The New York Herald Newspaper, August 21, 1855, Page 2

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witW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1855. 2 a a Beston Correspondence. Convention at Uties of the me. fe t shall be fornded on prineiples ado HIGHLY GUPORTANT FROM THE BIO GRANDE. oon’ Boeron, August 18, 1855. orcas? eetperintendente The Uni. “tee Bxssty With Holland, DORE OF THE “CEREROO FREE LOVE UNION.” by the emer oeen, 4 Perfective ticle, im whieh = tthe Ohepman Hall Mesting ~ Husioniste-Mr. | IMPORTANT FRO~ —_agane Box, (Trem the Sognpate Five Pron, juz 16.) ahall be comet bre d ae) WERENCE TO THB that the United States mon inonid ever be arbitrary, except tu-defence, when moral | 1, ov ene Mattle of Saltillo~The Plass | Dester and his pee ee BA inthrop— Letters <ctuiienonans oy maisaarccn. a ina y with Holland by which eay. centile! Bete Prominent Partiee Com: | marion is : ip! ereby the Kevolutiontsts, after Two | from Governer Boutwell . Reckwe” . 5. | Hberty to " ‘and Con- mrnao corned ei ene eT sald herctyaieye | Page? gan PA@Mtng— Two hinds of Banta | TOT ewe re ai ting = scuvention of the nce eas molar gen with the anual powers ad privileges, * an. i apg Force! Hors de Combat—Cap. “— Enemica transmarin i AEE: ES see erPaatenticn rong be be seen ot a gianoe by this | Avant Fors E hots of 960,000 in the Maine Law, e., Be, * +9 S| assembled at the Court House in Utica, on Tuesday | jand which are open to the vessels of all nations. N 9 iat System. diagram tere by the Bev’ af Simms and Mige ‘The aristocratic radicals had & dort of ‘an afternoon, Aug. 14. Representatives of thirty coun- | We suppose tees been gh sone oe Dr. Newberry’s Soc ? Bpecte, emi a Grin, —- wore —-— —"Y aetlng 0 the 16th inst. st Chaprsss Hall tn this | NesWere im attendance. ‘The meeting was called to ponies ofthe Giioon eae. ricans probably de, die., die. nitions of War—General Vidaurri Advanc- city, to see what could be done & order by C. F. D. Jones, of Oneida county, and or- himself too much to allow of demand. for com- ‘ng upon Matamoros with a large Fede- hemselves and putting down - ese mre AN ganized permanently by the appointment of enaation being presead to an iseue, bak 66 the same New Yous, August 10, 1658. relist Force—Oritical Position of General hers, which may David Ford, of Allegany, President; me ts the procedure in bis case was admitediyt « BERAL Woll, &e., Se. considered the great Pri 41 object of all party , ie county, Vice President; | Very extraor ‘and oppressive nature, it fur- ac doaaparsengea Mgmnt ‘ PONDENCE. movements. The chief ",ersong present, with a few | + Woolworth, of Lewis county, 5 | ie caamah crete he that the Duss Sm ;—In an article headed ‘Anthropology of the OUR BROWNSVILLE CORREA! , M. B, Converse, of Cayuga county, and H. Killner, | Dsned good g ee asa ies BRowNsvituz, Texas, Aug. 8, 1855. | exceptions, were en 4 euloties in white kid gloves, Battle of Sattillo—Complete Defeat and Rout af | the men who ere “Ascontented with things as they the Government Forces—Heavy Losses of the are, and who 94 bent upon changing them. The Latter in Men, Specie and Munitions of War— names of di-satiafied free soil leaders are very nume- apr pa Anerley gr lanantpeey pclae oii! General Vidaurri at the Head of Three Thou | rows in the published accounts of the meeting. GU of the present selfish, immoral and grosely sensual sand Federalists Advancing Against General Awong these gentlemen are Charles F. Adams, 8. “Gets 2! ociety, and therefore entirely unfit to form any 1 ba feviepeatst seriogs ce bane of union, such Woll--The ‘Making ic ra. | Ce Phillipa, ea Allen, and R. W. dn, all Maca of tie relations of a state of social harmony, the | 4 ment a dypetlt ot lonkaa apa — nr ery fie Jil pre peg ee hae, pens Auden * opposite of their present condition. It ix no wonder alee "Gs "aa “havatinar 08 thelr beings, te 138- eyes Lip Sees ales “ap Gar ihey, being fall of darkness and evil, should see. | Jory of whom shall Cecide all quertions, exoeel therebe | ferey, Geo, Sen appro transfer of the free soll party requisite of Dutchess county, Secretaries. protection and assistance to American citizens in The object of the convention, which had been | any cases pig ig aah hereafter é briefly stated in the call, was for the purpose of com- | ang, {¢ follows ax a matter of course that other ni- paring the methods of providing for the poor by the | tions in alliance with Holland will be entitled to different counties; to urge upon the Legislature the | claim its extension to them. As regards Great Bri- Pressing necessity of making more extended pro- | Sitte of the trealy of Inii--"tne high oouircting Visien for-the insane poor of the State; and to se- | parties enga to admit the subjects of each other cure on the part of the counties a representation in Es trade with their respective the Board of Commissioners of Emigration of New | Eastern Archipelago and on the continent @ereveo Free Love Union,” which appeared in your paper eu Friiay, tho 17th, my nome appeared in connection wih principles I never advocated. It is evident that fheve persons, who have set themselves np as judges im | =¥ Eg verthing but «vil, and naturally put their own bad cau- | X tle vote, or it concern the constitution, when thevo- | We have had highly exciting and important See fheagie = Aaa — sm ee! Bee York city, as well aa a more equitable consideration and ip Cerion, OR ae Seton, pee cima wtraction upon things they do not even begin to uméier- ot ecpesomenenta of ibe various genoral functions | events since my last, of which the following is a a ted lay ‘hat tte 3 of the pecuniary claims against the commission. carrying on trade in a foreign country i* @ consul, Wand. It must be observed alo that they have partially | corresponding to the general departments, or groups of | hurried summary:— 1853, because they, feared success would | “yr, Jones introduced the following resolutions | and, as by the above clause we are placed in regard f the principles of the so- | faculties of the mind. On the 22d and 23d ultimo a severe battle was | cause Henry Wilson to be made Governor. These | 1114 danse saints. to trade with the Dutch Indian upon the @aken bold of but one part of the princip! i Ta aeaidt tha ltranchie, bi ri ber of whi; in | Which were unanimously adopte ‘ fe ‘of the most favored the admission of siety without any reference to other moral principlesand | 5) Mommers guarantie by the integral orguntzation, | fought at Saltillo, between the federal forces, under | worthies were joined by a nam| whigs, also Whereas, It is already conceded and has beon adopted pce comanla: into. thea