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NEW. YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1859—TRIPLE SHEET. So mensea nt cattails abun | TOME CORWIN ON THE CONBTITUTION. | sit oestenerycios atten it] THE MARYLAND STATE ELECTION. | THE HARPER'S FERRY OUTHREAK Ferried to em ht carcar os» Mba of Fiance, from tary of i, aan o ¢ fret to lsat, op tho af, hie 5 and ts Bua, hie ot * ‘beip be . iis aivrnativo of he resign st vy | Bile Befinition of the Republican Party—He | Generel; and by Bratal and Work in wit lass nancial q Kia baie the gorau ae St women ME tae, Gonsteatien | 2, ies. re Bloody Continuation of the Trial of the sia innartt Ven, Coat Bl cue, | Regpecting Slavery tn the TerrWertee—De- | 3717 pag potucha, wus) cube Baltimore. Conspirators. . that period the fate of Baron Bruck boan mounces Popalar Severeignty and Wendell Congreso alone baa pewer fenibiing Jo the balance. Justin the same way, during | py of the United Biales, Be : THE RIOTERS IN POSSESSION OF THE CITY: ‘ohn {Ge old wars, Coloredo gave muy to Sadon aftr Aaaer. hillipe? Treaconable Doctrines, Delleved eltber wih ibe s s-otees 4 E * | John Brown Sentenced to Suffer Death on ae probably, that 2 new goverument must have Its Ray Reo kee of pepalat sovereignty, et =e the Second of December. Nita eapaleiurarinpermmensichatriats Torr es fpvunatioes they pieenee i Ff cmeemee, | Between Twenty and Thirty Citizens ‘ Seanberg seemed tvch moro holy 40 prosper wih Baron | A large eudienoe aseombled inthe Musioal Hall, Brook. | thay gus te? Please, con | He npoke ans is» whieh ought Killed and | Bese ho without bin, The nancial condion of Austria | lyn, lack evening, ander the suploes of tbe Ashland Gtub, | suttion of” tbe United” Slates seven J to be enforres until repeabnd or amende |: der the ooo. Mangled. THE SPEECH OF THE CULPRIT. maton of Cece of aay othe Schur | (08 BRrpoNe of eanlog wa pole! addres from be | Semen Snemprancons (aperemepri 88 pened AN separ ; he Aurizian, But, such a it was, we beliove thos Hon. Thomas Corwin, of Ohio. The mesting was orgs- | fave ite “opinion that = A m the andienee inquired i he wae sure be | THE REFORMERS DRIVEN FRON THE POLLS, mn too mont poe heh worse. It is per- | nized by appointing the Hon. James Humphrey as Presi- wer? . If the man not have voted for itt Conviction of Edwin gg, and that, te imperial credit Bas enern It | dent, who, 12 assuming the chair, nad thet bo wonld not he waa pest praying for. (langhier oe |e Conwin =} will wear kif you will bring tos Jus. dey hey kee Coppte, Charged with under bis management; and it ‘the | e¢cupy @ momient of the time that belonged to their honor- ome, rm “Another . VES hh iy fi " d paradoa to ofr anything ‘but dioparsgomont to | ed guest. page cele on 44 | ibe constitutional ccaonnie & ay balit be to Baummous, Nov. 3, 186%, y by . ee biyncoapuapiy! so wk Mr. Conwin then rose to address the multitude, and was on meen Joan they bed ag ier) ht on prea whee ‘The Siate election ie now progressing. There is u groat M, do Bruck wes ed share wo ala he fer. received with loud cheers. Ho sald that his hearers | ofthe numan race, ane he been held thet. Sery trade were eon eecensary mete cane | "evcaioin all the wards as far as heard fron, The Case of Captain Cook Sent to the ‘while he had no control ‘the expenditure. Count | knew that he had been accustomed to speak to popular f in the. deaat cf fogitives roms hibor, and onan oF tect. Buummona, Nov. 2—P. M. resolved that so much should be apent tomaintain | assemblies for about twenty years of hie life, but they | tat miracles had ceased; tone of the legal tribunals. who laws | Tho clection has begun bloody enough, and tho ruffians Grand Tury, ‘international \ ‘Bach } lar overe'znty were tbe true doctrine, thus vould do 80 like ry "| nave eb. the eky, _Adready: scans thirty have 4 Imuet recollect that the audiences whieh he bad beon in } ihe gopstitution panopiied with the to | Ferry, but they wuet expect to o a 1 ‘i &e., &o &e. the habit of addressing im the Wostern coun- | eymbolof our power and q SebUeWD vat Beare weed Deen shot. A. B. Kyle, Jr., was shot dead in the Fitwoenth “ ie try were compored generally of the refined, | ‘kes under each sacred ta | ward; his brother, Georgo H. Kyle, was mortally wound- 4; R. RB. Kirkland was shot dead in the Fourteenth ward. OUR SPECIAL DESPATCH FROM CHARLES : n Who earned and tho pollia imbabltanta, (Great | 1uG.uy has toa oh ee nee ee * Javghter.) He felt awkward in addressing himaclf ae, siesuvers could n not ba pened any we foe me wine A man named Johnsom was shot dead in the same ward. TOWN. to the barbarians of New York. (Gontinned laughter.) | °°*s of ratlocimation, it was F reason DOF jong aan on right what was Henry Herring, Jr., was stabbed and killed in the Third-¢ OLD BROWN SENTENCED TO DEATH—OONVIOTION OF r What i? of | dope With Uo Rute Ho would try to bring bimwelf down 10 their:compreben- | Wisin salad in foe th Rint ie Un, WestmeerTerruariee | ther Sato. et hnprisomed the eltigens of 80> | 54, Another man was shot dead. Business houscs are FORES SONEDR 7 ERB CAR RTE sion aswell as he could. (Oproarious tanghter.) Ho Jureformed, Sve or Mix to nial, Wo. orate SAG aE Mr, Conwo—Take him right up vo the United py eloged, and @ pall hangs over thefcity. RLERTOWS, Vay Nov. 2, 1850. ‘would lay before them what be understood to berthe doc- | CoPErees reserved the right to approver veto Court and overrule the of tbe State. ‘The Third ward polls are blocked by rowdies, and the Jobn Oseawatomie Brown was this evening sentenced Tis ala ouisheas uae He did’ tit: know What he Teredagies were towels eyes aR. of oy te a potice are doing nothing. to death, the day ftxed for the execution being the 24 of y a] ove: ‘7 ‘were mn he » ‘the hupreme Court ; they might bo in New York; bo-eoubd not. toll what par- | ‘did bob certainly apean That every oy Feorganige i. Xo government egal be pure. 3 | Inthe Temth ward Thomas Martin, the reform Judge, | December next. It iste take place in such public place i. ticular idosynerasy republicaniam might assume out ef Dna triee mele case ke a, Fy dows from beaver fore has been intimidated and compelled to leave, and’ Mr. } % the Sheriff of the county may select, ‘The court was ug! il ‘a 2 “a rmarrable Psy ¥ Highley, who was appointed by Acting Mayor Mayo and not 80 densely crowded us on the previous day, when the ooecomadl of ts the State, where he was 90 woll acquainted, bat aa far a® | sovereigne, with 4: crowns, and do jure. (Lat y he had Been able to know, the great doctries upon whieh | they plrars. In 1840, when