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8 NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY ecmttosn ont eee asa LE ORR ee neering, spirit of slavery ; at all events be considered Ly vy aed a declaration. eS onal aoe corre: slavery was we a in upon hwo poor upon Tih Horlo, Brana DO Marra Mott & | Malta: ith, tao tee to the treatmento’ slaves or servants. reeo- Sheerer, Hheerer, Wilmingion—R F Buck & Co. 7 would be defeat- Monee, Cy Fotat Jee Branier & Oo. EE ncn sonata se rent in the meeting wth ee ng YSievvort, Avril 29-614 While Cloud, Rowden, Boston, in advance of the action of thesosiety | Steamer Chesapeake, Crowell, Portland, une Ape Sarr Wostomberg, nie Yad ‘1K... | deen, carried co entirely tm Kansas with, reterence tatended to affirm that the essential 17 | ae et oa akin, Juckwonrtlo—Z Mayhew. | sivicaw stem wm og mucin ons a aay) BNEAGREE GESDORSTounee, | oR Aatrsara ef, ktmeaooe be ANNIVERSARY WEEK. | i'tt. wnt mans and not’ oo scomnt of the Wuex mon was @ sin, be was with hie brethren’ who bad pre Seine Grocke? * 2 Fatwoury, April —Arr Fanny, Berrict, a ae All be coaMd wake ext of t was, that Mr. Gtwover. hai | spolog ceded bum, He thought it was somewhat am iguous Bets Bone Dowsing rae vemeeen ens nfa,cuow'r00, March <—In port ahip Courser, adopted views without identify: 80! whetber referred to ves as chattela or to dj [elios, The Abeithontete tn Cownetly so. | himself with I ‘Be did uot bellove'tae, wes she epitome the North. If it is im: metances Gailego, Smith Richmond—¢ Speen et oa eae a) Ae 5 oe J QUNTIVERSABY OF THE AMBRICAN A) ‘wanison | WS? ® 800d anti slavery maa who disapproved wavery in to hold slaves at the North, it is equally immoral | jt was upnecessary Fsowart, Wallace, 1 cpm NRL Dea cimry—-FimsT Day's bgp neg Kansas but reoogpired it in toe other States, That doc- | to hold thé South. must not impeact | {bought the beat w => FIRE OF MRLOLOTIONG THE RELIGIOUS ‘REVIVALS Ha peaped teat ee clase mmptecotae eoeeae a by pot 2 every formula Then if thoy are hign- it cee ; ©o wed DENOUNCED— DIFFERENCE OF OPINION ON THE SUB- | this meeting it should be that the parpyse of this society | minded Obristian men, why ehould not men of the same | The reverend proceeded to argue on the Bebr F ROT ARTCHUM DON'T LIKE IT—PROMPT EXTIN- | was to dissolve the American Union sud wreak the gov- | faith hore bold slaves also. If you concede the right of | jmtion at some length. Bohr ‘SUISEMENT OF KETCHUM—SPERCH OF REMOND, 4 | ernment into e thousand pieces. (Applawse and hisses.) | the tlavebolder to hold slaves in Carolina, then he can | Rey. Dr. CaxEVER remarked | nS oe rg IN, WHO 18 IN FAVOR OF IMMEDIATE He might raneaok society to find a greater slave than he fatty claim that tbe syetem should be mate imiverse! | ed om Wednesday unless they Steamer ui Seneene wanes THILLIPS BLOWS UP THE wR | found the Hon Edward Everett to be. (Applause and would gladly aubvert all the tree insti | some declaration See Tee CRSTION—A DULL SPEscH | Disses) He regarded the hisses as the highvst prssible | tutions of the country. The Southern prose and Southern | two years ago. “ABRIVED. cans Lt ‘BUNE ON THE Mpa ov on can caatine ‘Amorioan slavery bad rows gun fade many te Ln mad ‘and out, continually preact mepaee the ao eens. ‘Tarpan claimed the floor, but was met with Steamship Persia (Br), b cudtinn, Tisempeale bi we ed): Bazaar, ewe wor omer cron repeal a From EDMUM! “i — ‘ 5 and wi bore in mind merican | trim longer ories of *' Question, question. AM, with mdse toB Cunard. CHUACH, THE REVIVALS, THE EMPEROR OF “RU- | ‘Union thore had been some seven slave States admitted, | guard against slavery. It is a matter of class The lovds |" My. Tarpax—One word, only one word. arGuarentioe at ie aM aha at ber Jock at Jersey Oly at | MCiowit’ Northland Flitaer, Sunderland and U tates, uy” AND OTHER TOPICS—MR. WANDSLL PHILLIPS | gpd the oonetitu:ion of Arkansss contained a provision | of the lssh Spin 2 the North because it is independent, A GENTLEMAN: that no person should be al- | 12:15 having been cetained at Quarantine in consequence of jokey Kons, are -f he fit Ania Mi ENDS THE CONSTITUTION TO THE DEVIL, ETO., BTC. | that slavery ehould never be abolished, he in- | bard working and industrious. Itis the favorite ides of jowed to speak longer than five minutes at any time. ae Senn omen. 0 hours. with | Ph) zane ‘Sd, Blaro, sam | fifth annual satarnalia of the oonglomerated | quired whether this government did not | the South to inaugurate a merry, military despotiam, Mr, Tarran—One word—only ope word. | rise to adopt on ge vamnal, W | Stoddard. Bankok; La alny, Tito ‘Tho twenty as failure on the question of republicanism and democracy. | with a Northern Louis Napoleon at’the bea’ of it. Mr. | whai Dr Smith hassaid, Be made a admission in his nals wiih of | Galates, Barber. 2 Ber Yems composing the Garrsonian American Anti-Slavery When black men in Washington had no rights, and in one bs gem then referred to the Ozar of Pega who | speech in which he pledged himself to support the question vi JEREMIE, set Ie Latport Mibort eck Society commenced yesterday morning et Mozirt Hall, | Siate white men were liable to be shot down for assisting | bad a fine thing in iil the serfs; oa Ihave introduced. I mow call upon him to redeem that eurare, April 1 Todbost Geo tai with the usual focongruous assemblage. There | their bisck brethren, he declared that the American Pi ona ike to dethrone them al—Viotoria and all flotae me eeeeens Soe nieees Dee pace Sat Soar ee. 