on poenpe! pegelations connected therewith. I therefore send you opportunity of perfecting and developing -elf and every | Governor Vidaurri, and the tyrant’s minions under | white kid gloves, very excellent people; and the two aoe polie of this tate, tbat Seaniiy is * Ainaaes: ae courre secure to Great Britain right also to. ap- eee eet Peeecn ae" prectrect, of Fitors ee eel step in reformumst be established on the | Generals Guitian and Craz, who, with over twelve | Classes are exceedingly desirous of relieving Gov. ment opens phe tae special means point consula. & t speed. Let every one digest it and make their own com- highestconditions in being: hence, we have decided to | hundred men and four heavy pieces of artillery, in | Gardner and his associates of the cares and perplexi- | “Tecolved, ‘That the State should make ample and sulta- The Dutch, themeelves, will benefit by this. Whikr meat; but how shal) the mind judge which is organized | commence in the city of New York, where governmental : 2 ties that wait on even the happiest public life, Mr. Ad. | ble provision for all its insane not in@ condition to re- | the sppointeent of English consuls in Java and the- se advancement and liberality of opinion is higher than | Commanding positions, occupiod the capital of Ooa- ha Gow side in private families, other Netherland 3 in India will be of ai- weet SA Ss : y , elsewhere, and where the various means of self-support, | huila, ‘The action lasted until the 28d, at half-past | ams would even go go far as to sendto the Governor a | “Rescived, That no insane person should bo treated or | vantage to Englich trade and can do no harm. to the ‘Me accompanying circular is the briefest article on | Cr education, and integral developement, are organized o'clock A. M., when the despot’s geuerals, with | superbly bound copy of Btirting’s “Cloister Life of | in any way taken care tin any county poor or alms- | Dutehs the establishment of Dutch consuls at Sine. @ur fondamental principles, and is so abstract as to be | in a great degree of perfection, ready to be made use of, - r Mute to Caitonairsition. Therefore, ffany further in. until'we embrace ae things necessary within ourselves; | one pfece of artillery, 200 infantry and some 250 4 E chen it will be best to branch off, first to a highly culti- at ” ‘ Seateetiant is requires wo shell be kapyy toexyiais. wea pi location as convenient to the city as pos- | Of the “dragoons of the guards” and “guides of house, or other receptacle provided for aud in\which pwu- | pore and other British Indian porta will pera are maintained or supported. considerable service to numerous Dutch yes Fesolved, That a proper classification is an indispensi- bie element in the treatment of the insane, which can | Which now fremont them. At peenent Charles V.," paid for out of his own pocket, with Mignet’s book on the eame subject, if by so unheard of an act of liberality he thought he could prevail on ie i Rink 0 . s is 8 i , i * f Dutch vessels frequently experience Please to publish the whole, a¢ no one incomplete | gible; and thence to wherever progress has most pre- | his Serene Higness,” with $60,000 in specie, only be secured in establishments consirusted with » | Manders ot eB Meell. Yours, &. B. NEWBERY, ] pared cireumsiancee. ‘ Bea" some Bon’ Ente Pobbel: ee report to | the recipient to retire. speciul view to their treatment, dey inconvenience from having no one to whor 9 . — Persons desiring to unite under these prin ? 4 Practically, very little was done at the Chapman Resolved, That insane persons considered curable, and | they can resort for the adjustment of dieputes be- RCULAR, constitution, will please write to the Secreta their master in person the rexult of the action. . those supposed incurable, should not be provided for in | tween themselves and their crews, and thelr inter- DECLARATION oe PRINCIPLES. their age, whether married or single, number and ages or 1 They acknowledge the oss of two-thirds of their Hall meeting. What waa said wae no as aye reparate establishments, ests suffér in other respects from the absence of con- 4s the first principies of Protestantism and the Decla- ci Lyle ahah “wilting to fa. | entire force in killed, wounded, prisoners, and dis- | been said by ‘the nme een ee! spn oe On eld annexed preamble and resolntions ae rose ining from ii ing on the right to vation of American Independence grant to all the right to | yest, comdtion in health of self and family, description | persed, together with three pieces of artillery, a | before. Their platform hing adap’ were adopted:— 2 refrai insist! Wheress, The Commissioners of Fmigration in the dis- | SPPoint consuls in the Netherland Indian ports, charge of the business of the sheds aon not been | Great Britain has shown that spirit of forbearance governed by a proper appreciation of the rights, duties | 8nd consideration towards Holland which has charac- and privileges of county officers, or of the intere ats of the | terized all her corduct in matters ting to the mn- several and interior counties of the State which under | tual position of the two powers in the Indian Archi- the opera'ions of such laws are required togrant relief to | pelago, and which hitherto has met with a very in to the changes that times have brought about, as the old Jady’e morning wrapper was tarned into the young woman's nightgown. Still, a step was taken towards a combination of the various elements of the temperaments, character, and amount ot education. fs ates] or} ° Sake stove is not with a view to exclude any one, but | large quantity of munitions of war, small arme, ar- omplote a my stores, &e., ke. The flying remnants of the force were hotly pursned by the mounted riflemen, who succeeded in capturing the money and divpers- weligiove and civil liberty, and the pureuit of happiness, wwe hereby declare our prevent cory ictions and intentions, mabject to progress a6 we advance in recip Mafvence, goolnere and trath. Kency of Divine RELIGION. a i-administrative party, and what wae done ap- | emigrants chargeable to such commission; and Wherea turn on th ‘the Dutc! ‘ sey motes ing them; bat the two gallant generals made good | anti-adm party, igra a x #1 adequate ret e partof the Dutch government. Sr nL ee fi sete apie the eseape. The best eit iothat, the day before pears to have been tolerably well received by the | the raid Commissioners in the taansaction of such busi | ‘This haw not arisen from any ignorance of the advan In ignorance of the true faith, the religious sen! EDITOR OF THEY HERALD. t tion, the hamane Guitian, as ordered by Santa | Know Nothings. The only infelicitous occurrence