The New York Herald Newspaper, February 7, 1860, Page 8

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ba NEW YORK HERALD, TURSDAY, *EBRUARY 7, 1860. ence ene of the finest minds that ever shone in American | arese, 8) bis hand in his as it dread Missiesipp!, tbe bells of the churches out a wil ab JOSHUA BR. GIDDINGS IN TOWN. crate I betes a Roig ay os | Sgn Some ovo ean afer Mr. daca wae = shea nr ta tal ae ge srotiet Wed poe tee beh ecto, ead mvs sees \ fest referred to Mr. Pickens combustibic =i peered teen Mera report Carolina — my general - pina ow = ‘The Repabiican stamp Leet jen the Guth Coralie | COED doveving teak Ul prameting She na end po cha with Faden, of a of Wine be ceatee aes » ‘by the Phorchee folowed, ‘The oe erat LS YY Er. Giddings om ‘ The Deities of Bauman tbe petition to the House Mr. Adams had incurred its | great Bitterness, Mr. undertook to return th, rk ag ier ny Perilcal pededicon wes an five, wach te Saou ket ibere ‘waler, Government)’ Exciting Scenes severest censure. ‘The House soon after otipurned but tn ry style from thet Be aia about me I went om to vindioate the freedom of debate. multitude received with uncovered and on | has tts Soor 20 feet above the water. intense excitement. Before leat ‘the a ip regard to Mr. Marshall. this momen’, yr. | (Sensation.) I have no time to dwell upon the scene bended knee. The ecclesiastical procession was then es- ‘rocal plane ‘e110 feet a i engros— The Orbe of Srsnss rons a Manion Spee | wou tp oyun ety SA he Sct | nme cegheh eset aegt ec nt | getualy ieee reins be Bet LSS the Government, taking measures in relation to So rendiation of Teen mena by bir. Ket, and was rotate the con saeel se wie i owas threatened the mob SEcDartattnd when toy bave rclvd 1,40 cent ‘whieh be io 3 C4 a &., ao. i ay Og Fg mimes tote es ein ee naaas (laugh: | vould take uk (he capiain and msie, oad ang | Othe mew ent Stell organ, of which I wrote to he _ ing F 2; permit me to say if he has fallen Lato Adams? them under iynch law. 1, felt impressed to | | The new ant ode Jy sopresimmale t eean.., Oe ee Gue ter iete "hare alas) het el ieee eceneret ter and | g0 to the prison and say to | them host they | oer Weis called “The States Rights ‘and is con. Longitude. $6 06 W of Greenwich. ‘Mee Metnedist Fpiscopal Cturch in Forsyth street was ae as > anette opp mala lasted through thirteen On | should not be victims of tynch law, that the mob jy alm Pap Eyre yy lh Tho light reese tis snon bas been, dacontoed. and, » 8 partisan wae e Ces et Mr, Adame wae speaking, had | not dare to do this. The mob at the gate sent in word that y , temporary light willbe shown from the the ‘swell filled last evening to listen to the Hon. Joshua R | lecture, wi is merely a Lyceum lecture. ‘become under the constant interru; by | if I did not return immediately, life should be the forfeit, | connected the and the Courier. RB contains @ | date above 0, vis — era Sangs, whe was recived with entusatic apace, | wiih ole aug it, Decaute, thenevor the guaran of | Sewihetn mln, among whom waa M.S, of Virgina. | I went out end passed through hw, and was ie aly wit gaina a footing, if | “ay Meat, ResnaerSocetry ahusen Sie slavery ema ay ane pig 4 . rats been re, mail contacter, and st the art ree oe Tae danger, fork will frankly Fy sf ehich, | Jan 25, pees Tanme uxp Gmerincc—The sunject to which your at. | fore the hour of aseuabling) the. gallerice ofthe flouse | the clerks & the Department Nad pita Sew tee aes |B Tob ektpomewhat fafor tan Ted fo propriotorg. ,nould Dodglet | Arr at Hosoluta and Lahaina, Deo. 7, Onward, XB Mention hes been invoked for this brief hour is, as has | Were ed with men and women, to fanny Pelik ope 5 fy (Laughter.) Ho is thesame man, you | when in the mob. I found my friends in great excite a (and he pie new 1,330 Dia ol 16.000 oe Tin esi to ruewon ‘Peen announced to you, Scones in Congressional Life. Tt is | womes hoping to hear something Upon the subject w in Congress, and ‘wow I believe beta etek Ege bose House a resolution of inquiry to asoctals whether mem, before it rill collapee (ied for Tecuabaan, wd cule): Vernoe, @ve to myself, however, that I should say that I do not | had been opened on the day. The lobbi Smith.” (Laughter.) Mr. Smith arose, and the or bers of Congress were safo {a the clty, or whether « mob last would-be ‘of the | oll 17,000 Ibs bone, Ochotek, Un here ai td eave) through the country nor address audiences for the | te House were filled with foreign Ministers and their at- | said—'* The from Massachuselia has the floor.” | was in possession of the city. Upon this resolution an at the South, by charg- | two days, ships Lancaster, Arab, eee Ne were pure of stiecting momentary wienton. y | ihicen days prociedmgs al the oflers oe go | mggenen or he bactt of eatomas frm ass | {bad lyon rae tai’ ‘ey Clete Ven: | ib, hoa proved ss aries an all pecaig dodgw to | qe caee D2, Mart Mrite AReNSaac ra” @esign is to impress upon those who listen to me the im Loy pp dna} Teould judge, were present. Soon | chusetis.”” ‘Mr. Adams turned around with a scowl, ‘and | ble, ‘North Carolina, turning to me with the arrogance the same end. The Huratp is too D Breton 10 crulse!; Marie Therens, 40 ; Orozimiva, portance of what I deem great and enduring principles— | {ter the House was called to orderand the journal was = “non talé aueilio”—which means, ‘I desire no sch which a slavebolder only can exercise or manifest, . a: Sab dgy Adana tbe. dr Geo Sovand x os oot read, the Speaker announced that the order of proceed- principles which he at the basis of our government, without | ing ene te me consideration oe to, Feoltog a ‘cen- which we have no hope of maintaining our free institu- | sure offered by the man from ¥ a ftene. The scenes to which I am about to call your atten- rage of Kenhucky, then rowe sad eGered an amendment. ‘tiem arose from the regaining of rights which had been | years of age. He had served in the Legislature of his own ‘said, “T want to know whether the gentleman from Ohio has | is theonly New York daily that has an fornis: Montezuma, to cruise; Florence, do; of section, and were tip 1dth, Rapid, do; Delaware, do. on ” Spoken, Feb 5, 40 mallea Rast of Bandy Hook, ship from A y saw who fa jot boat Wain Blunt No.2) here | "hyvahip ‘Mil svaabar ‘rom Liverptol for his Latin, and stood slill not knowing what to . | said that aslave from a slave State into Ohio peaking (Ianghter.) Turning to Christopher he sald | has 2 right upon Ohio sol of dofendin himself from his | mails reliable the number of ita subscribers would soon be gentleman has become per- the moment he stood upon Ohio soll was fectly enraged, and ho is telling you to go to—you know | the attributes which his Creator had thrown around him; abandoned by those who had swayed the administration pay dimly Ler bapa! fy 2 the hay’ balhinccerraly yf 1 a fortnight that it arrives as, Ye Rrery tony Nace ‘Br Hampioo ost, takin; stand in favor of universal emancipation, where iting down’ — .) | that it was not his right to defend his life, libert; with respec fan 4, lat of our government. Imay remark, by. way of illustra | Te'itenry! Clays and taintaining ie with an elowuencs | Mr, Smithy reedted Wack tte my Gore eee Tb | happlnges, but I though fiat ithe failed to de thoe Ne ns t looks to the as tho truthful mirror of | © Sark Cede? (reign), from Neweasle,B, tr 3York, Jan Bs tiem, that at no age of the world has despotism ruled the | and logic whichseemed to me irresistible. Hecame with | had been shot, and, so far as my knowledge | wortby tobe aslave. (Applause) But, on the contra- in their present troubled state. I Lo ee for ts Gibral- destinies of men with such unbridlea sway as when the | laurels fresh and blooming to take his seat in » | goes, never again alluded to the name of the old man un- | ry, if he stood forth in his humanity and protected his | bave beard of one or two instances Tg gil] ‘ork en, frown Bostoei Leghorn, Jan 4, Pere, Prong tb ih Vngrent af God wpe arth, | Sie Sanam a Resa | eae nes adage an cat | thd ar preteen perees seme | Ur aces Sg Sh le T's | wearin tom Abn, en, ak Ww wourped domination over the temporal as well | came to Congress under more auspicious circumstances | York with Virginia. He spoke of their schoo , acade- | (Renewed applause. My Sadncly 80 much ex- | been universally carried out, for I notice that the ony "br brig i (ot Helen), O7Brien, hence for Londen, with as the spiritual government of the earth—over | than perhaps any other member west of the ies. | mies and colleges, and drew a comparison in the numbers | ceeded his e: he would have no fur- | ‘aken in the Commercial Reading Rooms arrives with | decks ba 6 a | 25. J % fme temporal as well as the spiritual welfare of SR erates tl doing Sees. dams, pilose abate. sdudents in the two States, ‘He compared | ther ene bn See Henn: of See every mail. aa ice Wie Orleans for Providence, Jan 26, ‘esent against: comme! other BBEC, jues' wi menkind. And among the first frais of the | tnd government and people of the United ates, for ree Of the tne, States, and te other respects | messeo,, Pal 4 7 Boston), from Rio Janeiro for New York, er yy showed the advance which New York had made beyond | a slave has the moral right to leave his master whenever | The Weather, Dense Fogs, Accidemts, dic. } Jan 1, lat 20 ‘fon Virginia. This ‘was an eviertammnentto which they had he chooses and can get araks replied Idid not Tact map a devoutly prayed for b: ieee "Bohr Ney, for New York, Jan Sl. 12 miles from Cape Henry. not invited, and Mr. Sanders, of North Carolina, took | wish ewan te anlar me; I had held that a , y taat Setey asech made en tan doe tat lated to slave- | childhood to the grave, Ae par as nbrea ae “ a th rel - men, has once more given ‘8 warm spell; but the 17 and be surely could not say thas the defendant should | gain his Godgiven | rights. (Applanee.) And not only frets Papenetd aya better, Adena palsy fy have his lips |. Mr. Sanders took an appeal, but the | this, but if he remains in bondage one in Be p) House sustained the ruling. Mr. Adams proceeded. | his power to escape, and thereby dooms his offepring tor | fogs, drizzling showers, diptheria, and the great bore of xaobers “t to foal that it ves Docoming a Seager os go ee tiene, one and erry he | Young America—umbrellas. The physicians consider le wish themselves out of it. Mr. Merri- | ug! a slave. e-rded re wether on the thirteenth og ree and spoke of what | myself a slave, and had it in my power to the beat at this season unnatural and likely to promote the business of the undertakers, but it cannot be said that eacape, every time in this manner, and he for one was anxious | slaveholder who opposed my escape, if God gave | the disciples of Esculapius look at all serious at the pros- to take the vote at the earliest moment. A gentle- | me the power, even though I should be com led to find ‘a | walk upon the dead bodies of slaveholers from Mists. | Pet, though certainly a very grave one. However much that right to defend himself, but that be was responsible | sippito Malden. (Sensation and .) He said sickness may flow from the want of a little seasonable and sat down. | cold just now, one good result seems likely to follow from e utterance to sentiments like these in the pre- ‘the mingled influences of the salt, thaw and rain, and that fave ana by a Mr. — Lal Se oe be said, ‘nae are Lares now | is the improved condition of the streets, the filth of which . man replied, - wished eve ve Upon | is beginning to be swept away by nature, in default of the that the gentleman from Georgia was mistaken in holding | earth could listen to me, f that wore him responsible. “I waa not Consulted,” sald he, abot | caso; and. my” "ming could "be. obeyed” “yonder | efforts of man. Should the warm weather continue for this resolution, nor am I ible for one hour of the | sun should go down upon a world iiverated, few more days the city will present a different appear- time spent on the trial. I will give wayat any moment | friends, from that day to this I have never been | ance. the gentlemen wish to lay the resolution on the table. If cheated out of the expreasion of my honest sentiments The fog which prevailed all day yesterday still con- I am constrained the case, I shall feel it | in Congress. hr pean: Madham dee Dassine. fog powell Ll cepltdigg nytt Poverty t of imme- way to Ly my duty to bring my remarks to a close at the earliest | body, no slaveholder ever threw himeelf in the diately c! up. The ferry boats, on rivers, con- “Roun. Dee 10—Sid Siam, Rice, New London; 12th momens I can do 80 in justice to myeelf, 4o the public, and free expression of my sentiments. But I rogret to say | tim Rote Ro Fel dee n intervals, no (not 10th), Sylvia, Swasey, New Dodterd. Snip Black’ Beas great Reformation, was