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NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1858. 3 entitied t do pleases imeclt forever, against that counterfeit | ich pre- _ a 4 ‘Whereas, it is notorious 3 " Stree ti or ara win trtre w eee ae eceatec' dha not want © negro wos tes) ABOLITIONISM RAMPANT. wala Save nie erad on cmos AFFAIRS AT QUARANTINE. My wetersanding is Sas 3 need ‘not beve her ‘wah Amerienn capital, under ine anavom eae ‘Visitation of the Quarantine Station. the habit of different parts of the town amd romiseuonaly: ite Jeopardizing thelr “healt and fivest and that ipa eget veges gh ef eo ry ‘the concerns within that State that with | for either; but, as God Ws separate, we can leave connivance oi the American government, in defiance he rights ef no other Stale, aud that the govern | ove another alone, ani do one another much good there- | Lloyd Garrison and his Massachusetts Radical | of the 1aw of Congress declaring that trado to be piracy, Im consequence of the pelite invitation of Dr. Thomp#00, | pany, iaereby endangering tbe Mag and lives of bone with ment, upon principle, has no ‘to interfere | by. There are men enough to marry all the white Fanatics Celeb: and in perfidious disregard of treaties made for sup: | shecfiicient Health Officer et Quarantine, a very large they. come in therefore, of a ihiogs doce conteen the whole, I have. | women os Gaeta ic tbem be ba marriah: The a rating the 4th of July. , 1 ta exntionel pestitalien of tne state’ tid einem age veld avi to he | By th mos fasta bel i concern ) ” sald tbat at all times. I bave sald, as , thet T | Judge regales ua with the ‘terrible enormities that take stripes to the most dreadful of a stare and | Quarantine grounds ab Slaten Island, shortly after one | 1am hapyT oie ADM RAIN honera le Rear, at ‘de not believe in (he right of Ulinols to interfere with the [ince ba the mizhare of races.—that De aes eee jects American vessels engaged in lawful commerce to the | o'clock on Wedneaday last. The appearance of the whole a. ) waa entirely ih York Graaberry lnws of Induan, tho oyster laws of Vigla, or | the superior down. Woy, Judge, f we donot io nem eet | They Benounce the 4th of July, 1776, a8 } rupicion of boing Afvican savers in ree 1a tie | ctablishaoont, orn gratifying, ihe extreme, and with | with be tnnructous T received, f prevented him wits y"asee the liquor laws of Maine. I have ssid these over | together mn the Territories they won't mixtbere, (Im- 8 Day of tH 7 warrants the exercise of the t of visitation, the of a small of : ariinances pasad your last matatng. when be ai fané over again, and I repest them here as my mense applause.) y of Transparent Hypocrisy’ Sn tho pat of Brith cruwery enguged in good fain or | ‘te expenditre of» amall sum ot money ould be mado } presed Muse oo ‘inde ib, ort Sai ‘Bow is it, then, that J oe Por A Voice—Three cheers for Lincoln. (The cheers were They Denounce the Constitution the srgpromnion of, tho Sepsien save vee. ‘accordance | one of the finest quarantines in the whole world. if woes than. ohereree Board of Health bad Peegereri where the pet mind shall rest in given with a hensty geod Wi) and “ > ‘with the laws of nations, in order to ascertain the real Before proceeding to the inspection of tho grounds 1 scopes OF a0 premsloe’ of tbe sid and co operation be Devtef that it wn the course of ultimate extinction, that I | — Mr. LincoLx—l should say at least that that is a aelf evi- the Union—‘‘No Union character of the vessels ibus visited; therefore Pry Chidetdiianedt phy Be eee maere SPW ccih of the chy ct hoe, tam in favor of Tine going ever and intorfering with tho | dent truth, Now, itiappens that we mest together oace with Slaveholders.” ®, Resolved, That the menacing tone used in both ig of the wes Prosident G. 0. | Peekal weir next mecting st which be corfiaily’tayived tug @ranberry laws of ‘What can authorize him to | every year, some time aboat the 4th of July, for some houses of Con; at its Inte session towards England, | Verplanck in the chair. to appear, an endeavor ¢ obtain thetr assistance also to en- ‘draw any such inference? I suppose there might be one | reason or other, These dth of Jul; gatherings, i suppose, errr and the of in case her cruisers continue to | Commissioner PURDY said that @ statement had been oF Board to carry them into effect. In eunelusion, I ‘thing that at least enabled him to draw such an inference | have their uses. If you will ind ‘me I will state what txercise the right aforesaid, wore not extorted 0; any Fe | received from the ae ship Char! wal pis Unt ince last I have investigated the ‘hat would not be true with me or with many,others—that | I suppose to be some of them. We are now a m' Resolutions and Speech of Garrison, and Te ae ig nar Une Ainerican fing, or so freodora of captain of the ship ee Cooper | condition of the my iy ye (ig D4 4s, booauoe be looks upon all Unis matter of slavery aa an | nation-—wo are thirty, or about thirty millions of Speeches of Phillips, Haywood, Bas seas, or the jon of commerce; but, primarily, | Which recently arrived as this port from Antwerp, and | for this season 0! the year—all of which fs reapocnliywab- excocaing), Wee ind--thie mater cf: eoping chests and we own and about one fifteenth part of the layw 9 on the part of the South, by a consciousness of guilt in the | against whom the passengers had laid grievous com- | mitted. WARD 0. MUNDY, ofthe of the whole nation in & of oppres- | dry land of the whole earth. Wo run our memory back sett, Foss, and others, premises, by a determination to grant complete immuntiy to plainte—and that the be Health Officer of the Town of Caslieton. sion and tyranny unequalled in the world. Hoe looks upon over the pages of history for a>out cughty-two years, and coery slave ship, as against seizure and My | ard as same would laid before the | Castirron, July 16, 1866. ° 16 as being an exooedingly little —only equal to we discover that wo were then ® very small people in ke, Ker, ke while takin under our bossted “banner of free- | Board st thelr next meoting, when it would be found that ca matin Sec cumenred ent Bo ranere of (ho Tenth question of the cranberry laws of aa something | point of numbers, vastly inferior to what we are now, dom,” aud by intense fear and batred of England for her captain had successfully exculpated himself from the | OMlicer be published in the New You« Hxnato, ‘no moral question in it—~es something on a par | with a vastly less extent of country—with Jess of anti-slavery zeal and fidelity; and, generally, on the part rot anal YRBLLOW FBVER AT SAGUA LA GRANDE. With the question of whether a man chal! pasture his land | ev 1g we deem desirable among men—we look upon [From the Boston Liberator, July 9] of Northern members, oF republican, mainigsioner CxAntaxs vaid the of the Charle®| cartain Ingraham, of the brig Maris, ‘witn cattle, or plant it with tobacco—so and go small | the cl ‘as exceedingly advantageous to us and to our | ANTI-BLAVERY CELEBRATION OF INDEPENDENCE Day. | by ® wish to ‘make for Buncombe,” with a | Cooper waited on him and disproved the - ingraham, rig , at Bristol, Rhode fthing thab he covaludes could doaire tbat, anything , sad we fix upon something that Tn accordance with the call of the Massachusctts Anti | view to making capital for the next Presidential election. by ny ll Island, reports that when he left Sagua la Grande, 30th be done to bring about the ultimate extinc. anid gome way or other being with this | Slavery Society, notices