The New York Herald Newspaper, April 6, 1850, Page 6

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Ger Waskingtes Correspondence, the battle im the balls of Congress. om the admission ‘The Forrest Onse.—Another Gun from Mr | wase (bristles and her belief war, that Wasnoneros, March 3 1 Cotesem, a6 sand vo oguem © @tevens, covid elm coer toeitect ber final euin ia the world of . low Naw Yoax, April 6, 1860. | retitouttom Seww cmd boners oe Wostington. “Tike capital wears os s.cccamee of midwinter, end bas all the selemecss of 2 New England Sab. Darth Gay. The dell are tolling incessantly, re- mendang ws of Loot, aud that tomorow is Good Eorros oF rae Hema, By his © Sia: 1 must claim your imduigeece once more, to | version of & correct, before the * Court of Public Optaion,” some Of | cerded in stifling the rebellious spirit of Mra. the gvoce mivetatememte published in the Herald of ¢ ip nerving ber to deeds of the deepest ‘Thureday lest, under the signature of NP. Willis. hort Camning etrocity, and gording ber to the Although it muy sem presumptuous in me to enter rt possible exroution of the beilish act, Each the hiets with the glass of fashion and the mould of ie fled with expressious of the tenderest affvo- Friday, We dave an official notice that the recep- | letter, come what may Webster's eperch m form." even tu defence of ap absent friend, yet, with pe oli bis “ the President's, will ba quieted the South for 8 moment; but it is only truth ene rincerity tosoribes my benner, a » ten ee ay evening, at the Presiden moment Compromise! What is compromise’ aca | the reevlt: and | eppeal to all true American ladies | corresponden * Mrs. Marthe Mi dispensed with. This is particularly anmeying to | party gives up~ concedes something. Wai d» all the | ard gentiemen, to decide for the right, aud the Fight fught to rs : 4 strangers und extiness: Who renee com ives amount to’ What have the | only. Mra Guthrie's letters inficate the combination of @ large comcourse of strangers ay North propoee@ to compromise? Nothing atall They | 1be* pink of chivalry” knows very well the immense | ij) health, with gvvat agitation and weaxness of have made their preparations “to go up to the Telinquich, sothing,. Team lo no concession on 7 eesentege porsersed, te thio lend of freedom ong tus jhey shew the terrible power he had soguired o ~ ; Ra cola 3 001 joms are m ebivalry, by @ny map bo appears even to be the chaw- | ber dwing bic intimacy with ber as ber fumily phy- ‘White House’ to-morrow evening. Your corres the South! Wonderful Northern compromise !~ | pton of wiman; aod { emproud to say that it be had | siclan. aed bie adroit mavegement te 640 deat * Rabelais’ has managed to throw aa —— N concession ‘he South bi truth, or the semblance it e on bis side, he | tivet physical derepgewen's peouilar to ber sex—the taterest about these receptions which they never its under the federal constitution. They are te | would be invincible; but as such is not the cace,aud a8 | etormy contiiot in cwn bosom between o startled been obliged to resort to te\seboods conscience. aud the cv my meets teclacd by God jone. Bat the ques tion, whether ajury of Amencans have been guilty of condemning their fellow-man to death, upoa wholly inadequate proof, is one upon which we are ‘all competent to . It would not excase them, | in the least, if be Webster were to-morrow to confess his guilt. A quilty man may be condemaed fi testimony to-day, but the next vic- | of his ha waved up the by putting at py. sccm gti . call it amounted ts the revelation om maj I! o Basten tery. pained by their prejudices, or \ is just the course which a weak, irresolute apy other uowortby influence, have doue this, itis who had no confidence in his own ‘oper and it is important that those who have the | purpose, would be likely to pursue. Haviag de- appiness pot to live in Boston, should express | termined to pay this debt by saving enough, and their opinions publicly and emphatically. Such a | knowing bis own weakness, he seeks to r before, ano they are now quite ‘the Cee ae be has pound «peil which te dragging | verdict 18 4 stain upoo us asa nation; und it is | his resolution, to ensure 113 being carned out, by thine” r vf let By admitting California as a Stat his labored and maliguent tirade iy more w: ber within the reach uf bie f be shudders at the 4 i and ee See be bad Boy Vine tgp rely ors fs TE noright, legal orconstitutional,toclaim such admission. | him than {t » cf the pretended reapeotabie, g thought cf sending by the dytog bed of « polaoned | #Mportant that we should, if possible, remove any | adopting some unusual und out ter ciara Tl endorse the proviso against slavery in territories, | family paper bieb it firet appeared husband, than at sy other public enteriainniept save the | top Qh time to come, and destroy thelrown powerinthe | The low personal Se cac an attaeannt tek share of the disgrace from ourselves, and coucea- | He actually puts aside what be can save time. trate it upon the little spot where it belongs. It is | to time. pute it aside in some particular lity and vio © malice with obe taken, be, Mitebneon, muat do a Senate chamber The adventaye 1# wtogether iM | federal union. which Mr. Forreet We esthes.' to that gentle. be letters, centaining ail pried i elon amportant that we should let the world, and the | place. He vows to himself that whatever he favor ot the White House, tor itis utterly 1 24. To consent to the formation of Uteh and Dan's coptideration. being wax the publi menees— With an sching heart, apd @ trembil: Bostonians themselves, know that there is no | places there eball never, come what will, be sible, as & general ruir, to eet « bill of fare before- | Mexioo into Territorial governments, without strong be. that, at @ proper time a proper meni band”—and she inquires. 