Oregon was bbad a tue goverameut of his own Up | refected by the Council, has been roappomted. ‘Tho ro- | JUY returned their verdict, bus all the space within was “that party now rested before the yeople for ste hope of | dent Folk, a democrat of the democracy, the bilt, | scmewhore betwoen heaven apd carth, and was formers have been driven off, James Jeffers, son of Ma- | ‘Towed with people. The Judge had mot fixed any * with thé Wilmot proviso in ft,’ and all te | mined to bring heaven down wo it rather than Mitt the hour for deciding bis ruling on the motion put in-by success wore very mnueh the same im every part of the | democrats of the North, at loast, said Amen! | earth up. ‘Fee haman rece, had propremned. ‘Ol Com. | dieu Jeffers, was abot in the side and beaten over tho Brown's counsel in arrest of jodgment, and the: ‘United States where those doctrines were tolerated at all; | And during all this period of ay. Pf modore Noah was an honest men gentleman, but | head by seme reformers whom he had maltreated. igment, ant re were not, for you know, said he, its unhappily our situation at pre- | 17m ait we Panic hie fe ale, oy 1a federal, Thad | stock o Almighty bad to be Ag Rg Seige Giles, of Ge. Usihes: Siesen District Court, met cing oi pales at Neve : . lents, all the ial iribunale, et ighty we wine wige been. ‘A LAGTURB BY THR “LION OP THR Weer.” sent (and more so, 1 think, than it has ever boon in the | recognized this power of Congress. Yet we were tld that ap fot afler the deluge he took ¢ horn too | Sberiff Creamer tm the street thie forenoam, and cid bin, | aon addressed the Court, ia the mbist of profomnd A Very large congregation assembied at the Shiloh (eo. | hittory of our republic) to be divided betweon | they were mistaken, and did not understand what the | much, and did his children behave towards him’ Mt | p decided terms, that he was to bo held accountable for : : HAG W called’ MOAB “ésa”' Sook?” "Take constitution meant—that it never was understood till the | was evident they had not been to ‘tchoo!, Itke bie piooddhed to-day, Asa Judge and lawyer, he toi | ence. In calm, slow and unfaitering voice, he de- ‘ ‘Wwred) Presbyterian church last evening, to boar a lec- tea geographical | soar of grace 1864. Written constitutions wore our owD Young interrogator, and they didn’ use the old whan wel! athe : i clared his intention was to elfvct 4 stampede of the slaves fave from the Rev. J, Bella Martin, othorwise styled tho | divisions of the country have'no respect to tho ordinary | inventions, and iar to this country, and their ip then wont on to reply to the Boathorn argu. | the Sheriff that be had the authority, aud that it was his ol thva iat a condnch ads PA He had bi (Raen of the West.” The andjonce consisted ‘of a largo | Tus of geography. They comprehend in that word | chict won to limit clearly the powers of | the | ment in support of the divine origin of saver eka | ae 0 martes to do 20 nee Ean ge pegs er aang 35 a +t various departments of government—executive, legislative | up 8 Rhom Was Our fathor was 5 rowdi osaion, my sang Mai per, 400 BFeporiton of colored persons, with. a soléct number of } South ugarly every State that does not happen to have | 314 judieial—that there may be fixed and stablo rules, 60 | brother, Coffce—Hiam’s son—is our consin, and he did wot | _ W (he Kghteenth ward the rowdies took possossion Of Fo 1 ota. on from Missouri without the click of a trigger. ghee. In fact, the oommodious building was titorally } 2¢StO slavery a6.one of ite institutions. The South, whe- | that every department may understand its just limits, and | think there Rou treated their coasi Nas 0 gente. the polls and gave the reformers notice to quit, Tlad bo effected his obje ; ans ‘Geiteansd Wy tha dentrirvericn of expectant viniers. ther it be west, southwest or south, comprehends cvery- | the people themeelver may know their privileges anddu- | wan, (Lavgbter.) Mr. C. vext spoke of the slave trade, | Polix MeCurley, a reformer, was badly beaten. ac Be, ep oren Te Cures. eae Coes eneo: this si ‘i ies. He maintained that when for a iy period all de- | denouncing the for iis revival, aod « Cy a i ani first attempt, it was his intention to return and After a voluntary by’ the organ, the Rev. H. H. Gan- | thing in thin division of politica where negro slavery pro- | pariments of government had agreed in ‘Soortain | hie brethren, young and old, to maintain tile ark of San Re Sas Sep. cotreaten arn, Attren Saha ee at Tk" hiacen sk ii. Maes’ wee jamz atroduced the lecturer to the audience. He masts are Lid of you hromtaee) Ry yp the pinyin ‘outta coat = So taeabets Se ¥ ore ft wae | carly hour, Ason of Hon. Joshua Vansant was beaten ino atternps at: that’ clot whieh evidently see Se me when thie an! -” Hi i ¢ the ever imean: instrument until fortupe wagon omgaged to voto. Mr. Maer, who has sequired or assumed tho high- PRY geographic vis! things | De the Fy ite eget ep apg dl fm beating wi =~ and ritiohs,” eed for attempting ” A : first epecchcs. His composure, aud his quict and truth- Wwunding tile of Lion of the Went,” is ike anything | ‘ki not prevail in this country, ana have seen a great | ficcuck between politcal parties, changing a he remembered that * ‘wore four ‘Se Fasst, Sesend and Fourth wards sro also ia poeee: bay nisnnor, while bearing tesitdaliy tae great adal- Yet a lon; Ho, however, has regular and woll defined | ™y curious and elaborate discussions upon the origin of | a tho one or the other’ gained the po Be eye. ves from Keetucky going with him to sion of tbe rewdier, to the total exclusion of all who op- said, dam. a features, s clear, distinct and exeellent enunciation, great | that peculiar cast of politica which are denominated now | written fundamental law would bave no more | fronuers. He mbered ia the wigwaae | pose them. aaa deen: extendedeniieear by the Overs ‘yelubiitty of speoch, and, if ho resembios the king of | Northern and Gouthern, 1 think I was at tho birth of that | jai a2,,2e anarchy of which they heard from Mr. | of thelr Indian cnemeles the, dried © hie country | 7° ine twentieth ward the rowdkes aro kuocking down { ‘Foughout the whole of the proceedings, won the sym- Ny y 3 ee last nigbt, gathering its laws the sidewalk | women. Then it was that the Kentackians came to the Pathy of every generous mind present. He paid also @ enate wt all, it is in bis terrible practice of growling when | °™Dappy division in the counsels of your country, bear- | and the pavement. ‘Tae men who bled on the battle Bald | defence of Ohio, and sent their negroes