of which had been extensively | | 10. iesolved, That we perceive with regret and slarm, ttn took piace as to sending back some sick | ult., the yellow fever and black vomit was raging to « tion of that little thing, I must be in favor of bring: Tine of ity. We Gnd ® race of men living in that | circulated, « very large assembly of long-tried friends of | that tho effoct of al! this bluster apd bullying has been to emigrate to Europe, alter which the Board Teacta atlas omear tha shine LENE ‘hace ing about an amation of all the other little things day whom we claim as our fathers and grandfathers; | the anti-slavery cause, together with many new ones, inlionidats the British government, and cause f virtaal to, ve omatinns, then wat down to a splendid lunch, | wore upwards of 5 Peng yp lea mag domney the Union, Now, it so happens—and there, I presume, is | they were iron men, they fought for the riacigio thas freh recruits in freedom’s service, and animated with a | Sbandon the ree visitation, im order [opm oad Oticer for sho entertainment of whith ad lost me of thelr Ray’ othee oq Be Ulan, XO te a ene ae ee eeacecicdm Loe teetcag af ou, | there may be no rapture between the two countries, and | Bia gues, | The good things of We abie—bolh solids and | Har Mary Aun, Faruham, from Havatay arrived on ihe thus; and it so happens that there is a vast portion of the | what they then did it Has followed that the degree of day, July 5, at tho ‘well known grove in rata! thus to allow tho American fiag to give proteotion to what, | Hquide—-having Deen discussed, fo at A ig Deane teghouhendflen 4 iiperian Deope/ oe de St ook on a ee ee eee eae aoe | Sige ne are 2 Re beeen Pie oe contisnuly normed that tat warts: Tuomas | 0 were sek om board, ‘The capa’ wif died whruy q yy ol ie juent wi anti slay men wite. b pson’s - + ean, they can prove it is such by the writings of done in process of time, of how it was done and | have been wont to be uttered. al we F 11, Resotved, That the tone and attitude ef the Loudon Say, eaerely Enlmhcatonal, be presamed, oa Dr, Thomp fo apeiron eons Cad thone who gave us the blessings of | ‘which we en- | who did it, and how we are historicall with it; | The day was perfect--beautifully clear and bright, with | Times, in regard to the hitherto unquestioned right of | 900’8 part. | (Laughter.) Ho would givers. Thomp: | Csprain Seabury roe ienetaiee ma Joy, and that thay 90 looked upon it, netas an evil | and we go from these in bumor with | a refreshing northerly breeze to invigorate and inspirit. visitation, to ‘the slave traffic Itgelf, aud to slavery asa | #B—God bless her, her husband and children,” reported seven of the rev = Shor 7 coufzing Heol 10 the Staten ‘Wwhero it sitstod; | ourssives—we feel more aflached tho one to the olber, | When ibe malitode had gaihored into iho amphitncare, | cotton raising system jn Amerie, aro deteviatly unserupy ier a teckonie eld TMA CMM ATEGASE:, Sen yee encaben, to Park 67 and while we agree by the constitution we assented | and more firmly bound to the country we inhabit. In | hollowed out by nature’s hand so admirably for tne seat- | lous, thoroughly pro-slavery, in exact aocordance with th: Dr. Tromrson, in responding, sald that in the discharge | ir. riot, vf i agian to, in the States where it exists we have no tw inter. | every way we are better men in the ago, and race, aud |” ing of s large audience and for the convenience of ~ | withes and designs of the ‘power, and in sovereign | Of bis duties at Quarantine, under circumatances of Dilots. fore with it because it is in the constitution, and we are by } country in which ‘we live for these celebrations. Butafier | ers in addressing them, and when every place of 1g | Contempt and daring defiance of the moral and religious Setrolicn, 9) complains sok era te Sectahig A Paw ror THE SuprREssion or D 1 Beth duty and inclination to stick by that’ constitution in | we have done all this we have aot reached the whole. | and standing was occupied with attentive listeners, it was | sentiment of the peoplo of Fngland. of their tion, and they thought it oppressive at being | ny. Vick eh, : 7 SOSULING—- ‘all fis letter and spirit from boginning to end. (Great ap- | There is something clse connocted with it. We have be- | ssight both beautiful and auimating—full of hope aud | 12. Resolved, That the persistent efforts of the Times to asked to ee ne contents of tneir vessels. This | the Vicksburg Weg proposes » new plan for the yaa) ‘So much, then, as to my disposition—my wish- | sides these lescended by blood from our ancestors | promise for a better future. misrepresent the workings of British West India emanei- | 487’s experience taught him another lesson, for he | Suppression of duelling which if it obtains, will have all the Stale Legislatures blotted out, and to have | —among us erhape balf our people who are not descend: | | There was litle delay in commencing the rerular pro pation—to decry it as & meamure of slek'y philanthropy, found thus far no grumbling at the requiremenis of | now, hereafter and forever, put an end to the burn- fone consolidated government and a an{form! ‘of domestic | ants atall of these men; they are men who have come from | ceedings of the day, on account of the late arrival of tho | and as disastrous in its resulte—to give aid and com! thetr detention at Quarantine. (Laughter.) Me told tem | ing of gunpowder between gentlemen at ten paces. Fogulations in all the Staiee, by which I suppose it i | Furope—German, Iriel. Preneh and Boand/oavian--men | railroad train from boston, But at 11 o'clock, tho meot- | 10 our Southern slave oligarchy, and throw contempt } twat it was necessary, and that he required thelr presence | ‘The arrangement proposes that when a difficulty eee ne ee eee ee | ian Pecans tian Barope themaelves, or whose ances. | log was called 10 order by Samuel May, Jr., who oongra- | wPon the struggle for the abolition of slavery in the Uni- | there; and now he would tell, thom that ee, they were in } occurs between two gentlemen the matter shall be gen, bre too, and ‘we must make those which grow | tors have hither and settled here, finding themselves tufated tbe assembiy on the favorable circumstances | ted States—to make the growing of cotton paramount to quarantine they should discharge the vessels in frout of | referred to a court of honor, who shall settle it or io the Bouth, “All this T suppose he under- | our equals in all things. If they look, beck Uhroagh this | under which they were, assembled, and proposed, on be: | very conaideration of justice, bumanity and religion— | Shem. | (Laughter. ) decide whether it is necessary to fight or not. I stands I am in favor of d ‘Now, so much for all history to traoe thelr connection with those days by blood, | half of the committee of arrangements, the following or- | t0recovelle the people of England to an active prosecution Mr. DaviaN—Give us us avother storehouse, then, Doc: | ase of the court decidit mapat beds. Fi neneense, for I must call 1 20 ‘Judge can have no | they find they have none—they cannot carry themselves | ganization of the meetiog:— of the horrible commerce in the bodies and souls of kid- | Fr. (Langhter.) (safc cpm, Hog of a fight, the ferve with mo on a question of establishing uniformity in | back into thet glorious epoch and make themselves feel | "Presiden! Willam Lioy Garraon, of Boston Sepped Africans and Gootes, with, reference to the manu. | Dr. Twomrsox—The conslgnees frequently complained | parties conspelled to