is b ‘$s. | tages which would have resulted to British trade right to enact Jawa and regulations for the ascortaining and settling the claims of counties for such reef, a » TCM evch appointments, The presence of a con- ‘once ia opposition to every principle of ty and just | Salar representative of Great Britain in Java would dealing, and contrary to the laws of the State of New | in many peices aD times past, have been of esset- York, made and provided for the proper relief, support | tial beneflfto British merchants, both by remon- and maintenance of the poor in the several cities aud | strances on the wpot agaiust infractions of treat; counties in the State; therefore rights, and by affordi g a channel through which Resolved, That the interests of the taxpayers through- representations could have beem addreased to the out the State require, and that an immediate and funda- | Bt + and ietmaie mental reorganization of such commisaion, {5 absolute) ish government, and information obtained b; necenary for the protection of eek countle and tax | the letter, on subjects which for many years formed ayers against the illegal and unjust proce an grou Dutch, thins cfsuch Commintoners of Eivigraiion and the act | ernment in their dealings with British interests Ln under which they claim incorporation should be so far | the Eastern Archipel; The English govern- modified or repealed a3 to do away with the objectionable.| ment therefore re) entedly 0. reseed t] inject feature of “locality” which is now the leading feature of | the attention of of *yblland, nen elem aaturally attach thetase!ves to superstitions, with as ma By modifications as there are varieties of mind, some of ‘which are illiberat and oppressive, and have gradually Degotten arbitrary governments. Without religion or gow aver been able to hold ige Bowing opposite or antagonistic anion. @emmunities founded on erroneous religions must Mauntte os eoon as truth shows their foundations to be flee. Mbe true religion is the ouly permanent bondof union The Henarp of Friday contains an extract from a West- | Anna, had selected in Saltillo the spot where he ern paper, and also au editorial a assailing me and | was going to have Vidaurri and hia efticers shot. others, and inviting an explanation. Igive it cheerfully. The | federalists lost 38 men in killed and wounled. Thearticle copi Wisconsin paper, isa gurbied | In Guitian’s ranks were many of the officers who 4 des ne had been captured at Monterey, and who thus broke and false account cedings of @ public meeting | ei Torte! held at Ripon, Fond du Lae county, in which resolutions | ““Wrol} js fast fortifying himeelf in Matamoros, and were passed aguinst a Society of Free Love Spirttualists | on the 3d commenced burning the guburhs of the and Socialists at Ceresco. I send you a full report of | city, destroying fences, cornfields, aoases and hats. these proceedings in the Ripon Jerald, He has ruined many families by thus destroying all ass of one of the carllest Fourteristic | they possessed on’ earth. You may imagine this Spd hada ig tah Naive l eltoarty i braggadocio's situation, notwithstanding his late Associatlons, and most of its members are, or have been, | Hogsting, when you are told. that the bay con. Fourierigta, The Hon. Warren Chase, so violently de- | sumed by his cavalry is taken overgyom this place, Mr. F. Dexter's refusal to act on @ committee to which he was appointed. He has come outina letter declining to go into the fusion, and seems to be very frightoned at the readiness with which some “respectable whige,” ae he calls them, consented to the raising of k drapeau rouge. Our whig leaders, irdeed, of the ultra conservative school, are as much haunted by le Spectre Rouge as the chiefs of the Clan Iver were by le Spectre Gris, which used to make very polite bat unwelcome calls on those chiefa when they were sure to be hanged, @ eentratization. ‘Know yourselves, and be ye perfect, | nounced at this nx ‘as a Hgurierist, and is now | as he dare not yeuture with rees & mile Fs a their organization, and make them a General State Cor- | from Lord Aberdeen’s letter to M. Dedel in Ma: 4 ‘Mat ye may be one with God and each other.” All com- | one of the leading Spiritualist lecturers. LHe is now on a | out ofthe city. or to be treated otherwige in an unpleasant ¢ manner. He the right of repre:entation thereon on the | 1946, “ all applications for the sanction of the Ne- meuaitien established on other bases must become dis- | i octuring tour in New Kngland, ‘The people of Coresco, | Onthe 4th instant Governor Vidaurri, arrived at | Mr. Dexter is the gentleman of whom I spoke in my | Part of the several counties of the State, therland government to the appointment of British gerdant, and divunite, The Divine is yerfect—all truth | ce Tes of the Union, aro mostly Individuatiets, | CAdereyta, rome thirty miles this side of Monterey, | lagt as having been thought seriously of ga the fa- | ON motion of A, W. Brace, of Allegany, consuls for the protection of British interesta have arm0} g i if one 25 . is wa jain (i js sect i = t osalve, i 0 r ox G et law; processing from Divinity must bs perfective: | of the school of Josiah Warren ant 8. P. Andrews, hold- cone ri <0 pant ne Penne the line othe | sion candidate for Governor, but that idea ia all over |, jH™ perpen! tpn te aulject of eiglants an eo ae Dutch government of the present day, how aerate tae sieitead nee Cocatiaty the avine dove and | ing to the ‘sovervignty of the individual,” but alo | Rio Grande. Glega’s scouts are in the vicinity of | with now. Am eminent fusioniet, who had some gration as connected with the general care of the poor, | ever, appears to be gradually acquiring more libe- Spiritualists, and partial Fourferists or Associationtats, | Matamoros, and when they finally unarch down to Of course, as Fourierists, ov Individualists, or Spiritual AR place, their force will not number lesa ists, they repudiate marriage a# an arbitrary institution, tail oc oA Senin bes Ce ie ie and accept, m or Tews, the ‘free love” philosophy. | second in command of theartillery,and as he stands Fourier demonstrated the utier incompatibility of the | Seay high in hia profession, he will give a quod ao- civitized marriage and his plun of association. (See Pas- | count of himgelt. sions of the Human Soul, Love vs. Marriage, &e.) War- Woll received a reinforcement of 250 men from ren and Andrews have equally demonstrated that mar- | Tampico, which augment his effective force in Mata- riage la opposed to individual sovereignty ; while nll ad- | Moras to 1700 or 1,800 iwew and twelve pieoos of 0 1a Oppo s enty 5 artillery. His