'arner, London and the Iale of W! Rineston, 7, bp 2 Ste pore a 2 leo Turner, pier, Broadway, pene , Taien were Seaeta: (Aprionss end Bienes) When he rest. Mr. Garrigon sald there was no free taid if the mover had intended ‘‘cbattel slavery” he angers to ns | Rew/Yart, Sievers fr op orig ear oy aH were ‘black spirits and white,” of every shade; strong: | wont to Boston and found such men as Kdward Everett wel | except “ Gnady,” ‘and he was anxious to do awey / would go with it, and sir, I now move to introduce the w: erie Jessie ware. Figeld Ocha River, to load for Paliade hia; THU neh winded women, with diminutive hoops, eyegiaases, greet. | and Rufus Choate and Robert C. Winthrop silent on this that He thought the Empre State “ohattel”’ into this resoiution, since ‘chattel slavery” isa boy pa adem Chas atk ‘River 1g load for York: ‘Tist ‘speetacies and unfashionable bonnets; weak-minded men, pete, thet was a proof that (oo smeriean Toul be too Bot for one te Le ecagp eg Pome Stiees yearn age I bad a controversy iat brig bina, 224, chr JD Kinsey, Crawford, : u failure. and hisees. - on our wi he every time I meet with we draw 2 wih a ruperabandance of hair and an evident predileo- | can Poole eould not (PRRES iat whether they 00- Shame on our institutions which cannot give protection to } nearer ana nearer. I now call upon him to join 1p Bilas Groanman, Webber, New Orleans, 16 April ears I 17 Rita Geren, 308 tien for the Grahamite diet, and the usual scattering of | mitted it or not, the black race was proving that they | tho 1g slave. This ought to be put astep ©. | hands with me and su; this resolution. ‘atteras, from, nag eld ladies, blue stockinga, silly girls and noigy little boys. | were men. ‘There was universal silence at the decision of | He wes in favor of @ genuine revival. (Appiause.) v. Dr. Sarr replied that what he was disposed to do F'and high ea from'BE, being E > Judge Taney, because it was universally believed that | re revival Fesolution of the morning, he | ag an individual, he might not perhaps do asa member of | shoei uncer the lee; was obliged to ‘Mough the meeting was called for 10 A. M. the sudienc® | ihe colored people would protest. But nobody had been | Said that though carefully drawn it had brought out euch | the Tract Society ‘thought the term ‘“‘chatte!”” did not the Cape had eollected slowly, and at twenty minutes after ten, the | more careless than the colored people themselves, be- | a storm of ‘that he was reminded of thirty take away the mist as to the system of holding slaves, the compass hour for commencing the performances, the room wap | gause, if he could judge by contrariea. it wan a sien that | years ago. Now, be believed in & revival of puro re. | Mr. Tarrax—Dr. Smlthsald iT meant ‘che M slavery” pam hanna the biacks were determined to be free. Ho was ¢) igion—that ‘which left no blood benind wo with me. “chattel,” and now ach eae ‘nearly half full. Considering that this meeting had the that they were careless, and he longed for the day | did not steal na Tenet the Seas of mae; Sek mus go on : won (ot Beaton) edvantage of the curious hangers on who always congré- | when the slaves of the South would be 89 careless as to | we have a right, he said, to pate to nee the sport, and the outsiders who come to se0 go about their business as if there was not a white = ‘to what new depth of absurdity it is possible for men to oe Anieriean: . ‘ae ‘peach the attendance was upon the whole rather meagre, | ‘no union with slaveholders.”” pene Soma - ‘and fBplause.) ‘Mhongh about the same as for the past year or two. Such ee ‘was the next speaker,and | American church, which as and Geir g gy Poy, Horton, Ravana Boadicea, Oc iigey, ‘Mobiles HH Tucker Nucker, Onarleston; nie Ces jenas. owart & lyn, Matehell. NYork; 21th, Thornton, oa Wocdsury, ae do: well pa ar oy vetoes ae plied Pilg ne innit 36 60. or Bavanpab. ; i i it i cit , i i é i I ton, henee t ‘Boston; 28th. determined eaid he to express most entire concurrence in | 000 slaves, is tolerably corrupt. It must have some | another committee that would do ther during the passage. x ‘es were there, however, evinced @ bash the resolutions. He was sorry that the nature of the meet- | blood on ite ‘The of darkness rules . CLARKE, Of Brooklyn, addressed the meeting. i ean March 29, position to scoure good places, and not a few of the | ing precluded his friend from stating his objections, and | here—and have you a revival? Is it genuine? Is there | He said that whether slavery was a sin against God or bo ad eBereon, Toringas, April 3, wh rorid, be restrained from appropriating the | hoped ample time would be given in future for stating all | any excitement? Corru goes to sleep over it | not, seemed to be the question. Now, if they could send Wi fetes, 3 Dor ‘Manzanilla, April fret <, mon strong minded hai to wane re- Laurel (Br), of Windsor, gal, pI Tap Bell, for ‘After the platform had been partly ob 8. He could not see how any abolitionist could Ln rapa cg) Why, if you had a gent ‘| messenger to Him they would perhaps be informed as ‘wood, &c, to. to 3 6 whisey 4.10. ae 0s weporters’ chairs. to recognize the fact that the government and the would scare James Buchanan so he could not | tothetruth. They considered they had received a mes- “Jecnin, anya, PH, 16 days, with sugar | Pow, Bush, for, Mer Milled wih men, women and blacks, and the old ladies hed | church was an to the slave. | Sixty years of fo | sep of neh (Renewedapplause.) They would lynch | senger from God, and if he understood men’s hearts, he | and molasses, to ape 30, | 2rjcarelae temnta subsided into a quiét body of friendly gossip, the Presi- | bad seen that system doubled, trebled and quadrupled. nd put it to a violent death in the South. D> youdare | thought he was right in the opinion that they all oobel- | | Brig Joseph Park t Boston) Park, Cardenas, April $0, Mr. Wu. Lior Gannwor, opened the | TBere must be something rotten in the religion and civil ag the spirit of the living God ia at work? Graut | dered slavery to bea sin, He supposed there was no dit- | withsugar, 10 Walsh, Garver & hase.” th insh, 1st 3480, loo dent of the society, . id machinery of a government that cou allow siavery to | all your ¢: oases. Idon’tcare for them. They | ference among them that slavery was a sin. He con- i aptander: ager: Lib, of roan. rere, Som Topmasisof fore | j meeting Wy seotings detache’ pasion <boripare, dade exiet, much more to grow, and usurp the functions of the | are having a revival of slavery at the South. They are | sidered the question was whether they should give their | ,oa att polish, Wainted white, and had es @4 to show a bibiical opposit‘on to ry government. Who could doubt that there was an inhe- peeve thier ine ses fee 6 ew of Congronn jo make | opinion out and out, and whether they should dissemi- ee foresail hag hag gpg A being offered for vecal prayer, | rent, unmistakeable, radical rottenness in both? The e slave trade a legitimate one. Mr. Garrison then | nate that opinion through the Tract Society. The