the partial separation of the wake he Cig Carey — that ge tihng ‘e . e House, Brace an wor, would cont spiritual from the temporal governments of tho world; | with an expression of its severest censure. He addressed ‘end when the domination of the church was removed—I | the Houge in a speech characteristic of the man—a ew speak of the church of that day—the minds of philo- | of pet gm Cand espn me be was —_ a. es peers az lever nes an was ent Sopbers and statesmen began to investigate the rights | of nim by Mr. Adams. He accused Sa Adams of main- ‘which man held from his Creator, to ascertain what they | taining the same sentiment as the petitioners, and then Were, in order that governments should be based upon | argued that i cg i Tiron ee dyno Liymnnd ‘ e Was mo} jul G am fre sa) pl ‘eeee principles which were great, immutable and eternal. | ceeded, his as sapenel Se Verentatibie that ‘Im their investigations they attempted to be guided by in- aiherm em seemed encouraged, and looked forward ‘vincible truth, and they arrived gradually to great and | With confidence to the final passage amend- Important results. Those results were proclaimed by our | Py wale, Normern men seemed | diseppoinied gevernment at its baptismal font. ur fathers, the states- | logic. NM a qr no possible escape for my men of the United States, had loag turned their attention | Venerable friend. Mr. Marshall we fondly anticipated that Mr. Adams would rise and b; te the philosophy which bad originated in Germany, and | {rrible invective overwhelm him and his cosdjutors. Aw whieh had occupied the attention of writers of the pre aoe the Cen rene. Fey ted — = @bristian world f tury and ahalf. We ha ; . Instead of addressing er he cast Sear seisfection at this day in looking back to thst | °Ye# around the Hall with the benignity of ‘a father look- period, the Fourth of July, 1776, when our fathers in con- | Dg upon his children. No word was uttered by him ‘vention assembled stood forth before the Christian world | With solemn countenance, he surveyed the thronged gal- Be_crteematees ok ne mighty nation and cknow | man venerable with age e.tnan of vaat experience ‘t ri of men are iv om ir Grekior—that humam governments ‘are established to ac. | €rcat learning and high’ attainmente—s man who hai 3 E 3 iy | i 3 i I F ? a Bi E i 8 f @ure the enjoyment of those rights. It isa of the | Served his country with fidelity and patrictism in many 00 ©: veeord of the history of this government, faa cites the | 8nd varied stations. He now stood up, with all the | tothe constitation, and if gentlemen will permit me to | that the freedom of debate has been outraged. You have | accidents of any tnbment oourrag Wo eer them. Leeper gail in [tog gevernment bad been established upon those great im- | honors of an illustrious statesman upon him, arraigned at | proceed without so many interruptions, I verily believe I | witnessed a scene which has our government | There was but one boat run on the Staten Island fe Fare. oe Oa alt ecidipheod, Odie, NOrieans;, Hous mutable and eternal ples, the adminjstration per- | the bar of the House as a base felon. The slave power can finish my remarks within the course of ninety days.” | throughout the civilized world. A ‘tor, aman of moral | after twelve o’clock M.,and that boat (the Hunchback) ton, Share, Galveston. ‘verted and prostituted it to the of destroying and had accused him of treason againat the government which | (Great laughter and applause, A motion was immediate- | developement, of learning, of eloquence, of , Who | made but one trip each way, viz: one o’clock P. M. from ‘Offthe port Bath, Lady Safe, Lavender, yy ee overturning the very principles upon which it had been | he had so served. At be turned to the made to lay the on the table and was | has attracted the attention of this coun of Europe, | Staten Island, and five 0” P. M. from the city. On | _ Sid 200 be og ; Roger A Hiern, @etablished. I know that you will at once say that Iam | Speaker, and said:—Sir, I call for the reading of the first | carried by a vote of 162 to 93. (Applause.) Mr. | when giving utterance to the free e1 of his own | the five o’clock P. M. trip the boat was so overloaded that bar ae sr oy ae wu; @arging upon this government crimes—that 1 am ‘apb in the Declaration of Independence.” The | Adams triumphed, and from that forward the | soul, been stricken down, and compelled for | some fifty residents of Staten Island refused to go on her. | vy gto i; phat bey ornate @harging crimes upon those who administer it. In | Clerk turned to the deak to find the volume. Again Mr. | right of petition was regained to the American peo, his life to remain abroad, wi his seat in the | Navigation to and from sea was entirely retarded. Jan 23; City of Washington. Jeffrey, for New ‘2a; that you are not mistaken, for I do. (Applause.) | Adams cast his eyes over the galleries, and with a clearer | (Applause.) True it was that it was not till some councils of the nation has been vacant. But thank The steamships Baltic and Northern it both left | Rina >), Ader, ote 2; Tram Conk, fr do St ‘Tsay unhesitatingly that the powers of this government, voice and more distinct en! “The first para- | afterwards that the gag rule was repealed, but from | God, he has at last returned in apparent health; and | their ive piers, but will most probably anchor Chass, Sr 9 SER eee for do 26th; ‘which were ordained by our fathers to insure theenjoy- | §r@ph in the Declaration of Independence.’ By this | that time forward every man felt and knew thatno longer | within the last two days I have had the pleasure of taking | until the fog clears away. Sarah E Sey ad Bi , for Philadelphia soon; Joseph ment of life, have been prostituted to the destruction of | time the Clerk had found the book, and was open- | could that outrage continue against the people of the | the hand and looking once more into the face of Charles | _ The ship Time arrived at five o'clock from Penang, | Fish. Young, for do about 2th; Georgia, Mcloon, for Savan- Me; the powers which were ordained for the maintenance | ing it to read, as the old man ‘tho third time | United States. I dwelt more upon this subject because it | Sumner—(great applause)—another man of your own While being towed yesterday, at four o'clock P. M., to | “iison'Janiy—Ared Hothkiss, Mulford, Rio Grande for- of iberty were prostituted to the enslavement of men. | Tepeated the words in a still more emphatic manner, and | was the commencement of that mighty revolution which | State, whose name is identified with its glorious history, | pier No.5 North river (the fog being very fewye she | Liv dismaaed, and in want of stores). ! Here himself could scarcely exult in the despotism which with a voice that penetrated the farthest recesses of the Rene Sbcet 8 retraanilon Ses Ss eel going ce, and because he stands forth and gives utterance to his honest Pee ged endgame | Jamestown, lying at pier No. 13 Leguorx, Jan 1$—Arr Eolus, Allen, Boston. naz beep p exercived in this Christian land. you may agli hig eae ees besa St. = pela pretense Sky booed Ce ea a be declares that there is an irrepres- 7 river, one. Seas [ose eer ten the port bow for Berney) tA 17—In_port e mel Roem Harrison 3 pet Bay I have asserted facts wl are not proved > 9 , commences ri People. pplause. 8 conflict between frecdom and slavery, is denounced | & distance of about eighteen fect, and carrying away the Howes; i arene ees Dy the reeords of the nation, by the infallible faoomuaniery reading the introductory part, when he paused as if he yo H nA James Bryan; Te 8 p Adams regained the right Let Na humble | asatraitor to the country and worthy of the gallows. | fore rigging. The Time had her cutwater and cathead evidence now resting in the archives of the nation, I will | Wished to know whether he was required to read further, | speaker was in afar more humble’ sphere of re- | My friends, the freedom of speech is yet to be regained in | carried away, and forecastle deck torn up. MoGhivery, and my Gren te, Quonn of, eae do. : 3 . i NI % vepeat, what probably most of you already know, that in | 80d turned his face toward the old man. ‘Read en,’ aining the iom of debate or the right of speech. } this nation. Mr.G. proceeded to speak of the Amistad ‘The steamer Alice Price, Captain Foster, on the Br! ‘for San [W916 an army was sent to Florida for the ur pose of de- | Said Mr. Adams, “about the rights and duties.” The it weeks from the time to which I have adverted your | case, in which a cargo of slaves imported from | from Shrewsbury to this city, went ashore on the he ‘Butd out Nov 16, ship Templar, Martin, for Guam. sureying an t le who had fied from their pro- | Clerk proceeded: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, —— ‘was arrayed at thesame bar. In 1841 the bark | Africa had captured the vessel and regained | at Fort Columbus, Governor’s Island, at about twelve Mansuiiizs, Jan 11—In port brig Pico, Teel, for 18th. Serer eens Leas boven | Sion es as inhamean mara | Gomera nee Ge eae ot | A MR a, oy tl tias | Sees ec | ne | had jon ani e into that H ‘ cook, crew onsl an was ni le 02, : . ’ ervhory, and were there ase colony holdisg lands under | these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness; that | some seven days the colored people felt the | the two slavebolders who had bad them ia , but | and i consequence. The RL: | setkestee MYont? Athiae (he cliopess tor Bectaay ieee with no injury of de Bpenish crown, and being loyal suigjects of tho | tOsecure these rights governments are instituted among tion of the heaven born truth that they had been | directing them to steor for Afri. ‘Instead of that the | Mabey 10k ct he pseogera in number, and ete Da ckbe ama ashe them ty. steamer . 7 105 > government, as early ag 1737 they were | Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the lowed by their Creator with the right to life and liber- } slaveholders landed them upon the end of Long Ieland, ‘will resume her trips in Gieveland, ©), from the Black Sea for England in two or threo Remeraied "cimoug "the, military “defences ot “tise | governed; that whenever any form of government be- | ty, and by the power of thelr own right arm they assert. | and the men who had obtained thelr liberty were, arrest, | morning. pas tay age “ ae They were there with their wives, their | Comes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the peo- | ed'that right. One of the slayeholders came on deck | ed, while the slaveholders were permitted to go at large, | We have heard of no further accidents. Pec, Pouileren Can), Puiodepties an 6 beste mae their flocks and their herds. The genera. | Ple to alter or to abolish it, and to institute a new govern. | and drew s pistol. Ono of the slaves, named Washing- | The case was heard in the United States District Court of hae ba a erage egy Me ey Sm Md peg fon tm outh Carolina from which they had ded | Bebt, layingits foundation on such principles, and organ. | ton, struck im with s band spike and laid him -low in | Connecticut, and the decision was that these benightod [mg hn pote pt Fn 7 shall most . were, vio. cheer hed passed away. Another generation, and a third, and — powers in such form, as to them seem fourth ton Sway. Buithe slaveholders | likely to effect their safety and happiness.” And, as the generation, had passed of Georgia perceived that their complexion was dark, and | voice of the Clerk died away Mr. Adams took up the 3 Z Q # E P E i s 8 ‘Th, (Ay It is that heathen, 4 sce thing as that. “Why shgald the gallows be isede ia, had cominfied nocrine, tad wergameaavo MARITIME INTELLIGENCE. wear mane Se aianramen theme, with some 8 alteration in the 7— | struck with horror, and their vitages elongated Su] Court were ace a ay, ey whee hae aes maid bene they heard of eI? Tever God, thane hipcep - Movements ef Ocean Steamers, a army there to capture them and reduce | destructive of the tife, Aierty and hap; of any por- | found a slave that had dared, in Presence of his | Court ‘fthhem to slavery; not that single man of them could be | tion of its people, it is the right and the duty of that | dealer, to stand up in his own hu and strike | there it stands, that all men have preved to be aslave—and yet two hundred and seventy People to alter ‘or abolish it, and direct its administration | the death blow to his oppressor. (Loud applause.) ‘meen and women, charged with no crime and suspected of pathway wi ‘was marked out by its founders. | I know it is said in these days that you must not speak of | prepare for heaven. (Aj Hy = g E i E Hi 4 a ry ij me offence, were butchered in cold blood by the army of | This government, Mr. Speaker, has become destructive of dhe United States Decaune they loved lberty as you and I the Iie & a pectience Samesnin whee