The New York Herald Newspaper, February 19, 1856, Page 2

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2 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 19, _1856. ; ¥ Nee ee ear nSRaUNSD RATS UGS LATTE or ATE = fow we: ks, fased the most dieoordant elements Into an who have carried ont hia U TE. | of 0", The greet ides of that platform is mon-iaterven- | 90.90:hs of the Sourherm people are traitors. [think mb | THE NEW ORLEANS CELEBRATION. | cnective urmy, both in this ei y, and, 2 sboct tirne be- Lar pdt hold vreronpreg eke haw ary eat Se THE KANSAS EME + | Gon: and if these be tntervention, it shall be followed by | w charge a libel ard acaiumny on the South, Bat to . fee. la Aihamn-—the prompi’’ast ‘cser ption | Brcathed the breath ef life into thiy bropae--Ne Ee a | dim uption. Never was it dreamed thet the Georgsa pla:- | turn to the point of slave labr va. freo labor. How iv it | Mmauguration ef the Eyvestrian Statwe of | of the proprtion between tho end nod the meaas | Orleans may now oust y the woods of her widowhood. Bectch of the Debate tn the Georgia House | form ‘wou! d be necessary te keep her from ‘‘laying ou vi- | in Ergiamy Laborers tnere earn from $3 to $8 Pl andrew Jeckson 1. sew Urieans. which led to the e¢c:pation ef 8: Marks, St. Augus: | The cead voldie: who slept at the Hermitage has thrown ‘of Mepresentatives,on toe Kansas Aid But, | cleot bards.” month; or, to come nearer home, i the State of New rome the Now Ova ~ lieapune, Tet. 10} Yine end Pem-acols, te lofiners of purpose which | gside the oeremunte of the temb, aed la anw tn ihe mids Pree ioese OF Rupmicesrar‘ves Feb. 11, 1854. | — Them, sir, shall we—shall wo, as Georgians—the maXors | York white labar is paid for at # rate ar lens than itoom- | yesterday, the 9th of Fobr sry, Weill bo long 7 | Wine the gor and vishuous, the commanding will watch h should have boon always, 0 aod builders cf that noble structure, strong enoggh and | mands in the slave States of the South, 4 memoereo Oy the 6ivizene of Ne # U? hapa an? ** Wns eWan- ‘Mr. Hirkis—The gent’cman misuvderstands my posi- | g.ry within their gates.” Ht wl be jooked upon as tion. Imeant to hove said, waether I did or no, tbat | Fitet woot in the sf ys anaals a} be ficeree ‘amas: —sbalt we, [ sey, the builere of thet nobie atrneture, bs | slave labor was ax tugonistis ‘0 free labor in new Territ | ates in ibe wins OF ait wich tre ererithed monories ‘A bill to be entitled an act to promote tho settlement of | the first 10 raze it, andlevel it with theearth? fir, trust é that slave ‘abor cou'd only be profiiaple whore | ‘hich cluster around the ghrious Egh'h of January, | that subdues the rehelivus, do not these modle gifts and a: early giory, on the bsuks of the : vt tribate. @ vs ituto the trus stateaman a# well as the sue- | stream where, like the gesius of the Cape, he hurled hi ersful chiettain? And does not tho civil as mach asthe | thunder aud bis swrms at the invader. Here milary career of Jackson bear the impress of | stand forever. to excite to noble virtues and patnoti: these gifs and of there attributes? Tam aware, fellow | deocs; to speak «f the glories of the past, and to gh citixens, that pankind are reluctant to accord eminence | way to tbe gloriv# of the future. As loag as the Mirsi: to «ne man in more than ore field of human exertims. | ,jppi rol's hin ood to the ocean may the sua light hi But I would d» injastice to the bero aud the patriot—to | face to meet the eyes of our latest posterity. Lab ud yourselves, fellow citizens, ani to the coxvistions of my | joice thst our children eannot enter this square to in- own mine, if deierred trom the fmithfal Aotinres of | duige in their sports without behoiding him. They wil my duties oy the fear of encountering the iseralatity of | ack ux, who ie thisy Some of us will answer: “It is Gon.| some, the lingo ing prejacices of others, or even the protec @3 orphan, without famity, with dying eences of pa tisan oetraction, I xhontd hold up to ion tho triumphant soldier oniy. Poster rity think, will lock upon bis military achievements ‘a6 a part, the cas important part, of him—a nob! say: “He wea the very soul of honor; during a long |i torso covered with the seats which the poet has called | of almost constant coriliets, ia which all the fiercest pas- “the liviay of honor,” but ater alla torsoonly MH was | gions eams into play, he never was guilty of a mean Or in the councils of the nation, at the hen of Stats, | Gngenerous act.’’ Another: ‘He never withheld his rer-| and ax the reprecestaive and champion of great | yj ‘om bis eountry ; be never shrunt from the perform-| srincipies of geverrment, that he rose to the pr» | ance ot a caty, private <r public, however painful or portions of an bistorical character. It was upon | silous it migh. be. he patriot soltier will say: ‘: that high eminence that he met the giants of is | oiosed » war of dimasters ina blaze of glory.” Let and overcame them. I discard entirely the idle | rejcice for ovrselv+s that he will meet onr view daily; bs which have po often been renewed concerning | for, as » vigorous und criginal thinker has svid: ‘6: horsbip ot the edmrable State popers ot his ad- | men taken up in apy was are profitabie company. Wi tion. These disputes may be in e-esting to the’ | esnnot look, however inperfect'y, upon a great man, Hqvariem; in auy other view they are worse | without gaining rome hicg by hia.’ He is the livin, ‘er the importance thus seemingly g'ven to | light fountain, which it is good and pleasant to be meer tas Mz, CROOK, of Chattooga, introduces some time since, » rot sling rit of Kansas, by vo. | broad enough to bear ap the Amerkan Union, upon bo Ee ha lee Src gD eens The Bias as | which fifteen States alresdy stam shoulder w shoulier tollows:. 2 gh ulead = not. Let Georgia pass this bill, and her proud poyition ould be continuously empleyed. 181, sad the bero of that au-pi-ious day, Py Rensstea’ ty the Sette and Hoose of Reprarente- | will be lost ber pres'ige pen? Georgis, nowia the van, | Mr. Swirm—If the goutleman mesns to intimate thit {han General Acdrew J«eks°n no man has ever earned three of ihe Sisto d Georgia, and it 1 hereby enacted by | will have to retire to tie rear, aud what a posicion will | slave lab ris ro: profitable in Kamees, he is mivtaten | for nimserf a dearer or moro oadaring place in he Peps. Gee authority of the sauie, shat wheaever aay citizen of | behers! It were shame for ber to retreat (com | Hemp hands earn vaslly more there than the ootton | jar regard of our Southern people, and rhe ejuosts' ‘thir Stat, shall have collec‘ed teguther 4 company of the | ber position; but how as tone her shame were abe , bands of the South; and | trust we shall no‘ given» thst | giatuo, the tnavgura'ion of which was yesterday wir Bae State she State wishing to omigrate to the Territory | tobetke furt to vilate that solemn pledge she has | magnificent Terri‘ory through a false idea thatslave labor | persed amid s0 much of pomp and eircumsance, 14 but eee or et ase nnasie 70 do eo for the want of moans, | given, and by wich she now sande, S@¥I am oppoved | is not profitable there. Bat, sir, it has been said tha! | tho subatantins emooriacn: of @ people's gratizaie, ex- Spon the fects Deing mace known to the Governor, and | Arita proceeding I protest against it; amd I wast, | this roposes crusade. I @lasent.. It err to | preased in bronze amd granite, when the leader of said company shall have given bod, | for the honor of our State, this Dill wil not pass. with force. I, for one, am willing to meet the | Ag if odo honor to the oscasion, * the giorions king ayable to the State, with sueb an amount and sursty as Mr. CRook—Mr. Speaker, it