This document appears to be a newspaper article from March 14, 1863 discussing several topics:
- Resolutions passed by Congress opposing foreign intervention in the American Civil War and affirming the United States' right to resolve the conflict without outside influence.
- Discussion of a meeting in London of the Emancipation Society to support the Union's fight against the Confederacy. The meeting criticized the Lord Mayor of London for hosting a representative of the Confederacy.
- Mention of General Banks issuing an order related to plantation workers and slaves in Louisiana.
- Criticism of a British newspaper for siding with slaveholders and accusing the working classes in England of irreligion.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16S7w5Xb
This document summarizes events from several anti-slavery meetings that were disrupted by mobs. The Albany, NY anti-slavery convention saw speakers like Lucretia Mott interrupted by noise and hissing from the crowd. Mayor Thatcher urged the crowd to respect free speech rights. In Ann Arbor, MI, an anti-slavery convention had to abandon their planned venue due to threats of mob violence. When they met elsewhere, the meeting was taken over by a mob and ended in physical violence. The document also mentions disruptions of earlier meetings in DeWitt, Syracuse, Utica, and Auburn.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4S7w5Xb
This document summarizes events from several anti-slavery meetings that were disrupted by mobs. The Albany, NY anti-slavery convention saw speakers like Lucretia Mott interrupted by noise and hissing from the crowd. Mayor Thatcher urged the crowd to respect free speech rights. In Ann Arbor, MI, an anti-slavery convention had to abandon their planned venue due to threats of mob violence, and eventually had to end early due to a hostile crowd that became violent. The Cleveland Leader also reported on a fugitive slave case in Ohio where a woman was arrested under the Fugitive Slave Act and taken to a hearing, amidst large crowds at the courthouse.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 17S7w5Xb
This document appears to be from an American anti-slavery newspaper from 1860. It contains several short articles and summaries of speeches on the topics of slavery, the upcoming presidential election, and the divisions between pro and anti-slavery factions in America at the time.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper from March 28, 1863 that discusses various topics related to the Civil War and slavery. It includes:
1) A compliment for "Copperheads" or Northern Democrats who were opposed to the Lincoln administration.
2) A discussion of the use of black soldiers in the Union army and how it could undermine the Confederacy.
3) A quote from a Confederate source about what the South wants, which is free trade but not the end of slavery.
4) Several letters to the editor discussing the Emancipation Proclamation and whether it will help or hurt the Union war effort.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20S7w5Xb
The document is an issue of the National Anti-Slavery Standard newspaper from December 20, 1862. It contains several articles related to slavery and the American Civil War:
1) A report on diplomatic discussions around slavery between representatives of the United States and other countries, with the US maintaining that slavery is a domestic issue.
2) A summary of the military and political situation in the Confederate states, noting the emancipation of thousands of slaves and potential for social revolution as the war continues.
3) Discussion of the Lincoln administration's policies towards slavery, African colonization, and allegations that the administration favors emancipation and racial equality.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12S7w5Xb
- The document is an excerpt from the National Anti-Slavery Standard newspaper from July 12, 1862.
- It summarizes speeches given at a meeting of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, where speakers advocated for preserving the Union and Constitution while opposing measures like emancipation and the confiscation of slaveholder property.
- One speaker argued that abolitionism, not slavery, was the cause of rebellion and that the Union could only be preserved if the interests of slaveholders were protected.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14S7w5Xb
This document is an issue of the Rational Anti-Slavery Standard from February 14, 1863. It contains several articles that are critical of General Benjamin Butler and his actions in New Orleans, describing him as a "beast" and "modern Verres." It also includes a letter from a Colonel in South Carolina expressing his approval of several officers, including some of Irish and English descent. Finally, it reprints an address given by a Black man arguing that Black men should be allowed to fight for the Union and predicting they will fight well if given the chance.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Feb 16S7w5Xb
This document summarizes events from several anti-slavery meetings that were disrupted by mobs. The Albany, NY anti-slavery convention saw speakers like Lucretia Mott interrupted by noise and hissing from the crowd. Mayor Thatcher urged the crowd to respect free speech rights. In Ann Arbor, MI, an anti-slavery convention had to abandon their planned venue due to threats of mob violence. When they met elsewhere, the meeting was taken over by a mob and ended in physical violence. The document also mentions disruptions of earlier meetings in DeWitt, Syracuse, Utica, and Auburn.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 4S7w5Xb
This document summarizes events from several anti-slavery meetings that were disrupted by mobs. The Albany, NY anti-slavery convention saw speakers like Lucretia Mott interrupted by noise and hissing from the crowd. Mayor Thatcher urged the crowd to respect free speech rights. In Ann Arbor, MI, an anti-slavery convention had to abandon their planned venue due to threats of mob violence, and eventually had to end early due to a hostile crowd that became violent. The Cleveland Leader also reported on a fugitive slave case in Ohio where a woman was arrested under the Fugitive Slave Act and taken to a hearing, amidst large crowds at the courthouse.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 17S7w5Xb
This document appears to be from an American anti-slavery newspaper from 1860. It contains several short articles and summaries of speeches on the topics of slavery, the upcoming presidential election, and the divisions between pro and anti-slavery factions in America at the time.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Mar 28S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper from March 28, 1863 that discusses various topics related to the Civil War and slavery. It includes:
1) A compliment for "Copperheads" or Northern Democrats who were opposed to the Lincoln administration.
2) A discussion of the use of black soldiers in the Union army and how it could undermine the Confederacy.
3) A quote from a Confederate source about what the South wants, which is free trade but not the end of slavery.
4) Several letters to the editor discussing the Emancipation Proclamation and whether it will help or hurt the Union war effort.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 20S7w5Xb
The document is an issue of the National Anti-Slavery Standard newspaper from December 20, 1862. It contains several articles related to slavery and the American Civil War:
1) A report on diplomatic discussions around slavery between representatives of the United States and other countries, with the US maintaining that slavery is a domestic issue.
2) A summary of the military and political situation in the Confederate states, noting the emancipation of thousands of slaves and potential for social revolution as the war continues.
3) Discussion of the Lincoln administration's policies towards slavery, African colonization, and allegations that the administration favors emancipation and racial equality.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 12S7w5Xb
- The document is an excerpt from the National Anti-Slavery Standard newspaper from July 12, 1862.
- It summarizes speeches given at a meeting of the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society, where speakers advocated for preserving the Union and Constitution while opposing measures like emancipation and the confiscation of slaveholder property.
- One speaker argued that abolitionism, not slavery, was the cause of rebellion and that the Union could only be preserved if the interests of slaveholders were protected.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 14S7w5Xb
This document is an issue of the Rational Anti-Slavery Standard from February 14, 1863. It contains several articles that are critical of General Benjamin Butler and his actions in New Orleans, describing him as a "beast" and "modern Verres." It also includes a letter from a Colonel in South Carolina expressing his approval of several officers, including some of Irish and English descent. Finally, it reprints an address given by a Black man arguing that Black men should be allowed to fight for the Union and predicting they will fight well if given the chance.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from 1862 discussing lecturers and the lack of a tax on them. In 3 sentences:
The article argues that Congress overlooked taxing lecturers, who require little capital to operate and are a large group. It notes most lecturers are abolitionists or reformers who use their platforms to push radical views, often insulting audiences, and have developed techniques like responding to hisses that help their careers. The article advises audiences to avoid lecturers they disagree with and not give them money rather than hissing.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article that discusses the importance of enlisting the help of slaves in fighting against the Confederacy during the American Civil War. It argues that the Union cannot defeat the rebels without an alliance with the slaves, who have extensive knowledge of the terrain in the South that could help the Union army. The article notes that the slaves do not want to be re-enslaved and would fight for freedom and equality. It claims that with the help of the slaves, the Union could have secret communication lines and gain crucial intelligence about rebel troop movements and locations.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23S7w5Xb
This document summarizes a meeting held in New York City to discuss slavery. It includes summaries of speeches given by several clergymen, including Dr. Cheever and Dr. Guthrie of Scotland. Dr. Guthrie argued that slavery violates God's commandments and that the pro-slavery arguments of Dr. Hodge of Princeton are wrong and unconvincing. The meeting resolved that slavery is against Christian principles. The document also briefly discusses Virginia proposing terms to settle disputes between the federal government and seceded states over slavery.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28S7w5Xb
This document appears to be a newspaper article from 1863 containing summaries of speeches given in support of abolitionism and the Union cause in the American Civil War. It includes the following key points:
1) The speakers expressed sympathy for the North rather than the South in the Civil War because victory for the North would advance the cause of negro emancipation.
2) They condemned slavery as an abomination and argued the conscience of free England could not countenance its extension or the principles of the Confederacy fighting to preserve it.
3) One speaker stated that England and the United States should be friends and allies in promoting religion, liberty and peace throughout the world.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9S7w5Xb
This document appears to be a newspaper article from February 1857 discussing political issues related to slavery in the United States. It references compromises being discussed in Congress to address tensions between slaveholding and non-slaveholding states. It also discusses the deteriorating condition of Sherman Booth, a man imprisoned for helping slaves escape, and criticizes politicians for not doing more to protect the rights and interests of Northern free men in Southern states.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article that discusses several topics:
1. It summarizes a speech given by Mr. Brooks arguing that reunion with the South could only happen if slavery was allowed to continue on the old basis. It also discusses the similarities between the Federal and Confederate constitutions.
2. It discusses Wendell Phillips' criticism of pro-slavery positions and his style of addressing controversial topics through "long tilts of polemical disputation."
3. It analyzes the impact of the war and emancipation, arguing that the Union would be stronger after abolishing slavery than by allowing it to continue.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from November 1, 1862 discussing several topics:
1) It criticizes the delay in military campaigns and urges more decisive action to avoid wasting away in winter camps.
2) It argues that delays give opportunities for foreign meddling and hurt the war effort and Northern morale.
3) It claims the people will support the administration if they see signs of energy in the field and cabinet to end the conflict.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25S7w5Xb
This document summarizes several articles from the October 25, 1862 issue of the American Anti-Slavery Society newspaper. It discusses Dr. Hellows' views on the war and slavery, praising Charles Sumner as an anti-slavery statesman, and analyzing the Emancipation Proclamation and its enforcement. Key points include Dr. Hellows identifying a lack of national representation and weak executive power as flaws revealed by the war, and arguing slavery was the primary cause of secession; praise for Sumner's embodiment of growing anti-slavery sentiment; and asserting enforcement of emancipation will bring peace while failure to do so risks anarchy and a broken nation.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25S7w5Xb
This document summarizes several articles from the October 25, 1862 issue of the American Anti-Slavery Society newspaper. It discusses Dr. Hellows' views on the war and slavery, praising Charles Sumner as an anti-slavery statesman, and analyzing the Emancipation Proclamation and its enforcement. Key points include Dr. Hellows identifying a lack of national representation and weak executive power as flaws revealed by the war, and arguing slavery was the primary cause of secession; praise for Sumner's embodiment of growing anti-slavery sentiment; and analysis of the Emancipation Proclamation as a military necessity that would bring peace if enforced.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18S7w5Xb
This document contains excerpts from several speeches and articles discussing slavery and abolition. It includes the following:
- A passage from the Catholic Church stating it sees all people as equal in the eyes of God, regardless of race, and does not support the institution of slavery.
- Excerpts from speeches given by Reverend G.A. Brownson and D. Gratz Brown advocating for the abolition of slavery and arguing it is necessary both morally and politically.
- A summary of the Emancipation Proclamation stating it was a pivotal moment that should be endorsed.
- Additional quotes from speeches and articles supporting the abolition of slavery and arguing the institution is unjust and against Christian principles.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10S7w5Xb
This document contains a summary of a speech given by John Rossack defending himself against charges of violating slave laws. In his speech, Rossack argues that slave laws violate moral and religious principles by denying basic human rights. He acknowledges that he cannot obey laws that require oppressing others or go against his duty to God. While he is willing to suffer consequences, he cannot endorse injustice by joining those who make and enforce wicked slave laws.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from January 19, 1861 discussing slavery and abolitionism. It argues that abolitionists misrepresent slavery by only presenting the worst abuses while ignoring the biblical support for slavery. It claims Jesus and the apostles did not condemn slavery despite its prevalence in their society. The document also contains a letter from Rev. H.J. Van Dyke defending his criticism of abolitionism, saying he is urging conscience toward the flock he shepherds and must warn of coming wolves. In under 3 sentences, this summary outlines the main argument about biblical support for slavery and response to potential criticism.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from August 24, 1861 discussing the treatment of black fugitives within Union military lines during the Civil War. It summarizes the position of Secretary of War Cameron that fugitive blacks should be treated as slaves and returned to their masters after the war. It argues this assumes the fugitives are slaves without proof of ownership claims and would make the government complicit in slavery. It also summarizes speeches from a celebration of emancipation calling for abolition as a war aim and criticizing the lack of leadership on emancipation.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11S7w5Xb
The document contains several articles discussing the political issues surrounding slavery and the American Civil War. It includes responses to President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, debates conservative and radical views, and addresses given by political figures analyzing the rebellion from different perspectives. Overall, the document presents a variety of opinions on the major events and controversies of the time.
Willis a. carto toward history - journal of historical review volume 5 no. 1RareBooksnRecords
1) The document discusses the importance of writing accurate history that focuses on the underlying forces and power dynamics, rather than superficial details.
2) It argues that many mainstream histories are "bunk" because they are written to serve political agendas rather than reveal the truth.
3) A key alliance discussed is between international banks and political groups that pushed for US involvement in World War 1 and 2 against the will of the people. Understanding these power dynamics is important for writing real history.
This document provides a summary of international news from newspapers in England arriving on September 18, 1851. Politically, things were quiet in England as the Queen visited Scotland. In France, attention was on the upcoming presidential election. Small disturbances continued in Austria and Portugal. The document also discusses the ongoing Great Exhibition in London and notes of emigration from Ireland to Canada.
- The author provides an analysis of the political situation in Omsk, Siberia from their perspective as an observer. They believe Admiral Kolchak's government in Omsk is the best option currently to maintain order, despite its authoritarian tactics initially.
- Bolshevik influence in Siberia is exaggerated according to estimates of only 2% support among peasants. However, Japanese and some Western propaganda threatens the Kolchak government's stability.