1p one ait place in the country but Bostoa, where 8 | out again but for the one purpose. He hand of what is to de dished up in the Senate. Provisions to enforce th b federal ill attend to Mr, Willie's part! O80 the propored scbrme verdict could have been got. I firmly believe, and | that sacred. It is by just such meane that weak id teke your chances, which is ex- | teote pr 17 of the citizens of every State You mest 0 ‘be poim' Mr. Willis’s ard, in which the public | Lave mercy ow us ag: laaiy fnconvenicat to good people, whe have | is are interested, { will now briefiy notice I y — » 3d To consent to abolishing the slave trade in the With @ tacte and for an odjeot equally commendabie, ps rance of the saints, she saye, * - rd ie rill hovering about, or was four | Disttlet of Columbia, thus conceding the soknowledg- | Mr Willis felsely seserte that Mr Forrest, asouming | believed that @ Christian would not fall trom grace, um Draper ie ati hi 8 ide ir yeh ut) ment that Congress have the right to abolish Southerm | the aire of u lord of the maner, " baptised” hisertate | though it looks mightily like it im our case, if we ever days rie He ws unvoyeo that the Herald should | rights apywhere, when they conflict with the senti- | on the Hudecm with the name of Fonthill. after a | reached it.” These quotations are from memory. have placed him as ao office-nolder. Sim says it’s | ments, moral or maples) of the stronger seotion. | lcrdiy mansion or castle of thet pame in England The Rev. Mr. Willard, an able analytical obemist, no such thing—that he 18 gomg to California, not Beautiful copoessions Now, the simple truth is, thet the estate in question | was tefore the ocurt as a witness. and his testimony with & comaisrion ot General Taylor, but merely 4th To purchase the territories of Texas, that noware | wpe known as Founthill farm # hundred years ego, and | war unequivecal to the fect, thet the powders furnished ae flyer, to see what's out there. under laws that eckno' African siavery, that a | ir by that name described ip several deeds of treusfer Meee, to be given to Guthrie, were stryohnine Last night, Carusi’s Saloon was open for the | D¢¥ oor may be opened tor discussion. and that, event- | row on record in Weatobester county, and Mr. Willis, | There were rome yellow powders in the lot, which were Shekapeakeam readings by Miss Kimberly. Tae | ally, what w slave territory may beoome free, | knowing this. meanly attempts to prejudice the Ameri- | net submitted to chemical epalysi«; they were in the aa a ete Mh Like It”. ‘There was | Delightful compromise’ And for all this, what great | can poe im the mapper above alluded to. Thetruth | hends cf the proseouting attorney. As there were perfor ane ‘68, Like het oncessions are t! optbil ie ae purely Americen as the words | good rearens for believing that the poisonous attiocle in an out and outer Snow storm going on at the ime, * and “terrour,”” as formeriy writtes, are, | these powders was ot . Mr. Willard propesed to and when we arrivee. we fouud that it had bi Hea without the w, as at present (| use these | the commonwealth’s attorney to give some of this yel- one good effect of the storm. The Goths were words tm illustration, because | kmow that Mr. Willis, | low powder to » Seg. small dog was procured, aud not ere. The audience assembled was exceed- ebout this time, ta pearels familiar with the defiol- om of the ders was given i a lam proud to have such a belief, taat if Attorney- | men strengthen their resolauons. It General Clifiord and Chief Justice Snaw had been | in that way that we see children and women saving allowed to pick out from the whole people of the | money for a particular purpose. _ It 18 not eufficient city of New York, twelve men whom they might | jor them to set aside so much ia their muad, but think best suited to the peronee, they could not | they must actually set it aside by putting it ia some have found among us twelve mea, who, whatever | particular place. It 18 precisely the plan their private opinions, would, under a juryman’s | xdopted by poor persons, Who, knowwg they must oath, have rendered such a verdict, upon such | have co much money ready by a certain time, (ce evidence. pay their rent, for instusce,) and being close ' The case, as made out by the government, was 80 | preesed for daily means to live, every day or every weak, that, without calling any witnesses tor the | week, put a certain amount in a particular drat detence, the jury was bound to acquit him. Tre | and vow never to touch that. Dr. Webster was @ character of the government testimony, on many k. nervous man; he knew his owa irresolution ot the important points which they tried to prove, ney matters, and he resorts to this plan—a and were bound to prove, was doubtful aud incon- | plan commonly adopted by other weak people, sistent. (week ftom nature or poverty,)--to secure, if pos- ornurence of eal ingly refined, and highly critical. The room was tien of both of them reeenoe Of seve- Firet, they had to prove the man was dead, or | gible, the result. As to his oank account, thet 4 adi di ‘i Having tbur disposed of the foundation falsehood of heats 0 . wel farted, rat ‘siping yy see the bo Teader | Rerthern epitite ofthe age, who shall recrifice eo uch | Mr. Willie's superetrecture of mendecity. 1 do no: | tome of, vertigo apd eperm— soon paseed tute soranne re was no murder. ae YM aga oer tag ob does not ar ever to bave been kepe at very must Rave suffered some. us did the audience. for the glorio Earthly damuation to any | deem it veoeseury to examine the various points of | end frothing at the mouth, with convulsions and dysp. | Gentst’e, towards the identification ¥> | business-like manper ; and it wae not at all strange was worthless. No maa could probably recognize | that he did not conduct all his money matiers his own leg after it had been ampatated a wees, | through that. There are. yg Bag like bim io much less that of a relative. They identified me theee things. If a man iste _ for bemg body only by the faive tectm and the plate auach: carelese, or queer in the management of his every tothem. They idenufied the body by thing that | day money matters, candidates tor the gallows are ally no part of the ly. The dentist | abroad in theusands. e " » that he ooes these teeth and plate as If Webster was not convicted upon sufficient tie own work, ufter they bad been exposed to fire | proof, he was convicted on prejudice Can we and beat. Another dentist, equal to him, for all | reasonably account for the existence of such pre- mph y's | z, nr ny pam aad skill, avers that Jodioo’ ip supereaion of the arenes tae by no dentist could, with certainty, recognize his own itselt 4 suflicient teadency te work under the circumstances. Two of the