fire till one ia and the domestic regulations of the States, that they are part of us—Dbut whea they look through that Vice Presidents—Francis Jackson, Bostan; Eoenezer D. | factoring perity of Engiand—indicate total blind | When vessels were required to be discharged at Quaran- then the other to be arrested aud hung for murder. DRED SCOTT DECISION. old Declaration of Independence shay ind that those old | Draper, Milford; Fiflagham L. Capron, Worcester; Richard | Beasof vision, the deopest depravity, the most flagrant | tine, but he believed that their consignees would not gram. Alte now on the other point=ibe Dred Soottdecision, | men say that “We hold these truths to be self evident, | Clsp, Dorchester; Joseph Southwick, Grantville; ‘Marshall | disregard of homan bts, and aleposition to ald inthe | ble when they got up to town. | After chankiag the com- SPECIAL NOTICES ‘Anether one of the issues he saya that to be made with | that all men are created equal,” and then fool | G. Kimball, Barre; andrew T. Foss, of New Hampshire, | copevmmation of wholesale villany for the furtherance | PAny for responding to the toass, the Doctor propeged the | ———~ meee ra ‘me ie upon his devotion to the Dred Scott decision and | that that moral sentiment taught in that day 5 | and Asa Coiler, of Connecticut. ot a desperate cupidity; and should be mst by a united | Dame Lien yd . Tiemann, Mayor and President of the AM PERSONS ARK HEREBY FORBIDDEN TRUSTING my tion to It. Ihave expreesed beretofore, and I | their relation to those men—that itis the father of all moral Sccrctariee—Samuel May, Jr., Leicester, J. M,W. Yer- | outburat of moral indignation, and the most strenuous | Commissioners of Health of the ay of Now York: AA oF furnishing any thing for acrount of the bark. « Bow ropent, ‘My opposition to the Dred Scott decision; but | Principle in them, and that they have @ right to claim it | Frinton, Boston. counteracting efforts on the part of the friends of freedom . ROCKWELL, having been called on, responded. The im Sree Rerk ce Friaee, nor izing ot Quarantine, unless A should be allowed to state the nature of that ion, | 84 though they were bleod of the blood, and flesh of the | | Committee on Finance—Joseph A. Howland, Reuben H. universally. Mayor bad intended to have been present, but an tmpor- | dered by eeribars, oo OS ee eran SG ‘and I sak your indi while I do 80. gage rly | flesh of the men} who wrote that Declaration— | Ober, Sarah P. Remond, Sarah F. Wall, Lucy Colman, 18. Resolved, That inasmuch ag the position of the | tant meeting of the Board of Health, at three o'clock, on aeeaeieia 7 implied by the term Judgeoucias has used, “‘rosistaace | (loud snd leng continued applause)—and s0 they | Pliny P. Southwick. Timzs, on the subject olgalavery and the slave trade, ig | the subject of awill milk, hed detained him, ‘The Mayor | Socio rum WAITERS’ PROTECTIVE AND BE- ae eee io wee roakt tt, If Twented to take | are. That we the lectric cord fm that Declara. | Mr. Gannitow took the chair and eaid:—Friends | craftily assumed by the pro slavery prossin this country ‘Wes oppeada to all “ahort felled” conceras. newoleat Society will hold thelr kerd mowihly mertiog Dred Scott irom bis master I would be interf With | Mou that links the hearts of patriotic and Nberty loving | of Freedom—To the great mass of our unretiect- | 10 be @ true exponent of the goneral sentiment of the peo ‘AVowe—Very natural for a*‘Tea-man.” (Laughter.) | Prince street, on Priday evening, ats o'clock, for onlecting property, and that terrible difficulty that Judge Douglas { men "that will link thoee patriotic hearts es long | ing fellow countrymen this is a day for proud | ple of England, we earnestly call upon them to throw off |, Dr. Rockwnis, proposed Healh nd prosperity ta ie | dues and enrolling new members, By order, ° Epenks of, of interfering with property, woald arise. Sut | 8 the love of freedom existe n the minds of man through: | exultation, | for ostentatious parade, for, extraya, Meir’ 0} Legs pie caged pes lyr ory Comaalaricnera cf Jeereion, wo have charge. ot these f.esne,sigenr ered WM. HMN iY, Prosident, t . " vainst slavery an ettors, send accogs the A\ ¥ ee ee ee ae ae gant vain glorying. for revelry and dissipation, for the g y ; +4 The Pxxstpet (Mr. Verplanck) responded to the toast, ONS MALTA.—PHILALELPHIA LAG3! ! nou oon be lig and the firing of cannon; b rT words of encouragement aud val to the advo. +3 on; busto the friends here, admonish their own govern. | Which was received with enthusiasm. He said:—{ e of lave it is a day for heartfelt sadness, for the deep. | cates of emanci desisiog [h voloo—* again’’}. or boldtag that est humiliation, in mcg ny ong pocrisy, and. bloed. | ment to beware it sacrifices the claims of bleeding | have been accustomed on some of these occasions, when at all, | guiltinens of the nation. Wherever cite the American flag | humanity at the dictation of « brutal slave oligarchy, | the Commissioners of Emigration have been toasted, to @ ) We have Judge Douglas giving his exposition of what the | is unfurled to the breese, I thank God it ts not waving over | holding present mastry over the American government, 00d for you;” “we hope to wee it;” that’s | Declaration of Independence, Tew equal the veople | {ike this’ Tor, ia, tho language. of "the ‘British pook, and remonstrate agains! the fearful sorplicy ofthe Are” |’ Sresume that these complienta were paid ux, We uve vl uman fies! » We or engiand. Acoording 10 ifs elk? je of ‘the Hritish poet, | fhe perpetuation of “the sum of all villianes,”” Been admirably oy d and have done grest good for the nd celebrated armas brewery, ize, either fe dotela Be po pa THE MILITARY. ITARY.-GFRMAN HUSSAR'S ATTENTION: FOR sale, a new uniform. nape with saddle, &: . (cost Lixcorn—That is what I would do. ot ing to his construction, you, » | Campi 7 Voics— You will have a soon. are not connected with it, Now,] ask you in ail sober- « United States | your banver wears 14. Resolved, That we proffer our grateful acknowledg- | emigrants, an only say that the complaints hereto- | $125.) for less than third of its cost, at 32 Hammond street, or Mr. Lixconn— Judge Dougisa said Iss" ~)-t, thas before | Beds if all these things—if indulged in, if ratitied, if con- ‘Two embiema—one of fame; ments to those’ English journals that) are faithfully ex- | fore made were true Gentlemen, I may say, as a pre- k G.. bon G16 Pout oles, New Yor! the decision he might advaacs his vy.wion, and it firmed and endorsed, if taugbt to our children and repeat- Ales! the other that it bears, posing the cruelty and wickedness of American slavery, | {820 to the toast I am about to give you, thatthey arotruec, | = ae = be contrary to the desision when it was made; but ed to them—do not tend to rub out the sentiment of liberty Reminds us of your shame. assuring them that their words of rebuke are not uttored Print erred our Board haa been well organized, and POLITICAL, 4 was made he would abide by it until 1s was ‘reversed, | !n the country, and to transfarm this government into « ‘The white man’s y in types in vain, but help to hasten the cay for the overthrow of and honorable citizens bave been selected to carry - ag Just s0! We let this property abide by the decision; but | government of some other form’ Those arguments that Stands biazoned by your stars: that hideous system of this country, whe ous the law, and bave ooatributed their full share of duties. BR PATH WARD BOCTLAR WiLL MERE THIS ‘wo will try to reserve that (loud Ere made that the inferior race are to be treated witb aa Bat wbat’s the meauloy of your stripes? ts now the mightiest obi to the progress of We have the presidents of two societies which are mostly | Xo, 118 Wem Broads fallsteadones ie vequadied. ries of “good.”) We will try to put it where | much allowance as they are capable of on ; that as ‘They mean your negroes scars.” dom throughout the world, interested in emigration, among our members, and they | —— . bea a Judge ‘would not object; for he says he wili | much is to be done for them as condition will allow—- | Yes, they mean—et least the aymbolize, they stripes on- 16. Resolved, That we gratefully acknowledge our large | Sre always with us ‘and aro able representatives. But, | PERSONAL. =< Jadee Douglas, would not chiens: fer he says he will | ‘hat arc those arguments? They are the argumenta that | tineally ficted on the bodies of tho manacied slaves | indebtedness to thone friends of humanity in Hagland, and | genslemen, wo taonne fa Seoogies the erat lt Be Ya Rx. Geskion, dince it io made, ‘and we mean to reverse It, and | Bings have made lor ensiaving the people ia ages of the | and therefore, away with that flag forever. So longag | 9M the continent of Europe, who have aided us soaften | sent Loar oF ite Predesessors, but the excellent, 1 may | (\HARLEY BROWN.—CALL AT TIT ‘we mean todo it . What are the uses of de- | world. You will find that She argnmenta in faret of beneath it four miliions of, men are driven with impunity | 824 80 generously, by their contributions to the Nations! | #8. admirable, law under which we act. The speaker C (Friday) afternoon, at 4o'cloo) an z ‘Gisions of courts? y have two uses. Aa rules of pro- | King craft were of this class ; they always bestrode the | to their unrequited toll, like brute beasts, and every slave ‘Anti Slavery Bazaar, and by the effective testimonies they | then alluded to the sickness in 1845 and 1846, eulo- Perty they Rave two uses. First, they decide upon the | neckeof the people—not that they wanted to do it, but ship is to be protected’ from search or visitation under it, have forwavded to us,fron: time to time; and we earnest. | gieed the kindnees and benevolence ofthe cltizins at that " uestion before the court. They decide in this case that | Decause the people were better off for being ridden. ‘That | let the true friends of freedom Aigard X with tadignation entreat them still to make common cause with us, b; Sma, omang whom were Mr, Minturn and Mr. Jacob Har- pane rte pho ha et seremattetbn ts marry Drea ly. resists that. Not oal mation | direct pecuniary aid caat into ie treasury of tbe Anier- Vey. Ho might also mention another name—a gootleniae | ibey'are informed tat be dled suddenly’ at ihe retkdeace of $s their and this of the Judge and horror. argument, Se judge is the rror. Instead of making a speech, I will rt oer. Weod—-who poss that, but they to everybody else, that persons stand. | same old servent tbat says you work and I eat, you toil | paseages strikingly applicable to present condition of | ©#M Anti Slavery Society, and by all other praiseworthy ‘Thos W. Demarest, English borkood, fog Jens on Dood teat sumeaa ta a he lata ie, they say ‘and I will enjoy the fruits of it. Turn in whatever way | our coustry from an old book, so valued and so precious methods, not only for the sake of the enslaved in America, eens RN ne ee ae Be'urday, 10h inst, sce tates po AS thst when a question comes up upon another person {¢ | you will—whether it come from the mouth of a king, an | in many respects—passages which cannot become obso- but for the vindication of the rights of human nature, | Wrong be might be about other matters. Mr. Verplanck f taine «_ 2 HO8. W. DEMAREST, will be 20 again, —— Me decides in | excuse for susieving & People of bis country, oF Jete ce trite while apse is octet y fue. Garri- 4 org ore by ret I tg ay the saving gna, Sen heh Seo, a ; aLisn Neicunomsoon, Ju'y 23, 1808 another ‘cheers—ories of “good’’)—unless the court mou men race as a reason eugiay read second ant chapters a jected emancipation effected grant, “ overrulee Ka Secislon, *(Revewes: appinuse,) Welly we | the men of another race—it is all the same old ‘erp Seremish.) “The ‘congregation here united In singing, to | be Russian serfs, under the powerful auspices ofthe pre- | and which was calculated to mount lo two millions of Per ages bed ou bite plok frook, uray het trimmed writs moan to do what we can to have the court decide the ‘and I hold if that course of argumentation that ie for | the tune of Auld Lang Syne, the first piece selected for the | ®€%4 Czar, (who, by his beneficent and philanthropic ten- a year. In conclusion, he gave—“The framers Of | biue ribbon, and red striped manila; has black Bair and way. That is one thing we mean to try todo. Thess | the purpose of convincing the ‘public mind that we should | occasion, being George gs Mines: dencies, bids fair to render bis administration more truly {| the law under which the Commission acts. eyes, and yery rosy eheeka. Any person giving infor- @redness that Judge Douglas throws around this decision is } Dot care about this should ‘be granted, It does not Land of the brave, y hallowed shore iitustrioug than that of any of his predecessors), the bg toant was enthusiastically drank. — ‘to her distressed {amily will be suliably re’ Jed and 8 degree of sacredness that has never been before thrown | with the negro. I should like to know ff taking thia o Ts stained with tints of blood, &c., slaweholding democracy of the United Siates has freh cause | ME. J. ¥. nviay responded, and propowed—i<Tee Mer. | Pomena Heualog. eee eo et or Oe IL have never heard of such a Declaration of Independence, which declares that all men the stuging being led by & choir of our Hopeda’e friends, to hide its head and blush for shame and confusion of | cbas' La Bh fe’ letinguished for their pationce, | _ OSS ON thing, Why, decisions apparently ‘contrary to that de- | are equal upon principle, and making exceptions to it | Mr. Garrison said he had two series of resolutions which | /cr—engaged as itis, uncdasingiy, and by the most ne- their energy and integrity, but above ail for their great RS. WEED WILL FIND A LETTER IN_ UNION Cision, or that good lawyers thought were con! to that | where will itstop. Ifone man says it does not meana | be would like to present to the meeting. He read as fol- | ‘rious methods, in extending slavery all over this conti- humanity. M ‘eyuare Post ofice, trom pw decision, haye been mace by that court bel It | pegro, why not another gay that it does not mean some | lowr: nent, and riveting the fetters of ite muititudinous victims The sentiment was drank with ali honors. pa, heen Sie nt Be ee fo the fist of ite kind; it ls an astonisher in logal history. | other man. If that declaration ie not the trath lot us got | Whereas, at tho time of the promulgation of the Decia- | *ti!! more securely. Captain Mansiais responded. He said they had made ME MAN THAT WAS ROBBED OF A GOLD WATCH Gas) It ig a new wonder of the world. ( thestatute book in which we find it and tear it out.) Who | ration of Independence, there were not less than half « The reading of these resolutions was listened to with | & mistake in calling upon Lim to respond to the toast of in West Broadwey, and others who have lost t and ba vce! Tt is based upon falschood in the main | is #0 bold as to do it? (Voloes—'me,” “no one,” Xe.) | million of slaves, who were forced to wear the galling close attention, and