- The author warns that Western countries like the US may face trouble if they are found complicit in the spread of Bolshevism, which the author views very negatively and would prefer to suppress with force.
The New Age of Surveillance - The New American Magazine - Nov 7 2013miscott57
While some Americans have claimed U.S. government surveillance of Americans is innocuous,
others have equated it with the infamous East German Stasi. Actually, it's worse.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 7S7w5Xb
1. The document appears to be from a newspaper published by the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society discussing issues related to slavery and the Civil War.
2. It discusses proposals to arm slaves and use them as soldiers against the Confederacy, which was met with both support and opposition. Recruiting black soldiers was seen as a way to undermine the Confederacy and help win the war.
3. It also discusses tensions between the North and Southwestern states, with some arguing the Southwestern states should form their own separate government if the North continues its war policies. However, the document expresses support for continuing the war to preserve the Union.
Major military authorities regard the Twin Cities area as the nation's major center for the spread of Communism. A military officer from the University of Minnesota claims Communism is rampant at the university and that the student newspaper, the Minnesota Daily, has communist influences. He calls for public support of the ROTC program at the university. Another military officer has returned from investigating claims of Communism being taught at a local high school.
An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called AfricansS7w5Xb
This document provides a brief history of Negro slavery, outlining its origins and spread. It began in 1442 when Portuguese explorer Prince Henry had African prisoners exchanged for 10 African slaves. It then spread to Spanish colonies in the early 1500s as native Indians died out and African slaves were imported. Englishman Sir John Hawkins was the first to engage in the slave trade, transporting 300 Africans to Hispaniola against their will in the 1560s. Over the following centuries, slavery took hold in British, French and other colonies in the Americas. The document argues slavery has had disastrous effects on Africa by fueling warfare, private kidnapping, and leaders' sale of their own people for goods from European ships. It
This document is an almanac from 1836 that provides summaries of events related to the abolitionist movement as well as astronomical data and calendars. It begins with a summary of eclipses that will occur in 1836 and includes chronological cycles. The document expresses the publisher's intention to use the almanac to raise awareness about the injustice of slavery and discusses their rationale for addressing northern complicity in the system. It provides calendars with times for sunrise, sunset, high tides and other data. Throughout are quotes, statistics and summaries of pro-slavery newspaper advertisements intended to illustrate the human toll of slavery.
More Related Content
Similar to National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Dec 27S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from 1862 discussing lecturers and the lack of a tax on them. In 3 sentences:
The article argues that Congress overlooked taxing lecturers, who require little capital to operate and are a large group. It notes most lecturers are abolitionists or reformers who use their platforms to push radical views, often insulting audiences, and have developed techniques like responding to hisses that help their careers. The article advises audiences to avoid lecturers they disagree with and not give them money rather than hissing.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Jul 26S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article that discusses the importance of enlisting the help of slaves in fighting against the Confederacy during the American Civil War. It argues that the Union cannot defeat the rebels without an alliance with the slaves, who have extensive knowledge of the terrain in the South that could help the Union army. The article notes that the slaves do not want to be re-enslaved and would fight for freedom and equality. It claims that with the help of the slaves, the Union could have secret communication lines and gain crucial intelligence about rebel troop movements and locations.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 23S7w5Xb
This document summarizes a meeting held in New York City to discuss slavery. It includes summaries of speeches given by several clergymen, including Dr. Cheever and Dr. Guthrie of Scotland. Dr. Guthrie argued that slavery violates God's commandments and that the pro-slavery arguments of Dr. Hodge of Princeton are wrong and unconvincing. The meeting resolved that slavery is against Christian principles. The document also briefly discusses Virginia proposing terms to settle disputes between the federal government and seceded states over slavery.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb. 28S7w5Xb
This document appears to be a newspaper article from 1863 containing summaries of speeches given in support of abolitionism and the Union cause in the American Civil War. It includes the following key points:
1) The speakers expressed sympathy for the North rather than the South in the Civil War because victory for the North would advance the cause of negro emancipation.
2) They condemned slavery as an abomination and argued the conscience of free England could not countenance its extension or the principles of the Confederacy fighting to preserve it.
3) One speaker stated that England and the United States should be friends and allies in promoting religion, liberty and peace throughout the world.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Mar 9S7w5Xb
This document appears to be a newspaper article from February 1857 discussing political issues related to slavery in the United States. It references compromises being discussed in Congress to address tensions between slaveholding and non-slaveholding states. It also discusses the deteriorating condition of Sherman Booth, a man imprisoned for helping slaves escape, and criticizes politicians for not doing more to protect the rights and interests of Northern free men in Southern states.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Jan 31S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article that discusses several topics:
1. It summarizes a speech given by Mr. Brooks arguing that reunion with the South could only happen if slavery was allowed to continue on the old basis. It also discusses the similarities between the Federal and Confederate constitutions.
2. It discusses Wendell Phillips' criticism of pro-slavery positions and his style of addressing controversial topics through "long tilts of polemical disputation."
3. It analyzes the impact of the war and emancipation, arguing that the Union would be stronger after abolishing slavery than by allowing it to continue.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Nov 1S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from November 1, 1862 discussing several topics:
1) It criticizes the delay in military campaigns and urges more decisive action to avoid wasting away in winter camps.
2) It argues that delays give opportunities for foreign meddling and hurt the war effort and Northern morale.
3) It claims the people will support the administration if they see signs of energy in the field and cabinet to end the conflict.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 25S7w5Xb
This document summarizes several articles from the October 25, 1862 issue of the American Anti-Slavery Society newspaper. It discusses Dr. Hellows' views on the war and slavery, praising Charles Sumner as an anti-slavery statesman, and analyzing the Emancipation Proclamation and its enforcement. Key points include Dr. Hellows identifying a lack of national representation and weak executive power as flaws revealed by the war, and arguing slavery was the primary cause of secession; praise for Sumner's embodiment of growing anti-slavery sentiment; and asserting enforcement of emancipation will bring peace while failure to do so risks anarchy and a broken nation.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 25S7w5Xb
This document summarizes several articles from the October 25, 1862 issue of the American Anti-Slavery Society newspaper. It discusses Dr. Hellows' views on the war and slavery, praising Charles Sumner as an anti-slavery statesman, and analyzing the Emancipation Proclamation and its enforcement. Key points include Dr. Hellows identifying a lack of national representation and weak executive power as flaws revealed by the war, and arguing slavery was the primary cause of secession; praise for Sumner's embodiment of growing anti-slavery sentiment; and analysis of the Emancipation Proclamation as a military necessity that would bring peace if enforced.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 18S7w5Xb
This document contains excerpts from several speeches and articles discussing slavery and abolition. It includes the following:
- A passage from the Catholic Church stating it sees all people as equal in the eyes of God, regardless of race, and does not support the institution of slavery.
- Excerpts from speeches given by Reverend G.A. Brownson and D. Gratz Brown advocating for the abolition of slavery and arguing it is necessary both morally and politically.
- A summary of the Emancipation Proclamation stating it was a pivotal moment that should be endorsed.
- Additional quotes from speeches and articles supporting the abolition of slavery and arguing the institution is unjust and against Christian principles.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Nov 10S7w5Xb
This document contains a summary of a speech given by John Rossack defending himself against charges of violating slave laws. In his speech, Rossack argues that slave laws violate moral and religious principles by denying basic human rights. He acknowledges that he cannot obey laws that require oppressing others or go against his duty to God. While he is willing to suffer consequences, he cannot endorse injustice by joining those who make and enforce wicked slave laws.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Jan 19S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from January 19, 1861 discussing slavery and abolitionism. It argues that abolitionists misrepresent slavery by only presenting the worst abuses while ignoring the biblical support for slavery. It claims Jesus and the apostles did not condemn slavery despite its prevalence in their society. The document also contains a letter from Rev. H.J. Van Dyke defending his criticism of abolitionism, saying he is urging conscience toward the flock he shepherds and must warn of coming wolves. In under 3 sentences, this summary outlines the main argument about biblical support for slavery and response to potential criticism.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1861, Aug 24S7w5Xb
This document is a newspaper article from August 24, 1861 discussing the treatment of black fugitives within Union military lines during the Civil War. It summarizes the position of Secretary of War Cameron that fugitive blacks should be treated as slaves and returned to their masters after the war. It argues this assumes the fugitives are slaves without proof of ownership claims and would make the government complicit in slavery. It also summarizes speeches from a celebration of emancipation calling for abolition as a war aim and criticizing the lack of leadership on emancipation.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Oct 11S7w5Xb
The document contains several articles discussing the political issues surrounding slavery and the American Civil War. It includes responses to President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation, debates conservative and radical views, and addresses given by political figures analyzing the rebellion from different perspectives. Overall, the document presents a variety of opinions on the major events and controversies of the time.
Willis a. carto toward history - journal of historical review volume 5 no. 1RareBooksnRecords
1) The document discusses the importance of writing accurate history that focuses on the underlying forces and power dynamics, rather than superficial details.
2) It argues that many mainstream histories are "bunk" because they are written to serve political agendas rather than reveal the truth.
3) A key alliance discussed is between international banks and political groups that pushed for US involvement in World War 1 and 2 against the will of the people. Understanding these power dynamics is important for writing real history.
This document provides a summary of international news from newspapers in England arriving on September 18, 1851. Politically, things were quiet in England as the Queen visited Scotland. In France, attention was on the upcoming presidential election. Small disturbances continued in Austria and Portugal. The document also discusses the ongoing Great Exhibition in London and notes of emigration from Ireland to Canada.
- The author provides an analysis of the political situation in Omsk, Siberia from their perspective as an observer. They believe Admiral Kolchak's government in Omsk is the best option currently to maintain order, despite its authoritarian tactics initially.
- Bolshevik influence in Siberia is exaggerated according to estimates of only 2% support among peasants. However, Japanese and some Western propaganda threatens the Kolchak government's stability.
- The author warns that Western countries like the US may face trouble if they are found complicit in the spread of Bolshevism, which the author views very negatively and would prefer to suppress with force.
The New Age of Surveillance - The New American Magazine - Nov 7 2013miscott57
While some Americans have claimed U.S. government surveillance of Americans is innocuous,
others have equated it with the infamous East German Stasi. Actually, it's worse.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1863, Feb 7S7w5Xb
1. The document appears to be from a newspaper published by the Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society discussing issues related to slavery and the Civil War.
2. It discusses proposals to arm slaves and use them as soldiers against the Confederacy, which was met with both support and opposition. Recruiting black soldiers was seen as a way to undermine the Confederacy and help win the war.
3. It also discusses tensions between the North and Southwestern states, with some arguing the Southwestern states should form their own separate government if the North continues its war policies. However, the document expresses support for continuing the war to preserve the Union.
Major military authorities regard the Twin Cities area as the nation's major center for the spread of Communism. A military officer from the University of Minnesota claims Communism is rampant at the university and that the student newspaper, the Minnesota Daily, has communist influences. He calls for public support of the ROTC program at the university. Another military officer has returned from investigating claims of Communism being taught at a local high school.
Similar to National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14 (20)
An Appeal in Favor of that Class of Americans Called AfricansS7w5Xb
This document provides a brief history of Negro slavery, outlining its origins and spread. It began in 1442 when Portuguese explorer Prince Henry had African prisoners exchanged for 10 African slaves. It then spread to Spanish colonies in the early 1500s as native Indians died out and African slaves were imported. Englishman Sir John Hawkins was the first to engage in the slave trade, transporting 300 Africans to Hispaniola against their will in the 1560s. Over the following centuries, slavery took hold in British, French and other colonies in the Americas. The document argues slavery has had disastrous effects on Africa by fueling warfare, private kidnapping, and leaders' sale of their own people for goods from European ships. It
This document is an almanac from 1836 that provides summaries of events related to the abolitionist movement as well as astronomical data and calendars. It begins with a summary of eclipses that will occur in 1836 and includes chronological cycles. The document expresses the publisher's intention to use the almanac to raise awareness about the injustice of slavery and discusses their rationale for addressing northern complicity in the system. It provides calendars with times for sunrise, sunset, high tides and other data. Throughout are quotes, statistics and summaries of pro-slavery newspaper advertisements intended to illustrate the human toll of slavery.
This document appears to be an anti-slavery almanac from 1837. It includes information about eclipses for the year, as well as tables for tides, the moon's position, and weather predictions based on lunar phases. It also contains a note from the publisher advocating for the abolitionist cause and asking readers to consider the pro-slavery bias of most information available.
This document appears to be an excerpt from the 1838 edition of the American Anti-Slavery Almanac. It includes tables on tides and tidal factors for various locations along the eastern US coast. It also provides information on lunar phases and eclipses for the year. The almanac aimed to raise awareness about slavery and advocate for its abolition.
This document provides information about tides along the northeast coast of the United States for the year 1839. It includes a table showing the predicted heights of spring tides at various locations for each new and full moon throughout the year. Spring tides occur around the new and full moon when the gravitational forces of the sun and moon combine to produce the highest high tides and lowest low tides. The document explains how the tidal predictions can help coastal communities and ports prepare for very high tides that may cause flooding.
This document is an almanac from 1840 that provides astronomical calculations and tables related to tides, eclipses, and other natural phenomena for the year. It also includes some brief political notes opposing slavery and advocating for the rights of free assembly and discussion.
This document is an almanac from 1842 that provides astronomical and calendar information for that year. It includes tables of eclipses, tide times for various locations, and notes on the phases and positions of planets and stars. It also contains calendars adapted for different states, notes on calculating times based on location, and lists of religious festivals and fast days. The almanac was intended to provide useful astronomical data to readers across the United States for 1842.
This document is an excerpt from the American Anti-Slavery Almanac for 1843. It includes summaries of two deaths - James Forten, a free black man who was a prominent abolitionist in Philadelphia, and William Costin, a respected free black man who was a porter at the Bank of Washington for 24 years. It also includes predictions of eclipses for the year and a brief chronology item about the formation of the New England Anti-Slavery Society in 1832.
This document is an almanac for the year 1844 containing information such as lunar and solar phenomena including eclipses, tide tables, sunrise and sunset times, and other astronomical data. It provides calculations for the meridian of Cincinnati and surrounding areas. The almanac includes customary notes on the positions and phases of planets, equinoxes and solstices for the year, and chronological cycles used in calculating calendar dates.