gov- evvaleated and, to the accused, tatal prejudice. At about a quarter past eigbt, Sambo placed a | southern wan who eball accept of euch # compromise, | comparieon and contrasts couple of rosssive tomes, boued with red morocco, | which copcedes the rights, the liberty, institutions, sinvate, that Mr. W. bes bis own reasons for cou- it would be tm possible to imagine a stronger state of gilt edges and gold clasps, upon a2-by-4 table, | the honor, and the very existence of the South to | tresting. vutuverubly, the obarester of Mr. Forrest, | proof than wax furmtebed by the commonwealth in this Placed upon stege Six candies were placed the teil spirit of sbolidoutem and mad mercy of a | whom be denomivatesthe American Lord of Fonthill, | case No matter what fancies artful attorneys played upon the said table; and shortly after, the fair | Northern majority! Perish any Southern man who | with that of the proprietor of anoient feudal cases, | of upon the jury; no matter what extranvous matters reader took her seat, nnd commenced the readin; dare vote foreuch terrible und davgerous conces- | wlo fourisbed in mes when even rape’ was not consi: | were brought into the oase. conspicuous over all things She 1s ruther pretty, bus « bighly intellectual look, | 0m! alsted be the foul tongue of any Southerm | dered » crime, or treachery @ disgrace stends thie incontrovertible ‘act: Doctor Mitchason and is probell aaah yours of age. The cele. | Member who dare raise his voloe in favor of such it will steike the American pubic very forcibly that | deliberately pr pared and turnished Mrs. Guthrie with | mabey 3 oP pd yours < travels with | 2% ,°bormous compromise! Paralyzed and with: | Mr Wikis, afters ten yeare sequaintance with Mr. | s most deaaly and rapidly fatal poison to administer to led George Koberis, of boston, travels with | ered be the band of any son of the South who would | Forrest, can produce no better proof of the latter's du- | her husband, and indubitable proof of this atrocious her, and it is sud, first discovered her powers, and | raise it to stab to the vitals the mother that bore and | plicity than ap alleged conversation with # London fe- | villany wae before tbe jury in Dr. Mitebuso: developed them with great success. She certainly | nursed him, by voting for such » parricidalconcession! | wale phrenoiogist; and could | preeume so muon, | | handwriting. Let people say what they will of rie has them, and she read **As You Like lt” ina Thore corrupt, unprincipled party popes. the Intelli- | would suggest to Mr. W that he immediately seek the | and bie wite, whose characters were unblemished until ‘ted mad: suggests. | will werely | nos, and died ip a few m style thet the discrimmating audience liked very | gencer and Union, in their short-sigh ay | advice and arsistance of a New York fortune teller, | the saintly Doetor pot erpment’s own witnesses ewore that the plate | This testimony was withheld frown the public, pre- saueb, and they testified to the same by repeated | Oty “ No danger’ =" Ualee, our glorious Union,” and | weny of whom doubtless Fiich they liv the might have been warped by heat into its then | fesed); re nd their being’ prejudiced. The act sail stampings, which served the double purpose of — Satie Lae oee re the Soathe eae Kentuch jury. shape A doubt expressed by one professional | iteelf had eo clearly a contriry tendency, that the encouruging the fair reader aud warming their own | K'sinttimousand outrageous an are thelr daily lies, ey to turn the pol man on such @ point, though twenty of his bre- | professions are suspicious. Wouid the suppression , thern might differ with bim ta this matter of mere | of the testimon: vent le from thinkin: pt ge enough to show that Dr. Keep could | People in this ptt eager do think wg ' not ewe nd ought not to have sworn, with ab- | will think. The coroner and the proseeutu solute certainty. The very positiveness with which sitctr, mames of affording them light to thiak by, ve frozen toes. Will fall harmiees on Southern ea: Oucity of ber defender, than either avlogist or for- | sever was pone of your ordinary villans, There were few ladies present; but we recog- ‘The Seuthern people would preserve the Union, could | tune teller, or both combined could give; and I beg & protessor of religion. an exbor! nised the really beautitu! Wirs Ashley, upon whose | they do so without danger to their own rights, preserva- | itave to call the attention of the pubic to it. Mr ville Journal. March 27 classic features age does not seem to make the | tion, and prosperity. If these cavpot be preserved | Willis sayr:—" Mie. Forrest is lofty in ker jadgmenta, eae TT ee aT ree slightest kind of ap impression. Mrs. Reed, ane | agaimet Northern violence, then perish the Union » | and independent, though gentle, in the expression of Lecture of Ralph Waldu Kmerson, Dr. Keep swore in a matter, about which all will em to think in the dark. Does prejudice , ) e mould, t . thousand times before they will permit the first aot of | ber cpinione Quiet inetances of this kind were al- p u A ; yrdeny ‘dra glean ey ; The Gig ee aggression at acrisis like the present. There is no | ways ccowring, bute ay aud even minded diffe ON INSTINCT AND INSPIRATION. - ar) fetid rept eee coon : ray make wee Lie pnowiaee Annee The see y ag M “of Virgi Gavger to the South from disunion. Far betteris@ | rence irom her burband, as to his conduct towards Hope Chapel was nearly filled. The lecturer Dr Ki ia tomb, i ippressed—We prisom, pao repregented by the Hoo Mr Mason, of Virginia, | separation for her than the Union. when the constita- | Macready during the troubles of Inst year, brought his | said Tp listening to Owen's powerful descriptions | Mt the body, . cep must recognize ~) hely charged with murder. It was hie right, it end eral Shields, of Hlinois. The latter was | tion—the bond of it—is broken What has the South | intolerance of uperiority to » bead, aud he re- ae! pot only as his own work, but as the very tee! was the right of the public, that the evideace oa accor ied by the besuitel Miss Davis, who, | to dread from a separation? The sword of the general | soived ou ” of natural science, and the descriptions of other | and plate which be fixed in Dr. Parkman’s mouth. | which the charge rested should be equally