constantly greeted with murmurs of | the ‘merchants of New York,” as be aid not profess to be | aiches, jewelry, clothing, $2;,ar6 requested ‘a call apes the as to the facta—allegations of facts upon which it stands | If itis not true lot us tear it out | (crien of “no,no,”) let us | yoke of @ all through the Revolutionary struggle, | *#sent or with loud applause. One of that number, His vocation was one be was prod | P7Cheny kerl, Ne. ae Mime deoslinem, alee, ciated are not facts mt all in many instances, and no stick to it then; (cheer) let us stand firmly by itthen. (Ap- | and to the end of their earthly existence; and whereas, | | W™. Weis Brown was the first speaker, and was in to of—o nea captain—and ho was not well calca- | f5rkw and spoons, pleces of mourning, calico, check co ! decision made on apy question—the first instance of pase.) It may de angeed that there are certain Gon- | from their loins have sprung the four millions of slaves | ‘oduced as having been once a slave, but now a fresman to respond to that sentiment. He bore testimony to nd salinet, a box of crimped laces, and seve &® decision made under 80 many uniavorable circum ‘that make ies and impose them upon us, | now existing on our soll, who are treated like brute boasts, | ®t least as god & freeman as slavebolding America | the great good derived from the ‘Juarentine establish. hh money abil pawn tickets, lost |) y women. stances—thus ‘bas ever been held by ihe profession | 8nd to the extent that a necessity is imposed upon man and judicially declared’ to have no rights that white men | Could affurd. He contrasted the noixy and hollow celebra- ment. When be was Commissionor it was the ime when | ~~~ wry ee a - — ‘as law, and it has always ‘confirmation before the | he must submit to it. I think thet fhe coadition in | are bound to respect; and whereas, the load of guilé en- | Wons of to-day with the position of the slave on the plan- | the cholera was raging, and when they liad fourteen hun Tidy Ry 548, 9. SRBPRRDOON BRED HIS ADOSEES lawyers regarded it ag settled law. But Judge Douglas | which we found ourselves when we lished this gov- giles ‘upon us through the recreancy of those who led in the | ‘tions and in he prion of the South, His remarks were | dred patients there in that place, aad the great exortions |_to B. G., Madinon square Fost ofice! wilhave i that all bands must take this extraordinary | ernment, We bad slaves among us; we could not get | Mewlucion, and who determined tho course of events, | Wel received. whick were then and hed slace then been mae to keop | <¢ y)ristTy"—AT THE GARDEN, ADDAESS JUNIUS decision, made under these ex ciroumstasced, | our copeiitction unless we permitted them to remain in | threatens io whelm this mation in destruction by ite in- | | WHxDKLL Pure was the next speaker. His epecch | the contagions diseases from ieg, were without |" WVoton square Post of a aad give ‘their vote in Congress in accordance with it, | slavery; we could not secure the good we did secure if | creasing weight, theretore, was characlorized by the utmost directness, boldness and | parallel in history, There been & great deal said — ‘i yield to it and Obey it in every possible sense. Circum: | we grasped for more, and having by necessity submitted 1. Resolved, That, iastesd of glorying in the deeds of | stirring eloquence. 1b bad reference alinost exclusively &bout removing the Quarantive, but he did not believe that LOST AND FOUND. =e stances alter cases. Do mot gemtiemen here remember | t ‘much, it does not destroy the principle that ia the | our fathers, and burning incense at their shrines, it be- | 1 the bow in circulation, asking the legislature | S0¥ be selected for a Quarantiac more suita- Se 8 - <-. - ae the case of that same Supreme Court, some twenty-five ebarter of our liberties. Let that 1 stand as our | comes asolomn duty, on a day like this, to confess their © pass a law declaring that no man shal! be put on trial te tI the present. Sandy [ook was denied to them, | es oy JULY 6, A BYRAY STEER, BETWEEN ‘or thirty years ago, decidig that @ National Bank wag | standard. My friend hassaid to mo that] am poor hand | shocking inconsistency, to e their wickedly compromiy. | iM the Commonwoaith on the question whether bo is « free they could not get it, and be did not think there was Hovoken ond Hudson City. by proving constitutional? Lask, ifromebody does not remember | to quoteScripture. I will try itagsin, however. It iseaid | tng spirit, to blush for sine ¢, (0 shun | TOAD OF asiave; or, io Mr. Phillips’ language, declaring y other place. He considered the tion made to bm 2 sonnet expenger, xp b be en that a National Bank was to be constitutional? | inone of the admonitions of our Lord, * As your Father | the evil example they set, and to leave ly no cause for | tat" the simple arriva? of w slave under the free treog | ‘ne Legislature for the improvement cf the grounds ad- = ie, pm eee, Yea, yes.””) Such is the truth, whether it be remem- | tn heaven is perfect, be ye also perfect.” The Saviour, { | loathing our memories, through a atill more’sigual tresioh- < sgemnnate is a charter of liberty and emancipa- meni sen would make it 8 perfect Quarantine in evory OST—ON FRIDAY 0) or not. The bank charter ran out, and a suppose, did not expect that any bhumao creature could be | ery to the cause of impartial ireedom on our part. . If you mean what you say, aid Mr. Phillips, | sense of the term—to extend the lands further north, nomizer subscription book snd er pew wes ted by Congress. That recharter was iaid be- | a8 ag the Faiber in heaven; but Ho said, “ Asyour Resolved, That it ts time all boasting should coase in speaking of certain republicans, prove It by going up to | build the wail sro@ad, and to close up the entrance | R. B, engraved on the head. Any person who will leave the fore . Ikwas urged upon him, when he im heaven {8 fect.” Ho set | regard to Lexington, Concord, Bunker H Saratoga and | Boston next winter and passing a law, that, as there ino | ®t the south; to extend the docks om the north | shores! .0i Nassau sreet will recelve the ihaaka of the own- denied the constitutionality of the bank, that the Supreme | that up as 8 a, most towards | Yerktown: for the struge'o of 1776, ie spite'of “the eutier. | ©lause Dinding Massachusetts to return slaves, Massschu- | part, and have ingress and egress remote from | er snd bo sullabl eam ly rewerees. Court had decidea that tt was constitutional; and that | reaching that standard attained the highest dogree of | ing generalities” o: 1 in the Declaration of Inde- | #¢t## hereby announces by statute that sho bas got s cell | Any danger. These improvements might cost $160,000, ‘O8T._WAB LEFT ON THE 19TH INST, RITHER IN General Jackson then sald tbat the Supreme Court had no | moral perfection. So Iesy in relation to the principle | pendence, was not in vindication of the rights of human | 'n the State prigon ready for the Judge or the Commia- and be would usdertake to say they would make the mos & South ferry ferry house, oF the boat. n, parcel right to lay down a rule to govern a 03 ordinate branch of | that all men ar » Het it be aa nearly | mature, tit only for colmmial independence, om a selfish sioner who presumes to returns man from the soil of | perfect Quarantine on the face of the earth, and those | containing & linea dnsler and ® pair of sumer driving the government, the members of which had sworn to | reached as we cau. we cannot give freo- | basis, in thespirit of complexional