opponents, tiushed with victory, ad- yane Piritualist-—thongh few may have the courage | yance confident of success; but I regret to believe, to confess it—repudiate marringe in its legal sonse, and | tat owing to the proximity of Fort Brown, he will, believe in the doctrine of attinilies. Consequently, large | along with his mistress, save himself, thus cheat- consultation with him recently, says he never before had had any idea to what a de of idiosy a clever man would sink throagh ical fanaticism. >) Dexter Vegi d does not care a it deal for offive, and his timidity is notorious, He is the “ timid whig” (or has done duty for him for eleven youre) addressed by Mr. Webster in the campaign of 1844. Mr. Winthrop is said to have pointedly declined taking any partin the Chapman Hall meeting. It was rather rich to ask him to meet such men as Adoms, Alien and othera, whose labors prevented him from heing Governor and United States Sena- tor. Mr. William J, Bustis also declined acting with the meeting, but as he is a gentle aim continually at perfecting ourselves and each other. We can only receive the Divine intinense, in all its ele- mente, progressively, to its fulness, in proportion as wo Bye ap to its law. ‘Those who follow the bent of their unequally propor- Mened heing—by excessively exercising, and thereby in- q@reasing, the developement of their stronger faculties, and neglecting the exercise of thelr weaker ones, wad thereby allowing them to perish—deform gradual. & to dheorganization, and in the interim live {n increns- fag suffering, isolation and social antagoniem; but ‘there, on the contrary, who overcome their inequalities Sycithing tesencie, by strengthening in them that is weak, and sulxiuing that which is strong, will mave the soul alive, and ultimate in perfection, and in the tection <f iments, if any, fo 4 @ eveal counts of the Sit tanen tu Son- | Ta and Juster ideas of the policy which it ought to ection with the existing laws and regulations ostablish- | Po 0 cegard to tema “Archipe Tae tater. pete sta are ual administration is being ameliorated, while as lessrs. Beach, of piegeeyy) Kelmer, of Dutchese; regards the external commerce, itis beitl Gulick, of Steuben; Parker, of Onondaga, and Mc- et although slowly, on vounder Be n Lean, of Beneca, were appointed such committee. heretofore, and which will give oe fair aience of On'motion of Mr. McLean, of Seneca, the resources of the Netherland In Resolved, Ubat when thi convention adjourn, it will | pee, renources of the, Netherland Posseagions adjourn to meet at Syracuse on the last Tuesday in Sey- tat Bin ig Al Corda a Parsi pein | ember next, | An invitation having been extended to the con- | 89 of the goverpment, " yention to visit the State Asylum, on motion of Mr. Jones, Proposed Civilization of Indianm. Pog gious rs i 4 a 7 Resolved; That the invitatlo roopted, , the Detroit Fee 1 . poset spent eet ciate nertonis ty soelal Mar- | aoaies of Spiritualists are now emigrating, oF proparing a Mag hangman what is lop teanay his own. man of no political consequence, it does not matter | snembers of the convention sine the becraaery Sretock The WAS. ences of the late action af the United We should live in community under the tie of perfoo- | to emigrate, to favorable localities, where they can pro- | oy BS Monterey clergy eee he ried who este much what be said or did. The democrats are much | jhursday morning, ‘ee States towards the Indians of Mic! ‘are of 60 five love, #0 that our various Influences may niedify, | tect each other in freedom, and expecially in freedom of nip tnd Stet Poti aetna ater anal oy ging pied. A oe, Sydnee Ree fee The convention then adjourned to meet at Mar- great importance to the wellare of the that we ize and perioct each other. iis attests» Gun aunt ectilacdas du aaw CINg, , ane pe xb} ket Hall, Syracuse, on Tuesday, Sept. 25. m it proper to lay the main feature of the treaty ia Peo _ cepted their correspondence, he has arrested their | think they have much cause to rejoice over them. just negotiated, in this city, before our readers. The Southern Minnesota, in a beautify high priest and some of his subordinates, who will, The fusion, if made at all, will be the work of the a just inequ ee of wealih--the de- 4 - r "a Rights Convention at 1 Ba ie oi urs acung of mete | Dye str at prone inorder fo Keep thet hon. dbiraoalders, hav | yoook, and not ut poliea ders. healt ea | W#™en"” Mighte Convention at Saratown, | object ofthe Goverment ist ocue lee Indany Eacente cr monotonous industry. and she diseasing sa. early settlement In Northern Tex 4) ena Sree ta Wily hi “AO "ata Off Ado nuance by.Sie Leable ok a leading aes en TRURSDAY EVENING. = repare them to enjoy the wite and hamane provie- aes and indolence of the non-producera, speculators and Sp Mlapapiie Rae 000, This is sensible. both sides isad refuse: + So will it be efore p menopoliste—the rtarvation of ‘Itong in the micet of | of these associatto nubering son Since yesterday large numbers of families fro Sow 3f there ie Eefore the meeting was called to order, Miss 8. B, kon of ou? constitution for their citizenship. When now, if there really exist a desire for a fusion of the various parties, factions and cliques into which the anti-Pieree men are divided. % lought to mention that, sfter the Apringfield ecnvention, Mr. Dexter sent for one of the principal members of the Know eee party, and at soiler, and had a Jong talk with him.” He waa so green 2s to ask that there should be pledges given that the Personal Liberty bill should be rey d! The Know Nothing free soilev told him that, in such case, he wonld have to make affidavit that he had ron in Masaachnsetts. There is to be a meeting of the various fusion committees on Wednesday next, at the United States Hotel. These committees conaist of that ap- pointed at the Know Nothing a at Worcester; that appointed at Wi nena the Know Nothing»; that appointed by the ypman Hall meeting; and asopepican commitiee appointed during the last two or three days. There is no trouble anticipated at the wy 0 unless somé should proceed from Messrs. Allen, Adams and Dana, who are anxious to bers, with an aggregate property ® million : dollars; and made up of men and women, mostly Spiritus | OUF slater cities have been and are now coring over alirte and Socialists, who are banded together with the | t ecek refuge and sufety on this side of the river. earnest purpose of cither reforming the present soclal | Our goodly city is crowded with them. order or founding a new one. The general election on the 6th went off very My writings on physiology and sociology can scarcely Yt and for Congress, Bell will get the vote in