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. _ THE NEW YORK HERA = WHOLE NO. 7345. MORNING EDITION—THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1856. PRICE TWO CENTS. epired by the cecarton, I will en*ienvor, in @ very brief | striking characteristic of Sonthern society, and we, thers- should be rece! bande moet tnhosoi- | object legally. them A SECESSION JUBILEE Maoner, to state some of the most tmportast events | tore, bovor our representative for bis course to this par- eye hele Bes es etal aa ee eee at Signe table ~ dled the Torrtery pare my thes think they Monld rovelve taews erat tnlg fend ovitnaterscongenemon nen which have lately taken piace in Coagress, aud sae course | tigular, We folt that he represented ua eorreuily witen, point of view you are us deep in the mire’as 1 am, for | very: ) Wit aM tmpudesce and AB arrogance only | weuld say, ‘We Con’t want any of them.’ But len then The Buchanan Democracy of South Caros | i2 reference to threats of our distiagaisbed ropresoata- | fatling to find Mr. Sumuer ewewhere, he walxed ito tho ibey gay tbat 1 am @ correct type also of yourselves. their presumptuous stupidity, stepped fer wart | be told they wore runaway and they woul t wel- * tive now present 68 the guest of thin cocesion, senate House, and animate. by the exact sentiment of | (Applause ) +t is a proud distinctiun ‘| and claimed the entire territor: arms. Worse | come them wifb open arms. If they would even abolisk ln Fellow citizens, we tive m eventful times. the repab- | hig constituency, mado tho traducer of his Siste and sm glad to . But ai not wired by slavery, five negroes would be to five wikite Pisin anti Hor, whioh if "wor, the lvertion of sho repabic, are | blood ek the dt of the Cambor “which, be bad dese. | ie now my wood parle | — asin’ | aed ee wena ep theatre po pe ger. crated; but we felte en more ne Splendid Banquet to the Hon. Preston | ,, 1% crest queetion out of which riso tho convulsions | stood up io ibe ball of justice and wala, * Th» ret politi me ag dere ae i vagy rcp tuat a abey hich, toa point, It was fnapioueble os coee, the corsa gonrtaw, that disturb and shake the country as with an earth | cal lesson which my ripening faculties fully compre. cespise it ‘ww that of the buil , agitated man toat our State ever 8. Brooks, quake is the question of African sitvery,i1 which our | nended and appreciated, was tae high wora! and sootal : e at for God Almighty in bis in | by sul in the of we word Calhoun, the Cestinies are boune up forever. In compurisin wits this | ooligation of Srery citizen to beod himself to the ma- | one of the greatest blemir os | “orinis.”” £ ocurae tame of My, Calhoun, thas a Pocepeapg: Sy =A ype Se ree nme ee | ae ee he Oe ie Seemann Rt pet may | to onal ral gel ng A von Caro- | crisis is comimg, and’ it is upon us in tie year 1600, & States 0! lon eb) \y ju stieuttios, alavery, W! youth, which are tan y the expertenc» judg " n Gold Goblets, ‘Sliver Goblets and a Fresh | others do not. and those which do not seem revrived taat | iacot of riper svarr, Laobuolt aay cane vo tne judgment | ee, PuClCeah et. Y ca: | | ataeeenate mapememeniones cabemeeamama Supply of Canes. every new State which may be udded to the coofederasy | of the Court.’’ " When we beard éhis, we felt thas in the you are represented. ‘This mea wil take that shape, aad they will serie ‘hosg shall agree with them upon this subjent, Four Torrito- | person of our represen was embodied not only the | bp at the Norh from the ; the | principles which will inevitably lead tot, we have tee copenemnaerieaetaunantes ries bave Been acquired since vhe aicption oF tue coaatt | epint to recent wrone auc inault, bat also that other | Knginnd, bas brea growine thiak.| |splets eibe T believe see hawe.-- Windus ieee ae Terrific Disunion Xpeeches by Mr, Brooks tution—some by purchase and sumo by conquost, aud | spirit—no less creditable—of saubordmation w law at Re first it was got a8 Pat c 8 ‘Whet iy ove condi*tont “institution forced upos pe y i the exciting question which has ugitated the country | fully constituied authority, which i# only elimi | hand -mow it is of the size and propor govern | us first by England, and, ‘the Butler, and Senator Toombs, we Curing the last session of Congrest 13 in reference to | ated im ite highest degre by Christian civil | threulening with ite trunk to pull down tha ‘very Dp! had tho | of Virginia, forced upoo soil Somes Of ’ 4 slavery in theee Territoriee—the common property of the | zation and a highiy ouitivated state of society. | four government, and iavoive the country, possiviy, io | ¢rterprise to go there hed the right to say to out. | Union, who sold off ty us became prilsnthre- " a States of this Unton. ; For the first time in the history of the country, @ per | ruin. I: bas sogrow: and expanded that treads have | sider * You must not ecter into or medals with our | pic, and’ which bas becoras our socisty, what: Fremont’s Election to be the Signal for In order to have a clear view of the prinolples involved | copal rencontre betwoen members of has been | been sundored and sections arrayed against each ochorin | aflairs.”? And if you or { were to form a company and | ure we todo? What are we to de when we arc oy aon R in this controversy, it wili be pece sary to go back a | magnified wto national impor , aud taken up asa War | » hostility which the cople of America, either North or | g° to Kanrae—I put the question w you—would you let | the dominant party at party which hee Secession and a Robber’s March upon litle; and Gen. McGowan then gives s briel history of | cry by one of the parties of the Unio. Anold, once re | South, fee! to uo people in the workt bet trraveleas, 1c | aay obo interiore'to tell you wat vc de?” te regard to | charge of tho House of taiives, aod which ts the the Treasury. the purchase of Louisiana, the compromise of 1820, and | epectable and respected commonweaith—Massachisetts | has divided churebes. It bas done more. {i haa oroken | Texas, although our money was taken for tt, the groat | raniees compound of villanous isis tietever ofénded 3 eames the compromise measures of 1850 TPrecipltantly and without eviseaoe, undertook to pass | down political parties. iti now ali-cousuiniug aud all. | Wrong wos dove by ‘Teme borseif, She mate ths cow | tho nostris of any mam—that their iret measures wild * Now, fellow citizens, continued Gen, MoG., wa are in | resolutions of censure upon our representative and of im absorbing. It is overshadowing evorythin; It runs | pact om one side, and the general goverament on the ; Volunteers Enlisted---Brooks to Head | the midet of tho third goat excitcm-nt upon th's subject. | pertinent requiremeet upon Congrens. Tho act of our | ‘nto-every act of legiiatoe, tom'tholoced te the bign, | oiser. Tilauk the principle was obpresdee soc hr ariges ip the following manner:— Another portion of the | representative, prompted by 2 burping sense of wroag | ot. You canct clean eut & harbor—von caanot build a | ‘hat case to justify war aud disunion; but I \hink the the Column, Loulsinna purchase bad been sertied and it became neces. | and by @ bigh and nobie tinpulse, was characterized as ® | custom boure—you cannot publish 4 book without having | berdehips were somewhat exaggerated, Now, fellow tary to provide for it w Territorial government. | Ac- | cowarciy outrage; and the Congress of the United States | the questicn of slavery or moth einvery oatrouting votes citizens, a8 to the democratic