kaowa. report says, is the General's tor fiancé government? Bah! It would be eplintered before tt | Here it i tly stated, by one who speaks by | men, | could not help admiring how nature 18 To do this, he chiefly relied on the peculiar for- | People could not help thinking of the affair, aad Phe House of Represeutatives hud one delegate | ever tell on Southern State. A loss cf property or | Mrs. Forrest's authority, that the quarrel bet For- wf in thepoamn, Aad © loog one he was end ig prosperity? Stuff! South reet and Meoready, was the cause of re] om be- | elways sure in her facts; then, I thought, why Jobu Weptworth. Tory ge * ee ee eee nek page .. Hy oo ae a t sons See could pot the same description of animal laws be 5 i . jon? Now, the Southern jubslst, exist ra, Ferrest’s statement, because | kn Pi ea ory hoagie Pi aber ne by Bhar r egrioultural productealene. hen. every great | reparation ebe frequently alluded to the affair abore | applied to the powers of intellect? Why could not ie — an ajor Grandin, from the Ir- source of wealth of the Leenar gg to relearn rr en the mee pr wrt mae oe th the vame power of facts, as in natural history, be - ‘ ‘Yhe South wowld prosper—the North would perish. | lic inferre: much from jollowing : : The Press had its most distinguished hons on ethers’ States gain Tey alng te tee | tare. Porvent'n eeaubeny akahoued to ta also brought to bear upon the science of intellect ? y Slate of Feunsyivania :— - The difficulty 1s in the subject—no mere gauze, no ~ Mr. Forrest was dissatisxed with me im November, volanle salts, can defend the operator from the spot, called together by the fact that a brother eat sources of the wealth of Arsembly of the order was interested in the arrangements — wo Sencieainn, Cp and navige- ie " od iene » e Phil Penn- | tom. The three last are almost exclusively momopo- . for & diflerenes of opiwion ons sul “ = ¥ hig? sa ng ey mete pe lized by the North, The South support, in great | vaut to the preeent quertion, and from that time I was | the virus. But what most delighted me was the the New York Press; aiso Sir ‘Wallis, of the New | Measure, the manufsotures of the North. Millions of | eubjeoted to — —_ bd p4 Fre a og 2 general statement, and I thought, it we could only York Herald, and Mr mililens ‘of the great Southerm products furnish the | 7 Luis, it thust be remembered, wae duly ewora to by | Prin oe ine hisiory of results in a summary, Globe. mation of Dr. Parkinnn’s jaw, so singular that to | as the facts to guide their thougnts were wuthueld none but it would this plate fit. Yet another den- | from them, their thoughts were most likely to go tist produced betore the eyes of the jury a mould, | w . Rumors of all kinds were adroad ia from among his own steck on hand, to which, in | the newspapere—the facts were concealed their presence, he fitted this same singular plate. The attempt of the prosecution to-prove the ap- Now, this was no matter of professional op: 3 | pearance of what may be called a muraculoas it was a fact, proved tothe jury by their own | stranger, was indicative of a spurt, in the prose. senses—a tact that completely destroyed the one | cuung officer, upworthy of his pesition. It would only point on which the identification rested. la | be easier to believe that the ghost of the murdered copnection with this, let us remember that the | men walke: ¢ streets, than to believe that oa Automey General, near the close of the trial, of- | that eveatful afternoon, and at no other time, this tered to prove that, on the aftersoon of the murder, | stran; ie mont have appeared. It suche u mysterious double of Dr. Parkman made hi | man lived in on, he would have been seea be- appearance in Boston, for that day only, and so | fore and after that day; he could have been huat- ‘ae year, How are they Fallack, of the New York 4 ° vast capital required by the Northerm mercbante for | Mre. Fcrrest the commerce irem Northern ports, with the whols | — Now, to establish, beyond ddubt' both the falsehood of | !rom ali departments of nature, in the sume man- California wae represent d by the mayor of that | world Northern bottoms carry the agricultural pro- | Willis, and the duplicity of dire. Forrest, I lay before | ner, trom the coufusion of elements, as the che- | }\ke him that five or six persons went up and | ed up and known. Nay, he could net have exist- extraordinary country—formerly ot New York, | duce through the globe; and Norti mauufaturers, | the publie the following extract of a» letter fh that | mists and naturalists, and in the higher clase of the | spcke to hm. Now, this singular conformation | ed in Boston and borne so striking a resemblance and the nest und wiitiest man in the room, | Northern mereba\ hip-ow mers. amass | jad) to her husband, which was received by him on the | parts of geometry and astronomy. The intellectual | ot Dr. Parkman’s jaw must have shown itself | to aman so well known as Dr. Parkman, witnout except Senator Westcott, of Florida, who actaully | millions, directly ees San ae Semen) pane, Eas laws of social hfe wre not yet coditied; itis high | outwardly as well’ as inwardly; and indeed it 18 | its being notorious. Weare to believe, thea, that tay's speech was mort impertinent, amd I | time that it should be done. Isit not strange earner that the elemental laws of the deculogue of to nome you, but saying, simply. -auactor”’ 1 | Wielleet are yet to be written? It is only the lad that you took the trouble, for | know giner aug that a hist of the stare was made out by writing, to enter #0 fully into anexpla- | lies ell, at the Cope of Good Hope, Ali the * are only new mountains in the map of expenence. When a man observes the genius of nature, thé flowing des, the winds, he reads the laws, he edde a power, it gives him wings, which prepare no repentance. The Fagen value of of seemed to enjoy the fun amazingly. Mr. Secor, ot | FrOtucers. ° acorn; Soutbern m Your city, Who 18 On @ visit here, Was not present, | Peepers who get thelr goods from the North; Southern as well a& many more of your notables. pan oa proc fave Eagemt ads Soos ores ah At ten precieel , the perty broke up, very much | as if these cources of enormous deductions were not pleased with Miss Kimberley, themselves, and | euficient of themrelves to impoverish