enone i 4 “ then, tive of the of a portion of its people; it ‘be- | battle for that cause, to of | was not expected ag pe oN hea boon pi ‘come destructive of the of portion of ls poo- Americans to life and liberty. (4) ) Ihave my- | himto speak upon enjoyment of life, ‘prostituted to its destruction. To-day ple, and the people have a r! wo or it, | self served upon the tented field. I have seen my com- | said that he this government le ‘the constwise slave trade, and reorganize ita powers as C3 mo; and I tell you, as I live, that | tendency of Se ees at Ae pee oe Som i 8 ene ee, See sak nO }, whether a slave or in any capacity, ever | of the free States merthern sla ‘States and carried south under the | Now, sir,” said “my. ita had the to | asked my opinion whether he had & right to liberty, and | to use his influence fag of the United States, and sold in the barracoons of send’ thet petition here. They are the of this Sen eer armancing Ni OreP Nae, Daal Bava aeid government. ‘New Orleans and other’ Southern cities, to go upon the | land.” I would wo God, my friends, that I impress | tobim, “Have your liberty if in your 2 (Ap- | was able to take his seat again jlantations, where upon the average | that sentiment upon every American elector. You are | plause.) ‘These slaves took possession of the ships and | cluded his remarks by narrating . tre driven vo hard thas die in five years; and the | the sovereigns; the public men are your servants. I for- Geet, to fo Bitch poameentonaseind monk. estaers, The Quincy ‘ection plantations, where they die in seven years. Here get, by the way, that I am no longer a servant but aso- | slaveholders went to the Of the United States | of his 5 m are 27,000 human beings annually murdered by this | Verein. and applause.) If public men do | and him to obtain compensation from the British a3 slew torture; ana it is upheld and maintained by the go- | Rot do your bidding, and do not the doctrine of t for thelr Joes of human flea, and the Presi earth, ee eee aetiee mon, | from oes. ( IF tr Adcnse Sent: | Slate. aoting as the agent of tho Peeeldent, in his letter 49 ex! rr. Ny u pustain the inhous tommeroe wilch, ae'a nation, we | Bted—"It itbe ro The Hiodec to cntertais et | out Minutet at ibe Courter St James, drecied him toca | THE POPE IN NEW ORLEANS. ave pronounced to be piracy upon the shore of the At- I shall ask time to prepare | the attention of the British government to this matter and Iantic, and for which those who it thefe aro | my defence, for I desire to show that it is the in- | todenounce these men as mutineersand murderers. When ™ Bang.’ Jt will not do for me to trace the slave trade too | tention of slave power to restore the African slave Pec rie pebiahed, snd. sent, 2 Go tet. ese Our New Orleans far; for if Idid you might find our own representatives | trade”—e wi you and I have lived | were grave and reverend, discussing the sub- and Senators sustaining » commerce which, according to | % see lterally fulfiied, for’ to-day the slave trade | ject, who declared that unless the’ Briah government | Great Demenstration of Sympathy for the Pope—The Reso- Geir own judgment, renders themselves worthy of the restored—“it le thelr intention to strike down eee cane errs ee ay Oe eee eates ee | sitions l she. Cremona The ‘Make Give ote an ele pac arey one | uc eee Sah ‘as | seat Rema Me raaee nS | cnarnt Soul's pee ones mimacnes sale Sees ae a Poy eg as it point; use, if it is wrong rob and st and i 5 Joe murder, aad i ‘the man who commits these acts should | Said this, be resumed his seat. Mr. Everett, of Vermont, | commerce in human flesh. bo he ape Popaee Cig dis- OF, dc., de. Port ef New York, February 6, 1860, ha ans Be rn stand. upen the gallows, togethor with bim who strikca | then rose and moved to postpone the subject two weeks, | graced by those official avowals of men in public. station; deel a" — SEASON De aoe eats, from Bio Denaro, the blow, then they who ‘send men to Congress, who tell | i order to afford time for Mr. Adams to ey his de- | for, 80 far an the United States were known in the Chris- Rarely Crescent City seem an outpouring of ite CLEARED. aod peace rane coe Beery 7, Roe, men that they may deal in the bodies of human beings, | fence. As he resumed his seat, up rose Henry A. Wise, | tian world, it was held up asa ment sustaining a | people like that occasioned to-day by a call for a meeting | gr CAmeip Baltle, Gray, Aspimwall—North Atianuc Steam- faray gous Tomen Mate’ L. Bruce, Mayo, ae ER, ‘sed may murder and go quit, though they may be sc. two or three | Gommerce in its own people. I felt humbled, Ifelt morti- | or caihoties; to express sympathy with Pius IX. in hie pre ay + Northern Light, ee Staples, dig; also § sobr unknown, just arr, ‘Magoo, ~ ... Sw the fallible tribunals of man, stand before high it would be in | fied, J felt that iyi peed was improperly de- Sat troulhen: ' Pre’ | allen. Tinklepas Aspinwall—D B LP ABT, Jan 3—Arr schr Basie, Stute, orfelk eM mates: | Hy, een doting tut shrry was ct ay | Two or taro yarn ag, when Arcttabey nae wan | Ouse one (trom Nous od Haren | Soe st on ean Sheer “aa, is coastwise slave “4 > wi and theft. (Applaue." sery in the District of , which occupied the | that the federal government was instituted to secure liber’ | prae be Pestived tad tvs Pape & ‘was in | “Gark Rambler, Packard, Aspinwall—Metoalf & Duncan, CHARLESTON, Feb Z—arrabip Cubano (Pr), Lafoote, Ha- trade was sustained. Slav “utes men to whom wo hours of the following ty, that the State governments had the power of sustain- u Special pontifical bene- | Bark Yumurl, Anderson, doy, are Modena, Byéer, Boston; brig ree (a Boy. bg ge ol to of personality. He scomed | ing slavery if tey pleased; for, let me sage you that at | diction for the people of this diocess. Various circum: | qhaf Hobbs, Packer. Sigua la Grande—Walsh, Carver & | W (rice, Palmer, Savanah, Sound 10: Withlagton, and’ fet 1 have referred were brought from ‘,ersons itter hostility towards Mr. Ad- | that day, seventeen years since, I held, as Ihave ever | stances had hitherto prevented the bestowal of the ‘Schr iin, into this port on account of head winds. Cld barks Georgia and South Carolina and ensiaved. The Runs quired of some older members | held since, that the slavery of the Routh i their own insti- | }en0q Sak the fee ete, Cnet, Brae area & Duncan. | Starkey, NYork; Uncle Sam, Opie, NOrleans; brig, erdained