caste—aa eighty-two years | Massachusotia onthe groun< that he ise slave. (Loud | passive to and Vanderbilt's Landing, ina few | gloves, lined on the inaide of the hand and fingers. Whoever support the conatitation—that each member had sworn to wo nothing that | have demonsiruted, by m) of humiliating facts, by | SPPiause Thie was to be the test, and ifany man re- | months, would scarcely know there was® Quarantine | will return said artitles to Keld & Tracy, 85 Chambers support that constitution as he understood it. I will ven- | will impose fo eny other creature. the legislative and action of all the States, ty fused to sign the petition he was to be branded as « kid- Fireet, will reeeive a suitable reward and tho thanks of be ture here to say, that I have heard Judge Dougias say | (Applause.) Letus turn this government back into | the whole course of the national government, by the all pre- ir Mr. E, J. Purpy then gave—The Efficient Health owner. that he of General Jackson for that act. What io which the framers of the constitution origi- | vailing sentiment of the country eves to this hour, re- & few words by the President, in reply toone or | Officer of the Port of New York,’’ which was enthusiasti- OST-ON THE TH INST. A BADGE MARKED has now of all hie tirade about “resistance to | nally placod it. Let us stand firmly by each other. If we | specting the colored poptiation, whether bond or free. two of Mr. Phillipe’ remarks, another hyms wes sung, Ls “Night wateh, U. 8. Revenue, No 24, Port N.Y.” The the Supreme Court?” (‘Gone up,” “Gone to the do not do so we are tarning in the contrary direction that | 8. Resolved, That the 4th of July, 1776, was a day of | *24 the meeting took & recess for recreation and re- then invited his guests on board a steam. Sader aif confer & great furor bypeaving N ss tes ufveyer’s gp ly Foy eS Ee Ttannaliy—eg | trenparent Mpwcrivy, of pial dinembling 9 er | re on ae, he ceapeay a isting Fort Hamilton and he Wwer ship. | orem their S may where the Soaquehanna lice. £ dota ~- a4 ir several «i y 80." Independence—many of rections. Je cautions to say that that warfare of bis is tofall upon the | runs in that direction, and as such | resiathim. My friends, | W! om were then holding, and through life continued to At half: past two o'clock P’. M. the audience ply re- comforts of the company was provided, the republican party. Almost avery Word he | Ihave detained you about aa long as I desired to do, and/ | held, multitudes of thelr fellow mon in w bondage, | Ss#embled, the large numbers of the morning being visibly gtful anil the steamer returned, landing T? a have only to say, let us discard all this quibbling about | “one hoor of which,’’ acccording to the ad by Daniel Ricketson— her passengers at Castle Garden. yap the 4 ‘and 4 ~ Dining in his chains, ‘The band of the Basqaohanna was present, and played He means for the republicans that do not count vee | this man and the other man—this race and that race of Thomas Jefferson, “wae fraaght with more “The siavo a to be his friends; he makes no tuss over them; | the other race inferior, and therefore they must be | misery than ages of that which they them ‘His blood has cursed our hills avd plains,” ‘Xo. , some operatic airs during day, in highly ta position, discardiog our standard | selves rose in rebellion to oppose; and, therefore, to | having been sung tothe tane of Old Hundred, Mr. Garri- | °*editable manner. ORT—ON TURSDAY RVENING, THE 13TH INST. between Twelfth sireet and avenue Band Nible’s (sar: den, 8 memorandum book, wundry Pp of no use fo apy one saseut she owner. finder will be bbe- “all, » vat the carpenter shep rally reward y leaving ie er M6 Maat OfT—ON THE EVENING OF JULY L Fs Ra HAIR # Sedarboed coat ing mabe ot taetrene t= Pinced. Pata tottus.” Totus discard all these things and | deem them worthy of der speak on ag x p—y a inass party are re- we us. us b y reverence, ut sach circum. | son used, ag the first ‘or, in commen Commissione: Heal ally bis friends. I one stances, is to be partial in judgment, and to inflicts | terms, Rey. Mr. Bassett, pastor of an orthodox = — beeuian acindel whine taco Gocwten ha up ‘that grievous wound upon the cause of justice and righ:eous- slavery churah in W on city, who made a pathetie | Tee Commissioners of Health met at noon yestorday, ee aa e TEER ‘pation bands. ness. effect . —A BMALI rR CROSS tthe light in which 1 Resolved, That i i because Washington, aod Jeter. | Shestand was ner’ taken by Mr, Willa Marty, a young ee ieee serie hammecend eae Lottashs saad tise and ealontle culy ete ounee atin your attention fon, and Madison, and Patrick Hevry, and Pinckney were | maz of the city of Worcester, who hy with, Quarantine, enclosing a copy of the reso- | Sader will be eultably fewarded by leaving lt a4 room Ho. 10, that 1 may ask nolders-and vecnuae, Hancock, and Adams, end | marked ability. He wasfollowed by Intions passed by the Board of Health of tho town of | 5! Bxchange place, N. ¥., or 28 Livingston street, Brooklyn. Sedge Douglas th hie to strike with slaveholdert, and to wie pana Mr, Haywood a e reces! greanate of Bre renttten J ans oo hapg hag Pourtaenth serees page as tae erga or Brentwer sot do to cinta, gentlemen, to to expediency, in order that the link which bound them to | and understood to de preparing himsetf for Provides that no person engaged in service On | Fenth etreet, or Boar the Sorne?, AY Dematiched that | would pot their mother country might be severed—that the land is now | ministry. if this be 90, we had very shipboard at Quarantine shall be permitted to pass the | tucked poeket handkerchief, The ‘Suler will befiberally re (Qavghier)—1 ma ureed by ine meay of the slave power, and the cause of free- his apeech to-day that he would be Quarantine gate till ten days after ho shall bave coased to | WA!ded by leaving it at 282 West Twenty fourth street. you that dom is with contempt; for had those men been | the sdvocacy of Christian truth, no lover of ease in Zion, be #0 employed. This resolution conilicus with the preseat | ———————__ ———_ ~-— ing to the loyal to the “self evident truths’’ they enunciated, eman- | no timid croucher before the self-interest of unscrupulous | regulations, which detain stevedores five days instead of REWARDS. or not Judge Douglas cipated their own slaves, and insisted on liberty being | men, no wretched tool of sectarian schemes—loast of all ten. The inst two resolutions, in effect, request that the after this night; it may ned throughout all the land to all the inhabitants panderer to the behest health authoritiee of the port eball probibit passengers pete gene RB jm connection '/? aa & matter of self respect and moral conais- | are now eo large @ proportion of and crews and their inggage from of the Teownsr: Whoever will lafatgs nme 1000 New nor ‘ae camuaiee tency, ‘and to avold the merited derision and ‘witbees the action, course Quarantine gate and up w the city by the Island | 180 Lextogion avenvie, will reesive the above reward ; but where will you be reprobation of a witneesing universe, slavery Rot | American’ Society among ten thonsand other proofs. ferry boats. This change, the Doctor argues, will be pro- Jud, have survived the revolutionary confiict. Therefore, Th will pot be an casy task to do justice, ductive of much trouble and expense to 4 and VR gy gh | FTERNOON OF THE coodingly soxious 5. Resolved, That all attempts to hide their criminality, | Mr. Haywood's thoughts and manner crews. The letier ef the Doctor eonciaded rrvuating by