t) cofend them, | and maltreating whom they pleas. The rowlies have a high compliment to tho truth of the witnesses; mao. rea nthe howe hots of Conan tine teehee | 2%, ram tnat ance ee hay bee tren propenoat | then.” Foey feb to ave esate of (ve women at | M™VL® te Bosal te toncinded, be qulely oat do oT % a a n. ig) nave the women eo led, he quietly wn. ‘The reverend gentleman bogan his loctare bya reguiar | Fenlative in the lower house of Congress from the State | iy eical science, there had been a alll greater progression | Ohio, and the dashing out of thelr chilarens 'raina, some | Inthe Twolfth and Sixtoonth wards gangy of rowdies J "UO 7 ants Be ‘encorted, baakito the -prtaon, ‘political review of the ‘wate of partics in the country— | of Ohio. We know very well that that fundamen. | °n intellectual acumen; and, therefore, we arc warrant- { of them died on the river Raisin and others i: the from Washington, fully armed, are aiding the Baltimore | a. i) ret tine f 4 Be ecericaia ice cid at come of | We CoRstitutional truth, Which is now the great idea of | ed in coming to tbe concluslon that those old men who | of Fort Meigs, and the slaves went home tothoir bereaved | roughe for the firet time followed by the sympathy of the people, ‘he nae rie scsi remy ches a fsa orn acanictcr me States, was bat oo timo ge our Uyetgeinte 2 did = aa these mistrees #8, ‘aad never, 80 os bed content bb o Fiftoenth ward & boy has beon mortally wounded. who gazed upon him with pitying eyes. Jeading statesme: . ¢ condition ho admitter rished men | tons as well as gentlemen like myself. .) | to Bee Injustice done to those stood by ‘meucb . 4 ptions, i! Savery, be said, was mnost ruinous to ibe interests of the | North as well ag South, Bouth as well as That | Ap late an 1862, ip o7 ga) mere > wig = acre eee Se ae oe et gonizing the of emergency. (Choers.) He was shot tn the breast. . © | doctrine which excludes slavery from free territory, for | Co declared that th “4 * ‘be referred to the Court of Appeals at Richmond. Bevple, and nothing but blind ignorance end capi- } instance, is founded in the Constitutional organisa of | seted te the approval of ‘congreso, eo hat fom Tyot'to | the course of President occ ree oHaneth to defend | ‘There is coushlerable talk of Vigilance Commition on | ia” the proooedings of the Court the jury on Coppie's aity ‘could induce the slaveboiders to uphold so fun) | thie country—was, in fact, instituted anu fuaugurated into | 162 all the people of the represented in | political? Kee in ig om be Fugitive are calling | the streets. cage were deliberating on their verdict. After a shortab- ted “hi the policy of the gonera) government by Southern men | hoth Houses of and ir : returned essere ar ok cae ie eet ete | Geminis vab ope shee norton | (ce Ae a ey re ee ee re ey ee | tebe Piet wrt, Adam B Kyl Je smarchants Yo. | Senco verdict of Only” wan returned tm alte She eaaparvatore and the traitors of the country. The Ger, | fociety fh thie country.” We may have hold to the idea | this doctrite of the power of Cougressover the Nerrkoriea.-{ sireataaly armed. the duty of ever man to exereme the | ee Hanover strect, 7, wae chet im the temple, counts of the indictment. A motion was put in for arrest Smitha, the Garrisons, Wendell Phillipaus abd Horace | tbat slave labor wag in some sort standing in opposition, | Yet now we were told that power novor did exist in Oon- | sacred of ‘That right would pever bo taken ‘was dying afew momente ago. George Kyle, who caino | oy saagmont. ' 8 were the true couservatora—the r or that thers was # diversion of interest between the | gree, and the Southern democracy tell us that the | from uz but by thestrong arm, yet it was too little valued. | to the rescue of bis brother, waa shot dangerouriy. * H Skee oe thom au tid ‘appluse.) Tusial Website | iabor of afrceman entering into a compact to perform | Constitution carries, “slavery, wih’ fvand Mf M% | If we had fought for t lke our ancostora, we would merey . : To-day there was a fresh sccession of interest thrown ' ‘was pat down by the lectarer as tho most arrant of was. | Mbor by himself and the labor of a man who waseeer- {| docs it is clearly the. duty of ’ Congress to ‘away from the pollawhen a aan was to be eloctad to | _ 1 the Fourteesth ward there it a doaperate strugzle. | pound the Harper's Ferry trials, Judge Russeli, of Mas- fers fo tho republic aud to liberty, and his actons ax ant; th other worda, an amount, of capital in the hands Protect it there, while the Northern de atitas V sashes inves for «free people. He urged the importance ef | The reformers resisted with arms. Sonny White, alias | 4. nusotis, and George Sennott, a member of the Boston @’ i erit ‘. need ori af 1e powe! abso! ‘Territories sacred Tight—the office James Johnson, a notorimus x Be Caste eke ae es eet pUOEMY:. U cnia iden, - Ih-enquesiionably-orighaied, however; be Use | Thin weceeben the Somonraay “wan Gividedy Mera eed’ | Ge ous coe ton du taeen be Mr. "” rowdy, was ehot dead with ® } bar, arrived here by the 7 o'clock train for the purpose of came under furious paws of the “lion of the | icreared value of negroes, as the progress of population | fouth. The South takes refuge in the Dred Scott deciaion; | continued to s until near! ‘past ten o’cock, Pistol ball. acting as counre) in defence of Cook, whose trial is fixed fest.’? On the occasion of the inauguration of the Web- | “dvatced in the United States, and 1 think it now | the North establishes a sovereignty—viz: Brigham Young. | though tho audience, which namberod not less | ‘Two other rowdies, named Harrie and Daily, wero shot | ge yriaay next. ‘They had an interview with the pri 7 Bier stains at Yorton, ‘Edward Everett, ho said; tind spoken | Probable, had it not been for one Yankee, this question | (4 ) “Yet. tho Northera established | “than two thousand; had by this: to half that | tn the loge. _Syrea ear cad ingi ‘saan fof the rain as “the gentle sprinklings of hoaven that came | DCVer wonki have arisen. I mean the man who: Invented ‘@ Dogue eovereignty, While it that the } number. * in jail. te the statue”—and Yble raid ho thought would be {ho-cotton gin. ‘The poor fellow was: nos to blame for it; | Territorial Lepitatare, the Judges aod ‘should eens Fe, Cook was brought up to-day, and a proliminary oxam)- < thought serviee o mankind. elected 2 Wm. , © reformer, was 5! y P 4 we fae ey Shane Crepe, Niece ie A tho.cnly resale. whish follewed {rear M Wop ta) Taleera:]. tho voppdeed eee at te Pee ee Another Steamboat Disaster. berg ‘eae deity | Bitton being called