuid notice) to (be
likoly to iKiraei atteri-
rJotel.Mout
hrown. The first e^., _..
of Tim Coiiftilei-atioii, (he second
t'olonel Elmore, and the third egg struck
Douglns. burste.l and discharged its contents
ncc of liis wile, wlni siood im'inidintelv ,.n his
These nru the fiels a. detailed to us by'severnl
gentlemen who witnessed the disgusting nlliiir. So
1
(oT lir^fciiifjiigo intolerance,
A eoi.ttiokist Huko in Ai.iii.vha,—Tho Mont-
gomery (Ala.) Miiilot the 2d, says:
by the name of Palmer, a daguarraiin
been detected at Opelika, Ala , tampering
. . Fives ol John Smith iTj and others, bnun-.n
Opelikn and Auburn. He pavu severnl aegroes
bowie-knives, and otliire.j:-.- ait.-mpied to instil into
cir minds seditious acts. He was detected, pursued
d apprehended, and the pri.-.f being positive, be ia
•. .o hong at Aubura to-day."
A Bell -Ei-ere It man, of l f
niontown, Aln., has been
[Oil, for declaring tlmt in case of disunion, la-
is musket, go North, nud light
iv ticket, win
.LI tho train »
ad deparud.
one ot them brought to : waited
. al. out lo move, bade nie good night,
lie.s|n-ci fully, etc., ."-. STtt.viuin.
MAN' BETIIAYEI) HY TWO WOMLN.
pinno-foi-te Ii
3 of intolei
oiing man named lieorge I'. Eddy,
housea in the tru.le, at ihe rei|upsi
if their agent iu that city. Mr. Eddy reached Augusta
in tho 10th uf Ottoh.-r. i ml inier. d ihe employ of ti
good Siutherner. At one of the houses ivluch he
isitud, he eiilcrcd into converiaiion wilh two Indies,
,-ho appeared to have been instigated by some, one to
raw the. young man out.
lie expressed his prelerence fortlie Dell and Everett
arty, hut said nothing u warrant the harsh
I'hieli he subaeqiiently received. His repli
iiiei-rogiitoriea by the Indie, were, however, eiltn
falsely rcporlcd to tbe editor of Tke /m/./e. ni/e,
South, a lire-eating newr-pajer. printed in AVayne
-.liciousli ...(, st rn.d be In... ml
- ' ..South Bad' "
h usngi
H to thi
buhl and delinn k upon the.-:.
of falsebood-
ff,i^a^u^gaaiiir-
l
llJ'.
i
'i'.ll,(d ^^'rl-K:RW-Tn«-'lW(m<i li,irn'v^'c»tIia
,
KWv'e!
in~ abrupt and compulsory
.r.i.'li:. lili.-illll Iilil I
/n.i.y ',.'.' .^..i. 1
'.. |.n'.J. n
Mr. Eddy left Augusta on the Sth iust-, by n
ThestenmerAlabrimu, which arrived here
T
ov. 13th
from Savannah, brought about 2-1 cabin passengers,
oue-hnli or whom wit.- l.'iui. bed from that city because
of their Northern birth. One of these persons, John
Devintiey, hna called oj s.and from him we g.'ith
""
tho 1st of Novell,
~ !
'>' '
I hi., rlai.,,,,.111 |ia,li,-..n..or
'.IlL'tO'il 11. .in tin- r,u-ri.|..|. r.. s-.-ii.
" ornery. there
c of the lireckinridg
present when Judg
bear arms, nnd thousands of them i UOK | ]0 „
Ihcu. They can rend „„,] ivVire. ami , orr
with each otherabom the urongs inllicied up,..
Should a separation take "~—~ -• .<---<k.. Ida. . an.
ilh. ui in ilk
eelnred tliei
o their masters,
He surplus ,
eiveil ll,cir I
dependence of thos-
e'pinls.tt,ei-.stiouM 1...
inv.i, ,,
n with tea upon
illy rewarded for
of the ui
-Ihe oloic-
o'Ud
;iinst the South.
KHb-IAL TnR.vr.MK!
i.i.dna (Jaiille says
ir l.ineolii. was Heiited by a party while lie wan
nut of the Court-houso, and carried a short
3 from the village, w lien- he was blacked com-
pletely with printer's ink, mounted on bis horse, and
......i ror 1^., ], „ St.
;,[ .^ iiacomfurtahle n ailunlion
.vould wish to bo in.
bta, Gn., Nov, 9.—A Norlhem homccopnthic
residing here, named Thayer, having been
charged with uli ..ring ab.ilitii.n --.ntinieuls, wasivaited
ipon by n crowd this atieruooii, and ordered In leave
he city. Upon his refusing, the crowd were about
proceeding lo violence, when some citizens prcacnt
managed to get him lo the rear of the hotel, where
they let him escape, it is presumed that he bt safely
Dut ol'tho State.
the g rea test
-ensures of proud
IS, would afford
idst whu have beer, nil their live. I.ept i., r'.'. ,'.'o-7v
id obscurity, who ore more loyni ti I
'
ii ion
of their Country, and much -. , -.,,,. „„
those trensurts, than thousands ol tin .i opp i -..ir'u
who now possess tliern. ilow did. ,, i.t t!„- Knto Oi
things in lln: South ! Here lb.' poor while laborer is
respected na an equal. His f ilv are (rented wilh
kindness, consideration and res|-,a. He docs not
elong to the menial clas.e Tin- m-ru is in no sense
'the lenn his equal. He feels nml knows this. Ilo
dougs to the onl,- tri... arin,.«.racy, the raco of
litlu-inen. lie blacks no niasier's boots, nnd hows
the knee to no on., save find alone, He receives
higher wages for ln.s labor lima .lui_s the lahorer of
- orliou of the world,.and Le raises up his
i (he knowledge that they belong lo no
., hut tint (|,„ big-best memhers' of Ihe
;n ! their couduet is good,
luld-.l-n IV
THE SECESSION DRAM AT THE SOUTH,
VAPOIUNGS OF THE FIHE-EATEriS.
that tin
main . thai iho .--ml hern
'
'on of the Onion, vi
they now arc in reference
Ihe event of n dis-
formation of
Nor"
r governments, the people of tin
dionbl l.e li
if the negro am/ ahould bo "ta"u'gi;'t ibitTbrirne'aVis'"-
morney MMbe South i^an aristoc-iaey, nut of wealth,
i apend whatever
haughty oppre.-sora. Aa wo did
e, but it hies been forced upon
end it till tho aggressors nru
J. The gold, silver, and orher
ml haughty Northern Abolition-
nib)
Inch he lives w
treat tbera as »..,.„
' 'sVvi.e; ''' :. fufii Wtjtf
(
oL>teteiM*m
-ich, who would ho able to protect themselves. They
ivill, therefore, never permit the slaves ol'tho South
to be set free among then,, come i„ competition with
their labor, associate with then, ami their children ns
equals, bo allowed to testify in our Courta ngniuat
them, sit on juries wilh thciu.'iumch !o ihe hiillot-box
by their side, and participate in tho choice of their
ity with them, and ask tho
bauds of their eluhtr. ,„... That the nlti-
bring nboiit il
f the U'l. Ir - [.nidi
nib..
™ party u. lo
and that its il sebi o hv us, will, nt
lead to
these results. -v,.b-
every cool, dis passion te thinker wli has examined
'!"." i the light of all tl
If the madness and folly of the people of the
Northern States shall drive ub to a separation from
them, we bavo will. in our.-elves nil the elements of
wealth, power, aod national greatness, to an ualcnt
possessid probably by no uiher iieople on the fucu or
the earth. With a vast and leriile territory, possess'-.',!
f every n
,-idcnce upon tho
nited ii I I c Id c
l through." The a.
me, ha Batd, " Go back lo tliern who sent
and tell them wo wish no Uostonian amon
low^'ititenB, till who me iu favor of llus ma
this town in two hours, say aye.'' I hen i
in the negative. 1 observed, boiienr. Mi
number nbataiiied from voting. Though
have thought that 1 was unjustly treat
dared to liap a word iu luy delimce.
After listening to Dlher abusive und
Iniigunge from the honorable Judge and t'
cTs.aiideoiiviiiccdofthentterfollyoffitieui
son with un infuruited mob, I consented to
Much of the twu hours given me were bi
undeavors to procure a conveyance fo* myself a
.- lali.i
old. ..- reb, I w
durnnn. to
s met by a mob hi
lommanded me lo open m
o unless by legal authority,
a were ttmroughii
k sounded for
rnn sacked to
la'.vyer I'alliTruii, who
trunk. Hefusing to do
it was broken open,
osinuiincd, nnd tbe sidea of th
coaled drawers. My books
Houiethiiig of an ineenliaii i baructor. Tho news-
pajiers which I bud wrapped about my allocs were
carefully scrutinized, fine of ih.io whs u eopv ol
The Hmton llerahi, which was lirsii taken for n illack
Republiean ahcet, and when dLseovereil to bo a Dong
Ins orgno, was pronounced by the bystanders, "n
d—d tiight worse than a lilack Republican pa|>or.'
There was also a copy ol" The Boittm Tracellei; wilh
one of Henry Ward liocohcr's aertuons, which, how-
aver, contained no allusion to slavery. The nait
Beeeher added lo the ociieuioiil, but ihe climax
reaclied when tine loom! aiming inv letters, one writ-
'ti 1854. For a. few
protection. 'I
»e, who have
iperly iu Te.dus. nud many have left their families
liere, being obliged to th.-e for their lives. Those
iaw were very intelligent, civil and gentlemanly
dieir appearance, anil would seem lln- last persons
listurb thu (piiet of any community.
From these persons 1 learned .-.nee of the mosl.cn
rl hi- art-rending tales 1 .v.. li-t.ind to [us
„._<cs they would equal any of the nillmu barlnnii..-
fiial have made our own h.-tor, - - ,
st. But n stanll proportion uf th. rmitic,
vo votappenn.'d in prmi, and m —n nl ,.l.i.- I nn t
with, It was tbe reipi.-st ol the parlies that I should
withhold the facts for a few weeks, lest it might he
carried to the curs of their oppri ;-ora, and thus
"
'
"'
fere with purpos" •'-
s they were still hoping t.
propel r li-i.
. • '
Hi- .In M rot, had risen tot
useful posit - in ..- en .
and were esteemed by
HuanitHueea, as nmnng the mo
A the i ounly, This raid up.. n Free
need (he past year, and Ihey wet.'
country. They have oven been
banished from the grave of their lamented father (or
sake. Indeed, this is the " irrepressible con-
flict."
F.very man and woman I saw protested solcmnly
aguinst there being a word uf truth alirjut the ibuuaand
rumoi-s of slave insurrections, burning of houses,
fomenting troubles, and Un- like, by ihe Abolitionisls.
In aomu cases, it ivius believed, they had fired their
own buildings to furnish a pretest fur theaa false
What, then, ia the grand secret of this conflict,!
asked'. 1 invariably had the
every fugitive 1 saw. It ia.that the time is near when
Texas intends to ho divided into two or more States,
according to the terms ol her aunesalioii. Thai the
portion awny from the l.ulf is largely mixed with
people from the free S-lntes. who prefer freedom to
slavery, and the Slave reiver wants all the strength
they can get by dividing ihe .Slate, but dare not riak
the Northern portion, until it has been purged of all
-of her freed. 'in-loving populaiion. So they
E
refer louse the sovereign arm of tin
nowiiig it has the power to wield any force that may
defend her idol institution. This power
they aro using to kidnap, bang, or drive into free tcr-
itory just that portion of bi'r population that tlm
.aat to be rid of when the proposed diiisi.a, -hall
take place. Il is not Methodism, but Republicanism
thnt they war against. They combat every funda-
mental principle on which the pennwicucy of our
government depends. Even free thought Is not tole-
rated —aiuch less free speceh. Here, then, at the
present hour, is tbe fullest exhibition of the madness
and folly that is slowly but surely bringing ua all to
the realisation of duty. How long can such nconGicl
be rcpreisiblu ? Go into Southern Kansas, to-dny,
where these incidents are recited, and ask, how long?
THF. STORY OP A CINCINNATI MERCHANT.
7b Ihe liliio- «S '17" KndnnoK Oatelle.
CtNctSX.IT!, Friday, Nov. 2, 18G0.
An article in your paper of ihia morning, indiu
me to offer vou ihe cs-sential facts ia regard to I
recent experience in the South.
i arrived at Komo, fin., Saturday evening, attended
.bur. b and Sabbath school the day tidlowing; called
„ ib. I mis on Mombn. and left, ivhen rvndv.on
H .
mug train. At this'place much of the hitter
di-uiiion spirit wns constantly revealing itself; and
here, in 'fit' Courier, originated the article which
ending instrumentality in bringing on tho
whieh I been involved In Montgomery.
ta, Gritlin, West I'oint and La (iraugo, Gu.
am I called acted the part of gentle-
—
iscts in relation lo thia ill
uf Terror. Mr Pcvintiej' was in the employ of Harm
den it Co., Expressmen, in Savanna li, and received, on
Saturday morning, a notice'thnt he must leave the
city immediately. A notice. was served, at the sn
,n'ic, upon .Mr. foe, an employe iu tin' same oil
that he also mtisi leave. L.vpostulatioiis were use
ihe :is--uraiices of both men thai Ihey bud in no v
interfered with .-out hem institutions, and bad
tention of doing so. were not listened lo for n moon
nt ihey were threat. -i.i .1 wiib immediate death unless
ev departed at onco. As no alternative, therefore,
as left them but either to face death or leave, ihey
li in the afternoon of (he same day. Their only
fault was that thev were Northern men, Deviunoy
being a native of t'liitu.h dphui, and foe of one of thi
hasten, States, lln- man who was most inatruinenln
their banishment, wiis oil,- James While, master o
.nsporlntiou on lb- tieorgiu feu teal liailroad. Thi:
bile is biinsell a Northern man, but, having lived
connected with slavery iu thi
than tln-y now are in Cuba or Bi
Northern Stales have already enact.:. I .stringent 1:
ajjainst the imporiaiion of free negroes among th
They would not desire su. h a population in their
midst, nnd would le willing lo spend money
themselves ot" it. Tli.y would need our colt.
they now do, and would find our trade still
pcnaable to their proaperit) We aliould tin n ham
to regulate our uwn revenue i.i
.
- ' -
i States, ifwecboo=- todo.-.. bj Empoajng
i oh cotton purebtised by them, and im-
in iniiiufuctured articles sold by them to
This they could not endure and prosper.
would be that ihey would, it re. pure. 1.
uio a tr-ali wilh us lo l.iing bm I; our fugilive
and deliver them to US at the line, if we w.jiibl
.-,..., lo .1 favorable eon rcial treaty with them, by
wTiieh they could buy our cotton and sell us their
i;ooils upon equal lorins with other nations
Tar tixatv, for a like reason, could be mndi
"
iglish 'Guvermncnt, by which Cnnndu
longer be the harbor of fugitive sin--
when 1 had performed my duty ii
oil iniuiediillelv lo join vou I .- lb. ml ,-
satisfied that 'if anything was .lone n ,
here, and 1 had no doubt but what it v
(applausel. mid tli-: 'o-j.'icr you 'hi i
.-.. and ii
L-.rai.ent
e pi.,1 dull.
ily precipitation, by i
g mnn in this State,
hvo coaaiilered what w
i or a lllaek liepubli
.lure will decide lo-m.
lately ;
loit preeipitale
mid be done
mid be done
o-'Ue-r (cries
1 b- -be 1--
. I'l-esident.
ivill n
ivith thi
Stales, that the jntople of the' South wouh
ger from their slaves, in case, we alii
[paratc from ihe Northern States, am
ipeiident goeerumeul. Insurrection ai
ad. attempted to Le held In terror oi
pretend lo deny that Northern spi-
tl,.. Nordic
great
,-." I'de
If tins
belter than
four friends
abroad—you will giic euc.iurio_.euiuat to the timid—
you will frighten your enemies (applause). I bavo no
thought of South Carolina remaining alone. Shu will
soon he joined by other Suilefc. But if alie is not, tihe
will he just as strong lo repel Northern ncgression
ho Federal Government, us if she
Of the fifteen Southern Stales (loud
If she does remain nlone, which I do not
aihlc, it is my full conviction that you will
be able to defend yourselves against any power (loud
and prolonged applause).
Thoy might tnlk as they pleased, theie was but one
but, having li>
in Georgia, nnd become a slaveboli:
ho is so far trusted as lo be permitted to prove
faithfulness by such villnaoua servicea as these.
Three of the passengers, on board the Alnba
a gcntlemnu.his wife and daughter, who havi
in Augusta for several years. This gentlei
physician, and Iho hue and cry wns raised ngniaat
Turn by one of whom he endeavored to collect a dobl.
This method of settling pecuniary claims is a favorite
one iu Augusta, aa our readers will remember. This
geiidcman barely escaped with bis life, and neither
he nor bis family' w-ere permitted to bring awny nay-
thing but the clothes on their hacks. Another of the
passengers was from Lexington, Gn., hut all except
these four w-ere from Savannah, nnd all were banished,
any other reason given than Ihat of Northern
birth.
'
r.NPL'I.Sli ,S Ob A ITUNTEH FIvOM SOUTH
CAllOLfNA.
A young mnn named I 'as. ... well known in Troy na
former emploie iu the olliee of Th /'. i oi ihj Journal,
...id a lending "ollicer of the I'rinlers' Association, »
few days since left this eitv, nnd went to South Caro-
vhero he had been offered a situation in (he
if The Clttn-teton J/ei-cnro/. When he reuched
there, he found it would bo aome days before tho
lised him would be ready, and be wna
go out to a neighboring village, where a
ivcil
ioually to incilo small numtcrs
aluTves, in different localities, to revolt, and muni
families of innocent women nnd children ;
which
would oblige us piomptl, lo esecute the elaves who
ahould have depiiii.-i from Hie path of duty, under
the deceptive inlluence of nholiti-' f«™™*i
'I Ins- iuatam cs would, however, he
are usually under iho eye of their
seers. Few of them can rend or wri
permitted to travel on our niilronda,
nveiaiiics, without the written
g control ol" them. They bn.
eept such as their owners allow diem lo nnvc, ii
. niean^ of communication v. ith each ..(lier at a '
o entirely unnrmed, nnd unskilled
s. A general revolt would, therefore.
Dut the men., important fact, whie
roly and devoted'lv attached to the!
usircsses, ami would shed, in their
. They
or other public
•unt ol ihose hav-
• mail facilities
iHnee. They n
the use of art
be iuipossibb:.
is well known
of them nre
(as to bu-' < In, ii- chains nod abandon the
a'mc of freemen (cheers). He never intended to
ounl tbo cost of maintaining freedom, and would
ininuin thu heritage of those who bore bia namo
i-itb Ins life, if nteessiu-y (applause). His last '
dd stand
heriiagu of
',l.,pcl
J.-, tin'
rould be,
mid leave behind him
freemen (applause). When tbe intelligence can
from Charleston that the sons of Carolina bad cm
menced this campaign as thev should, and that rev
lullan was there inaugorati •]. bo felt Ida blood boui
nuiuVor, nnd ho rejoiced that thoy bad taken t
right pciil'ion (loud applause).
Notbing has held the tide of fanaticism in check,
save the doubt as to the subuiUaiveness of thu South.
The buttle is now being waged against us. Hay by
day the sappcrn and miners are at worlc along our
borders and in our towna nod cities. Day by day,
through, our revenue sysieui, wealth and pi
im ul n tin)
them the
stranger,
Thi :cd(t
Ho lold them
New tork, nnd inthocour
t.-, mention thai he had om
Tl :u asked him to get
toofchii
L - r
could be employed
'
On the
buggy, and inquired of
1 him ivhelhiT ho was a
anil what
r fror
oitiiens are thoroughly organized
iiiitlees.and all nre expected tojoii
in the divinity of nlavery. All wl
their creed aie marked, bunted do
loo, tried hv what is but n mocker
lice, and often sentenced to d.-atb
false charges are brought against
lo put to death, and no uepnuti
absurd or oppressive thua some ol
In Kourbon County I mot a 11
arrived in thu T«rritorj' aome two
ing in To.xna his family and ovc
property. Ho had always been u
obtervinj; citiien ; had t. large ate
ic of the
.lln: hilutes i
. sp.e.-l, froi
nlf.'.-lingKof
1 to Montgomery
s of Messrs, I'nnc
er business ou bund
a' his remarks happened
worked on Tke Tri' ~
nnd ride with them
before a Justice near al. hnnd, by whi
ordered to bu locked up In ft filthy eell t
Abolition emissary." After remaining in du
.s I, ours, during which time he wre, subjected '
most cruel treatment,'
His friends from Tl
present,
und
In
tin,,- urn
.-onlcl 1.
-ii-i- political rights, and !
lion beyond their present
caae of a plot or compirac
miiicated to but few. till
j would i mined Intel v cjioinunH ate it t.
and put iheui upon their guard. Tbil
Ve have, therefore, In
nise of apprehension from a rebellion of our
Let ua, lor a moment, contrast our dillicullii
ir "fa'.oi'er-i. in case of division, with ihe ddlieiilties
hieh tlie Northern peoplo would bavo wilh th'ir
laborers.
Many of the Northern master*, or employ
they piefer the term, are How II. poSs.s.sioil .
'
fonunea, which they have accumulated by tb.
tho strong nrmfl of white laborers amoag thei
have labored nnd toiled and dropped the
'
for wceka and months and >v
"
,-ed from them
It little
fin--., are-curoulaiine at tbe ---t(.
litvtowbielilboSoutbis
lends at the North can no longer raise a warning
jico, we caa no longer raise n deli not admonitmn, il
black republican domination be tolerated. Roth
"
he Inughml nt and ridiculed. This is (lie crisis
ic conical, and if we lake our stand for indepen-
dence we will nttnin peace and safety.  hen
suspensions and failur. s an- lb- current events of Ibu
dav, and Northern commercial and uiauufucturiiig
iul'erests, with ihe Southern prop knocked from under,
are settling down, in aome pbvcea crumbling from
the fall, in oilier* sinkin.'. lo im.nor posilions, with
laousanda of laborers without the means ol nubsis-
ee, and credit—tho basis of all war operations—
tcketl in the convulsion, where will (be power to
reu the South be found I It must, from Ibu
South has the
il/.rcari/ ..ifieo, V
o fuel thnt he wl ..
holiii.'nisi.aiehli.i ivoubl be responsible for biagood
behavior. Thev we're allowed to lake him. un condi-
tion that he should ban' the Slat, in 24 hours, otber-
wi-e be wns to be publicly dogged, and locked up
nml fed on bread and water lot thirty days. Pasco
1 not snid one word on tin- subject ot slaver;
.... polities in nn; form. His only nfienco
he lead been a New York pi'
The AW For* Tribune.
,n, which, in be-illb, baa bnrely enabled tl
themselves in u. simple style, denying 1 ttieil
rnniilles most of the comforts of lile, and
has often left them in destitution and actual
the necessaries of life.
While iliose who receive lln- benefits ol the labors
of others nre living in stately uiaudions, amid ease
" '
.Kury, and faring aumpiuou-sly ovur-y day, thu
and had worked i
NAn-ROW ESCAPE OF AN EDITOR.