This document contains astronomical and calendar information for the year 1846, including notes on the phases of Venus and the moon, dates of equinoxes and solstices, and two solar eclipses visible that year. It also provides farming advice and schedules for January through May, with recommendations on tasks like selling surplus crops, cleaning barns, tapping maple trees, and starting gardens.
This document provides astronomical and calendar information for the year 1847, including the motions of celestial bodies, dates of equinoxes and solstices, lunar cycles, moveable feasts, and predicted solar and lunar eclipses for the year. It also includes tables with the times of sunrise, sunset, and moonrise at several cities in North America. Additionally, the document outlines postal rates for various mail items in the United States.
This document is an excerpt from an anti-slavery catechism published in 1839 by Lydia Maria Child. It contains a dialogue between two people, with one person asking questions about slavery and the other providing detailed responses explaining the cruel realities and unjust laws of the slave system. Specific examples are given of slaves being overworked, underfed, hunted with dogs, tortured, and having no legal protections. The responses aim to refute common justifications for slavery and show that the system inevitably leads to widespread abuse that cannot be reformed.
This document is an excerpt from Angelina Grimke's 1837 "Appeal to the Christian Women of the South" in which she argues that slavery is inconsistent with Christianity. She examines the Bible and finds that while some forms of servitude were permitted under Jewish law, the servitude of slaves in the American South does not align with the protected forms of servitude described in the Bible. She notes key differences in how slaves became slaves in the South versus how servants became servants under Jewish law.
The narrator was born into slavery but had a relatively happy childhood, cared for by her kind mistress who taught her to read. When she was 6, her mother died and she learned for the first time that she was a slave. Her mistress also died when she was 12, leaving her to the 5-year-old daughter of her sister instead of freeing her as many had hoped, in accordance with her late mistress's promise to the narrator's mother. She was now at the mercy of a new master and mistress.
Letter from Lydia Maria Child to Henry Alexander S7w5Xb
Lydia Maria Child writes a letter to Henry Alexander Wise criticizing his views on slavery and constitutional rights. She argues that slavery has systematically violated the constitution to oppress those who oppose it. Child also claims Wise previously advocated for invading Mexico to spread slavery, which was tantamount to treason, robbery, and murder. While Wise condemns John Brown's actions, Child argues Wise's own past statements set an example for violent opposition to tyranny. Child believes the actions of slave states, not abolitionists, are most responsible for increasing opposition to slavery in the North.
Letters from New York; by Lydia Maria Francis ChildS7w5Xb
The Battery in New York City is as busy and chaotic as ever, with wealth and poverty existing side by side. While some dwell in opulent mansions, others struggle on the dirty streets. Street cries still fill the air day and night. However, the author has gained a new perspective and now sees deeper meanings in the scenes around them - in the interactions of people and in the foundations of society. While New York remains the same, the author has come to like it better due to their changed viewpoint.
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1860, Aug 11S7w5Xb
The document appears to be from a newspaper published on August 11, 1860 in New York. It contains various sections including news briefs about political events and people, as well as advertisements. However, most of the document is illegible due to the poor quality of the text image provided.
A Strategic Approach: GenAI in EducationPeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
A Survey of Techniques for Maximizing LLM Performance.pptx
National Anti-Slavery Standard, Year 1862, Mar 14
1. pitoal liuti^kbefB Itankfb.
voLVxxm. NO. 44. NEW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1863. WHOLE NO. 1,188.
ajiitfonnl gntti-.SIut'mj $tninliml,
,'UllLlSnKD WEEKLY, ON SATURDAY.
AjiircnnwN ,Mi-sL,VRiiv socuyrv.
PENNSYLVANIA ANTLSLAVKltY SOCIETY",
10U AWi-T.nlft «"(, 1 'MJu.WpSla.
j^lcrtions.
FOREIGN INTERVENTION.
CONCURRENT HESOLtTIONS OF CnNfiBEHS.
by Seniiior Siiiiiiicr. from (ho Com
lion::, nnd .-uloplcd fllmo?l nnnnllit'
Con pros'.)
ly by both lion
led Si
appears from the diplt
nbtuitlcd to Congress lhat a proposition,
i form, looking lo pacification through
-dim ion, hna been made to ibe United
[lie Emperor of the French nnd promptly
y tliu President ; and wberefls (lie idea of
y foreign govern menIs as pniclicftblL', »u(l
niuenl", Mirouyli thin misunderstanding,
in proceedings tending lo embarrass the
•ilinns which no™ nxisl 1)0 meen [Leln mill
_ m-, understanding on (his
I ,i, t.,r Ibo I
sited Stales the full
ll.'ii 1
1
l .
.
! . r, i lr-m f..i-.'ijj(i interference
1 of ilm l,.gl..*t rij-LlB of independent
nn hi Ihnt Goiwttjbs should declare ita
the House of lie presents lives concur-
whilo ill times past ilie failed States
ami accepted (he friendly mediation or
f foreign powers, for the pacific adjust-
rnijtiau.il ijiio^liouu, where Ilia United
l,r. n.-iriv ni'.tho onn vein iin.l sorno oilier
other pari; and
the nulu-
pond
while lb. > iire no! di>-|'.-.Hi'l io i
nil mid humane desire of fi.r-.-i^u |in«u mum ...
.arresting ilomtaic trouble*, which, widening in their
influence, liave nlllieied oilier countries, eopeoinlly in
view of the ciituuifi.'iii. e, deeply regreded by the
American people. ibnt (lie blow aimed by the rebel-
l,.ui :ii il.. .'•mi. ,iml lite bus fallen heavily upon the
bibming papulation uf Europe; yet, notwithstanding
lb. " ilnr,
r
v, I'ongrtrs cannot h.-iii.ile lo regard every
pn.p.i itii.ii (.1 foreign interfere are in the present cn-
li^t !>~ mp far unre.inr.nnbl ill inadmissible that its
only ex pi an n lion will bo found in a ru is understand-
ing of the true statu or Ihe nnoalion, and of ibe. real
character of the war in which tlie Republic is en-
b
Resolved, Thnt the United Slntesd'arO now emp-
pbir_' wilh nn unprovoked Bnd wicked rebellion,
nlni h i. i
eking lli.' ilerlriu lion of the ll.pnblie that
it nun i in bt ii new power, whose corner-stone, ac>
.
ut-di'i •
lo Ih- conlcs.-ion of its chiefs, ahull be
Hiavcn . iliat for ilie suppression of this rebellion,
and thus to save ilie llepublic nnd to prevent the
esUibliabniont of niicb a power, the National govern-
--inent is now employing armies and fleets, iu full
fuitb, that through these .11... Is nil thn purposes of
conspirators and rebels ".'ill I"' rushed -, llmt while
engaged in Ibis struggle, on wbieh so much depend*,
nny proposition froui n foreign power, wbalover form
it may lake, linviiij.', lor iih objei I the arrest of these
ellorta, is, just in proportion to its
coortigement lo llio rehellion, and
pretensions, and, on this neeouiit,
prolong nud tniliilier the conlliel, to
expenditure of blood
ncn who, thnugh receiving less by S10U per month
lian others who me employed .-n (be f.nu^.i'r/.i.Btur-
lily maintain their loyally, c'ooie men of this class,
iho have been over a year in servitu. liavo reieived
ess limn half a year's pay. Query—Is (he United
i(nlcs povernment rompelled to pay these Missis-
ippi pilots any price per month which they may
house lo ibimanilV They now receive S.10I). and
even S3.
r
i0 pur month and I learu ibnt (hey are ubout
o deniaud nn inere.ito of pa) lo ftfUU per month, or
ome suub fnhuloun sum ; mid by the machinery or
ccrol organ i in I ion ialend (or pel eai-h iionion to
ic.-ept noiliing hlierl of (he price lixed by tbeir Com-
nitlees. Who ever benrd of Biich outrngcoiis extor-
PUBLICAXS AA'D SINNERS.
Wiiii v. (ho ftritish nrislocrnoy bus from the bepin
ing, wilh a few excuptionB. favored the robollioni
loveholdern, (be c.-mniuti /u.ijil.: ol fn^lniul— Ilie
plain people," to iim) a phrin-,: of the I're^ident'a
rim (In; iirst leek our side, rccn'ririn-r il (o In- tin
ib- o(" ...iiBiiiiilit.rinl liberty nod ol tru- I intUVS-
ni> Sinco (he I'ri.niileni inued his llmnneipniiori
rf.i'l .Mill", llel r.ni;|pr-li |.e ( .ple baie.hi.wn t In .-
planiem signed n eontrnct or a^r.
aulleirilie" in neiiordnnce with Ihe p
&'iill later lien. Hanks published a
enbjeit, hi follows:
lie' 1'r.i...
V'^.jierile
1,,11'ir- !-.:
./'.'Vieel'j.
(,r.|.r..llv.
''cur i...r il.v .'l
not as a servant, but as a brother in lovo
—nnd bo Thilemon was directed lo receive
Tlio speaker from the caller7 attempted lo
(bia, but was not permitted, the determined
ora tlio bcly of llio ru^eting of "Turn him
out" being responiled (o by n nractical response
from ihoe nli.-. wen- in the imiuediate nei(;uborliood
or the interruption by p.'L-.-ini: him from nno (o aao-
ulilil he arriv. .1 nr I In- .Lmr. ivh'.-n le waa rgno-
iously expelled.]
T. Thompson proceeded wilh some further re-
marks, cxprcsiini; IiIm nlilinrrrnee of thd author of
(he fugitive Slave law, and of the ljird Mayor, who
by receiving him at hii (able :i[ tb" Mannion IIouho,
bcearoe a sympathi- r niel pririiiji[.:i(or in his erinied.
III! denied altogether (lie aF.=frtion of Sir. Mnson
that he bud been a nelecnie ami un honored guvM in
.class of society, ii iid l-e (Mr. I houipson) did not
uon House, llio eili of l.eridoii w.im ili^.;r.'ieed
Ih- p.opleol Lueliio.l belid , ui.-i oil n le.nl
.r ,<l,.. hetler rcprosemed the tree lei-bie.H ol
,1;. of [>,ndon and of Kngland, Idled llio eiviu
, lei " lelinlmd " be wriltfn over ihe Maii'i. a
:e door, and let no man win. valued bin rcpuli-
"u (cllCliTS).
be " employed
(erronslcr'd De
lood nnd eloihi
of (.mil, ii i;,:.,n.i il Ihe :
the success of the rebels and wliil
will hlrive in vain (i. iodi v (be T.rili
lo hosii'.e nets against us.
Tito Journal of Comim
and it > tilled wilh bitter
iiicb et Lnglund that the
liberty. It canuot call 1
women of Uacut-hirc bav
thai. So 37/pJoiiriioJcnl I be lei
.' .-liarp
ntl!a^a
iheir morality. In a loag and phnrHnual article oa
Inlideliiy in the working Clausen or England," The
ouiiml of Guamfr&j speuks of these as " the very
Codom of aali-Christ."
It IS aa old liiek of llio slave-lords and tbcir Hilp-
porlers in llu- free Slalea, to iliargo all
viio nud irreligloii upon the people, and i
all tlie virlue of the notion is monopoli
Ilie tlmi
t the trick is
tbun our slave lords ; nearly nineteen huarlrcd
years ago there were men io ,ludon who expressed
the same eootempt for Ilie people :ti does 37ic Jour-
nal of Coiilnterci: (o-dav ;
who iliar^ed (he people of
lliat country willi irraligion, just as complacently as
T/tc Journal of fi-nmif.-.v lodav charges the samo
the people et Fogland. Tliev were men who
stood nnrl prayed: "God, I thank Th" " -
other i
|..,i.l.._.
" friend of public! .
'-
-nio you, Sdrihca
>
ilwnrdly appe-ar
I, aduli. (i i
,„« ,»II.J
supporters. Therefore, in (be i-ye.s of Tlie Journal uf
i and of the »lsvc lords, thcy
And, finally, wo conic (o Iho Intest order on (hi
^iil-jici being the first pnragraph ol (Jencral Urden
No. ll.ne fotlowa:
,111 bo taken Irom Ibe plantations nnll
3S.1 11,.- I ell
Ho murU for (be official documents in Ibis
bieb 1 have, deemed it best io present entire.
inn a cooiplele liistory of the mutter, bo far
Ticinl rcconl is coocerned.
ill from
""fb'ey
GREAT MEETING JiV LONDON.
THE LORD MAYOR REliUKED.
irrs cruwdfd mcctirg of tin- frircda nnd bij|*
>™ of tbo Umaneipulinn Society was hold on
if (be ?ei-l«lj-. i.-Jiecinlly in releri-.ee io ihc
siruefjlo now ™h;'»ii b-.Iweui iho 1'cdetal and
(-oofnli-tatii Swie. of America. Aboul one lbir.1 of
Ilia body ol the hall was *ct nnarl an reserved seals,
lor ihe occupaltoD of whioh Ih. each pcreoi
eborj;ed. Tbo remain
nallorim, wn» frco.
,.i-y Ii 3 that
(id f unrig!. i nu-nr-s
d elaveboldent and law-
breakers, Ibe upholder of violence nad wroag. Iban
be dealt by all tb.iulidil |ir. -i lung in tbo world,
i) men, wliea tbev sen Hie!, loud-rnontbnl pml.-i-
ofChristianiii na Tlie J„i,m.,l vf V<» -I-
fending slavery, and doing Ihcir best to keep ib.wn
Ihe oppressed, r.ay (o lbem'.',
lvi-s : If that in (.'brie
|, we ,vill be imylhing rather than Pbri-l«n».
Foil.
toj;i Ibe
"V. ntt» nili-eiN-'i:
..-:, lil.-d
.,,.
,„
J, line. .,.-,.,
GEN HANKS AND THE I'LANTh'R.-i.