be misapprehens by any inteltigent reader, I am no | this valley. For Governor, it will divide between lecture ‘miserable or an eon woman's rights, | Pease and Dickinson. ut have vindicated human rights, as T understand them, Sratitt 5 ran * + and particularly the right of men'and woten to the can: Revolutionary stock is at a premiom, on looking trol of their own Tervons—the right todo rght. The up. ta Ko Brayo. principles taught in these works are briefly vtated in the | crogay Correcpondence of the New Orleans Delta, Avg. 8} ee ee pee rep anne bert information T can furnish of tne rout and Your ‘neighbor Raymond” heads a notice of ‘Mar: lefeat of the despot’s minions under his Generals Lyndon,” “A Bad Book Uibbetted.”” “It seema tome | Gaitian and Cruz, at Saltillo, 13 to send a transla- self-gibbetting of the critic, who in this single article has | tion of Governor Vidaurri’s official report, which is coverod himself with the infamy of most grosely libelling | the follow a delicate, pure-sovied, estimable woman, as such | anstY OW THE NORTH—RESTORING THE LIBERIA Xnown and admired by thoussn's. Hut her ite with al OF THY: COUNTRY. pure persons, is hor beet defence against euch Mbeliers, 1 i et 3 ; n wie probable that» Wisconsin ae will attewet to bei el sel cosine! fag ak up the Cereeco Union, for a Vigilance Committee aa ere 3 ce As . waa apralatted £46 that purpose” Thee nece mettiee | ‘Today, at half-paat leven o'clock A. M., after the Rmmense abundance-—the genoral want of equity in ex- ebsnge, and the want of scientific economies in produc- vation and distribution of wealth—in the iso- order of society, and tho causes of these evils, as ie monopoly of the ‘wil, savers: trade monopolios, in- ‘surest for capital, protit on the skill and labor of ot! .; We guarantee to our members, free, the econo: and other advantages, of integral organization, Bberty, the right to use God’s earth, free competition, education, support under disability, capital without 1 terest, employment without profit, other than tht which is devoted to the above guaranteos and good of | whole—to the support of which all «bould volantasily eentribate to the utmost of their ability, consistent with ‘the harmonization of their being, none having the right to voperfiuities while others are in need of the means of Sei support. We should live in the slinplicity of good taste, the greatest economy, and full temperate enjoy- ameent of every good, repudiating the production or use of Sebscco, alcohol, ald biher usuecessary things, except ‘fer their proper uses. Gor affairs shall be managed by a proper Ket of officers @eeted by the democratic vote of the society. ‘Gommon property i#n temptation to indolent importers nese passed up and down the various aisles of | we reflect that they number quite seven thousand the bal), auctioneering, ina very jleasant and mu- | souls, scattered throughont the er and of the sical way various tracts, in which the righta@md | Upper Peninsula; that they are divided into «mall wrongs of woman are quite elaborately , | banda, under the direction of separate and are which she counselled the buyers to take home, “read, | in various stages of civilization, we ive how ponder and inwardly co difficult and te a tusk the agents of the govern- Rev. Anrornrrre L. BROWN was the first speaker |. ment had to perform. . The principal matters of the of the evening. She began with an allusion tothe | treaty are as follows :— theological discuasion of the morning, and stated 1, A permanent home, or farm, to consist of that after the close of the morning session a clergy- | eighty acres for each head of a family, of forty man had accused her of misapplying a text of Serip- | acres for each gingle person twenty-one years of tare, and advired here to be more particular in her | age, of eighty acres for each family of two or more public ttatements. He told her that the langeage ban « 5 — by her did not allude to Cain and Abel. ese lands are all to be located by the individ- . then read the text from Gen. 4, 7:—‘And unto | uala, each selecting his own piece, within certaip these shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over | tracts chosen by Indians, and reserved from sale him,” and the context showed that the words were | by the United States for the during the addressed by God to Cain, and the allusion was to his | next five years. The ‘obating te to reside brother Abel. Miss B. said, if the rev. gentleman | upon his farm, and isto receive a certificate of Was present she would return the advice so | from government in usual form, save that the pate: kindly tendered, with the remark that he should be | shall not issue WA it before the meena dl tel gee Mee frnyal und industrious; and In common property the | Peyond the boundaries of cist lization, or in & rt ay | er eat hie taken possession of the | Lense of Governor Gardner and Senator Wilson. which God «aid to bve:-c"And thy deaire shal bo to | the patent to any ‘who are a indelent excesses of each fall upon the whole, causing the | {t Mi Probate that within the next five years the apiri- ae tated ma ich was defended by over | °” 4 vast number of letters were received from emi thy hustend, aba Be ehall role Over, thes"--almsoetsi can their tr wnsiteetty whole to dispute with each—tt resulta {n disunion. ne - a social ists Hs soca oe of oat twelve hundred men and four heavy pivees of at | nent men by the Chapman Hall meeting. Governor iy husband, and he ¢! rule over thee”—al hr ioe Property with pradence, while, on Individual property and competition, freed from mone- | Wt © bigotry, selfishness and despot era neks tillery placed in commanding positions. @ Boutwell wrote ote, very plein and ight-forward the same phraseology being used in both instances, ¢ cther hand, as, at the expiration of ten poties, will be found right, consistent ‘with liberty and | on, will concentrate on some unoccuppied territor ‘The attack on the place commenced yesterday ut cD By ' | and the asked if anybody thought God intended | years, are not 60 capable, shall wait still longer for bili ing the whole length in favor of fusion. Mr. Rockwell wrote one, in which he affords evidence that he does not know exactly whattodo. The only ¢lear thing in it is his desire to be Governor. The whigs don't know what to do—the leading men, I mean, for the masses have made up their minds what todo, and will probably do it. From what now appears, I] should say that the fusionists could make as great a party a8 that which elected Gov. Gardner. Whether they will do so, is another matter. to make Abel secondary, or subject to, his brother? | their patent. It was undeniable that