The Cleveland Plain Dealer says that Mr. David
Wentworth
i->m-,'.e-, re
ia . liters of tbe Buffalo
tirled for California by tho ov,
ville, Arkansas, a few nigl
anu lunuiy, Hue. iin,>up nu,.,|j h"w-^v .—rj
laborers whose toils brought thesu comlo
upend their daya in unplejisaot dwellinCK, and often
-i-i" buts, doomed to perjwtnal obscurity. and
a aickneJi'. the comlorts of life produced
by their own hard labot
, by an almost unanimous vote, al Lulu t,
received in Ibis city on .Si.tunluy night will,
demons' rations which have, perhaps, never been
"
the political bislorv ot the country. Our
wWo community seemed to breathu freer nnd deeper,
and npon eve rv brow Kit confidence und hope. Tt
was as though' the glorious sun had suddenly dis-
persed cloud, and mist nnd 
illuminating rnya lo ery heart nnd home. Men
|..,i, lied leoir.jlher iu tin- f'le". as ni'-li si Id who feel
lb at. iimb-: God. their ili-slini.-sw.-ie at I a- 1 iu their own
lunula. Ihe doubting demon was e.mruised. In tho
Epirit nnd temper of Ihe limes, a I .invention of tbo
people of Eoulb Curoliou, to be held within four
re weeis. lo pronounce upon her remedies in tbo crisis
nolwbicb is al hand, means iVinuuiuu.- mean* the ttpa-
loiroV.Vi. of S»a(/i Curo/irin, iehethtr ahni or alA
r
or uthert from t/.c- Cm -."i, .f'lie'i c-.iu •jnli)ft<e n badge of
. ; to her! It ii so boiled in tlfiaVouimnnitv.
,t race. They are not I Tho decree Ueb go no forth, nnd must ho registered, in ihe
of freemen, who shed ta'.bi.sof bistorv Well done to our nobleAT.epreiwn-
™hor-es wercbein.'-ehaiiWd'iVie thc'ir blood to secure iiberiy to their posterity. These 1 tafvw! The day that brings then, back again to
Jrs
6
%£&*%^$g£Z^i£I
— »*« political righu, inhentcd Srom Iheir anees- 1 th, hearth, of the. constituents, w.U bo ,„ud«
I
those honest, stnrd
ionof iofciionty lo
_ irthly musters, wh
drive their carriages, blac'n thcii
ihem nil kinda oi rr-cninl servici
men. They belong u
only free, bo" ''
''
the former was Impossible
if ei'niliiignell' ii .1 .
' <
.not surpassed, in .beep
Rational §tiiti,*lawr<! gtumuiKt,
vrw YORK batuiway, M>vi;Mi»:ii :i. laso.
ttvorolt lvinp; urnl infamy. In .h'spilc of nil this, the
North has for the first lima hail her own wnynud
ohoaen tl " she prtfomil President, without a
Cot l mi Stales
SVprLBJlENT—Hfii-
,,nnd ii
raWgli";
iucl lli-ir telle
, in the
a ncok what safotylhcy can in I)
f Louis lionnpnrto.or wherever llni
fear Hint ii is toeiuueh to Uopb,
Stnti-s should secede. Not Ibatwc believe, with mimy
or our contemporaries, ihnt tliu Disunion movent
thcro is ii mtn: lilmin anil illusion, intended lo fri«h
tlii! North out of her propriety, or into it. We In
dwm believed Unit lltera was n sincere »»»»»»
niety 'it the South—men who really believe Hint t
,>..,« *>..'-" mould hnjimehjicitej! c# la UiBmselv
the most fiwornulo (hey li
Union nnil Ihe
Mjr, Ihnc is
tlmentlnmost,
" ..'."
,- tl,v N..iili H.1-...IL--1. li-r l.:..~-h Of poUfl-
„ ll
,.„ llll „ li „„„n,l wmi l
i,,-,-i„l.li-^t, r . Their idcal-
iu Northern people, '' " lu.'.i'.ri'v "' Hii'iii. are -
.,1, Union, and 10 afraid el ' -c|"C"-."
.li^.lulien. tlml when they arc made to ...-c Ilia
hi.
r
, t,,. v ,.,,„„i, i,, now planKiauf fidelity t,
.j il,.,- »ill full upon "loir knee* nod beg "
»»
,"„|
lk.„ i„ frt-L-ii rl>»in» ui-on tlH-ii- liml^ n»'l !:>»
locks upon their months! Their faith in Northeri
rvleuoy Is tl! '
'
,t wonder, hi
ill
1.1- mi-led
1 , i ntiy shadow upon the character of Dim whole
whole name nod attribute are comprehended in One
will aland up
nciplesbithc
,- bend lu-foro
word Love." The hymn, " Nearer, my (led. to 'J hie.
wnfl ttifii fs '.Ti-r beautifully. Il niii}- lie said here, Hwl
.,11 i|i>. sieal eioi'elsea throughout the day were
„„,|..,. tin, illreclioii of Jlr. Joshua Hutchinson, uf Mil- 1
iu Union" by ford Sow Hampshire, and were aduiirnhly arranged,
forming ii moat attractive and impressive mature - the
toll. «o felt
'"t!i th.nft.Tiii.oii tlic ],u...i..-i- .-I
-
the audience were
W 1 1
perceptibly oolarged.-tbo boose, Including a!»li «
and
, IL |,„„„., 1,, U.eehnir, f..v. .lulu. Hoyden, .il ttunil-
i
i „„,„, Lvely rend. T i another original hymn
oi llin Wlliuos 1'rov
tooSuVyS law; inn
In let It nlono, in
. Tin
PROPHECY -I.Wi FIIFILMENT.
iKEall men cnong;ed in tin: unselfish prosecution
-rent Moral Reformation, Iho Abolitionists hnve.
,ll,r first been endowed wilh ibo p,iit of prophecy.
,-
live now in tho midst or the fulfilment of their
predictions. Like other proplicts, Hoy have not
,,-a l,wi old.. I" lis on the precise moment when
opportunity for
euoliaa fevrpersi
,ig n^of tbo cour*o it w
timlly engaged on the
imliiceinouts to hidL
c them nn
old take,
Ibo truth
l : nov.
fr.im Ihem
Hint lb'.'
Bolv
Ulh, vhojo .-Ii
possibly enjoy. Tlioy
ini.lity „ HIM in-." ail; mid lliis failb, nnd the
of 01.-itisoliite nl.Mnci.' or nny nrel
si,. , it- uv.'r nnollier, niiido IbHr vision oleJir ns to tl
no-i likely nntlts it would toko lo victory. And tin
tbey were nil the lime busy in helping to bring aboi
wbnt Uk.'V Inid prefigured, wbk-b •:
set down lo whiuli fido of tboir a
their erilies may prefer. They nre content with tbo
sneecs*, uml tlic cmlit fur forca-'tinp or 1
about may bo given to whomsoever the judi
think it due.
Tlio intclliacnt renders of this paper mill of the
for accomplishing their revolution. We lb
w that it would ho dmnitglng to tbo safety nutljsu
ipcrityoftha ulave Slntot) lo disebnrgo us, their
insnries mid their bankers, who fi
t'!it their buttles,
their do bis, nnd sin-lnin their political esinlomo
s can be cyphered out on any blackboard. l)ul
oliitinns are mil ninde with n uln to and pencil, n^
have often snid before. Tbny are not bnseil
niri'vilv on ctdeiibitioiii- of profit mid Uwp. ilo'.v di
proceed forth of the pocket bill ol the lienrt, not!
s nol money but piifsioii that breathes into then
the bi-ealh of "life. It is true, also, undoubledly, Ilia
of the great slave- owners anil proporly
hoblers would oppoM Disunion. So did Hie milts o
the wcnltli in oiirt'nlomos before the Ttcrolulion. Tin
Cnlton Slnles lire butler nble tosnppoH a govornmon
Thirteen were at tho booiuning or t!io end of
. And lh™ they will have no w
Iflhoy arc resolulo to secede, there will be
no violent opposition lo it. Tbo consetinenccs tu II
limn oyimu .iy inr llinl. 1'orwe i
that the sop is even now gL'ttiuj; n_ri.lv for i.nr l-'orh.-
iiniible-pie is .ookinj.' that ive are (oer.t
llieeoiidilionof having our Old Mun of the Sea nalri
irnhoulders for another four years. We will n
iy that Mr. Lincoln will be obli-iuy enough todeeline
I election, ns some Virginia pa-pur baa inodestlysUg-
r.l.d. Bui we are by no nieniiH sure that (lie otll
imlitions suggestod, of Ihe repeal of the Personal
iberly bills and tbo linmblo imknowludgment of
fealty to the Fugitive Slnvu law will nol be ende.a-
•orcil by Ihe Rcptitjlieaus as measures of peace. But
"Peace I Pence! when thire is no
i
flio slaveholders Ibal the Agiin-
.... boj'Ond llie reach of political
to guide, anil that it will ro on
dead parties, if nol through living oncn, until it
has swept slavery from Ihe carlb.
ri ill !. ,. L.'
i-
^ H slll'l lll.lt 111'" l.olli.ll
I i,| ilir.'i.ten violently to tVdk™- In
Hence, loo. they have oon.pir.'l with N'orlhiri
lorclmut politlcinna to brlmjou
They hope, through the confus
inoii'l b the Editor
""Tfie'licpuoitciin |
i"e the virtue, and
ml patriotic roogni
ml-, i.f llie
peiato cfi'ort will lie mail.
under the milium. nf the
wing nf his party, represented
,1 BwiDB ofOh-0,TTUuihullof
of the Am nil.) .Mii-snchil.
of-
"ja:
5 ihe present have been fore^liiidowed. For on<
in,,,- anion;' many ; in the Report of the Mnssaohu-
Sotilety, written in l&ltnnd presented in tho
,
, o( 1848—before the Pre.' Soil party was thought
lrc these passages : "A Northern parly in uuqui
uahly nl hand. Like llic sects of Jerusalem, tho
rln" parlies nl ihe North will yet unite and pre-
.^.it a form id able front
There is Anti-Slavery spiritenongb in tlic free Slates
to orente a formidable, if not a predominant parly
All that is needed is men of personal integrity am
moral courasn to take the lead. We think lb.
o Till
n-llierli pcuple Ini.ecepl audi c litious of settlement
,1 |,i.:iili:i.iioii ii will i.llur.l South Carolina n conve-
,1 omkc slavery for over Ihe ilominnnt power of tlic
lion. The plan of these eniwpiiMloi-s aei.iu-il llb-rl;
lore -ill ii i lowed by (icnrtfe X. Siliiilers, a fuithlul a ti-
ro t of Ibo slaveocrucy, in a letter lo Ut Minn*, u(
hicli the [olli.wini; in ml estrnet:
"The tottnn or (iiilf Stales lire now in process or
m -;,.n. (i is believed that tht
W,.v
...).;.'/
,.li,.iil,l he' per
.li.peinl" tin: p
iieuplu ..r Kev
.liev I Ibemi
.I ii,,; p...!.
in,-.., t,-.,i-- li
-....„,; i .it,.
:
lie lfi ,:.l
Tlun- ,-.m
nt.. uml i.l
. ,,-lu.lin.i;
n party vWhelber the Hapubljci
ei'C indicated, anil atlenipt to cor
imieurntini! the old Whig poliuy i
emaius to bo lecn. Of nne Ihinj;
itr, i.< n Airi-Hi now of a vm-y ilill
rlueh Wolsior nnd Fillmore had
- U -uil.il.l,. K. tho ,i.:i
ir 111!" J:,:v. Mr. [l.iy.len ,
,.f l..i.-...,i..-i-, inn. I.- eoiieT.i'i
ll- il.i V . nn fcrei] |,i IV r A 1 uh good ,,1-iL-in
Mir Lucy W '^ .mi ; and M.V
iirk- li-.-.i
lli.ni,.,-.
in
i tree fur
„ll.,ii
1" ikia-'i ren irks, the h " w ;' Cfluni llill-ii
He
nut ii
imri-:r>,
a of
I... I -
:
_- l e r 1 for „ 111,
a crying i
peace. And we win
thi'y iln.'ul is
lo, for the I-cun
liitu I "I'll sl:iti- t.i"-..'..l,- iviih.mt first reeeiviiiL'
their snnctiiiu ;
an.l H >"' < '" '(" ''' "'"' »" eowr-
i-nlii- ir
"(' I'-' /-.'.i. ("'.-. •'-'. <nll -I..H.I .;iii-«i; '../ "„'.(
,„ tlir Hou)}i •Irifi.'rf «/!', 1]! II" r<(usal i,J propositions
;„i.fi.i..i ..,,,'^i.Nj ,, f"ii t • i'--
-
'Ili," l:ii. ,.-t..".;ii..n in il bo renaided i
iivc. The pren'iit iBsu™ n-arccly eiitere.l
vnia. Many thoiisnmlJ wi-ii> disgu'tcil at
ipects of"
1
''
V will M
i call tlicm forth." At that time tbo
Dcmocrals nnd Whigs possessed the land between
them, niidcaeh vied will, tbo other in the depths of
their senility lo the slaveholders ns the autheiiti
nrhilcrs of tlic Ktrifo for power. In n Tew months
beaitiuing wus made in the Free Soil party. Willi the
interposition of but one Presidential Flection, there-
after, the North all but Carried Colonel Fremont into
the National l'ulnco by un cselurivelySeclionnl party,
and this year it lias organized its victor)- in the tri-
umphant choice of Abraham Lincoln by almost every
Northern vote against every Southern One in tho Elec-
toral Colleges. Our readers know that we expcol
little or no Anti-Slavery help from Jlr. Lincoln,
oscepliilg the absence of the swift servility wlueli
made Pierce and Buchanan run Wore they were sent
to do Ihe dirty work of the slaveholders ; but we none
Iho less recognize bis election as an Anti-Shivery tri-
umph and the result of long Anti-Slavery labors. It
is not ihe harvest, but it is the green blade that must
go before it It is not the fruit, but it is the blossom-
ing that promises its coming.
It is not tbnt we do not expect Mr. Lincolu to do
substantially Ihe same work that bis two predecessors
were eager to do. His method may be different, bui
all the worse for thai. lie will execute the Fugitive
Slave bill, nnd put down Slave Insurreclions, nad
maintain the Constitutional rights of the slaveholders
ns they arc generally received and allowed by the
Kation. Wo should advise evury fugitive *lavu in the
Northern Suites, and especially in Ihe largo cilice, wlm
is not ready to convert himself into a Northern mur-
derer by a deadly self-defence, to place the St. Law-
rence between himself and the incoming President
wilh all convenient speed. N"ol Hint bo will wish
molest him, or that lie bad not rather be were 1
alunu. Hut slave-hiiiils will l..- speedily organized
all critical pads of the country, as soon as mny be,
for the very purpose of I. iting the (id li'v ol tha Pn -
eident and bis Stars! '" t' Constitution mill th.
Laws. If the slaveholder an -I .-..
I- ,m th. Ecent,theEe
hunts will be set on foot b; the Demoernlj
Everett men fur Ihe nnnoyanco of their successful
antagonists. Nutwithstiimliii^ all thin, we rejoice
Mr. Lincoln's eh clioii for the signiDcanCo that it hi
in -in', of the sequences that may immediately
fnlh™ tr ii li was hatred loslavcry and its works,
l__ |. t'.. b lulera try to disguise Ihe fuel, that
; ]]( „ r | ii„. |;,.],,,I,lieiiii iiiovemetit with all it.s vital-
ity The "real mass of his voters verily believed thai
they v,-,.rc"i..tim_: against slavery when they east their
ballots for bun. Not merely against the thrusting of
slavery upon loathing Territories by tho bayonets of
the Nation; but against mIiivit; it.-elfaml 'ill Ihnt it
inherits. And so I bey did. For Slavery is a Giant
that tliuK when the first stone Ls thrown tit him. LTu
received his death- wonml in tbo first number of Tim
Liberator, mid this is another of the successive ilenlh-
Ihnwls which will at last do him lo death.
The testiniou; of the slaveholders may be taken ns
satisfactory on this point- Though Sir. Lincoln will
eointo power wilb amuJDrity of themselves and Iheir
, both liouies ol Congress, they inalinc-
what u prcg * symbol his presence in
the While House will be, and nre busy in conspiracies
to hinderdtinnd loud in their threats of se cession if
1UL.
y , nut. They .sec in bis election tho sign that
the sccplre has departed from ihciii.Uiul that in spite
of tie tMnsowibltt *™oi two successive Prcsideuts
DR. BACON BROUGHT TO LIGHT.
Every evil, even siu, has a eerlain nmount of com-
imnsiitifin iiC'-oui|.!i.ivi.ie ',
i
,
|1
, "! l
.','".''.'''.. i
.
L
r , ll'."!
1
.,'.',
1
','.'!'-
of teoipor a few weeks ago, so many of the people of
this world as lake nn interest in the Eayings ind dnilifis
of Tl,,- la-ltpendtnt hint been enabled to judge, for
once, which of tho editors nf that paper wrote a par-
ticular article in it. This cunt derives interest from
the fact tint, while the aulhorsbip of editorial lnntlei
there is commonly led impersonal, upon general prinei
plifl.it Is particularly and assiduously "kept dark'
when Ihe articles in question contain fnlso statements il
regard lo its own course of policy, or calumnious nccn
sntioos against people ofn dilferent persuasion.
Three weeks ago, there occurred an exception to tbi;
iir?o of policy. Thr fmlepniiiint nf the lsl Inst, con
ined a lung letter ...Ulreiscil to il" editors, but sir;nci
ith the full name of its senior editor, whu seemed par
ticularly riJ,d by the amount nf Iruth which bad hcei
cspecting him by an "evangelical " brother, tin
mil editor of Thv Chrisflnn fn/elfijenciT.
i ebargo made against Dp, Uncoil by bis elerica
brother was, substantially, of a course of conduct in tin
icon Hoard ol '.'• is-ioncis in- I'.,ri.-ii.'u Mi'-.dim.'.
n of el .,1V 11
U:,ll.|,,i-
ito fur want of proper fo
Very iminy thousaml-i viil.-.l ,lir':it fir Lincoln, to pi-
ih'ii.i that III" Si.ulll will ll'.l
i.l tlmi if lln- .'. i nl a- iti |,i-i. |.le can e.-l led,
— "- oujusted."
|.-."y i'^'lij'" 'i.-."'
"(im=,"'iv,'iukl.¥ Vl i' ii 'u.- i": C
, ..iii|.i.n;iii i|in -ler. or the Southern SI
, tionand resistance. L
jdi h.vv ].L-|iislniiiiT or in
<
|.ii-il-
.in thei -liivci-y-i,
i.|i li'li ..i.unlry, Ihnt
new church building can have i
fur the true anti-slavery reformer,
:v of Christianity in its genuine ami ini
ad Mich an Hi
But the del f the n . iiu .
i-
f a disi
which Slessrs. Ualtou, Bnywoud, Hill uf Milfbrd uml
May, took part.
" ^ ';'-"
The .juiet and steady all.ntioi
.cry part n.ul feature of lliu ocen
highly grntilyine to our ll..ip.-.iali
frieuil'i. And thus was t-l apart lo Iho be.'.t of huimii
the GiHjaland Good 1'albe]
of all—the now IknieJide Chunk whciv in we trust am
lievo tbnt many a meeting shall yet bu held, promo
enf Human freedom, Growth and Uapplnesa ;
many
faithful Anti-SUveey mei'tuie, before whoso
iting light and
t llope.lale (Milford, Massachufletts) foi
tiou lo the rule un Ibis subject  and us th
y there established is of a character lo il
ie lovers oflheir kind, and all Abolitionists
ial manner, a notice uf this occasion lit
priato lo yoin- columns, and may also prove
i llopedale Community was instituted aliou
:y ye.n-s since. A little coai|iaiiy of believers i
[Uitiilily of aiakine Clii-i-li.inity n prnclicnl lliin.
:ii'ty, m bnsine.'-.. and in the daily intercourse of
ivitb men. associated themselves tu test the experi-
They made purchase of a small triiet of bind in
•Bierly part of 'be town „f Milford, Woea
-hull I.
t to si e anil e, I'l'ldl t.
II. .
iv,;.',. vly |.,llt ..i ill" l.'ivn ! M
mind ; many il Temper,
i
s.uil-lionduge of dc
u was dead to be alive again, him who was lost to be
mil and restored to vii-lue nad tu peace; many a
miairs Ilights meeting, where Ihe Hhacklcs which
.mail's just nod rightful action shall be weakened,
111. at length, they Tall entirely away ; many n Chrls-
n meeting, in short, where, villi nil bohlne-', the
itlis af the kingd of Coil shall be unfolded, and
dtitudcsbc brought, by the beauty of holiness, to lead
n nf npri;_dilness. [iciice and y.n..l will to man ;
ilms
uilei-in? tu I.umI Ihe liigbesl gloi
BBblD
The
.i-|...ii
Th
Tract Society, oi
i look like dishonesty. And it referred lo
roll known aduiinislration nf" gi.e-law : '
bi-
Dr. lliienn, in tlic meeliug of the American Hoard nt
oston, in contrast with YVn &dijModfnt,
iconlplaiaUi of
ie same H.n-t i.l" di-'.'iplinv esi-rcised towards its party
,- (lie government of the Tract Society ; with the very
ltuml reflection Ihat " it makes a world of ditrcrenec
hclher it was your os or my bull."
Tho jufltice, combined wilh the ipiietness, of these
cl jTc», made them ii.lhei miiii.yinn ; and Dr. Haeon
plumply denies them, appending, by way of snapper to
tho iwu columns uf bis reply, tbo boas: M...I In-, ai-
with ilself, but had co lemed mure II. n a ijnirtvr nf
n tentury ago, earliei' tlmn tin- In-ginning .if bin oppo-
nent's " Reformed Bi 1 1 dimunship."
Giving o passiuimie denial, both g.nend and particu-
lar, to all tho charge- o I bis reveivnd hruil.cr. Dr. Il.icon
singles out, for more elaborate lefulnllon. n cbargo so
carelessly worded that he euuld plausibly n nkc a stand
against ih) literal meaning. Tllecilltor.il '//.. i'i,.>l:.i..
laltlliijcnctr had incautiously said that Jlr. itacon was
11
opposed to ri'SiilutiiuiE ahtuit slunr; "
u. !.:. mm
ecclesiastical bodies, ami in tin American I:-,- I ... .-.
ing, what is pei-1'ieily true, that lie wa- ..pj.no, I iu nil
energetic aelion ".j.iij.,1 shivery in thus, i
...In -.
"
icli a chance Tor ......iniuij In be in the rie.1.1 (i .-
e of readers not one in fifty of whom possci".
iniuTIM by which to teal ihe truth of bis stale
not lo bo neglected. And Di
appeals to Nurlhiru cupidity
Tltt Eatress, Tim Doily A'cim
' ily, are
,
encourage the escape u
ws declaring and prulec
travel and sojourn in >
their slaves ; instnicl I
,r Ihe full |liail,-,'lii,ii „f -la
erics uf the Union, and lei
entiling promptly obey si
Ihe North, wi
in-ulent demand* ol the
tin -in dilincntly by base
V'/.on'<mrii..lo/t
,
umFm™,
and niher jimiiinls of the
not one whit behind the
arloalon Aicrciire, or tho
in the Mai with which they defend
nds of the slaveholders. These
without molestation, to libel and
rily of the Northern people, and
eheuiea of the ahiv
the South no man, without end angering
:na spcuk a wnrk in defencu of Northern prin
in opposition to slavery. [For evidence o
i Iho examples uf .Miulherii jn-niicrihliun an,
Lynch law recorded on the llmt page.)
It is probable that, in the aext sis mnnlhs, the North
cm Dackbouo will be aubjecled lo a pressure moi
r/it IVioiinc, speaking prest : stale of all.
igbtsof property, lil
belief was general Ihat they
their bond uf union chiniei-ical and unfitted to the
uses of real life. All such oVpi-cuilioiu have been
signally disproved. The Community has thoroughly
established not only the possibility hut the cssent
value and high practical use of tbclli fuiiihiinen
principle of union. They now constitute an imporU
village in the nourishing town nf Milford, and its me
ipect through,
i by .
,
sympathy i
l;i-
presses avc n
insult the gic
defend the si
id of 1 . |,l,n nnd II,.!
"Tl ;,.-,. Inlcri tot ... IH |
eg, is
'
i
'
i II"
!- !"
VI. ,1.. . ... Nl ..
'..::
il til
usc.ot tie financial Ir. ubh j • ur
", tboy really mcai in break nn tin , „;... A few
2 ";'.