the producers of yo everybody else. Couldn't you spare the Christy | the South, the tederal government steps in, aud draws | vatien, Minetrels for a few weeks? They would sing “ — fr Raglens ever bere sane e bad feeling which the asic revenue and protection, et Ur, * pantie Count 7 win shaittiasbasia oo the free Statce Glorious Union | usequality! | evasive; but what, more thau all the rest, like about Death satay ba it here.” Last night a | lotions days for unpringipied political adventurers to | your curd, 1s its simple, bold and unmisiakeable lan- pe A ang dhater sd Bcc Boys =: enjoy bonore and emoluments for keeping up soglorious | pusge | een clear it did, from his being 11 one instance nick- | he came and went that ‘moon; that he strange- named “chin.” This strange individual, then, appeared, for the purpose, forthat day ealy So must have had, of course, the same kind of jaw; | bad was this testimony, so unfair, that the judge such being the case, the Attorney General himselt who delivered the charge would not admit it. oflered to prove that Dr. Seeman was not And what ehail we say of the churge? Ie there singular. Yetgn the singulanty of the jaw and | such a charge to be found elsewhere in our crimi- on that alone, fests the identification. * nal annals? Is there one stngic suggestion or Second—The prosecution tried to bring | word on the prisoner’s side? he even tell home to Doctorr Webster, the three letters | the jury that their doubts are the prisoner's pro- m a feigned hand. The judge, in his charge, penyt ‘Try the charge by this test. Read it and ever been clearty it 3 very estimable friend— Mr. Wills, formerly of Vie- | $120? Banors and tiottt feel quite assured of the teat) that you wirieed | Natural history, the discovery of the parallax, is its | touched’ on this very lightly.” He knew how | {magine it to be the summing up of the prosecute ginie—died very sudeenly, of a disease of the Where would the South stand were she to separate’ | with nocxve about it. Had you spoken jesr boidiy— | translation of the universal science, the rules of | weak this testimony was. Nevertheless the evi- | ing counsel. Read in this way, it filis up the full heart. He bus left @ very interesting tamily, and a | Her agricultural productions would be the same, and | snd seme pereuns might, doubtless, think it more poli- | istellect. These are the things which interest, | dence was betore the jury, and no doubt had | measure of a prosecuting counsel’s duty. rhed frends, to mourn his ab- | ber producers would reap the just reward of labor. | te—you would bave beem sorry ever after. if Mec | which belong toakingdom where a thousand years ot Louisiana, has been ina | Her manufactures would be untrammelied, and having | dee not repiy to you, he tacitly sckuowledges that be | aie us one day. My design in these lectures is te n tor some deys. [tis ex- | every requisite advantage, tp every shape and way, ahe | bas tcid @ wiltul and unbiushing falsebood.’ | want | give u sketch of the laws of intellect, to identify rhe willsurvive. The | Would do her own, and would to compete with | to Rnow bow he is to get outot thas,” . its puture, and give its by-laws. Now we come ony nation in the world. ei Saline comeek man tie pore extraot, that | (@ the founuune of shought and inspiration. In wide cucle ot att sence. Sena or 5: very critical sitast tremely doubtiul yet wh weather is drencful, chu great influence with them. Dr. Webster, in his The evidence produced by the prisoner, though speech, shows that ne feli how | this would | it showed but few facts, was th weigh against him with the jury. It was an im- | ceptionable character. There ‘was uo attempt to portant point. Ii proved, it was the strongest and | introduce bad testimony. Seven witnesses swore ou every day. Yester- r y Noi most unansweruble proof of guilt presented. To | to having seen Dr. Parkinan ata ume incoasisteat day the public grounds were clothed in the deepest — Soe aptin by fe base. Fouvent nos anil ‘approved of the whole | Techonmg the sources of mental power, it isan | prove thetthese were his, they prodaced a writing | with thei ot the case presented by the go- green—to-day they are covered with purest white. | he open to ail the world. of Mr. Forrest's bey epplanaed tnat | Urknown country which ell the rivers have | master. They produced him as an expert ; that | vernment. Prosecution did not pretead ty un- . e inte her borders from all Yer portion of the © Cangh of Now. ad. 1848, which fountains, w there 18 the line of wie } is, &% man whose practice and experience peach them. They did not them with be= the public gardener, has be- | ment would be simpre; . Bes heen mess o hg bet Stace the ssparation, | dom, the brain of brain, not yet having put | in his daily business je been such and so | ing ne: d, nor weak-sighted, vor weak- hb speechifying of a at little east to the U ee Bez Stores would po mk A wy — she most severe | forth its organa. That fountain is instiact, as | grect in the particular matter on which he testi minded, nor deficient in memory, ner defigient ia nonsensical and unimportant character in Con- seete the sion atticn would betke watete | Now, lark, what becotes of Mr, Willie's assertion, | i! !* commonly called: It is the taper—the light | us to render him, in that matter, best qualified | character, nor connected with the defendaat by grees, and bas been mak ech, | Mi ef the Southern republic Honor would be ber | above quoted? And. if he is eo ost Lo all conse of pro. | ©! ©!! 