pary, of which I ama sort be to abolish slavery in the District probibit the carrywg of a slave fro Alabama, from North Ceroliax into South to pass laws providing that no other slave State ever be adopted into Union, that all the Territorea cordingly, Congress in 1854 passed the Kansas and Ne- | was required to expel him as unworthy of a seatinit. | in the Bouse of Representatives. Aad way? of a member, and not very much of ona, unlesa votin; unorganized shall Le ¢rganized as Torri i WHICH IS THE DISUNKON PARTY ? braeka bull, providing governments for the Territories of | The black republican perty inthe House of Representa | under our system of collecting revenues, the-exparts, ae | for Buchapan—which I shall do tnaices tae'ono—! toll you | Now’are you going to remain quiet ueder on tart tae tbat name. These Territories area part of the Louisiana | tives took up the charge as an element of agitation—em- cording to our doctrine, pay duty on the imports and fil | { am doubtful of the democracy north of Mason and Gur money and your blood oxpended for territory oast- &o., &o., ko. purchase, and being north of the Nive of 36 deg. 30 min., | blazoned upon thelr banners their owa shame, aud en- | ihe treasury. It has contiuued to grow in magnitude, tn | Mson’s line. They will stand by the constitut{ou, bat into the free soil gales, are you qoing patently to watt ‘fn were subject to the Missouri restriction; aud taxsmuch as | ceavored to expel him from Congress as unworthy of a violence, in all absorbing importanca, until at jast it has | eateh any one of in a corner, avd avk him if slave. | until the free soll yoke is put wpon yourselves? Fellows agers ‘he Miesouri live had, subsequent to the admission of | seat amovget them. They tailed in their wicked ogee] ceveloped itself tu Kanrus, where citizens of tho same | TY bo right, and he will tell you, ‘a0.’ tell you @ man | ciulzepe, you are nut going todo it. The people of the \From the Daily Times report. } Missouri, been abardone)| in re erence to Territory south | but to our view it is almost to bo regr:tted that | ,cvermment tiave shod cach vther’s bioot. May God | °/ thot kind w not always be trues. Iwane aman to | South are not going to do lt In 1860 1 told may friende— The great banquet and presentation ‘0 Preston 8, | of that line, it was thought just to y the same rule to | they did ful. tf that mongrel crew of biack spirits | grant that the few drops which pave been shod in | 9° the whole Rog om that subject. Now, fellow citizeus, the | and it was tho oply prophecy o f mine that ever was fal- Brooks, got up by his coustituents of the Fourth Con. | Territory north of that tine—io deat wita Kaoras and Ne- | aud grey had succeeded in expelling our repre- | Karo sy Dot foreehacow a coming storm, in which | “Fmocratic party was somewhat Jeepoaribin—ney, itwas | Slled—thet thoy aeed not be alarmed about an issue; thas gressionai district of South: Carolina, took piace on Frid bragka as Utah and New Mexico nad been doalt with ea, without precedent, with he’ © passions of men, fannet by fanaticism, and | 190 very grea: extent rosvoneible—for that act. And yct | kvaves would come us tast as blackberries in the spring ‘the 8a imst., at Ninoty 21x depot, on the road between | Hence the Kansas and Neb: aska act, whica was prepared. thout propriety or devens pretext, it | waryiog upon thosy who figut for hee homes aod fire | ‘t's a party with which South Carohne will now affiliet time, and stronger ones thay we had then. We bave the Columbia and Greenville, aud about two hundred and | proposed and urged through Congress by the heroic Judge v been au ostracism as honorable | yidee—for the hoaor of their men, andthe virtue of their | aod I think rightly, The demcoratic party bas oadeana leave Us pow, and how are we to moot it? I tel five gpiies from the city of Charleston, The affair bad Dougan, of linols—a non-slaveholding Stato-—repealed | to bim and as tmmortal in history as that of Aristides, | women—may revel unooutrolled, and drench this meek | the aflaire cf this pation, from its organiaatiog, with euc- | you, fellow-citizens, from the bottom of my heart, that Deen for several weeks in prepsrativa Committees were | expressly the Missouri reetrietion, and gave tho same | who was expelled (rom his own city ayowedly because | ea) ih in torrente ofhumean blood. We must judge of a | Cees and glory, and under its tnilueneo tho greatness of | the only modo which I think available for meeting it @ cupeiniet im the various villages turoagaous the district | rights to the people of those Territories ag had been pre- | he wag the best wan in it. Tue effort to expel Mr. party ae we Judge of an ermy; we must take iis leaders, | the sountry hasincreasea. Our numbers, our wealth, | gust to fear the constitution of the Uni‘ed States, trample @ raise (ouds, ariange the prelimip»tiee, and appoint | viously given to the people of Utan and New Mexico, | Prooke was a political manmuyre of a fanatical faction ‘What bi ’ att: * gommittecs of maoegcment. Every boty entered wd into | This was taircealing. Te was noting moro tnan sheot | ‘hey wished t0 weazen tho democratio party by wana Sear ees cod eetey Co ota ea ae tenes aaae Dustuess com amore; the people grey ent! justica, equality and rig It was but another ap. | ing him, and they wished to strengthen the black repub- | What bave wo to expect from a party, on contributed to the rievance to which I have referre About it, aud money pourrd in by handfuls, and the se- | plication of their own rule. Yet the passuco of this | licans by povoting to the ecros on Me. Sumaer's bead, and | Jeaders has spokes of tes constitution of your'couatey ase but it dio po uncer the” asrurance. that jasloe veral scb-committees met, and wound up their business | bill produced one of the fiercest howls which has ever | ihe Fry he frag ech, frog soll and Fremoot. If tam’ seo- | jopgue with aeath and a coverant with heil; and another | Would be done m future to the South—that prac oy making the following appointments:— been extorted from abolition They abandon the | tional faction wish to make our representative and Mr. | cf whom iavokes, the “higher law’? to authorizs him to | tically, our interest was not #0 in the President, Dr. S. V. Carn, Missouri line in order, through the operation of | Sumner the exponents reapsotively of the two parties, | violate a constitution which be has eworn to ton | Territory acquires from Mexiro as it waa in priacipla. another rule, to take from us half of California and | we certainly have no objection. It they aro willing to | (he book issued to mau by iho Most High himselt—and | sud that they would give vs laws afterwards whieh would VIC PRE ADENTS. nearly all of Mexizo lying south of that ling: but | accept ax the living emboximent of their principlos @n4 | another of whom («bom It does no. became m0 to speak | be better than tue mocifications we claimed in those laws. Col whon we apply the same rule to territory north of tha: | their party Mr. Cbarles Sumuor, with ail bis falenoot— | cr but interms of respect) who has recen iy said, that | The propoeed measures were that they would g've vitality iine, and in doing se ride down the Missouri 1 mn, | with all fhis bypocrisy—with all his cowardico—and | when they «lected thoic Northorn President they would | #29 force to that principle of the Constitution which re- they cry out sacred compact sud violated fal oy | witb all “the ceep soars of thunder Intrenched upoa hix | yur into harness the slavery Senate; and ifthey remsted | “vires fugitives from labor to be surrendered, and fartaer, raise a yell of vintuous indignation, shriek fur frecdom | forebead,’’ we » i! accept az the exponent of our section | their strength or their intluence, that they would grind | ‘acy said to ue—‘ Don’t reriet—don’t divide the Uaton on and threaten revolution. 