on, his eounee! watved an examination; i of Everet:. was then eriticised “starry? | hegre from. when empioyed in the or. | removed at his pleasure, and still exercising the veto STEAMER CHAMPION SUNE—LO8S OP LIFB, ETC., BTU. Sixteenth ’ Woodall badly ‘Dut thie had to be done by Cook himself, This was ac- b <ytoey ‘waa, he , & Baptist, and tnorefore | amary to the priee which he now | power. ‘Thus this vaunted sovereign, this iohe- | The steamer Champion; Capt. John Bowne, of the New | beaten. corded, and he was ordered back to prieon, There is-no- Sporatiog’ a ap to ha et ja bringh im the market, which, if he bean ableDedied man, Tent monareby that can’t got rid of a eovoreiguty waa ‘York and New Haven tine, left this city at sbout three | Dr. C. Richardson, a reformer, was parsued by tho | ning unusual in this, for the ame. witesses. that would tne tren My By ee i | Sroch tomardas the diescniaaticnel Untviek ate oe | ee irty porvioas'te the White House, } "eck yesterday morning, bound to Now Haves, in tho | Captain oe Canara | we en caran swore. | bo produced to sustain a caso for tho Grand Jury will be to the slave power of the Daniel Web- on plant, end in acortain sense bas revolutionized | and or our royal Grace, allow place of the steamer which had been “4 refage cere, examined by that body. The trial of this man, second in ser’ trata fo, ‘and Faw ee Soo qenganie ites seek But I do remember the have or abolish: thie’ or ther tan a? = ‘ ca ceennes ele a we nd . 7 i Stra eating bomen, Eaward Everett a eater pe peri og pare or — Ker ecg OE nen ‘by @ collision the day previous. Ghe had ouly #.mode- mm capture him, but fortunately } command to Ossawatomie in the late affray, ia only sub- ‘were the traitors 10 the country since the days of ip tho year 1686—-then 1 think confiict began, which? | of “the. Preetieat of the” Unnea States, and the | *e freight and some forty passengers, among thom quite | they were Barons, Nov. 2-37. yu. | “Ary in interest to Old Brown's own. Areca. Turner and Jobn Brown were ite if I might be supposed not to intend treason—(laugh- | acerbation of parties in every election would be | & portion of ladies and children. When off Mattinasock y Cook bas not yet given his confession to the tight. It ts Senservalors. What Turor labored 10 acconsplisé In his | t7)—I" will now. may eeoma at %t0, me | intensified. Whatever might be their opinion about | Point, at aboutfive o'clock A. M., when all the peasen- | _ DF: Robinson, of the Central Reform Comminiee, came | 404 ror with interest. ‘time, but failed, is the same work that was ‘seized | t© be an irrepressible onc. (Renewod ). Now, scaaien, fuoah pisoa than teetige oe teeehook wes reer * to the Eleventh ward polls and announced that the re- anne, 'by the noble and heroic Brown. (Applause.) Mr. Mar- |° don’t undorstand me as having any at whatever | ceaso, (A .) Why should this be.called popular | £r# were in their berths, sho came tn collision with the | 115 nad been driven from every ward except that Se eek pened The pastinalos esate te oo etsoiax Ga nh with John Brown—none, none. I remember at that time | # y? It was like striking off a man’s arm and | large screw steamer Albatross, from Providence, by whieh THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE COURT. New York Hxnaty, roaring out bis abuso of this papor as ‘that tbe people of South Carolina telling it was to Sor battle tke the Champion was cut down bolow her water line and im and the Bighth, and counselled the reformers thers to ‘Caanusmown, Va., Nov. 2, 1869. “ » ge Bottom in his role in “A Midsummer's | WAY of carrying on government by theenaci- | the wings of the eagle, and, pointing to the bi withdraw to avoid further bloodshed; whereupon Dr. Meesrs. Russell lsanssl, vontmices emched.he igut's Dreass,”” The Hutsto, bo onid, was a fright ana | THcLbe! Glaloles under their ergunic law, and called thelr | stumps, bidding the Bird of Jove soar the eun—tixe fe | odistely began to wink. Immoditely after the eltiaion | TOUSEN ev MANES ANS Receepes Ee es . ee Publication, and { could not be supposed that people together in the form of a wen- } ting out a of meoting houses to oppose @ f the passengers, half frantic, rushed out of the cabins, . J u to-day. (@aeh » paper could ‘with an oppressed people | Hon orduincd that the Revenue law'of the United Btates, | tlect of 74 , The republican party, on the | saloons and staterooms, most of them in their night clothes, | ¢Ued: Previoesly the refurmers throughout the city | Cook was brought before the Magistrate’s Court and ‘against ‘odde for , thei iiborty. ‘Tao then called the tariff, was unconstitutional. sy resolved other hand, teave the rae pee in the hold of life noth and fa " | withdrew, leaving the polls in the hands of the dominant waived an cxamination. ‘was well known to be the exponent of the views | t#othat the constitation of the United States—whish | hands of ’Congress—the reprosentaiives of the | *ieing preservers, setiees, fac party. le ef the Bouthern ters, and its opposition to negro frde- TAs penne neonate ae Ce oe whole people, coming from parts of the | evory moveable article of a buoyant nature wherewith Barrons, Nov. 2-10 P. M. THE TRIAL OF COPPIE RESUMED. ‘was an es'ablighed si a flimsy piece of paper, that was conatitution at all, | country—the fathers, rothers, uncles and cousins | to saye their lives. The sky was dark, the atmosphere o ” Copple’s trial was resumed. No witnesses were callo¢ The pref. mene Behaeih. lectarer oosupied fully | P\t 9Wy the echo of ‘a thought from tho pavement— | of the many men who people and: a ime “ That and MERENENS ‘Seperle Sf Ener utrdgte ee Me Te sctanee, goats wtb ae see Passed on theonsiger | (WSbebtOr)—swas a solemn com Tehould like to seo | ed withall their wante and wishes. ‘They would plage the | ld, and for a time everything looked forboding, ant | private rights of citizens in several wards. e - ‘tbe ‘and cereor of the notorious rebel, Nathaniol question tried ina court. I think that the constitu- | Union in the bands of 300 men instead of one man—aoci- | the officers of the sinking steamer explained the natur In the Second ward # man seamed Charis Barkard was | _ ©: Harding opened for the Commonwealth; Mesars nero was bora, bo said, in, the State of Virginie, | Och of “a, thought can idle; eadualy °aponalauve | Gece ee relent oa eietlonk Rote he weal unk | of the damage, and prevailed upon the frightened passen | ypot inthe bip. Hoyt and Griswold followed for tho defendant, and Mr. > MTorper never told a tle in'hia fe. (aheers which the | thought of