by government to secure liberty were prost.. the told me that Wise and Adams had | tution and not ours. It is a State institution, over which Y Archbishop determined to take | senr , nee ‘NC— naredy, a vbattng, Nar ‘scbrs Geo Derby, Rovers, RYork; ted tothe enslavement of men. The slave trade became, occasion, and Wise had e has control, and this federal government ‘the close of the Provincial Council of Bishops, which Sehr GM Ms egengion—) Suh SG it, Georgetown, 80, Sid US steamer Harriet ‘as it were, a part of the institution of slavery. When you r.) | has no power to interfere with it, (Appiause.) And Iwill | has been in session during the past week, as a | oo! Herndon, @ Frown, De Rosset & | -*2tyysu on serait a sent petitions to Congress, praying Congress to relieve you hig | say, too, that during those seventeen yoars it had been ty fer the ” Schr Z GALVESTON, ote Actes, Pine, Baltimore. Tepret ates Congres cowed Un dors nto i uo | BE meni at ele adlen unt gore ra | ergo. As ved_ts ha purper' beame trore, | RRGHreaReris smerny eerie. | Heian ea tegen hanes eer al since r your 5 you are not as known, a , a saying thst you were unworthy to approach your public with his of the government; that you >) SErLel map Sprague. Eien, azar Faulkiin, = the ‘slave States; thal you are not de- sli carcege Re i bey ngage eck Beamer Keaswvee, asi. Phbaseb has 7 Br Est your servants with respectful language upon this ele nd wih which you Leger yew had involved. Your repre- their not a H ARRIVED. sentatives sat there lips sealed, the forttea for freedom has no right to involve you in the | the occasion, and a committee wasappointed which issued Steamship Cheasapeake. Crowell. Portland, with mdse and Doing permitid b the gag ran of ns day fo Gre ue Jenve to ad- | crinie of surtaining & comnargg I Rotean eek, I there } the call and made the necessary preparations, As no | Pigwmesr.toHECromral kOe, See aay acatines of things’ that contain, indiv¥ieals nh hs gavel, | isny coe thing that should Bo ay prayer nthe bots of | sonrch or hal inthe cty was capacioun enough for the | ts enter Is bound to Boson: puto thls portin Srovgheut he country and’ in Congress demandod of cove to an, | American people of the free ‘be aroused, not to it the mecting should be hela | WwlishSortenila de xad Geccms Shot of previa e” (his federal government reformation Phyo ae ‘amenities of de- | encroach upon the rights of the but to mamtain open air, and Jacksoa square, fo ‘Richmond (of Bangor), Clark, ‘New Ori the geverement to Ma original principles, ond pia ‘Then, with | these our rights. (Applaupe.) Thad ed, as I gaid, | of the St. Louis |, waa hosen as the spot. At the | Balize Jan 12, with mdse, to R P Buck & Co. Wi A keader of ho age aw 2 of his nature, Mr. Wise said:—"Mr. | these rceolutions, dec very to be a local instita- | west end of the square a platform was and taste- on the evening of the Sist in tow of the station in which be sroved, stood forth as the leader | & caver, Ldesire to know whether I amon trial or the | tion, and maintairing that the momient the Creole left Vir- | fully adorned with American fags. The square itself was | Pel,but during thestorm of that evening was freedom’s hest—the Hon. John Quincy Adams, of man from Massachusetts.” (Laughter.) He took | ginia it left the jurisdiction of the slave laws, and went | reserved for the schools of the city and ladies, while the | } “on aw —, LE came Dept = ‘seat, as the lawyers say, without receiving his mo- poe the high seas, whess there iano iw of sisvery, ad outeide space was appropriated for the various Catholic re seeks cimmpite of hase vaghee, of 4 Ahead tion. Mr. Adams paid but little attention to it. Having | there no man aright over another. (me man bad and citizens. At the conclusion of pontifical ben zeigt from New Orleans—anchored on the with all the advant he had 5 having | disposed of Mr. Wise (I cannot give you the details of | no more power over another to carry him to New | high mass in the Cathedral, the eoclesiactical rege, es- j also one a 1b.) Sener caren eetoantt Sasi tara aaets | (aac Oat Wat er Sedat |S ache mt ue fae a OPT | cma sins He of asay man Vee an pl moment (two Baltic, and Northern Light ‘Sly cube? nian sithat me ving is Sarason, with vest | spoke in. terme of kindness and even of afbotion, | thelr rights they violaled no, law, and it ‘was | o'clock?. M.),thecoupd'ai, from the pire Aira) | aud probetly anchored ogeeeatheo: experience, baving served in the executive chair, he had | He paid a just tribute to his eloquence, his genius and | ® fact which no slaveho ler or doughface has ever dared | wasstrikingly grand. The vast area in front, including | Wind during the day SE, and very light, with dense fog. ‘with him into that station an influence which | his services in bis own Legislature, and to My or audience of American people to | Jackson square down to the very verge of the river, was Seas Macrae a? Gi high station an influence which | teem in which be had bees held throughout the contradict in any respect, (Applausa.) No law oan be | one vast eca of humanity. ‘The guy drecace indies . With Thigh devotion these He spoke of his position as one of the proudest found making it penal for @ man outside of the slave | gave to the square the appearance of a huge bouquet, and Telegraph Marine Report. are to eaten ot tnd these edtvantagss, be |. the Toung men Of his age. As he preceeded all the | States to maintain his iberty. 