3 end our party the pailant representative of the Fourth | them between the upper and nether millstones of avolt- | thts issue, ard wo will repeal tho Missouri restriction line, Scarcely bad the Kansas and Nebraska bil! passet Con Congreasioua! district of South Varolina, Hon. Preston | tion power—that mun who impudently and tmploualy | which, upon principle, is more odious to you thaa any- grese, when there arose @ faction at the North compozed | 8. Brooks who, when provoked beyond endurance by | psked, as representing, tho sentimest of this ple, ‘thing tn this bill’? Now, it caunct be denied that the of the odds and ends of every conceivable extravagance | landers beaped upon his State aud absent trien hattne | un anti avery constitution, &D anti-slavery Biblo. an: Northern cemocracy, wich ali their faults, magoauimous- end absurdity—a fusion of all the vilo isms of acorrupt | manliness to pun: the other of the Okt caning } on ovtislavery God? What can you expect from | ly, honoratly andtaitbtully fustilled their pledge They did 2 our commerce alt show us that, with all our abuses, under foot, and ferm a Southern confederacy, every State pon us, and become a part’ of the warp of our rooiay? | We are a great people Now. this democratic. part C fod or whwr vill bea slaveholding State, (Loud and Cheers.) [believe it, as I stand in the fase of my 1 believe it op my responsibility to you ag your representative, that the only hope of the ‘South is tm tha South, and that the only available means of making that hone effective is w cut asunder the bonds that te us togethers and take our separate position in the family of natimes These are my opinions. Thoy bave always been my opinions. J heave been @ disunioniss from the a could think. Bet a0 one Siate can dissolve this Uutem. I Lee i ie deference to Peewee bay mind, as m riotism, and as much good fecling tor their fellow aon ag I ‘have—I think, I say, thet the separaie action of aay one State would retard the move mint. Our friends have told us to make the issue, ana ‘the others in seif defence would be constrained to coma tous, Why, I have beard some of ggg la ye 7, 1 COMMIT:ZE OF INVIT TION and uneasy society—whose double purpose seems tohave | Aim in the Senate Olu od , ant | them? el . | give you a togitivesiave law. which it nowon your statato | South will eubmit it Fremont be elected. Now, if shat { Col. A Simkms, ‘Or. W. L. Temploton, been, and continues to be, first, to overthrow tho demo | then, luke c law loving and law abtdang citizen, as he 28, sud- | Sees tren Ye bein’ ne bee "Senay tolheey | Pook’: ‘hay tid topest. tae Misnourl line, witicu. was an | bo, bow to the panes of Goa will they coma te le it tee Dr. E. B. Calhoun, Thos. Thompson, Esq., cratic administration and get control of the government | miiled himself to the judgment of tie iaw. Tho efortio | pone af the gi'ta of prophecy: I don’t pretend to be a | insult to every map South of it. And what bas been the | mont be elecied. No one State in this Union can break is Gen. Jas Gillam, A. ©. Garlington, Esq., ja order to repeal the Kansas and Nebraska act; and se- | expel our rey ‘eptative failed, but pending a resolution | statesman; but I am identified with your tnterests, éflect of it? What has been toe effect of the repeal o’ a | up; and! would not risk a failure; let us wait ike a Capt. K. Cunningham, Geu. P. Quattiebum, cond, through the instrumentality of abolition ait socio | to censure him, be resigned hls geat. Kaowing his con | god I am a man of commonsense I's0o what it is | restrictive line which a mujority of Northern men would | good soldier who reserves his fire uatil he can see CoMnurTTss Ov ‘hecernow. ‘ies, to mould and shape the institutions of Kansas soas | stituency, and being unwilling that they should be ¢ie- | coming to, and let me teil you that political questions | have pase’ had it not got the vote of a man Soath of the | white of bis foo’ and then the ball where Col. B. T. Watts, ‘maj. J. K. Vanoe, to exclude slavery, whether they are able to repeal the | honored in bis person, be appested from a black repub. will bave, in a very short ume, w be seitied, not | ec? What Las been the effect of that act of justice, | will be most fatal. "e must have co operation of the } Col. A.M Smith, Col. J. W. Lt sston, jaw or not. . ‘ican House mJ Represe rath) to thom. tay ve | by statesmen in conclave, but to bs cut Iike the Gordian | Megnanimity wud faith tn the democratic party? Why, | Sowk. We must have the sympathy and the aid of the + Dr. Robert E. Campbel!, W. C. Moragne, Fsq., Tho Kaneas and Nebraska bil Bhs a gives equal | already justified his con ence and sncereet course | uot, with the sword. Itseems in the providence ot Got, | #4 my distnenisbed friend has aid, it has raised a how! | States interested with ourselves. Their moral support ie Jas. M. Boxter, Esq., Josenh Abuey, Esq., rights to all the States, and under the ops ration of whish, | by the most extrao’ inary bg M iol ¥, a3 vor | jhat the institution ef slavery, which has so interwoven | tue like of which was never heard before. Mon who | worth moro to us than the soldiers they will send tm. Capt. Weliam ‘hun, ohn Sayley, and which eae, we are enabiod to euter Kausas with gs Place in this country = y bana mously rising wy itself wich our social fabric, that if 14 falls we tall with it, | heve repudiated tho tne—who rejected it twice when it Let Soutn Carolina stand, in the language of a gontlemam Gap. Jf Parks, our property, and Oght for our insuitutions upon the very | und re electing him, without bis returwtag to them at all. | has to be determined upon the America coutiaent The | Was eilcred to tet is run out to the Pacitic—who have pant. | whom I have always known to be a who bes ‘H A. Stallworth, Col, B. W. Bail any ay? signed by Mr. Pierce, the democratic President | or being absent from his seat wore thin 4 brief peried | propiem of ery uluisy has to pe setded on the Amori- | ¢d and thirstea for tersitory—ay, every part of the terri- | more talent than ho gets credit for—'* Let Carclian a United States, and wasa leatiog measure of hig | of recreation. During the whole course of this alfair We | can continen Things aro working to a crieis, anda | tory south of the line—thoee were the men who raised J administration. It constitutes the most imp2rtant plank | bave watched our representative with great aud in- | prisie which affects not only your order and your in. | the ery of piiguted faith, ¢tsappointed honor, and broken in the demoocratio piatform, and upon it the existing issucs | creasing anxicty. We have heard his gallant aot ia de terests, but it affects your vitslity—your very oxistence | compact. And of these pscific gevtlemen, ono whom it was of the day are made up. fence of his State and blood heratded as a crime, and em- | asa pecple, The South, immediatel, the euccessful stand ag en armed knight, with bis lance not a leather quivering in his plume.’’ One ot touching, and | think, one of the most solemn in Roman history is the acovunt of the interview bets Hy itik ! a a Oe eee i and blood braided at & crime, and 7 after By olefortane to at by in the, House of Representatives, F oor a ieee oe ‘ellow citizens, we approve the act of our immediate | blazoned upon the pi pers nok ropublicaa: | war of the revolution, etood with twelve pro slavery Staios | “4, within three days, as ] know of my own poraonal | Coriolapus an mother. He eget iy, 4 ropresentative aud alatingatahed guest in voting for tho | wm. We have seu that bis ack disgracing thotr oham- | pyainrt one auti slavery The canoe ainet thom her | krcwlecge, originate & paper walsh was ultimately the | lberately, and cruelly expelled irom his native city, He Kaneas and Nebraska bill. We approve the of | pion has ‘from the bottom stirred the hel! within” these | poeu waged sometimes slowly, by gradual and art(ulap- | basis of the organ‘zation of the Kaveas Kmigrant Aid Soci- | took refuge with her enemies, and by bis merit reached : Fraoklin Pieroe in giving bis stgusture tot. We appre. | nbolitiorists, We bavo secu bimi in continual poril, bovet | proaches—sometimes by an ‘affected retrocesston, thon | ety. To that they throw in their contributions, and soon | the command ol thelr armies. He appeared before the ciate his heroic struggles tain and execute tt, and | by sri € crew, in and out of Congress, and we koew | gain by a rapid plunge forward. The South, with a | raised a large fund. Apd to do what! To cefoat the pro- | walle of Rome asthe commander of the hostile forces, Stanmore Brooks, we will give our support to those wno are committed to | that, Wanted the courags to mect him face to face | piagnenimity more generous thau diacreet, ans, time | Vi*ions of the Kansas Nebraska bill, whicl. costains the | end reduced ber to tke last extremity. in their ageuy Jornsou Sala, uve all the powers of the genera! government to carry | end cye to eye, some of them were not too good to exe | ajior time, avbmitted to compromisss, every one of which | very principle upon which the American Revolution was sent wed 4 Dr. W. W. Davis, out that act in good faith. We will vote for James | cute their threats of assassination vpon him In the true | jus becn ge ber a ttad under the dith rib, ‘The fiest | fovght—the right of the people to cecide local quostion: , and Henry Beard, Buchanan for President—not in any spirit of man wor- | spirit of their chivalry ho has even been invited totra | y.istake le by the peop'e of the south was made by | for themselves. They contributed money & sent vat em!- his infancy aad ‘Dr. J. W. Catboun, Simeon Coancy, sbip nor because we approve everything which he pro. | verse the enepry’sfcoun'ry—to wavel hhandred miles | the patriots of the Revolution. Tuese great aud gronts to resist that law—to act ia contravention of a sts. ‘nd the honor ef Maj. R A. Grifiia, Capt. W. Corder, mises to do or yi bave done—but matoly bomase be ts | towards the Vals of Niagara, aud thus fall into the | men—far greater—poasibly petter—than we Pat ‘be, | tote law of Congress; and men, membors of the House ot the city where he was born, He James Creswell, Jones ry the bearer of the demooratic standard, upon whioh is ia- | ambush of their spirited avd patriotic heroes, under | oud doing vetter possibly we would have doae un. | Representatives, who bad sworn on tho Word of Gad to breast that bad nureed him, aud with R. M. White, T. C. Griftin, scribed the repeal of the odious Missouri restriction and | the miserable prevexs of enjoying the “cool aud Wo | 2% the preciso cizxcumstances, were yet wanting in our | Support the constitution, undertook. of their own act. as | » bursting heart sail:—“ dy mother, you have saved WN. W. Stewart, W.N. Biake, the equal rights of ali the Stes ia reverence to slavery | frosbing breezes of the Clifton House, in Canada.’ We ee, for the eeales have been removed from oar | members of the House, and with their oaths atili upon | Home, but you have lost your soul’? “And to the J. W. Fooshe, T. © tApacomb, ip tbe Territories. And, fellow citizens, at the #ame | bavo observed ali this with anxiety, but it was an anx- | ¢, no mo Ten thirgs pot as they enw them. Tho drst | them, to tmouleate treaxon upon these they could dupa. | man who, on such en vocation, could stifle the prompt- * al King, J. W. Child, Ume, and for the same reasons, we wil! war to the knife | lety overbalanced by. admiration. We nover looked to | pi\iske wat made on the 13ta July im the year 1787, | They sept ot the rag tag-aud Lodtail of the lowest classes | igs of ambition, repress the feel'ngs of vengeance, and ée G. W. ii Howay. against that m’ crew which like the buccanter Marga the scene of straggle but we saw the nod white | xien Virginin, y ng to the love “of Li do) ve im ths purlieus of thelr cities; and what was | rgbt because it wes right, and give 1 the world such am Marshal of the Day, Coi. T J. Roberts. half fonatic half , with mingled = piume of our gallant ropresentative waving prow q ore Voted, magesuigoorly surrendered hor Nuthwestern | ts result? Woy, the people of Missourt welcomed thom }| exemple of persoual heroism, and keen appreciation DEPUTY MANSIALS, curse, fights under the Back banner of Blact tam | wont and proudiy plainest ovr All, oud, animate! by bie Heit ablch “tvs. Slates alone, were | kiudlv; they give tom everytiiug Wo ned to thar | tha bighext of ail bucan virides-love of the mother wee Maj. ZW. Carwile, Capt John Boozer, —that motley mob of free silers, Fremoniers, free niggers | spirit in the conicet, our waichword bas been Bushanan but from which the Yanieos hay } comfort. They waxed fat upon the generosity of tbe | bore him, and of the country in which be was born. if Capt. Wm. Perryman, Capt. W. W. Griffin. and freebooters—(applause)—tha rolver band, headed by | and Breckenridg’—Kansas and Brooks, (Loud cheers.) out of another. When the smal | iveouriana Bot they had their work todo. They com- | the sovereignty of a State coult be embodied in te the tipstart, renegade trastor, Fremont, who, of all the mon | dir. Brooks—(here Mr. Hreoks rose)—Sir, the loug com said {0 the {larger—““Why, you, with | H.eaced threatenivg on the Missourl border what they | form aud proportions, J, {n imitation of the ete ee oy cuibe I have ever known or heald of best feserves the indiz. | tirued stevggle ir whice you have lately beeu engaged t# Territory will overshadow us; wa havo a great | Would do to the Miasouriane who suould venture on | Coriolauus, would go as ambassador to our aster, . T. 8, Blake, v a - Calhoun, rant execration of the vanquithed patriot; — Low over, und it becomes my pisasing duty, in the name, | Goni to pay ; surrender your lan therefore, to the | coming over to Kaneas with slaves. Now, thoso are | erd Srowny myseit at hr feet, 1 would implore her ‘ James W. Richardson. s ‘dhs, Portion, ie tate aat doeee ahteaas comen aud on the part of your fol ow citizens here assembled, to | common fund; reduce your size to the proper proportions, | tbe men who aro responatble for every act of violence | the glories of her past history, by the hopes of her naih tive mall o uuert, @ oe to o- Some hidden thunder. th the stores of heaven, Weloome you back aga'n withim tho ismite of your own t we can live harmonioasiy”—it was dogo it was | tbat bas been or that may be done in Kansas. And yet | by the chivalry of her mei purity of hor bis a fartbe ques, ae me Ked with uncommon wrath, to biast the wretch pratefu end proud Soutn Carolina, whose character you of generority on the part of Virginia, but tt was a | tLeee enormitios are perpetrated by them in