, loua liliiri .1,1. , I
he American Board have passed rcjulutioas ..'.-' '
,
hivery. He coocealu Ihe fact (a faut which imtv he
ilaiuly seen by any ono who ebnuees in powcw the '
ong series of Annual Poparts Df tho A. li t 1 M ) that
vhercver he has spoken for or voled tor iCkOlulions
u'hii.I slavery in that burly, and wbeuevi .- thai bodv has
passed such resolutions, it has never been -|.outoncoui.ly. .. 1.
actiou ouainsl slavery. In tho whole hiutoi . ol lb i .,
American Board, at whose meetings Ur. B.ieon has been
one of the mast constant and active alien lants, he has '
itterly relVained fr leti -veil abnu! .la.. ,;.. i, . |.l
m," and -.i'i" -
when it waa thought .1, -ii-able t.i liiron ., wet blanket
upon the action ,.f Lewis Tnpiuin, Dr. CI., ever, nod men
of Ihat stamp, ,iu,iin.vl it,
Tlic Jiildiiijrnctr of Nov. Slli gives a s|.i. > r.-j-ly [.. |ir
Bacon's letter, giving abundant and conclusive docu-
mentary evidence in proof uf il- iirivni.il , l.jitis. cl
in refutation of the culprit Istet .. i.
atThe lndtpendmt will m ,.. :',,
the principal editors of that papor will «nj with th .
n], in .ii ' " '• t. lowu bv uns. rupnlous asscr-
ti I rordnd of their unfnlfh fulness.
Thi J' -I./ ,•' ' '.lull always eulogising tbo Ameri-
can Board, ou.l upholdbig its policy, has alwoye prac-
tised concealment, cni-i.ni, or denial, ami-dine lo cir-
cumstance*, tu keep Ihe piirlieui.-iiM of the pr.vsl.tvery
action of that body Horn tho knowledge ,
If the whole history shall ever be wrilteaof tbonltciupts
made by a small minority of its mcuibi rs to e It tu
withdraw from direct complicity with slavery, and of
the manuiuvres of the Prudential Committee, Jlrst 10
aveid both netiuu and esprecsiuii upon the subject allo-
.11 «»...iii
,- it.:, ,..
n.ni.ii, 1,
i, nccommodntiou
line; also I ii a ncbonlnioiu. But tbcii
i.iimbcrs au.l |.; op- ii ...... I
.- ..„...-: .....Itul..i,-,lpui I
Tin: (London! ,liifi--7.i
intaina a loiter from Gm
Ihni-oiich and mnsloiiy ivi
Jlnii-h Anti-Slaary Htpar
Cheever. Hour columns were no
than usual, we would rcproduci
although Ihe principal facts enihodi
already hiiil before our venders.
i L-
ourselves lo a single extract, iu which Mr.
psoa replies I" a paragraph published ill Th
(rrfi.r tlelober !—and commented upon In Tin:
moot October Ihe pivagi ipl
Ihflr p
..hi.,,,
urb , . hli . , I..,
,U. ...-!.. rorlhe i
..I congratulation
V. ... "
c.ei-l nt the .l.diC"
tlslove.y reformers
in and Cod-speed (
lemptcd la a ba-eini
.mud, is " large and
[.., . . .,, . it. .i th
hnlldlns (with ih
t. - ... :'.. [ibilfoi
...I, -,,
I
i -i dedicnlioa, and o
aiong their f. icu.ls on the •; f em
i one of Ihe mini, rn.u audicuc
wi, sr.,1 believes that all tin
the II -|.< -!il' friends :.i tin
i ... o( II.. Imose will cot b
int stuey. b.u entirely r-bnv
tiro ',l»l/ : . I
FlilV. II
.. .1 .-
I rl! v muse proper Tlds .. luisje enongl
m lortably fl>u hundred persons. It .- ucstly
,i prtcd. nnilthc seats in ceusidoned unlfuruily tlucucb.
,1 M.e Iioik The w.lls in simply but very taste
||y [..Int.. I ... f.cic
:vy phafliug cOvi i t: I- bo a- favorable to.
i'. purp -- of speaking an I henriDj nut
- ,n i
On Thursday, I- clock n.ni., a
„i... Heeled from linp. n.l
together wilh nome friends I gveoiei -..
ivh.-l. , Itcd the home. Aflor nn anthem, by
clioii uf ibout twenty persons, the Budding Co nil!.
.ie. ... lill deed and th
keys of the I The statement the re with idi by
It wa '
I it. d ".v bouse bad been built by
voluntary sjbscrlplic.il nnd .kn,ii„n. there I..
,| ulsorj i .v ; th. ie '. id I. n
Till: iVESTBltS OAllPAltm
Cnicioo, Illinois, Nnveiuher, 1
jltiarof 7Tt< -Vottenol jLnli'Stotrr? SlanddTd.
lnul .i t'.iinvi-utii'ii lust .•'
rihiy and Sum
.la in this state, thai we denmed ol UiOSl I'
cter. It was not numerously attended, bu
.0 right sound. The main topic ol discus lio
|ple iij opposed to I'nliey. U'e had inlei
revlnus, ruled for Aln-,,1 Ustcoh Drai
em was loud in hi, ail™ rl n •,' -
iiiii,i-lii-i:lali,:.ii..if il.ri."--..i-.i. i
.
'ivory as Ihe rin'.t line.. idly en .ml ..,- . .,n
cry one hurled his lint anatlie sapniust il„
e Slave law, and nearly all paid becoming h.i
i! heroism of Cnpt Brown and Harper's Terry.
mj .bl.iic.r/.: lor .Vuvembe:
li.ii: Tin hi i-d ns, esposiny in ,
y ihe gross unfiiime-.s of Th
, lit.
;
ard Dr.Chee . ...i, ,ii.. I
[lits] lakiuo, ..i, . rid. .
.!
T [-...-.. i. a. isivc reply ti
,r th .. .... .ri, I I k
r- '.'-.
and had voted for Lincoln, who absolutely spe
interpretation out or his mouth !
One of (hci
vcr. bad iii.'-n all tho [lilgrimnge to see Lin.
have nn interview. lie said Mr. Lineolu told
Cons 1 it.I ti on was pi-o- slavery, that the Soulh '
tied i :oDBressioual Fugitive -lave law, an
should, it elected President, eieeuie Hie pn-,
" ihoueh lie regarded it as a most unqalbj emu
,. . . . ... I 1... him v.. I he i .'.I us. e
Ih it he did r.. t expect Mr. t.ineolu ivould do c
iu.ller ! '
.a,,- r.
.i» ;..,vj,-i-l.Le ....- " thl
.a. ...... i tin •
en i.'-i a,
.,. : , ni oi :.. II..' I'residcr.ey of Hi
.1 -
- 5u cr ond Ju-h
)«,u Line, .y bovc dono tl.,- 
ti.-li ..| I- -• • and sn.vcries,
d.iverv It cputii leans [what foi
...ih, i have p --
v. if
Unlivd Suites
P. Giddings and
am,-. And. seduced by
... t-hearted am.-
an. .-..„.-..
H.-i -, ll.,..,vl.a
ion.bnll l.o
,i the foe.,
hall i
t
i.. -,. the
co idjutor,
,::• Clll ,f,.l e
•ay. i then, onbcbalfol n. 1. -
-• led t hi Irosl
„n the conditions named, adding, that person" oot
, .-I with ^i..r c were tnritcd t
and take seats nnd elu.n-prliilrses In Iho home no tho
isiue t. rui- Willi tho members itnimtbn, their coolri-
butions toward- it ". nbolly voluuta.-y.
,,.i onotbrr anlbocn, on appropriate prayer was
il... ! .., Samuel Mny, ( Leicester ;
and tliis wa*
...i.-.i.i-l I.) the ebaoling of a hymn, written for the
... bj vl.n Ilallou.aeopyof which, with others,
| .. .. |
.- -, fl., morning sermon nf dedication WIS
.
... 11, IV ;. llnywood.rriBCipilof tbc
Ilnmidalc Comolnuly 'cboul. and ono nf ihe stated
r b.le
old one—
of tbesu i
Chcercrorrived in England an tho SardJulr.n
the fontineot no Ihe 1 lib of Augu-t. Hurin.
,i o( M... period, it was In th powci
U.:i. J. II. ff -i."M.lo-'".'.i the Third It.f.
•
,. .!..-.
,-.-.i' -.. eniui.rHhur.il in il. ucily. d.b
n |
ul discourse, hut eucdny ennui.-.too rr,
congregation, on " The Present A-ncvU '
"
. . : . Rovolutioo." The ll-'-'l
„. whiU
it paper
: .-" J todu juiiiiv 10
$At (Suvopriu. tf tivvoo))ouilrii(c.
Anti-Slavery Opcr.itiocB in Great Britain.
during tho present i
American liwign, -the
Mlv. 11 . emu lh.it n gn.vl .1c i . ....
rllnt- 'i ... rare those nnong^l Mid ><:.j....-
•.-. Ijl, n 1ni ippcnrancc in l r metropolis
.
" "Ii
arfi
1o(l ! hi
1 pi lilVCri Inn a vulgn
1 :.l. 1
1. e.r,-,.
burlcd I.,
nor. a-i .
[hisi-rillcs
- .'
is language.
Tl..- ..I ,..„ ..
Ihoi • l.n ..ii. Dr
(.1,,- that '.' utf tV .«
PC ,.h- o tl...
bearing tl
io aupp
...;'„:'"."
.m i, .-.i In hi- priiciil po.
:„d . i. ,-.
1""" Ofll.lT.lllS : 01 the [lull ...1
f UnltoJ States the Ilrsl denominational r
" Thenrstcalilr
in" jnst adopted
i Churches of Hi
AXTISI..Vi:i:V /(.' YI7.T-'
i- i ."n.). attended by "
Ii I gnvi .. I ...
I uudlrl: f tnlclll
TWEXTYPIFTII
PtVNSVLVARU IRTI-SLAVERV FUR
THE SECESSION MOVTBIEflT.
lion of llie Rev. Wni Fh uck.lo -.
i,i -i i
hurchrsol Iho United Sui
(11-lM StOlCl. Hi.' »..! f Of '"
nt M, .oCily ..I
num. some lofnr -
[ Philadelphia, who,
... I,,
i<ii. •iii:i: t:t: .
, ,.-, i.,-. ...
js c! (lie meeting I
-
address lc II. over on si
:ul,.., with t'.. Slavo I'u I . .. I
.-. report is before us In «( AurU JJruV/.
i : -...j •". I -- Hie 1,1;
...... ,....., . ...I...- by inBllR.itiooof Hi
.. .1 oi1k.ih.ii this it Ire) (o hcdlrc up the
Doctor's w a) W. 1*. I'll tun, Ksu. occupied the chair,
I o platform wore ii goodly number of eminent
M - ''.' ' ..ii". ad. a • bii Intri - Lory
.1 was followed by II.
supported n rci
,..i...
ogive Ui.
siooaries to rltii tugitivo slaves in Canada IV cat, arc
tin! collection Of SG.OOD fnv the erection of a chapel
school nt Toronto, Canada West, J understand
bare already raised about S-UW). .Mr. SIIIcIibII
published mi interesting boot on the condition uf thu
colured population uf Canada, which contains
valuable statistics, ii.nl much infunii'itinn relating!
' Underground Hail road." Mr. liny, n colored gonllomnii
from Chatham, Canada West, is delivering very abl
nt.il eloquent speeches on the subject nf America
slareiy, nnri in, meanwhile, mininff funds Io establish
newspaper on b la return.
Mr. William Craft, who, Willi bis wife, escaped frui
slavery in Georgia, ucarly twelve years ago, baa brnuul:
adventures, will, llie title of " Running a Thousnti
Miles for Freedom," and is engaged in lecturing in cot
neetion with llie London limnntlpnli.in Comiiiillee.
Lastly, us rcgnrda tile ngeney of i-oloi-cd persons i
this who I.I.
pUr..:ll,L.- .iliihlivnaltll ii
slaves in Kentucky, utid bare redeemed theuiselves,
their wive! and seven of their children, nt u cost of
SJ.SUO, and are nnw hiililln- nt..-* tin^a with n view ol
bondage.
Methodist H[ii-i.-...piil Chui'tli in Cincinnati, lie has beei
lalien by the hand at the Wesloynn Mission House, nnd
will, 1 irtut, be liberally helped by British Methodist:
The itinerating Inborn of such poreana as 1 have noi
referred to tend to keep alive and extend the onl
slavery feeling of the people here. I could wi-tb, how
ever, that if it were possible, the exei-liunsof all of Ihei
might be directed to the one simple object of the aboli
lion of slavery. l)ut we cannot have it ns we wiali, and
wo cannot Withhold our " Gud i-|.ei-d " from any who
ore eceleing to alleviate, by wliiitcvor means, the eondi
lion of those who -ire the victims of prejudice am
oppress inn.
We have had a smart Controversy with the Uriti^l
Colonial Missionary Society, for the shortcomings ot ii
lUjojles
irlUi the Slnvi l'i
by il. Hoi Uenry II..-. belui. n n.le a brief b-.u
rhirjinnt ii. Id..—, nt wlii.i. he ..p;.'.i.l the ln-1 <i
cflcciii'i-iy to II.. Si-' Y..rl t.,.lt,x... l,.it fur m rom-te
in regard to I'r Chcovoc nud hiiuuclf The resolution
having been i-loptcil, Or. C .-. .- ro-e, ..nd, niter
receiving a in. .1 : I. .1 ...... ie. proceeded 10 deli vera
mnsterly atldnss. !..r .. p.u-t I «h...!.. 1.1 leapt, we
hope to Unci room inn future number, iiu defined with
grcnl clearness the diller w between genuine aboli-
tionism and its eouiueri.il, anil replied, point by point'
to the " Trotest " lately sent lierois the water by the
pro-alnvcry malcontents in the Chureh of the Puritans.
After a few pertinent remarks by Rev. Henry Caldcr-
wood and Dr. .Symini^iun, in (.upport uf lie. CheeV'
minion. Ihc inCiiinir itdjnnrned.
aiuucii of run i-uhitas.<
Iblisb the following resolutions for the
.ii.reprv.wnt
lie asks fur ai
lVherens, a
from Chri-tian nnii-slavcry men.
iiiiibci' nf prions, unlv a part nf wlu.m
thei- .if the CIiiiil'I. .i,- III,. ~-..i- icly ul" il„.
Without tl]ee..,inil1,.-.b of the P
sent ofthc Church,
mil publiuhed a for
"
Dr. Chcuvi
Re olvi I flinl
. id nppcal ; that, in our
riftht, ninl proper, and that tin
i-cf-eill lilini-ti-y depend
the pl.iiu. pltnplu
pollltiu, an.) so<
i i.i ... i „
Sathnnlel J
My t i I..
.. i. ThvirnctWe pmironal intorc
n oir uieutingn, and lluii- uenei
...;..! i hi., i, den n visit la Ibolr I
...-I .. •••<.: pleasant f.a.-. ni to :
fi..|... fitly .ln.rl.e,.. -i.- f -.
.1, ... .- .'.. . ,i.
.M. I I.. ...... . I I
ion ami e ".'.
i.ic among tl. i: I
Riven upoo Lone I'lituJ, nt
ns, mil." tin
:i In. 1. 1-..:.-. i ii nnd ^liiii
Church
!• by i:
in the New
rjrc.iehing. I I
t lV,e.l
i i iyr-,j lili.-r.i) i iiiuiler. well kr.onn
:. Vi ,ii Mr ting ..' |", ......'. I, .
is .1. . . i. Mi unwelcome
i. iron M-Crj a
liberal thcologlral (oni and tend cr.olr*. Ills ve6ldenco
rue or the t Lraullful I highly oriinntented)
ii a Iho i- ii I, nnd toll I was cordi.i i^ ,. 1 i ,
Uiselfnndfn y.
Itelier ;: from Long Wand, I wan very glad of the
... |...- ui ..: Hi hist Montbl) Anil-
i > JIi ii... it Ii. i hcci. r's church, ol ivbh h you
given some ncc .; in Tin; SrjtMMitn A lone
I. i . .hie is that inocting, In Hie midst
iiiii'iii<i.li- .t fnsililrw Churches midtvorsbippers
} Lit) >l I, :
nib-:
ligbi
ball dedicated to freedom,!
ave two lecture* io modorolc siicd but intclliguui mid
ppreciative audience*. 1 am imlobted to Mrs. M. A. K
InKtv, a dovoled, lnithJid fvieud of llie slave, and to
lr. Uisliv, for (.[lleicut enupiMMtion and generous liopipi-
tallty. Subsequently 1 attended n deeply inlercsling
iEEN, Dnn. Gkiiiiit Suitii, Gkoroe W. ptrrsiu, and
icrs, were present. An account of llie; Co menI ion i
lice yon have nh-endy published.
I gave two lecture;, in the Mclhodiit Church at Fair-
Id, in this county, on Mi.mh.y ami Tuesday evenings
;t. Tliero is a large nnd thmrUliinc: .ieademy located
re, GOine of the sludcnls of wbicb were among my
arers, Fear of infidelity, nnd self-sntisfnclioa with
: election of Lincoln, on the part of the people, gnvo
moderate sued nudlenocs. My Strictures upon the
:csdon movement at the South have been warmly
il heartily responded to, evincing no great sorrow
long the people at iho possible prospect of Dis-
speak 1, ll.ii
I'h.iivli, nud mi Siiliii.lay and Suridiiy nevt al
CouveutiDn at Pulniid. with Sinus It. A.ru,.;
ithcrs. At Falrlleld I was very kindly and pleasniitly
nlortnined in the home of Mr. and Mrs. 1). W. Cole.
endera. I am also indebted in like maimer to Mr. L.
L. Kolsoy and household. Mr. Kekey is una of the
mcer Aholitinniats of this State, devotedly attached
l'i.-- /.iirnid-i ,
rc.n.ieinc aliv.iyi in ihc service of our
ase. A.1H0S M. Puweli.
Tlllil'VIVMM! LCTTKKD.-
IV.lI.I., JVll, llUVill.lt llll.l
incoln, thus enlightens us as to the civ
Southern correspondence :
mentioned Ih.ii Me. Lincoln iu.d ui
,-,.n-..~p,>nd.n,";e null llie Eolith. Tl
ti'tlees li.llll tlnH .luurler which
:
to see. Miasivi "'
of 77tc
Willi Abraham
of his
relnt: ) the
ratcil from III-
because he was nol permitled to estnbliah a "negro
pew " in the Mission Chapel. When llie facts wire Ursl
disclosed by the 1 Inn Etiuincljcirion Committee, Ihcy
worshippers to take th
tho whiles, and they
" That the above arrangement
conlinui <>. nnd freedom of ncc<
of the building tn nil pernojii
color; nnd Hint, in the event
being" complied with, the coi
Jlitsioii'irj' Society
en secured !
h hai
r, frolished hi a London papei
that the conduct uf the Committee ii
the e(Ciption •/! iu neliou ju.'il nnlie.
blameworthy. and Mm! the le^ululinu
btvve been recorded in ilecemlier l.ii
fully a oof t;
a of the Colonial
COu recently puh-
i ha.
adopted by their Missionary. The virtual snnetioi
which they then nilbr.led to Hie wrongdoer caused i
most excellent man, the liev. W. P. Clarke nt Canada, ti
end his connection with the Society.
You Will see in 'JV Jnli-SIUbon/ Adcocalr. for this
month, a lung letter from Hooi^o Thompson, exposing
Ihu doings ol" Tl.r jl„fi-.SI.ji.rv llrp.rltr, in reference
Dr. Chcever. You will probably deem it right
reprint it, nnd it will then speak for itself. Thin lett
was written in coniicnuciiec of the rejeclinn of one si
for insertion i" The T<ci«jrlrt, in vindication of I
on opening 'J7.r IUp.>rkr for the present month,
Iheru the protest of the nialco tent memhers o
Church nud Society, which yon cry properly phi
your /iro-slavery department, t id ably replied
son to believe, w W IB f the editor soin
before Dr.Chcci. i . 't 1 ! f.u- Scotland. I
nppei .mint f.-n..;..„
1 ami paid fur, ns such, in
British Standard. It was sent to 77,r Ji(j«,rier, wit
simple request fur in insertion, i.n.l is fnrlhivitb prin
yraluifouil;/ with these wuiilu pivli.ied—" In order
to lay ourselves open to partis amhi p." Such ia
justification sought to be set up for the publication,
through ten sneeesaivo months, of a series of de
tory libels upon one of the most noble and heroic
amongst Iho advocates of God's truth, as direct!
ngalnst tho infinite iniquity of idnvery. And this in
publication sustained mainly by lliotu whose pcculii
characteristic it is to inculcate the charity that "thin
ethnoevil/'
In tho latter part of the great struggle for the nbo
lion uf British colonial slavery, and especially sobse-
qnent to the return lu this country nf the aposlol
lion-hearted, but porsecutcd William Knibb, no rt
giousbodyrwithtlR. exception of the Society of Frieni
was more tho rough -g. dug in ibupp.nition lothesyBti
than the Baptists. It ivas that body that, in 1S33, ecnt
it iv,. In-,,,- ivilli unleiened |.l
e kind nn.l cordial re.epti
by the Cliri^lian (hurch,.
Resolved, Thai ,...,. ... th . ,. ,.,-,..,,.
,;nrded io Drs. BatelielDr, I indHih, mil Giithri
Dr. Chcever,
"
ember S, liiin.
wii al a mcctiiiL' of Ihc Hoard, held Nov
Tuns. ,1. Iiu.
Thk -V."- 1'r.rA" (*mh« iii trying In calm the lei
the .-Invelnilderv) l.y leterring llicui to Lincoln's
-1,1 very ebillii.lb! illl.l ],l..:.lv'..-, ;l|. eiillllliniil ill his ill
with Seniilor Douglas. After .moling what he ha
in regard to the duty of nun-inlerfcrcuco with sli
in tho Slates, the Fugitive Slave law, Ihc nbolit
slavery in the District "f Coluinbiii, the ndmissi
new slave Stales, tin- domestic slave Irado, and the
social and political equality of tho white and black
rupiilous pro-slavery sheet indorses
n these
"Tlll-M
,.,i,;|.,-
-"et forth with ndisliuctncus
,g or the purpose of llie 1'resi,
ids of Abolitiimisti will, I,
net
1 the mun who holda them ;
ited for hilt
, Lelie
. him
and o
.nij.lisli ,
uliuiniiiciiiiou. Itul'he luis'iic
/, i-',,l,i,.l ,i Hi: moil tiHIilint'u
j.n-ily. i.|ipn-.-.l i" hi-
.... I, mi. ntii. ii. nn.l /,- :.t,i
ami .vi.Iiinn mariMrr U'jaii
i,.,- n-y.i.i", ti,-- . i',, :;.';,.„ ,.;. I,.,.-- ).,<, . ,„jiMu,.j i.
'for Ihc toxl UcentyjiVc i/f.tr*."
We commend this language of T7.e Otisrrt
study of those Republicans who have- been so
under llie criticisms of Mr. Lincoln by Abi
What hare wt. to expect from nu Admi nisi rat:
principles in relation lu slavery nre indoric
pro-slnvcry sheet .'
Those who iniughiu that tl
ralion of a President holding such principles
In the Jubilee nre certainly doomed to a bil
polntntcnt.
eir postmarks reveal tl.,- I'net
it th,- v-ieiiliii liii-i of l!illii>e..eair i-: hi.! cunlincil t.i the
.. I'..inlsnni1 Marshal liyndiraolliee. Ciifertunalelv.
, . ii-iiiarks .if nunc ol llie in :Au,k tlmt their wrilor.i
. in. i devoid .it otluenlion, ii .l,~iiiui... ui dreencv.