1 deolared that these men, | the fiags and glittering banners of tho societies, disposed | , SANDY HOOK, Feb 6, sunset Weather a denae fog; noth, Brave the storm of ssek SeCCine MDA Cen | Sane ReaiRan of teat whe nitened to him were aroused, | in resuming their natural rights, had violated no law, bad tn graceful groups here and there, heightened the ‘of | 2g can be seen from this station. Wind SW, light. Ihe was constrained to meet in the regaining of the and he seemed to obtain control of his hearers. Then | committed no crime for which they were amenable toany | the scene. the of the concourse ‘be- Miscellanceus. of petition —in regaining tao Sheegom of sesechy to hat Age ge ed the sine of Ur. Mareball before pee ‘The moment I preeeuted hese Teeolutions Rog pet wt Saiaan the Commit- Barn Sr from NOrieans for ~ tone. —“ ‘eontest scenes worthy the istorian of . Marshall rose, with his arms fo! jouse was in convulsions. A resolu! censure Arran; called the meeting to order and read | Teported been seriously damaged ( Jenaiegs x the Ta'which we ie wotnes hat can only be tana et ? SS looked ate Adame inthe ee ae by the introduction of | the following resolutions: — ee Futeron caraged at New Orlouas_ 27 ait ‘and waa Gharjestec; Win H Rowman, ; bet ia Polak by the canvass an artist, scenes ve u challenge bidding im Previous question were hermetically sealed. ‘Whereas, our Holy Father Pope lately been reber patted ‘Boston owls follows: e wise eign iodescrive wo you; bal with suchas I can | defiance. Mr. Adams understood it, and all the resources | The vote of cousure was passed, in order to degrade me, | and unjany deprved of coat fortes of eet [antes Go qrabsetth a ein iets Beeew (jas en ee a i eemmind it is my purpose to ask your attention to | of his inmost power seemed called forth. He spoke of | to a ‘my influence, and drive me from my seat. 1 | commions; and whereas, have been wrested from him About 100 nalles, ale. was Fun into b Patterson (of, Soars ccs Tiles, of Premeptiare, See Senge Se f@em. Had you been in the gallery of the House of Mr. Marshall as Paving charged bien with high treason, | scorned place where men could the tryant over | ostensibly by domestic but in reality by the in- | bunk) i bound to lew Orleans. The ship pay Lg fe a aT P34 P tatives on January 27, 1842, you woald have een re eee et cree | een eee on neccee Folly intramantatty of afew bad Spee ee eae | So Nat on te slarzoard vom, breaking tho siom and knock | ton, ions Seppetae? agri Bel, Ge. Proves 4 ————— ‘spon andr thirty ni rare me. It was a scone wi jure as long op : d : { Dero tat Tedy, cach engaged’ in his ‘usual avo. | levying war the United States, or lending aid and | as me , when the representative of the {iiss vase persced new seek oo legaiioe ete nicer tached fore yards Ba. sanning here ook Death Foe rane | Rusam Haylee, Oreo, Rewburspory suver Cloud, Wilsoa: 1 fstnas; some. engages, in correrpouaence, ‘oubers in | comfort to ite enemies. I presented,” said be, ta re. | Sanding at the bar ‘a violation of the rightsof | by the sasclon of a Congetas, ane t© comets TAs na. | would have G distheres her sates tot ahead resaee hee NH; Lone Btar, Wood, NYork; ‘writing ethers in reading newspapers; others in the of my con: to the consideration of | the body, no man presuming to say wherein, T'was con. Haus Waropean under ‘specious pretexts to the | Patterson sustained but trifling to her cutwater. Ph ; Dorens Island, Baker, NYork: ¢ | eek Shan ane tn the chair was Jenn bert ogee, fo gehen te gen ‘been to speak for myself py eecpamartly ensae; and Bax A Marnew—Havans, Jan 30—The bark Augusta een We ‘Sid schr 8 P Simeon, NY White, of s eiavesolder, who presided ‘with ing to what I bel to be my bounden duty, the | or to defen leftthem and retarnedtomy con- | Zberess, the marked and universal interest on this aubject at | Mayhew, which left thie port some tme-cinoe, tn ballast: bound | .,NEWBEEN, NO, Jan 28—Cid schre Cathérine, Fle- eerie wes eames on Cae Crk, te Wleman from Kentucky saye Ihave waged war against | stituents, in whom | had the mort implicit confidence and Of bt kad Tenens cea a ees is te sath | to Grande, an Ga the Cauy del Padre reat st 3AM of ride: 50th, Howard, Howard, NYort ois Teaee reas ignty, da front ond the eoidence "On the lett «| We government. "New, sir.if Iwere the falber of that | made my appeal o them, and they with an. tsanlanity Foy See, aad of ardent guihuataato sym ponies of te | the Hib. “hy the accounts we bear from bor she will prove | savin’ Harstog: hom Frottiencs for Sernamabe Ges, Palen, oe below the medium sa ‘and ‘Sven! ping. r Soeciaat tense inteneinal, aad eonmmuaisaaios aay ‘Washington ‘and to tonintain poh cement hence Se ete pee randersigned Celbalinn ot he rater raied Ab nnd wan owned bY Z Mayhew othe oy ‘lckeron, do fr Fhildeipis; 8M Tyler, Beary, Go foe Rew pearance, then three years R 1» v0 Nea of ; p A Wad seh See base eictad win tie Reamer of of that profesion ‘which he has 0 long followed.” (Ap. | cated. (Applanee.), When Yrearaod to that hall and loans dons proper i expren befall ws sentimenias—"” | Stored, Wall geet for shout $15,000. (hy eter Stb-—Arr achrs Home, McLellan, Baltimore for Providence; - | plause.) Mr. Marshall, r 0. country again : lndeoendes eminenily . | Rosine, Sie Cai ta sho cvey Seve ‘oa | Umass invctre mined fs Ar Acme, abt: | Soho pan he cats ny cou. Tay | Sau Reece ameeenycrae oa | Ra TAeT By Pate on Corecess | aetateucreaoeeeseec are Oem manded the respect due to astatesman—the Hon. John | creasing vehemence, spoke of him as an ingrate—as hav- pity tet, Imeant what I said. | earth, involving, as they do, the direction of the inet miles above the Brandywine Buoy, and held on until 2 AM TuOUTE, eb Arr ochre ” Mullen, Norfolk. Quincy Adams stood presenting some papers ing conspired in a it cabal, on the of | If Ihave failed to maintain that constitution, may God | of two hi miltcus ot mon, sod we cenit canes next day, when she parted ber chains; tben let go ber kedge Cia dan $0 ach Wampatache Sent * hich he took from file taj his hand, | Mr. Gilmer’s resolution, with slaveholdersto destroy the | forgive me; for if I bave failed, it has been through my Tre talliceeer ans snd humiliatién the spirtaal head of four or anchor with 160 fathoms of hawser, which did not hold her, )VINCRYOWN, Feb3—Arr ane, Medion, Mer bs which, as fast as presented, upon the | character, reputation and influence of the best friend he | want of intell and not from any intention upon my Sve salilions of our republican fellow. ‘under the tempe- | When three masis had to be cut away to save vessel and cargo, | folk for a Freeman, Freeman, Virginia for Satin” of tome slaveholder, were laid Upon the table. | had on earth. He held his action up to the detesta- ‘As Tlooked around upon those who five weeks be- | ""Z"Tan we uahesininah sine sur and eed Miche a Feb ¢—Arr Around him were Gilmer and Jones, of Va. tion of the House, and charged Bim with, doing re had gazed upon me with such arrogance, and at- | support to the tem} ‘75 ton moral | | Baio Exocs BExwee. 