tho name | the pride of birth, and the hovor of knighthood and bia, at ti 3 @ groan A a Who owes bis greatness to his country’s ruin ave cefended, and whore spirit, as is illustrated take. That mistake was incorporated ia the ordinance | ©! the Moat High God, aud tho sarctions of religion | manhood, to rise like @ gigat fom | lethargy inte Sutival, From suarine, troops 0 omnis people (Loud and proionged cheers.) throughout the Keyolotion, and more lavely on the Held= 187. The fatal error was the provision by which | S70 invoked to bless them. Not coutont with that, | which the red dovils and tho biack devils have on horseback 2 wegoas, poured in contvaually from Under the Kansas and Nebraska act Southern omi- | of Mexico, you bave #0 well di#plaved, maintained and avery or involuntary gervitude, except for crime, was | eter being fairly beaton at aa ciecion where tho wilt | charmed her, and et-ike a blow for Soathern im- ever. side, through lanes and roade aot delde, until, at , soraa Wal : ome back to the Fourth | ¢ a r tbe i ard sration poured into Kaneas. Nobraska was yielded to | bovore: elcome, sir, welcome back to the Four! for ever pronibited there, t was & tack ackaowlod, of the people was bonestiy taken im regard to the pm eee are oanret Sane Aemennnee on 1 Be ‘North without s mtroggle; Kaneas, ‘which, by sis 2oft | Congresstovnl district of South Carolin, whoxe principles | *,4) Tach plavery waa of ttecif wrong And bare lot ue | ubject of domestic slavery, ibey contest the seat ia the Sigs formed about occ thind of the enteo audience, | a%¢ climate, % adopted to slats late, soon became Southern Zou bave ro wall ifoatssied, and whoke venorablo ani | (yon that ary people who aistrast it no tot. pre House, of General Whitdeld’ who ta the pro-slavery caa- ladies form for thetm th front, of the platfores, | % ts feelings Slavery was estabiuled by laws of the Ter <uored foo you Dave defunded at the peril of your | (o qcjend it. I tell you more than thai—-those «roar Gidate, These 'ree #oiiers send the Governor of the Tor f Beata were set apart for them in front v ritorial Legislature, and t& was seen that she waa about to | Life. The Fourth Congressional district now eurolls your | eoéa men di¢ qT ritory a wretch named Reeder, to contest Wuitdeld’s gent, ' and upon the ground, not that Reeder bad gota ‘najority cependence and iberty, rave the Sovth. (Loud that tt is noble men who cons tog the patriotgm, aud havi the merce of my distinguisned friead Toemls) from Georgia, who has hon a iy Hf nto the Unison “s ‘Pilg | pame in the lorg list of distingvisbed statesmen and bday oh Ge Amatee tho seals wore arranged ong HEE ET Ee eeueel troten ans thay concen Tat | Sioeml WSN have green Mar sanema, Sad bape sue bores Z protiinbie im Vir, | of the votes, Out thet the Legislature which bad ordered | compliaiented mo by bis presence on this — ee ee were now prosecuting in that Territory civil with one acclaim, to give you aseuranoe of a uaan!mous vyled the Great Apodtte | to eleckiow was, iteelf, an illegal body, And yet that Go- | I almest feel iike making my appoal t wv 5 In open violation and contemptuous disregard of both the | re election, aan’ early day, to that Congress which we the authority of the now his influence with the peopie he rey to order that election, the institut vyrnor, ax the representative sed ‘he institution, They thought * fnew Sm mtaees Wiese peas Se neal Organic act and the laws of the Territory, theyjset upa | ink you worth, and where we intend youshall re | \\ was impoverishing their soil aud interfering with their | Ualted States, end commissione ie Fs. day asceaded the pl overnment of thelr own. A fow renegades from civil. | "ain, ‘without fear, favor or affection, or aug drent | \reeperity, But the finger of the Almichts which hag | sd certified, under bis own band ant seal, to a quoru:n | God thet | cou’! hear that clarion voice of bison this dered to conduct Ur. Groces and the taviied geaste to ¢ Ged society met at Topeka, and claiming to ect for the | whatever of the couecqu noes. (Appiause.) Wale | iv He leveress on this ineveation on core cecastene irae | ct that Legislature, that they were legally ‘elected Gen, | tinal tcmue, as f omoe heard {t to a persona! fasue, Wham biow was struck jor Southern independence, 2 be struck more successfully, aud when he * bance end exctaimed “lt ts at the right time, the right pace !'' (Creat cheers.) Now, fellow | have told you very fravkiy and undieguisecly believe the only hope of the South is in diewleing the which connect sith the qorerninent—ia seyarating the hexiy Srom the dead carcuse, These are my opinions. in that very importantly seoming invontion, | Whitteld, however, because be was & pro-slavery man in - 2 whole Territory, adopted « constitution exeluding slavery. | Come, thrice welcome, buck from the field of strive to | eno, is viewb! ree eee pede : 44 This produsmenen porphin y ‘eesombly prey ‘othe | the sweet and peaceful Dorom of your family, winery | the colton gin—cott a itrelf being an indispenenblo pro- | t<utiment, war denied bis seat and refused admiesion to vey! my are shed to the cad. iak Bren ‘bey ‘ook black republicans had the bardihood to present to Con | vender the very shadows of the old Star Fort of Ninel duct, an article of necessity next to bread, for the psop'e | bis place on the floor of the House. He was thers, it is Busic. pony ab Sotaeiinn N, gress, and to urge the a {mission of Kansas ag‘a free State. | "x, you may enjoy repose for a short period, and im- | of the world. The fremers of our constitution and the | Ue, for a litte time, but did not retain his seat. On the their piaces, amid the hozzas ne i pe wry pod ‘hina Whilst thie extraordinary application was pendiag uy bide again Lio true spirit of the olden tome, of which you | members of the Con‘ederate Assembly never helievod | other band, bis contestant wes pormitted to draw his per pn Cte ag Alay: Dope alter me canoe, Congrees, Mr. Charies Sumner, a deastor from Massacha, e shown yourself #0 cobic an exponent. And foa'ly, | that the institution would be it i now--the | Ciemas a member, althoogh he did not get one ina han- ee ee eee at tae eeeces | setts, rose in hia place in the Senate, and dolivered a permit me in the uame of the Abboyville district—a | strcogest element in the of one haif of | dred votes. ‘Thos your money was taken, by acortempti one wes ronal pees en = Jed speech, us it was afterwards labled, in tavor of | portion of the district you represent in Congress—to"yre: | (uis"Lnion; nor did they even appreciate or bevove that | dio party trick, to pay Reodi | if ri eolely becanse ho was op- 1 feedings the conducted themselves wich undevia. | To¢ Caneag, ‘woich as boom characterized as “ibe | sent you with this beautiful goblet, an w furtser proot | \t would be the doue of ‘contagion, tus sicaggle'in | Toeed to Whitiehl, who waa pro-aluvery in hisseotiraents, | StbD0t Be carried out by us alche. | I know t—i ’ a! a . J OD, ., > As ag blo man, it is left for me to take ext best tung propriety and decorum. (Ate seek so adjourn | most ua-Amorkai and unpatriotic specch ever | tbat your conduct 1 approved. ‘Tbe pure gold of that | regurd to which hes threatened to diaso.ve tnevsunds | Senin, it was found that by cbauoe tho’ Presidential lec: cooaneimesindits ts Gee tet ahes, teas aa von eee @ — erento’ upon the care of the mombere of that high let is emblematic of the proud spirit which itis given | which they united so putrioticatly in