""°°° ""
Krw OatfcASt-, IVb. '-•?
ealcolnleil to
['. - 'I
.h detiired day of peace ; that, with tbesc con-
vielions and nut doubling ihat eery such prop osi-
llon aliiiongl. (.,..1- mil. - I ni- (il, is injurious lo
tlie National i
•' ' >'dl be oblified to
iu- in, uafrieiidl, a- 1 i-b^b il ' arnestly deprecates,
io tbo end that nothing may occur abroad lo
htrciii-tliU) ll"- ,i- I.e.- lie.,, , or I., eerlkenll,,.'..; lr-lkl,.,n-
of good will with foreign powers which the tjmleil
rf 1;^::.., are nappy lo cultivate
ll.-unlved. That the rcbelli
a the C(
uragcil
its beginning.
piracy wbigh
by if-; hupc of an, _
ita chiefs Ireijinnlly
rbelber the most
,ny one of tbeni
nkiiiL' llieir own eenfes
. helpb
bloK
dependent upon tho
vntion of their plnnwuuuc
It was a spectacle nrve
upon Ihese men, retaining
nnce nnd tlif? same spirn
i,.id them in former days
tooe of imporlaacc, and ;
the very act of a^.-einbline
they were helplesa. I'liev
. id state di .-u
i
h. they
of individuals, totally una-
(beir nnirrne.i, anrl utterly
for the mlli-ilary aulln
to bo ftrgol
•-- ! ,. - ,
i-d tie- fee|ine,',of the citizens
i.' I I -.• ibi- city of London would bo under
i
-' il '. ma Mir-- il did not deserTe, until
in i in., il assembled ii nMonlciI ibu insult
which the Lord Mayor had pot upon it (loud
cliecra). Oe eoncbi'led In moling ibe following
reaolution: "That the ford Man.r, by iuvifiDj. aad
receiving at llio Moasioa IlouHe Mr. Masoa. Ibe
nuthor of (he lni-pnninn I'u^iiive clave law, as the
representative ol :bo:c SoiKbora L'oufcdemtc Slates
in America, whoso independence lie.- [triliHh govcrn-
menl has hitherto rtliimvl to rt cognize, Iiai oilered a
itnnton insult lo lie- governnieril lo Ilie cili/tus el
I.oadoa, and io tlie whole llrlii-b nation; and hna
disgriiced the nanals of a corporation nol more
renowned for i nuit.iniiy ilinn for lis great and con-
linuouj services in Ibe cause of Ireedotn, and tlio
honors il has rejoiced arid 1.,-en proud (o
men distinguished by Iheir Cbrislinn un
thropie labors nnd sncriHcca for the II be
welfare of mankind."
I pliilnu-
A S/laMFI-l'f- r.F'-OTlD.
ir ii with iudigiialion nrd eurtoi
(b- (net thai s i.f the huhl-.crn
larked al J.nod'fl Kr.d bate cocluii
1ckci» ngaicst (be defenr-. Icis color
...i-bborior; plautnllani that wool
ii i; I unliaiM.- morabiy. nrrnrd
an! uf Tngons. We canndt bill
" -I" -'I-' "
',::";:.::,;::'
1 rilllv (,illli',d, (rem ...
i. Jlel -il.-li wlilt.;.-, e . ivili,.
le- 1'1I-:'I Ilicm -lei :
hi ell.
,.-,1.L.:'
Wllle.lll I
i tho public works er in the i.bnr.
r(men(, wrrnotT en, execpl (heir
. medical nttcndmicc. and such in-
struction nnd rare as may b, tnriiihlnd to them and
Ihcir women and children." l'e;siblv such economy
ol admiuialratioa maybe deemed too careful. 'Iho
Sovemnieat is (pending n firvat deal of moie e, no
oabt, but wo shall In- slow to believo thnt it will
resorl to iaduicriaiinn(e oppn'.-.-inn and plunder ol
Ha MgrOea in ortlflr lo savo to the N'aiiona! Trea-
irv rl„- nniDunt ol" Iheir hard-earned wnge;. Let
I
1 -- A-liaini.-lration leave even ihing .d-e le tie- wilt
: i'- ',1 ler.il if it must, but do a".' leavo bint lo ca-
rl, h his military i heal by extortion from tbu only
i
. t ,, |
-i i.j. i.i.-.i io liii away, wbo aron.bio.
lers" ^c^bai
i liber or.br-> of (..a. liauk^, met eilie. pro..-.-e..linr;.i
ider bis authority, eiipply mlditmnal evidence, if
))* is needed, I o slum- bow eomplel-ly bm ileijiirl-
en( is administered in (be iatenstol flia slnveliold-
g class—a class that, without I'.vCeplion, is mali;;-
uitly and defiantly disloyal te Ilie goieruuieix
bicb he representn. lie has forbidden ibe removal
negroes from lb-- plantaliiin- by any ollie.ir or
"
niithorily from bis biadnnni-
i o( ine macks. Mono will be received
beea nt work oa Ihe plnntatiens.nnd ihone
bey nbnoie. Mi' QuatwrmMter, lo wlnun
o I'lnnter's Committee a nolo or introduc-
;s the slaveholders Ihnt overytbiag will bo
•or'"s- ( . Of
KIDNAPPING IN INDIANA.
Wan u called Iv-mocrnry in Imlinna is about as
.cb like genuine l.'einoernci a- lb'.
1
K-'biil l'r.>iilen(
ike Ibe illustrioiH patriot i>diu-e inemory be insults
iisurpiny lii-' m .- Ni.r eon lent with positive ilis-
ally, close alliaiiee -.villi Souiliem Lreanon, and ac-
houads perfonu. bi
legal or illegal nnll
Siv'oiln^Aa'ofi
regarded na one am
. ;
- .- I
1 i I
. I
.
-
infaruouBl'ii-
wci-e always
ing He- ,- I,
buttered in pieces, and
an hardly ho expected
my be found in tb" pracii
ii. -i i is. i »ii bin our know
ilie, a lownon lb«
plantations—of Ci
they nro auppon d lo be familiar wilh Hie approved
1 uliiMii:, i r.e [l.iel ..I" enfureing plnul-ilii.ri dii eipb.e-.
In a word, <iea. llankn uppern-i io have yielded with-
out hesitation or reluctance to every demand wliifh
the grasping avurie..., the hostility la freedom, llio
haired to iho policy ol" die government, Lin niu|>
siduslineas nad tlie milium nil. of tb.. I ouisianaslave-
maslers Can have imlnr-.-ii them l-i make.—TViiiian.
oTkblna
nlc« of i.'
Ohio, >
stcnlior; free blacks and selling
i into alaver> baa bean pursued in that lown for
Iih and inonibn pust in tbo most o|icn nod >.hniue-
woy. X.-gn tit. whom nob. dy on r pretr.-.deil to
.i a- -I iv,-. bare been soiled in ibe Directs, on'
muni, io houtos. nr.tl wiihcol .the flimsiest prc-
t of local procns bin.- Ii.vn lak.-n mr.isa thn
r int.i K t iki ibin- lo be n.bl ( .. th iiitcreat
The Evnnsvillo Dalli/,
o office
-of liniiL.ni
every pr-.j.e-HiYiii ol lor..i;-u nin-rtei-ence ipii.
anew, and lhal, without ibin life-giving suppo .
must soon yield to (be junt and pareru.il authority of
the National government ; that, eunaideriug "
•
line--, wbi.'li nil- aggravated hi 1
Ihe m.iiive .
re.,i"lare ("un-, ele.eur.-i-. d, the 1 l,i'. .1 - i -
ftesolveil, That ilie Inited .-rlates, confident in
iiiftii. id Ibeir cause, which is the cause, also, of
good government and of human righls everywhere
among men ;
nnxiuiix for Ibe r[H:.dy reetornlinn of
peace, Which Bbull secure irjiiiijuillily at home nnd
remove all occasion of complaint abroad j
nud
Tiwniliae with well ic.*ur,,l (rust i In; final siippres-
moii of il,e n: be II, on, ihiough wind, all (hcsc tiling,
resoued from precent (LtngCTj "ill hi- secured lor-
-, and ibe liepubb.-. 1 mdmiWt), inum
of Ilie case could lool: upon iliem
ty to read the aelual IbongbliJ ol
ir corr.-iprindent is ol Ibe opini
nmoat Ibaugbla have been
enccla
ilbout a curio:
their hearts. Vi
that, could their
we should have teen neiore us ft eui
and biimili.'Kioii ; the lirst loo strong
willing vibibition of ihe last ; iho last
to he wholly concoaled :
They cumo, in fact, as Bupplicnnls to n humane
government, asking for j>ruteeii-<ii against the clleCta
ol the uiadness of ibeir ™ a people—madness which
many of them bnd shared, and for which they still
entertained a lingering -ilk-iinm mingled wilh rvgrvls
for ita frnite. and compelled to ask Iheir own judg-
ment if tho old maiim of Quaa Deos mil pcrtterit
prioi tfamentat does not find n striking illuotrnlion
in their own case.
To begin at the beginning of this business, nnd
eiplaia it correctly, it will be necessary to lake tbo
reader through feme documentary rending—a por-
tion of wllicb has a I re ad j been published—a piece of
work wbieh is usually tailed heavy , but in tho pre-
sent instance I believe Ibe reader will find bimter
snllieiently interested and rewarded for bia Inboi
even if he reads some of the lirst docuuion
second time.
It will be propi
most tho Irfird Mayor • murked recenlion ibe otbrr |
eoioe nt Ihe Mnn.ion Uoase. ol llr. Masoa. !te
nbor of tbc Fogitivr Slavo la*. o» n
.0 of the So-jtl <( !'• -mi.- il I-
pendence the gon-rie i.i -.- t it.. : ii
plntfotm I'rof- F. W. Ifewmoo bfi '-
F.ii.'. (be lv William Lnndels, I'rnf. itra-sley.
Aimr nn iidilr.ns Lv '1" ' 1-iirOiai, Ir.: 11
X. ..coin. M ^ .
-I llu, ('" ' I -
"That tbe revolt of the Southern Slates or America
againit the F.-dcral government having avowedly
originated in Ibn delcrminniion not only to maintain,
but to eMCiid slavery, and Laving bceu followed by
the orgnniiBliou ol a Confedoraoy ba^ed upon the
denial of human rigbls to tbo uefiio race—llu* ineei.
leg itulignantlj r.|-v1i tho assumption Hint the Kng.
lisb people ayinpaibife with , rebellion Ibat thus
,iol.iies,- l rrv principle of p.ditical jnitie. , or will,
institutions framed in definece uf ibe. moral n« of
civilir.ed umukmil, nud which aro nn outrago upon
the rebgion wboso 6auclion boa been ilninicd in their
lie m.ado an eloquent speech in pupnart of ihm
motion, whicli was >c o: did by tho lUiv. Mr. Landaui,
nnd unnnimously carried
Tho next spenker nns Mr. (i. Thompson, whu
apoko of bis long strvieea in tbe canso of emancipa-
tion, nnd demnndci (bat Ibe iwnpatby of F.ugland
should be altogetb.r wubb.-ld l:oui tbo great con-
spiracy of tlio Soutb. and wholly go over (o the
North, lie rejoiced thnt wbai was hut
ago but a partial, was now likely t
nniional demoiistrniici. and ih'itlbe true Kuclish peo-
ple, not (hose who it was proved
patches bnd been paid ft
"
ibe fullness of th(
liuaiaii libnrty in
' ' ilicvrd. world
legal.
i.ii bcalcn fur prouctiog Ikr
i.,d .l.iu;'iii.-:n , nutrnges upnr
binga aud insigDiGcant house-
nl .
threat, inlet were a sufficient ti pi
An-;, i nasniilt-. Imrjdaty. jiotiy larccoei '
tl.eie
a record for a '*
Fiddler and a gentleman '! 1!
liar.- .ioae element 'bat ii.hlsil.e last deplb of col
to lb- d)o of there ofh.-cws , nud lhal is. lb., tiff.-nr.
lis-. telidCiS that.,. 1. 1 uf the sullLrers. I bin- .-
nsni!:rable mcanneaa about the acoimcjrcl who •
ra;
;ci i inburd m-m i.t « m.i-iuiply t'ce.-lui-e t
ba'.iL- id tl lit t .'m. t . .iii.l 1:11,11 lei.i- nude ihvni
nil 1 i...n who have any '
ttprit du tarpt." Theso
men ooold rob n wbitd man. or burn bnf bouse, <
o-jBilju bia wife, if lb.-) had ibe courage. The di
Clbetf, tbobciuHly'pas.-ie:.s.si:ii.d mimli-J. Nothing
restnilus tbeni bai want ol np| ojtnuity or a w*
ecnie fear of puniahmocnt.
Wh enid Ibnt we recorded ibeto facia with indig-
tistiin and sorrow. No : it is with shame, that there
should be fonud in our army <•• wbo l.-.'i
Ibemielvca. tbcit fl.ig. fay. hamauit) ib-elf. by tbcir
crioiBs, . iiust ibu. bit tbc credit of tbo corps,
and for the sain of gcod older and diacipllc
nl 11.;. |. 1111-I.1 . ' 111 1. r. . I. il..
relrticil :n Tlie /....-h.i'utv ul pecu
iiarattcciiy. Soveaiy five blnrka wcte brojjbt Irom
Mi.iuuii, through Illinois, to Indiana, ae.l i.hipped
from Krftnavilb m tl. ...:;l,i 10 Knilmk) fbey
mlyht havo been slsi^ titcniy limes over in 1
Mis-
souri, butlhoy becamn Iter by law tbo moment thoy
weio taken into n fren Stiilc. To eer.d tbem again
into slavery was legally na well na morally ki
'
ping. .no(!,er ca-.- wns (bal oi a negto, f)t
piutcd hy
11 (Im ci
1 1 .it.
it forli
mndu
ended by I
bicb hats and
lilt in various direiliooB.bnl thu hadle
Dry I tl d. being confined to n parlicu
ne oi thu side galleries, and wan aooi
forcible eiipulnion of iho chief of thl
Order having been restored, Mr
Thompson resumed by staling lliat ibe gcatlemai
just turned out was a paid leelnrer of the Southern
Aid Society, wbbli hel'l 10. .lings 10 promote t
Southern cauBO. charging a philling each for adm
r. out nay person wbo alteaipled
ueslion by tho
-'
'
i f.r I In
phaii
le sugn
enllle
sin ibe parishes within our line
ml.ind, hrrcbij
it fail t( itlht
really invoke upon ibeij cause ihe
ion of the l.'oinaiaailiag-i .viieral.
w a question of great iinportsnie
—11s important 10 tbe planter'
enualry aad important 10 (1
id tbeiiiaelves exposed 10 n'bje
lUAiVJ. EFFORT* TO CORlll'FT TIIH ARMY. of the slaves were 11 boll) unable to control thei
Notwithstanding ibe nibciioii wbieh (hey had pro-
claimed to exist on the- part of their clave —
nlli.i-lion so wrong lhat noihii.g . ...i'd .ml e
[ierei.un ii
.. I .1, .1
of llr. Thompson'n, and Ibo con-
ijueneo' was that tho addn.is wan susiieodtd for
me momenta by tlm confusion wbieh ee.siad.
any of tho audiem- n..|'-ired that ibo diascclietila
ould be luiiied out, and aa attempt to curry this
!'-.