present Brig J F Eiloots eksport), Oroskett ‘Trinidad. april “Aurora, Bi Rev. Mr. of yivania, availed himself oft, | Character of the bation proved this Dr Adams, of Bos- | cited the case of Rev. Mr. Adams, the most couspicu- | conference did not grow out of any differences betwoen | 25, Wi'h sugar and molasses, 0 HD Brookmaan. & £ Oo. New one asad, ‘Leavit taking occasion to express his remarkable belief that they | ton had signified his approval of the“rovival” by aser- | ous leader of the revival movement in Boswoa—the | them ‘and the society, for he considered that it was the | {n#t, off Cape Henry, saw bark Sartell, Dennis, from Havana 3 eit came there to “learn the way (0 be sured aa (0 200 mon in favor of the “reasonableness of eternal punish- | author of a South side view of slavery—a man Wagenn te e that caused it. fependence (Br: MeAlmon, Hillsboro, NB, 7 dayt, 7 Nett aa to save others.” length of tie Oxkertation | ment,” who favored the Fugitive Slave law. This Adams was Bisnor of the Vermont Chronicle begged to renew a wil planer tof Revita E ‘erman, Bichbors, New York; Northern, Chi @id_ not scom to meet with general approval athe od “H must be reasonable where guch as he existed.”’ | much concerned for the soul of Rev. Theodore Parker. | motion which was made some time previous, but had not ‘Bea Breeze in a8 oe April 27, a): 0b, New" Hass Indies subsided into their former recreation. (Applause and laughter.) &: Garrison here diverted into a eulogy of Mr. Parker.) | been put from the chair—that each speaker should only Hinsugar, 6 a lat Si lon 78 44, spoxe lard; Gottenburg, Wrear, ‘The TugascreR then submitted » financial statenent, ‘Vorcr—Hit him again | tinuing, Mr. Garrison said that he had carefully exam- oooupy five minutes. Brie Joke nw, of Macain, Pound to ecko one | Ne New Orleans; Joseph Gilchrist, Williams, vather unintelligible, making the aggregate receipts of | He differed with Mr. Remond when ho said that Fd- | inedthe revival through the medium of the press. Hefound | The Cusmam put the motion which Raased, and re. | yt br 8B Wheclor of Wilmingt Daly Gor, 2 Cardenas, ET apr geo fates has ais nociety and its euxiliaries ‘$00,987 24, an0 thelr ex- | ward tverctt waa under the influence of an anodyne when | the leading Dro-slavery papers, divines and demagogues | marked, “I will wow look at my watch. must keep | M2Y, Charlotte alnerve iB Hoses, Baraccs, 10 days, with dag Gabe; 0, Flymo pi ja enia, Todt von, Gray, Trin}. tures amounting to $32,042 11; which wes laid upon | he signed an approval >. the beating of Charles Sumner, | giving thelr ald to the revival, so he knew it was not of | in time.” (Laughter. table. ian Edward Everett could not, when under the | God; if it was would be down on it, in accordance Ait Me teoeetacd 00 ner Shah: the whet: discussion * Mr. Jommerox then read a letter from Joshua R. Gid- | strongest stimulus eay his soul was his own. (Laughter.) | with the dictates of their own wicked natures. If any one | of the day was to very little purpose. If he had known in dings, expressing his rogret at his inability to be present | The jast steamer bad broug yhat true religion was let him try hit | Vermont that he would have heard nothing but a discus. ‘ane his sympathy with the objects of the society, which | Furope had taken the last step to strike off the fetters of | hand at reform. Look at the truth, The only Christ that aus he would have remained at home. (Ap- Te eee ares nid ee a. : ro| ios Ganzson said that 6 was save a sup- xi. of, the mosting for 8 speech, he would not tres- i requested that the mecting woul ip. lic, Lim Wichr Bums E(B, Mahan, Windsor, 88,7 days, with plas: | Gia Zi oceetechse ‘Bomay; 30th Palestine, ‘Schr Kate (Br), Malone, Charlo'tetown, PEI, 12 days, with a Apel [2 port bark thos Dalit, Dil, from ators. ‘empest, hence Sehr Mobile, Howes, Mobile, 15 days, with cotton, de, to eee ona: Lagtin & Boriout i ‘App Elizabeth Merrit Work, ° ny C-ATF Gy ted brig BPhilips, Mount, Bucksvitle, SC, Parker, 6 r B Phillipe, Bu ‘Mapnas, March 15—arr Judge Parker, Shaw. Odays Boston gramme Christ; int and they | prese en that Kind of applause; it was indecorous in a meet- | Schr Herndon, ‘Gaske NO. B days. Baxi. Maren 1 Arr Beaver, Sah, Hong @ Kong. Sid Feb ‘pare on their time more than to read suadry Fesolntions, | same week celebrated the triumph of fastening sl very meri must be the ai Christians. pp Ng Ba gd Fp arty L Masi nich, by = process of hydraulic prewure, he bad made | Gn'a'state againet itt wil,” The reason of this wat this | save, Because he ie the lowest and moat st despised. What Busio? continned—That he would heariily join with | Sekr Danvilic. Chewter, Richmond. § daya |” acu, arch 13—E rms I 5 orlean Socentain poe all = sentiments on the eubject. fhe | Russia was cincere and saw the necessity of fecae, we want is the same moral heroism that distinguished ee ome: but that was not what he was there for. He Schr Beauchamp. McIntyre, Norfoik, 5 days. Sid 26.h, Let a va will give a faint idea of whet | while America was insincere and did not mean what she | Christ of Judea—that spirit which defied the despo- | was there to make a representation of ihe imprea- Bohr Yorttown, Pioglam, City Point, 10 days, with cotton, : Arr Fleetwood. Wilson, Penan would probebly bev have vee done if Mr. Garrison had em: | said, We had a revival of what? Words, pasteboard | tisms of the earth. He was in favor of a revival with | sion of the Christian church of Vermont upon the ques- to J Hunter & Co. WA Platenius, Bennett. London, Nestoriaa, Cg: ae lan ployed steam pressure: dicieed about ang no two cpg met and | such a leader. tion they had met to discuss. wanted simply that Meee Nelson, Vi a. delcbia. ‘sla ath, Tingurt, ‘Swift, Calcutta; Matanzas, Sinclair, Resolved, That as no man can, in reason, show a better Mr. WeNDELL Paruurs being called for, said—I donot | the fourth rescietca, passed year, should be re- | febr DA Miller, Curling, rginie. ae. April 4—Are Sverige Sai fide 10 be a slave at the South, so he who see how anything can be added to the remarks which my } affirmed. Bebe oF bert, gone, Virgis phage gi hate fo Gelletrom. Pensecela. Maine ihe rectitude of slavery. in aby (nitance, riko as friend, Mr. Garrison, has just made. For myself, Ihave | Rey. Mr. Parren, of Chicago, next addressed the mect- | Ach Nit Parken Packen Vic Newronr Vom Blow ‘st ibe freedom of all ‘and becomes an op no ambition of the kind.” He has shown us thechurch | ing, He said he represented the West, which was larger | Sehr Bynepuzent, Mam ‘eee 224, MB Rich Rich, Havana: 24th Daphne, Drganer om 8 word write wate. act din ua wipe and and the State as it is. The institutions which our fathers | than Massachusetts and New Hampshire, and the ground | Sehr J : Cranmer, Virgtain, 6 yarven. City Polnt! aiih, aslo Joe, Proknata, Petugeeanst ghnine, lis yokes and Gump screws, tis paddics and tranemitied to “us are sbown to be fallares. ‘Tho ery aly Which they planted themselves was antislavery. | Behr LW Birdeali, Woodmineon aor *y another acon ant anys Point de valle. poy. ame a ae yoy ome s 4 pes i . . tions, 4 nat he Sad Leone § feaaeeen iy ‘ale a ool ie ous eee Gg Fg yo bow y hed « od the Tesolution, passed at the Schr Jeremiah Hf { Youmans, ‘yack airgiais, Adays. r institute something better. And we ought to do some- iouieg last year, because they believed that the laa thing better. For this we are called fanatics and infidels. | guage of it implied that slavery was sinful, and they con- fis deviliab nature ned accursed aim, perjuries. I remember the story of the English middy, who, being | sidered that the American Sree Soolety we was bound to do and sbovaing blasphemies ; the’ stead Gr preitel oe pow examined before a Board of Admirals as to what he would | gomething with respect to it. Suppose the emigration of tact expansion of a system so frightful Ay demonstrative | Was as sagacious as Napoleon: it saw ‘the weak points of tnd do if asbip bad lost masts, shrouds, anchors, and was on inese to Cal! ia had increased threefold and they Sebr O P Binns, Crooi ‘nln x oe TF aay meee hrs, Prospero, Moller. uno. a pp 44 atand. pctarias, Avril fate foam, Handy, NYork and Leg- arey, Virginia, 4 days. ‘Scbr Mary Ann = Patt 4 Veginte, sim | “Fumo, April 20-8ld Conductor, Cano, NYork. dloocy sg of fhe marriage neuation and enforeed fiventiou sees, ‘Nixaro, March —In port Progressive Age, Holmes, and of power aboreall that is the roof that to this pation most justly appiles the osers. The Zribune, years ago, had laid dewn the €oo- | a lee shore:—‘‘Let her to the devil,” he replied. “You | had taken possession of that State and practised Sehr Chas Pexano, March 7—Arr Live Yankee. Thorad! ropbe:: “"Thelr feet run 10 evil. and they make haste to pall the extension of slavery,and now it expreased | could not do better,” was the response. So I say about Motatry pb not the Tract then exert itseli? | fcbr Ma Fa hy iy Yee Cohola, Day, Bomba (apd old ag for oe micgengray. ay onovent blood “judgment is turned away backward. | its willingness to let Kansas come in with slavery if she | the constitution. gregation bad authorieed him to appear there and Py tin oe Virginia, 6 days. yy aaa Biome Sad cous cannot enter ; and be ihut deparieth from ord Wished. Kansas was conquered—under the hee! of the vey A the audience applended, a few hissed, and al! tee he inslaence to have the American Tract Society ad- Grove, Al Nae aera. a Fat dad = orem en Klockgeter, from * hun government. jetly hom: re resolutions passed last Bremen ‘ eet naa tie, Was day hes gone by Of it ever existed) here | A Vous —Not yet. ‘The Secretary then read the r Palestine, zandris,, Queexsrown, April 22—Arr Nebraska. Card, Cardenas (and Piithe North, to frame or to ofler any apology in Nehalf ot Kaneas had nothing but paper promises, which had bees American Tract Society. Dr. Ine begged to move that instead of the words ‘‘Mo- y alexa rie, 6 day ey | bye hioell, Nt John Forsyth, Ho! on Aleman, 4 —_ py a). Mary rar as aan nd », ae Oy. Conkling, Aletan¢ th for Liverpool). Dacepies, inna’ under! revealed themselves io be | made a hundred times and broken. He had been told by | THE ADJOURNED MERTING OF THE DISSENTING MEM- | ral duties that grow out of slave! Pind feu: | the President of the Tepeka Convention that if Lecompton | BERS—PRRPARATIONS FOR THE ANNIVERSARY MEET- | ‘the duties of slavebolders”’ be si ae merciless and pro’) tam, Gessietown, Dt Hi NYork I L . : 7th. Frey, Rudin, ©u eteru'zing their terrible wen affine fe ‘are to be clussed | Passed, the Opposition in Kansas would organize: there ING TO-DAY—TEE POLICY TO BE ADOPTRD—COM- | Rev. Dr. THomrson eaid that that portion of the resolu- y vic alban facie * eure tay. 1 rigs Chimbarazo, Sees, from ' among the most dangerous and depraved of the human race, | were but two or three majority inst them, and they " tion was from the resolution of last year, word for Breeze, Hulse, DO, 6 days. di ville, ia, Richardson, — Wi tna ented areordingiy. o could be shot. Surely the matter had come tothe last | TARISON BETWEEN THE LONDON AND AMERICAN | [71 Moses Yan Naine, fame, Georgetown, DC, 6 | do: Mam! Frenche Parris: hence, are Sub win, Woe TRACT SOCIETIES. days. od sail PP sy Bn a slavery tien the el religion thn Son: when majorities had to be shot. To three months = oT ae APR Rey. Mr Ine having withdrawn his motion, ke ht ain, arte, are, Senge. pad Nor, Munn ron doa Ly ‘ie iat ercteeiano sluvery, isomer | Kansas would be a ‘dead hoss.”” It would be covered ¢ adjourned meeting of the members oppor! ‘The Rey. Mr. Baxtusrr, of Connecticut, addressed the | Rehr Ranta, ltese: Vienne Trace: todo, sean OF Ida tee inane ee ity bat corrupt and aponate., = three deep with Central America, Cubs and the revival of | action of the Executive Committee of the above socisty | mecting, He said he was ready at any ‘and all times to | _gcbr Shylock, Hawes, neabeth Ci Guy, 5, for Salem. Oe far Bel * That if nity ia not inimical to slavery, | the slave trade. In Pennsylvania there was the nucleus of | was neld yesterday, at 9 o'clock A. M.,at the Mercantile | ¢xprees his views on slavery, and that against it inthe | | Schr Amanda Powers, Kovinson, City, NJ, for gins serch aa Dr seg once Williams, Crigetis Tope, Dut every’ bp ore grevaing tn bond We raloser’ and | Kovacs. Wha ovaprofessd eacuetit Ther promis iinen | Library, Astor place, ‘There was a very large atiendance Behr Suan & Jan & Jane, Raton, Calne 3 days a, molinat Vesa tetas iar nti fc mina fucon void | the republican party provided arty tac. "Tis would | of membera cf the socety, oir frends, and deleguis | area A aaa Par Gee poor and needy Rot do, A lie could Keep ite place ior years under a fair | trom the New England States, [itinois and New Jersey. ‘Resol: ‘Phat we estimony against the A: wame. So the Union, patriotism, religion, something that Ah ‘the pesca, ws my ee Ae nobody could touch’ covered up slavery with honeyed ‘The Cnareman said the hour for entertng upon the pro- Dotted states—beo, ‘une, by their deliberate copsent apd active | words, So it was withthe Union, Buchanan rotteunees) | coedings of the day having arrived, he woud ask Rev. Dr. pes Erresnes | Wee (laughter); Washington formed jt; Jefferson ose mane Js resisted | guided it lsunched it, our fathers cherished it; | Hawes t offer up prayer. Seaeovacy tae, Ike ores in ‘he Cainese idol, could not | Rev. Dr. Hawns, of Hartford, having offered u,” wearer, Heee of the Supreme Court of the | be got rid of. ‘Thus she rat was safe im religion'and in the | and the minutes of the Inst evening's proceedin v ved, Thet the decia, PO, dtane, ough wo pe maiguanly Union.“ CLanghier.) Ao dutrbuted Barks and Douglas | ten read and approved, ee ‘stall hazards, by every state | in van of a party for Liderty. In parties there were sy + ia - vas) reard « “or ite sovereignty ‘or for the | but two sides—for slavery an! Against it. There was such The Cuarmmay called for the report of the committee “?- ax tety and Hiperty of ts citaene. (a " “order roftaniem and . a Gueges being kicked into a pan,’. He considered Banks | pointed last evening. ass cheating If the time had not ‘come when the Ame- solved, T ‘consum tation Maria, Bursley, Th, Na, Akyab; 128, Ino) Plumer wer, Nawore (aos ape) |, Penang 13th, ‘comect ‘Norton, Boo; oy ne. Riein, Baseo rt sid Son for hat ‘Ri 7th, Palmetto, lan ee Lair’ he 4 it the meeting, and he hoped they would oo ae the object for which the: -¢ ir. Pewney, A Brown, ‘MeiCeison, New Frances, Jones, 8 Jago, 2 ‘Wind at sunset SE, rain during the day. tari, Sairpaton, in reper dio Kamina! Qaeteddeo' | party urlong at the rope would bala vm, ad then ne | 2020 HoRxnlows, chairman of to committee, replied \ Ge gir ¥) would lige to know when ihe uae woud a REE op NP ing) Ryork amma Vana, owns genieved .." the Prevent ink Poe "Ketan op per where be ‘only could. ‘Perhaps his Dame would | that owing to the latencss of the hour at which the meot- «Se when they would not oa #0 in 1868. eae Mesinensons and Dunsters. ma of GIEE AND, April Hair Yo You “Siar | Set eat thay come snip ‘Beott, ean Breeze, Sat Foner rubmaited ty ry ar gles Ore | Sp nerene name ss Se Reed of 8 — Bat ye mee ad tot met each other for coavulaio ete “ek pe yy eR Er ay ey pit Bape oe ‘emerioan man ano | BuTERA. “Apeid— Arr Samboul, Kis gman, Boston; 1806 f Excerpt | Sma, Me weeny, Sarit rgd | Snetemene monn tote cma moe | He RE eines pie | plane paste eee ame” | fala ora ap) utier! foun. e van. ‘or 4 i Ear crcl Serre as | jon, ee gma ary were Srey toremend ts | Heyl [VOTO ed at abough econ | tert tou RP lation Amana Rat | "ya me Von tom Wana. ere opreamnk | eta a am, Ary py ly #p' iy the people of Kansas, het. ~d of the trumpet as the rider himeelt, le was sus eats Be pwrecemied yet po iy three | ciety shoul. . 7 i akes d feit’e i, wae got edo | Dine ear ea ner had Lotus, asolred. That the party which concerns tel exclusively | present tne at enon een neem 8 Mancnes- | members on it As bé a ™ ©. if ly ae way iar eidered that « “Stale aystem of eolportage was a humbug | work ce each. A diver iben' Went down and savour Marebahh Mofile oma I Seo An old man “bought one 01. <viewe ws woe wg | Present from the Weat be Woe com ind wicked way; Smmponse sums of money ware spent in | canvas ever the bow, io stop the jeak, after which ab wes vane ask neatly dn: bathe $0, av gn 4 NEF no jane asf Ady yy ld | Set us moved an acconded to ead tw6 a: ort woe | a way tbat would \ > Gao eH ESS Breartnooks, eae carried away, ee caress: | A Teiuses i eepouse "ihe cause of all sue as are Spb “ telling ». 2 & bargain. uv ttee—Rev. Dr. Gordon and Rey. Mr. Field, of Provi- | the society was cone ibe remedied wali! the whole ra. | NOt been started, ‘excepts few were taken ou destruc regard to complerional distiactions 4 ‘sand cart. ‘trampet of the | commit id nev ef, *' of the fore hold, and which were found eupty in order to destrastion’ wapent reguss ve somvecsanensy or morsion | man thoaght bu © 0a his tie a ‘ad cou! ae oie te i, “inorder to apse, kinks Stat enitient & remodelled at the steam pump down. ‘A body. euppo renee abl roeretins (ere ean a wer tren ga, hor. 1 Syne, Seng tae be pyell | teers to voig A207 whe Rave ihe question apes the te dhe musing pane nger. was foond ‘aabore last week ‘only difference between the democrauc and oma ter. upeet the sand man Preeent at their meeting, and | amendment. motemnte etteslen to Os — See is one of deares, not of principle—of limitation as against | 2't\ O07) Ye with Dongias-— (rene ‘te mal masses | sad would ie eters cates Nasen of tae come e186 | RNa gg tes Be C a's attention to the Doundlecs expansion of altade ‘end longi'ude in opposition wea ane manbood to be the leader of Vetters from Kova, Charles) fact that were wore. a, Eoiowet tear oh the masetng > romlaing aiitude, old man was sitth, % ciency, incapedie of main sising on uncompromising oii Sets | Biizal yey March 23—The Henry Ellis, for the Owe of Good 2h an am sche, with Hope, and fully loaded. yesterday and lay awk- - « = wardiy, Dut preceeded ‘by steam fi At ‘to 26th, brig Montrose, om Demarara, j to snivereal propagandiem and lndiscrimiasieautjursion.., | Norn. Bancroft aaid that American law ~ ““tagd this | _."e¥> Dé. Tnommax, reed eters ‘00s ict "sanith, of | could net gals atiaeaion Livgnroot, April The Harvest Queen, from New: York, | yA4raue 4 Marsh 20 in yor’ cbr Datphin om oa RE land publicly made against the American Sheiety-im No. | of necessity aud of the hour, Themen whol~ "<do, | Waiker, expressing their entire sympatby in the ob. | to morrow. . i atiempiing to dock this ¢orenoon Frees Dock, was ‘Tuissye, April 21—Arr Golden Rate, Somber ina, bya ouinver of “pastors and ministers of Coa- | eorstitution knew they did what they were not sent “| Washington, th ‘serosa. Mr. Tarran—Name, * Ghat although they were | causht St the entrance