tying, The next | Lon, which devoives on the successful party the distribu- | FCN police tn any sort of Memooracy. If T was partook of @ very plentiful +l ly.” The speech contained a gross and unpro- phold—a spirit Which you must excuse mo for saying, | mistake, fellow citizens, is that mace in tho constitution | §on of $80,009,000, might come into the House. The dan- | Commander of an army I never woula ‘a sen‘ine a so ren Gothed to order af 33 o’elouh, yoked ,libel upom the State of South Carolina, been tried in the furnace seven times heated, | iweif. Tn addition to the acknowledgment and admission | @°F arising from tho vote of one State m erefore be | \entd not swear that tary seright., Bot we must tale Rol ny ty iat Nags Booth Pre- | and thé character of our beloved and distinguished Se: d to be the genuine metal, That testimonial bas | made by the ordinance of 1787, to the effect, by implica in all. The casting of a single voto of one maz of ove | things as we find them. Neither you nor [can bave the Cimoty, by Tr. Cause, WG tate cs oom. nator, Judge Butler, who was thon absent. Tbis Mr. | & valve beyond ite intrinsic worth. You wii! approciate | \ion at least, that tho institution was an evil, wo gave, oF to might be equally momentous. | According'y they | right always done in oar private domeatic relations. We rived honor aol On om nro, mot to day to Pay | Sumner, a0 far.aa I bave been able vo leare, a neopayte | it, rir, for something more than the gol of whish tt ts | ubey gave, tive States to this Union which they keew | (mp upam excuse that Allen, of illinois, hadwome tnfor- | (Coot make ihe wile do just as we want her om Rae a ae eee Ned eee ad cake te. | in politic, « narrow i senviment, without | compered. Tako.{!, Keep it, and band it down ag an hetr- | would rapidly grow from Terriiorios into dtats, and must | Mality in his election thoogh it was proven toovery honest | Gocasion. (Laughter, especially amoug the tadies: ive in the Congroas of toe ited, Statens and thls de | one impulse of a gentleman, or the first qualyfcation of a | loom to your children, who wilt doubly vaine it as axift | 0 reprorented on tho floor of tho Senate and’ Moura of | Mind that he wag’uirly electod, Yet, lest he sbouldauthia | Ws must, 1 sepent, take things as we find theme pepe dl | ppd ty FO Eg ad to ali that, the greaiext back. | to you. and as an evidenoe that they posses the im, | Ropresentatives. ‘The next mistake, T repeat, was in tho | vote tor Buchatian, they ejected him from the halla of |; ‘am willing Ww give the democrats a fair trial have sores St Ba macen general AF pA tga had the impudence to way in tho So bie honor of an illustrious name, Inthe same | constitution itself, and it consisted in requiring aa the | Congrees, and send him whistling back to fiknots. Now, | of their experiment, I shall vote for Mr, Buchanam: tative, but So my Fest and A ioe the United sates that the conatitution of South me purpore, aliow me, oa bol basis Of reprerentation Sonth, five negroes to count but | fellow citizens, their obief act was in rogard to myseil’ | ing when I say that, you know 1 have got no yoo, clearly manifest that Ss Saenz angrove a that ass wees is republican only 1a name,” and that her inten, Lawrenge district, to prosout | three votes, while the samo negroes ca ried worth of | | thought proper to violate the lawn of the Iand as pro- | shail eupport hi honestly, and fairly and zealously, — pF vey cine OE a Be AM ae “pbameful imbectlity from slavery ‘was confessed | yout’ ie cane, with the inscriy ion : the line of separation would coant the same aa five white | viding against tho commission of assault and battery. I | fuel do it, however, exactly as @ go0d- a | Renate Chamber of the United states. That, gentlemen, | yuroughout the Revolutim.”” He not only anid this of our Use knock-down arguments, uier—and white gentiomen st that. ‘Thero was £9 poass | Kaew I, was otoenable to the courk, I thought 1 would | fican coniigues tog7e medicise te & pallens when | = Wawa novie, Foe Soyrre ben TR enich we want | St#te, but be indulged in the moet vulgar abuse of one of To the Hon. Preston 8. Drooks. io the requirement. It was atrick—it was aconcession, | be fined, and | thooght 1 would Pave been put tn jail. | \uows he is dying. If he @ « kiad man, he canue. oon eee trality in hie’ Caton, or our indepen, | Ber Senalore, a citizen of thie Congressional district, acd | oud and relterated cheers. it was a concussion to thore who bad been thirsting to | 1 would have submitted. 7 did submit. According to | youn’ the family feolings by sofusing to do so. He te. H Sesee out oft And shoud ho be the means of bringing | Whose name here at home ts synonymous with high ‘tone | Major Gairni, of Nivety-rix, came forward, and in ap- | Lecome our masters: and who, if wa bave vot the spirit willing to make the trial and take the chances, @bout that ditirable consom nation, he will not only de- | 8h spirit and high honor. em Soon after | propriate terms preseoted (o Mr, Brooks the silver goblot | to moét them half way, will be our masters. The next knows in his heart that & cannot do one bit of this extraordi ‘specch was delt l—whilst the - 4 5 miniake was in probibiting the lave trade after the year | Senate is not in eesion the Senate house is any more o, J know (hat ete case here. 1 will act the oe Bt oe ene es ore | nows of the rhetorical diaplay was transmitting upon, the eaaes Oy SS ee seer 8c, as an evidence of the opinion that T have Just ad. | cred than your court house when the court » adjoura jood'bearted physiclaa to the democratic party, 1 wil generews, Ay aa hgbtning line to every; tne country—our,immediats Dr, Paumstiy then presented aa orange-wood cane; after | vanced to you, viz: that at the time our constitution | cc. But what did they do with me? They take me | (iv them Buchanan pills, and if suey them do no’ good, I shes tant wafigh eupeions renty ona wold he & mark Yorn Gacatative, Hon. P. 8. Brooke, who represents tho | which wns formed, the people of the Boat, artloulaeiy of Vie na ries pong Renempe Renee tw york meng eball copecte marvel vy te Fedlestion .—} Ibave done my cl of “Old Ninety si: inta, were indifferent to this eudjret. ae an ov _ duty am wv or aim are Ser ( ‘Mr. Brooks), to the Oapitol in | ‘etrict y Mr. Brooks advanced amid vehement choorlng, aud | & ma dake peuple ot By yt ‘ole +4 and tney’ bring me into the ef hoprenentatees, Pong Sg ag - , 5 the outrage © ah i Rakersen Wrens Nause) We feel, Sr, that you | S24 inilictod and disgraceful punishment upon bs ae Crnress, Lapa axp Gevtieeey—t accept from | question of morality, it is a remarkable fact that upon | Why? Because they know that the Seuaso woull rivately a very cable gentleman. He made ave discharged your duty laithfully and'feariessly; ani | ‘de Said Sumner, whilst the calumaiator was in the very | sour hands these testimonials of your approval with the | ‘st provision of the constitution the mon of Now sng. | censure we, because they wanted ito got } ; i; when tha: momenteu: President, and | believe, simcerely, that if i act of franking his own sland rs to tic 4 .d, in the language of my frien land yoted againat the restriction of the slave trad Wn fangs, in order to make political capi: would desert his own party, and make @ better President. } pears oer —neweres Soe & F Seiten Him there paying ee oe meal oars on bekrtoomn fo ny mety, To gloddea aad. the people of tho south went for li ‘New. we | D0 you ehiove thet if