some gentleman’ on the pavement. | his brother democrats, if ‘any such had condeacended to | £ers to calm themselves, and they would all be saved. In the Fifth ward @ man, name unknown, was droad- Hunter closed for the proeecution, The speeches wore of thought s grost falling on bis part i ee ee Se vt: opectihibeaeaphenlpse am gern bk bch aN ped Ait! as poor Sapeevs) By this time the propeller was seen near the Champion, fully beaten. marked ability. iD conflict between slave ick repul , Whether it was not more democratic . GReswe structions Bempunction whstever, Hie aid vo to escape from slsrers, | BOF in the South and free labor a tho Norib, and proceed: | give thle vetopower to Congrets than Yolesvoin ehande | *n4 thelr feare were quictod. | Every facility was allorle | The mous reliable account is that Mr. Preston was as- | | iit, Cemnctt ed for sorosnd rsiructions to the fary, ‘ ‘md would do the same thing again. otas torhor wae ed to say that it was contended that the of the | of one man? If he did not think so, though he was | the passengers for getting on board of the propeller | gauited at Govanstown, in the Ninth district of Baltimore er 1 and the jury re- Congress U had no power to prohibit the establishment | doubtlees patriotic, with pulse beating high for {| which was found not to be seriously damaged, and in a | coun ‘account beaten | tired. . « God! be bad many a a Of the institution of slavery anywhere, but that the States | freedom, he was a weak creature. Cangnter:), short time all who wished to leave had an opportunity of ag: aon Mole b herd ge Jar, with which be bought, powder. (Tumultuous cheers | !0 their sovereign capacities alone bad the power to pre- | 1 find your characteristics, my democratic friend, doing #0, much of their personal baggage, in the confusion | ™22- It ie difficult, 80 many reports, to from the colored part of the sudicnce.) Nat Turner was | Vent that institation from taking root anywhere. He | Mr. Corwin, given by one of the old patriarchs in the He- | of the moment, being Teh behind. * arrive at the truth. people suffering | (Mr. C-) was one of those who had some reverence for | brew seriptures, when speaking of his children: ‘Reu- | 1 ig stated that the Champion when going up saw the | William P. Preston, democratic candidate in the Third : ly 1¢ constitution of his country; be was one of those old | ben,” said he, “thou art unstable as water; thou | nent of an approaching vessel and the engineer instantly 4 s ‘The Court gave its decision on the motion for an arrest deliver them, From the moment that he determinod on | fogles who believed that the founders of ‘the republic and shalt never excel.” Now Reuben, in 1848,in my Sountey | blew his whist, wh ‘Albatross, | CoBgressional District, is now lying st Barnuin’s Hotel, was answered by the of judgment, overruling the objections made. In the ob. fie work he never turned hig back upon it. His educa- the makers of tho constitution understood the organiem | and everywhere you passed resolutions spion then made for the + band side of the | badly beaten about the head with a billy. The outrage jection that treason cannot be committed against a State, The Cham} ‘was altogether the rosult of chance. While as a | Which they presented to us, their children, quite as wellas | your conventions saying that Congress should put the | channel, as required by law, whilo the Albatross, inatoad | is eaid to have been perpetrated in the Seventeenth THE CASE OF JOHN BROWN. Brown was then brought in, and the Court House was immediately thronged. z ‘; 5 : E 5 ‘condi it youn; ‘we did ourselves. He was one of those who had a great | Wilmot provieo upon all the Territories. They went to a opposite be ruled that wherever allegiance is due treason be Rests al eoboot, So honed the’ suireton stew tee be deal of self suficiency, yet he bad found by experience | man that had a transparent skin, and could se0 right the chameel, eaten scemsuviiy brocgee tas ino venieie werd. committed, Most of the States have passed sae fhhotr masters, and the lessons fell, as it wore, through the | that there were other men in the world who bad | through him, and gought to acquire territory from Mex- } contact.” Iu the Eloventh ward the etronghold of the reformers, 4 Yeung ladies’ cars into his own, and Nat always made it | DPaine in thelr headsfas well as bim—none of them, | ico under the treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo.” Why have | “the Atpatros struck the Champion about ten feet for- | yr. on 7 ‘the wih, | ZOMtR. The objections as to the form of the verstict ren Bpoitt to Keep all that bo got,and to get ail thet he | 1 be sore, quite as much. (Langhter.) The | you changed your opinon upon that subjoct, Rouben? | ward of the wheelhouse ou the larbord aide eutuing her | Mz: George M- Gill made «speech announcing Wh: } dered the Court also regarded as insufficient. ‘ould. The lecturer then went on to review the lead. | framers of the constitution knew What the mean- | “Unstable as water, thou shalt not excel.” (Langhter.) | ciean through to the boilers. The concussion’ the | drawalof Mr. ‘Thomas, the reform candidate for District The Cinux then asked Mr. Brown whether he had any-” Sig inches in bo'ife of Turser, So_well Kuownte every | 304 of Mt was beitor than. we could” tel what they | OF anothor man "i suid in that Dook, “ Ephraim is & | Soterstoeeplode write a loud sopere above kes aa | Aitorney, when the reformers, finding i imposible to do rea 7 stsdent of American history —Tarner’e influence over the | meamt by reading it. T am. allogether unacquainted w cake not turned.” Now, whoever said that, thought that amid the hisring of the sealding steam which was ths lot dada aah “lider thing to say why sentence should not be pronounced upon negroes was great, and this r ho never failed to | ‘is gentleman, said the speaker (placing his hand on an { Ephraim was not baked on both sides. My demooratic | frogs, could be heard the agonizing cries of one of the | ™y ne r§ him. exercise in behal( of his fellow eutorars in bondage Tho | S8dividual who sat on the platform); if be wore tho san | Ephraim, turn yourself over, for God's, sake, and bake ® | remen calling for bop. ‘The strecta are nearly deserted to-night, except by the SPRECH OP OLD BROWN. seheme of the insurroetion under Not Turner, and the } Who drew up the constitution J sheald feel little embar- | tte on the other side. (Uproarious laughter.) You do} Atiempts were made to rescue the man from the boll | victorious party. Mr. BaowN immediatly rove and ina cloar, distinct progreas of that awful episode of ‘brutality and {| assed to look him in the fate and aay: if, You ars } bet want por love these doctrines, but you have been ing water and hot steam which were pouring upon him, ‘pa hhh weed 0p chapel da. ctiak a Aig Ree. % t. ondish rage, was woll detailed b7 tho lecturer, fh | such a stupid ass that yor do not know what you meant | made to love tho namo of democrat, and to that you ad- 1 but j¢ was jmpossible to reach him, and he ie numbered . voice said;:—I bave, may it please the Court, afew bo sense to say that he did not ‘of | by thee words as Well as I know by reading them.’’ | hero without any of its substance, Your Lage fold F among the ‘Phe Dame of the Unfortunate man ie un- ‘The proprietor of the Exchange, having been threatened | words to say. In tho first place I deny everything w ‘end murder evep for a (Great laughter.) You would not think that was accord. | youn the South that the constitation ordaiiiet! TY | known. with assault, made s domand on the city authorities for | but what 1 have all along admitted, of a design ow uy part hr w freishs wolt, | $8 to the rofined manners of the Wost, at any rate. (Re- | shall go there; in 1848 you woro all alive to the idea that ‘Three engers, one of whotn is supposed to be a tofree slaves. I intended certainly to have mage ‘tn this part cf hie sublect. st some newod laughter.) ‘That was tho very controversy be- | Congress should bar for vyer by a law omnipotent, a8 | yy. mie of Now Haven, are supponed’ to be let, as | Prowction: - ly vo made &. Dut bis ideas were neither new. nor intercating’ | ‘Ween us now upon that very point, ag it was also upon oming from them, the ingress of negro slavery into thoee they have not beon seen since the collision. Tho nities A. B. Kyle, Jr., died of his wounds about balf-past nine | clean thing of that matter, as I did last winter, whend hb hie leeture, he eakd, ho would close. his. re- | ‘he. the power of the federal government } territories that we were to acquire, out your eaderahave J of the other two are unknown. The Champion gunk | o'clock thie evening. went into Missouri, and there Wok slave without the snap- ‘with this last thought, and that was that mow, in | 0 Stretch its arm over the territory-of the federal govern. {raid mow it aball be otherwise. Don't say I wanted to # within twenty minutes, til her upper deck was under | The wounds of Georgo Kyle are not considered dangor- | ping of a gun on cithor side, moving them through the oritical time, when before God and all honest. men | ™éntand establish its institutions. There he,rolied | hurt your feelings, for God knows I do not want to hort } water. Her surviving re and crew wore taken 6 gu : iy ‘were three martyrs to bo tried in Virginia, he would. [° "P08. @ of constitu. } any man’s feelings. That is one of my weaknesses. a8 § om py the Albutross the stoamer Acton. The wreck | U5: country, and finally leaving thom in Canada. 1 de. Bey that before the throne of God, as far as their mission | 0D from the catablishmont of the fedoral govern- J you can see, by looking at my oft blac eye and expree # Was thon takon in tow by tho two sloamers, and finally | ‘The Americans are rejoicing over their victory. The | eigned to have done the same thing aga on ‘was concerned, they stood. as abecived from all wicked. | MeBt down to the year 1652. ‘The democrats of the | sive face. (Great laughter.) My democratic brother, grounded off Red Spring Point, where she now lies. reformers deny that anything that can be called an elec- J a lar, teale, That was all I intended. 2 bess and sin. as Werhington aid in formor days. In those | North tho Unit. } you now remind mo of another man epoken of in Scrip: | “Tn addition to tho irs_on board the Champion, pith iA ‘witical times it Beliooved thom to remember that these | ¢ States, an instrument which, its face, said that } ture, namely, ‘‘Issachar jean over-labored ass.” You have } she had a large amount of freight, including four horses | ton bas taken place. did intend murder or treason, or the destrpction of pro. men bad their lives in that causo, | # was mado for the Lost ag g more Perfect | been mndo to hear this burden tong enough, snd now | apd eight mules. ‘The animals, of oourse, were all | twill be late before the returns are received, ae a | perty, or to éxctte oF incite slaves to rebellion, or to make aa gh be Ry tlle. tefl (Ap- | iiberty to us and to our posterity forever--dhat count | sake cut of pour eare, and look like a horse. (Uproarious | Sfg*Bed tu walicane cb a visinaeh wha aabiteat | Meee wore ene oe een once Ena insurrection. I have anothor objection, and that ie that it trodden humanity, and he should esteem Jobn zal established by men who determined, ev merriment.) What aro you EG Nl red ya many of them with but very little clothing. Oapt. So far as ascertained the vote stands as follows:—~ {# unjust that I should suffer such a penalty, Had I inter- Brown the noblest Roman of all Virginia, the noblest Vir- | OR6 of them, to exert ovary faculty which thoy pabeecoed, | doctrine that, you have get up in tho Southt - Was Hofimeyer, of the Croton, and Capt. James, of the Alba- | Wards. Reform. American. | fored in the manner in which I admit, and which I admys ‘of them ail. (Applanse.. man who wrung | 12 public or private, for ultimate extinction of slave- } ever a court of uny Biate in the Union that did not declare | trogs, supplied such garments to the sufferers asthey | 1 ‘68 678 | has been fairl vodefor I admire the truthfulness and geen hema ee ay ghd atte Ty—that constitution, we were told, now carried under its } that slavery wae Inade local by the particular laws of the | wore able to. ‘The passengers wore brought to the cityon | 8. 252 2491 n fairly proy Qeet man he ever saw, was the horo John Brown. Mr. sacred panoply. Regrocs into every foot of territory be- | State in w! itexisted? Never. What, bo oe nite! the Croton. 6. 