Ileis Ihreiil.'iiinjt ihalh. in nil il. l..ruin, n.s llie peiuiliy
hin high position, me in. .. :.l.ni„l;inislill. They are.
tuiir;.-, inniiily an, .,ii iiioim, Iiu. ugh i. few bear real
.me!-. Suuie nee -it'i.,-,1 in lii. ruglvpbics said In be
...ii n i.nli I., llie ' Saereil Order" ui- ^.uillui'll
ulliei-hodil," which il.r,:n,n- Mr. Liiieolu Willi a i,ud-
'ii an I iiniimely n. king-., if. A few nre oriiainciiteil
i Il skelcllCH ut e .(.;. Ili...,, l.y clldn I, ,l-.L-.,ilill
the htiletlo. oi-.ii'iilh by ,. liitlilriliii.- Mroke : anil in
rly nil, the tbenl....'y nl (lie wril.-iv. i.i indicated by
inged f.
- thre
H A' he
viL-tn.i>.Tixi( in Ii.i.iMii"-.— In I. liicag... the other day,
ru woman named Fli?.a, whn had escaped from
y in thelerriloi-y of Nilumkn a short time before,
arrested ns a fugitive slave. The United States
Marshal, in taking I he winiiiiu to jail, was slopped i
street by an excited crowd of negroes, nnd was
[idled to give the woman to Ihc city police, who lodged
her in (bo Armory tor ~.i(e keeping. The nest moi
a Justice issued hiii warrant again .t her fur a breach of
the peace, and she mis lnV.cn out ofthc Armory by lb
Sheriff of the Comity, anil while lie was un tho wn
with her Io the Mike el ihc niMghtrrite.nhe was rescue
by a company of people of her own color and carric
olf—tho wlso ones only know whither. The Jus'tii
who issued the warrant, tho Sheriff who executed i
nnd seven other persons, have been indicted in tl
United Stales Disli-iel t.'i.uri for violating the accursed
Fugitive Slave law. Thus is Ihu " irrepressible
diet" kept up!
ir tidily year-.
la* feels its hlflu
i. Shall the ticgr.
ancipalcdr The I
in,- Urolhrra.
I il. l:ih .nis
ITW. ih.
ii nf
.-:''
dch Anil .;c.l
f trial by jury
nu nery man. Northern or Southern, who. op..
111 I
.1 •. I .... I a .: ivcliotding popular
marl) ulUrine. , it, I., I, ,11 .. I I.1-, ni | |, .
.i,,,,. .|
in." fur nun I ,vil .- .1
(
..hi,., I freedom, ns wel
I.. i I
i
.r>. ...-.'. fr. . .1 uf the Bla-co i
and upon al
i.' V. munplibilllu a t..ku no cogntiar.c
I-Htcf, weinreihecouihliriii,.,.. . .
tbu fi
Hint lb
.-.la . i- ll.e ..
• alt of „, longospo,
.![,. , (
on.1 .-..
iiiv.iii!) f. -.-.-..
he piintipks of crjuiiablo tr.if-
... , mdfl i. I jrc ton well
an here. I'roiu our coadjutors
hope I., tccuivu valuable ecu-
r arllelei of merclinn itse ma)
ci. (Hike. So 107 North Fiftli
to any uicoibcr ol the Com-
1 1
,',,,.' uinsicr, nr.d [Sua ii, ,.l. wiw defeated."
ClUH-iU M. JOMN. 'II, New n.l ,..s /i
. -f . - i, mil
Ill 1.0*11 JrvtlLTJ,
;:;:;'::,.':'.
.I:,,-,'.', ihcr. 'bj
ti>-uii i l'i i 'it.i
i , -. i i.
1 ..
MauvSu.iw,
i-. -,','i
,,|, '„',".!.,';„.!!,",..'„,
r>i:, i
1 1>I . Mlllilll-N. Tho M .. ! ... hna notified then;
1 v.. ...,,-,.„,
Jliiiv C. Wi. ....
0111 Tl'AR Y.
Diril in Weymoo i,Nuvembcr2d,M.iRi Westu
,
one of the earli stAholitionisls.
In Llopkinton, Ma-ss., on the lKlh lust,, K5SK J!
,D„ 1 and formerly of Fr
ged Ii years.
In the ik-n Dr. Merrill Ihc slav
rui'.e.Kl'li ni 1 devoted friend, lie
iti,l, ii its earliest days, nd his
ind a d pur.ie Wt e always responsive
I th- Inn
nnd friends of the family at
:et, First i
siikuco, Ko. II
The cause of Freedom in Pennsyli
nother uf iiu heat aupporlers. Jol
lenlilied with the Anti-Slavery movement from the
CginniliBJ :.ml ,. more Ii.iiii.hI, ..',n-ne.-;l..ir rcBIlCBS
ate waa nol to be found in its rnnlis. lie had a large
cart and p liberal hand, and no appeal
u do ring was ever made to him in vain. In his death
tho champions of Freedom lose a faithful coadjutor,
id tho poor and needy a pitying and gencroun friend.
n Plymouth, -Mont-
ed.lhan llie friend win,.,' dcparlure i here record
D centre of a large family connection, and of a in
lend, d in-.:- lib. l'i, '.""I acquaintance, hid active bene
ice and oilier virtues made lor him many frie
ontKidc hiM it ciliiite circle. His manners were pi
id bis habiU retiring, bin (hen? eras soinclliinc in
nrit that was sure to attract and attach those v
one within the sphere of his influence, lie loved
uth for its own sake; lie was a man of unbending
upright Ii I
1
ks ; anil he abhorred all f.irnis of dishorn: sly.
Rentte In llie erring i.nl lull of pity for the outcast, he
o ]iatieiice wiih hypecewy, iiud was, severe in his
ivbukcs of self-righteous le-sumpliiin. Straightforward
atund, lie eoultl not hi ,ir crookedness in dealing,
.olliing was more distasteful Io him than allecta-
ii. eiini. Though he had but little to my about
in, it was a subject that lay very near his heart;
owed his appreciation of il by deeds rather than
l.y word*, "linst (hou liiillii lt:vt (<(.> ft :/!< .y—O'/ur.-.
i,,.,!."' was ,i ientiment which inel with Ids hearlit-at
acceptance.
Ccorge Corson was a consistent Abolitionist, and one
uf the most efficient coadjutors in our unuse. A utem.
bcr uf the I'ennsylviiuia Sueiety from iu origin, he was
to the last one of ils most coi^inl and uogrudging sup-
porters. Most sadly shall we miss I) in I from our ranks,
and keenly felt will be tho bereavement of bis J
lure. But we shall have for cur consolntion
(bough nbucnt in hotly he is present with us in
and that the example of his life remains for our h
The memory of one so good cannot fail to Incite
who loved him to emulate his virtues.
Tut; Lctteh iiu ii Swrr/fciiuvii. which will be found
n the fourth pugc, will bo welcome not only Io the
uttiedlnto friends of llie writer, but to our renders
enerally. The friend who in. s.. kind ns to send It to
s is entitled to our thanks.
V.nu tiivt Wwxus.—In Charleston, on Iho ISth
co was an inunensi. galliering to wok e llu 1
atntives of the city on their return frotu Celont-
-i-e. ai members of llie Legislature, they had
i active pni-t in the Secession movement One
of these representatives, -Mr. Porter, showed in his
speech Hint he had read the lecture of Wendell Phillips,
published iu the.se columns last week. " Why, lelluw-
citinons," lie exclaimed, " nu orator of Mnssaclnuotts
(Wendell Phillips) bin said, since ll.e election of Lincoln,
that it is tho flint time in the history of the ttepublic
thai the slave bus elected the President of tho United
Slates. Yes, felloiv-cltiicns, mark the taunt and tho
instill, thai the slave has elected tho President of the
I „ii, .1 Stab And it i- true. But alongside of that
fan. when it e> written down in the history nf tl
II. public. th.r> will I..- wiittcn another fact, which
this : ihat Iheru was one. at least, of these slnvoholding
States Ihat refused, with otter scorn, unlo tho very dis-
ruption of tho Confederacy, to submit to the inaugura-
tion uf a President elected by a slave." If South Caro-
lina cuts herself adrift from the Union, she may find
her slaves, Ore long, lining umictliing oven less to her
mi.., I than electing a ['resident.
Tin: lli-i. UI.-.-I-.-. Fimii.v. consisting "i" John W.riuleh-
inson and Mrs. Abl.y Hutchinson I'alton of the original
qunrklto company, and Mrs. Fannie B. itutchiiisc
(wife of John W.) and Viola G. aad Henry J. Ilulchinao
their children, nre giving n scries of concerts in lb
city and vicinity. On Monday evening they eaug to
eisiwded aiidii.nce nt the Athenemn iu Brooklyn, and
Thursday evening fit the Cooper Inslitulo in this cit
They will sing again in the placo last mentioned i
Mnnday evening. Sixteen years ago, when anti-slavci
opinions were unpopular, llie Hutchinson Family,
constituted, did nut hesilate to sing the songs
freedom, thereby giving great oll'enee to the pro-slave:
press and io many persons who, hilt for that circui
stance i
would have done much lo advance their pec
interests. Tho Family ns uuw constituted will
found, we venture to say. equally true to their ennv
lions. Iiu and hear them.
... ..i , ., ..- |
1.1 fn, ,,..,!„_. a
,".,.71.'1 th.i llioy w.r.
Ihc
The, III.-, .x
'
iiccocdiujlj r. |. cruph. d north . rofusi
pn.-sci.^Trfl. 'lbs movement - an I m ol ai
ordinnnco hitherto a dead letttt. hut now rrviied
" il is feared thru in the midst ..I" niilioi|.nkil
ileslitnlhlii next winter at (In- N'ordi. crowds ol pau-
pers will llood the Southern cities.
A despatch from Washington to Tt'.f. lkrul-1 s.T.vii
The Fire-eaters have been admonished by lite Union
nan that their present eonr-c I-, i.-uiling to stir up
Invo insurrections. The more intelligent mnhittoes,
,et a plan for pn.loiigingtlii'ir (..tiii of servitude, which
they h.avo been led lo suppose, hv their mnslera*
speeches, would conic lo an end wilii the election nf
Lincoln. Many fear that lh.:_v inni beeome =o exns-
peraled by the probable .ieknt ot' antieipatcd emnn-
i|,:ili.,ii Ihn.iigli cllbrl- ai 'e-ce.-sion, Ihat limy will
irise in revenge. All good [.eople shudder nt the
possibility ofaoeh a result."
orrespondent of The Hcrnkl writes :
" Tho exhi-
bition Ihr snle of pnrl)-.-iih ..i' I .in. In, in Ii., han-t.-
]dace, New Orlcaim. on the iiili or lihh ins!., so exas-
perated the people that the exhibitor barely escaped
violent de.ith nt their hands. What if Lincoln were
to appear ia propri-i /••ri.iim at the same place? Iii
would be llayc.l alive, t nu a Ijnion exist when sucl
feelings rir.. enlei'li d i. cuius! it~ chief magistrale
,1...:. i IY,-1, n ,.„ il,,, l..„i thing thnt cold lie done for
the Cnion now- would be In .send Hid A lie on u alio
ilgi"image to 'ew Urlonnt. lie would have ao mx
: prepnre his inaugural after thnt."
Tl.: Ttw ':•}• : -.liiiliiH Wayne, el the United Stab
upi'enie f'e.iirt. ha-, it i-i unilci-otoo'l, written a lelti
. a friend in »"ii~l.uict.,ii s.. in;.-, .uneiig other thing .
nit ]".iui-lil(ln ol lb,.- citi/cus el Sal an nab ,ire opposed
Senator Tuonih- dclii, red n speech nt Mi Ik. lac- .ilk.
in ..(tier ilne. in (lie eont-sv uf whieh lie said he hud
rv .icorgin in Cungr.-ss for tilteen years, and
lanked its l.-.'isl it.,i-H Jin- thus Inan.i-ilig him, but the
iinor, II'
1
-lid, h.i.l been ..ul.-i-r. ,| a, king :i:i lie i
live it ;
that ,.„ II,: ill,
;
-;f j;.irca ii-j-1 Iuj resigi
c stated that mean.
1 lying In llie ereel
Immense quantitii
, break open the jui
ivovo provided by a vc
ine.-,dl".ll.l 1-
. i, .banned I,
if things."
.-lif.s
,r ..r'lii,-
,, [:; A i imin.—Last
,.i...|al..ll,mili"i"i.'ini-
ib.ir.n" the ci|>en-ie "I
c Governor power to
mi each coiiiili Willi
bieh lie- Slate should
i.I'llicSl.itc.IAl
'"'j't'/.TlL. .i/t'ImM
cek in advance of the
.1- the election '( I inC'.lii.
Southern Slate
'//,.: ttmW c
f Georgia say
Irown i« a humble, pit
Hie Co..
.-kalicl
ii.neel :
1 the |.ill
i'viis of ^outh Cirohna ami .
Iiin the Inst few days,
poiidint, speaking of the Govt
Vrtin I,,. II L-nnu-n rlnil- Cnnknown tin
I- Hull, nud far frmil lic-
schoul." And a (1, .'!.
I.i~t el" -i.lllll r.,|-..lil,a
.. when once in fur il it li-i Is say In-
the very last men who will yi, I.I. Me is an,
liars of the Mel hod in l'|-i--.-;.[..il i.'l .1. iu tin-
men. civ iveidlhv. and is reprcfcnted a= not
.
lig tor anydiiug but the w.l _ ..I b.
77ie ll.rM's Washington des|iati
A letter Ii i n slrone cotton
lys that Ihe.-e is really no unau
half of the nee
dadciphia."""
"
Hid alt the |.rel.-' I ..la-
South Carolina *
to throw the tea ovcrbua
Tile Baptist Convention of Maryland hf
a.ldre-.s. pivpand In- (In- lie v. t'r. Fuller
foeinerlv ot" South Carolina, i.|.|.,::.line In i
in Alabama, Gcui-giii and a.mili C u-oliu:'
liuab'i-aii.ui. forbearance, nnd brotherly
period nf excitement.
J. C. Morgan ,t Co. received on Monday
,f Ihr
his piper, ,
ie,7i.
;
-ii.-..,
Cnowpun.—Wo are reluctantly compelled to postpone
letters from Mrs. Mnrtincou, Rev. W. II. Bonner of
London and Stephen S. Foster, ami much other mi
for which we hoped to tlnd room this weefc.
Tub Lnotc ,ini> rnr. Miiri.ii.n-v or Si_nt:nv are vividly
illustrated in Ihc extract we this week print from tht
message of the Governor of Georgia. His ideas of
Northern society betray incredible ignorance or
sure less eH>ontery,
lli:nti:ei.iTiox vv Slvvi
nre reaping the iirsl frui
giiieral ikpre.-iali if
giniil paper -ay: Ihal Xi
mure than ".!.' per cent, 11
In, iu '.in in 00 per cent.
AST!-Sl.t
l'iii.i-i:erv.—Tin- .sl.i.eb"
i of their dliuni'.ri panic
icir buiuan property. A
! negroes have already fallen
id second and third rate bands
ii M.:i:
i. ilKiiuH Gaitiix*. -I
..Xcwport,
. South Trenton.
.Trenton Vlllugi
asked, if she should sr
; troop*, having only
ns Sew York City,
land." A diplomat n
ie innniry if briuiee
lied, ''Oh. yes! ti outitli Cnrobn
"-Tribiin.
will abolish slu-
Thelbib'ighiX.C.l n-y.V/Ticiys : 'Already the elliil..
.i—.- — lifesling themselves. Ki
ceiil., and mum other pn
ate. And for wdiat^
bl in lUvlupl I." linid-- t
i now wealthy will b
" .",'7
- .."
,.s Picayune relates this story: "Som
fancy store in this city, discovered
slock of fancy articles eicpaied fu
an, and an immediate demonstrntio
Special gioticw.
Pi
ilH
if 11
„l,.ll.b
mil Fair Cii i.,:-it„-. Cireic e 1 ,i
• .:„
l.,ll
t'.roie
!:,!-. i
B^Sociclywlll l.r held
,,, Salnnlay, :;,... 31
tl-tiui! Kl *T.
.., tin-
it New
Ii. nt 1
Axxx E. Dicctksos will speak in Itucka Count)'
Po., as f..iii.v..- :
'"in So*enlli .lay uvenliip, Jim in-i. ,,t 7
oVIiK-k. in Sewlowu Hall, 1111 Woman'. Illglit.. It,, r,th. at
Tlilfl 1I.11 ,-i.:niug I
,
.'7lh in-1., lit . o'cl.s-li.li, V .i.||,-,.
011W1.ma11Mti1.-h1-.
Kcnlictt S.|mu... tlii-ltr ('..iii.ty, ..,, ,:,-,, all. day
el eiiillg. [lei. I't. .11 7 o'ete-'k.r.n W an'- l(ii:lil-. ami l|,e
^rtvcvtiofuicuts.
ladders. -I,. nu.d the Here, nnd poor (JL'U-'-'. ' 1NTUAL1H TH'i.V- r >| |||l; Jtllil.F. — I M
threat.- "f rope and lamp-] t. brolto
l? u
'''."''.' ,' .' .',
:
,
:
,
,
|
>l
,
",' ',',' '"."","'
,,idr.-d. Being hard pivs-ed. he look i°< «it «.niti4ieu<,m olib- ,..'-[v~i e ,, 1,. i'w, ',.[
,'.r',",'^. 'ii'.i'j
IS, IB.. ..Salorday and Sunday .