Onarise ‘Semner hed given moo than we think. But that is'the very Using I don't waa Venmaeeses Cumenene 00 De Se for Squat like a toad, close at the tar of Rive, the hearts of my children when time shail have taken | krow that provivion i made in the constircilon whareby | CAaBiag they would have arrested hima aud tried him’ | | am afrakd be would do #0 well that he would throw } «Or the cotnstrophe, we are ready and we aro willing to ‘Ansaying by his devilish arts to reach me from them, with (he assurance that you, who bave | this matter as to slavery may be ordered in two ways, | No: they would have sung peaime of flory over It. | pack the pr of disunion. But take bis dectrines, claim our rights or to clam oar death. (Renewed ap The organs of and with them forse Keown me longest and bnown imo ave permitiod | (ne is by the action of the two bousoe of Congress, tue | The most stuptd thing I ever know was, that there war | \ "ot, bo ie & Know Nottut Tdou't care anything abouk [ 2 . oo . Ubugions, aahe ist, phatineme aed dreams. me to find some favor in sour eyes. No good moan is in- | oiber ls by conventions of the people. Now, the effect of | Pot rome man who bad sense oF pluck enough to Agbt. | that, It ls a dead cock in the pit. Tmever bad any cam ban adarecs, by Matar Concral ieGowaa, to ve followed Hira thos intent, Tthuriel with bis spear seanible to the approval of hia equals t soctety, aad the | (rebibiting, the slave trado ia simply unis: while the | There, never, win 0 Scag ae tegvtne’ word bopant nection wih Tt bizded « few for 9 Une, Dat as seam , 4 ier rowel int ny orth borthweet territory to invite emigration j fae thay ru or oyes they saw cl Wy Semen se of Abvepvile: ‘a ayer goblet, disover'd tnd ourpetods” ttconcy i te only Adequate Feward whicu a pubiceer | vo ofthe euth-both mie au Clack, Tmean—werore | ti I really though there was wore moka sre Tam careamyiing aon, © Fae go i - receives for the cares aud solicitudes of pudiic | #ricted te counting our dve negrcem as but three, We 7 ani that . Any man who ts fri j is en: wh ina the bono rng mene 2 n0GY mater, enema Tenn, aaa, tot | aon. The wt wich Yon our bem lara! an | Love; an every now ‘ens tnt immgraton cold | Ao" anitcal een, witeat rong is uae | et! gates hein ook, care at oe |, the homestead of Mr. Brooks; at the same time would be | thould be avoided, if possible, especially in the bal's of org ppt! Nrociing ot selieh. | feavence was that ail the immuigration weut to the North, | eobkect which is now tho politica of the country. We hava ft tonsion of slavery. lim Bret vote in eee was in re ; ‘ed @ etick made by the citizens of Laurens, near | leg'viation. it ia not to be denied that in certain cases | its origin. {f 1 know my own heart, nao Ing of seliis! Foe edhe of that ment be, as tas te new aven it, that | £0 politics but the nigger; and \t is impomsible correctly to 7 iation wo slavery Kata Lastrot of Gutcaabins tho oat tom < there ie a virtue in the cane, axin to that which tomperet | ness. I did not know bow it would be received eveu by be ping Geretand thet and your own roations to it, unless: b ig aad there was avctber stuck to be provented by a | the spear of Uy 1 ith a gace'it tn | you whoee opinion is the world to me. But! have ar. | io course of time, by wator® inovence and by immigration, | 8 a rit the annexation of Texas, which gives ur ope Ste. ees Seed he Oot prays, Sen 6 Rear oe recul war cs Guandl tbecaias Genel te Tired oh th ed of life, however nogiected it may | &.0 North will have the coustitutionat power, which the | go romewhat into ite bistory, the diferent causes a! u there le Goneral Rusk. He is a man and Ben of South , but now a resent of Florida, | miraculous power to uncover bi 7, detect faiechoos | rived at that period of life, I | strength of nummbore gives tem, to chauge our consuta. | 10¢ it, and the different i which we have lost tn it. 1 ctleman. Then (here is Gen. Houston. ie a good pe wen te Salon on Sheree panes. Sree Sree | Se eens ck ie, bckicen eis tae ine, | uece eal chay, '1Veh inet war Seuss’ by every tion tad to. sbolteh Slavery. It Wey. think proper. ‘The | baco xove over this. hare shows 70s Wael you Rave C8 tellowe-and that is ail, Mr. Filimore is tor. and anetoer , Sen stor asain, of Seergie Afterwar pense @6 docuney, truth or ‘could ro. | copeideration of position and, honor to defend the galiant | P°rt mistake was in the repeal of the twenty-Arat rule, | fort ot political ery eo power-.of the moral | ward as the opponent of the rte, whom the Mie- dinner would be served, an dinmer more speeches 2, mm] people who had pat thelr houor and interes's in my hauds, | b) which free negroes ano abolitionists of every hu | force of numbers, of be of more’, sontiment—of | mori compromire Was . friends lay Sent ‘would be = inn Sem akon utterance of barcfaced y bad commissioned me a8 Obv of your field oticers, | Were authorized to rend petitions and Papers to Congrees, Unt power whiob, if! m ee ay grows by town | stress en hie having approyed the fugitive slave y has over @ light tod of a mean is 4 ee gence we pe on. td it was ny duty to do may duty according tothe intelit. | insvlting to the Southern reprerentadives and people, action—of the power which a heary . he could not kelp it. Be bed taken to himself aod his position, which | gonce and convictions of the moment, and to refer to your | to prostiute the United “tates mail to carrying tham ana | °%°—of the power which, like the waow ball, xccuma- be2anre of I port ‘the constitution, ‘nm addition to that he i ij oT oduced Major,Ge ‘The /’:esident inte — tive assembly ow stitotional. They decided thet that was ond he approved it. There was so not vote for him. Will! you yy be le a South Caroiinien (Cries out as drbutable n question as orator of the day, who ‘i iow citizens, I and giving them circulation We believe, at the Zouth, | lates by its roiling motior—of the povver, ip short, of a self by a solemn pledge to bis to veto any os ali con capreed be polltical course contehenmr thet Frogs ot ap beep] taotlemanty language tea aeenen euaarey, pc caeocmin convene that We pay two-thirds of the revenue of this govern’ | Conecniraied public gentimeut New, these Northern which they should say ip their to be com- i person of our immeliaie representative in Congrems, ole it hs one ‘Hators call themee!ves free soilers, aad usink ita great ‘and to scrupulously forbesr from 5 ery consideration of real manhoo!