PRE A SO) and everything to you that something or to for their conduct, are oyually futile no ordinary effort, and gave demonstration of {ss i the State or the port will furnish co ventout mods Syeee ca nye Te OY done you aid Ives? Whi, he tried to persuade you 3 fe stand condemned out of their own | powers. We hope ina future paper of transit for Jaaounrers and their fremn Quaten- | Comma oe Laven bk te than at Basen tame te Jest night that our Illinois Legislature instructed him to mouths, and Be Thal seh evil and bitter # | of his remarks. tine te New Yi yt yte ey tb 9 Fanon mreet ” fe ” introduce the Nebraska bill. There was nobody in that ‘thing it is to the living God,” in ‘The Pxeapent said that no doubt with the request of the Board of Health of Castleton. ‘Legisisture ever ee get ; and when he justice, gubstitating a ecifish ex- | ment would be felt at the absence ‘The commanication bat Deen read, the following ro. REWARD ~ 1087. A MEMORA BOOK, BE- yg ncaa ot Ss beh ota Jency for the higher law, and making the end sanctify | He knew that Mr. Parker had wished solutions, offered by Mayor , Were agreed to— yee gt fiver ana Jersey Chy erry, fights furious! , Present—had indeed prepared in jealth are ‘igen evohat beniden Decntet ere wats standing entation tem Solon ‘Whereas, ‘tho stream cannot rise higher thi Eocasion—Dut the state of his health did not admit of his | entvedw esmmunication trom te Meals Dicer of tne port of ony Gert a oo im tavor,of tieamer Hudson. The to be always introducing Ne! Dills. (Laughter aod source ;’ and whereas, fhe Constitution of the United | speaking in the open air. He had, however, sent the fe tor with of resolutions pesect Oy the Board St tate wil teoeiveeineral reward by returning the same to applause.) a yt fp yt ay States was framed and adopted by a slarehol.ling and slave- sentiment to the meeting, which would be read of Gatton tate ind & 00., No.5 hee tells you he is for the Dred Boott deciaion; he tells you, trading people, both im their State sovereignity mutut | by Me. Yerrinton, one of the secresariee. It was read, aa enid comm de accepted; and fur: ‘ot in his speech last night, but su in a former compact; and whereas, determined aa they were hold | follows — , ‘That this on n REWARD.—LOST, JULY 13, IN CLINTON STREET, speech, thas he cares not if slavery is up of down; slaves in bondage aa marketable goods and chattela, | Resolved, That this tonders ite most hearty | isstiwo i Pears wal owtely epnely win ie near Grand street, aamall Diack and tan eat, « cross Botella. you the siruggie on Lecompton is past may kad to pronecuite the African slave trade under the Amort: | thanks to Raron Vou Humboldt, for the noble humanity | provided thet they furnish means ot conveyance for te pas: | bylWeee terrier and hound: anewars vo the name of Pap. The Gome up again or not, and if it docs be stands where he can fing for at least twenty years after the adoption of the | which shines tho {airest rtar in the heaven of hia science, | sengers end their | mentioned in the ald Feward can ve obtained vy Weaviog tm 38 Went Pirty stood when in spite of him and his opposition you bailt Gonstitutlon ; and whereas, to quote the language of Joba | nd for the faithful testimony he, for. years, hag | from the Quarantine to free expense 10 ate. up the republican party. If you endorse him you tell Quincy Adams, ‘‘the freemen of the North, reduced to the | always borne against the of the American siaye, | Paasenaers or the clty of New REWARD—AND Wi TIONS ASKED, TO ‘you do not care whether slavery bo voted ap or alternative of” from the vital principle of | The question on the sentiment as that of the | The Commission then adjourned. Ree ate pe Wen Twenty ihied down. and ho will close, or try to close yoar mouths with their liberty, or of the Union iteelf, averted ‘war taken, and a ‘and unanimous aye rang —— the eae teak tharetiin’” fee wich wes mamutae his deciaration repeated by the day, the week, the mouth their faces, and with hand subscribed the through the Grove, and testified to the respect in whicn | Pleeting of the Castleton Board of Health dared by James D. Moss, Liverpool, No, 4,405. and the year. Ta thet whet you mesa t (Ories of “No; | will be delivered at the Londoa docks. pm gh dg AD aye ee > the vast assemblage held the venerable man, who, in his Report Health Officer Mandy—What a one voice iy ag Hl bave no doubt you bare Separate ‘mast be drawn up for the purchase | 824 perpetuation of slavery tal and animating Se et ee pervil- « ne ere REWARD WILL BE PAID FOR A POCKET always been for if you mean that. No doubt of | of the quicksilver at Seville or London, even should they | *Pirit of the national government” —thus “constituting | tity the prose and people of iheitTaited Sates ia regard the Objects of the Board, and Why tt was 2 book apd comtenis, belonging jo the tste Joe. C- ‘that. arm Bit him *) Soberly i bave | come from the same individual, Those proposals must be © privileged ordee of man in the community more adverse © the great subject of human slavery. Entabiiohed. Vauther. of Brooklyn, lost on 34 of May last, : J said, ahd T repeat it, Ttbiok “in thé position in which | secied with the rubric on the oulalde of the offerors, and | 10 the of all, and more pernicious to the interesta of | Rey. Mr, Bowias, of Natick, made a brief but impressive | the Board of Health of the town of igformptign copeorans WS Geakaian strect. P Judge Douglas stood In opporing the Tecompton | in trict conformity to the forme which wil gisrors, and | tne whole, thamany order of nobiity ever known’ and | speech, aid wea frequently planted. the town of Castine, Stee | Se constitution he was right, if he doce not know that | at this Consulate. whereas, from the hour of its adoption to ine oe Axonew T. Foss then rejoicing that the young | leland, met at the Nautilus Hotel, Tompkinaville, July 15, | ~~ “ae TURE, i j| return; but if it does we may know where The proposals forthe purchase of anid quicksilver may | t¢ Constitution has bees understood, interpreted. men were coming forward to fill the places of those who | at five o'clock, Mr. Christopher in the chair. i beer rn 40 find him, and i Ht does not we may know where | be in Madrid or in London. Thone that may be | 4 and enforced in accordance with this view of it slave: | had borne the heat and barden of the day, and warmly | ghe Health Officer, Dr. Mund; ENTRAVILLE COURSE —TROTTING —PRIDAY, JULY to look for ‘him—and that ts on” the Cincinnat! plat | joade in Madrid will be received. at’ the of fia | olding comprominen, by all parties, all courts, all the entire series of resolutions drawn up by Mr. De. Mandy, presented the following | ()™37 "iyi, ociom P. ¥ Mech $1,000, mile hexis, best form. fly the | cienda rat the act of the public sale, and the | JU%cee, all legislative dasemblies All the Presidents, trom Teport, which was accepted: — ares th sive, to wagner ft ee ee eee hard names that Judge Douglas has called by] all ree eton will be delivered to the Com. | Washington to Buchanan, Congress and the Sapreme | CnamneC. Benision was next welcomed! 