-
i. V. [uvis°ttS""'
1
*''1"
" lS,l«....Tue,.la.-.md Wedn.-Mlay llr.s-k.f, brake aied &-- 'ingu.ve by bikinL- hit It.c kek-np. It iTiyHKLI.KIl A Wll -rCS obllLNC M V U' .f-
:
11 M,21...,ThuridoyandFriday Salisbury, I
VTM dUconred on inquiry, that the boy employed by Y t>ffi«, Mi Bi<*ln/, N.« Yo.i.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 24

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National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 24

  • 1. ~r intfairal Siiti-f liaifi'ii JStittitlimt, IV. ON fATl'IKiAV, amiwicw anti-sj,.ut;rf sonivTv, PENNSYLVANIA AttTI-SLAYERY SOCIETY, 107 _Y. F.flh St., ohm-, Arch, Philadelphia. -,z: llr-ciing my fcnllcrcd property, I "iclud of clothing were missing. J Krc. ng morning, anil fool. Exhausted r[. I dr.cje'i il mi iv.eirv e about three mik-s, wher " mo. and presently three in it Mill speed, ordered mi' iinira of Timmiii at toe south J law in Northern Alabama limn ill.- press bns y ado known. ^ iin.iiili- -in,-... ;in i .|i;.: iiii il friend n nil well- known teacher. . H. rlllis, Ksi[., at Kingston, Muss., v.-.iv.-l . l.-i. , nn.ild acquaintance, Mr. J. J. '•'i-."l ^ ' iliii;iiin I'd.. A In., ollering him "' l ". ' IV,,,. >[• .1 in mi academy (it cknnorville. inh i-li'..il, ..| 1'bh offer .Mr. Ellis thought fit to decline, l.iii 1.. ..in 11. Ml in., in his stead. Sep. tcinhcr-l.-l in.mi! ! ...u... u.natinnfrom Mi-.Giers, requesting mi- il Id. ir. .] il.. situation in question, to visit the Ninth in A.I |, n(] been BUfltJping for some li ti.ni j, .liu.niiri disease, my friends thought ilmt :, wni-,,i.,i- ,li,„ rl i.. thnnonrs might prove benoheiiil to my health, mid mlvj.-.-d mo m att6a the oflor. I started from ll.isiou .f,.| item I ,.. r .1. lV,r North- urn Alabama, via riinrlcston, 8. C. Among tho few passengers upon tin. alcinior Pouth Caroh'iin, there was /.V'« ..,v/,,,„r. 1 mndellm ..„ !, , I,/., n tho i ii,...l,.,_ but n I'm i seemed nn nlion to Ihe I'mim some [jinn must be devised ti ,UW..,,I|I, ,,| pro™ nil All old law uxiala in (ho Texas nlndiics, forbiddin ny person IVi.Fii lending with tin, slaves : hut nu on ignrda it in iti.'ir n.j i-Uln-. rlino'i d.-idings. nni- mur tluln the peor.li. of Indiana do lln: " little" law. nholess, here wns a hidu^-ph...... -,. ., ,., eut to the su.ro of lr.S--.,,, sell,, bam, ,,,,.1 mi- p.. : t„e,-|y bought it. His fool wns in. lie i-1-.'.-i.-.l-tn.'.ll.j il,..-r,.i,i,„iti..,.. ; ,„,l |, ,,„i,..| '- and also i the The rnflinus l . , ^, .. r ?..i:!!Ml l sir<v!'FHit(iMv i 'ir.vw 1 ;,'j,' k with him a spel'1 first." ,ccn*ti»i; in.: dock of a sinking i-hi scnmi lias died out in liis Apparently ' boys, let's talk i'th Ihn number]. -.< oiilhs' with whieh the Ah" nnsseeni wouttouTirnii.il their elegant speech, I...I iiich I do not can' to repeat, In icskod, " What sent you down South lo murder ua aLU" 1 lold him 1 "" by in v i tut i a n uf'u slaveholder, and if they would go wilh mo 1 would proi-i- in. innocence or.anvdosign ainsi their slaves. Thin win rec-ived wilh'jeere. Finally, the) sniil." If you will uoufess the truth, thtit you comu to ulir up (h.i shives, nml tell ufl who kill you." plitaseil, bi rumninod niltn. find eviuecd no lenra of ue.ath, the viJ- n -,! PI . - '.[ tl.-it I wns nriued, nntl eoinmandtid me ;iii; up mi pi. tot' Whin 1 (old thnui I Imil no up .ii I. ' i ih' i . ''K..I me and threw me into oud o! wntiT by tin. r.miUide. The poad was ono l.h. . .-. .m common in ihe -South— :i mure bog-hole, "nn ling with venijiimui rcplili>. I sank knee-d.Tp the mud nt the bottom. Tliu chief ruffimi cut n large pole, with ivhirh he ihn. a(.n..l to split inv tkull "ill.-- 1 attempted ' ,vife of Rev. Tho. he hung for violnti..„ .. lor li.iing ai, A/Mliliouisl. Tie wna I in ICnnans, niihont a dollar of no llroajwct of meeting his f'atni perhiips ii eve Torn ii ro„*Ti:sns. ... diatL'luirel, ortl,. mi.l. I„nl I,,!,,,,-, ,| ArkuiiMii. fur M.yei'iil yenra. Ituwns rin (i i-.nfti,/ ii i-i.ii nr.v i|iK.-linu, hut lurnndf to he n iiioih.nil... HW Sliiti.. always luvn i,t ,n-ace with his mug in.ellin • I'SilIj nhu^-rl. l-min,. t l |n,?,-" , j'.,^!i'|ilrr"i;irc"!!I! -. iiiie.'.i, on... of tlm Irn.ti,,, |-,..|,., nLS „„ „.| , | '""I very uupru,],,,!', .p,,..,,,,,,,.,, i,i,... (lr.",onv pohticul ,-,,„,, .„.,. ,„,„,„ (||/1 , ,, r , ™ ['ixllu.g an OM',1,,,,,-1,..,,,,,,,,, ,!„„, „.,,,, n,,.,,,, ,, |h[|[ "'I' 11 ' -'-"'." ' p.-'-sit.l... to control or suhdue 1 n^ngover mcidnm, ivhi.l,. ,llu „„ h ,-,, „ yu ,. u in|( , " l - •- :.,.-« I,.,; ti,.. prog.-.,-* of moii., it,.. ,„„„«(.„„„.,„ "„; rri,,. J, tho iiy trunk In Jodiir.il ion, l.'.'lulTVil'y'ttiVunir'wl <.f slnvery. Sin.-., hist Fubruury In, [ holl new Th.. another Cm,,, |i, too learned ol ro-rue. niiii tri.,.1 him agni I :i Ih;.. ii rh.it he would lemo il,.- iii.'ly. II" leli, nml «imi m V,„li Arkaii-a..,, nliereh,. had liirmerl, pr. thilt I...- willlhl be safe IIIIIOIILI hi- . lint he s..mii din.:..!-,:,-..,.) that the m.i lh" aamu cominilteea, with the mhii lliere us in T'exaa, and tlml Ihev ,|,.',l,..,ipp,„i„. ,1 . ongregatiiiu e orgnnitatioiis nblige Vilh L rose hi'fiiii. my mental' - I.t ii iliifi, uli in inn, .nil my mirth, it was I. us amusing ua tin- Moutgoiinirv Ailirerliscr't ptinn oliiiy iio.-i.' and whiskers. I must h.ave ini.jilcuia, nml luistea to neloao. hiding me uwuv tor s e lime, in an unfre- ijucnleil part of the Imi.l, i,iv„i iron, light. or iinyLhing I my locality, rind n.SMiriii^ the erowii of my' : idinry doeumonis." with pi •Id j refused to u.u.u, uuniiivr, n.^nilauls turned to It;,..- . and tell my N'orthern ..If in the :iv...| sM'uly.ii inn; ighfoi-homl ot the tlrput, hoar ; left tbe Cainrige. lie, and two by ar-otuur. 'iepijt - s.,ui..d nu, w-heru leni I. Campbell on tbe ary who had come 1 rapine, upon the :l I', slmaslcr nt Somcrville. >.n -h .1. i lotl only knows h ,.s- ..I Mr. Giera. 'lie wns him-.elf hristinn kiadiiens ili.-ir-d t.iword , at n moment when I to -h needed forgotten by me. As my nsmiilnuts had threatened to burn dowu Mr. tjiera'a house if he sheltered me. word was tent to several planters in the neighborhood, who -him..- armed with guns. 1 slept that night, for the first time, with a loaded revolver under inv pillow, whieh mnpun wius given me l>y n noble-hearted youth, himsell the son of an eslenaivo 'aveowner, with the advieo to shoot the first man ho should oiler to molest me. SuvoroJ plan 1 . r~ :preised their regret that 1 should hen. .11 it. i ifavornble an inir jiii'.iniiiiut here n.k.il ivhv ive w, „ . I.. i ,-. I .. .,-.1.1.1. ll.U.lll •i.r:. , iiud those who • ol there first should wnit for the oiIi.t.i. She hud been in iho Territory two weeks when I anw her, and nothing was heard of her buaband. She was in the ---'distressing auspeuse.nnd could notapeakol him * agitation. It was her premonition tlml he wns hung, na In- hud been .so oflen threatened that fate. Ilo was nr, old friend of Rev. Mr. Uewley uld l advi, remain licit 13, a Via ham lesion! u gl.... ..g . .,1. rr,v,-.I ., rriVfc Democrat, whieh givti :i detailed account of the occurrence. To thin art. le 1 he- have to refer those who may he disposed lo oueatimi Iho truth or ,v narraiive. Wiii.iam J. Bkewstke. lloslon. I.i,:t. IT.lsi.n. HOW ANOTHER SClIOOLMASTlilJ WAS SERVED. whoso death by hanging for the same oflenco haa benu widely published, and they were but eighteen miles apart when ambushed in the mounl.-.ina of Arkansas. It was rumored that they wanted them both to lake back to Tasns a-^ nn n.vample. One they Imvo had, and 1 fear for the other. Alter leaving Mrs. Willetle I learned fi-oma getitle- unin who had just been ii.ro.s ihe line into Missouri, ..I an incident that may or may nut have application loth, sauieen-e. lie said that down some neventy- ules in the Stale a man and a bov had ree.niiy relied on su.spieion and urj;ed to eoiife.Ss llleir j.-sniiil ih-.linaii.iu. Afo-r being clinked several lie; bov at la. I told them that iliee wr iie- iiBaa, and that the n had a wite 'there he wa.s ponug to meet. " .-II, ' .« : ,i,l n,e Missnuriniifl, " that '"'.'!"' -'' aii.h..,. 1 well take' him back for 'I toi I mil he wns taken buck K dealer. South, for the purpose ol of Hiiriard I olleg,,. ^r Mm lb-re. I. 1 Jong r from yuu .ejrj.l..,.| VTll, s. lloCov. ' When tho Judge fiii.-Led rt-mlin^ the letter, there iirooe Irouj the cuwd a Eenornl yell of execration, with erica of" llaug him! ' " Shoot him !" As soon as 1 could make my voice audible, I demanded my right aa un American citizen to be li,..ird in iulf-di.-teii.e, and oil. -red, if opportunity were given me, to vindicate myself li.un an accusation so utterly false. The honorable .liidge replied in the fol- lowing language : " Vaji arc a ti—d d—n black- hearted Abolition isl. Von eoinu from Eoaion, and tb. ii ,. pi n .le-h ngain.sl nni. lou needn't try to to send to Mr liiers-, ami iuouir.- I e.mie.-:.,ulh. and ask the various -, if I hud -pokeu to thriu ol freedom, or Uni- vith them wered, "'1 kno-.v eon lou.' doiie notlun yet. You are more sly than your co of our unsuspecting people, hv i teachur, and then, by nml by, giv-pr. 1. i .ii.-s.i~ s^nehntii.- When the Judge had ended, a young lawyer named Patterson mounted a sugnr-bon, and apoke substan- tially id follows: " Felh.iw-i'iiiieiL-i, Imvo you not heard or the horrible outruges in Texas, cnuned by the il—d Abolilioiii.it leathers '.' Have you not heard of tbe pluts in Tnlleilga t.'ouuly, lo poison Ihe apr" ami murder our tidlow-iuliicns, all cauaed by d—il Yankees/ And now, te.llow^itiieiia, into midst coincs nnother of this d—u black-buarlcd , t.i incite our uiog.-rs to died, of liolenco. Tho er ia iu our aiidst — what thall we do with hit. |i.,i,,.,,1 " K,ll I, iii,;- ' Han- linn, '- I'uilunillir.uigh ! ,„ . ,....,1,1,. [,],„. that '.-ill .. e-.. Ill I.:... .1. 1. r. mi..._ °. ' <r ^ There came nnsscogcra on the So.ith Coroli this porl leiterday ;;.... I l.arie-tou Mr, "William C. Wood .anil Mr. Blr-lgittt. - - Wood, it appears, teaching, lie was He wns destined f,: 1""' Vd. IV.-.. h. Burn .veil eitract District, .=. D. Ho look pna.«ago in tho cars from Charleston for Lis destination, in company wilh Mr. Blodgetb On the »*;, iuadierteuily, he enpreased Ids preference for Lit-.co'.n aa l'residcnt. dun) wa-i nolieed int. ..f.i l-i. ...eg to I. . and nt tho nest stop! ' p! it. "I. ?•• '! i-arslarned ehihli. for tin ..-i.-ipiartera ol an i.i.ui, he ...is waited upon by a committee, who questioned him ivs to his politics, hut be declined to give them auv satisfaction. Mr. Wood thought no more ol" the ipie-ii inning to " had been siibje.l.d. "ud continued on his journey. On nrri.iug at' Four Mile branch." tlie place wns found lo be t.'rrihU c.-;eiieil, a tidroi-aplu.- leapnti'b having probably informed ihciilizciiH of the jpinions ol the new-eomcr among Ihem. He wns immediately waited upon by a committee, who told him that it would be inipo.iil.le to permit his stay in tho place, nud advising him lo leave aa his beat emirse. They, however, did not insist, on his iuime- ale departure, nnd olTcvcd lo defray the entire pinse of hi. reliini to the eitr. Mr. Wood concluded that lie would retrace his ?ps without delay. He experienced no iuaulls c curs, on tin 1 , way If) • harlu.lon, except from a I ingh ciistoniers. as an officer had been provided protect him. On reaebing Ihat uiiy.at the suggest r i.:„ c_:.„.i„ i— oeeupfed apartments at the Guard revious lo the twiiling of the aleamer, that being "the 'safest retreat during the OKis'tilHJ escilemcnt. The n. ^t moriiing an ollicer ol" the city came down with Mr. Wood to the steamer, ami put him safely on hoard. Tb.' produce dealer, so far as we could learn, effected tbe object of bis Southern THE COMMOTIONS IN TEXAS. IiAVvnENcr;, Kausna, Oct. M. Tne present commotions ia Texas, aro in no way caused by an atleiniiieit insurrection among tho blanks, nor bv nnv .'.illusion among the Abolition is ta null negroes. Net him.' of this. Neither ia it espccinlly a raid "against the Mi'lhodisrs in that State, ua the pai-ers bine generally told us. [ have recently travelled through several of Ihe Counties of Southern Kansas, and then1 learned the most that 1 know of these matters. I wna surni lo find in nearly even neighbor! I families win fugitives fruni Tc-nlia, and havu lately arrive Kansas, where they intend ' last three vears.nnd all v.] She said they b religious papers lire! I... .en kepi from them : ti in cut forbid their holding .... inga. They could not as.se in I de together aa Northern people for any purpose, unless some weru anion them who believed slavery to be a divine inslitutioi At uresent a Northern man docs not dare lo speak d they are fast hanging oi :t to bo unsound ol recently emigrated rnes nt nil classes nnd all ages. related of a very worthy nud industrious guntle- wlio emigrated to Texas ninny ycara ago Iroiu Dis. He had oj-'in.d a large liirui. mail., valuable - '"-iiy Of inleresliB" .uld r '!!!!!;!!"!! - time th i.i app'.n.nt danger N'1-..uncd like ndrenmlo inc. t ii the very looks and nil tho'n ^ht lo protect me that it must I (trnunlinnry composure, even md escaped to Ohio, (ill our people led. IL".V'.llli n the beM _ He rolloive.1 this ohser ratio na of a ic landlord id half-align ....... limes, and then',..,,,, . )| S'ran^er, nr 1 you a lilncHiepabli id be leg.ardcil Lincoln ... fit-Id ami should support him. scrymiim with several other ill mora inllaminnhle nature, ho peregrinates on the hnlf- Iple, walked round David "Well, jus slnnd still till I look „t young before. Elf the boya up stnire -' |';, U1 UP< nnd we'" E»e. yon a e. urtli e estly declined tbe generoua olter u passengers (who were moitiv Soutbei-u' -". ivayl. uitercchd in hi, bidialf. lie was not Our informant ia ii gentleuinn direcllv nnsiLS who was a passenger with .Mr. Weni- Liko fagu," Davo " spoke nn more." enrage my per my slavery would uaus. [!.. linn-; '-. , tantl, a, : my Jurgrovc nud ot ,• my prot.-i 1 1 on, advised n ilj Walked (two bj cine o nvuid notice) to (be likoly to iKiraei atteri- rJotel.Mout hrown. The first e^., _.. of Tim Coiiftilei-atioii, (he second t'olonel Elmore, and the third egg struck Douglns. burste.l and discharged its contents ncc of liis wile, wlni siood im'inidintelv ,.n his These nru the fiels a. detailed to us by'severnl gentlemen who witnessed the disgusting nlliiir. So 1 (oT lir^fciiifjiigo intolerance, A eoi.ttiokist Huko in Ai.iii.vha,—Tho Mont- gomery (Ala.) Miiilot the 2d, says: by the name of Palmer, a daguarraiin been detected at Opelika, Ala , tampering . . Fives ol John Smith iTj and others, bnun-.n Opelikn and Auburn. He pavu severnl aegroes bowie-knives, and otliire.j:-.- ait.-mpied to instil into cir minds seditious acts. He was detected, pursued d apprehended, and the pri.-.f being positive, be ia •. .o hong at Aubura to-day." A Bell -Ei-ere It man, of l f niontown, Aln., has been [Oil, for declaring tlmt in case of disunion, la- is musket, go North, nud light iv ticket, win .LI tho train » ad deparud. one ot them brought to : waited . al. out lo move, bade nie good night, lie.s|n-ci fully, etc., ."-. STtt.viuin. MAN' BETIIAYEI) HY TWO WOMLN. pinno-foi-te Ii 3 of intolei oiing man named lieorge I'. Eddy, housea in the tru.le, at ihe rei|upsi if their agent iu that city. Mr. Eddy reached Augusta in tho 10th uf Ottoh.-r. i ml inier. d ihe employ of ti good Siutherner. At one of the houses ivluch he isitud, he eiilcrcd into converiaiion wilh two Indies, ,-ho appeared to have been instigated by some, one to raw the. young man out. lie expressed his prelerence fortlie Dell and Everett arty, hut said nothing u warrant the harsh I'hieli he subaeqiiently received. His repli iiiei-rogiitoriea by the Indie, were, however, eiltn falsely rcporlcd to tbe editor of Tke /m/./e. ni/e, South, a lire-eating newr-pajer. printed in AVayne -.liciousli ...(, st rn.d be In... ml - ' ..South Bad' " h usngi H to thi buhl and delinn k upon the.-:. of falsebood- ff,i^a^u^gaaiiir- l llJ'. i 'i'.ll,(d ^^'rl-K:RW-Tn«-'lW(m<i li,irn'v^'c»tIia , KWv'e! in~ abrupt and compulsory .r.i.'li:. lili.-illll Iilil I /n.i.y ',.'.' .^..i. 1 '.. |.n'.J. n Mr. Eddy left Augusta on the Sth iust-, by n ThestenmerAlabrimu, which arrived here T ov. 13th from Savannah, brought about 2-1 cabin passengers, oue-hnli or whom wit.- l.'iui. bed from that city because of their Northern birth. One of these persons, John Devintiey, hna called oj s.and from him we g.'ith "" tho 1st of Novell, ~ ! '>' ' I hi., rlai.,,,,.111 |ia,li,-..n..or '.IlL'tO'il 11. .in tin- r,u-ri.|..|. r.. s-.-ii. " ornery. there c of the lireckinridg present when Judg bear arms, nnd thousands of them i UOK | ]0 „ Ihcu. They can rend „„,] ivVire. ami , orr with each otherabom the urongs inllicied up,.. Should a separation take "~—~ -• .<---<k.. Ida. . an. ilh. ui in ilk eelnred tliei o their masters, He surplus , eiveil ll,cir I dependence of thos- e'pinls.tt,ei-.stiouM 1... inv.i, ,, n with tea upon illy rewarded for of the ui -Ihe oloic- o'Ud ;iinst the South. KHb-IAL TnR.vr.MK! i.i.dna (Jaiille says ir l.ineolii. was Heiited by a party while lie wan nut of the Court-houso, and carried a short 3 from the village, w lien- he was blacked com- pletely with printer's ink, mounted on bis horse, and ......i ror 1^., ], „ St. ;,[ .^ iiacomfurtahle n ailunlion .vould wish to bo in. bta, Gn., Nov, 9.—A Norlhem homccopnthic residing here, named Thayer, having been charged with uli ..ring ab.ilitii.n --.ntinieuls, wasivaited ipon by n crowd this atieruooii, and ordered In leave he city. Upon his refusing, the crowd were about proceeding lo violence, when some citizens prcacnt managed to get him lo the rear of the hotel, where they let him escape, it is presumed that he bt safely Dut ol'tho State. the g rea test -ensures of proud IS, would afford idst whu have beer, nil their live. I.ept i., r'.'. ,'.'o-7v id obscurity, who ore more loyni ti I ' ii ion of their Country, and much -. , -.,,,. „„ those trensurts, than thousands ol tin .i opp i -..ir'u who now possess tliern. ilow did. ,, i.t t!„- Knto Oi things in lln: South ! Here lb.' poor while laborer is respected na an equal. His f ilv are (rented wilh kindness, consideration and res|-,a. He docs not elong to the menial clas.e Tin- m-ru is in no sense 'the lenn his equal. He feels nml knows this. Ilo dougs to the onl,- tri... arin,.«.racy, the raco of litlu-inen. lie blacks no niasier's boots, nnd hows the knee to no on., save find alone, He receives higher wages for ln.s labor lima .lui_s the lahorer of - orliou of the world,.and Le raises up his i (he knowledge that they belong lo no ., hut tint (|,„ big-best memhers' of Ihe ;n ! their couduet is good, luld-.l-n IV THE SECESSION DRAM AT THE SOUTH, VAPOIUNGS OF THE FIHE-EATEriS. that tin main . thai iho .--ml hern ' 'on of the Onion, vi they now arc in reference Ihe event of n dis- formation of Nor" r governments, the people of tin dionbl l.e li if the negro am/ ahould bo "ta"u'gi;'t ibitTbrirne'aVis'"- morney MMbe South i^an aristoc-iaey, nut of wealth, i apend whatever haughty oppre.-sora. Aa wo did e, but it hies been forced upon end it till tho aggressors nru J. The gold, silver, and orher ml haughty Northern Abolition- nib) Inch he lives w treat tbera as »..,.„ ' 'sVvi.e; ''' :. fufii Wtjtf ( oL>teteiM*m -ich, who would ho able to protect themselves. They ivill, therefore, never permit the slaves ol'tho South to be set free among then,, come i„ competition with their labor, associate with then, ami their children ns equals, bo allowed to testify in our Courta ngniuat them, sit on juries wilh thciu.'iumch !o ihe hiillot-box by their side, and participate in tho choice of their ity with them, and ask tho bauds of their eluhtr. ,„... That the nlti- bring nboiit il f the U'l. Ir - [.nidi nib.. ™ party u. lo and that its il sebi o hv us, will, nt lead to these results. -v,.b- every cool, dis passion te thinker wli has examined '!"." i the light of all tl If the madness and folly of the people of the Northern States shall drive ub to a separation from them, we bavo will. in our.-elves nil the elements of wealth, power, aod national greatness, to an ualcnt possessid probably by no uiher iieople on the fucu or the earth. With a vast and leriile territory, possess'-.',! f every n ,-idcnce upon tho nited ii I I c Id c l through." The a. me, ha Batd, " Go back lo tliern who sent and tell them wo wish no Uostonian amon low^'ititenB, till who me iu favor of llus ma this town in two hours, say aye.'' I hen i in the negative. 1 observed, boiienr. Mi number nbataiiied from voting. Though have thought that 1 was unjustly treat dared to liap a word iu luy delimce. After listening to Dlher abusive und Iniigunge from the honorable Judge and t' cTs.aiideoiiviiiccdofthentterfollyoffitieui son with un infuruited mob, I consented to Much of the twu hours given me were bi undeavors to procure a conveyance fo* myself a .- lali.i old. ..- reb, I w durnnn. to s met by a mob hi lommanded me lo open m o unless by legal authority, a were ttmroughii k sounded for rnn sacked to la'.vyer I'alliTruii, who trunk. Hefusing to do it was broken open, osinuiincd, nnd tbe sidea of th coaled drawers. My books Houiethiiig of an ineenliaii i baructor. Tho news- pajiers which I bud wrapped about my allocs were carefully scrutinized, fine of ih.io whs u eopv ol The Hmton llerahi, which was lirsii taken for n illack Republiean ahcet, and when dLseovereil to bo a Dong Ins orgno, was pronounced by the bystanders, "n d—d tiight worse than a lilack Republican pa|>or.' There was also a copy ol" The Boittm Tracellei; wilh one of Henry Ward liocohcr's aertuons, which, how- aver, contained no allusion to slavery. The nait Beeeher added lo the ociieuioiil, but ihe climax reaclied when tine loom! aiming inv letters, one writ- 'ti 1854. For a. few protection. 'I »e, who have iperly iu Te.dus. nud many have left their families liere, being obliged to th.