'lluminetions—the kindred torrents of light— | 1 pronounce a decision on a difficult point. Isa | blood, nor in any way partial towards him. Sevea which hus been exclurively secured by the Untom | Tie used, and prorperity would be written on her | pricty ro reckless of all regard for ibe oommuaity upon | tht Jandecape of the universe. All our knowledge | writing masier an expert inthe matter on which | witnesses toone fact, und that a [act which was newepeper. Father Rivehie designs to suppress it, | Sree, and where, then, would be the boasted euperior- | wbore patronege be lives, as to state aud circulate @ | —¥!! chects are flskes and grains of that mountain. and retuseg to give up the menuseript copy. It 13 | {ty ofthe North’ where the proud commercial oities of | wilful mud ma)iguant falsehood, what contidence should | 18 balwnce is never lost, even im the insane. The said the: Mr. Meher has spoken tether favorably of Thiledelphia, New York, Bortom, and a hundred others? auy other of the numerous stave | Immortality of the soul is 7, alink inthe loag Generel Taylor, waich causes this hostility on the | While Baltimore. Norfolk, Savannsh, Ubarlestom, Mo- ostensibly to establish Mra. For | chain of mye. The property ot this power is absolute part of Mr. Richie. A suit will probably grow out | bile, and New Ork be spreading it anifestiy to shield himseif? science. It hastens to solve every riddie—if it he was called to testify? Surely not. There ig no | tested by the direct evidence of their ceases, 18 practice ip his business togive him skillia detecung | elsewhere considered pretty strong proof ; 1a Bose the handwriting of en individual. His acquaim- | top it is easily got over. Now this, tie all tance is not with the already formed handwritngs | mpertant ev: ¢ for the prisoner, was not air of men. His busimess 1s to form their handwriting. | jowed to go to the jury for what it was rest of the transaction, es Mr. Maher swears he will | Cer, and beeomi t depots ot o itis weil that brings problems, it brings the answers to them. | Elis famalarity is with the rude, unformed writings | wo he evide: whieh the y prosecute ‘that ¢-——d old Kitelie for purloiing « was be baal tile chores’ a the, tlorneta Veep esme te All true wisdom results trom deference to this in- | of be nd cxhets, betore the writing has become war on imposes, aS sete "oedervect valuabie State paper.” ue cities; and the doom would be just and right, for they | of thi © spiration. We are never without a pilot—we must | cherecteristic. He has one model of handwriting, | to e away. A fact sworn to by seven wit- To-morrow 1s Good Friday, and alter it is over, | Sere the fret to commit. wrong. and in ® midnight critt with the current till we know the way—but | on which he attempts to form that of all ms pupils. | nesses was not considered proved, because no tt is hoped that there will be some ‘let up” from | justice towards thelr brethren of the South, im the old | Jvwrnal of this when the and the sua appear, we may put | He maintains no correspondence in his business; | more witnesses were called to swear to the same. the wickedpers, immorality, drunkenn Federal Union. _____PATRICK HENRY, whose protersie unsuilied | Out the oa: rum the sails, which 1s the practi- | he sees very little of the writing of om up men | It was argued away by disingenuous reasons, If lechery, gambling. sting, lottery dealing, ste Sedidais lemabananiin ‘aiaelloe penn gy bem - mene Le ved by two | cal use of this true wisdom This is an example | jp the natural course ot business. hat is writ- | these seven eaw him, a great many other ing, commandment-breaking and general ras om, teen Om 04 Ee os ee apeetabie (hecatse asiepensbed) witserses, to have ur ritual inspiration in place of understanding. | ten by his pupila is written onder the restraint of | must have seen him ; why are not these other poe in high end low places, tor which this strag Redbenrth suratedec ng When we go to a gallery of pictures, the eye ix daz- | his prevence and his rules. The haudwriting that | ple all here? A great many other people were im village is famo If so, 1 will adver a. ; Wasurscros, Maroh 20, 1890. § zled and harrassed by the many pegged gence ad he sees must be, in every case, constantly chang- | the streets, and a nce see him, therefore those There are # great many defalcations going on in | yo the Hom. Joux M. Ciavrom, Beoretary of State of | tails, lie bas everything at stake but when we withdraw, the most noble remain | ing—for the object of ail his efforts is to change | seven did not see him. It requires not ouly one Washington. io the th ol August last, proots |” the United States, &e.— oracie in tefived society, be ts suddenly calied upor unpressed on the mind, like @ sweet strain of music, | and improve it. Ot the individualized, fixed char- | own eyes to see people with, but the eyes of of fraud on the government, through the pension | The undersigned Kovey Extraordinery and Minis- | anewer to charge of total untitness tor fellowebip | Which is heard further off than the noise of carts | acter of handwriting, that results only when bis | one’s neighbors. great many other people may office, were placed in the possession of Mr. Ewe J Plesipeventis of the Mosiesa repaeie, bee the | with decent men; and, striving for the means of sooial | and drays, (Enthusiasticapplause ) Language is | pupils apply what iy Oo learned with him to | have seen him, and yet the prisoner not be able te ing, and the Koave iw yet here, pursuing his voca- yd sf ezeee a arom ates intnence, hie tess are called forch vo ave bis | only Wirdem in words; the words are fixed; the | actual use in their business, he sees nothing. | produce them. He could not hunt p every maw tion unmolested, Mr. Ewing having taken no steps, we ieee eae student canpot alter them. Insunet is radiative | ‘There is nothing in bis business to make it his in- | who saw him, except by questioning all the people sinet him. [ will give you the particulars, if anaeshen Beeneiesy Was ph plete @ertruction, might Dow standby und Ieugh wien | Me then impulsive, going over all the ground. | terest to guard forged hand or to identity | of Boston Individually. °A'great many other 1. Ewing don't move in the matter. ‘with his confidential notes of ti bebold bim plunging and. tice: It is, in its lowest grade, the common sense of enuine one. & merchant. or a merchant’sclerk, | may have seen him, and not been to remem- People don’t understand here how a duel can be mankind; it fixes the laws of the heavenly miaded 1" The man to whom books ere nothing, and t tant, relative to the orders issued by the gover avoided between Meesrs. Foote and Benton. You | ment of the United States for the fulfilment of the moy rest assured, however, that old Benton will | etipwhation of the 11th article of the treaty of Guade- railroads are nothing, and men and women are craw! out in sem f° ALEXANDER lupe Hidalgo nething, has noth to do here. All that we call ‘The government of Mexico, to which the undersign- | « Edition of Othello.” | perceive ti fate