of the gut, Dut 24,8 D Bhepherd, Gale, NOrienn Sian WW Bocule, Bea Seti churches in Franklin and Lamoilie counties, Ver | tut the people bowed to ft; and ever since, whatever ® — ! tects stated in 1, D., of Detroit, was added to tho Several gentlemen explained “yey attended upon the towed oul galas } Apparent iajury snd sabres ins’ te — ly "vasiained Dy all the facts in the case, | ooanized ernment nated and ibe poeple aay M “th aroma, ~. not members of the Tract Soolety . Fiver . inkiin ob ies *Taoo Apri ae Poe Reser Ppres Prcitense, A can law. Mr. Buchanan emoc * addressed the meet ting upon invitation. sean w) a be Tork, anes wate con vm dy Apne ty = rye turew off the Constitution and did what Be eee aan mT 1s TAPPAN, Faq. em before taem as @ mer Me, Boo oxi, of Hartford, th" nade 0 few re. editor’, eso of a, ane bur, oe ie Adam Lodge, Thoburn, from Shieldt the cause of truth and of evangelieal re Wy throw. | the republican party do 20100. He asked the republican | 608 ie sg that he desired to ad- | marks, tne main, ba tore reported) ere ian andes rn Taland, ; ‘Meesf, ae tt bas done, an° a at a between slavery and the party to checkmate the government pills, rotten | Christian solitionist, and as ye he . + eveniog The Rev. Mr. Cuxmven rose to address = 0 The whaler, from ‘ale Ports. ic sentiment of Christendom. It has become the enemy of | gojlar Lat them table the sppropriation i here, He vopeidered the remarks made ttm « of pat in I atm fimaa, Toried! cessussered shears’ § Heme Bor ee ty and the bulwark of oppression As thus conducted, | \ iy, proslavery expenses. et the South no longer by Judge Hornblower a capital speech in favor of aboll- | was met wnt crm <- “ ‘eb 10, jm gt 288, lon GLA, April ae pe} ap A a wi | thoes the ‘arue and snk what we thik. (Anplaase ) | by 1udee Horgulcne © ope Pita sy means, | “Rey. Mr. Cuore am ir sagen 1a 5e Serenata Toe ayer atar | RAY pak Mary Con, Avery, N14 Ghost may be promoted aad may exist with | Messxchusetis bad begun, og ‘he looked upon that movement as an to the | wish to say one wor: Pes gp ——- Aignaliod the American ship Rajal Ee pasty ger tana ah oto | Yee yer on grace | Sebi ear he Su open | Fr rnin) men |B hel i Ppa the Feligion of the wospel. ai guage for the Union, bat too dtrty Mishop Mende, of Virginia, wae enutied to their respect; | that one word timent. (Mr. Choover the | faded March 81.) | stig, il ey ang benent by Reavunceaarery, PA or Sr palty vowed ita opposition with | but everybody knew he lived in a slaveboliteg: “a | im wora ina led voice ‘and !mmoediately retired.) 1» dees | do under all ciroumetaness, a9 at war with ihe interer's gtvnal _emene tg Tt would effect something. ‘There pa re ay yy gr for Dr. Touras alladed to the moral form: | | Ship Centurlon, Ceutkins, rot Lavorpoo! for NYork, Apeil | eae ene erie ine aia or countenance of any | wasa State pride strovger than the love for the Unica. Bishop’ pesaphlet Be and "? were #y- wich they could go t0 the meeting to morrow from te nites oe is canta Apri 25 tut 48 40, ton 113) MAULX ANDRA. May 10—Are bris"® Re ken gaa aed gure ores Tndividtal, claiming tobe virtue, bumane OF | Tat them enact that the slave should go back wo slavery, | be considered ecagiaien, Ot engrorauion’ we wuld po (0 tho acting 19 marron, Som te ah eye " ro 19 aes Hite in tenes is Recolved. That the “revival of religion,” which bas tert watt ere be pamisle, exe aher"acothor, to | bined mend MeO Sori, bed sere hg gee capneene irom era ee fe TehBe ie sake aah ig Wallace, from Callao for Rngland, = pegniat RYok ci :. aes egem pS PR ST TE pactment which millions of people would mate | “recog Bisboy ino said in | | Afer some diacusaton, the original resolutions were pat Ww. NYork; mone. teat dclunand rio ereptlonal cases make a3 001 oman sbould be subjected to « trial as to of the oes of a personage. fed ag ogi ghd _ casaimouty, Mr, Tappan’ Pehip Hosert Peal, trom WYork for Hamburg, April 18, | Boston: nastie Ary bark Yot eeiuces for millon ia bo from all considers | whether he was a slave on that soil. Let them = a, 4 Se ena mavendaer iin the American sense And passed theretore lost. It was then resolved "2 bets o, gtering 8 April 22 Yet 48 X, Yon 11. ignat iox 8 Pare bowed 8. end 8 Jp lied ite converts as ly wt the eee as garrisone the despotiam of goyeram: : of that i That, pampbiet of the Bishop’s had beea tod pustiemen be inted ag a comm! Jobasn, re for Charleston, April 17, renee. Mira — extited a0 opporition in the mi ist Pn 4 of this kind bad an influence. As Beoteh womans kept term “ coptained much that was bat | to make srrnngerneate for the of ection at the Pe get abounding corruption and ad progigacy has recat Reng; | watering the linen time after time, so tha’ uls. mately though eat was moai “erpicious, and was (buted | meeting to-morrow Sk tas Hupper, from Havre for Charleston, Ap Besar es ore oF fon and co-cveration Of ibe mms Teait waa erideuity de, | imperceptibly. it would become white, the anti-sisvery | & great deal that was moni ; pion, Wa. Jearup, Re Rev. 8. H. Tyng, John Jay, aa.» w Shanghae for NYork, March icrida, Rely oN, Teresi streugiben a church which in." the bulwark of cove would "work certainly though slowly. by day | wih, @ view, — Asa Smith, Rev. J. Howes’ et. gie Wing, Mere, fram owes Yorks bid, wind W all day, Bs Se Wie in a eb | SAY ens ie cera Roma | Ph Ta | Beg. ee mrs vo inom, Win nu; | MAA om tio ot Mah | SA iia in . That they who stand aloof from the anti slavery | Chusetis liad tried it and found it was for Pa. | favored :n¢ publication of the tract, “Of the Dutlee ot . Mr. Sarr, from the Business da A from pen ee eplerrice oooupy & positing dieh orable io themeeitee, mer po Loring {olive in Washingwn tan is the Bey | tere towards ‘Deir Servants,”” as being one that would not Hay, Me Sm, from umes Comentiee, ore- ne peers Daslerto, Liverpool for WO: Sterpiozarde fee enaloret, well plessing jo the der Suid. (Applocse.) offen! the delica’® sensibilities of Southern siaveboliors, | sen." sating then separated, after being five hours in | “ktnp wi from Liverpool for NOrieans, April 19, ‘** Tame cf the republic, nad tressonatle touhs cause of | Mrs. Frances Warries of Md. a colored ady wae the next | Mr. Tappa. pr eded to assail the slaveholders, and | — The m. : 44, 100 16 etalon, rm ; ‘ent of slaves, and argued that slave. | session. soot for Apalachioola, April freedom throughout ibe world speaker. se beard, re aed the tren oc saves, weir No anette res ot Whie the resolution with regard to revivals was pay fea? pton, ‘shrieks holders were Such were rsary Meeting to be Held, ‘estern Isiande—see a Liverpool, Zend the ulesowk confusion was, manifested, nad Tmingied | torn dan acne rn slavery. Hoxiogs to the commends Hy read crimes Anniver yeast, Mat 1h wart ee tee et rem Motes fer Piss ve “Go on,” &c. Neither a peel ena au pt Ye York, per ve p> it capitally, ‘and Grotius had denounsed American Antis Society. Aa — Peete ae Hs iar bo we ‘on 3 ” — nd aif a dozen per- | ment; but the first time she man ateaiing a8 A moet infam:.'