20 ‘870 | candor of the greater portion of the witnesses who have ‘Martin then 19 make the following startiing as. | longing to this government where @ State constitution did ] would Ido with the Dred Scott decision? Tho Supremé | ‘tse Atpatrosa remated by the wreck, apd tho New | 16 2 100 840 I testified in this cuse—bad I #0 interfered in behalf of tho Sertion-—T de Dot hesliate to say that If were, plaged | 20t oppose an insurmountable barrier to it. The speaker | Court of the United States mado no euch decision; they | raven Company have sent another steamer’ to her eld. cela “ 900 | sich, the powerful, the int the so-called @ a favorable ‘that is wi 1 saw chances of | ##ked if the writer of the constitution believed that when | talked about it, but the issue made up by the record in- ‘The Champion should havo left here at eleven o'clock rich, the powerful, tolligent, great, or succees, Tuvule do what Jobe, Brown ‘has tokens nei | Be wrote those words there that Congress abould have, | volved ‘no guch question. Tho question was wheter | on Twestay night but for somo reasoe was. detained anal THE LATEST. iu bebalf of any of their friends, either father, mother, me Godt I do not say this for tho purpose of | the power to make needful rules and concern-"| Dred Scott was a citizen; It was not whether Congress } threo o'clock on Wednesday . ‘The Albatross is a Barrmors, Nov. 3—2 A. M. brother, sister, wifo or children, or any of thet eer Reamer eet eae net wo. apeak Peking tine bois ak he (tho Beaker) ved Stout somthing, clit Tiny, wud oier when the | {relght propeller, belonging to Providence, and issaid to | ‘The returns from the different wards in the ty will not class, ‘end suffered and quarifced what I have ge A ae i = Sree aed Zr gut | forever freo from’ the curse, ax they” thought, of | question came directly before that tribunal, whothor ane hoon <i pont, and has been employed | P?in for some hours yet. The Americans have, however, | in iis interference, would baye been allright; every wbont by the sun of peace and the effulgonce of | cero slavery by tho ordinance of 1787, ‘and | it could be decided in the manner that’ lawyers | on this line ton or twolvo years. For the last year or | without doubt, carried the city by about 19,000 majority. | man in this court would have deemed t an act worthy Rs then, in the name of God, let that sun | Tecognived that ordinance in the mew. constitution | will say it is an authoritative and binding decision. Up to | two she has principally carried freight. The Champion ‘Three procincts from Hoffinan county give Hoffman, sBimeforin. Bit, if tcaa only be done’ by the body | S82 all-binding obligation upon tho new guverament. | that ime, said Mr. .tnere is no deckion. (Applause). | Wi be rated ren Change cota disacalte » | of reward rather than punighment, This Court acknow- Sword and the leaden’ ball, when. 1 say let revolution | Whatelse did do about that time? The State of In- | Speaking of the unreasonableness of the popular sove- | “Captain Jones, of the Albatross, states that the Cham- | American, for Congress, 228 majority—a gain. lodges, too, as 1 suppose, the validity of the law of God. yale its head, and let fire and aword devastate | diane, & part of the criginal Northwost Territory, eome- | relgnty doctrine, he related the following inoWdent:—An | pion was first soon at a point and a half on their star- | Two precincts in Alleghany county gtr Kunkel, demo- | j xce « book kissed, which I suppose to be the Rible, or The land. Atady rate, let the colored man be free. | Where about 1808 or 1804, pe Congress honest man was troubled in Ohio with @ disease called nd bow, and should have kept her course, passing to | crat, for 188 majority, an opposition gain. aan 4 ‘have seen him soorned at the soat of justice; I’ve soon | % modify the ordinance of 1787 go as to permit the intro- | hypochondria. (1 believe the Proper technical name is | tho northward of tho propelicr: instead of which ‘ue | Tat for Congress, » at least the New Tortament, which teaches mo that all Akim made the sport of the ; Ihave seen him de- | Suction of slaves, because, peng. & now country, there | hypochondrias—the gentlemen of profession of medi. | stoamer put her helm hard-a-port, and came ‘square ‘The rotarns from Havre de Grace sbow an averago things whateoevor I would that men ebould doto me I ‘ied his rights in every positon of fo; and it is time for | Wee & scarcity of labor. Yet, the ‘very men who had | cine can correct me nen Vacoeibe eee. across the propelier's bow, which struck the Champion | American majority for Congress and the Siate ticket of | should do even #ot0 them, Tt teaches me, further, to re- SEP, Moos ha the reich Sole Th ar tee ply, not that Congress had not Jurisdiction over the Ter- | dlence, becauee you would always labor under them | "Ary amidships. member them that are in bonds as bound with them. 1 he tongue of Gabriel, he would say, “Brethren, lot us , but that they were not willing to grant thisre- | after this). I mentioned . this case to Dr. Scott TELEGRAPHIC. endeavored toect up to that instrrction. 1 say I am ‘ariee and liberate John Brown.” dous cheers.) of the Ordinance, and John a of Roan- | and he told me it was very common, and said that he had New Haves, X a ton te tae a that God le an: > ‘Mr. Martin edded the remark that he wished it distinctly | Oke, in his report upon the petition, told Ht was | a cabo of this kind—a man imagining himself pregnant. Isw Havas, Nov. 2, 1860. y young erstan 17 reapectai ‘nderatood by the reporter of the Humax, that he was | {rue that tley were laboring undor [disadvantages | Fomebody east bee. BAe fay, al nypoenenne and The news of the collision on the Souhd at one o’clock | alias Pigsey, an escaped burglar, was taken into custody | f persons: I believe that to have interfered as 1 have 5 ue language of the colored motabors of the | WSU oatire ise ploagh opuld be: deed. Duk they must | Welt cowrs thare ee no way of curing tar dscare hei | ‘2i® morning, between the steamer Champion and the | by policemen Rigland and Wilson, of the Eleventh precinct, | 400, as Ihave always realy admitted 1 have done, tn Sane tasting ai tus reopcasbiuey of fin aagoricas ou his | bear with this touiporary inconvenience, ninco ‘belng's | by hursoring the peculur Yeastty of tho paest ‘Tho | Providence, propeller, only roachod here this ovening. | on Tucoday night. The prisoner effected his eacape from | behalf of His deepised poor, is no wrong, Dat right. Now, ‘own back. Scorers woe =) pene Actor fl is pa Deeks an a Gaee It creates much sensation. Besides the death of the firc- | the city prison about two monthe ago, by «most ingentous | Mf it le deemed necensary that I abould forfeit my life for ‘ary inconvenience would. com] eu a y - of ‘The meeting soon after broke up. by their being Snally ‘id of the apr tomsgyy yor} ty wos one rede awe fats ites u voll atom thetor; man, Mr. George Stecle, tea merchant, of this city,is | pian. He was confined in the samo cell with a man | the furtherance of - egg, ) and mingle Acquittal of Solomon Charged Yo b been foulas aeoagte he would ha: trived Bday 76 wl De Solis rag he’ asian ha reba i ee ST eUgLaasribcs castkame are indaced