';i.r„."'i
CbrioLau it
tbo c
I being
tbom freely up to
ibers. molnets, wives. loHuw tbem with their ptay
(bal ihev may be preserved amid all tbe daogcra of
ir, nod W relumed to gladden Ibu homo circle
am. Holier d.ey uboubt fall, and I"- gathered
lb Iho nnkuowa dead 'am the Ricat grave pit of
me bailie-field. U eturn who ... 1
. 1 • 1
pt at heart. Wu prefer lo believo that into iheco
. gieieats have strayed tome few r.ulcasla from (ho
prison or the bulk, who, thrust ouuide the pale of
society on account 0/ former crimes, have sought tho
aa a hidiug-place Tb.- army nud the cause
ne. -J lie m I
11 I be Ibe .lav wliea lie,
„t il -i - ....I U u*e ol right aad
objee
other
1
tbe or
om tho
alcd 1
r-'V;',!'
t their i
'
constitutional Kugland eo old sympathize,
luncedMr.Ma-eii i.aii.mtiie,: thai Ibe " Newgate
Calendar " did not contain thn name of no bbrek 11
felon.*.) dire nnc
wuacnteriaimd at tb.- ,Miu.~.oii M-eive by tbo Lord
Mnjt .
slave kidnapper, na Mi Ma-on was. vres unworthy
to unloose tut I in le t ..I am gl n << lv bigbwaymsn
in tbu land (immense . beeriug|, lie would toll tbem
wbo Mr. Mason wns.
Mr, Mason was a Virginian, I be,-lab) that ill Jbl!)
imported tbe &rr.t -bi|.lon.l ol" negro slaves into Norlb
America. [A Voice—"It wns the English wl
-
imported them " ; followed by loud cries ol '(Turn
him out-"] Thoy were brought into Ihe Jame^ltivor
by it Dutch vessel, whieh sold its cargo lo the/ Caro-
lina planters, and was seal back lor more—and that
was die coiamericemeni ,.1 tbc slaie trade. Iirgioin
["of'oCcea whicb' would'
.lion to tbo friends who have g.
j I lag.-.
ih the Unioi
mtocky na
nrsistance. and
ibe n-l-cl tc
1.. eacapo, wna >top|i-d
,-
ibe Ktnnsvillo officure,
io Owensboro, and into hope-
,r I'll. F.n
. ;: ueril
while
"-: in- int" Ml'-oiei Pi'i... nu : Below 1 Kend
Mi-a.-i friim :. bit-r of ,1, R. Dulhrio, Esq.,
i heretofore been considered rather |.to-
or. at least, leoder-leoied. on (be i.-i.ir.n
. Tbo leller was written lo Col. Moons, ol
1 regiment Missouri Volunlwra, now com-
Iho post nt Onion City, Tennessee. Thu
iendsofMr. Outhrie and bia brother will bo
io lenrn thai they have fully sided wllli tho
II,,, Me.-re. Ililllirie ..re reeml.. I.-,
r Green, Williams A: Co., of St. Uui
nn. by ltio ; e l.inner ml. id -e.i.i-^ion
. lire.-n and .lud[;e A lleese. Hut (
.f Ibe law firm
MEN OF COLOR. TO ARMSI
Witt brat ihe rebel cannon sbntleieil ibe walls ol
dicled (bat the war then aud
would uot be fought out enti
Eeory month's oipericnco ilomi|
yenrs has confirmed tl.-it i.|ii.
loudly upon colored men to help
a nioderulo sbnre of sagaciiy ml
tbe arm of tbo slavo was the 1
the arm of the slaveholder.
'bite vagaboods.
Icy and sold na tpiealaiion. For
bim. tes for Ibn olbcrs, there, was 00 refuge or help,
transactions, pays Tlie Journal, occi
almust daily, yet in n community wlucb calls itsell
(.btislian there is 110 compassion, no jusliee, no nt
lection for tbe ncfrro. There are laws against ki
napping, but Ibee lind no support in tho pnblie bc
tiaicnt of that pari ol the State, and nro practieally
imperative. There are courts, but they recognize
! -
(i.- blacks no rigbia wbieli while men are bound^
respect. There are pulpil;', bul ibe religion win
lb.) dispense is not meant for ihe i-alvation
nrgtoes. There ia at least cue newspaper. Tlie Jim
not, which exposes and denounces Ihece crimes, L
;i.-ms (o bo powerless to prevent tbetu.
Il need not nnin.1
-. aui-Lndi lo lin.l Ibeso practical
,ll...|rali'ins ol I'limotiali. p'rineipb.s in lhal ccction
of Indmna. It wna in N«i.l.i.rg,» to»n ndjoiniiiB
tansville, Ibat [bnioersts lived last year, base
enough (0 guide a rebel force that croESed tbe river
(o murder aad rob, and in llio same town lhat 11
L'r-uioeralie. Jury screened ibeir neconiplices by a
i...i<rr»> nl in iho face of the cleaiest evidence ol
tb -!r niiilt. The only dill, reiiee between ibis Democ-
rn.ynud tbe treason wbi.li bides ilnelf under the
„M name nearer home is ibat one is bolder than
Ibe other and exhibit" a more complete doielopment
nf ibo idena nnd purpurea which are common lo both.
Tribune.
QEN. JJANKS i.T NEW ORLEANS.
IKi to Ihe lermi
:
published the
heeded.
heeded
best that it should m
that qucsdi
thaw
lied naiion lo unehiiin
ul black band. Slowly
al is bemmiiiin lo be
™P e;„ S»l ii™ ™i
r it may not, have been
ia Is not tbo lime to (fa-
it to tbo future. Wheu
is paved, pence Is ealab-
'
rbgbts a
uthiri
ot believe that
when courage, 1(
licr.
q
f'ub!i,:
having comman1
- r tlo men 1
bal go to tbc making of n good
[linlua will not ucquit tbu oUlcers
of thire troops. Insubordination
tbe result of (be want of true sol-
dievly qualities aiming Ibe officers.
In one dny Ilie product ul a year'j loil of supena-
teadeals, leaclura and people has been swept away,
nor, in Ibis fiico of tbo greatest
ired men nnd women have been
of tho Guli.
II, nnremil
ebsta.dcs.il:
Tbo
er. They
is of our
M '/ (lie
nig large
at lb, m. 1 1.1- wibpt t demands the insinnt mid rigor-
... 1, .,1 : .1 lbs U'nr Department to avert ibe
insidious nnd poironoua inllnenee engendered by
ibece rntuking and perjured pilferers of tbe public
money. My inlorin,itn'ii Is ™ direct nnd ao relinble
thnt I should 1101 feel a. quilted 1: I did not call atten-
tion lo Ibo abuse.
l*t it nol be inferred, however, that fift tho St.
Louie and Missuuij-pi pilot.* are of ibu above deteata
blu claas. 1 know of come honorable Csceplions—
the Uniled btalca autboriliea for prol
allow bis plantaliona to go to waste.
Tho military code of tbu United States forbidn an
fliccr lo return a fugitive slave ; aud the question
,-as, what arrangement could be made which would
t once secure tbe necessary labur for the Cultivation
f Ihe estates, bj guarding the rights all parlies nnd
,ol violating tbc letter or i-pirit 01 Ibn law. It was
ome In our lin-t d e nt, In which we find the
t, 111 ' . 1 1 . ! --. .:-,i-'- ,li. hi I. 'i.iuniillee uf
About tbe lime tbe above plan and circular wn
issued n number ot planters met at tho St- Charles
Hotel, and alter a good denl of discussion and
ferunco with tho authorities, concloded lo try tbe
plan- and subsequently n large majority of the
est of iho alavo In,
I cbnltols. A ma
yu lo hire himself c
Ik. . uglii 10 make eomo adv."
eal condiiioo. They nro si
tie- degradations amid, whit
been spent. They have le:
IhcvnlueoC fai'b and purl
tho produels ol lb. nl -u
caruinga, losupp.) in. ir nL
shall bring .ta crops,
destroy the effects oi (he 1110
gradually gaining inline nc
their failli in tbe Norlhorr
welcomed as their deliver,
tbem back a h.'lj.le"
Thus, not only an
louls with crimes agai
f the helpless necro, I
atroy the governm
y dollar
niggling to escape ft
ild 1 1 allow
ave haviog a gun or
ek nilgai be pnm-di-d by any .In-iice of tho Peace
th at) lushes ; and an emancipated slave remaining
the Slate more iban twelve mom lis might bo appre-
hended, sold, nnd tbu proceeds appropriated lo.the
literary fund (laughter).
A Iter del ail ing pei en, I
otlur disabilities under which
thu slave population labored, be '-aid Mr. Masoa
ite that di-tiintli eel at naught
tbe c t Jehovah, wbicb sai.l.
Thou ahu.1t 11.
escapulh unto 1I1B?." Not so said the guest of the
Lord Mayer- What bo said was, that be who did
not hunt down the escaped clave, and send him back,
should be imprisoned fur ri.v months, and fined 31,000
God to the contrary, notwithstanding. [A Vote
"St. Paul sent back a fugitiv
OWldi wns Willi Ibe lute.
Tbo
- Pai
r to prove that Unesi-
:k to Pbilemor
1 Iiim back.h,
irtied in u good degree
. in tbe family, and of
rights of others
.itbere.t about tbetu ol
li.nenl, with their little
csaillua till nuothei
These outrages at
al teachings wbieh
ake awny
10m Ihey hi
ppri'-imi. 1
of tho order in which (Jc
rt-sldent'H prc.-liiinntion,
ssued another, more precisely dcfioiog the re!
between llio' government mill Iho planters
iann. Wc reynrded his first order aa mischn
i temper mid tendency, as oppo>ed 10 Ibe spi
which animated the procbiiaaiiou of I recdom, a
praclieally_ annulling it within
.-el, erne
gnnl for Ibo weiinrc 01 mo negroes un mm h»wii
ol the I'nsident, and tiny lo.proie '.pi.i, ti.e mb
uiatiitv ot Hi" original order 111 roernl r.-[-.-t.-.
With referen.e lo the question nl tlie employine
.1 [he blacks, the serious iiii-Lite- of Ccn. Danks wi
ind is that be considers ibe government and the
rilantera lo be tlie ol.lv inteuHe-l parties. The runt-
ideutlylies in bis mind siibstnnliaHy in this
"ll.-reare plantation!- -.vriiiiiieT labor, and a
iment lhat doca not wnnt to be burdened or bo-
thered wilh negro-*, 'flu: negroes. 10 bo sure, are
free, hut then tbey have no pt,l,i„ al importance, and
not many frioods. They mi
thoy nro incapable to tak _
(lie best practical solul"-" '
lished, nnd [he black ti.. . _
they will be, bislcrv, with an impartial band, >
dis'poso of thnt ami i-nndn otlaiqiiestioiis. Action I
action I not crilicinm. is thu plain duty of ihia hour.
Words nro now useful only mi they eliniulalo lo
blows. The olliea of speech now "is only lo point
out when, whore nnd how to Btrike to ihe best ad-
vantage!. There is no limo for delny. Tho iido is nt
'
lluod lhat leads on to fortune. From cast in
,t, from uorth lo south, the sky is written all
r wilh "now ot never." Libert; won by « bile
, wuuM laefc l.mf its lustre. Wbo would bo
1 themselves must strike Ihe blow, llellcr even
din free Ibnn lo livu slaves. This is Iho tcnli-
uient of everv brave colored mat, nuiong na. 'I'hcre
nro wcub nnd cowardly men in nil nations. We
have them among us. Thoy will tell you ibnt this
a tbc " white man's war '*
; that yon will bo " better
di after than before Iho war"; lhat the getliDg of
oil into tho arntv is lo sAcriflco you on the drill
ipportunily." llelievo them not—cowards ibetii-
clvia, they do not wish to have their cownrdice
ihamcd by your brnyo example.
their limidity, or lo whatever other
back.
iiive nol (bought lightly of ihe ivotdn
mldressing to you. Tho counsel I give
close observation of Ihe great Etruggls n
gress—and of tbu deep conviction that II
hour mid mine.
In good earnest, then, and nfltr iho bes
tion,l, now, for the first lime during the 1
liberty to cnll and connsel you to nrms.
consideration which hinds ynu lo your en
low-countrymen, and the penee and welfare ,.
country ; by every aspiration wbicli you eteri
il,,- iie.eli.m nud equality ol ) o-i rsel ve.i am
ehildn'n ; by all lie lie.1
, ol" blood ami ider.1ili_
delibere-
ir, reel nt
lu'veii lel-
a of ihemselvcr, and
if the difficulty is for Ihe
„...,._! Ibcmlo return lo their mas-
ters aeeure them low wage, and iruet (o (he interest
b tin- iilanters, ant to abuse Ihcm any more thao is
necessary to make tbem work, eki die governoionl
will be relieved (rem a burden nnd a responsibility,
tbe planters will be cone dmtod,
inning
;ded lo put down Ibe r
l,e btlilDpilis led.elKeri.c
('Vll-r'-'n. - ire I" --.-."
; tl ll,eirum..e>-nlid WI..11C.
ii,,' -ill-"
orHoueil.bireatteoiv'ieJiotA.Ui'
l.,l.l J -„„...l,el,M, h
:m c
-1... iLe l.ylt-. I nllif C"i--'
aKhff-n"bP™idv'tlt.
l
|'r]!e|.:iroen
l
"'li''i.'r't'
ilu.ek-lllloil, Utvat lo iiicee-' nn Hull [»l belm
cure, and in company wltli anotlicr pruale,
1 tho
aid about (hem thu better sally
.'