* bc rb, rat continued i eae Indutry ~The aon canbegmey ext. Py, reli, frean Carl for Tampton Roads, mmgnden bb Ty thon the due opal pier tmagitere, % Sabbath | pratn ohne eUte A, will be held at the Cooper sth | ‘ek ha oie of HOG 4 days from W Rod 8 Domin- mi upon the du rates, ‘inatitution - ar’ Mr. Kmencm, of Brooklyn, from among the audience, | poor black to the Feakers and gamblers, or ot the Keepers of bomcs "Ml | tate —w 9 (ot am aon, Av 6. J a tor Giaagow, Apeit | Bath Me. vie, Wes Rive, making hi if heard above the din, | they could not crors. e, and he understood there were great abuses there. - 5 eval mee 1 May 4 Arr soni MAT he. end sad Mr |’reeident, ‘ere those here who cannot | whole North would be free, Tiasgeeer.) He considered it @ shame upon (he society ror the Blind.—The anoual annl- ‘Park Kieciric, from Hamburg for NYork, no date, iat 48, ‘Saree with that rentiment. need of personal li that while slavery was the vitals of the body & stitution for ill bo held at the Agaaemy ot ee Bees Boa Voices—“Order, order.” jeowen Gen 4 politie like a cancer, it looked on and treated that cancer this institution the / of Beau. for Nort, April 1 al 4 Jon 1 =. —_ Will the a “y gg yo now slept in ny graves, } dpe Lhe J LA . ple In concluson he moved bath i Avola, from Boston for rape Abeona, Pay Vorces—"“Order, or. L. on, dear jum.” | been successful cpt @ following reeviution — ~ Doe'ness D'Take him out,’” ke The society bere adjourned ening Rey. Dir. THoMPsox then rex tho following report trom, yo Apps a Gatehebares | Peg trom Herth for ae Apel 9%, et <i ee phte pa od gentleman | the old indies encamped on the feld of battle with thetr the committee — at 00’ A.M, The anniversary exercises will begin 8 LE op, Tottiand, bound to Matanza, May 1, lat lowed to speak Proper tim: provigione. Resolved, That im the judgment of this mestings het The business meeting closes. Wavre Max—Hear him now ‘dl ton, eden fourth | © oe 15. on for 8t Jobo, «th Gannason—it ia simply out of order for the gentle. EVENING SESSION. agente of visa stirred nad the" wears | American Home Missiomary Society —To9 Thay ten mE Be non PR, April 30, man to ¢0 into arty diecuesion, and # ‘ar ae those who The faithfe) came together at Mozart Hal) at half past the American 3 Erpet os boriety eat and eetnes te anpiversary of the American Home Lg =~ f ~~ § Jat 30 20, Ports. reprobate ine resolutins Just read are conceraed they | seven. Tee complerion and numbers of the wadience id | & fislernal and Pee detes Seth ia i Feb Meche Adome Rowe Rone CHt Marsh euke here indicate sree eelignn | ROLVAry eexeatielly from those of the morning sssembiy, ee iis % nd tie moral | ORF Msg mur th AARTAN: Cole, Belle Tale; 6ib, Ploreace Nightingale, Joss, saBeientty without en ion (Htisves aad | TRF Was & considerable delay in the opening of the exer- 4 eee 1 fee ee American Bitle Society — the Fort Ar no 49 vy Fame, Rarle Wing, Wa'er, Stangan ise. cies, roved. jesived. th ie expeote t sleeied 1 brated House, in Astor - ‘Callam, fri o 4 fr. GAkR@ON then introduced } which was improved by @ partion of the audieute ge Pees ncazeey tm all whe may Me laced to this society fo (ranmaction of bentoese, ot 9 A. It for coh eure ace Hack, Clarke, from Whang ee for do, in stamping their feet after the manner of the hoys in the Eke yrtveal sceting cl te society forthwith faithfully M> Cuanum Lewox Rew yp, (oinek men,) of Mamsch: zee, April 25— Sid Jobanna, Presch ton. Taavt, § York; Jeune ‘Wotte, who sed the resolutions were every way important. | Mestre when the curtain is not raised at the Proper time. Sala com * over {tee of ni pointed to mage | 1 tans, Union ‘where the report of the mana gnr, ‘April $7— Arr Constitution, Serebe schasrman, (he members ofthe nocety, | Finally, Mf. Jounson sated that he had been requanted vo fereatsee tt for the day it of eeu "he hatheee meetin gern will be made and addremen r‘ivered. ee oa eee einen, Smith, Boston (and cause, am charac” Bone passed $27,(), of thone present, he 'did no: propane 1 oosupy take the chair, and introduced Mr. Kamund Quiney, ot Bos. De Tt Tre mere det of the repor Amervoan Sita <= he, enieal Se we pEl Arr Aulante, Sactent, Baveamah; 2, bh ing wor’ Apel B—Are Memengor Sind, Billings, Bh Zocentiy when he happened to be the ouly colored gen. of the pies ‘© power dubing the last twenty years, He & be pr ‘at 7 o'clock P. M. iin = adeed Sieman present, and he was called upon to eperk, he pup: | revic the exer also Wher ope, in the ‘ udgment of thia society, Amerisan slavery Doginnlng at 7) “J Sa BeviTeve give color wo the occasion. laughter.) | © exertions of the ‘abolitionists during the | 189! 4 Nefore Ged ‘American Tomperance Union. —The anniversary will be en, Ant SAE Ochre, wemele, BTork. ald give not only color but upprobation t2 thi. mact | %™* ‘ime, complimenting Mr. Garrison. There was some £. TAPPAN apcko at longth in support of the amend: | held in the eveung, in the Church of the Puritans, Union | Ponnervs. \ orllie= are Panny iauny, Widaon Mork, ¥ good ore Pr videnee Be was sorry to 200 a revival of the particular Ame lauso from the audience, and a o m eqvare Baacuy Ynan, April 3-07, Ose from At MR One ¥ oe ie oe, ® rican item of hissing. The work to be dus # greator | from a large black dog on the plast a rs barking & Dr. Bacon thought the society should not assume Deaf and Dumb.