is idig to talk about meet- es of Vandals ard Goths that threaten the | . day” arose in the east rejelcingly, and tue radiance Governor shail spprove, conditiomed to expend the | ing thie grea? question by’ private efforts, Iholdin my | Terrttory of Kansas. I shall vote for tais bill, aad if my | of his eurly beams was wel e1 by "hinderons salvos money advanced thereon in transporting, subsisting and | haid a letter trem Col. Lomax, of Gctumbus, the Secre- | eounty should object to her share of the tax I wik bear!t | from +‘ the loud m uthed cannon.” Hf avon # dearth euttitting sucb destitute emigrants, and wls> consi, met | tary of the “Musccgee Emig ant aid Society.” He says, | my wyself—pay {tout cf my own pocket. racy, sir, 1 | seemed to smile prophe: proval om the coming cere- within twelve months thertater to transport oma hua- | ‘Pasa your bil if jou cag; ifnot, all is lost. Im this | maintain that itis our cuty to sustain the gallant Ste | monies: and humanity, awakening to ‘he Inspiration of Sed emigrants to Kansas, then the Governor shail issue | rich, inteuigent Southern city, we have been adie to of Missouri; abe is not fighting her own basties, but the cheering omens, aroso determined to fix a new holiday Bie werrant in favor of the princtpal obligor ia raid bond, | ruize bus $900.” Now, air. 1 hold it idle to taik longer of | battles of the South and her institutions. Memesn be | cy i-s patriot:c calendar. wovn the Treasury of this State for a sum eqnal te fitt; eppeais to the wpe in reply to the gentieman trom | found to go to Cuba; men were found to aid Texas. Shall Whi'e the artillery is booming gry bauners are thrown dollars per head of such destitute emigrants. l'revided, | Muscegee, who m it so long upon non intervention, { | we of the South behold a sister State bravely contenitt out from mast and balevpy, ond they tlatter aa if in fhat the sum expender under this act ehatl not exceed | wou'd sey that he world be right but for one thing. | for our rights, and suifer ber to stand in tho bresea a1 ppison with the thril whicn urs the public pul. 64,000 dollars; aud provided further, that the amouet a> | There bas already becn intervention. Shall we meet it | breast the waves alone unaided and unheard, ‘Thousanas of brave men, the citizen so diers of New expended shall be reimbursed to the treasury of the State | with intervenucn? The original settlers of Kansas wee The bill was then put ana lost, by « vote of 63 te 4. Orleans, are preparing, as ire sun onreers Ic brightness Dy a special tex on slaves; and any mouey in the Irea- | pro-siavery men. Efforts sre making to change tho in- up the heavens, to tako the ct im the day’s eerezno- sary not otherwise appropriated, is horesy sppropcisted | *tetutions under which they have ro Jong itved, and State of Feeling In Kansas. nia), Uniforms, which bavs of tate been lying idle, are othe purposes aforesaid. Z sid which whey preter. A'ready, by foul means, hesa Turri- | 4... State of Meaty Re Bireclan, ( tinched and brigbtenad, an] when put on they enkindle Mr, Crock called up the bill this morning on its thud | toriai government deem established, whieh those people, (Prem Sirtugfeilow’s ‘on Squa\ » (pee eenpen ct | io trance fergte aut aber, ‘mnna-bace wey.) aeh mall memo i hg Rea hy sores, De itmary msi of piel decane st aur | he ght bleh cv cen wut, elpated ana made few introductory remarks. | the origioal rectlers, deepl A abinser's .) Bed. ae exeecoubant atigity free dnperem eg ela ergo spe ar | tbe light which ¢v) ah ob x Tir. Joxms, of Muscogee, moved to strike from the bil | is éale pruring her legions mto Kanvas. Intervention | , Tee traitors and rebeliosists at Lawrence, and seme Ts worth an oge with ut a name, er lar ter pail erin hagler haem fre marc carr ayer ‘he feature which imposes a xpecis! tix on slaves, and sustained his motion with some remarks upon the per- ate co jes ef - | few other places in the tory, are st! . Filey ‘ tinen inet inti I this «pecialicy of the bill, which be ed pihars vf the Georgia glatiorm, They reable | been able to learn, they did not attemstt to hold elections | “ott ihe there are other banda of s out and considered ‘ea nesocuasily aloulated to awaken’ Joalou:ioa th ties racriligious touch. Dat straxge to eny, | for Governor and other officers at but few points outmde | | ov nen or the city, the screwmen and mee tener e cee att foam te mos ta | col) soundahcn ue esac min nega i oT are of the Prrvtorval Register, at Leavenwo: vhe vanoes ‘cay interlan ms—all of whom Mee to tion os of K troubles in foundations the sentinel gives no alarm 1h . BN berored paces in the line of proossion and take Seren Taso, ees: cpjocel ts fuch class feg'stivion. | sit, thet the tie has come, aad now is, fe thls pro: | stems to bave proceed a good effect in that region} wad | ON OUTS Boos Oh ation” gods of music are Mr. Ckoox warmly discltimed any desire eithe: to ere- | mid edged resistance. The time for talk has | Kiekapco has become a name of terror to negro | SL beginning to sound the elarion and fil the are guch hostilities or to legiciate for classes. His tox. | pest. “Action” wut be now our watehwarl. let | Fiekajoo is entitled Se et for the wholesome | fire, and cio ten, o'cicek arrives tho whole cl'y wena for inserting the words “on slaves’ wore not to | Georgia thea pass thistpill, Voureen eter States wil eahoess' - relsod over her neighboring town, | i, ‘ariir. And never before did Now Orleans ‘eheew th a of the tax the slave owaers of Geor- follow by sample, and cre many days near a imilinn a - bs id a 7 #0 populow Ever: svieet fot a'3, “Arc to shite ibe rerpousibitty upon ihe; but to | dol'are will to reiced the defince of Southern righ:s, We are not much troubled in our immediate bral oeneving. Manly andigentio Dee ‘jon le each o.her give them tho privilece, as it was thetr right, (thay being | and ovr hones and fircsites. It socms the very name Atchison sickens an abolitionist; | ver swhere, od thonsancs of mow acqwan’ances ere more Cirect!y stiszhed,) ty repel the assault He though? Mr. Jiang, of Polion Mr. Spesker, Tadaire and en. | but we er r Sere mebsuclves free | fermed cu acciveatal introdue'ions, Poesry ani patriot. id pref ¢ But sgaio, by making tho | Coro the sentiments of the gentiemam who hae just | CCunty there fa a neat of traitors calling themselves Gas chek nicl ceckiton ding sans hernatter bal mieien ence epetten, tee ovis of Noethern’| taken Di otha juddiont No wan can sjeax | White Sta‘e men, who ate paving the way to a hemp eord Faphad Oba pre aecpa dle pliner ge esi ng Sectntionis's wauld be stopped. hey could ao! say to the | £0 done for the rights of the south, | and enjpgig Tim, somewhere on the waters of the | 6 OO PthO‘siildron who are cromicg towards Canul white Jsbor of the South, ‘see how you are tax g my scmlration audmy gra'ltude, Bit, “A. tee town of Atchison, we aro never honored with | Siteet as the g-eat cv of attrse joa, helt mercy | ay a8 much as the slavedok difier wilh him ia his pe while t Lee ier there renasaies, aud ac for an | Voices oro heard, and their lagghieg eyes are soen at insici us appeals are made furile by Ba ab Ons concn eee Sloction Hever iris tho fant thing they tank of, We stil every print; fox not upintercsted speciats are they, and the bill, anda cause of passinie disgom- | cf the demand made won Gecrgia by this BML? Simoly, | RU atemals suficient for rafts, ana expect to kospon | seme ci them afer bait a ecniary ehall Lave eapsed, raid ecuade, to fores | POvG eeoustont supply. The papers at Tawscase are | Willlcok: beck te the inaogurelin of tne Jackyon manu 2, the commen proprviy of 8! | AGE yous ing at the Victory ‘ley gnined over the pro | Mect aemarking a cherished om in seis lives, you mauke tne Sate of | i ory party. which were called there by the Governor | At 11 o'clock approach+d, the various miltsary eomp: Bf opposed | ee Pele! of Sheriff Joae#, which shows thst ihe | 1i€s, the civic digniiartes, tho benovolont aosia ies, and Teniency of cur people has had no. quod. elfe other bories wo had becn iuvi ed t» join in the pus - rence; but their elections abow that those of thete pacty, | (i0B, Drgun to form iuto lime om Gapal strect, unoer the cutsice of Lawrenes, are becoming alarmed, and if nv | orters cf Goo. Trecy, the Grand Marrhal of the cay. Chiwatoe toacta of treason by tho ringlosders at Law. | 13 linc, if extended ont, wuld make frou tw) and poreé us to d‘sapocmtment at home and ridisula abroad. | Heaven-—a tlowing light forutsin cf native original wan- tt has fwlssded in the pupalar mind the standard measure | peod and heros 1-olencss. in whewo radiance a] souls) of statermenship, The statesman thinks, contrives and | feel that 1 is wel! eith them.’’ ‘The breaaz of the veteran) sete, ‘The labor of illustrating and enforelsg his views, | will swell with pride a: tue right of his beloved and well! is of & ministerial and suborcine'e order. That such | trusted lescer. All, a1—tae young and the old—the were the relailon: ot General Jackson to his eabvine!—bis | men of this and of coming generations, invoking @ bless- bead that e ved and the wiscom tha! cireste3, theirs | ing upon the artist who has preserved bis manly form the bands that executed—cannot now be fairly question- | and features, will hoil im unison tho man without fear ed. His cwn character, every feature of it, is atawped | and without reprcnch—tho bright pattern of American, upon the while course of his administration, 3t was oa | ehivalry and Ager iean patriotism. of startling initiative—of boid measures. No personal During the detivery of his address Mr. Sige was fe ecnriceralions, no timid counses eculd indus him to | quently interrup ed vy anclaust. halt, or lure him into efreulcous paths, The aim of hits ‘As soon ws be bad enced the oovering was tawen from) companions in the Western wilds was nov true, | the statue, and the ororze horse ane his hero ridor por tbe lead from thew rifles more direct to the mark, | were revealed te the gaze of the assembled thousands than he is to bia chject. Ho reorned tue »bifts andexpe- | ginid ceafening cheers, the loud acclsim of artillery ant dients 0 often resorted to by tim!1 polittelans tocast | gri:ed music f-em the bands in atteacance. upon their succoasors the diffisulties which should re- | “This done, the Hos, A. D. Crossman led forward Mr. olution irom themselyos, Ho met © Clork Milla, the artist by whoa the | it arose, and pressed it te a final and ented, and introduced hia +0 the 4] He never shrunk from the ex*rsive of all Mr, Minis then delivercd the followiag addresa:-— | pre—and to thelr full extout—waieh tue const Ladies anc Gontlenen—The statue betere you represents turton ano laws comferred upro bim, whenev ene who, with a handful of men, proved Uimself the ns sion ana the is terests ¢f the nation comsnded it. I thi viour of your beauti ul city, Gen, Jacksou is there repre. 1 may solely assert that these qualities belanged uniiesly. | sented aa ho appearel cn the morving of the Sth of or even sepurstely, 1 any very great degree, to nae Of | January, torty-one years +g> He baa sdranced to tho the otherwise eminent men wae composed his esbinet. | centre of the live in the ant of review; the lines have eome It ix therefere his mark, not theirs, whieh is upon thet | to present a ms as « suture to thei: commander, who is eveatful petiud. He wae agreat and eamand: ° | ackwow!ledging i by raising hi a, s100rdiog to tatue had boon ex: Hare. ion to strike ont wis then put and carried. of Wilkes, mex saggested, that ae she 29- Sa, Bropriation was gratuit}—2 simpie dorstion—it w gic. 2 grand oo Pequire a two-thirce yote, the yeas and nays being taken | to private associations of capt to pase the dill. While he was op, be would take | cal cuter prise and energy. 19 pe: jon to pro ert agaiwet the whole pracoiure ss un- | cf the Sovtp. Bot, sir, I com wise and impohitic tho gouth had en pernicious m their e dorsea the great 1 » Of noa-tavervention, and i | jativm, 7 admit, nt rence, and in the Northe , they might, in time, | Balt to three miles in lor gta, bu befire it nud Suemodt in Its w | she military et tte of tant diy. — His restive horse, asioese to in‘erfere in 2 | as times, bat te: ue by assocla-ivg wiih our le, bee ore honest iaen, vis entirety. the Brat portiea of is comcenced its m reb , anticipating the nex: move, attempts to dash dowa ths distan ts, though we shall mishe godeiienr, Ane these things go to Cvard Jackson square, whee the monument hut boa entinn 10 roi Une prove, th while ireulgence avd kindgess may operate favurably | “ee Ce. Upon the igoorant dupes io fanaticiem, the leviers are | ,. 1ke'e mewementy were effected in stzh voorpaaren wth eb ovre geo in their villainy; and, ince optziva, tha only | ‘be published p:ogr tho Lonisiaua Leg m fe ‘< eecual wey to corcect the evil4 thac now exit, i Neo lose ing miliary eocort uncer the ecanmand uf Veneral 1 " ‘aliey. ee oy cipal nae eee Yolivwing the Legion wore the Jackson Monument As- er psrticpated in, the celebrated To soriatien; tho artist, Cla. k Mile; Mr. Risbards, the da that ones Cone, and peace and quiet undarch! oct of the pedestsl; the Oravor of tae day; pridie bono of the dauntlers hee oeing tarn xd hie cormant, that] oi Gencrat J to diseuss 1) °re meas” rea, b ot bis mid andef k the “Avo rican statesman?’ par eavcline. J mean, low citizens, that statesmanshty wach is the tegiumate ciepting of eurews instinusoai—whiek hee a fy rerem ance with which never lnaes sigat of tnose uréer, chows that he $s restrainiug the horas, whoze open mouth and eusved neck indicats that thyanimat is feeling the bit. Ihave though? this oxpiamation neces | sory, 95 th stand the 2 of statesm tak at its meat of the Te. sates. Lex‘) npon the gray hai we this ther if they kaow of say si are Many eri iow who profess nol t) under-| jon Of the artis. Lacios and geatle- Ube to my wera-ry = dark dey iedead, when I sball forget the va:t crowd of faces around me; and) shculd thir humble eifort moet your approbatim, my iw appoin' sand inake tne pu | | | | \ | ucdor the broad the Littery of our State. Sir, at eanes toe Governor of iho State and stoff, sad ia propor or: er tpsvtitions, and 4 what ecti ry 4 * z bd ramet we are t Ay 7 ? ’ 1 wencest reflection wili be the consciowsne:s of ing: “To prom of the Territocies | sancheiae ia this | de varions Siaie, mili ary, crvic aml other budies whe alue of pobt: sande] Depetua‘ee, am itoperlibable bongs, the forestmd fon And by whom ? gia im her gove | vay . pad been invired 10 pisticipato 1a the day’s pagsant, onc, howover superiieial his atin | tures of one whose life and characier have aways been! | : | reign espacity ! i sii to mark, throughoat the pait ial il » that close, 1y with the forms he admimisterod, and th warty mivntes weTora 12 th tioa of the t rf 2 epte) he ancient Place rmer——zow Jack. materizis muet a party be eimposed, when sora i on tered t i puppies as Lane, ile More, and the Hike, oan be | *f8 Fqvare--the name having been changed ia bono: of wwe utostion ia asked, how | ‘26 ero of New Orleans atter ft had been decermined t At picenbie in the aight of good inen everywhere A 2 my adairation, onstan’ Rad spoatancocga ‘Hr. Mills was cheored to the close, and music followed, 4 of tho govorncient discourse | the) unsw-rviag fidelity to ev. Plaucké then advanced and an. + wrong, to ship fro n tl and our cbitcren sleep in poace and trany The-e, ders, are