Cain did “ rule over” Abel, At the expiration of the first five poe and w for he slew him; it was also undeniable that man | the end of ten years from the ratification of hes “ raled over” woman, for he has enslaved her. | treaty, the Indians shall have the exclusive right But that was not a commard of the Great Father, | enter and pay for lands within the tracts reserved who regarded hetany all his children, bat rather a | from sale, the object of this provision being to ena- prophecy of what would take place in consequence | ble thore who can, to acquire lands in addition to of the fall. those given them by the . the ten Miss . then branched off upon the subject of wo- | years the holders of these cates catinot sell. man’s position, and advanced the idca that it was | contract to sell, or in any manner, dispose of thelz about equal to her present capacity. This might be | land. The Jad ext! of every one should fall ax wholly o« upon themselves, so that they may have their reformatory influence where they belong, and not @zamp the good endeavors of others. Free competition will successively bring all thine @ewn to their lowest and therefore equitable value, (to @ort,) and then to their highest perfection, when in- Froverneats in producing will so Gil the world with wealth all will be rich at the least of labor. realize freedom and justice. i Tbs writen thie vases to wet you and the publicright | the enemy the whole day, the moat of the n respecting certain important movements, than to vindi- | the same, and all of to-day’s forenoon, when two of cate myself, For several years have borne the abuse | the enemy's pieces were captured, and the tyrant’s and landers of conservative donkeys and knaves, who | division fled precipitately, end which I ain now pur- make a trade of radicalirm; but euch personalities are of | sing, in hopes of capturing from him the $60,000 sequence. fi worst slunderers urea clique ef s- | he received yesterday, as also the only piece he is and so-called reformers, who are too cowardly to | carrying along, as he left the other hid in Saltillo, by the logical and Insitimate consequences of their | gs T have jast been informed, g vineiples—aneaks who villify others to eave them- | "natty dim Retaile she ie n vis. Such men all true reformers must despise, while ntil T give o detailed report of this triumph of honest conservatives will mever trust them. liberty, your honor will tender the same to the State yin tufficient force to orgauize a State, in which they may | apont halt-past eight o'clock A. M., fehting with ight of se Competition regulate: supply to demand, eheeking use- ‘Bane and excessive productions, by reducing their prices, apé causing thi fearce to become abuudant, by “i " " At al “ The opponents of the Maine law had a prelimt- ; Seca ee sete Br NT ones of sos ela te sam | gr lig ans Cpa wa, | tenon cncenen ae emg | ema, St re obo rv, mesa oe he, an ear pts nb New York State Census Hing Ahi Mdal note ich you wil extensively | tobe udopeed. somo geuleiruseemedtomhink wat | Men bad dwarfed er capacity, jut a lavery Bod | a cakes desigzated by the Indians themecivs, ne or, Ww ce be on i JON OF COUNTIES. . 3 eaty! 4 < 1a te . r Gan thone working In irolation and ny hts wean-pe et ee Saxrtaco Vioacnas, | 1 Would be proper to wait and see what would be | ing effect was not only visible {ih the intellectual and pois out manifest divadvantages, if any existed, done by the democratic convention, before doing anything themselves. Anything more absurd than such a peepee itwould be impossible to imagine. Whether they look to the past or to the futare, the foes of the law ought not to cast in their lot with the democrats. The Maine law owes ita existence to the democrats, aud that ought to settle the case with those who took back to the origin of the evil. That party is now #0 weak that it can do no good, even on the singularly extravi t assumption that it is desirous of doing it. If the anti-coercionists wish to sink thelr canse down into that “ depth still more profound" that lies below the “ deepest hell,” they had better couple it with that of the Pierce cdininistration. Why should they think of uniting themselves to the most odious that ever existed in politics? There will not be half a dozen democrats in the next legislatare—if, indeed, there shall be any there. What can be gained by euch a Mezentian alliance, aa would be their union with @ dead-and-gone party? The opponents of the law are numerous, and they are encouraged by the growing belief in the absurdity of such legis- @ueers, By underselling those of hi ‘the superior of our home, we ean foree nnd t people to Join us as fust as we ean re ty. ‘te receive them: und th rkimming the world of . Best talents, our conqui mare; for isolated Interior’ y ean have no chance against unite! supe EDUCATION. Is view of the general ignoran. ef the whole world, and that af evil, and the main obstacle to ull reforms, a to establish o complete echool of imtegral and produc. ¥ education, with intention to balance every faculty of our phyrical and mental being, and Udencee, and thelr ractical application to ure, produc tien and the good of life in all its departments. PROCREATIVE. That though we admit the necessity of marriage in its various forms, as essentially pertalniny to the ' amtogouistic or evil aystemis of society—in view evils, 4 the sensuallem of unaffinitive unions; it Seating and diseaaing excesses: the evils of int the term of opp {ta enslavement of af festions ; affectional starvation boyy ), chlorosis, &e., ef the usmarried; iv prevention of the free developeme: i Headquarters at Buena Vista, July 23d, 1856, MUuee-quarters past two o'clock VY. M, ‘Tire escape-galiows, Generai Woll, is fast forttty- ing himself in Matamoros, efter baving promised its inhabitants that he would go ont and fight the ene- wy if he ventured to spprouch the place. Ou the third he commenced burning the suburbs, huts, houses, fences, ond cornticids in the vicinity of Matarrorox, and the chaparal or underwood “and trees, within three miles of the place are being de: Laat Even the brick kilns have been razed, av he has wantonly reduced to begzary many poor fam lies whose only fortane was their humble cottage and little cornfields, with which they eupposted their hapless and helpless little ones, Irom the Brownsville Flag of the 4th inet., wo extract the foliowing:— ‘The insurgenta, unde: Gen. Vidawri, have metand defeated Gens. Craz and Guitian, of the government troops. The fight took place at Saltillo, on the 22d and 25d nJt. The official account of the conflict, froma Gen. Vidauri, we have before us, It does not physical