BiuS accordingly appoints n Seque^trnlinn
ilit.e; ibelommliie.- makes a bargain wl"
1 -
era and the ncKroea have nothing io i
escc in the. arrange me nt. Tbe plainer g.
ler a niitninnl p roe, and tbe g-jierutLcn. b ...„
'
,. lroablei.Ome ,|le.i,l.-,l.- '•'-!> l.Ttal: ...[.: I
)
i South Carolina, I are-
te wilh i letith die pm-ier
rrmeot nad your liberie
I wish I could (ell you
She wns first iu the war of independence . Krai lo
reak ibe ebains of her bI.'ivcji ; lirst In make llm
blnck man eipial before Ihe law ;
lirnt (o admit ei.l
her common i-ebools, and sle- wan
lib her blood the alarm cry of Ibi;
nation, when ita Capital waa menaced by rebels.
.... her patriotic Covernor, and ycu know
Charles Sumner—1 need ndd no more.
"
nachu-etla now welcomes you io nrmi rUj bet
aoldiere. She ha« bul a rmall colored populntinrJ
from wbicli to reoruiL 3be has lull leaie uf Ibe
government to tend one regiment lo Ibu
„,.l id.e Ro 'tuickly
* „ tbe
,s and faithful s, ejpeclful dc port-
id pertkc-i
ts." In olher words, the
Department ot the (Jell.
lihtary aulhari
pbo wcro charged by tbe President to recogmw
and maintain'' the treedotuof ibeetu.meipMed blacks
havo gone into the bm-iie-i ol slave-driving on Ihe
largest po^.ble scale, and the ..Ulcers who went
J^n to 'l.„„i,ia(ia from tbe free so, o, New KngUnd
and New York lo suppreas a rebellion ol slavc-bol.l-
ere are made overwore ol nlnnLntions which the
,„,', rl 1,1 slocks wilh reeie;b.vedblacki
n
Bnf ibis is not all. The negroes wl
wanted on tbe planiaiiens nr- provided l« with the
UDit generousand considerate .^are- which ta bestowed
or. thereat. It is not enough that the. government
ehall help the slaveholders co
aid toil oa
ihe negroes
;o the bit
''"-.'*:'' ' '"
till be led by nblt
rill lake especial
ess. They will b
your ligl't ,
.peak ?
ide in your efficiency and sac-
quick lo accord lo you all the
.all merit by your valor—and kc that
,nd feelings are reapcrlcd ly olher boI-
e assureclmyBelf on these points—and
ilb authority- More than twenty years
humble clai
.1 arrjuc-
ir.ess of enlorcing-uo-
eo. Hanks orders lhat t e nance
Ihe plantations shall lags of
To do so, iiJipli
not hesitate, it
The day dawns— tbe morning eta
the horizon! The iron gate of o
ball" open. Ibn- gallant ru-ib fror
llu,;. it wide op-.n, while lour mi
ib-.rs nnl i-iiiers shall mare.b out il
. heailntion and
do not doubt-
is bright upon
prison stands
the North will
ion of our bro-
j liberty 1 Tho
wgiv.
2. %»:*^ k -V
M* S £s
'i'l'i "'" > "
u ,, „....|i't it —nod
r, r ,'.?,'.'r
r
i ,
,
!-!""„»l i'|!m 'd"V>: .-'.-lir.,
«!.. - u.i-p'innj'K
£ibTmtitX c^X countryman" tbe but
blUin«. of our p-FJ 'hro« S l- »M
'"^J^nuok.ii of ibis nral raiment " "?," ,'"
l
,
P
„ m
ItMndvLllc, n short distance f"™ IloB,on ' ' "'
,
- -bo ahnll
giitionnt Imti-*tawtu, Stunted.
jar SliiaUb ,
„„l,lo John |'-a^> " rr^iwrity lo
bo cause of its fouodnti-" in
tilli oppres-
NBW YORK, SATURDAY, MARCH H,
'n- 1 Nations, .is il in of individuals. Wo hnvo discerned
.reclaimed that there could ho no permanent
m wbichbnd established
ightooimneM nnd injiialiea, and
which hoped to maintain its own liberty whilo refus-
ing it to a sixth part of its inhabitants. The brum-
magem elalesmon tbe Nrition lias delighted In honor
liavo differed from ua on this point, and trad to ovcr-
ridu the laws of God, or at least lo escape their
penalties, by political arrangement*, Congressional
majorities and judicial decisions. Whether of the
twain have, been justified by a<
leave lo the judgment of histol
Adminiatrntion, willingly (r by Ihe compulsion ol
circumstances, labors In make ll.o rooognitian of tbi
rights of mnn aud the laws of God (he IbuntlntiunB
of tho State, tho Abolitionists sustain mill ninintmnif.
Wu lament tho mistakes, mi sou Urn blunders which
ha™ delayed and still endanger tho victory wo
desire ; but as lone; aa iho lues of Ibo Nation is turned
Zionwnrd, and its clTorla put fortb in that direetit
wo will do nothing to binder ita progress, and Ovoi
tbing to remove obstacles out of ils path, and to
point out to it tho way it should go. And lo thil
April.
Tar. CusTiNESTii. Moxnii.r
.,1 rnibUiber. It is issued now fron:
John F. Trow, 60 Green street, and
typographical skill and taslo. I'll
number nre us follows ; Turkey,
. Lei
1 Giro
.ly building i
of Northern bustle and thrift is the
ivernmenl, ihroogb E.S. Philbrick ui
engaged in ginning cotton. Nerci
operation before, I waa much Intm
through the building. Instead of the
foot, which tho negroes d
-li-jiiiM-iij/iiio furnishes lb
ennslaiit hut li(!)it i.rup!,,, i
ill by bai
id so ten
motive p.
nl for too
it 7Tit TVKni.
„,. hi whfeb the
IJ.S.Soierone,
rntrii
.sdy
; For and Against ; European Opinion, by Don,
F. P. Stanton ; Tho 0oguonota, by G. P. Dteoiway
Montgomery in Secession Tlroo; iho Union, by Hon.
Robert J. Walker j
Tbe Soldiers Burial; Literary
Notices; Editor's Table.
hold to be (ho lone of a country which deserves to bo
loved by reason of its regard for, and pretention, of,
the equal rights of all its inhabitants. For tba pros-
perity, grenlness and glory
"'
.,,:*, Sr.tst.Ano, No. ISBmnoi
labor and tc
ily, grcntneaa nor glory a'
AXTI SLAVERY PATMOTISJI.
CoHomtsshns died a natural death since ouv last
issue was made up. Il will bo remembered ns few
Congresses have been, for lie. history it has witnessed
and that it has helped to make. It hns dono more
than all Congresses i.ui together Hint went before It
for the permanent good of Iho country, am! lbs we
will put to its credit whenever we are forced to
remember that it has not done all thai we had hoped
and capeclcil at ils bund*. It has abolished slavery
in the District of Columbia and prohibited it in Ihe
Territories ; it has done what tho President recora-
mendeifnsto establishing diplomatic relations with
Hnyli and Liberia; it has confiscated tho property
of rebels, including slaves ; it has forbidden military
officers to act as slave-catch era or slave-police ;
il
baa boon always ready to men! (bo President mnn
than half way in all measures looking lownrdi
Emancipation, and prompt to provide men nod mono]
without alint for tbu suppression ol tho rebellion
This, and more thai wo roust pass by, i B s glnriou.
record lo have inndo for itself, and one Ihnt will bi
written imperishnbly on the pages of History.
that il llJIS p ::-:'
I
I of exialence
loyal t
>r.tr:.J !'_!
ind the
j deemed it might and should have
do'ne to niako il» good works duly elfectual.^ It
might bave passed a Declaratory Act
that slavery was abolished cverywhei
welt as disloyal Slates, by Iho nccCJssiiiCB of tho umi
aad Military condition of the country, consequent on
Iho rebellion. And it should have made a resolulo
attempt to remove from tbe public councils the prime
minister, whom a majority of ils membera believed
to hava no faith in tho necessity or Ihe practicability
or the policy of Emancipalion, which they regarded
us tho only salvation for tbe Nation. Congress holds
precisely tbo same power over the constitution of our
Cabinet as Parliament does over thai of England.
It ia tbo power of tbo purse, tho potentiality of Iho
withholding of the supplies, that makes an opposi-
tion majority equivalent to a cbaogo of ministry,
Nolbiag can well bo ninre. unparliamealary than
custom of leaving iho Adm
by Congress. It makes tho President virtually irre-
sponsible in making him nominally responsible.
This would have been a good oi^HMJn for introduc-
ing a more pnrliamenlary course of practice, which
would have givun unily and inspired energy into iho
military movements on which our existence, aa a
w^afm
n
,gL
1
t
n
or's'i,ou1d'
i
hav
n
e'bcc°: Wo will wTof«K
what the lasl Congress has done for good, and hope,
with trembling, that the next may not try to undo it.
Tho attitude of tbe Abolitionists towards tbe gov-
ernment is to novel a one. that it. is not astonishing
that their lono of criticism should bo misunderslood.
In point of fact, they and the slave
changed places in regard to tho Constit
Dniou, Four years ago the slaveholders were all
loyalty to tho Nniioa, and claimed it as Iho bulwark
and citadel of their property in men. We, on the
other band, seeing it in precisely tbo same light,
denounced It and came out from it, that wo might
not help guard tbe accursed thing it contained and
protecled. But now tho sccno is entirely clanged.
Tho slaveholders are denouncing the Constitution
nnd Union, and have como out from it with stolen
arms in their hands, whilo the Abolitionists are
maintaining aad sustaining both, nnd helping to
establish them. This is the necessary result of natu-
ral antagonism. What tho slaveholder loves Ihe
Abolitionist must hale, aad what tho ono enditnvon
to destroy Ihe other must see it is his office to defend.
The Abolitionists never had any objectioa to a Union
of States, nor yel lo the Conslitutioo of tbo Uniled
States, as' far ns its mere letter went. It was to the
vilo uses to which tbo ono was perverted, and the
eonslruction which was put upon the other by it(
authentic expounders, that made thoiu dennunco it nt
a " Covenant wilh Death and aa Agreement with
Hell." But when, as Mr.Garrison epigrammatically
put it, Death and Hell had tcceded froai tho Consti-
tution, ihey' carried our objections along wilh (hem.
By the Rebellion, we held, slavery was actually
abolished, as far as National support
in the rebellious Stales, nnd virtually abolished
everywhere, as a logical and political consequence of
the first proposition. Under tho influeacc of thesi
now views, arising from this new nnd unlooked-for
stato o( things, Iho Abolitionists
ejirnesl supporters of ihe Administrntion in every,
thing that looked towards a vigorous and successful
prosecution of tbo war. With slavery virtually out
of Iho Consliluiion, for Iho time being, they had no
difficulty about Bupporting it, and lo a war, virtually,
though aot nominally, waged against slavery, Ihey
were ready login ihoir cordial eouperalion. But they
woro not thcrvfort ettoj-p-jd from crnicising tho man-
ner iu which the war was carried on, or from ani-
madverting upon the acts of general officers or even
of Iho Administration itself, when they seemed to be
ploying the game of tbe enemy, advertently or inad-
vertently. Still less were wo bound to hold oat
peace from urging from the beginning the necessity,
now partially discerned, that victory and peace can
only bo had through Emancipalion and tho cotipera-
lion of [he slaves. And when this vital measure is
inadequately eaforced, and in danger of being
obslructed, if not defeated, bylimoroua if not treach-
erous counsel), it is incumbent upon ua of all men
to cry aloud aad spare not. Wu have no numerical
forco to turn the wavering scale of battle, or to
decidu the dubiou- balance jf cleeiiuns, but wc have
tho power oi making an oulcry and startling tho
Nalioa into nltenlion. And this, which wo have
always done, nnd which has been the means of all
oor successes, we do col propose to mhso from, until
tbo work is fin'uhed or given up, for this lutn.
The great diflerenco between our criticism of tbo
Administratioa and the Generals, and our censures
of the one or Ihe olher, and that of the Rebel party
at the North, is, that ours is friendly, loyal and help-
ful, and theirs hostile, traitorous and mischievous.
Neither true prospui
npaliblu wilh tho lob
_
~,
n of slavery within its borders. That eslii
paled, America will be a country worlh living and
worth dying for. And the Inith Ihi
struggling forwards towards Ibis gr.'jtl desliny is all
lhat gives dignity and interest lo Iho war now wng
.till bellovo in tho triumphant In«eu of lb
country as long ns this is ils general direction, i
nsional apparent or nclunl dovinliona
from tbo true course. And to this end we will do all
la our power to help and strengthen Iho government
in the carrying forward of tho war. Ou speedy
success in the field, bp have often said, we hold the
success of the present experiment of government
depends, H through the int.llable folly of despiaing
our enemies, and thus permitting "'em lo strengthen
themselves by sen and land, beyond our powor of
reducing thcnl.and thus hinder or defeat tbo one
vital policy of negro alliance, w- f.ar that tbe sue-
;ss ol tbe rebellion will bo an accomplished fact,
mugb tbo war may linger for many months And
:
will be happy for ub, and for ihe slaves, if the
rebels will persist in their purpofo of Independence,
consent to lord it ovor us in « Onion rondo
lin to suit themselves. Rut it will bo time
lo consider our duly in that emergency, when
Tm: Rebellion Rkcobd. Ft
Documentary History of Ihe War
August last, nnd contains silicon p
ildentfl." The portraits of the
Commodore Clarion Boggs, U. S.
Wallace. G. P. Putnsm, fiTJ Dri
XXVII., brings tl
dowo lolhc first i
mgCB of" Poetry at
ber are those i
nd Ren. Lew
ay ; Charles
'
P ERSONA
o Washington corn's pond on1
Gen. Bnller is lo receive the
llarshal General.
Gen. Cur) Sola
furlough, to reci
condition, no ii
rlr. htm beeu compelled to ti
dt his health, which is lo
in Philadelphia.
tho lulling it fnr shintm
] building and the
liiCM pcrvndiu
i his ability I
me fcrllngt that II
This dispute affiir
nd the bear.