is on the peo; side. It begins at the sur- 20, 1850. ed has sent ccopics of there documenta, will with — Govn as lego's younger brother. ' * face of the earth, and proceeds to jatellectual and Another Letter from Patrick Henry—The Present Aspect | *etietaction. eve im them the desire and good faith of te” of Gl) familiar Go not sest moral laws. Such is instinct. What 1 inspira- hited States for the reli of the Slavery Question— The Effect of Separation, eng senteacted bp tt sotande Lp pe a tion? It is instinct put in action; the power is ol 1 Was our political constitution made that the | Mexico, in the said 11h article of the treaty of peace, scence; the good will is instinct—it is dumb; bat if majority of the people in the Union should enforce | Pith the clyect of repressing the inroads which may | it would impart steelf, it us restetlene—it is, in all — be made by the wild Indians now inhabiting the ter- | poin If we could prick the sides of this their opinions, pertaining to morals and religion, upon | ritories ceded to the | nited States. ecate, | stom gz power—this angel from God; if we the minority’ Was the sword givem to the general A, Mexican government will see with plearure in conclusion, Mr. Editor, I beg te say thatit was | could extract speech from this dro power goverpment to destroy liberty of conectence— religious ene docu! with regret | found aoe. compelled to address you | and genius, we might know the way, e Tudest Liberty’ Did our fathers recognise Congress and the Pet a et ety epee ee are ts sourrary to | nund hae its Delphi and Dodona. Where is the my bi strictly speaking foreign to badd. Geveral government to be the arm of the Lord, to exe- newt; but | am a friend of Mir. Forrest, Sed trieadenlp | Yeast to leaven this mountain t one cute his vergeanoe sgainst stoners? t cli y, vilized nations plouse.) There is a solstice of genius , egret, bet the efforts hitherto mage by the goverme | spcanibaitinn. e Kenta very somercianns = ™ | the heavens, never Teaches the senith; it calmi- 1 with I could say «few words In season, that might | mentof the United States to prevent and punish the ANonuw SrEVENS nates, and goes down. The history of man is the reach the public conselenee of the majority, that they | inroads of the ravages on the frontiers ot might feel that the bond of union, (the eonstitution,) e been ineffectual from the want of ae ses tiran tai ‘ history of « solstice. een, 18 vital and con- crime alle 7 fi i 3 have been ip a ent winery essen eeccrtee oie . epers of my tres | tin 3 ite @ universal ight. The conflict be- made in good faith, murt be maintained im good faith, | from the want, moreover, of funds to cover the great | Sttention to it q drama of Othello, affords me ax a elf right before ibe var o exurace of @ leteor cages i hich, ay who is receiving meee. daily from y C4 ber afterwards the precise day. rent persons, Whose writing is as diversi If th i ts the individuals ate ‘aumerous, and who | pisiside aby such questionable crideuce vo pid the knows, betore he opens a« letter, from what cution, (the writing-master, for instance ;) one of his many correspondents it comes, 18 | bad he offered to prove anyth 60 strange as the a much better qualified expert. A bank clerk, | nirseulous ‘Appearance of Dr, Barkinan's double, who pays checks froma huadred, nay « thousand it would have beea successfull urged different persons, every day, and who, as we kBOW, | him as damning proof that he h cawen ‘enn is guided as much by the baodwriting in which i hy should not Oe cans Tale apply the check is filed ep, 98 by the mgnatate, Is meen | t9 he tion t sw more of an expert. all persons who have mu It matters not whether Dr. Webster be to do w 1 Pe, 4 writing master is probably guilty or no ; and allowing all the force eens A the least qualified for such a purpose. By pro- | Ficious circumstances brought 1n evideace against ducing on this pomt such imterior testimony, by ; : omitting to produce the best teaumony for this th nevertheless, impossible to deny— purpose, the prosecution jaid themselves open to the fair inference that they could not prove it by good testimony, that Nar Reg not produce the best testimony. Bat this witness was not of a murder at all,) - familiar with Dr. Webster's handwriting; ‘one pomt, and that point one, 10 i rested b had seen him write only his signature ture, fol of doubt, No part of the body itself’ was correspondence | | woven by his own profiignoy ai ‘bat republic, with him. He had only been some of 3 That the evidence for the hand of Dr. Webster, said to be uine, » prosecution was ead ‘hie brief acquaintance with this, he goter. there pore Cope suspicious, and Weak ; took to detect his bandwnting when arpopely die 4. There ‘what evidence wes in favor of ed, and when written with A Covenesn of Ge witness, also, in a matter pt in its character, poutive, hich could not be reduced to certainty, was suf- ficwst to overthrow hie testimony. Why did not | 4,°- Thet seven persons swore, on ev gees, of Peter. (Loud applause) The healthy ts itself with the symbols of novelty. ry ends produced The soul of all books w how near man is to the creative; the the world is im his bones; he dips hie and habit is aecessary ; it repeats by the said 11th articie of t This coat in the Ler; It goes into the mould Peter, and MA ortwasty of 1, Forrest, on January 4, 1500 eceived mo reply muob less form lawfal, unlimited popeias despot nett, I have no y terminated the war between that republi dee that any por whieh | cam state will pited States the only advantage which can Dave any effect upon » Northern majority The South | peneate ber for the many sacrifices the peace Bave dome wii pre poritivne betr only redress, now, | rendered necessary on her part— isthe exect fui Gi human being; ané not 5 fe to resist the very fret everonch: of all the obligations comtracted by the United States o melee ot: old it ; dence of their senses, to a tact be towards Mexico, in the raid eleventh article of the Stason paint pot in whieh the rocks, the | the cution produce a really competent witness ‘ "ona weve @ treaty of Goudslupe Tidalgo The wndorngned be Te ‘any other oye weawege te OF uuntaine, broad landseppe of the on this pomtt A really experienced and skilful og pre presences { rhie asa State in this federal | lieves that bis Gret and principel duty ase representa. 