10 the stand, | To rms Hoxonanut tue Boao or Heactu or tax Tows of | borowsi Wi Reapedy aR SOMELIN, Propristo pan toh Sears te ‘with | mitioe of Finenoe of Spain, in sald caphal, wat the 224 saaiy and olen £9 — = ol Ge Sates, and spoke with his accustomed ability and power in vin- qasnaren.. a _ come ott cain orahine. = YORE 4 prietor, negroes; larations of black: ican. ‘incluaive, next, bommittee wit! | *inel: leetivel, us real scope dication ANTLEMEN—-By virtue wer with which I am yest! | = fim—by the way wo aro improving, the black! han go ie ue ry will | foteation beyond all Feasoaatie doubt or desial, ia these | Panter’ Priumeny made the concluding epeech with ediby yout banorde Heard ave igemed it nesessary to a . rubbed oe wan ety sande endorsed by re- | ordor that they may arrive with tho necessary anticipa- great earncstnees of ‘and Atelity of admonition in re- | to ry ints elie too tales Gk regtiotens capil gar | \TAOMT, PERT LONG, FOR SALE-WITH CABIN, publican votes, wae SiS Me Fd tion, to be opened at the same time as the other proposals 6, Resolved, That any attempt, however sincere or well to the danger of lowering the anti slavory standard | last for the purpose ef the bealth ‘of the y roomy cook pity oe consre, boned, stecn riaged ‘Alad Tonay saddled, Dridied and harnessed and to be | at the act of the public sale. meant, to ‘Or prove that the constitution of the the a¢commodation of political leaders. town; and here it may pot be Improper \o state that there several sali ponte, from 18 to 28 feet ‘new and second hand. driven over to'the slavery extension camp of the nation | For further particulars apply to this Consnlate. United States is, and was desigued to iw, an anti-slavery | The time for adjourament hed come, and aa it was no | seems to have been ® deli Toresed and persistently | Als iabine,bosie and suits, from. 10 \ #) foot long. Apply ‘A Voice—"Wo Go ayy }—just ready to F. BNOUOHTON. H ©, M.'s Consul. inetrument, and therefore in complict with the slave | coamary to conform to the railroad arrangements, the | jriniaiped daierminaiion on, ibe certain parce te | io FISH & MORTOR, #4 Water sirect driven over tied ina lotto be driven over, fystem, i8 the werieat is verbal quidbling | meeting was then closed, although, to the general disap- high actuate he, membery, a etyeck | DA every man with a rope around his nock, that halter being | The Cnba Question and the War of Races. Fetrya wollen waste of time and ah | potmtmtat of the wadiencs, So oppetteaity tad been bea | Uvennuiee scitie pen memectD 00d, Cie ee Og held by Jndge Dougias. ane ee eee LORD MALMRSBURY'S THREAT AGAINST SPAIN 1umLA- | Mer poe of the truth—a convenient sudtertage, Gg denetog eoveral epechere present, among whom were | in order these larenrepemiationa may” Hoe etved Al.—@4 00,—PAMTLIES LAYING IN FOUR OR FIVE PY Dh Ee Ly " TIVE TO CUBA. behi ich to take from the im ve moral Foster, ‘lee 1, Remond, Rey. Mr. Kimball, | >; aa truths, I feel it incumbent upon myeoll, 26 C' CL ig gt of stove, ong, iam Cay hen Demrer ons 0 8, beet wo repab- |Parie (Jane 27) correspondence of Tandon Globo. | in | of Mrs. N. Colman, Saran P. Remond, &c. Lt Sate brah the real oxless ot vo) ng ace, Abe. sereened and delivered ander | pT Fh aa they can | It is seriously believed here that Lord Malmesbury has x The ad Wook place at five o'slook, and the | Auer ct ity 3 eee a evestty. Sea oee en from = Beir hep for its citienate entinetion, If they Gélieve te | conveyed to Madrid hie determination to mark his disgust | woe tne | rest company departed their several ways, ail reaching in the fre pince, we wave locates in Our Hasaratio, or ie, oe ne 4 ys wi oa eee nit | at the Cuban authorities being in complicity with pi imposed homes, 00 far a8 te known, without aay sooldent to | w ‘iiavia which prodice dis- | W8¥ 5 wget py ial And | siave dealers, and openly fostering this hellish pursait itu. Mar the inierost and enjoyment of the ay’ h | ease and Tmonatroce nuteasce, it seeme {rom \he CLOTHING, &. ~~—S—S—~S rm trom Oe settlement of free white norers | around the island, by winking at an American occupation in these going te or towards orcester were very much Fenult of the ofits m for the sceompilahmen eat we | a who want bring up their families upon; if they | of the Havana, and thus cementing a firm alliance with Presext whatever: and } layed in waling for conveyance, owing to an unfortunate moval by the af the county for sever" Ja bonse it be OvF CLOTHING. WORTH WANTED. — mop ge may make 0 mistake, they the qreat Anglo Baxon republic, eo as to secure. an over. organize on a fro and ake ofthe railroad agent ih not cullcient | are aor ee eee pt imeavares, aa the, law ny bar can mare waa eS cam be ob: stow come they hoo! ‘balance: cars route. on so busy @ when © thorires porait q large, = ome beck again and ro organize, if not by, he same eoeeel by tvenes, soa apa gy Preciphating lia, Immediate | are goime by reilrved tn oll irecucas, sows excuse fo cor: | Ue"ke presen Tus ‘erotect oar ‘guusene, from the cise KoRORET, eg ee pridelplen es hele party Tt is equally aaveried thet Spain has bargained to give tainly to be found when the railroad company does not | influence of ite miaamate, For ine 6 pogtn, Yon have ake tee tee eaeamare while | ail the support can to France in return for formal Pro, #0 maintain ber control over pp 4 A. a tnd no other, the Boned of Netiregsintions py which all per’ | ADIES AND GENTLEMEN WAVING ANY CABT OFF choose } tectorate oes, That the nent great ive D pA hg KT Dak as | esr e oka worth willbe, tetocen tes Faces Latined eed flag under which four mittione of | cisty sa Praminguaas rove, beaver hog 6 bevier’ bor ronaengag of re orc Foamy imfeoted or guaran. | 24 clothing, seaomd, hand furniars Jie, wiaed BY; Mee, rel eanization, pom prin. | the Anglo Sawon aha Leudouic wationalitie is wheory of in their chains, beyond ali hope | more effective one than this;"and we hot ite fruits | sich woesel, Shall be iat rom onming on Paine 101 Obatham street, eat eaten Sah sua ben tapirde your Ss faceiy fo God reigns ever you | some al observers. In much «struggle ft Is ob- to} wil in pave ant riage at repre: | Quarnatine ‘end from te, —_—$_S—$—_—$—$— prety ad oputtiuen 40 give you hope oo sorety you ri vious yh side the great a lg phe fl 9 Lea ms M. LIOYO 6. iN, Next che cocoa, Woah “prohibitions erems to fee too L AND GHATLENED RAY 19 pa fr O euro! predominant—gold an Samcm. Mav, J <I ean rt s yeur wane moa fou tat te = Torsone Aira free prons, freedom ot’ Mought, apeeck ape ianatruy,} Soran. Sapa ent ae elec metus operenit of Infectious of 008 esvsuib avon bot ts aad Front sein. Cloed appre.) Wo were ohemore Wan | S88 #¥°% vain unfuried tothe tress: | Deyeey Savrmvon--An old negro man, belonging | mebsmenrure Avery man inane thes rl _ oe a Maat Gight, reminded thas this porcruntent oot mate me, | oA Lane Kruuap py Lionrrva i a Crtvnon— . BE ay oe acount, | to Major 8. Crutchfield, was taied before the County a pervone 208 Aoc'en well sn ihe sineen treteestyen; 6d MATRIMONIAL, white men—that he believed it was made for white men. | The church at Freeport, Pa., wasstrack . preas them upon the meet. | Court of carina, Virginia, on tho Stivinst., | dence [think the ingenuity of those who have made tt a OTIOT INE LN WietTI Well, vhat ie putting it into ashape in which no one wants | by lightning last Saturday evening. A prayer meet her | Charged with an attempt to kill the overseer, found | sepepial fp.Pmeprqeees Ge motives and actions GRETLEMAN, OF EOSESION AND MBANS, Wieene eee i vek the Judge, Wen goes nto hs passion fer | ing was held. One lady was killed, and ber general | guilty and sentenced $0 be hung on Friday, the 19th Ue comm Reretotery persons omplosed upon | dailart Sane ike ew Ssandsng, -adaress bout iaforences ne Warranted, I proves, * two brothess seriovsly hurt, i of August. Anfevted vessels seoleres nad Dusvorenca have been ia mana. way Post offiee, % . lo —_—-S