-e for their lives. Those iaw were very intelligent, civil and gentlemanly dieir appearance, anil would seem lln- last persons listurb thu (piiet of any community. From these persons 1 learned .-.nee of the mosl.cn rl hi- art-rending tales 1 .v.. li-t.ind to [us „._<cs they would equal any of the nillmu barlnnii..- fiial have made our own h.-tor, - - , st. But n stanll proportion uf th. rmitic, vo votappenn.'d in prmi, and m —n nl ,.l.i.- I nn t with, It was tbe reipi.-st ol the parlies that I should withhold the facts for a few weeks, lest it might he carried to the curs of their oppri ;-ora, and thus " ' "' fere with purpos" •'- s they were still hoping t. propel r li-i. . • ' Hi- .In M rot, had risen tot useful posit - in ..- en . and were esteemed by HuanitHueea, as nmnng the mo A the i ounly, This raid up.. n Free need (he past year, and Ihey wet.' country. They have oven been banished from the grave of their lamented father (or sake. Indeed, this is the " irrepressible con- flict." F.very man and woman I saw protested solcmnly aguinst there being a word uf truth alirjut the ibuuaand rumoi-s of slave insurrections, burning of houses, fomenting troubles, and Un- like, by ihe Abolitionisls. In aomu cases, it ivius believed, they had fired their own buildings to furnish a pretest fur theaa false What, then, ia the grand secret of this conflict,! asked'. 1 invariably had the every fugitive 1 saw. It ia.that the time is near when Texas intends to ho divided into two or more States, according to the terms ol her aunesalioii. Thai the portion awny from the l.ulf is largely mixed with people from the free S-lntes. who prefer freedom to slavery, and the Slave reiver wants all the strength they can get by dividing ihe .Slate, but dare not riak the Northern portion, until it has been purged of all -of her freed. 'in-loving populaiion. So they E refer louse the sovereign arm of tin nowiiig it has the power to wield any force that may defend her idol institution. This power they aro using to kidnap, bang, or drive into free tcr- itory just that portion of bi'r population that tlm .aat to be rid of when the proposed diiisi.a, -hall take place. Il is not Methodism, but Republicanism thnt they war against. They combat every funda- mental principle on which the pennwicucy of our government depends. Even free thought Is not tole- rated —aiuch less free speceh. Here, then, at the present hour, is tbe fullest exhibition of the madness and folly that is slowly but surely bringing ua all to the realisation of duty. How long can such nconGicl be rcpreisiblu ? Go into Southern Kansas, to-dny, where these incidents are recited, and ask, how long? THF. STORY OP A CINCINNATI MERCHANT. 7b Ihe liliio- «S '17" KndnnoK Oatelle. CtNctSX.IT!, Friday, Nov. 2, 18G0. An article in your paper of ihia morning, indiu me to offer vou ihe cs-sential facts ia regard to I recent experience in the South. i arrived at Komo, fin., Saturday evening, attended .bur. b and Sabbath school the day tidlowing; called „ ib. I mis on Mombn. and left, ivhen rvndv.on H . mug train. At this'place much of the hitter di-uiiion spirit wns constantly revealing itself; and here, in 'fit' Courier, originated the article which ending instrumentality in bringing on tho whieh I been involved In Montgomery. ta, Gritlin, West I'oint and La (iraugo, Gu. am I called acted the part of gentle- — iscts in relation lo thia ill uf Terror. Mr Pcvintiej' was in the employ of Harm den it Co., Expressmen, in Savanna li, and received, on Saturday morning, a notice'thnt he must leave the city immediately. A notice. was served, at the sn ,n'ic, upon .Mr. foe, an employe iu tin' same oil that he also mtisi leave. L.vpostulatioiis were use ihe :is--uraiices of both men thai Ihey bud in no v interfered with .-out hem institutions, and bad tention of doing so. were not listened lo for n moon nt ihey were threat. -i.i .1 wiib immediate death unless ev departed at onco. As no alternative, therefore, as left them but either to face death or leave, ihey li in the afternoon of (he same day. Their only fault was that thev were Northern men, Deviunoy being a native of t'liitu.h dphui, and foe of one of thi hasten, States, lln- man who was most inatruinenln their banishment, wiis oil,- James While, master o .nsporlntiou on lb- tieorgiu feu teal liailroad. Thi: bile is biinsell a Northern man, but, having lived connected with slavery iu thi than tln-y now are in Cuba or Bi Northern Stales have already enact.:. I .stringent 1: ajjainst the imporiaiion of free negroes among th They would not desire su. h a population in their midst, nnd would le willing lo spend money themselves ot" it. Tli.y would need our colt. they now do, and would find our trade still pcnaable to their proaperit) We aliould tin n ham to regulate our uwn revenue i.i . - ' - i States, ifwecboo=- todo.-.. bj Empoajng i oh cotton purebtised by them, and im- in iniiiufuctured articles sold by them to This they could not endure and prosper. would be that ihey would, it re. pure. 1. uio a tr-ali wilh us lo l.iing bm I; our fugilive and deliver them to US at the line, if we w.jiibl .-,..., lo .1 favorable eon rcial treaty with them, by wTiieh they could buy our cotton and sell us their i;ooils upon equal lorins with other nations Tar tixatv, for a like reason, could be mndi " iglish 'Guvermncnt, by which Cnnndu longer be the harbor of fugitive sin-- when 1 had performed my duty ii oil iniuiediillelv lo join vou I .- lb. ml ,- satisfied that 'if anything was .lone n , here, and 1 had no doubt but what it v (applausel. mid tli-: 'o-j.'icr you 'hi i .-.. and ii L-.rai.ent e pi.,1 dull. ily precipitation, by i g mnn in this State, hvo coaaiilered what w i or a lllaek liepubli .lure will decide lo-m. lately ; loit preeipitale mid be done mid be done o-'Ue-r (cries 1 b- -be 1-- . I'l-esident. ivill n ivith thi Stales, that the jntople of the' South wouh ger from their slaves, in case, we alii [paratc from ihe Northern States, am ipeiident goeerumeul. Insurrection ai ad. attempted to Le held In terror oi pretend lo deny that Northern spi- tl,.. Nordic great ,-." I'de If tins belter than four friends abroad—you will giic euc.iurio_.euiuat to the timid— you will frighten your enemies (applause). I bavo no thought of South Carolina remaining alone. Shu will soon he joined by other Suilefc. But if alie is not, tihe will he just as strong lo repel Northern ncgression ho Federal Government, us if she Of the fifteen Southern Stales (loud If she does remain nlone, which I do not aihlc, it is my full conviction that you will be able to defend yourselves against any power (loud and prolonged applause). Thoy might tnlk as they pleased, theie was but one but, having li> in Georgia, nnd become a slaveboli: ho is so far trusted as lo be permitted to prove faithfulness by such villnaoua servicea as these. Three of the passengers, on board the Alnba a gcntlemnu.his wife and daughter, who havi in Augusta for several years. This gentlei physician, and Iho hue and cry wns raised ngniaat Turn by one of whom he endeavored to collect a dobl. This method of settling pecuniary claims is a favorite one iu Augusta, aa our readers will remember. This geiidcman barely escaped with bis life, and neither he nor bis family' w-ere permitted to bring awny nay- thing but the clothes on their hacks. Another of the passengers was from Lexington, Gn., hut all except these four w-ere from Savannah, nnd all were banished, any other reason given than Ihat of Northern birth. ' r.NPL'I.Sli ,S Ob A ITUNTEH FIvOM SOUTH CAllOLfNA. A young mnn named I 'as. ... well known in Troy na former emploie iu the olliee of Th /'. i oi ihj Journal, ...id a lending "ollicer of the I'rinlers' Association, » few days since left this eitv, nnd went to South Caro- vhero he had been offered a situation in (he if The Clttn-teton J/ei-cnro/. When he reuched there, he found it would bo aome days before tho lised him would be ready, and be wna go out to a neighboring village, where a ivcil ioually to incilo small numtcrs aluTves, in different localities, to revolt, and muni families of innocent women nnd children ; which would oblige us piomptl, lo esecute the elaves who ahould have depiiii.-i from Hie path of duty, under the deceptive inlluence of nholiti-' f«™™*i 'I Ins- iuatam cs would, however, he are usually under iho eye of their seers. Few of them can rend or wri permitted to travel on our niilronda, nveiaiiics, without the written g control ol" them. They bn. eept such as their owners allow diem lo nnvc, ii . niean^ of communication v. ith each ..(lier at a ' o entirely unnrmed, nnd unskilled s. A general revolt would, therefore. Dut the men., important fact, whie roly and devoted'lv attached to the! usircsses, ami would shed, in their . They or other public •unt ol ihose hav- • mail facilities iHnee. They n the use of art be iuipossibb:. is well known of them nre (as to bu-' < In, ii- chains nod abandon the a'mc of freemen (cheers). He never intended to ounl tbo cost of maintaining freedom, and would ininuin thu heritage of those who bore bia namo i-itb Ins life, if nteessiu-y (applause). His last ' dd stand heriiagu of ',l.,pcl J.-, tin' rould be, mid leave behind him freemen (applause). When tbe intelligence can from Charleston that the sons of Carolina bad cm menced this campaign as thev should, and that rev lullan was there inaugorati •]. bo felt Ida blood boui nuiuVor, nnd ho rejoiced that thoy bad taken t right pciil'ion (loud applause). Notbing has held the tide of fanaticism in check, save the doubt as to the subuiUaiveness of thu South. The buttle is now being waged against us. Hay by day the sappcrn and miners are at worlc along our borders and in our towna nod cities. Day by day, through, our revenue sysieui, wealth and pi im ul n tin) them the stranger, Thi :cd(t Ho lold them New tork, nnd inthocour t.-, mention thai he had om Tl :u asked him to get toofchii L - r could be employed ' On the buggy, and inquired of 1 him ivhelhiT ho was a anil what r fror oitiiens are thoroughly organized iiiitlees.and all nre expected tojoii in the divinity of nlavery. All wl their creed aie marked, bunted do loo, tried hv what is but n mocker lice, and often sentenced to d.-atb false charges are brought against lo put to death, and no uepnuti absurd or oppressive thua some ol In Kourbon County I mot a 11 arrived in thu T«rritorj' aome two ing in To.xna his family and ovc property. Ho had always been u obtervinj; citiien ; had t. large ate ic of the .lln: hilutes i . sp.e.-l, froi nlf.'.-lingKof 1 to Montgomery s of Messrs, I'nnc er business ou bund a' his remarks happened worked on Tke Tri' ~ nnd ride with them before a Justice near al. hnnd, by whi ordered to bu locked up In ft filthy eell t Abolition emissary." After remaining in du .s I, ours, during which time he wre, subjected ' most cruel treatment,' His friends from Tl present, und In tin,,- urn .-onlcl 1. -ii-i- political rights, and ! lion beyond their present caae of a plot or compirac miiicated to but few. till j would i mined Intel v cjioinunH ate it t. and put iheui upon their guard. Tbil Ve have, therefore, In nise of apprehension from a rebellion of our Let ua, lor a moment, contrast our dillicullii ir "fa'.oi'er-i. in case of division, with ihe ddlieiilties hieh tlie Northern peoplo would bavo wilh th'ir laborers. Many of the Northern master*, or employ they piefer the term, are How II. poSs.s.sioil . ' fonunea, which they have accumulated by tb. tho strong nrmfl of white laborers amoag thei have labored nnd toiled and dropped the ' for wceka and months and >v " ,-ed from them It little fin--., are-curoulaiine at tbe ---t(. litvtowbielilboSoutbis lends at the North can no longer raise a warning jico, we caa no longer raise n deli not admonitmn, il black republican domination be tolerated. Roth " he Inughml nt and ridiculed. This is (lie crisis ic conical, and if we lake our stand for indepen- dence we will nttnin peace and safety. hen suspensions and failur. s an- lb- current events of Ibu dav, and Northern commercial and uiauufucturiiig iul'erests, with ihe Southern prop knocked from under, are settling down, in aome pbvcea crumbling from the fall, in oilier* sinkin.'. lo im.nor posilions, with laousanda of laborers without the means ol nubsis- ee, and credit—tho basis of all war operations— tcketl in the convulsion, where will (be power to reu the South be found I It must, from Ibu South has the il/.rcari/ ..ifieo, V o fuel thnt he wl .. holiii.'nisi.aiehli.i ivoubl be responsible for biagood behavior. Thev we're allowed to lake him. un condi- tion that he should ban' the Slat, in 24 hours, otber- wi-e be wns to be publicly dogged, and locked up nml fed on bread and water lot thirty days. Pasco 1 not snid one word on tin- subject ot slaver; .... polities in nn; form. His only nfienco he lead been a New York pi' The AW For* Tribune. ,n, which, in be-illb, baa bnrely enabled tl themselves in u. simple style, denying 1 ttieil rnniilles most of the comforts of lile, and has often left them in destitution and actual the necessaries of life. While iliose who receive lln- benefits ol the labors of others nre living in stately uiaudions, amid ease " ' .Kury, and faring aumpiuou-sly ovur-y day, thu and had worked i NAn-ROW ESCAPE OF AN EDITOR. The Cleveland Plain Dealer says that Mr. David Wentworth i->m-,'.e-, re ia . liters of tbe Buffalo tirled for California by tho ov, ville, Arkansas, a few nigl anu lunuiy, Hue. iin,>up nu,.,|j h"w-^v .—rj laborers whose toils brought thesu comlo upend their daya in unplejisaot dwellinCK, and often -i-i" buts, doomed to perjwtnal obscurity. and a aickneJi'. the comlorts of life produced by their own hard labot , by an almost unanimous vote, al Lulu t, received in Ibis city on .Si.tunluy night will, demons' rations which have, perhaps, never been " the political bislorv ot the country. Our wWo community seemed to breathu freer nnd deeper, and npon eve rv brow Kit confidence und hope. Tt was as though' the glorious sun had suddenly dis- persed cloud, and mist nnd illuminating rnya lo ery heart nnd home. Men |..,i, lied leoir.jlher iu tin- f'le". as ni'-li si Id who feel lb at. iimb-: God. their ili-slini.-sw.-ie at I a- 1 iu their own lunula. Ihe doubting demon was e.mruised. In tho Epirit nnd temper of Ihe limes, a I .invention of tbo people of Eoulb Curoliou, to be held within four re weeis. lo pronounce upon her remedies in tbo crisis nolwbicb is al hand, means iVinuuiuu.- mean* the ttpa- loiroV.Vi. of S»a(/i Curo/irin, iehethtr ahni or alA r or uthert from t/.c- Cm -."i, .f'lie'i c-.iu •jnli)ft<e n badge of . ; to her! It ii so boiled in tlfiaVouimnnitv. ,t race. They are not I Tho decree Ueb go no forth, nnd must ho registered, in ihe of freemen, who shed ta'.bi.sof bistorv Well done to our nobleAT.epreiwn- ™hor-es wercbein.'-ehaiiWd'iVie thc'ir blood to secure iiberiy to their posterity. These 1 tafvw! The day that brings then, back again to Jrs 6 %£&*%^$g£Z^i£I — »*« political righu, inhentcd Srom Iheir anees- 1 th, hearth, of the. constituents, w.U bo ,„ud« I those honest, stnrd ionof iofciionty lo _ irthly musters, wh drive their carriages, blac'n thcii ihem nil kinda oi rr-cninl servici men. They belong u only free, bo" '' ''
  • 2. the former was Impossible if ei'niliiignell' ii .1 . ' < .not surpassed, in .beep Rational §tiiti,*lawr<! gtumuiKt, vrw YORK batuiway, M>vi;Mi»:ii :i. laso. ttvorolt lvinp; urnl infamy. In .h'spilc of nil this, the North has for the first lima hail her own wnynud ohoaen tl " she prtfomil President, without a Cot l mi Stales SVprLBJlENT—Hfii- ,,nnd ii raWgli"; iucl lli-ir telle , in the a ncok what safotylhcy can in I) f Louis lionnpnrto.or wherever llni fear Hint ii is toeiuueh to Uopb, Stnti-s should secede. Not Ibatwc believe, with mimy or our contemporaries, ihnt tliu Disunion movent thcro is ii mtn: lilmin anil illusion, intended lo fri«h tlii! North out of her propriety, or into it. We In dwm believed Unit lltera was n sincere »»»»»» niety 'it the South—men who really believe Hint t ,>..,« *>..'-" mould hnjimehjicitej! c# la UiBmselv the most fiwornulo (hey li Union nnil Ihe Mjr, Ihnc is tlmentlnmost, " ..'." ,- tl,v N..iili H.1-...IL--1. li-r l.:..~-h Of poUfl- „ ll ,.„ llll „ li „„„n,l wmi l i,,-,-i„l.li-^t, r . Their idcal- iu Northern people, '' " lu.'.i'.ri'v "' Hii'iii. are - .,1, Union, and 10 afraid el ' -c|"C"-." .li^.lulien. tlml when they arc made to ...-c Ilia hi. r , t,,. v ,.,,„„i, i,, now planKiauf fidelity t, .j il,.,- »ill full upon "loir knee* nod beg " »» ,"„| lk.„ i„ frt-L-ii rl>»in» ui-on tlH-ii- liml^ n»'l !:>» locks upon their months! Their faith in Northeri rvleuoy Is tl! ' ' ,t wonder, hi ill 1.1- mi-led 1 , i ntiy shadow upon the character of Dim whole whole name nod attribute are comprehended in One will aland up nciplesbithc ,- bend lu-foro word Love." The hymn, " Nearer, my (led. to 'J hie. wnfl ttifii fs '.Ti-r beautifully. Il niii}- lie said here, Hwl .,11 i|i>. sieal eioi'elsea throughout the day were „„,|..,. tin, illreclioii of Jlr. Joshua Hutchinson, uf Mil- 1 iu Union" by ford Sow Hampshire, and were aduiirnhly arranged, forming ii moat attractive and impressive mature - the toll. «o felt '"t!i th.nft.Tiii.oii tlic ],u...i..-i- .-I - the audience were W 1 1 perceptibly oolarged.-tbo boose, Including a!»li « and , IL |,„„„., 1,, U.eehnir, f..v. .lulu. Hoyden, .il ttunil- i i „„,„, Lvely rend. T i another original hymn oi llin Wlliuos 1'rov tooSuVyS law; inn In let It nlono, in . Tin PROPHECY -I.Wi FIIFILMENT. iKEall men cnong;ed in tin: unselfish prosecution -rent Moral Reformation, Iho Abolitionists hnve. ,ll,r first been endowed wilh ibo p,iit of prophecy. ,- live now in tho midst or the fulfilment of their predictions. Like other proplicts, Hoy have not ,,-a l,wi old.. I" lis on the precise moment when opportunity for euoliaa fevrpersi ,ig n^of tbo cour*o it w timlly engaged on the imliiceinouts to hidL c them nn old take, Ibo truth l : nov. fr.im Ihem Hint lb'.' Bolv Ulh, vhojo .-Ii possibly enjoy. Tlioy ini.lity „ HIM in-." ail; mid lliis failb, nnd the of 01.-itisoliite nl.Mnci.' or nny nrel si,. , it- uv.'r nnollier, niiido IbHr vision oleJir ns to tl no-i likely nntlts it would toko lo victory. And tin tbey were nil the lime busy in helping to bring aboi wbnt Uk.'V Inid prefigured, wbk-b •: set down lo whiuli fido of tboir a their erilies may prefer. They nre content with tbo sneecs*, uml tlic cmlit fur forca-'tinp or 1 about may bo given to whomsoever the judi think it due. Tlio intclliacnt renders of this paper mill of the for accomplishing their revolution. We lb w that it would ho dmnitglng to tbo safety nutljsu ipcrityoftha ulave Slntot) lo disebnrgo us, their insnries mid their bankers, who fi t'!it their buttles, their do bis, nnd sin-lnin their political esinlomo s can be cyphered out on any blackboard. l)ul oliitinns are mil ninde with n uln to and pencil, n^ have often snid before. Tbny are not bnseil niri'vilv on ctdeiibitioiii- of profit mid Uwp. ilo'.v di proceed forth of the pocket bill ol the lienrt, not! s nol money but piifsioii that breathes into then the bi-ealh of "life. It is true, also, undoubledly, Ilia of the great slave- owners anil proporly hoblers would oppoM Disunion. So did Hie milts o the wcnltli in oiirt'nlomos before the Ttcrolulion. Tin Cnlton Slnles lire butler nble tosnppoH a govornmon Thirteen were at tho booiuning or t!io end of . And lh™ they will have no w Iflhoy arc resolulo to secede, there will be no violent opposition lo it. Tbo consetinenccs tu II limn oyimu .iy inr llinl. 1'orwe i that the sop is even now gL'ttiuj; n_ri.lv for i.nr l-'orh.- iiniible-pie is .ookinj.' that ive are (oer.t llieeoiidilionof having our Old Mun of the Sea nalri irnhoulders for another four years. We will n iy that Mr. Lincoln will be obli-iuy enough todeeline I election, ns some Virginia pa-pur baa inodestlysUg- r.l.d. Bui we are by no nieniiH sure that (lie otll imlitions suggestod, of Ihe repeal of the Personal iberly bills and tbo linmblo imknowludgment of fealty to the Fugitive Slnvu law will nol be ende.a- •orcil by Ihe Rcptitjlieaus as measures of peace. But "Peace I Pence! when thire is no i flio slaveholders Ibal the Agiin- .... boj'Ond llie reach of political to guide, anil that it will ro on dead parties, if nol through living oncn, until it has swept slavery from Ihe carlb. ri ill !. ,. L.' i- ^ H slll'l lll.lt 111'" l.olli.ll I i,| ilir.'i.ten violently to tVdk™- In Hence, loo. they have oon.pir.'l with N'orlhiri lorclmut politlcinna to brlmjou They hope, through the confus inoii'l b the Editor ""Tfie'licpuoitciin | i"e the virtue, and ml patriotic roogni ml-, i.f llie peiato cfi'ort will lie mail. under the milium. nf the wing nf his party, represented ,1 BwiDB ofOh-0,TTUuihullof of the Am nil.) .Mii-snchil. of- "ja: 5 ihe present have been fore^liiidowed. For on< in,,,- anion;' many ; in the Report of the Mnssaohu- Sotilety, written in l&ltnnd presented in tho , , o( 1848—before the Pre.' Soil party was thought lrc these passages : "A Northern parly in uuqui uahly nl hand. Like llic sects of Jerusalem, tho rln" parlies nl ihe North will yet unite and pre- .^.it a form id able front There is Anti-Slavery spiritenongb in tlic free Slates to orente a formidable, if not a predominant parly All that is needed is men of personal integrity am moral courasn to take the lead. We think lb. o Till n-llierli pcuple Ini.ecepl audi c litious of settlement ,1 |,i.:iili:i.iioii ii will i.llur.l South Carolina n conve- ,1 omkc slavery for over Ihe ilominnnt power of tlic lion. The plan of these eniwpiiMloi-s aei.iu-il llb-rl; lore -ill ii i lowed by (icnrtfe X. Siliiilers, a fuithlul a ti- ro t of Ibo slaveocrucy, in a letter lo Ut Minn*, u( hicli the [olli.wini; in ml estrnet: "The tottnn or (iiilf Stales lire now in process or m -;,.n. (i is believed that tht W,.v ...).;.'