propored to be yent ‘rom our boriers, animating appearance they wade up tor the want of law- g for the Y er among tho shrubbery, rende ing the whole p lature, te ps | a sah me ee Y a ti , | Me ‘ veacore and great roan: f a : t ounsed th aherac'erzed as 2 E sppral semetimss patbers, | nary tans, thow arm japon nBich | i ge egeily reach then’ We aay, that al tho tyw | weet in ite entre an ecuestten monusout to nin | tte chjects, fssermas the very myers: nation of ths! o- | gereanouy was end/c;, nd the crxnmissiona-s a} invited pometines pitt i Bot a sittle + fafiammatory.””' | sborow relics? The bral a Pa iheded oe f ng disturbers of ta> paver, is | ™EMory. j : fs yecomen®, pesteased by rt #plrit. | Reno’ him as the | guestwon the platform rove to depart, being, of eoarse, | Tea Teac ing ideaa were that the gol momen; tor se- | her suns, archer property. e > the bulwatks and | ¢ ze Lynch; bavii our people are uot dis Op entering the square, it war fund ar seprerentatire of prpwar sovereignty} Wao among followed by others, the firing cf the artiilery yet oon earlg Kansas was now at hand; thet tho apple was | theramparts, behind which our wires, ou: dawshers, his honor Judge Lys ¢2 presise ouly | be:# of ladiev were olreaay present, and by theic gay and eeussore and bis saeecasors mare ind:atrionaly anieg | | tye, taviting the hand t pluck it; and that il woud pe veked the expression «i tbe popuar wil ‘the randdest in ie safle Z, Who more The ventrable Bernard Marigny then anncunced his in- sternly and more £ jovernor t call a. vo neglect so glorious an oj sly enforced it, when s laws Codning tre 4 this floor it itis their 0 i 4 4 more tention of aac re:sing the spectators in M'eensh ag soon a+ tentty to cegur 4d Terri gentlemen upon this floor tis = po q y gaily deal cut justice to theso tre \ifa} even without tho auxiliary ards usually cen usceituines ? You reeoeet how broadly anil s the tiring of the :ala’e was concluded, ani aceorringly adolitien and free 50) for a fal oaclopt sk “ system vf depopulation, It wili do urged | Ihst they mill have to be dealt 'a’n Jovely sisterhood, sue— oO be or not to he—wicb the Uni did ¥o at some Jergth and with great sptitt, ark before t! ase, that the bid bas a pesuliar merit— that it proposes t9 send 20 Kansas tho poor and dastivate, who may there ind homes and fortunes. Sir, this Is no argumeat with me. Why ship off th: dostiiuts—why them? Are wa not able % pport the | records ct the State attest th r ‘Are gentlemen af-ni to t hou devo'ien—t fea. oH to rely upon thea ‘tbeir due: with the stim the sp rath n— tor your alters and your t for the green gray Ms. Joxys, of Museogee, demarr Dy dhe gentleman frem Wi ker, that ccatemplated by the bill was & donati before he besame a candwlaie for a secon thst speedily, in order to reatere peace to th je stavuc, which stands in the ceatro of t) twa fxcd fag; and ff the Governor does not see was veiled with a slight canvas coverivg, we Lave intimated heretefoe, the people will, ¢ right, lookang towards the river, there was a "At the last seesion, an eurl was mace to € fogs, and 4 platiorm fem which the luwagn! pahraee te rone tnd vee Hpeletuleed mph was to he éalivered, sor Tabata Oouuell ue piaject wae ot Sill poured into sho sqnars the living tidn—ovmyany eliciting applause at many ‘ E ly directed to a review of th ved it with more eortainty, tien of which chielly the st at least by refraining from attack | » euicgy on the putsiuris teolings which it nad excited and ‘ institution, Ww! bad be- | pen-ered of imperish«ble strength. { come a power im tha sate. But bis objest wea to ‘The fimmense crowa now endeavored to getentof the sacertain the pepular will, and he pursued that object | gouaye, down from the turonged roofs aut balsonies, from regardies cf the eonseynences upin his owa ‘or | ine Cathedral steeple, the lamp peste, the masts, the: cated by ° a" von Fa, many gt ous poopie are une | Micrecmpany. roolety ater seciety—wich music, ban- jak’ we canexpiaia i —outdde | vers end sil the mposiog appointreents of a grant oae, I me ved” waa had for a doa | in the day of teal, Bat, viz, { , and muiisyy show. At cength i: was Bl'ed till tt oowld | tunes, A tue “American statesman’’—e would bave | rigging, tho piled merchandise ‘on the lever, and every prackie Bag acnoe ng pm togbe gprs gan outrage on the people, reid ro moe, ard the streets all round, andthe vas | scornid to grin er to reain power by these emees!- | yiher peiot that bad been seized ap affording vantage for it was ish this, or ¢ Tant thee, wot itke 1 politics, were Ww ‘psec ex ening fromthe square to the river, were crowd. | ments of opinion, or even equivocations im matters of | ground to view tke imp’ sirg caremony, and to ge* homo. worst, that the mopey wan te be ap) iat a nold prejadee, jealous ed. mith one dense. mai Pre kee one cert ment, Walch subvert the very foun lations Thir, however was rot to do effeted either wawed i: was hardly vecesary to demonsteate thar it | e the people’ éf th this was net wil. The ba! palatial Pontalba e instivutions, aad present them ip tho lig’t yor easily. Many ladios and ehildren suffered not swos clearly to ovr interest to's and propagate benctit ¢f tanking e2.ttat oro \ i ding, which orpsinent two sites of dhe o.uere, were ne involved in laborious forma, The veto o in gethng through the gates of the syaare, and a avery, o thar the admission o as a tree state | iisen 6 rapifermed on the ctearion into pistare galleries, from termg the bank had made {ais issu» before | after they heo got out the dense erowds tn the wtroots el which creole beauty shone iorth in all its ebarms. On Dor thei laude | these vast galleries, and on those of the public duil ling» : ead, an? instoaa of paying baak- | ‘hich extend along Chartres stzect, several thousands of | ing rates of juserest, they have gut to submit to uve twie women ang brave men kad taken their stand ») | cont pes month at tho banca o° shavers on che ovber ard while observirg were thecrelves observed, river; avd, We are sorry the enpolo ot the 0.4 City Ballemd the towe the people; that isnue hed been tried, and Gen. Jack#on | tectually prevencel ev ry thing like rapil propress, Je Behold bina now executing the poyctar ver lst | of deccra ing the statue as soon as it should bd ‘nuvelled, amid deverting friends, or a the mest tiwid supporters, | put it had coen decided, for snfilcient reasons, that ib sguinst 4 pewertul party, and ia the fao ol throats | would be wise not to arsent to that addition to the esre- of perionai yio.ence, ef eivil avd bankreptey! | mony, m was fatal to the best 1oterasts snd weal of tho prosen x, has (not here by scor tre a mtrary being sb wn, ) tro reasons for opy nactment—a Us*s | tu their Introd: u there; and 1 » of our de © ¥ vchicd primacy asvecao ies | who arc sent there, are very accueBi ole to these two rca *et7, Lara net for sk» a ; ot - % ca | 2 ra reain ‘a ‘Ris Were not without t The removal of the ceposits, determined upym and car- Aliegether, we con coxfidently cay, a me-e brilliant, Daa rata de aidireat ges ge teeny gry oh Lexpest nething cle than to hare my postion | Dah Canin ewan who, frem disay hieigh.a, Jocked down on thn vast seu of | red out against the advice of a mojo ity of hie cal: faprsing, or en:burlastio coremitny Gatiarver hese wit jo, egiaintors may do—end what is wicng for them i opreentec. T anucipate the elarge th&t I have east | te move the siupne:s give Ysil their caine fr ane | Po ynity beneath, aud wacened the day's congs with | qbiletit mas justiied by sets of matirasance op 1h persectandes pie Bs Rin py other cireumstacce: the hraits of the Unrep, Not ess than 49,000 persons fe Cin and around the eqaare daring ths insuguration, some of whom bsd travelled hundreds o“m')ss co witnest , wrong fcr as. Thersiore, rir, J om emigrant oud.’ Sir, chia ib + safety and defence; and we La tex fer ovr protection in this ins’ance, as if we weve Te- direct ‘egislet npntotions on the peor man, Pant l awe $, 88 @measuzeo’ | eiim it, My eonsiituents would age were this House to make it ow that Ihave eves been the mn. re and Its surrounding was tra'y rot shiek were above, bright ey d all the ascessiories of the oe he bank, was viewed py Gon. Jackson in x ight of a measnze necessary t) west f there means of loitaence whieh it wou!} hy ing the bank b) We are ‘or po wild tanking echerr frand the propio, but we ae for a go t bell! or they knc to cheat and de- aysten of bank- oor man’s ii x ri - 1 t : im told thas ve de | J Be ing, to mduce capital into our Territory, so hat the peo- | Steund, o * e popular will on a new applisation fur & re | the interesting sigh’. asp pt-pt inmnn doen pr ge Mee pr are el Fa: EE eee 2 | ple’moy obtain mency at fair rates of intorest enter | Deight 2nd cheering, Hero were wtal yartiors ly | cna.ter. For im he paper which @ reg to his erdicot, mya yiig wane conducted ina most birmenioas and tim’ I sdmit tt. non vention og the parte | Tenremes emlaran id he ga wi | Their lands, sndto enable our travers and met frew this city, but from all portions of tro State and ovr | and whieh wes alterwards published, in w satisfactory mapner, spd the arrangomects generally 7 W We say to Congress, | ty He ied heard the chareewich serat moction | opeiate jor the imp-overcent of our towns ani ister States; avd every porticn of the wice spread Uaion ‘course und relieves ther trom ail Junsioill. | wero eatcnlated to retlect nigh ereiit om the Mona nent y | oe Dat iit were tras thas Scatheiti Fond i Hes | ‘efoated a ecntributed quote to the galaxy of beanty which | ay, Fe lnye Itile atrers upm the fact that tho | Asscefation, and io Gencrai Trasy, the (rand Marshal of ‘aes, or in 14 a; 5 -wakclaltt Hist ic Baal beRAbas: Tipeame | shire wrennd, : vant nas’ become an unsale keeper of the public | theday, to whose macagemont the dotais of the page why Co we say this’ | pana bad avatod That the echatitviom of Ge Caited: | ngent Aimeng these conspleucus on the syuare were the v Mirds; snd he rests bie vin ebichy upen | anthad been intrue Rad kas tastgewar baycad wiiks ae deligele ti | Sinton was tice Yepavded a Mlnica i:f ASiP den con. | enCEn ta Pi st ip ties | 2ane of 1814-15, ana to then the day was tinkya proud | the ground that the removal was | Afwer thoy had lett the square, the fovernor, mo+t of tbe States, made ii, gave it breah. uod we Snaed:y. "ewe te en edie ue iw er | the Tertitor sor 4 bani, w: mee pre: e. A monument was about to be rated to tho y it the national will, The bank wa» | the members ot the legislature, and various other eivis ‘orely denied to it ine power of iateswere Mt: Spcakes, tie aout hap) tence: fo ever tei a bask it will bo la sne | of a battle fiott, in which they wore actors, and in sbi g uncer ihe veto of 1su; wel known | ard militasy fone imcries, repaired to the residence of Mev aahitas ei montaniretion las ot } Mr. Sp ait a | rext two years We peed erpital in the Tersitory, and | that hero and that Beld their desrest memories iad long t it bad not lost all hope of ubtaising a recbarter | Mr, Kennedy, the United “aces Marshal, and partook of even under the a¢ministration then brewieg tnat remem*cr, uncer thi the y ‘obiain it througlt a bank cheane> tnanin | deen centercd, Wi.h them was the tottere| banuer un- | ary citer wey; aud we rentnre the predis‘ion that those | #°7 Which the Ixuisiana militia fougat and conquered on | wo opzesce the bark, when they want the people's vore | tt @ plains of Chatm And well may they be proad Andependent end sovereign Staie. We, the wight to inteziere by « by the p haromguer anc we it was | answplecolation which hud been genezeuel ide} 3 hweall | py xe K, Subsequently the Governer eye aaT on essare of which tt expected w In- | inspected the Jagion the Washington Ardiiiery. the Ne- exiead these hey will be airal son the | of i, for it was wronght iu gold by tho lair dangers o! | crease the'rumber of is frionds in Congzess. The rear, | tiogal Guards and the Continental Guards, af the Pieos Mans; ft aa ethan 1 they tock | 0 . | the Gressent City, and presented to them and their ssso- | vat of the Ceposits curtailed its means for wisshiel, and , 47a; a leaving, he received a marching salute at pees eet Be coe e a my os pg 1Featle- | ointes with 0 prayer lor their success, Pveninits sheds | insured the trimmph of the popular wid, I: ia not my ahah BAe Boe ap same right. They have the right, 05 wo ha’ ive craig: ant aid societies, and ve havo t Saree with fron, But to Gon Again, sir. [ take the orcad alevery acd the exisines © a-wociated. When the one toll. th mostic s avery, as it exists In the the gates, whea be was cecorted to his quarters, y I is impossible to include in tye compass of this article, written amid the excitement of ¢o stirring an oosasion, all the notable ocenrrences and brivht scenes of a day which willever be remembered all who par icivated in ite festivities. In will perheps be more agreeable and inatruo- live to our readers ‘> rév.ve their resollsstion of a simi- Ligy to do so? ries her it is #tiil locked uzen with reverence. May it pi phetic of Satare triamphs. Vie noticed bmmong the veterans onc, who of November, 1200, ovatated in reising the fi con flag wh'e!. ever flustered above tbat » 4 Castile had lo: purpose, foduw-ertizens, to enter into an elatyorate reci- tal ot the polities! acta ot Cen. Jsckion, Tae ocoaston keer not eal for it. [have selecte? only a fer, tn w hia ebacacter is aust prom: ik alloé ed to bis «(rng besides those which I have already mentioned seats ty law, 9 | aud ler the people speak out on th ‘Tee Governor eserus to havo | | come of Botm parties in the rence, and acme of our peop) | are dowa on himss bad as Dg SOre, W ne, dy the ed mi wyay our bene | at men whos hearts en on whom we inoy men us tr « the tro oked love to re ervati t. t : tea whi kh wrorg. We benesth the y-nerahle syca- | duvet in thore transactions, which has been a ts lar celebration which veoursed forty two years ago en the ee ay see: ay tea men have aliute ere eee Soe st f towered eb ed’Armes, | elaieation avd unjust aoctuas fon, far from ind paiio apety under olsperetan se or a. ghueasune been make eve despotism, Lak at tho organvaan of « | that Le bad no businces there whatever. fy Siar that, whep years bad paseo: now g aF- | for power, furnishes cone'umive evidence of by: exciting than thore ot yeete any. there, apd the ‘isms.’ monsireus and | ¢ the militia, and reyuired thom to proczed io | Bvitec vetetan bad juioed in de‘endies iy froinan | ‘uciffezence to it, The tearlesa assumption of respon It was on the 23d of Jnsuary, 1815, thet Jaokson, ree throughont the leng:h and bre | anty, and ‘surrender a gfe, Anciber Je-ade cl years prssedaw.y, and | sibility, io jome of great importance, even wiLikin | turning frum the lizes ‘Tom whieb he had sea his power- be participatee in tho ovation given by the eity of New i} Their educated mon are tamatles—their igno- ans to the) rant, the fanatics’ too: fuck scones meet vA at the Somib, as shock the . laud of ‘isms’ and 0° whe @inerder. Sir, I believe Afi i the preservation of i propegaadisn, and eoull won'd plant Me 'b im the heart of free tie! slavery dae alweys existed. Disek slaves, they will have wile ¢ Rave blacke—ihe North: has her wi Judge which of the inetriat ‘a0: to be ertpared wit! PY, provperous and tian the ibroes of discontent vain. And i’, sir, this | nion be poo: faa iw the excouiion of the la men who