the tnttor to" his are with the eed ot millions in ete th coun: Cole, with eo & po) man wi ve some means ol on the three children. store was cloned at an carly hour, some means eswurme mame, | aud , the Mu: i. said: Do what you lease—Congress cannot invorfere, for | be bad practiced on the mind of his patient, . ’ | so that at the expiration of ten when Francis was are disregarded by wicked, crue! Murder of His Wife, in New Jersey. | tbo constitution makes You ; and had he been a | in order to-cure him and caught what we calla ground | “02 there is now a large crowd around i. called ont to be discharged, John stepped try, wees rights = mS te ‘Tho trial of Mr. Solomon Cole, on the charge of having | beliover in the doctrne of the Soott decision, | hog, and assuming the name of ibe end unjust enactments, I say dene. H efet Let me say one word further. I feel entirery sntiafed ‘polsoned his wife by moans of arsenic and antimony, tor- | he would have told them that tho constitation carried east, He took tt to the Williamsburg City News. oo wale snepicion — | beve veeteuingaiing wil. Cm with the treatment a ag ‘unseel mainated ‘slavery into every Territ and bad a perfect righ | man’s house, and on ai ted he there found Cazmov0 fond relief of as to his identity. a few ey ten Aeantial of Cesectused: 5, saves tak the ante conatiation, ah0wa eapel | him ih torrie speamodio convelsions, sad nave time | 4, 2 amy tn tid of ho: Sema few We tell OF | veee | Messlb:. Uruly,~ Wer” usaighea in terri ic jue , has been ther of th no man had | be said. ‘There is your babe.” Said the doctor, “Don’t | © poor of Bt. Peter's and Paul’s parish, opened on Tues- General Sessions charg sidering ail the circomstances, It more generous the rr ees ott: | you feel better Row?" 0, porfeotiy wall, doctor; this is | day at tho Odcon, and waa well attended during the day | pet to the” meas amoniabment oft ther Cont cd | than Texpectcd; but I feel no consclonmess of suit. 1 tion and as often dented the Congress com- | a terrible thing, doctor, ig dabverod of & enild.” He ‘and evening. The revenues raised from this source do } jury the witnesses were unable to ‘the prisoner. It f nave etated from the first what was my imtcatios and of of the very men who the constitu- bro args Ca: said, much good in cemforting the sick and destitate ‘the | Was evident that there wasa great somewhere not. Inever bad any design against the liberty ye Bever upon the ground of want of juriediction. | ‘Is thet it??” “Yea,” ‘the doctor. de: Seed on teh are nee canna phan J and , Whom the District Atsorney investigated | bat was > ‘wo present the doctrines of the ican party. | livered) make Dale lay, etraiebt, hog | Foligiods distinction, by the Bistors of Toe Fay | the case, be ‘Uaat he had the wrong Brady in court, { of any person, nor any disposition 0 Commit treason or Nodoubt they had often been presented to those pre- snapping “Well,” said he, “it ain’s will continue two other days a woe and the iiberation of the prisoner followed as a natural incite slaves to rebel or make apy general insurrection. nen! Das taey Wael ever Dest eee Cee Baking vely,, but as long as it is mine} i, Roo ir Malone, ping whoa | consequence. ‘The matter was kept « svorct until within cacouraged any man to do so, but always dis- , which wae 8 Part of the pur- } Twillbave to i” laughter, which leg be pe Sneath 1 expect a liberal the past few days, when the circumstances attending the sth. kind. ‘atitation are sent back to bave the afuciee ordain: Corwin, pee bg, Sam took ak Personal md abet! “ nooo Sun, named ‘ania ‘x’ "sales Site G ten wes - . Im o e of the to the expunged; but afterwards, after re- ut a groundhog. We had tried popular telligemce. Aneaet co 4 Rarosam—A reporter copnécted with rgunent,sbe was adi wit daveey, had refused to exert ite power | Miss Ada Clifton, late of Laura Keene’s company,tailed | Connelly, was yesterday brought up before Alderman | who were pap peng cnet the treaty stipulations by which the over the ‘of Utah, and the was that | yesterday in the Empire City for Havane, accompanied by | Brady on @ complaint preferred him by ©. H. } some of thom that I bave induced them to join me, but the ‘States had bound iteclf fo admit this Territory into the ee ae anes Snes alco miserable con- | ior tathor. Farrell, who alleged that Conpelly him, and # contrary 6 true. 140 uot cay this to injure them, bet aa aon with all the rights of he arigioa!Siateg,' Ie thems | cabjnen'bad been allowed to feter there, and the power | ECON senjamin, United Staten Senator trom the | Dat casme,t be cwouaed baie reports, 2 Reorae F recreting ther weakness. Not ove joined me Dat of hia ‘pavements to find tho thought of men there, | the of gor country’s history, Popular | state of Louisiana, has arrived in Washingwen. jan own accord, and the greater part ettheir own expense. A. oF regard the constitution as a piece of flimsy which ‘was let loose and exerted its be- Grantley F. Berkeley reached number of them I never saw and never hada word of 20 man was bound to he ii cococtatiog saa neflcent power in Kansas, and five years of civil | os wit on his St. » Mo., on the jon with Lil) the day came to me, and tha® y the laws and treaties pursuance of it should be }' war had been its legitimate consequences. sovo- ied ‘ain Teturn from the Plains. His hi tour conversation with tl) the day they me, ¥ e the supreme law of the land and they wore observed. Telgnty prevailed in Kansas ever since 1864, and every oxte ly miles beyond Fort Riley, where ho way for Qe parpere 1 bave etated. Now, F have dome. ; RAS Re Bet above the ino of thirty-six dogrees thirty minntes | viede of gress on the beautifal prarice that epreed them: J oslo, elk an‘ antelope ia abundance, ; 1k DEATH SENTENCE, there were no except.ind! aie i } Trader acne be chae aceM ne ane ansaid Coseroes | with the blood of the habitants of Uaes ,under | New Yore Poser Orrices—The Post Offices at Wile W Sven ees eee evens: Jeo" hbeichec int Poin a cae enacted that in those territories there should never be | the Aogin of sovereignty. New Boston, Lewis county; Church Hollow, Chenange and when he Lad finiehed, the Judge proceeded to pro- 3 ‘Oo Hopas. " de A avery, We Koow the histery of this legislation... The sepenenne and out of thelr misconduct county, and, Bearadale, Wantchester county, ‘have been pounce sentenco upon him. After afew preliminary re- + Fromm Bassoon, to the sehr @ J Mia—J Rosse dant Jamnet Honree, a couromporary 4 old Joba Browa. Tas was the loghimate frat ofpopaap © Nagara couaty, bar boon shaped epee OR, te Ee | | |