/ ,.li,.iil,l he' per .li.peinl" tin: p iieuplu ..r Kev .liev I Ibemi .I ii,,; p...!. in,-.., t,-.,i-- li -....„,; i .it,. : lie lfi ,:.l Tlun- ,-.m nt.. uml i.l . ,,-lu.lin.i; n party vWhelber the Hapubljci ei'C indicated, anil atlenipt to cor imieurntini! the old Whig poliuy i emaius to bo lecn. Of nne Ihinj; itr, i.< n Airi-Hi now of a vm-y ilill rlueh Wolsior nnd Fillmore had - U -uil.il.l,. K. tho ,i.:i ir 111!" J:,:v. Mr. [l.iy.len , ,.f l..i.-...,i..-i-, inn. I.- eoiieT.i'i ll- il.i V . nn fcrei] |,i IV r A 1 uh good ,,1-iL-in Mir Lucy W '^ .mi ; and M.V iirk- li-.-.i lli.ni,.,-. in i tree fur „ll.,ii 1" ikia-'i ren irks, the h " w ;' Cfluni llill-ii He nut ii imri-:r>, a of I... I - : _- l e r 1 for „ 111, a crying i peace. And we win thi'y iln.'ul is lo, for the I-cun liitu I "I'll sl:iti- t.i"-..'..l,- iviih.mt first reeeiviiiL' their snnctiiiu ; an.l H >"' < '" '(" ''' "'"' »" eowr- i-nlii- ir "(' I'-' /-.'.i. ("'.-. •'-'. <nll -I..H.I .;iii-«i; '../ "„'.( ,„ tlir Hou)}i •Irifi.'rf «/!', 1]! II" r<(usal i,J propositions ;„i.fi.i..i ..,,,'^i.Nj ,, f"ii t • i'-- - 'Ili," l:ii. ,.-t..".;ii..n in il bo renaided i iivc. The pren'iit iBsu™ n-arccly eiitere.l vnia. Many thoiisnmlJ wi-ii> disgu'tcil at ipects of" 1 '' V will M i call tlicm forth." At that time tbo Dcmocrals nnd Whigs possessed the land between them, niidcaeh vied will, tbo other in the depths of their senility lo the slaveholders ns the autheiiti nrhilcrs of tlic Ktrifo for power. In n Tew months beaitiuing wus made in the Free Soil party. Willi the interposition of but one Presidential Flection, there- after, the North all but Carried Colonel Fremont into the National l'ulnco by un cselurivelySeclionnl party, and this year it lias organized its victor)- in the tri- umphant choice of Abraham Lincoln by almost every Northern vote against every Southern One in tho Elec- toral Colleges. Our readers know that we expcol little or no Anti-Slavery help from Jlr. Lincoln, oscepliilg the absence of the swift servility wlueli made Pierce and Buchanan run Wore they were sent to do Ihe dirty work of the slaveholders ; but we none Iho less recognize bis election as an Anti-Shivery tri- umph and the result of long Anti-Slavery labors. It is not ihe harvest, but it is the green blade that must go before it It is not the fruit, but it is the blossom- ing that promises its coming. It is not tbnt we do not expect Mr. Lincolu to do substantially Ihe same work that bis two predecessors were eager to do. His method may be different, bui all the worse for thai. lie will execute the Fugitive Slave bill, nnd put down Slave Insurreclions, nad maintain the Constitutional rights of the slaveholders ns they arc generally received and allowed by the Kation. Wo should advise evury fugitive *lavu in the Northern Suites, and especially in Ihe largo cilice, wlm is not ready to convert himself into a Northern mur- derer by a deadly self-defence, to place the St. Law- rence between himself and the incoming President wilh all convenient speed. N"ol Hint bo will wish molest him, or that lie bad not rather be were 1 alunu. Hut slave-hiiiils will l..- speedily organized all critical pads of the country, as soon as mny be, for the very purpose of I. iting the (id li'v ol tha Pn - eident and bis Stars! '" t' Constitution mill th. Laws. If the slaveholder an -I .-.. I- ,m th. Ecent,theEe hunts will be set on foot b; the Demoernlj Everett men fur Ihe nnnoyanco of their successful antagonists. Nutwithstiimliii^ all thin, we rejoice Mr. Lincoln's eh clioii for the signiDcanCo that it hi in -in', of the sequences that may immediately fnlh™ tr ii li was hatred loslavcry and its works, l__ |. t'.. b lulera try to disguise Ihe fuel, that ; ]]( „ r | ii„. |;,.],,,I,lieiiii iiiovemetit with all it.s vital- ity The "real mass of his voters verily believed thai they v,-,.rc"i..tim_: against slavery when they east their ballots for bun. Not merely against the thrusting of slavery upon loathing Territories by tho bayonets of the Nation; but against mIiivit; it.-elfaml 'ill Ihnt it inherits. And so I bey did. For Slavery is a Giant that tliuK when the first stone Ls thrown tit him. LTu received his death- wonml in tbo first number of Tim Liberator, mid this is another of the successive ilenlh- Ihnwls which will at last do him lo death. The testiniou; of the slaveholders may be taken ns satisfactory on this point- Though Sir. Lincoln will eointo power wilb amuJDrity of themselves and Iheir , both liouies ol Congress, they inalinc- what u prcg * symbol his presence in the While House will be, and nre busy in conspiracies to hinderdtinnd loud in their threats of se cession if 1UL. y , nut. They .sec in bis election tho sign that the sccplre has departed from ihciii.Uiul that in spite of tie tMnsowibltt *™oi two successive Prcsideuts DR. BACON BROUGHT TO LIGHT. Every evil, even siu, has a eerlain nmount of com- imnsiitifin iiC'-oui|.!i.ivi.ie ', i , |1 , "! l .','".''.'''.. i . L r , ll'."! 1 .,'.', 1 ','.'!'- of teoipor a few weeks ago, so many of the people of this world as lake nn interest in the Eayings ind dnilifis of Tl,,- la-ltpendtnt hint been enabled to judge, for once, which of tho editors nf that paper wrote a par- ticular article in it. This cunt derives interest from the fact tint, while the aulhorsbip of editorial lnntlei there is commonly led impersonal, upon general prinei plifl.it Is particularly and assiduously "kept dark' when Ihe articles in question contain fnlso statements il regard lo its own course of policy, or calumnious nccn sntioos against people ofn dilferent persuasion. Three weeks ago, there occurred an exception to tbi; iir?o of policy. Thr fmlepniiiint nf the lsl Inst, con ined a lung letter ...Ulreiscil to il" editors, but sir;nci ith the full name of its senior editor, whu seemed par ticularly riJ,d by the amount nf Iruth which bad hcei cspecting him by an "evangelical " brother, tin mil editor of Thv Chrisflnn fn/elfijenciT. i ebargo made against Dp, Uncoil by bis elerica brother was, substantially, of a course of conduct in tin icon Hoard ol '.'• is-ioncis in- I'.,ri.-ii.'u Mi'-.dim.'. n of el .,1V 11 U:,ll.|,,i- ito fur want of proper fo Very iminy thousaml-i viil.-.l ,lir':it fir Lincoln, to pi- ih'ii.i that III" Si.ulll will ll'.l i.l tlmi if lln- .'. i nl a- iti |,i-i. |.le can e.-l led, — "- oujusted." |.-."y i'^'lij'" 'i.-."' "(im=,"'iv,'iukl.¥ Vl i' ii 'u.- i": C , ..iii|.i.n;iii i|in -ler. or the Southern SI , tionand resistance. L jdi h.vv ].L-|iislniiiiT or in < |.ii-il- .in thei -liivci-y-i, i.|i li'li ..i.unlry, Ihnt new church building can have i fur the true anti-slavery reformer, :v of Christianity in its genuine ami ini ad Mich an Hi But the del f the n . iiu . i- f a disi which Slessrs. Ualtou, Bnywoud, Hill uf Milfbrd uml May, took part. " ^ ';'-" The .juiet and steady all.ntioi .cry part n.ul feature of lliu ocen highly grntilyine to our ll..ip.-.iali frieuil'i. And thus was t-l apart lo Iho be.'.t of huimii the GiHjaland Good 1'albe] of all—the now IknieJide Chunk whciv in we trust am lievo tbnt many a meeting shall yet bu held, promo enf Human freedom, Growth and Uapplnesa ; many faithful Anti-SUveey mei'tuie, before whoso iting light and t llope.lale (Milford, Massachufletts) foi tiou lo the rule un Ibis subject and us th y there established is of a character lo il ie lovers oflheir kind, and all Abolitionists ial manner, a notice uf this occasion lit priato lo yoin- columns, and may also prove i llopedale Community was instituted aliou :y ye.n-s since. A little coai|iaiiy of believers i [Uitiilily of aiakine Clii-i-li.inity n prnclicnl lliin. :ii'ty, m bnsine.'-.. and in the daily intercourse of ivitb men. associated themselves tu test the experi- They made purchase of a small triiet of bind in •Bierly part of 'be town „f Milford, Woea -hull I. t to si e anil e, I'l'ldl t. II. . iv,;.',. vly |.,llt ..i ill" l.'ivn ! M mind ; many il Temper, i s.uil-lionduge of dc u was dead to be alive again, him who was lost to be mil and restored to vii-lue nad tu peace; many a miairs Ilights meeting, where Ihe Hhacklcs which .mail's just nod rightful action shall be weakened, 111. at length, they Tall entirely away ; many n Chrls- n meeting, in short, where, villi nil bohlne-', the itlis af the kingd of Coil shall be unfolded, and dtitudcsbc brought, by the beauty of holiness, to lead n nf npri;_dilness. [iciice and y.n..l will to man ; ilms uilei-in? tu I.umI Ihe liigbesl gloi BBblD The .i-|...ii Th Tract Society, oi i look like dishonesty. And it referred lo roll known aduiinislration nf" gi.e-law : ' bi- Dr. lliienn, in tlic meeliug of the American Hoard nt oston, in contrast with YVn &dijModfnt, iconlplaiaUi of ie same H.n-t i.l" di-'.'iplinv esi-rcised towards its party ,- (lie government of the Tract Society ; with the very ltuml reflection Ihat " it makes a world of ditrcrenec hclher it was your os or my bull." Tho jufltice, combined wilh the ipiietness, of these cl jTc», made them ii.lhei miiii.yinn ; and Dr. Haeon plumply denies them, appending, by way of snapper to tho iwu columns uf bis reply, tbo boas: M...I In-, ai- with ilself, but had co lemed mure II. n a ijnirtvr nf n tentury ago, earliei' tlmn tin- In-ginning .if bin oppo- nent's " Reformed Bi 1 1 dimunship." Giving o passiuimie denial, both g.nend and particu- lar, to all tho charge- o I bis reveivnd hruil.cr. Dr. Il.icon singles out, for more elaborate lefulnllon. n cbargo so carelessly worded that he euuld plausibly n nkc a stand against ih) literal meaning. Tllecilltor.il '//.. i'i,.>l:.i.. laltlliijcnctr had incautiously said that Jlr. itacon was 11 opposed to ri'SiilutiiuiE ahtuit slunr; " u. !.:. mm ecclesiastical bodies, ami in tin American I:-,- I ... .-. ing, what is pei-1'ieily true, that lie wa- ..pj.no, I iu nil energetic aelion ".j.iij.,1 shivery in thus, i ...In -. " icli a chance Tor ......iniuij In be in the rie.1.1 (i .- e of readers not one in fifty of whom possci". iniuTIM by which to teal ihe truth of bis stale not lo bo neglected. And Di appeals to Nurlhiru cupidity Tltt Eatress, Tim Doily A'cim ' ily, are , encourage the escape u ws declaring and prulec travel and sojourn in > their slaves ; instnicl I ,r Ihe full |liail,-,'lii,ii „f -la erics uf the Union, and lei entiling promptly obey si Ihe North, wi in-ulent demand* ol the tin -in dilincntly by base V'/.on'<mrii..lo/t , umFm™, and niher jimiiinls of the not one whit behind the arloalon Aicrciire, or tho in the Mai with which they defend nds of the slaveholders. These without molestation, to libel and rily of the Northern people, and eheuiea of the ahiv the South no man, without end angering :na spcuk a wnrk in defencu of Northern prin in opposition to slavery. [For evidence o i Iho examples uf .Miulherii jn-niicrihliun an, Lynch law recorded on the llmt page.) It is probable that, in the aext sis mnnlhs, the North cm Dackbouo will be aubjecled lo a pressure moi r/it IVioiinc, speaking prest : stale of all. igbtsof property, lil belief was general Ihat they their bond uf union chiniei-ical and unfitted to the uses of real life. All such oVpi-cuilioiu have been signally disproved. The Community has thoroughly established not only the possibility hut the cssent value and high practical use of tbclli fuiiihiinen principle of union. They now constitute an imporU village in the nourishing town nf Milford, and its me ipect through, i by . , sympathy i l;i- presses avc n insult the gic defend the si id of 1 . |,l,n nnd II,.! "Tl ;,.-,. Inlcri tot ... IH | eg, is ' i ' i II" !- !" VI. ,1.. . ... Nl .. '..:: il til usc.ot tie financial Ir. ubh j • ur ", tboy really mcai in break nn tin , „;... A few 2 ";'. , loua liliiri .1,1. , I he American Board have passed rcjulutioas ..'.-' ' , hivery. He coocealu Ihe fact (a faut which imtv he ilaiuly seen by any ono who ebnuees in powcw the ' ong series of Annual Poparts Df tho A. li t 1 M ) that vhercver he has spoken for or voled tor iCkOlulions u'hii.I slavery in that burly, and wbeuevi .- thai bodv has passed such resolutions, it has never been -|.outoncoui.ly. .. 1. actiou ouainsl slavery. In tho whole hiutoi . ol lb i ., American Board, at whose meetings Ur. B.ieon has been one of the mast constant and active alien lants, he has ' itterly relVained fr leti -veil abnu! .la.. ,;.. i, . |.l m," and -.i'i" - when it waa thought .1, -ii-able t.i liiron ., wet blanket upon the action ,.f Lewis Tnpiuin, Dr. CI., ever, nod men of Ihat stamp, ,iu,iin.vl it, Tlic Jiildiiijrnctr of Nov. Slli gives a s|.i. > r.-j-ly [.. |ir Bacon's letter, giving abundant and conclusive docu- mentary evidence in proof uf il- iirivni.il , l.jitis. cl in refutation of the culprit Istet .. i. atThe lndtpendmt will m ,.. :',, the principal editors of that papor will «nj with th . n], in .ii ' " '• t. lowu bv uns. rupnlous asscr- ti I rordnd of their unfnlfh fulness. Thi J' -I./ ,•' ' '.lull always eulogising tbo Ameri- can Board, ou.l upholdbig its policy, has alwoye prac- tised concealment, cni-i.ni, or denial, ami-dine lo cir- cumstance*, tu keep Ihe piirlieui.-iiM of the pr.vsl.tvery action of that body Horn tho knowledge , If the whole history shall ever be wrilteaof tbonltciupts made by a small minority of its mcuibi rs to e It tu withdraw from direct complicity with slavery, and of the manuiuvres of the Prudential Committee, Jlrst 10 aveid both netiuu and esprecsiuii upon the subject allo- .11 «»...iii ,- it.:, ,.. n.ni.ii, 1, i, nccommodntiou line; also I ii a ncbonlnioiu. But tbcii i.iimbcrs au.l |.; op- ii ...... I .- ..„...-: .....Itul..i,-,lpui I Tin: (London! ,liifi--7.i intaina a loiter from Gm Ihni-oiich and mnsloiiy ivi Jlnii-h Anti-Slaary Htpar Cheever. Hour columns were no than usual, we would rcproduci although Ihe principal facts enihodi already hiiil before our venders. i L- ourselves lo a single extract, iu which Mr. psoa replies I" a paragraph published ill Th (rrfi.r tlelober !—and commented upon In Tin: moot October Ihe pivagi ipl Ihflr p ..hi.,,, urb , . hli . , I.., ,U. ...-!.. rorlhe i ..I congratulation V. ... " c.ei-l nt the .l.diC" tlslove.y reformers in and Cod-speed ( lemptcd la a ba-eini .mud, is " large and [.., . . .,, . it. .i th hnlldlns (with ih t. - ... :'.. [ibilfoi ...I, -,, I i -i dedicnlioa, and o aiong their f. icu.ls on the •; f em i one of Ihe mini, rn.u audicuc wi, sr.,1 believes that all tin the II -|.< -!il' friends :.i tin i ... o( II.. Imose will cot b int stuey. b.u entirely r-bnv tiro ',l»l/ : . I FlilV. II .. .1 .- I rl! v muse proper Tlds .. luisje enongl m lortably fl>u hundred persons. It .- ucstly ,i prtcd. nnilthc seats in ceusidoned unlfuruily tlucucb. ,1 M.e Iioik The w.lls in simply but very taste ||y [..Int.. I ... f.cic :vy phafliug cOvi i t: I- bo a- favorable to. i'. purp -- of speaking an I henriDj nut - ,n i On Thursday, I- clock n.ni., a „i... Heeled from linp. n.l together wilh nome friends I gveoiei -.. ivh.-l. , Itcd the home. Aflor nn anthem, by clioii uf ibout twenty persons, the Budding Co nil!. .ie. ... lill deed and th keys of the I The statement the re with idi by It wa ' I it. d ".v bouse bad been built by voluntary sjbscrlplic.il nnd .kn,ii„n. there I.. ,| ulsorj i .v ; th. ie '. id I. n Till: iVESTBltS OAllPAltm Cnicioo, Illinois, Nnveiuher, 1 jltiarof 7Tt< -Vottenol jLnli'Stotrr? SlanddTd. lnul .i t'.iinvi-utii'ii lust .•' rihiy and Sum .la in this state, thai we denmed ol UiOSl I' cter. It was not numerously attended, bu .0 right sound. The main topic ol discus lio |ple iij opposed to I'nliey. U'e had inlei revlnus, ruled for Aln-,,1 Ustcoh Drai em was loud in hi, ail™ rl n •,' - iiiii,i-lii-i:lali,:.ii..if il.ri."--..i-.i. i . 'ivory as Ihe rin'.t line.. idly en .ml ..,- . .,n cry one hurled his lint anatlie sapniust il„ e Slave law, and nearly all paid becoming h.i i! heroism of Cnpt Brown and Harper's Terry. mj .bl.iic.r/.: lor .Vuvembe: li.ii: Tin hi i-d ns, esposiny in , y ihe gross unfiiime-.s of Th , lit. ; ard Dr.Chee . ...i, ,ii.. I [lits] lakiuo, ..i, . rid. . .! T [-...-.. i. a. isivc reply ti ,r th .. .... .ri, I I k r- '.'-. and had voted for Lincoln, who absolutely spe interpretation out or his mouth ! One of (hci vcr. bad iii.'-n all tho [lilgrimnge to see Lin. have nn interview. lie said Mr. Lineolu told Cons 1 it.I ti on was pi-o- slavery, that the Soulh ' tied i :oDBressioual Fugitive -lave law, an should, it elected President, eieeuie Hie pn-, " ihoueh lie regarded it as a most unqalbj emu ,. . . . ... I 1... him v.. I he i .'.I us. e Ih it he did r.. t expect Mr. t.ineolu ivould do c iu.ller ! ' .a,,- r. .i» ;..,vj,-i-l.Le ....- " thl .a. ...... i tin • en i.'-i a, .,. : , ni oi :.. II..' I'residcr.ey of Hi .1 - - 5u cr ond Ju-h )«,u Line, .y bovc dono tl.,- ti.-li ..| I- -• • and sn.vcries, d.iverv It cputii leans [what foi ...ih, i have p -- v. if Unlivd Suites P. Giddings and am,-. And. seduced by ... t-hearted am.- an. .-..„.-.. H.-i -, ll.,..,vl.a ion.bnll l.o ,i the foe., hall i t i.. -,. the co idjutor, ,::• Clll ,f,.l e •ay. i then, onbcbalfol n. 1. - -• led t hi Irosl „n the conditions named, adding, that person" oot , .-I with ^i..r c were tnritcd t and take seats nnd elu.n-prliilrses In Iho home no tho isiue t. rui- Willi tho members itnimtbn, their coolri- butions toward- it ". nbolly voluuta.-y. ,,.i onotbrr anlbocn, on appropriate prayer was il... ! .., Samuel Mny, ( Leicester ; and tliis wa* ...i.-.i.i-l I.) the ebaoling of a hymn, written for the ... bj vl.n Ilallou.aeopyof which, with others, | .. .. | .- -, fl., morning sermon nf dedication WIS . ... 11, IV ;. llnywood.rriBCipilof tbc Ilnmidalc Comolnuly 'cboul. and ono nf ihe stated r b.le old one— of tbesu i Chcercrorrived in England an tho SardJulr.n the fontineot no Ihe 1 lib of Augu-t. Hurin. ,i o( M... period, it was In th powci U.:i. J. II. ff -i."M.lo-'".'.i the Third It.f. • ,. .!..-. ,-.-.i' -.. eniui.rHhur.il in il. ucily. d.b n | ul discourse, hut eucdny ennui.-.too rr, congregation, on " The Present A-ncvU ' " . . : . Rovolutioo." The ll-'-'l „. whiU it paper : .-" J todu juiiiiv 10
  • 3. $At (Suvopriu. tf tivvoo))ouilrii(c. Anti-Slavery Opcr.itiocB in Great Britain. during tho present i American liwign, -the Mlv. 11 . emu lh.it n gn.vl .1c i . .... rllnt- 'i ... rare those nnong^l Mid ><:.j....- •.-. Ijl, n 1ni ippcnrancc in l r metropolis . " "Ii arfi 1o(l ! hi 1 pi lilVCri Inn a vulgn 1 :.l. 1 1. e.r,-,. burlcd I., nor. a-i . [hisi-rillcs - .' is language. Tl..- ..I ,..„ .. Ihoi • l.n ..ii. Dr (.1,,- that '.' utf tV .« PC ,.h- o tl... bearing tl io aupp ...;'„:'"." .m i, .-.i In hi- priiciil po. :„d . i. ,-. 1""" Ofll.lT.lllS : 01 the [lull ...1 f UnltoJ States the Ilrsl denominational r " Thenrstcalilr in" jnst adopted i Churches of Hi AXTISI..Vi:i:V /(.' YI7.T-' i- i ."n.). attended by " Ii I gnvi .. I ... I uudlrl: f tnlclll TWEXTYPIFTII PtVNSVLVARU IRTI-SLAVERV FUR THE SECESSION MOVTBIEflT. lion of llie Rev. Wni Fh uck.lo -. i,i -i i hurchrsol Iho United Sui (11-lM StOlCl. Hi.' »..! f Of '" nt M, .oCily ..I num. some lofnr - [ Philadelphia, who, ... I,, i<ii. •iii:i: t:t: . , ,.-, i.,-. ... js c! (lie meeting I - address lc II. over on si :ul,.., with t'.. Slavo I'u I . .. I .-. report is before us In «( AurU JJruV/. i : -...j •". I -- Hie 1,1; ...... ,....., . ...I...- by inBllR.itiooof Hi .. .1 oi1k.ih.ii this it Ire) (o hcdlrc up the Doctor's w a) W. 1*. I'll tun, Ksu. occupied the chair, I o platform wore ii goodly number of eminent M - ''.' ' ..ii". ad. a • bii Intri - Lory .1 was followed by II. supported n rci ,..i... ogive Ui. siooaries to rltii tugitivo slaves in Canada IV cat, arc tin! collection Of SG.OOD fnv the erection of a chapel school nt Toronto, Canada West, J understand bare already raised about S-UW). .Mr. SIIIcIibII published mi interesting boot on the condition uf thu colured population uf Canada, which contains valuable statistics, ii.nl much infunii'itinn relating! ' Underground Hail road." Mr. liny, n colored gonllomnii from Chatham, Canada West, is delivering very abl nt.il eloquent speeches on the subject nf America slareiy, nnri in, meanwhile, mininff funds Io establish newspaper on b la return. Mr. William Craft, who, Willi bis wife, escaped frui slavery in Georgia, ucarly twelve years ago, baa brnuul: adventures, will, llie title of " Running a Thousnti Miles for Freedom," and is engaged in lecturing in cot neetion with llie London limnntlpnli.in Comiiiillee. Lastly, us rcgnrda tile ngeney of i-oloi-cd persons i this who I.I. pUr..:ll,L.- .iliihlivnaltll ii slaves in Kentucky, utid bare redeemed theuiselves, their wive! and seven of their children, nt u cost of SJ.SUO, and are nnw hiililln- nt..-* tin^a with n view ol bondage. Methodist H[ii-i.-...piil Chui'tli in Cincinnati, lie has beei lalien by the hand at the Wesloynn Mission House, nnd will, 1 irtut, be liberally helped by British Methodist: The itinerating Inborn of such poreana as 1 have noi referred to tend to keep alive and extend the onl slavery feeling of the people here. I could wi-tb, how ever, that if it were possible, the exei-liunsof all of Ihei might be directed to the one simple object of the aboli lion of slavery. l)ut we cannot have it ns we wiali, and wo cannot Withhold our " Gud i-|.ei-d " from any who ore eceleing to alleviate, by wliiitcvor means, the eondi lion of those who -ire the victims of prejudice am oppress inn. We have had a smart Controversy with the Uriti^l Colonial Missionary Society, for the shortcomings ot ii lUjojles irlUi the Slnvi l'i by il. Hoi Uenry II..-. belui. n n.le a brief b-.u rhirjinnt ii. Id..—, nt wlii.i. he ..p;.'.i.l the ln-1 <i cflcciii'i-iy to II.. Si-' Y..rl t.,.lt,x... l,.it fur m rom-te in regard to I'r Chcovoc nud hiiuuclf The resolution having been i-loptcil, Or. C .-. .