should have ¢7 vn judge of the moce and manner of exeo'tog ard ebould not hav» sabmitied to lis wae taken ia | Gie- t the vndizputed Lmi:e of the law, leads ottener to the | fui encmy steal away by night through the swamps, re- Ins# tkan to the o:niinued porsession of power. Such. | entere the eity which he bal reieuse from @ishanor and at Jenet, we must infor, ix the general upinion of mon | ge:olaticn. A’ grand recepti a was prepared for him. in power, tor that virlce is certainly aot a ocmuon | Ricing up to the yates of the Place é’Armes—now Jack- oue in ican govermmen‘s. Bat when thatawsvmp | sen sinase—with bis sice, not arrayed lise cur ol'ivea licn «7 sioiity implits the exerese of a give solcics of yes ay, in bright, shicing, nest and stain; power, in fis entize and to He ntmont limite itt stil | Yess unileraae, but, in me oud weathe stained garments, | moze fave und wore perious. Few dare to tread the with none of the pomp and cirenmstencs of war, and distinct line whiob separates legitimate fro bremzed and worm wii the fa('gue and expssure of « powers—ew Care i9 a nud wen the verge ceaupaign of unparaticied ae avity and constant labor, the pélon roch—few aie ambicous of 9 hero was met by ths city authoritios and escorted lo map knew better than (en. Ja er of trivmyphel arch erected on the spot whore the statae now suming responsibili y Uis tune bad teen nearly wreckel | gtancs. Hee o liu el w cata was placed oa the brow for the Invasicn of ¥ wih the see o* the victorious general vy a lovely danwel wiss Bareau, ‘ot tanction af erwards Mrs, General Peravor F. Sc ith—-who repre been ibe love of of anotber whem part in dhe ent to Jacksoa. wilh thoir fmieat- your treasury doors, ana jet the heed labor, cmeazk in that gout hag beon vrged ver, never yote 1 0 hi 5 gocd faith, ax for the be svo Invended, # you may vi and, as waar pro slave Aneel § st not particular prolixity. All Tooled well and the square was fill in an outburst of ents ermiasnt ar Jecksen, the seviour of Louisisna—-the taviont o isiona!’” Shis wae the signal of loud und repaated harass, story vera on white mea havo my 5. We of the © ive Tet tha w bext. Sir, th ve geod a not aout tne hones of ol, Pars it, “il me how yoa ean your hand er your voles a: id she adopt the cth fs heaving th a8 tipon tl of | dissolved, as surcly or indi igs in tho nelghborkowt ring intereste doe Monroe, Tt eould frow well. ond a erofre, which prompt : t 7 sen'cd Kame—supported by Mias Pop'essia, afterwards, it vill, unless nome mirace not now disoerritle. should ‘ this GBI’ @nee but we think bei« mistaken in regard to the ( the Hon. A 1. Crossman, Chatr- | buld acta, but a ive to Go his caty—his whole . Ogden, wife of Ceptain Peter V. Ogden, of Jackson’s avert it, the black tay vat over the heart of New | , | a yet, have rever read whet is termed t » dntroduces I. J duty at sll h: h is now the judginent of the | turds, now M:s. Charles Caxainer. who rep:esented b, and cevered wi immediately thereat r delivery of the fol York city itse:f, and be hailed as a welcome salvation fa eonel on this work of | yerly lead off than | by the Governor and the 1a uently eebnet speak ly. We | abolition papers what they say wi have een eo mary eiber things publi wo knew to be ‘n!. et we sre wot wi | avy O.tug they pr 8 aa jor men. Joey have abwolved | Justice, and presen’el a serell to the General, whilst im fem the ition, and they justly re | Liberty, personated by the lovely Mies Qurcline Kerr, gard even bis errors se the execs-es of that fe'C-éueri- seared wha ina beautiful and clogant little address, Geing perziotism which was ever ready to peril lif, | to which the General, gen ly removing the wreath, ro- fue and power for their welfare ani tho benor of thet | phedin modest and ‘app opriate terios. (The wreath country. The threatered oppmatin of S nth Cazotian | Qing wort ly bestowed te mill proser ved by our fellow- ie the coliecien of the revenues, which if carried into | citten, Ur. Howard Smith, the son o” the lay who pre- etfect must have ied to & collision, and perhaps toa dis- | genton it.) é solution of ths Union, exhivi.cd the intense nationality These young ladios coeupled niches in the trimmptat ©! Gen. Jackion, ils love of the ‘whole country” rose | greh, From ibe areh to the door of tho Cathsiral there 6 the full height of the crisis, Whilst in tomas of inpos- | were two rows of the lovoleet girls of the city, beauti- giles, and comes. on in the from anareby and dc*y it be wise, if ir be ne li, then a Those who saw the of Junnary, 1815 say tha an glorious « day of sunshine ae th ove which sziles upon this ne public place, all 12 ticces of the ancient the ga On that ¢ay, voless we know ichey kave publ onkl not Le surprised if ont to be false, If the rienu re- her people are willing, | and Georgia bad the has kt policy which sholl yor be the policy of the Arn Pubiic. She has righcon her slue and L say, eur, let this wn.” Mr. Wann, of Bu eatbedral, and of Me. Spe ain opposed ¥o | 2 prove Gor. Mis bill, beeause 1 ar the Ido not Rs Be The most tant oan be : sioxed eloqueror, which to the vory hoart of the | fully dressed in b'ueeaa white, and besriog'in thoir Think tho hore advoea A better | 4p the. Y ior a oetionss Viton » and wainenuing ed ita on, he appealed to theiz patrio‘iam, to the menorios | hants basbcts of flowers aad evergreens, watch they to effect oar common wants in this matt 1 » | ¥ Bat 2 sto.d hete end around, in a! * play. Hut that Fe Et ae ve : gate. rose triurophal arches, nda of beight. lowers ned Mees and forms of beauty as ight. ‘The rear of artillery, stiains of m 90, loud and inerssant oheor ting D Past and tke hopes of the future, he was proparing | pcattercd ayer the path ct the honored ehicf, The first m. it was the authority of his nainv and of his | eigh-een of ihese young ladion representel the Sta’ vple, much mo ethan any ingisiative measure, which | the Union, ard behind eaca. stood an chitd bearing the “I the sicrms and stooothed tho tron et waters. | nameand insignis uf the State she represented. 1c will May God, in hy from the midst of the | acubtlers gra ify many of oor readers, ani particularly people some such mighty Mader, some meh king of the | the nemerous decendaate of the ladies w30 were selested ‘enpest, to lead us through the darkness, and to depei | for these posts of honor, to roscue fron. obi the atorins which are fact gaibering around us’ J have | their names, Thove which we hays been ab raid enongh, follow-eisivenr, to convince yon that Gen. | feoni a surviving voteran, are 25 follows: — ckven ix uot, os be ts often represented, a one-sided Mise Hilen kerr, subsequently Mra, Lavi Biorre. chsracter, # loca! name; buta complete type und a namo Miss Hidonia Lewis, subsequently Mra. , K, Wagaoa, Dorsay. twiter here nore, that ike Sampson Fould embrnoe the cotuame of that pitate ite fall! Sir, clouds ap: cin us. On m emigrant societies in every county. Jong since» fellew conntyman ci mine Kansas. Fie widened the porple B ing counties, and, tir, he has reeontly ‘anos with seventy emigrate. He had no difticalty ting all the funds and af tko aid he dosired. This, sir, the proper plan by which to raive men end moans, aud my word for it if you adop: ft, you will have mor money than men. J eave the que:'lon to the generous teipulses, and the true Houthern feelings of eur p a.d there will not foil o be a response. Dat, air, anoiser onsite + promived obedienoe to the laws, and as- ei no domds; au the clreum tance, romrices in that way than to people lowe upon them; for he well kue . i, War of ester: Jon, wnd ke thought induigense fiat | Pboute of appl. Mou atares, end ouriatemnal | fat of estermunation, and ke thought jartie ue i fae | anther Of grains tacaying fram the slslen Of the ol tems feed to punish them suimarily, ple {hero, ming’ed in ove Std and joyful din, and pro- aid that when men commit errors on the pari a uv.ey | Gsimed the emotions ot the inultitude. | The bey rooy be fenyiven, oud we Wow Govercor Svunnon'y | NeW Orleans had assemble’ here to lift up their fen oor Bates Zoo In fervent th ga “bapue t better take their poliey eb ii erary institutions, our mann improvements. An‘, but a few days sine course upen this Honse; but che fore you When were w awine. et now @ pro ory ‘oot Like pearls before * befure yon to send from Fuggomive ef ali these exalted qualities which mark the atu ie ver set 6 8 Knily Packwood, Fu ¥604 a Fation: We wero told a few evenings sinee by wie guntle. | Zou i tae cask ” pamgieee Wk te tripute of admiration and ¢ 0) tine | «reat srrong inankind te ie shining lightatorever. Tmay | Mis Elva MeNetl, ebro, ake Art Vanoe. man from kansas, who lectured in thi nt mb of | Geenes ‘ ee AWE DEER te ee = dor the direction of an ail sind Providenoo, had Save? | now tora to ihe more softly shaded bowers of private life, Mics Loulea Ze eerie, sabseqnently Mos, 1, C. Shields. Soy aisks Gian worn icaangen'ted to Kanehe frock Teckesiens ~ ne mt Coup Weraraa av Pewwiwae-Mr. Buntiok, | them from the mrvlts of a haugh'y foo, their city to show you hia wan ot high tenger, of stern resolve, of | Muiin Adele Fitegerald, #uleoyuenily Mes Long Se preveahbes, 2 | and the nriversai heart of wan tre viey for fear, sanity of ta tee oe «Thain | pillage, ond the arms of uhelr commnon ‘country {vom th | irresistible purpose, exeresting tho sweet and gentle cha- | jiien Matta Khameoug, mde he Aira. 3 Hoon, case terts, ths’ suai Ags 4 oni’ | stow Jtitle do we kuow that which we are mene: of the House trom Veubing, informe as that | Sin ‘nor of defeat. We haye wot here to intagurat> » | vitica wine, hko the beavtiful Aretiusa, frwodinanun- | Mice ser ten: ee PE ae red fales, Sir, : Me How less whet we shall be! The cternal surge he hus received a letter from Vembina, stating that | monument of deeper and broader sigaidoanee than Intorrupted stream beneath the sactace of his stormy pub. Mise Vanda ’ pockirear dl f time end on, and bears afar mnprecedented cold wenther has been experionced in | ecren ies of that dey. Tre feolings of moze cra! tie lite. His tideliry to his friends bas become proverbial—— Misa Mercer, rubsequentiy Mra. Ro MeNal wort, bare enc yoler ‘bnret, new emerge, that region this winter. The mercury im the ther- | tude ¥ ich swayed the generation that preowed enunst | ine nevor forreck them~-be never coula be iaducad to har- Misa J Haul, pub equently Mrs, Grant, tem of county nocie ier from the foam of ager — mometer for a week averaged 52 dexroes below | sficet us, et leat to.an eoual desree, x fathers had | dorsuspicions cfthem. The Jevoted partner of his borom Through this avenve of beauty, Hinked with festoone of your mev are true; an) prevent hile the graves of ompires bewve zero. The half breeds, who hed started oat on thelr | resped the immediate and the first frvits of feneral | be loved wiuh all (be tenderness ofa first and youth{al love | jeer and evergreens, the proud, chief paxsed into the smuggled in, Lastly, air, le unis bill pas Kansas will nave reached its climox. Men, « Puta winter hunt, were compelled to return to the settle. | Jackson's victory. Kd celebrated their resent deliver- | —--2iih oli the ardor of his zo} chs i ive mature. The me- | Cathedral, and then burst forth ibe Tr Deum, chanted by ns te calm and prudent —wise as © “nerjemt, but | ment, owing t) the sevority of the weather, and they | 27° fiers dangers which bad reached their, very doors, | mw yry cf Ids mother's cevotion “Wen the 4 sulering continued to | a large choir, aided py musioal inst dt an eal a8 Bow noe, w tle dove! > 4 aud which they bad seen in tho face. RBorldes.” loon: ‘tke Mit us fresh in bis mine as when, more than half a ne . > Gorter! thenmtves Whee paing the oan, sunira, of U Lie expected, Mr. <porker, | had sito lost ca/tle, ond umomus hors from tHe | op) to the evoute whisheaika icrth tke rejslcinge, tt | oentury befure, ke bat visited him, & boy ania prlymme | drevsed, “ibe “Gerad ie oe sapeeeh, the, beat their purses. Asa friend, air, to Kanoas, a eproch on the B.sor of thisHlouse; | “MDE HUO—St Paul, Bin., Democrat, Feb, 7. War the centrollirg avter in thew ovents whom they ad- | of the ixttisn at Camden. At the mere nioation of oc | ard elcquence of which will bear tho” soverem against this bill gentleman from Fuitun Is oppose nn mired, loved ard extol. However far-reaching ear | name, the big war would start to his eye, and roll down | eriticsm and ob the war.cect _sdmira- Mr. Thorswioy, of Muroogee mon to the Territory of Kansna. News }y the Mails, ayrupathtes may be. we can no mere be expected to cnlee | bb rogsed chorks! A women's love, that nobler: av tien, even in tho ysresent generation. Through- feend, rir, to Kaonar, and Dave poo Las nod of all her soma, aa‘ that | 4 petition now In circulation amon the caticon. | t0,the fulness of fhe wecaliar sentiments which anime | holies: cf human off pats, dhstes ‘cla fashions and cxatts | out the ecramony, the General was supporte? by the vo- road apy gentleman cu inte her! Fle is opposed to emiera- | af f Seinen lea ; * to , dirce's ara ststaiae human | lenteers of the fattalion D’Orieans, they wader « member of an od , and have eontribe Mr, f Ue docteioe be teas wey Ts Tisolt kare | 02 Marylend, advances tome stron argumenta in | events, ant the ame i v2 oe 8 KOT : zn clr, as they appeared in 1918, | exerden—bover od, Vie » good engl, over his wholu if, | mando” eat oes, Who, yesterdss at E: mite both of money an! itv'iconos to assiatit. Ba , ars wad jours ar; ant “mippowe ft had been | {VOR OF the suppresvion of the nanneries which at | Tho agene has expanded since that year, ant new and | What wouder, if tt produgcd the anual trepronsions, ant | war ced age Sd SUA OWING ote thd entre 1 cannot go no far a4 my colesgss, in thinking each so. | followed then!) Wkive d now be our Texas, oar | Present exixt in that State, They are termed pri- on events have crowse! upon il. The General-ia- | sroetbed the eoidior into the polianet and dignitied gon- | youry ecicict he them wae—prorided over a oslebration eietios to be tounded in right, ethor of morels er equity. | great and gorions Fouthweet / ut, air, the dectries of | Yate prisons, into which gins und wormen are de | Clicfat New Orleans has lod other aruuey—he han exor- | teman? But even in thin he preserved hin native aba | irbich, allor « jepse of forty-two years, revive: the reool- do not admit that Massichusetts lista right to ilo th | anti omigration was uot believed them: ih ix ae false now, | coved wider Verious pretexts, and there confined | elec! bigher comment on a yoster Feld, whore all the | moter. Fis wae the rimple polish, the gonnine eotrtery | lectiozs of the most joyfad fentivity in the history of New Territory of Kansos with her pwupors aud her sucon | Our fathers Che wari rairies | withont any protection from the ly under their | virtues ard all Lo Shy he 1 ator and exali ha- | which eprings from a gemia) and Kad neture. Ble du | Orleens. duarien, If a right, 'as We the right too mule bas to | which sisitan ont weekier present oy-tem. menity were called tuto actien. in fieroe elvil strife, | ¢ained to wrap himeeif u: while alive, in tho mere | At] o’olock P.M, the City Conncfl en‘artained the i od the society on the prinsinis the ney wen a * which involved the existenoe of prinolples atlecting tne | pomp and parado-—in the more outward show of the eun- | Governor, members of the Lawicl J ee one Sekt