-,l m illustntiun nl
i,Tlfr-ihst tbe Adtn
lo* amosg 111 friend,
. .: ,| , !, II :,'
nd pecnlstlin,
di and aordid
panes nnd proini
neither to be donl
these practices hnt
without abundiot
theii
ami .,!),.!
implicit Li
; it is
That Ihoro I
high places and In
.en lwvo token nd-
1 lo Gil their own
iiggrondijcmeot, is
light of; hut thai
extent end degree
at they fciirly illun-
and ruler*, Is uol
lied,
judged and iU-judej.
individuals by Its nnprovid and unprnvablt
ns ;
that were comparatively a small mat
the damngo done tu tbe cuu*c of ranublioai
power was that which they inv,dunlinI.
#m rfPwbiuflton Gotttfpottftuft.
A few words upon the general
I, this wcok. Congress odjouiDi
ning fully accmplitbcd lt«
, March S, ISO.
jaiW,(.n.l tbatb
tho right moment
Prrbapl I shonli
important things weri
in cruelty lo the cob
lely recorded in our
r Ihe North, was pr
red people of
columni, being
;e en ted by hi
of plote.
, Jnno G. Swisihelm, formerly editor uf the
risllor, now of Ihe St. Cloud (,SHn.) flcm.
red nn address in Iho lecture Itoom of Plymouth
h (O. W. Beceher'a), Brooklyn, on Tuesday
In very high ti-rnn. Mrs. Am.". Ihe special correspi
dent of the SpriogQ.-1'l /fc/mt.'ir-jii, describing n rec<
lion at tho houio of Mr. Grow, Speaker of the h
lou<o of ltepi-esent:itivca, says ;
- ,.'
n ,l.lv il,.. ..II, -r >>- "" Mri. Jnno G. Swi
rlplwwkirtmtV;
[ '
'' "''
i
i^^l
row, and eyes of a clear, frnsty blue. She was
liwed in black v.lv.l on-l «HMng.-ly inough, Ihe long
black feathers in her hair suggested nolh
icern in the renowned Gen. MeClellnn. 1
'
ribnlili, aaya tho European correspoodi
,»t, is still ailing ;
It cannot be snid as 3
nvnlescent, nt ill his general health is i
SEW PUBT.WAT1QSS.
SeVvorki John Hopper, 110 Broadivn)*.
Wo have rend this book wilh great pleasure
edification. Among all Iho works inleodcd to n
forming tho diameter anil guiuion the nspiratio
girls, we cannot remember nnolher so good,
instead of attempting to not lorlh Ibe grounds
opinion for ourselves, we will let Mrs. L. Marin
speak for ns. In the Boston Transcript eh
^l ilguiek'a echoo
nany rears consLdered 1
1 remind tho public nf
,,r """go,.-: fei'lh froc
eared—
i
1. Charl
n for st
inlellcetunl am
is impossible lo estiu
mothers thus wisely i
lilted by their posterity threugn
Mrs. SedKwick endeovors to convene
de, through the medium of this lilt
A Talk with My Pupils.' May tilt
cadcra be large. The book is full
lorn, pure in its spirit, large, liberal 1
«om«0, in nil the relations of life. Ir
bleu!
W. G. Allen, a colored '
Professor in the New Y01
delivered to a crowded audi
publiuhod in our
Whig. oe« an " A
course be Is now ii
Inn, and formerly,
otrnl College, lately
.n Shoreditch, i
Y...i l..ok a r. listen I feel b
,-lrHIU i.-l
I'lulnilflpliia '''orrwiiomlfntf.
of pitlfible pesairolsis.
! forms of error. The
mitl'.'e'ii |iuwcr w
mailo at last by these mutual crluilnntluns.
party— the umjorlty anil niinnrity—accused Ihe <
of dishonesty ; and both mode out strong cues.
Froniont and his Mlow-viclims now stand befort
wnrlJ wenlpalcel from Ihe charges ol lhi« Commiltee ;
its members being proved by their own showing to be
iltogether unworthy of credit.
The blunder of the appointment of this Committee,
Ike a good many olhor blunders of Ihe Administration,
had its origin la good Inleotioai. Soon after tho
breaking out of Ibo war, n cry wss raised of corrup-
tion." Thopeoplo took IV olsrca, inves ligation was
demanded, aud a Cummltlee made up >a pan of tlio
most clauiorjiis— who are nut always tho oiost virtu-
ous—were appolaled lo make inqnett. To lids Com-
mittee wore confided tho largest puweri. Thoy could
nowhere IllOy might ehono on mltcogo : th-y could
employ stenographic and clerical assistance; Ihey
soald publish wllhnot revision ind ad UWruro. They
have already Issuc-d tbreu octavo volumes, in edition!
of 10,000 each,- comprising in all 2,J00 pages, nnd are
on tho point of publishing a fourth of still larger
dimcosinnj. These relumes are di Urihuted. under the
frank ol members and otliOrWilo, throughout the
length and breadth of the land and over tho world.
Wherever Ibsy go, they carry a libel upon American
character nnd republican institutions. So impressed
ivitb this were radical nionibui-fl of Congress Ihat Ihe;
oruacd to receive their nuola or to be InKrumcnL-
n distributing them. Bnt tho Copperheads had n
1. Thoy took nil that wore offered,
them with alacrity.
Tho members uf the Van Wyck Committee nre not
10 only recognired friends of the government who
ivo dono harm by .sweeping inculpations. Many
good pcoplo unintentionally fall into tho same error.
They receive for truth reports not worthy ol credit,
and openly deplore n state ot
rerlooked. The Fugilirc Slave 1
ir repealed, and slaves con be legally caught and
tinned to their mailers throughout loyal slavcdom.
be scenes enacted in this District under this barbn-
>us law ore shocking, and they occur much oficocr
ian is generally supposed. Tbe omiuion cannot now
e rectified, hut it is a consolatioo Ihat tlio old Courts
r this District are abolished, and (list we aro to havo
;w men for Judges, ihe probability belns that a
isjorfty oi lln-m "111 be men at lde»« «n,l -ilb wim
umauily— and this cannot ho said wilh truth of Iho
old judges.
Thofoilureof Ihe Mi«;ouri iiium i|ntleabill grieved
the President, but I judge fpom some things I bare
heard that Ihe radicals— tho strong and reliable anli-
slavery men—do not feel very badly over Its detest.
Willi Ihe triumph of Ihe government slavery is sure of
eitinclion in all the border Slates, and Ihe day is not
rhen tho slave-owners will be begging foe com-
grumhliog because tho President
It is Utter, perhaps, to wait till
Ihat day come-s.
Tbo government, 1 think, is not afraid of the Copper-
ads. Thu developments ol ihe lnil four wi '
hwo
nrinccd llio Pre.ldenl that Ibo rebel .sympathiser* of
North really have little Influence with the people.
iy iillempt in a free Slnto to resist Iho Conieripllon
•t will bo Instantly punished, and It is not believed
it oo>- attempt will ho made in any Slnle to n il^t Iho
[eeulion ,.l iho law.
Tho position nl tho gorernnient on tho slavery ouci-
on in more sallifaotnry Ihsn il has been for a lone
me. The minors ol nCabio,-l chnngo, by whith pro.
srery Hieo are to go Into plnee and anti-slavery men
e 10 leave the Cabinet, are all false. Mr. Lincoln
very obstinately refu-es to give up Mr. Sonird to ark-
radicals, hut he has no idea of outraging
ntimcnt by dismissing any aall-slatory
, Ihe Iloytian CnarjB d'.-ljfuir.
orted that Mr. Sam
.linncr. 10 which ihe wh
.
invllcd. Only think of
the United Stan.-j n.-.kifn
The nominalhm of Gen. Cassiue Jl. Cloy as Miniate
10 Runsia was ropcrled hnek from the Committee
Foreign Relations on Tuesday, wilh tho statement tbi
1 members present were equally divided on th
m[| nf enn llroiol ion. Il in uiiilersl'pfij 111 it.>enlt,T
or was among Mr. Clay's opponents, and Senator
Garret Davis among his friends.
.1 kindly In
ill.- fll.ipl.T
1
an example a gen
ilh her 1
im in this
trifles iodli
Charles Sedgwick
emaa who, whoa a
TllO!
lrgehearled husband ot once recognise
incident. It may seem a trifle ; but such
ato the moral staple of character. Mr
type ot character
uly Christian lie moo
ire tlcally. . .
There Is n noblo nnd a
m';nnd ihe words cor
aot grudge the snerifl
ne ; nor would 1 have
n be otherwise than St
,
practically ns
G.WE0=r«a
In this c<
„ lir-tli.T
,..[ 'HI small.pact, neatly prinitl vi.lu
psges we have a dictionary of all lb(
to military aad naval description, nai
slanlly employed in official and othei
ties nod of Ihe preparations thereto
such a work Ihe accouots in tho newspapers of tho
movements of our nrniios on hind and sen, it not unin-
hut imperf,"-tly amK-rstunJ !;
.
iiong tho President's re
Joseph J. Lewis of West CI
Internal Revenno, in plact
resigned ; John A. Gurloy,
ono. Hon. John F. Potior
eclinod the office of Gove
,f the Toronto OIooj.
,1! n..|llin.ltii.ns. rr.lllitQ.fd
, .. ._,.ell,LI,Jll"ivlr,g:
iter. Pa., CommL»pionfrof
if Don. Gcorgo Boulwcll,
f Ohio, Governor 0"
ato M.C., of Wiscons
lor of Dakota.
e iu recording the clee
of George It. Brown, Editor
lo is an earaest opponent
" I,osl , "at New 11
Wendell Phillips said I
impressed by Prof. Sil
audience, aud that thr
ad dress iog
ugh lile he bad made it a sti
1 perfection of delivery;
.• iu speaking had ex tended t
People wl
1 think vol
ire aot only '
a degre
ungulm
The kind of f.dk Ihat most tro
1 this part of the vineyard arc
joyful believine," in anything
inking upon thiaga with "unqu
ion and doubt ererylbing Ihat me..- «/«
omo of them will frankly toll you that tin
a that stale now Ihnt thoy don't believe coi
nything. They havebeen so disappointed
g eyes
ir or his Cibine
Tburlow Weed.
Tho President talka
nist. Fea
ally o>
1 admitted e
lo magnify it
ll.vi. hear -ung V
is bound by the altribules of
our best cfJorte. This is the
would gladly reclaim lo a hot
hall with satisfaction overyi
—I had a duly to perform
again to tho cky of Woshingh
for o meeting to bo held, the
in this city, on tho subject
neotcd with tho Freed Blacks
id hope
that they enn
,-hody or any
> ability nnd distinct!
tier part of Ibis runn
Emancipalion as c
mity, thoy exaggerate its extent. Tl
[hough well Intended. All slitemcn 1
Ihls kind, that eieecd tho truth, tt
first in our rulers aud people, and the
lions which breed such products.
—A decbion is expected this week fi
Court in Iho case of the ffloiralha and other prii
which, if it he what m anticipated, will ha
of alloying Iho (earn of some of our Mill
pie. Tho chief questiou nt Issue in theso ,
to the legal nature of the nontrnvorHy il
,ntry is now engaged, h It a war nr 1
auto? If, tbo former, the government is
law of nations, aad nuy eiereiae belli
; one of which Is to oonDscalo nnd doilroy tho
miy'a property. It tho laller, it Is bound by Ihe
nicipal regulation:! of the country, nnd must con-
alts measures for Its oupprcmon within the lines
prescribed by the Constitution. If the former, the
Proclamation of the President ia not unconstitutional.
If tho latter, an ndvorao Supremo Court may, at its
st opportunity, declare that proclamation noil and
id. It is said by tho90 supposed 10 know, thai a
ijority uf Iho Judgei
&wt gnsfon GmttfmlltHtt.
Bcmox, March 9th, IMS.
You know Iho Warren Street Chapid, and Ibu manner
in which Its mlnialer. Charles F.Darnord, provide* for
not well, Iho mental and spiritual needs of n class of children
eilent do
: abroad ; current ovenls for the Instruction of bis Qoclt.
le instilu-
A year ago, just ns Mr. Zuchos (formerly connecied
with Antioch College! wos about to sail for Port
e Supreme
Royal, to give hli aid in the instruction of tbe colored
refugees Ihoro. he held, at Mr. llarnard's request, n
meeting in the Chapel, In explain 10 Iho children wb.it
this mis-ion was, and why the Interest nnd labor of m
Boston, after a year's lali„r aiming those 1 pie, Mr,
Ziohoa again appeared nl llio Chapul.nnd sjioal Iho
oveolng ol Sunday, March 1st, in giving a report nl bis
lent n..W-
work at Purl Ruysl among the colored people who ImJ
:-,ful ; hm
purest members of
jnghnm "I
lolnle
I was at Iho Capital Congre
my fortune to witness the pre
had ofien heard ot tho benr-
govemment—to bo enacted 1
the session, nnd 1 was curious
present'
j. Whilo
adjourned, and
easof itsdissoluli
irden scenes that
,di held Ihe re las
that c
And I ni plea:
say there was a
,; Ihe i.ul.jee
1, of coursi
le i ,. Wo happen
hud t.-.-n
reports of b
tclligibl
tbo unr render. The
oH. 8. ly and Navy ;
lank, pay nnc
lea of money
ipect for the man, an
should he staled. Of some 530,01)0
lectures in England, he brought horn
balance, beyond his peraonol
yen to charilablo objects. LI
enteon young men in colleges
his receipts m
aldol
infallibililj. 1
slates manshi p. But wc claim, in virtue of lliirt)
years' devotion to the subject, lo kn ow something
the characlcr of the slaveholders, of the nature
slavery nnd of ibeir nevituhlu efftc s upon any inili
lotions or goTcrnmcn wilh which 1 ev are mixed up
Tho only slnlesmau lo bave, Is, the
knowledgo that conf rmity to tho aws of God ant
naval arms; P ovcrbs a d phr
in, Italian, Spam. i aud Greek ; W
om tho 1 reach ; a id, besides all thos
t Dictio in rnell-l Langi
This dcacrlpt onofits 00tents a a suffleio t como
dotion of iho vork.
TUE CiiniSTUN EtAMINEB lor March ce
articles, ent led aa follows : Dr. Doyle
ly „f ih
Discipline in hi, elan.