—The deaf and damb pupils will bold | for Amsterdam; 2th, Loulelana, trom By 4 Aponryaeb, ‘May, ay orig mae Coseee, } Shan they anticipated. Ho he! been wld thet they ought | complimented the 4 Platform. The speaker | ' 4. teaching of political parties. He theught the amond- | gir exhibition at the Acndemy of Music, at 4 P. M. men ar om » i Cotati, Stow gy He e Gertenes, ‘eamer ChesapeeRs, Cro fo bo callatiod by having gassed eo. many dimes fromtes plimented the dog, but he wae ignominously ejected. | jrent would weeken the original Fesolation. ‘American Atelition Socidy.The anniversary will be | yAtacos, April l--Arr sche Sarah Maria, Ontorkill, Yor ‘ Colg, Morten fy of thoit opponents, “For bimeslf, he cared vary lit. | Mr. Quincy proceetod to puff the poe Jety to a tremendous ‘The Rey. Dr. Curevar coneidered that the only ground held at Dr. Cheever’s charch, Union equare, at 2) P. M. Cowse, April 0—Art Connectieut, Welsh, Callao. PoRtEM OUTTA - « Ms beret gos, Col, 7 Me for any other one of the rosolvtio ‘xoopt the one | extent, aud to claim for it the crod on which the Tract Society had @ right to publish anything National Wo- Coxtaven, April Sid Denmark, Koch, San, Francteco. PLYMOUTH, May 71 e pO My Beading to the overthrow of the Amorican clon. That fostering the anti slavery feet Tf the Moone nating 80 4) On the subject of slavery was, because slavory was a win | Woman's Rights Convention The eights National Wo- axnsGaR, April 1Old Fillmore. Evans, 6 ( BROWN Ny ts Pelican. Altri Seemed to bim the only practical measure. He {rund that soporific order, and tennnas or ch | before God. (Applaure.) The first duty was to proclaim | man’s Rights Convention will be held at oom | . anton Tifa Arab, Ore ‘and Caloatta, 'PROVIDRRDE, May }0— 77 stessahlp Poles, prea and through and over all the phases of acti slavery Se. betrayed ite impationoe In's taco srs wae Niwas a sin, for itwas man stealing, and no oce could | mencing at10 o'clock A. M. Orne il Arr Favorite, Crowoll, HAYES: psaisaet. | Rhodes bin, (and an off Pawinxe’) American slavery bad grown, and it soomed to him | Mr. Quincy having wubrided, there wer manner, ©" | Geny thal, no maiter in what nt people viewed the mat Frunay, May 14. Chanente, Apil 3-614 Cadiz, Dale, 8 ‘Sid ‘barks Bit, Percival, and Zin the only course left to be paraved was | “Phillipe” and “Garrison,” hore were loud « dis for | ter. Inthe Supreme ‘Court of the country Savebolding American Board of Commissioners Sor Foreign Mistions. | Pile. os. sarc it—Arr Mowery, Marner. Cups of ood ganeiro, pmeran one aimed at by this society. So far fr M ‘Ccommon preey: vat Mice in lieu of ri teousness, and there it dared 0 | —The anone! m ‘the American Board of Commis. | ., Dist, Orace Gordon, hone ‘and al SRF Arr Spanish brie it O pemeate chugs , Y gnaienee, Was © antl are Came the me oe ee ean a ‘men porsoased qnener fusions wilt be held ta the churen of | 1°? > siaboun, ong se omtage Mathew: | tn fa aches RM erill, Hendrickson, Yor; ay ing snged by any opposition to a | this audience was @ anit on the qu ty of | make the deck What black 2S J dys J cn wi ee eee * ina pers, onan’ dies, lution of the (ain. he was more firmly attached to | they were chiefly from the North, ana tresame freedom, | that. the white man should respect Ph wae me AM. Boston man ¢ K Nay O-Aid sche Mio, Chandler, Ft fi Oat neta othe erat UAck but Atty years he could | commence with @ remark as to tie South He” ete would | South should take some action, and he hoved the many Bioka Comventton , (second day).—Monart Hall, | Si iam Re nM paige, Mi Ue 7 oar bate Ne Tie Beatrice, B. eee ie the pulpit nnd the trees AVeUy stood with | vel that the slavcholders strained every y didnot mar. | amendment would prevail, for to vote it down would wen ace, Jaa Syrte ‘acd ‘ a 1% bit Relat Aa Pgs Fy ; } TE ae ak pean > Fe a Whether = oe aa of slavery. They were arve to perpe- | in Ly Judgment, MT Ett me ty ewer Oo ‘40; toh Pata nan ty mm in the city night C ‘ a en oman «poke at length, anc uted = Past, do we - Washington , he must believe that we American poople | toe mach, So the delonce aye {river ore tioshound | ing thane aly reason why. the Tract soviety howl | MART TIME 1 N 1 BI LLIGe rT On , | erltehe: Robes Orreker, a NEWSPAPERS, Bore destitu.'e of principle and feeling on thie subject. | protecting themesives. 8 it mf wore justified in | take any action, was becaure it was a sin before (o4. ; v Thomer 2hth HP Mildens iy ty The Diack man had no place in their estimation. The | to whom you #end missionaries: yr 4 with idolatore | The Rev. Ir. Pauemn, of Albany, considered that the "AIMAMA0 FOR 4E TORR-—tHIO DAY Were 'S. a | Webster, Bpencer, and} 1 ENESS of wulge ran Troedom pad oo tuner hope for eman- | and the true God suotild be known’ 4 \dolatry was asin, | amendment would fail {n effecting What Dir. Toppan 904 | som mises..... “4% Wikies ewe 7 a | Keeler ‘tens are for fapden eo Ow Hall, Mowry, ei ee pation of the rare, and hd no ofber plan ‘ot that to | Exactiy the ease wil the shavete Mr. Cheever desired. They tai Goat with the evils of | gow ears. wei 108 r eve Battery nn for Mam a eo lowry, | he burglar, with askeiah of ve the Amerwoah Unk n he was mae to foo! | a free press in Rustla, At i Dut they were not ther sare Uerlenon oa Gat the sane clave of Inwe were made to operate in ai pa — a Ret, uae in invy niet ‘bey ‘adopted the amendment ha Port of New Week, May 11, 158, Vow Foren, trom New York for Am: iam meet during he journey aes Ge aa ie ee the South, no man ¢ thought when they should meet thoir brethrea on Wo:tnos- h Carace, Mmpeve, from TAR ENTS OF soon oe “Tmersoes question very ° ; holders aia pn May weutd be taken whieh wouss prosesiy roses Steamship Arabie (ir a ranen, pool Canard. ung Mechanic, Amebury, fem Bombay for gnc OHNNE pn rs ‘ when tee @ . FP — — ts Sure then mae some observations. Ho ) hin {opnd, Benes Lear gre eal . —01, Ladi, Coffin, from Baltimore for be dvi , r present * A. 4 ahoala’ bet thought they should keep w withsin the bounds of the pray | EOP Aiiateatia, @mith, Liverpool Wiliars A.) stom , ett 08, F TT Pruning, Harding, t or « on thie t - ' ; | teats to thelr resotuticor they only shadows! forth | Bhip Gotden Oks, Neston. Kewon J {nag An. | prt oom, er nae RATIONAL POL * wry » oe b 4 hed 7 propored to carry out on Wednesday. Re Bark Muskingnm. Martin, Warren" \ion & Bi: | pas; © ’ ‘ AOBS & TOUPRY, Generol wore ; he pmepdment, he geld teak wor Brig Gteanger (8°), Nicholson, J Wer.