162 tous, wach Iput into Charleston pt a Wilkeea dss decane’ Sones. na b ‘Wie, Gis Leeaeurat the bidding of the aleve power, Mr tempted to look into their faces, I ould not catch the eye imbued with love ‘and. veneration fox our ows sais. | sola'bd leet for the mene of $000. Cook and Meriwether, of Ga. ‘and ether slavebolders, in | listened with signs of increasing emotion, and | in that vast hall of one of them who could look me in | ¢al tions, though firmly believing them best adapyed to wv. 6—The schr Wi RI ND, Feb 8—€ld sehr Martha Moore, Burnett, Mo- tently watching every word be every he | t# the old man saw that he hed him in hie ppwer ‘his in the face. ‘Then I felt the power of truth. I folt the | CMF Peoullar character, and ‘clrcumsiances, we are not so into; | oC WATCHMAN. Abeecom, Fob, 6 jatchman, | wile. sy qrealated, leet someting that the institution of | veetive became more terrific. He seemed to draw one | power which attended him who clothed in its panoply sean oy carcumcribed in our views as ‘to think them most J Jiavery should be At length ‘paper | arrow after another and thrust it into his form. | main those doctrines of freedom which lic 80 } sence. ‘traditions, inatineta and modes of intelli. from his file, mein yin mere can ‘at- | The reporters laid down their pens; the sla sat | near to every American heart. I have not time to 5. That in reality the government of Pius IX. is eminently ‘be addressed the Speaker thus:—'‘Mr. Speaker, aghast, and when I eay the tears rolled down their cheeks | dwell bog ‘the scenes that followed. I will not Pejernal and beneficent; that with the exception of certain tar- J bold band the petition of Benjamin Emerson and I speak what I know—so a nae time when Dawson, of Louisiana, | Dulentradicalssnd malcontents, many of whom have Terty Sve ethers, citisens of the Commonwealth of Masea- | tbey of Dut the words that fell from the lips | drew a bowie-knife for my 1 was after: | Srorwarmiy siisched i Bie rahe eo ee ee is eats San ve ec cnn ete | Oe Me eA ow oe fee | Tt Game Ta arn, Geese | Exacta se Sv rata oar — le and unsatisfac. wrath, a8 it were, Mr. wn, » . | malice. ee ee , who are threat- ing Uke % corpee. Apparently insensible and un: | Black, of Georgie, raising his Dlodgeon and Sanding in | | © at we, ea repxbiicana, cannot reeognise as brethren in co Lewen e3: satin Gimetaion + tig hich bere have | conscious of life, he looked as i den. ‘And indeed he frees of me ee ateee pees aes the enneg tales in the name of liberty, hand over their ‘$100. ie never time. ‘Al again down. solemn fellow citizens foreign dictator. oe. pve Soy os Sores tastes ore trenmterred Tcan give you bis own views, which are 0 epee) | Stn mer. Thad never been Ienocksd dows, and ‘having OS a TO wt mie Sar Senate, Pee ae Rete ee ee eh 7 coke C Mathews, Warren, New to tbo South and there squandered in support ofan inet. | vrien than my judgment, Som tien or twenty oats wpon that euject 1 repeated the language: | mZatofas Sominonsso bes bec Fupenie Sauciorat | Thome Reanne}, ad received commderable nary.” | VSALMM, Fob Gh brig Mary A Jong, Cniald, Mente- sSents tin, Ue petucers very mak pretest it to the side where I waa suing and faid to Mr. Campbell, | that I am sayiog this en though I waa bmsan of courage; sak et Rnoming an we 2, tat the Holy Bee wl be oo exist Ra er from Bosion threw video, wweald overwhelm both North aestruction.”” | of Sou pee * sae i terfnge of tte damaged shad heavy weather: MISCELLANEOUS. thet Se ee cies abdsened, tne Coeak lwas dead.” (Laughter.) Mr. reproved him | opinion myse! Tat tt plank te teaaae b de want- oa only ‘The underwriters of New York have presented, to TN Nn ore nee Ard -+ aon ee 4 said, “The geatioman from Masea- | for his rashness ‘an oath, he repeated that be | ing in courage at that Ome T was no Soniye doin. monk dive | sine ter reatiacaial of his conatet is tating the cocci ATS AND, rrrERs I pop Ma the noor.”” ‘When order was restored, Mr. | withed be was in his grave. ‘I would rather die a thou- | danger, therefore there was no need of courage. | "7. Americans should not eonfise their sympathy to ie, on board ship Mastif, which was burnt at sea September wre. at of the Sees eee 1 .move that this petition | sand deaths,” said he, ‘than undergo such a castigation Some of his friends seized him as he was making « very ‘Dnt ahowld generously contribute money, whether ‘on the passage from San Francisco to Hong Kong. a ara, So reherel te & select committee of nive mem ain.” (Laughter.) I said that he never breathed eorkwara Raghey @ eee eta he ate to. = the logtrumentaiiiy of Peterpence Sosieties or other. Se See ieee, egg es Bos: York in 1843, on the blood, 5 ‘with instructions to report to this House | politically. He never the members of | strike me. Mr. Dawson, of Lou! the same who Saw dee fH Pt hae been sold at Singapore for $10,000. fever and in 5 r of the potitioners cannat be | that ‘ss be had dono. He never bore himself so | had drawn the bowic-knife, placed his hand in his pocket pouletee of Bnd me heviediie ube shlve bones Catholic | At New Badford seven- of bark Tropie Bird was sold ‘properties. oe eee wy Adame resumed his seat. Instantly a score independently, he never spoke with the commanding oi, CS Oe pee 1 will not Topaat, that he | forcarrying this into effect. aa peasible at auction to Wm F Howland, atthe rate of ‘Also, one: | at! 7» ML. Y., and by all granted. wer that \ ‘woul! shoot me, same time cocking his pistol 20 | "Resolved, also, That these resolutions be circulated for the | ‘#hthot bark Rodman. ‘cnamnmndesh, caste: an abpmean tamed ee Sf stavenolders. ware upon their feet demanding to be | po dy in his attendance at the House, and—I would not Chat all around could bear it click. A member from Ma. | signatures ofthe Catholca of New Ouvcena, and then detvered Netice te Marfners. . aD eee ws eae , and was assigned the floor. Al! atten oy i te Mate Be eee denote tocada aoe Feet np egret Leen yas Lipwrethoess 4 Cease eneeret oe request that be hy ‘ily waeerapeen on ie Sas, chant ov Retna erat rh oe wes eeeies Oe rig ge eo bin ae its owe. Tregret t. Tmourn over it Wwesemed | an@ Dawson, and Twas aboatto continue mr remarks. | On the conclusiot of the reading the resclutions were Wh ec etates Renee igus dine ton ae Sirey ty from 4 a be % 5% ae if that effort of Mr. Adame almost Dictied out of exist. At this John Slide), pow @ Senator, thon in} the Eouse, ' s¢opied with a roar of ageent that echoed far over the } pocse elatrict, thst he pew lightaouse at Ship Shoal bas been | pal strest. Ht, whether it woold bp inorder to burn the petition in the greund

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