1
The Ca Dilation
tyrs of Japan ;
Democracy on 1
o Utile
of our most inlclligen
without feeling renew
republican institution
The Piose
This is tbo
: Walker, Wise ft Co.
etille -I 11
Dow Dt BBOuin PnesiDBNT.-
book not yet published, bi
nranco on the itllb Inst-, from
of Walker, Wiao ft Co., Bostoi
m. M. Thayer, who has spent two yi
Hon. It is In the form of a tale for boys and
young men, and will trace the career of Presideol
boyhood to manhood, showing what Ihi
principles ot honesty, industry, energy and pcrsove-
'- -olalng
country can t
I, m- full,.:
JW. Hwi
p, by Harley.
place of hot
I be illustrnl
BucKWOon'a MiOWtSK for February (L. Seolt &
Co.'a American Edition, 5S Walker at) eontalr
following papers : Progress in China, Pari II. ; Casto-
niana—Motive Power (concloslon) Henry I
flair* ] Lady Morgan's Memoirs ;
A Sketch from
Ion-concluded ;
Our New Doctor ; Pollllcs at
Bad Abroad.
Tnr. WEstuinsTeb Revhw for January (L, Scott £
Co.'a American Edition, S3 Walker st.l contains nine
articles, of which we give llio titles : English Con-
victs—what should bo done with them ; The Litera-
ture of Bohemia ; Bishop Colcnso on Iho Pentateuch ;
I.ca iliserablea; Indian Annexa I ion 5—British Treat,
ment of Native Prlncea ; The Microscope and ils
KovtdaUona; Grcoco and the Greeks; M. Ralsal Bnd
r, in recruiting regim<
lore on the alert 10 put theui thro
ess self-containod but equally determined,
all vine for a choaco to defeat them. T
resorted to every trick that promised lo 1
their purpose. Bitterness waa io their
rr in their eyes, but on ihcir longues wi
Science. There was no display of n
r like helps to pro-alavcry legislatini
inch tiling) hud i-nised, never, it is to L
We perceive, snya Th: fitdlrmdeai, that the Hon. Sto-
lon J. Field, now chief Jusii'-o nf California, bos been
offered the ofBco of United States Circuit Judge for
L State. Judgo Field, ia a eon of the venerable Rev.
Field of StookhrUye, Mass., whose sons havo all
11 10 rlistinnion in various professions. They are
id Dudley Field, lawyer in Now Turk ; Rev. Henry
M. Field, D.D., oor neighhorly editor of The Emngtl-
1st ; Cyrus W. Field, who hopes lo lay a second mli.
Atlantic lelegrnph; Hon.J. B. Field, present Speaker
3 Senate ol UaBsachmotls ; nod Judge 5. J. Flell
of California. Who shall say that mioiatera' sol
Tho Taris J/onde Bnnouncea tho c on version to the
Roman Catholic faith or tho eldest so of Wilberforce,
and aoys : " This is tho third of his s
hua rewarded for Iho father's hum ino efforts. One
a in Ihe Anglican
Church, died five years, since at Romc, while studying
ln-.-.lu(!y preparatory to Inking ln.ly . rdors. Another,
rich benefice
the English Church to cmhraco the Catholic faith, ai
is now proprietor and principal editor of Tht Wfddjl
Brglsler, a Catholic journal. His eldest son is already
ia holy orders. Of the four sons of tht
of the negroes only one alill adheres lo heresy— Dr.
Samuel Wilbcrforce, Bishop of Oiford, etc., who ia
accused of l'useyism."
Says tbe last Concord (N. H.) fnOcptndrnl fl?moc
" Miss Aona E. Dickinson, of Philadelphia, who
been speaking lo crowded homes in Slralford and Car-
roll Counties, for the past three weeks, spoke in Phenii
Hall, on Saturday night last, on 'Tho Crisis.' The
Hall wos packed full, Ihcro was not o seal on the msin
floor or in Iho gallery which was not occupied, and
hundreds were standing In the rear of the Hall Bnd in
Ihe side oisles. A mure Intelligent ond attentive audi-
ence never assembled in our city, and from constant
outbursts of applause during the hour and a half
Miss Diekinson was speaking, wo should say iht
lis business was of tho most it
.eluding aovocal ol llio great men
lion aud freedom which for moot
or consummation. The friends
n hut with every nerve Btroinc
aside cable confuab
arcsentotivo body
liy—and no unseemly bsfe
,'cloelt in the morning (of
inivo and able leader of tho
ires all salely through, an
till 10; at which hour busu
nndclollerof frequent
debate was kept up till IS.
touched Ihat I
Speaker fell, and suddenly,
re, ond a good 'deal 1
Eager competition fc
1
; but this, in a largo pop-
bedy 1 ibo
ire, the hammer
if by magic, tho
prolound oilenco.
nd delivered his valedictory
rally B. hi ie
if the government's exorcising all tbe
ights of bolllgorcnla. (1,)
You may have nollced that Ihe Copperheads are
much more veaomoua in their Bilacks upon tho sus-
pension of the habtas eorpas lhan they aro upon Ihe
"
motion. They have discovered that tho latter is
Diclcntly unpopular with tho masses to yield
any political capital ; so they try tha former. But
ihoustcd. The Indemnity
bill will go far to close it up, nnd obliga thoso who
been working it to look for uew diggings. If, in
xcoss of your duties, you have omitted to read
bill, I would advise you lo embrace tho carli-
ppoi'lufiity tn acqnai
You 1 And I 1 "/Tic JVi',i
able law, being
tho President
tbo citlifi'n, The govt
the boily of an accused pei
1
at Ihe ond ol twenty days,
fusal, either a trial or his ci
ns of tho hill are wisely con
<1.) Thc'f.-vi
cat.' Thuilcd.-
hehoirofiliom..-
(conciurrd in by Jade
read ny Judge Selson.
A.vTi-Ni:iino Dijboi
a negro who had con
whilo girl was ben
II),; 1 .!-
',-[' II.. I.
It ii
iiuct'l .'ii Tucs-
[!tce°"rkr?'on
1 the 61h Inst,
a young
DErnoiT.— On tl
I an outrage upi
on from Iho court-room
litnry, when an nllompt
rescue wns made by a gang of rowdies. Taj crowd
was fired upon, and one man killed and several
wounded. Being foiled in Iheir attempt to get pc
sion of Iho negro, Ihe mob perpetrated the most I
blc outrages upon the colored people residing
vicinity of the j.iiL Thirty-two houses were dosti
ami ;u" pe.iple mode homekts. The riot was o,1
only by military force. A public meeting was he
tho 7th, at which res
authorities to orgai
keep Ihe peace, and to cause iho swell
commuted the murder and arson; 1
Mayor to proclaim a sort or marllal la
that O10 Common Council be requested
urging tho
sold,
IL1L Dns-HIM*.— The " Social, Civil and -'Mti'tienl
ation of Colored People of Pennsylvania," which
ig effective work lor the relief of tho " coniro-
" lately rc'celvEtJ Trom Peter Lcslar ond 1 few
warm-hearted Irieods In Victoria, Vancouver's
, a dralt for S1H3, poyablo in gold, which, when
mounted to the sum of 3^77 and a tew cents.
, of Virgin!
memorable Congress
Mr 1
1 pleasing, 1
nrgumi
thrilling, and her oudl-
nce'fl nre hold as though they were clcctriDed. Her
rcatment of traitors, both South nad North, Is severe,
ad they squirm when their wickedness is clearly
ainted before them. Miss Dickinson spoke ia Ports-
loulh on Monday cveniog last, and speaks in Clarc-
flUin.. lerniinallun of an impo
becoming dlssolulion of Ibo m
that l^us sat since ibo touudalion of the governi
Thcb) was Utile episode In the last hour of
ceedink which, thougbof no especial interest
:
ivas, in-omo ol its aspects, quite instructive,
to the family quarrel, for auch it was, of 1
Wyck Clmniittco. This Committee, after hai
sputtered wilh improved charges almost ovcry
wbom it bad laid its hands, concluded its labon
session by a general set-to of dirt-throwing
other. It was the feat ol the Kilkenny cats '
Cd un another arena. Tho occasion of It was
which had been adopted tho night before, accepting a
minority report modo by Mr. Van Wyck, tho origionl
Chairman ot ihe Committee, and ordering 10,000 copies
Lo bo printed. Mr. Wnahborno, of Illin
of the majority, moved to reconsider
unialraess on tho part of Ihi
d even insinuating fraud. Mr. Dawes, of
1, followed, corroboraliog, so Ur as h
immilling himself, what Mr, Wast
.,„ bad said. Mr. Van Wyck replied under grcs
excitement. He repelled the charges and insinuation!
and retorted both wilh interest added, declaring lb.
he held himself responsible for what ho said-tber
..
and elsewhere." Tho motion .0 reconsider was lo.
by a small majority ; the vote .how.og thai th
House had looked upon tho squabble wilh much Ihe
Mr. Lester aad his wife, who were ai
Thoy were reared in the midst of iho
slavery as it existed in and around tti
;y feel intensely in regard lo Ihe struggle, now going
,
especially in relation to such as nre
lutd that colored people all over tho laod could feel
those far-off ones hive lelt-
SKEicncs miuS'o oon Colobco I'orci.nioN.— A series
Of papers, bearing this lillc, lias lately been published
In the Brooklyn tVenino Stat. They wero written by
Rcbkcca VfWaB, a lady of more lhan ordinary
ability, who spent
nllvgini; 1
Uassachi
could without
nil
t:?jz
at
Hv,
rstdoublfuland.ua-
bolh tides, and dis-
iu they hod pond rea-
. Noverlhel ring their conddcncoi
ving litem n nt II
to nccomplidi, 10 fou d 1 em welbdisposcd aad
iv
f them had -s from Ihe whip, and
thor marks fprov oua 11-tronlment from Ihe
tli. rn ii!.'.iiii either
free-
peared
They w
doni by honest labor.
Thoy were willing lo work. They had planted cm
til sweet potatoes hefore Jlr. /.achos arrived Iher
u! when the produce uf these came la, they volu
.rily deaisled from drawing ralions. When their en
as destroyed by iho caterpillar, thoy boro Iho dl
lpointiuent and Iho loss patlenlly. In limes
irclty, those who drew rations divided llietn wi
10 rest. Not one Iniy. lonflng fellow waa foui
nong them. They ware very Induslrlons when gsi
ly waa given, and tbey were porflatent nad steat
1 Die ordinary work, cheeiTully continuing It wh,
payment was long delayed, after tho clrcumatanc
ere explained to thum.
Afler the Interesting atalcroeiil ol Mr. SCachoa w
flnisbed, Mr. Barnnrd showed the children a specim
gift that
plo i tho a Sireet Chap.
hi en Il.fi i; il.
diligently, in Ihe inicr.-al- ol Inbpr, bo(b
grown people- Tho gilt to be tent Ihen
cards, containing tho printed let ten of
large and .mall. These cards wero dur
Iho Oilier. On Ihe dark »i
ted In gold letters, on tho
school 1Mr. Barna
childrea un equnl Icrmawtlh whi
1 a fair specimen ol the culture
liods and hearts.
Wo havo in Boston a now In
IMonClub," which announces bi
ion of " unqualiQod loynltj1
lo
'nion of the Uniied Slates, and 1
io Federal government in effor
I tbe Rebellion." This club
een formed nt tho Instance, nn
gency of Charles G. Loving,
city. 1
string supporl id
tbo supprctwlon
Inly Ibrough Ibo
a gentleman qI
who repre.enlnd
pamphlet lately
umns Feb. 28(h),
FreteBt Relations
United State, ol
of bus
Hoi
Ihe colored pcoplo of Now York for t.
sketches are creditable alike W her bead and heart,
and wo may regard Ibis appearance in Ihe Brooklyn
L'p|.1"1 ptoward Ot
New QiursiitBE. — Tin
Tuesday last, resulted in t
The Republicans and loyn
people ; but Ihe L^l-Ij'.u:
Repobllt
defeat ol Ihe Copperhead'
Democrats being divided 01
loico of Ihat officer by th<
The llirce Congress!
Ihe Republicans. T
the C-ipperhtid Denwrac
elect thuir candidates, and
bora ol their party in this
ithur the Republican or tho
candidate—probably the forowr.
onal Disirlots were all tarried by
hU is better than we cvpccied. for
the American side In the ban Injiue
printed (nnd nollced In your colui
in tilled " Correspond en co on ihe P
between Great Britain and
America." This correspondei
In regard lo iho courteous and
defence of antagonistic opinions. But, In my judgment,
tbo English gentleman who takes Ihe opposite side has,
In several particulars, Iho advantage Id tho argument.
The Ideas ol slavery which Mr. Lorlng Imbibed lo Iho
old Whig party—namely, thai though unjusl and inju-
rious, II was practically to he tnlc rated in defcrenco
to llio Cooslilulioo— havo seemingly befogged Ills mind
so os to reoder him Incapable of rowgnhiing the fact
lhal lighting for Ihat Conalilutlon is a very different
thing from lighting fnr freed Ur. Field, lift Eng-
lish correspond ent. aptly quoU-s President Lincoln's
letter to Mr. Greeley «evidence of porleci mini. ronOC
on hla [Jirt whether or not slavery shall toliliouc, and
tbus as evidence that the Bxccullvc of ihe Coiled
State* Is not inttnt tonally guiding this war In Ihe Jnlo-
il freedom. Mr. Wing explains Ihat ihe I'rcil-
belog the sworn delendvr ol the ConstiluUon
r which slavery has grown to lis present hulk
and i mporlance], c ono ol Interfere with that system
except so f.r as Ibu immedisto preservation of thu
national life requires ; and he wonders at his English
friend',, inference fas if that inference wore any other
Ihsn inevitable) Ihat the nation which is Oghllng for
rucA a Constitution Is nol purposely fighting for free-
dom, and against slavery.
In Tlu Chriiltau Eznmmtr lor March, just issued
hero, Mr. Uring*. pamphlet U reviewed, nnder tin
liUo-" Later Phases of English Feeling." Tho re-
viewer corop I sins of the cool, guarded, and measured
eiprev-dons of iho English correspondent In regard t
1