1 ventared im your bebaif, thas it has as painted. (Immense applause) This | man would not have sworn eo ively. Itis the t aveb « Bilt tive of Mexico in this country, consists im constantly doube whether | should » ol denotg® the inspired man. It is evidently shown in | ignorant, the unskilfal man, who, in assuming to legiviative requiring the most exact an tual full ment of > a the fine arts and in action. Intellect is universal; | be what he knows he is pot, is always the most thet rid Sioecie tomer poy te A le bays for @nater = sane port a fi by e beg ee it 18 not re gon 5 itis - positive. lsnot the attempt to prove t at by eased : ‘ tceraed he (atau ns | fot SatrnoinyreapseaaMes IN Suet tue cutgcanae gain, | “en eee a eaen oft wor dene he may consider requisite to ema- | freely aa ever.” of this bile to comply with good ae it has already rored to 4 with the accused Third. The it fact, that these remains Wenerere pa conor A = It of Dr. ter ivy, Was prov y only one witness. That they were there before the hole was t—that any such discovery was —rests on the Sm a ed testimony of one wit- neve, Mr. Littlefield. It 1s true this witness is un- impeached ; and, for aught I see, uni 5 inyBlect and virtue consists in a reliance npon one’s OWF ideas. (Great applanse ) People do not trast h to the power of their ht. Genias against the world, though all society is net his proect. The secret of his power is = im bis work ; his genius is everywhere ; he Setter enientated to ry trial inte 4 works while be stands, eats, sleepe—like the dream bring jury 5. ware] inp from ‘a reverence for the source All . ope cf the documents accompany! - by confides. force Northern morals wpom the South — to destroy Boter of the Secretary of State, mention is made of ever what the North esteem simful, the institution flavery. The sword only, in the bands government, can destroy Southern liberty, Foros may exterminate the people of the South Congress of the French math h man ongnt to d y bas communteated them to bis and thew the result of Mitchuron’s Case. jar b. rench pation, that every it to do | No attempt wes made to impeach his ! f. '» people out of their rights Pt wal ooepe as > pemenenee vw nn be induces to convies the echt bioeded, Gcliberd pivrhat he likes, and have two franes a day for doing | | is feir to infer it could not be impeached. Sti persone punished according to the iaws who have com- | sover. who under the garb of ® religious exhorter, it, (Loud applauce.) he i# but one witness. Ovght not this fact, under mitted the excesers mentioned by an officer of the | (be copfdential relations of family physician, Bret 7 id vd be * __ * | the cireumstances, to have been by more * United States army, in the letter addressed by him to | duere s man's Wife, and them inauces her to edmiats We live in marvellous times. Ladies and the War Department. sccompanying the confdential | ter polson to her husband, justioe is gefarce, gnd ia a7 tlemen make it a fancy to in search of ow note of the Seoretary of State, of the 4th instant, peitry, idle song. ligron The Turk, who reads fate written on The m culls the ateatien of the ten, | . Aleut Gre seses age, ip comeeeeet ons iron tablets, rushes on to the sabre ; the Budhiat m. The object ie to substitute realism for sentimentsliem. Mahomet eaye, * There are two | things Tabhor—the learned than one witness? It was nota sudden, accidental ona sth ny eos prev *urpicione—a ch, the result of which was anticipated It was ae easy to have had two neers to the hornd disclosure that was cy It not a discove Saas wily ees one eULrege Upom the constitation, eed the liver property. prosperity. honor and safety of the mi- nority rection. You may wrire about compromisee— you may talk of amicab what this prominent man or <3 at promivent man in Warkineion will ao, tall amounts to nothing. | tell by yen vo ¥ bas the Seetbern pes bot what 1 its own evidence ; let us not be | a case, it would be impossible to have the teste oe Ghat hate soprescnres feetered with assertions, emotions snuiile. All| mony coafirmed. In such @ case, no complaints Jere Collfornia te sow itt- | that ie preceeacy exists temenis, in proverbs, | could be made of there being but one witness. | E well were hoe ged = na ye oy But bere was a search a | lewyere, remrences of scholars—in the verses of pon strong pt - Ray searcl jority mere then the = willy air wae the gourt na | ports, scattered far and wide, waiting for the which wen ageannd to result in Cosovery Oat 18 will, te a 1 ae lentes cam give 00 ‘proposed In bis part of pee noe, > the = genive to bring them into a code—making a new on it was the Union to neatberes fragments, Sourhernmem. | of the confidence which it emtertatns in Scot upmistekebie terme, the removel ot (sacbrie owt | church the bermeand rafrere, of which are heaven time, bere cee thts ‘and they will postpone her ad. | goed faith of the gevernment of of the way, rettiog forth tm view of the religious be | and earth (Great applause ) which mission by ing the House ot Representatives, | than by ite devire that foree tacter of Mr Guthrie and Mrs. Mitehuson, thet deacR | The leeture concluded. Now, before a man engaged in eerured will = Se eam “Tew boty ening prewende te leeture on intellect and metaphysics, de- Wicks, becntse on ‘ber Sort, e&l evolinee, ian, Im view of the reluctance that Vee Gusbre pe pte {keer enmething of those whe a Phe yh *ll ber efforte for the Lee Reed, Stuart, Hartley, Home, Tucker, important Fas epteoeineet bas tn hue Ghat the ardothers He onght eurely to know someth and of the subject dif he hed invelleet himeeif, bed guthered hnowledge from the labor eed ame perience of others, he would at least be to efate some one simple tron, prove, clearly and Somentvent the ro he | siticn when be hed stated it, {ueteed he | tecether on insane mass of crude absurdities tery of Stet a Sanh erase orver she rom the Congress vu Py 7 the exeoution of the 11th Guedal) The undersigned prays Hen of State the result ot these measures to him. im order thet he sadam: | . « Spal perseverance of the follies—loore, silly and unconnected—pyet, A ROSA, told (hat she bad evidence that rhe | matic, impudent, bold and pretending

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