- ro-e, ..nd, niter receiving a in. .1 : I. .1 ...... ie. proceeded 10 deli vera mnsterly atldnss. !..r .. p.u-t I «h...!.. 1.1 leapt, we hope to Unci room inn future number, iiu defined with grcnl clearness the diller w between genuine aboli- tionism and its eouiueri.il, anil replied, point by point' to the " Trotest " lately sent lierois the water by the pro-alnvcry malcontents in the Chureh of the Puritans. After a few pertinent remarks by Rev. Henry Caldcr- wood and Dr. .Symini^iun, in (.upport uf lie. CheeV' minion. Ihc inCiiinir itdjnnrned. aiuucii of run i-uhitas.< Iblisb the following resolutions for the .ii.reprv.wnt lie asks fur ai lVherens, a from Chri-tian nnii-slavcry men. iiiiibci' nf prions, unlv a part nf wlu.m thei- .if the CIiiiil'I. .i,- III,. ~-..i- icly ul" il„. Without tl]ee..,inil1,.-.b of the P sent ofthc Church, mil publiuhed a for " Dr. Chcuvi Re olvi I flinl . id nppcal ; that, in our riftht, ninl proper, and that tin i-cf-eill lilini-ti-y depend the pl.iiu. pltnplu pollltiu, an.) so< i i.i ... i „ Sathnnlel J My t i I.. .. i. ThvirnctWe pmironal intorc n oir uieutingn, and lluii- uenei ...;..! i hi., i, den n visit la Ibolr I ...-I .. •••<.: pleasant f.a.-. ni to : fi..|... fitly .ln.rl.e,.. -i.- f -. .1, ... .- .'.. . ,i. .M. I I.. ...... . I I ion ami e ".'. i.ic among tl. i: I Riven upoo Lone I'lituJ, nt ns, mil." tin :i In. 1. 1-..:.-. i ii nnd ^liiii Church !• by i: in the New rjrc.iehing. I I t lV,e.l i i iyr-,j lili.-r.i) i iiiuiler. well kr.onn :. Vi ,ii Mr ting ..' |", ......'. I, . is .1. . . i. Mi unwelcome i. iron M-Crj a liberal thcologlral (oni and tend cr.olr*. Ills ve6ldenco rue or the t Lraullful I highly oriinntented) ii a Iho i- ii I, nnd toll I was cordi.i i^ ,. 1 i , Uiselfnndfn y. Itelier ;: from Long Wand, I wan very glad of the ... |...- ui ..: Hi hist Montbl) Anil- i > JIi ii... it Ii. i hcci. r's church, ol ivbh h you given some ncc .; in Tin; SrjtMMitn A lone I. i . .hie is that inocting, In Hie midst iiiii'iii<i.li- .t fnsililrw Churches midtvorsbippers } Lit) >l I, : nib-: ligbi ball dedicated to freedom,! ave two lecture* io modorolc siicd but intclliguui mid ppreciative audience*. 1 am imlobted to Mrs. M. A. K InKtv, a dovoled, lnithJid fvieud of llie slave, and to lr. Uisliv, for (.[lleicut enupiMMtion and generous liopipi- tallty. Subsequently 1 attended n deeply inlercsling iEEN, Dnn. Gkiiiiit Suitii, Gkoroe W. ptrrsiu, and icrs, were present. An account of llie; Co menI ion i lice yon have nh-endy published. I gave two lecture;, in the Mclhodiit Church at Fair- Id, in this county, on Mi.mh.y ami Tuesday evenings ;t. Tliero is a large nnd thmrUliinc: .ieademy located re, GOine of the sludcnls of wbicb were among my arers, Fear of infidelity, nnd self-sntisfnclioa with : election of Lincoln, on the part of the people, gnvo moderate sued nudlenocs. My Strictures upon the :csdon movement at the South have been warmly il heartily responded to, evincing no great sorrow long the people at iho possible prospect of Dis- speak 1, ll.ii I'h.iivli, nud mi Siiliii.lay and Suridiiy nevt al CouveutiDn at Pulniid. with Sinus It. A.ru,.; ithcrs. At Falrlleld I was very kindly and pleasniitly nlortnined in the home of Mr. and Mrs. 1). W. Cole. endera. I am also indebted in like maimer to Mr. L. L. Kolsoy and household. Mr. Kekey is una of the mcer Aholitinniats of this State, devotedly attached l'i.-- /.iirnid-i , rc.n.ieinc aliv.iyi in ihc service of our ase. A.1H0S M. Puweli. Tlllil'VIVMM! LCTTKKD.- IV.lI.I., JVll, llUVill.lt llll.l incoln, thus enlightens us as to the civ Southern correspondence : mentioned Ih.ii Me. Lincoln iu.d ui ,-,.n-..~p,>nd.n,";e null llie Eolith. Tl ti'tlees li.llll tlnH .luurler which : to see. Miasivi "' of 77tc Willi Abraham of his relnt: ) the ratcil from III- because he was nol permitled to estnbliah a "negro pew " in the Mission Chapel. When llie facts wire Ursl disclosed by the 1 Inn Etiuincljcirion Committee, Ihcy worshippers to take th tho whiles, and they " That the above arrangement conlinui <>. nnd freedom of ncc< of the building tn nil pernojii color; nnd Hint, in the event being" complied with, the coi Jlitsioii'irj' Society en secured ! h hai r, frolished hi a London papei that the conduct uf the Committee ii the e(Ciption •/! iu neliou ju.'il nnlie. blameworthy. and Mm! the le^ululinu btvve been recorded in ilecemlier l.ii fully a oof t; a of the Colonial COu recently puh- i ha. adopted by their Missionary. The virtual snnetioi which they then nilbr.led to Hie wrongdoer caused i most excellent man, the liev. W. P. Clarke nt Canada, ti end his connection with the Society. You Will see in 'JV Jnli-SIUbon/ Adcocalr. for this month, a lung letter from Hooi^o Thompson, exposing Ihu doings ol" Tl.r jl„fi-.SI.ji.rv llrp.rltr, in reference Dr. Chcever. You will probably deem it right reprint it, nnd it will then speak for itself. Thin lett was written in coniicnuciiec of the rejeclinn of one si for insertion i" The T<ci«jrlrt, in vindication of I on opening 'J7.r IUp.>rkr for the present month, Iheru the protest of the nialco tent memhers o Church nud Society, which yon cry properly phi your /iro-slavery department, t id ably replied son to believe, w W IB f the editor soin before Dr.Chcci. i . 't 1 ! f.u- Scotland. I nppei .mint f.-n..;..„ 1 ami paid fur, ns such, in British Standard. It was sent to 77,r Ji(j«,rier, wit simple request fur in insertion, i.n.l is fnrlhivitb prin yraluifouil;/ with these wuiilu pivli.ied—" In order to lay ourselves open to partis amhi p." Such ia justification sought to be set up for the publication, through ten sneeesaivo months, of a series of de tory libels upon one of the most noble and heroic amongst Iho advocates of God's truth, as direct! ngalnst tho infinite iniquity of idnvery. And this in publication sustained mainly by lliotu whose pcculii characteristic it is to inculcate the charity that "thin ethnoevil/' In tho latter part of the great struggle for the nbo lion uf British colonial slavery, and especially sobse- qnent to the return lu this country nf the aposlol lion-hearted, but porsecutcd William Knibb, no rt giousbodyrwithtlR. exception of the Society of Frieni was more tho rough -g. dug in ibupp.nition lothesyBti than the Baptists. It ivas that body that, in 1S33, ecnt it iv,. In-,,,- ivilli unleiened |.l e kind nn.l cordial re.epti by the Cliri^lian (hurch,. Resolved, Thai ,...,. ... th . ,. ,.,-,..,,. ,;nrded io Drs. BatelielDr, I indHih, mil Giithri Dr. Chcever, " ember S, liiin. wii al a mcctiiiL' of Ihc Hoard, held Nov Tuns. ,1. Iiu. Thk -V."- 1'r.rA" (*mh« iii trying In calm the lei the .-Invelnilderv) l.y leterring llicui to Lincoln's -1,1 very ebillii.lb! illl.l ],l..:.lv'..-, ;l|. eiillllliniil ill his ill with Seniilor Douglas. After .moling what he ha in regard to the duty of nun-inlerfcrcuco with sli in tho Slates, the Fugitive Slave law, Ihc nbolit slavery in the District "f Coluinbiii, the ndmissi new slave Stales, tin- domestic slave Irado, and the social and political equality of tho white and black rupiilous pro-slavery sheet indorses n these "Tlll-M ,.,i,;|.,- -"et forth with ndisliuctncus ,g or the purpose of llie 1'resi, ids of Abolitiimisti will, I, net 1 the mun who holda them ; ited for hilt , Lelie . him and o .nij.lisli , uliuiniiiciiiiou. Itul'he luis'iic /, i-',,l,i,.l ,i Hi: moil tiHIilint'u j.n-ily. i.|ipn-.-.l i" hi- .... I, mi. ntii. ii. nn.l /,- :.t,i ami .vi.Iiinn mariMrr U'jaii i,.,- n-y.i.i", ti,-- . i',, :;.';,.„ ,.;. I,.,.-- ).,<, . ,„jiMu,.j i. 'for Ihc toxl UcentyjiVc i/f.tr*." We commend this language of T7.e Otisrrt study of those Republicans who have- been so under llie criticisms of Mr. Lincoln by Abi What hare wt. to expect from nu Admi nisi rat: principles in relation lu slavery nre indoric pro-slnvcry sheet .' Those who iniughiu that tl ralion of a President holding such principles In the Jubilee nre certainly doomed to a bil polntntcnt. eir postmarks reveal tl.,- I'net it th,- v-ieiiliii liii-i of l!illii>e..eair i-: hi.! cunlincil t.i the .. I'..inlsnni1 Marshal liyndiraolliee. Ciifertunalelv. , . ii-iiiarks .if nunc ol llie in :Au,k tlmt their wrilor.i . in. i devoid .it otluenlion, ii .l,~iiiui... ui dreencv. Ileis Ihreiil.'iiinjt ihalh. in nil il. l..ruin, n.s llie peiuiliy hin high position, me in. .. :.l.ni„l;inislill. They are. tuiir;.-, inniiily an, .,ii iiioim, Iiu. ugh i. few bear real .me!-. Suuie nee -it'i.,-,1 in lii. ruglvpbics said In be ...ii n i.nli I., llie ' Saereil Order" ui- ^.uillui'll ulliei-hodil," which il.r,:n,n- Mr. Liiieolu Willi a i,ud- 'ii an I iiniimely n. king-., if. A few nre oriiainciiteil i Il skelcllCH ut e .(.;. Ili...,, l.y clldn I, ,l-.L-.,ilill the htiletlo. oi-.ii'iilh by ,. liitlilriliii.- Mroke : anil in rly nil, the tbenl....'y nl (lie wril.-iv. i.i indicated by inged f. - thre H A' he viL-tn.i>.Tixi( in Ii.i.iMii"-.— In I. liicag... the other day, ru woman named Fli?.a, whn had escaped from y in thelerriloi-y of Nilumkn a short time before, arrested ns a fugitive slave. The United States Marshal, in taking I he winiiiiu to jail, was slopped i street by an excited crowd of negroes, nnd was [idled to give the woman to Ihc city police, who lodged her in (bo Armory tor ~.i(e keeping. The nest moi a Justice issued hiii warrant again .t her fur a breach of the peace, and she mis lnV.cn out ofthc Armory by lb Sheriff of the Comity, anil while lie was un tho wn with her Io the Mike el ihc niMghtrrite.nhe was rescue by a company of people of her own color and carric olf—tho wlso ones only know whither. The Jus'tii who issued the warrant, tho Sheriff who executed i nnd seven other persons, have been indicted in tl United Stales Disli-iel t.'i.uri for violating the accursed Fugitive Slave law. Thus is Ihu " irrepressible diet" kept up! ir tidily year-. la* feels its hlflu i. Shall the ticgr. ancipalcdr The I in,- Urolhrra. I il. l:ih .nis ITW. ih. ii nf .-:'' dch Anil .;c.l f trial by jury nu nery man. Northern or Southern, who. op.. 111 I .1 •. I .... I a .: ivcliotding popular marl) ulUrine. , it, I., I, ,11 .. I I.1-, ni | |, . .i,,,,. .| in." fur nun I ,vil .- .1 ( ..hi,., I freedom, ns wel I.. i I i .r>. ...-.'. fr. . .1 uf the Bla-co i and upon al i.' V. munplibilllu a t..ku no cogntiar.c I-Htcf, weinreihecouihliriii,.,.. . . tbu fi Hint lb .-.la . i- ll.e .. • alt of „, longospo, .![,. , ( on.1 .-.. iiiv.iii!) f. -.-.-.. he piintipks of crjuiiablo tr.if- ... , mdfl i. I jrc ton well an here. I'roiu our coadjutors hope I., tccuivu valuable ecu- r arllelei of merclinn itse ma) ci. (Hike. So 107 North Fiftli to any uicoibcr ol the Com- 1 1 ,',,,.' uinsicr, nr.d [Sua ii, ,.l. wiw defeated." ClUH-iU M. JOMN. 'II, New n.l ,..s /i . -f . - i, mil Ill 1.0*11 JrvtlLTJ, ;:;:;'::,.':'. .I:,,-,'.', ihcr. 'bj ti>-uii i l'i i 'it.i i , -. i i. 1 .. MauvSu.iw, i-. -,','i ,,|, '„',".!.,';„.!!,",..'„, r>i:, i 1 1>I . Mlllilll-N. Tho M .. ! ... hna notified then; 1 v.. ...,,-,.„, Jliiiv C. Wi. .... 0111 Tl'AR Y. Diril in Weymoo i,Nuvembcr2d,M.iRi Westu , one of the earli stAholitionisls. In Llopkinton, Ma-ss., on the lKlh lust,, K5SK J! ,D„ 1 and formerly of Fr ged Ii years. In the ik-n Dr. Merrill Ihc slav rui'.e.Kl'li ni 1 devoted friend, lie iti,l, ii its earliest days, nd his ind a d pur.ie Wt e always responsive I th- Inn nnd friends of the family at :et, First i siikuco, Ko. II The cause of Freedom in Pennsyli nother uf iiu heat aupporlers. Jol lenlilied with the Anti-Slavery movement from the CginniliBJ :.ml ,. more Ii.iiii.hI, ..',n-ne.-;l..ir rcBIlCBS ate waa nol to be found in its rnnlis. lie had a large cart and p liberal hand, and no appeal u do ring was ever made to him in vain. In his death tho champions of Freedom lose a faithful coadjutor, id tho poor and needy a pitying and gencroun friend. n Plymouth, -Mont- ed.lhan llie friend win,.,' dcparlure i here record D centre of a large family connection, and of a in lend, d in-.:- lib. l'i, '.""I acquaintance, hid active bene ice and oilier virtues made lor him many frie ontKidc hiM it ciliiite circle. His manners were pi id bis habiU retiring, bin (hen? eras soinclliinc in nrit that was sure to attract and attach those v one within the sphere of his influence, lie loved uth for its own sake; lie was a man of unbending upright Ii I 1 ks ; anil he abhorred all f.irnis of dishorn: sly. Rentte In llie erring i.nl lull of pity for the outcast, he o ]iatieiice wiih hypecewy, iiud was, severe in his ivbukcs of self-righteous le-sumpliiin. Straightforward atund, lie eoultl not hi ,ir crookedness in dealing, .olliing was more distasteful Io him than allecta- ii. eiini. Though he had but little to my about in, it was a subject that lay very near his heart; owed his appreciation of il by deeds rather than l.y word*, "linst (hou liiillii lt:vt (<(.> ft :/!< .y—O'/ur.-. i,,.,!."' was ,i ientiment which inel with Ids hearlit-at acceptance. Ccorge Corson was a consistent Abolitionist, and one uf the most efficient coadjutors in our unuse. A utem. bcr uf the I'ennsylviiuia Sueiety from iu origin, he was to the last one of ils most coi^inl and uogrudging sup- porters. Most sadly shall we miss I) in I from our ranks, and keenly felt will be tho bereavement of bis J lure. But we shall have for cur consolntion (bough nbucnt in hotly he is present with us in and that the example of his life remains for our h The memory of one so good cannot fail to Incite who loved him to emulate his virtues. Tut; Lctteh iiu ii Swrr/fciiuvii. which will be found n the fourth pugc, will bo welcome not only Io the uttiedlnto friends of llie writer, but to our renders enerally. The friend who in. s.. kind ns to send It to s is entitled to our thanks. V.nu tiivt Wwxus.—In Charleston, on Iho ISth co was an inunensi. galliering to wok e llu 1 atntives of the city on their return frotu Celont- -i-e. ai members of llie Legislature, they had i active pni-t in the Secession movement One of these representatives, -Mr. Porter, showed in his speech Hint he had read the lecture of Wendell Phillips, published iu the.se columns last week. " Why, lelluw- citinons," lie exclaimed, " nu orator of Mnssaclnuotts (Wendell Phillips) bin said, since ll.e election of Lincoln, that it is tho flint time in the history of the ttepublic thai the slave bus elected the President of tho United Slates. Yes, felloiv-cltiicns, mark the taunt and tho instill, thai the slave has elected tho President of the I „ii, .1 Stab And it i- true. But alongside of that fan. when it e> written down in the history nf tl II. public. th.r> will I..- wiittcn another fact, which this : ihat Iheru was one. at least, of these slnvoholding States Ihat refused, with otter scorn, unlo tho very dis- ruption of tho Confederacy, to submit to the inaugura- tion uf a President elected by a slave." If South Caro- lina cuts herself adrift from the Union, she may find her slaves, Ore long, lining umictliing oven less to her mi.., I than electing a ['resident. Tin: lli-i. UI.-.-I-.-. Fimii.v. consisting "i" John W.riuleh- inson and Mrs. Abl.y Hutchinson I'alton of the original qunrklto company, and Mrs. Fannie B. itutchiiisc (wife of John W.) and Viola G. aad Henry J. Ilulchinao their children, nre giving n scries of concerts in lb city and vicinity. On Monday evening they eaug to eisiwded aiidii.nce nt the Athenemn iu Brooklyn, and Thursday evening fit the Cooper Inslitulo in this cit They will sing again in the placo last mentioned i Mnnday evening. Sixteen years ago, when anti-slavci opinions were unpopular, llie Hutchinson Family, constituted, did nut hesilate to sing the songs freedom, thereby giving great oll'enee to the pro-slave: press and io many persons who, hilt for that circui stance i would have done much lo advance their pec interests. Tho Family ns uuw constituted will found, we venture to say. equally true to their ennv lions. Iiu and hear them. ... ..i , ., ..- | 1.1 fn, ,,..,!„_. a ,".,.71.'1 th.i llioy w.r. Ihc The, III.-, .x ' iiccocdiujlj r. |. cruph. d north . rofusi pn.-sci.^Trfl. 'lbs movement - an I m ol ai ordinnnco hitherto a dead letttt. hut now rrviied " il is feared thru in the midst ..I" niilioi|.nkil ileslitnlhlii next winter at (In- N'ordi. crowds ol pau- pers will llood the Southern cities. A despatch from Washington to Tt'.f. lkrul-1 s.T.vii The Fire-eaters have been admonished by lite Union nan that their present eonr-c I-, i.-uiling to stir up Invo insurrections. The more intelligent mnhittoes, ,et a plan for pn.loiigingtlii'ir (..tiii of servitude, which they h.avo been led lo suppose, hv their mnslera* speeches, would conic lo an end wilii the election nf Lincoln. Many fear that lh.:_v inni beeome =o exns- peraled by the probable .ieknt ot' antieipatcd emnn- i|,:ili.,ii Ihn.iigli cllbrl- ai 'e-ce.-sion, Ihat limy will irise in revenge. All good [.eople shudder nt the possibility ofaoeh a result." orrespondent of The Hcrnkl writes : " Tho exhi- bition Ihr snle of pnrl)-.-iih ..i' I .in. In, in Ii., han-t.- ]dace, New Orlcaim. on the iiili or lihh ins!., so exas- perated the people that the exhibitor barely escaped violent de.ith nt their hands. What if Lincoln were to appear ia propri-i /••ri.iim at the same place? Iii would be llayc.l alive, t nu a Ijnion exist when sucl feelings rir.. enlei'li d i. cuius! it~ chief magistrale ,1...:. i IY,-1, n ,.„ il,,, l..„i thing thnt cold lie done for the Cnion now- would be In .send Hid A lie on u alio ilgi"image to 'ew Urlonnt. lie would have ao mx : prepnre his inaugural after thnt." Tl.: Ttw ':•}• : -.liiiliiH Wayne, el the United Stab upi'enie f'e.iirt. ha-, it i-i unilci-otoo'l, written a lelti . a friend in »"ii~l.uict.,ii s.. in;.-, .uneiig other thing . nit ]".iui-lil(ln ol lb,.- citi/cus el Sal an nab ,ire opposed Senator Tuonih- dclii, red n speech nt Mi Ik. lac- .ilk. in ..(tier ilne. in (lie eont-sv uf whieh lie said he hud rv .icorgin in Cungr.-ss for tilteen years, and lanked its l.-.'isl it.,i-H Jin- thus Inan.i-ilig him, but the iinor, II' 1 -lid, h.i.l been ..ul.-i-r. ,| a, king :i:i lie i live it ; that ,.„ II,: ill, ; -;f j;.irca ii-j-1 Iuj resigi c stated that mean. 1 lying In llie ereel Immense quantitii , break open the jui ivovo provided by a vc ine.-,dl".ll.l 1- . i, .banned I, if things." .-lif.s ,r ..r'lii,- ,, [:; A i imin.—Last ,.i...|al..ll,mili"i"i.'ini- ib.ir.n" the ci|>en-ie "I c Governor power to mi each coiiiili Willi bieh lie- Slate should i.I'llicSl.itc.IAl '"'j't'/.TlL. .i/t'ImM cek in advance of the .1- the election '( I inC'.lii. Southern Slate '//,.: ttmW c f Georgia say Irown i« a humble, pit Hie Co.. .-kalicl ii.neel : 1 the |.ill i'viis of ^outh Cirohna ami . Iiin the Inst few days, poiidint, speaking of the Govt Vrtin I,,. II L-nnu-n rlnil- Cnnknown tin I- Hull, nud far frmil lic- schoul." And a (1, .'!. I.i~t el" -i.lllll r.,|-..lil,a .. when once in fur il it li-i Is say In- the very last men who will yi, I.I. Me is an, liars of the Mel hod in l'|-i--.-;.[..il i.'l .1. iu tin- men. civ iveidlhv. and is reprcfcnted a= not . lig tor anydiiug but the w.l _ ..I b. 77ie ll.rM's Washington des|iati A letter Ii i n slrone cotton lys that Ihe.-e is really no unau half of the nee dadciphia.""" " Hid alt the |.rel.-' I ..la- South Carolina * to throw the tea ovcrbua Tile Baptist Convention of Maryland hf a.ldre-.s. pivpand In- (In- lie v. t'r. Fuller foeinerlv ot" South Carolina, i.|.|.,::.line In i in Alabama, Gcui-giii and a.mili C u-oliu:' liuab'i-aii.ui. forbearance, nnd brotherly period nf excitement. J. C. Morgan ,t Co. received on Monday ,f Ihr his piper, , ie,7i. ; -ii.-.., Cnowpun.—Wo are reluctantly compelled to postpone letters from Mrs. Mnrtincou, Rev. W. II. Bonner of London and Stephen S. Foster, ami much other mi for which we hoped to tlnd room this weefc. Tub Lnotc ,ini> rnr. Miiri.ii.n-v or Si_nt:nv are vividly illustrated in Ihc extract we this week print from tht message of the Governor of Georgia. His ideas of Northern society betray incredible ignorance or sure less eH>ontery, lli:nti:ei.iTiox vv Slvvi nre reaping the iirsl frui giiieral ikpre.-iali if giniil paper -ay: Ihal Xi mure than ".!.' per cent, 11 In, iu '.in in 00 per cent. AST!-Sl.t l'iii.i-i:erv.—Tin- .sl.i.eb" i of their dliuni'.ri panic icir buiuan property. A ! negroes have already fallen id second and third rate bands ii M.:i: i. ilKiiuH Gaitiix*. -I ..Xcwport, . South Trenton. .Trenton Vlllugi asked, if she should sr ; troop*, having only ns Sew York City, land." A diplomat n ie innniry if briuiee lied, ''Oh. yes! ti outitli Cnrobn "-Tribiin. will abolish slu- Thelbib'ighiX.C.l n-y.V/Ticiys : 'Already the elliil.. .i—.- — lifesling themselves. Ki ceiil., and mum other pn ate. And for wdiat^ bl in lUvlupl I." linid-- t i now wealthy will b " .",'7 - .." ,.s Picayune relates this story: "Som fancy store in this city, discovered slock of fancy articles eicpaied fu an, and an immediate demonstrntio Special gioticw. Pi ilH if 11 „l,.ll.b mil Fair Cii i.,:-it„-. Cireic e 1 ,i • .:„ l.,ll t'.roie !:,!-. i B^Sociclywlll l.r held ,,, Salnnlay, :;,... 31 tl-tiui! Kl *T. .., tin- it New Ii. nt 1 Axxx E. Dicctksos will speak in Itucka Count)' Po., as f..iii.v..- : '"in So*enlli .lay uvenliip, Jim in-i. ,,t 7 oVIiK-k. in Sewlowu Hall, 1111 Woman'. Illglit.. It,, r,th. at Tlilfl 1I.11 ,-i.:niug I , .'7lh in-1., lit . o'cl.s-li.li, V .i.||,-,. 011W1.ma11Mti1.-h1-. Kcnlictt S.|mu... tlii-ltr ('..iii.ty, ..,, ,:,-,, all. day el eiiillg. [lei. I't. .11 7 o'ete-'k.r.n W an'- l(ii:lil-. ami l|,e ^rtvcvtiofuicuts. ladders. -I,. nu.d the Here, nnd poor (JL'U-'-'. ' 1NTUAL1H TH'i.V- r >| |||l; Jtllil.F. — I M threat.- "f rope and lamp-] t. brolto l? u '''."''.' ,' .' .', : , : , , | >l , ",' ',',' '"."","' ,,idr.-d. Being hard pivs-ed. he look i°< «it «.niti4ieu<,m olib- ,..'-[v~i e ,, 1,. i'w, ',.[ ,'.r',",'^. 'ii'.i'j IS, IB.. ..Salorday and Sunday . - i. V. [uvis°ttS""' 1 *''1" " lS,l«....Tue,.la.-.md Wedn.-Mlay llr.s-k.f, brake aied &-- 'ingu.ve by bikinL- hit It.c kek-np. It iTiyHKLI.KIl A Wll -rCS obllLNC M V U' .f- : 11 M,21...,ThuridoyandFriday Salisbury, I VTM dUconred on inquiry, that the boy employed by Y t>ffi«, Mi Bi<*ln/, N.« Yo.i.