condition of woman, but of man also, For the country they chose, and to upon them Shen the piping voices and effeminate airs of some | the necessit; Ybich all will seanowant) of con- of our young men are remembered, the fear should pregating in 6 large numbers as ible. The be, not that woman ehould become manish, but that | localities designated are as follows, viz :-— man wonld tecome womanized. This she regarded At Ne-aw-me-con, on Lake Superior; Whaishey's as the direct result of female life and education, and | Bay, or Ute-qua-me-nor, Island, apd near hence the necessity of extending the sphere, and en- | Sailor's Encampment, on the Ste. Marie river ; the larging the capacities of woman, for the advantage | Chenoore, back of the Island of Mackinac ; the and glory of ‘a race. Beaver Islands, in Lake Michigan; Emmett and The reverend lady was followed by Mrs. Ernestine | Ieabella counties, in the Lower Peninsula. At all L. Rose, in a most animated speech. She excepted, | there points sufficient numbers will locate for in part, to the position of her reverend predecessor, | educational, Hoke and wunicipal parposes. At that woman’s position is equal to her capacity, con- | some of these points the Indians already have flov- tending that it was fashion, custom, and law, that | rishing rettlementa, where they own rr crushed her natural aspirations, and prevented the | land and have made it advances in ‘ion. menifestation of the powers with which she was 2. In addition to the lands the government giver endowed. . to them $500,600 and upward, of which sum $200,000 Mies Brown interrupted to eay that her position | were due to them for reservations under the was misapprehended—that she only contended it | treaty of Washington of 1836; $26,000 for princi was the general rule; there were of coure exce and interest of reserved annuity ander t! ents tions, in which women had showed themselves 1D, $30,000 as the value of certain mt superior to their condition asa eex. She put this | end about $50,000 for improvements upon Indi question— Suppose all women essed the courage, | lends ceded under that treaty. By the treaty of and partial elucation ance is wt the FE. of the soul; it# narrow and monopolizing jealousios; ir4 give the number of ti ‘i i o out love: {ta action ol ok viata engaged on either side, | lation as they are specifically opposing. If they are eon tye be i 4 SMccreative low thom sey red on tore POPULATION OF RENSSALATR COUNTY. the plaza at hal-past eight o'clock on the morning | ly get 20,000 votes for their candidates. Snag Bi the sex would exist one hour?” (A plause.. ; the United States was to furnieh them one year's the present < “In heaven there is neither marry! Perlin re of the 224, which all that fay, most of the | kition to run an independent candidate is liked by | “Mrs, Roark acknowledged the Phenaed compli- | subsistence and an ontft, besides paying the ex Foo Mey J in orem, oop Al kingdom come, thy’ wi Sreasekk.,. night, and all the morning of the 23d, whieh result- | many who care not much about the Liquor law, but ment, but still insisted that there were hundreds and | pense of their removal. They have never been re- lone on ens asin ven. '" “ thousands of women who were superior to their | moved; and the commissioner, taking Mito consi present position, This idea she illustrated by allu- | deration the fact that their removal would bave cost. sions to Washington, Bonaparte and other great | the government over $100,000, and that the expense lighte, who had been in advance of their age, and | thereof must have been regarded as part of the enforced itin a strain of eloquent and cogent remark. | price of their Innd, gave them, upon equitable Bhe was followed by Lucy Stone Biackw! grourds, enough more tomake up the total giver upon what had been set apart as the principal t above. of the evening —woman’s Fight tosuftrage. It would ‘The manner in which this sum is to be expended be nseless for us to attempt to reproduce, in the space | is ax follows:—$76,000, in five equal annual instal at our dis 1, cither the arrumrnts or the illustra | ments, for building materials and other things ne- tions employed by the eloquent lady on this occasion | cessary to locate upon the lands ted to them by She contended that sui should be extended to | the treaty; abont €40,000 for fie cappers of four woman as @ right, not asa favor, She considered it | blackemith shops ten years; a large amount for the the basis, as well as the safe; of all other righta, support of schools ten years; and the residue to be because, until that was conferred, even if one Legie- | paid in instalments of $10,000 per aanum, with in lature thonld concede the rest, another might h | terest on total amount unpaid ten years; which Ointon taken from Greenbush ed in taking twe pieces af artillery and putting to flight the extire division of the regvlae ticche; pied were pursued by the insurgents, with the hope of captnring some #60,000 which the defeated generals bore with them in their retreat. The engagement is said to have been obstinate and bloody. 1 loss on the side of the iusurgents is given ot one hun- dred in killed and wounded. Gen. Vidaarri has published a proclamation to his followers, which is also before us, dated at Saltilio on the 24th ult., in which he reminds them of all their victories; pointe to the Meta ease with which they have taken the naturally strong towns of Saltillo and Monterey, though guarded hy the flower of the army of thelr oppressor. He tells them that the God of battles is with them, and they have only to persevere to se- heir lost Mbertiea. The greatest enthusiaam is who wonld readily vote cra Teta who should belong to neither of the regular factions in the State. One-helf the men who would go with them in the event of their epi 2 an organization, would proba- bly vote with the fusionists, or not vote at all, if they should be 60 foolish as to coalesce with the broken down democracy, to make of themselves the crutch of a hobbling faction, which violated all its prin -i- Pg in the day of ita power in order to “c1 out” very men on whom it now calla for assistance, These considerations have their weight wi the nagacious men opposed to the Muine law, and who have no purpose of a political character to advance. Colonel Heard, who is the ablest and most experi- enced of their number, plainly told the meeting that they had nothing to hope from any party. They had tried all in the State, he mid, and had There i¢ no act #o nacredly important as the production fs human offspring; a tte eternal life and happiness @r increasing mixeri¢s to death, depend mainly upon the condition of ite parents, and the clreumetances of its Seation. Smatory faculties are developed long after every ether, that they may be under the control of moral ant tened mentaliticw, 1 all things in nature ary de~ it tnust there not be laws for perincting Imanity? Persons should only unite with those of op- poaite temperaments, dispositions and conditions of bel ®- themecives, that they may harmonize each other hy .