—of representative | ment. think it is cemonsiradio, ht fliows, therefore, ba a f Brooks spat insult. The Duke of Welington expressed the faes | {vty-—ot high porition—required me to doa T aid, hat, | Wat we, by the repeal of this act, wera plated im this | compliment they are no abolitioaly ia, Wil. 1 Nats Jem see reel tar ua to he here Gratitude en virtuous | when, in hia correspondence with the Ear! of Winchelscs, | hadi kuown my political destruction would have’ been | condition: we paid two dollars outof every vaso to carry | 7 ‘ay, . v " Svar * the mail, and abont tw documents ont of every | um worse than | hale the raitlaand te, for, unlike ti, the emotion, and when indulged in reference to publ'e poll. | he said —— No man baa right by specoh of in writing 10 | Une result, Iuatend of the applause wad soclamatione whieh | {1 nits mail" were pottions from tree negrocs’ ie | tee no warning of thelr vt, ard tock Wo comeeal ‘nck it x 5 Decomes vam, Tole immense throng, this | ineult another, by attributing to bim motives for hia cun- — jon | eboueh our imetitetions, [a 1820 anothor most fatal | evjecis. Free roiliem! » Mwsy bad detter way aboll- o died and was buried. But he wea deeds ee "g aout | an ommetek nn ery gba | (pam onan ng egy gaeeneeig tw | une ee fen eeney onm | (nora, any Sua ary teeta | Ook Goan Heber rs CMe aenee iy ; hex. | that an most glaring imjastion «i porps. | ths eve k © sole recoramnen: om That suicidal o shoul! never be com. | bate or in a moment of violonoe, he is always realy | circamst re such that T know you do and will Gene 0 060 of te .giaring injantins could BO Pere: | ney te Le rabe, Bei ee Cay,’ oe weeia tat tae graiyen Satan a be eee Se Sader enent ation 19. him wom. ho us I feel that my tadtviduality has, ina great reap 08 confete a 7 home of bie and tbe soones Such as ours, there tw notaing ‘more proper or usefal that jared. fone but the meanest of rmaniind eosid aval mearere, been eectroyed. and LJ trom aac 1 po A TT 6 = ‘Sher eee say a bs 3 wrens Heme men whe Fy ea ia not we + demonstrations c f - |b ft high and sheltered position of a Senator from ‘¢ been placed Ina position which constitutes me jor | mey ie ral 5 — wis ok — irresistible Hike the present. It a right that the ooe- | Wines we 1 nud wicked slandors, and i a ference to the matter, tue type | tons of that government. We, by purchase or b; you where you are. Thoy will increase and extend, whil upean: juerndle prejudice aguibet voting for a Frenchman. eteans shauhd Cbeerye the coarse of the representative, | % Tick 10 Me, pretent OF parliamectnry’ privsices, te veenomtcuve ofthe estire Souh, For inflicting too | scquire territory. Yet, by the Misrouri act of 18 You will droop and withor, until they get power gnough | \nw' dis mobos was 2 Virginian, it i taid she married | SBE ite approved, to manifest thet approval in tho | ive'to the injured party redress, Tariumcatary pris, | punishment upon Mrjsumner, oF Maseachaseta, T hare | Yom drawa throvgh verrtory so obtained, at 96 degrovs | 10 change We feveromniat, to alter your nian there of the cere of Pryer, No, she was a Mian Pg gg Tg Dt 7 ich tho calumaision dbsiros | kat chowered upon mo appladee anteommen tation from | 0 minutes north latitude, and sn edict wae passed thas | 10 crus your power, and. finally declare you outiaws it | Sryor, sho marr d somebody: I don't know whom. Tk eolaring, im the most emjhatic sn el Gone, hoe | eel oe ie ibe » I ceare part of tb colire ian, ty own havoere. | yonol the South should taroh up % the tine and halt, | ou continue to hold to your property agaimat ibe laws | oe so Fremont though. Fremont wos to father Food god ah Ly pow pd S67) pon} ty yd todd! is the Mberty of the aragssta my walen untee tion | Seasbine ms by the hosors which they har pour ta Sapte and carry’ taelr property “i every description this, bear ‘mind ts ae ane ther be" foroat by ceocker's: besbend "hreswet wes frecem one " A thus with a hoty horror gof violence | upon me. [tell you you lave bestowed moro considors- ol ‘om your tobe a |. x Pf pimuiahy t the act thon i deserves, 60 hae it bro Sith then. | Now, flow ciiseae, apart from ine pride | may fom Fou Or to be put on ao equality with ‘oath of allegianse vo thie goversment. ih veesthcente snd bis ouury, Cl wpunee 24 ove, sate neceseay OF invouing the virtues of the By heed villontion, denunciation and abure of man, which would make you olan your right to go | them, or to put them to the sword. tell wa they connection with his former bie Cy cave im unis case waa created © the enormity of the of. ta my heart 1 ¢o ‘not merit. I bave no d es a freeman, Shoere. the American fag waves, fancy ae slate F ra ey - FA _ the 19th article of the Frenom Dees especially, under the | fence, Cd ee which fon Ng understanding why 15 oe ee, to oy goa, es went ‘Ton’ ae tool’ ons ro yh? ae Hing ieelt to death, fies or rane marries Pe gy 4 semua, impossi| obtaining ross proj rtionate rows mag! shou! loomed. 4 pace tote an = ; Wee oid La eascatbn ates | the wrong. it waa one et thowr odveced witch the law | tnurual demousirations,, The, eaatigatinn of a diaak: | Tine, because you own 8 parucular sort in ‘ations of the marriage : : ! #4 . | tell You, Bowever, that that is the perv rd, hes nothing in Wt to attract the Southern people, | ic!) fons fil # i ti : é3 ‘beball core. | cold and ‘ms of courte. Tho sam: tet © first leston your boy learns at sch the You need not tell mo sbout democrate bein & tn cr tenets tho tanning reproach at. | mont inflcted Uy our roprescutative was well desorrod, | lesson bs earns. ts that etter sohoniroom, the play- | aliogetber right on tbe subject themeetvos, The most | the agorized Moor of Venioe deere is meta, whe it Ln head nad } ato Romans, Who, wttorly oblivion | end it was well given. (Applause. ground—Ie to resent inmvlt and avengo wrong whon- | that they do is to stand A bes There is an T would rather be a tond ar A live on tho vapor of a dungeon, Northorn candidate Mr by yd Lt 4 made to save the republic, were ‘Tho castigation which our | ato seprocmative in. | ever and wherever it is given. You have beea provoked eo in the th mg I love for r men's usem of the bt <r Heverthelers, & sectnioal‘breeoe St tke law." Hoteeee: | rien to give me bnore whleh 1 tol) you tenia 1 do. not If they proceed in 1 \tne of march they ‘have begun, Ugg eS cholo, Is Me. ad om ; great the pr . oF strong, the circumstances of | inerih to the extent thal your gonerority fancies ‘we will soon bave ® corner, and only corner, fr the was not my choice, and most Know you not Poupey mitigation, yet words do not ji an assault, With the | And think you, follow . that the denunciation of jortnere pres Franklin Pierce—that man Runto your houses fall upon your kaces, hamneteriatle prudence of he slanderer, Mr. Sumaer ibe North Somos from the heart? Do you bolieve that te trickery oF ae aime grows 0 ca of Pray to te gods to intermit the pingne the law upon his side, and though pilloriod kimscli"in men north of « goographical line have nerves aad boarta kos 4 been tres Soath Thal needa wast light on this fngratitade | eternal —) and souls entirely it from thoxe south of that line’ laborers at . ae hth eis Teagan ta wll Mcrae: | SonaaeRe rt aben, | Rags Sl of hee cp aan ache oad vee Sees / ly ‘Oo manifest attachment 5 der 5 y ran, re wo inate jal independent ens! orauons Sra yet, ec se oe of injured = aad » scan in Fined Pee ot Cag yh fag Rnd Mg is Bel ba. See se cla tan erate ; concer, han idle pageant. 'e im mediate ‘ete @ inn in om been very. A ‘ r e- ( bave oa here te pertrm's amy; aad fal conceive it | dicted for this act 84 arraigned at var of jastios as pha eson. They have seized upon this ciroumsiance cuak 1s ae tan Ato people tak: LW thoir D nda Yo Ray Fay 9" m™ Tumble provines. from the position assigned mo, to | for high orimes sod misdemeanors. Being a law-abiding | aa a proof of the doctrine heretofore proclaimed by them, | conversed hy / ol term | Be energies, enable them to x f --- nives, axe | tracing, all eonayering. Thay gave “ “ Mito the. views, tetives and foeiings of thous who have | mon, and Torresenting @ law hiding comttueney, be | thatthe teettation orwping 1 ie my vals ror =F Stas a Garren. cent | Save ot Rie See a, (ih SUOmUAS Ceetel ce | Henne eT 8S ; ferely Goive yee ond ws erembe 0 tas seatimanee tr mentee “ne law. Tiobdicace ve" lawiel “auiborrty i's PALL be asm ofall tho Vilawled Upow cary. f | gant Whe Could Ut) WEL yn, | magcuils Dis Binyes (oO Morrow, aud, Laying oilected his ' 7 orjeot wat fat to Mle momiatOM, Wal | Wan, ue