STL Cha. Momtoueonte ice T made hess ter ene, oe ee a ome | The Rhoie Laand Vord-latare has Ho amonded the | Aretinies of milion, he bax Leon the reoorned and ths | recthonalitien of the worid—fo: the rama resscn taut he | varius Comrie, the. mill aaa i hg he eommenced the fight, acd we have the right, on the | 1 Tam not in favor o Yettile Kans ge by de marricge act & todo away with the publication of ‘leader of wflifene. The octs ef hie tong and we | weuld not mnifer bis remaics to bo depssitel nw surx- | vited greats al aaiumer siven wt the i, Coarles Hotel. peineiple above siluded to §to keep it ap. Neverthatoss, | great itt oger & wo | the bas, ministers and elders being authorized to | ced ii have Gleplaye in desing rel all these featues {| pbegm: which bad once hon tho resting place ofa Homa | The Mayor pi : “ ed, with his Evsellency th on Eoneider these acclovier aa wrony, 6 Oe ew? | join persone in marriage, alter having proceren the | of ite character, aa eithuen, ove vcdzicn, and winetiane | kmperar Ie was ropugneat to We Mpabltean hoor, | bis rightaad Cask Whg., tbe arass wines guales . € 7 ‘ark Mille, rineiples which underiie our republic; at war with the | sas, and jet thei octtle tat’ Territory, 7" ° neressary to 1 rock wi , | men. We lave seen him ron bis {uil course, suad avd | 1 wen'd not have you suppose, foliew edtiems thut ) bad eontriimted the caict attzacthon Bpirit ot our geveramon'. These woctotine whould have | tlod ethers that are now ouy Bat vet whee S | ve eoesly (0 i jratind sywiem of regis: | TT ctiole like the great curren cf the ocosn-— a aad | tb fa my intention or'my dese to rob Loe wan of ie bs: | ke't. We were able to remato misty the 8 a Been everywhore (isco ard diccconmmanon. 1 4 atan evowal ff the genti : < me the acme in all those different rituniions. He now rests | manity and fe exhibit him bofore you aa an ideal, ursu, | banque!, and must aut om: it tne Nortl bas pet toes on toot. ‘Thocevil must b3 tough! | Pulton—namoty, that slave labor th antegonistie im tee | Fuuma Onrtis, the young iy ea forcibly | n'a baliowed graye, aut the aoh'ererents his tong | stantial” perfeetbon—os an ipo, shapoine was an unccmmonly acrorebie reunions ant was gortom wht fire, But, str, there ts a wide diifurence Lot ween in- | labor. Js not this tue very arguinent f the ' taken from her Mhaker fricads ut SpMngticld on the | career, comnoncicg with the Revolution aed en- | dedice fetion, He was s real saan of vier aad | up with grout taate, dividual enterprises os) thawe ret on foot an‘ achieved | of the Northy [i slave labor be an‘agonia’ white lo | 22d uit, by the “world’s people,” was bromght le- | sending almost to our sy, harwaleuty boome a part | of ftech, of bene and ef sinew—« hero of Hocsor, Yew oy wiineesed the ceramoaies of yoxterday wil? by twice. Buppom Mason duvet, by the | bor, and if it be the duly of our state protest aud pro | fure He Supreme Court in Boston recently, ona | fot Isr trachions, To ne, thereore, fellow eu. | net the hery sed fonelf:l eroation cf a drowmy bart. | forget them socn ‘ milflons in Tor troamry, should onlosive a territory, awd | moto the intmost of her cltivena, tivn ft beoomes the duty | writ of habeas corpur. The Uonut dectded tuat ahe | “ete t an of ironre who vende bebind thie curtam, | Boel the men wh bare been called to wet great paris being it forwant for edmiscion into the | of Georgia to abolish slarury. ‘ ile sate | ere thee sovler only, the savizar of « city aly. It | ia human sale, be sbons by the posseesion of ercamend. - tains i na soon renter Se canis ae | tan a (oy Ee, Salts vermisslon)— Dida’ yon ee ate Shaken: Pletoed, and she de- | SOM Tete that the art, ohu'ieat to the exicccetes | ing virtuos, ot by the absence of fiulta—by positive, | A Lemire on Skarme—The Wareham Trane the matter now stands, Toould, and would phouldor my | und p | chded to retur 1 ker. tand the gontiomen fen Sansa: (Mr. White) + musket to prevent ruch an outrage. Du’, sir, paaw | say, nih thaid tokewon 3 that a large proportion if tbe ‘this bill. ref Georgia in her severcign capadty pres | emigrante from Tennesaos, and some from Gorton onunty. ‘this bill, and then tell mo with what propriety, | Ga. bad yotod egalast mlavery alter their arried In if ihe place and the wriGes 0. his art, hes east iden not negative quatites. He wan the gennine +, of | ovipt says:—Since the clostug ef navigation, vossels Reeton lavt woes, the acecutrements of war and upon the fold of bate the bighest type, of our demeerade invitations a bave tonop below, in the ‘letuity of Grose Hi, \ of inilammation | The mind of the spectator now, end in futuro thangs, witi es pan of the peop’e—one ef them in his hebita, Le ay the cargees more diffionlt to land, of Only siaty-wight deaths oosurred of which fifteen were of convurmptl of lurgt, and four of emallpes. be roale aud female | hap instantancenaly fromm Dow Orlengs 40 Eoucht ir eyrapethiee, in his Ctsliker, though towering «bine ~ w, , . - ‘ course. Upim the amival of the Mary Hart, with wih what the id wo ever protest, macy les | Kanaae’ deathe were equal ia sum! On y two deaths ogenered | from Fmuchfaw to Mor from Florida to Washington | thera. Jc ie for thie that bie hietory, atchough o-mpere- ‘AS m, opal eet te would have set’ tho prese | MreBurncot did, and T reply, that nomen heed the | !n axe Doster ie reveniven, (2 ove ,imrtor, osout- | eity, ‘The quoiides and inteltoet of charnster waleh | tv sy modern, bas elrcady sank a deoply In ther hearts pees aaoiamenere joo becom, fee bm nt. Our mow ha would be etopped=cur res’ -taace announcoment with more tortilerdon the: el in wards one and raven. enced evccery at the firat places oponed the way to J as enold legend. It is for tuie that his countrymen ap. we a6 fitted up on skates, which, with sails spre en‘. If Mareuchureta, then, aga State, has no right | ark the gentleman tf be means to use this | The Tampa Poninewloy weve that 9 ervarely ook wea: stand the most eminent- het upon which ‘he hes eciated hin co well, wad awarded h'm, whilo yet ho | *kims over the ice with considerable speed. ‘This igh'y-nine | ther ins nevor been eXperience! in eda until thie | hewn bis pam re, in jerm.ns newt, 10 wind as upon | lived, hat fame which) others have reaped ealy in « dis. | boat in doing the duty of e lighter, and the can is Stsees, nettber ta: Georgia a right to forse hess. The | emigrate from the South to Kansas will prove tra tora | wonier. Capt. Bontes De Goa iniorms us thet wharka | @ pecesial.” The prodenoe and wartrecs evineod in the | tant posiedity. Jt is for this, tom, fellowet.vons, that we, | being landed inan oxpeditions, antorpriaing manner. Perritories belong nol Vy the North or the South; they | to the land of their birth? If they ware traitors, Thay | have been froven to denth, during the Inte @ 1d ape, in | preparations for the detence of New Orloans, the politie | the people, aco here in saxiouy expectation by hall the sve net theirs. they aro not ours: they belong to we boll. | no censure to eas! upon thegentleman who v0 proviiuad | Charlotte barber. Such an event has not tranepieed, bo | bolemers which mugcented the wtiack of the 64 oF leoom- in but beautifal moaninent q . tine’ to perpetnabe | Writem Leyd Garton Cdltvore mm, Whist ia Gu rgin's positiva, as laid 0 wo ko ber plaorm | them AY We same thee, i deny the allegation that | hie Liewlwlge, for abo lest tir'y tie yours Hter, I8it-the power of orysuiatlon which, iw | the Wem an! festoren of a grea! lnadoe of the perme, | og tice ters Cextimn CAtworré a Roatuee ta pre@ Ler boptitutvoas into the Territories of the United | Does he mran to sey that eighty ont of every

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