< mutual influence, and that their opposite condi Tieitives organtoaticas be a A thus produce | North Greenbush, tal menta of God. Dut on trees ‘ars, by their influence m te <aeh other's defects, which Poestenkiil, taken t Sandlake..... Rehaghticoke. Totals . a sesees 6.811 © thelr of. , pose = at " them away. She met the objection that women | leaves, at the expiration of that time spring in an incressed degree to be evil AGE IN ORNPANE COUNTY t among the Iiberators, and ey ! found them all hostile to Mberal legislation. He M P » a large fund ge to death, and reflect b ‘upon them 2,008 Morgane, beeseen J Garza Capietran and Bee thought It was better to set up for themacives, | Could not their children to go to Congress, with | to be dixponed abel any purpose of utility the In 4 sharp allusion to the mothers now in Saratoga, who diane may desi in the \icinity of Matamoros with a force variousl had somehow managed to leave their babies! But, 4. At the whether they should get fifty or fifty thousand votes. “Those who are necounte! worthy o: 500 Alatbema Gentry Uwe resurrection, > | estimated at from six to twelve hy Re expresely approved of the tion to nomi- of ten years the tribal organiza nelther roarry mor are given in marti but will - 443 Bmithville vies, 447 | CHtimated at 2 undred mon. It ee y App! p om | che said, of course evel 1 i tion shall cease, ready to obey the fed slp law of Gol. 400 Rownoke.... ; 115 | Not probable, however, that Matamoros will be at | nate af. Lovejoy for Governor. His views found | anty to her children, an the fret, the higher aed ho. “Thee are the esenthal rticulars of the treaty: Ta the milena community, the baman laws of mar 850 Wheatvilie.. 3 | tacked before the expiration of rome weeks yet, aa | favor with the meeting, as they will with the pnblic. Vest, und would not’ permit it to interfere with mo. | and in view of the deep interest our State has in th 5 riage are annulled by the perfective law, which decties B45 Pavillon Centre. "<'.. 89 | we are informed by good authority that the entire | A committed of seven waa appointed, to take moc- | tivey of office and olobition, ‘The crananit det | wuftanc arte Tater, iene hd hat att persons shall be free to unite with thetr opp. 26 insurgent army will anite for that’ purpose, and it | sures for piling a State Convention on the 30th of . * : , nnot refrain from ex 3 politics is deg roved too much. If te, easing OOF Aj bation of the liberal f ite ee shonla ane get out of it, But vabea. sees ane pre @ presenoe of woman we wea redeeming in- |. | 4 Dania tk Chea fluence, A gentleman had said to her, * You will Notaries Public as Commistoners. be insulted at the polls.” “ Would you do it /” she New Yorr, August 17, 1855, asked. “No.” “Then,” seid ahe, “give to others ‘TO THE EDITOR OF THe HAL, or ieplowtd or highest affinities, by mutual conse: ions, fo: nem q ‘ tod parte tion ot hetr ——- + thoes Fine ry Warertoo.—We learn that the flourin; When two are so affinitively united os to be a harmony | Dull of W. W. Wood, in South Waterloo, was burned they are necesartly eympathetic recipients of the divine | dow2 on Sanday morning last, between three and fafinence; therefore Got {x the parent of thelr ofepring, | four o'clock. About five hundred bushels of wheat August. That is the way to work. ALGomA, will necessarily consume some weeks in accom: - in, a end. \ won _ n the meantime Gen. + We are told, is maki preparation for their reception. He has oonimiased cleaving away the woods cnd shanties around the A May Annestep ny a Woman.—A gentleman who was present at the examination of the Rands at Concord, N. H., tells us that no «mall amusement Oy ond through them, ita puysical parenta. in the mill was also consumed. Mr. Wood was in- | “MY, and otherwise preparing to receive his enemles. | was created in the court by tho testimony of Mrs. | the same credit you take to yourself” Women are | ,.X0® may do & public rarvice to the mercantile commu Selden tol vests: TySmetpameiae wos | muted. fer $4,000 iy the “Ontaro and Lvdagron, United States Marshal's Office Co Te as arreated Ske acre tpn | faxed: bat they are not represented. Let any man | the ih Seta Sous ally enaiot ne to fenee, as to be mont lowed, tinder euch pring | pred couney ond Granite ¢ co to CHARGE OY REVOLT. sean by We elas of Hand, cnane “4 explain, Pave] can be reconciled | lows, to wit:— ples, parsons must make themselves phys tally | U0, Suflicient to cover his loss, The fire extended to aut down by engaged him in con- the homed A wage the isfound- | Chap. 150, fee. 2. Be {t further enacted, That Nota- and worally lovely. physteally, mentally | 9 harm belonging to Yandemark & Co., which, toge- Ave, 20.—Officers Horton ond Miller proceeded tofandy | yerwation, sent for Mr. Sheriff Rixford,and when she | e¢—upon whieh the Revolution itaelf was projected, | rles Tublic be, and they are hereby authoriond te tate “Our relative affaliies to oll things are continually va. | ther with @ quantity of lumber, belonging to Ticok on Sunday night, and having boarded the Amertean | thougl proper time had arrived, ela her | that there can be no taxation without representa- | depositions, and to do such other acts in relation to ev: vying, according a4 our conditions change, same firm, was destropd. Lost about $200, La | brig Abbey Thaxter, arrested George Charleson, Willlam } hand on his »,saying, at tho same time, | tion. And so the lady went on for an hour, the au- Seon be Seedin, Che Cees of the United States, im pa GOVERNMENT AND ORGANIZATION, Egret hy oR i ag camaged ty fe bo Guy, Wane King and Chas. Rigby, four of the crew, ona | “YOU are mi tr, ten Ne ey LO feng ody unwearied, and often applanding ean Ube 5 rn hg Se Coramis- re ean be no government adapted to am or and were na’ r them with c " , bs ta Seen Tia tetas | Sebememtatte ae hor arti | riage ee! cco eae Bo | Sacra eetmme Cat aap | cect erp aan | awit el Ca ome wate mind sexes b i may Cy ve na! Mr, Commissioner Morton, who commit: de. | ot v jan conven! - ledge of the . ~ . goth dine belng lsat oF the maebunery in tp nlf. ee | hel tate ook. nen ee | was narrate gave to it an additional interest. 6 sine die. si Seen nm ise of the stove low w “oan

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