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4 NEW YORK. HERALD, SATURDAY, APRIL 7, 1860.—TRIPLE SHEET. : | able and patriotic > of my whole action in the THE sHa.” POLE WAR. | ; hought he would stop’| The United States officers, Mosars. on, WAR IN KENTUCKY purpose. R, he didn’t talk according to law, be thoug! P jcors, Carleton, Darton, | THE CIVIL * | Commonwealth I in geod srt myself {rom the —— { THE NEW MABTY: and give way te somo other speaker. Cooledge and Freeman, are cited te appear on Friday revolutionary, deotrifes ue Saitell aboliisaiainy ond w PISTOLS AND GVNPOWDRR—A REHOUR PREDETRRMINED, Bext on a charge of assault and battery en Sanborn. The orn im Concord—Groat Mr. A.@ Fay, agentfor the Amerisan Powder Compaay | counters and re-eountoré appear to be thoroughly im the ‘Mill, located in Barro, Mass., said he had meta manonthe | bauds of the lawyers. the unfortunate purposes of those yb in sheir porgous | Phe Fishermen Sabmh * the Law—No i M. @! A ai to the Citizens or Ma County made an armed reclion against the nom-slayaholding Prouble Yesterday—a Fo Facts About of Madisom County—His Lettor Comcern« Recep ion of Sa Outpeuring of Citize irtag ef Cai ho said’ ‘Sambora would never be carried = ing the Emoute With the Boreans, whites of the Commonwealth. The propogition that tho hing in Gee nom—Ringing ef Church Belle=Great | [ey'winyur bloodshed. Telegraphis despatches had boea NEWSPAPER ACCOUNTS. Futtow Omuans of Mapison County:—Learaing’ from a | Legislature should, as could comsttutionaly de, enact a Mhad Poles and Shad Fia"I"g i St All Aroumd—A Village Rum seat allabout the country, and the friends of the cause ANOTHER STATBMBNT OF MR, SANBORN. reliable source that the Revolutionary Committee of Madi- | law to meet the ulty, and thus avold all violence, meral. ; Excitement were on the alert to prevont his being carried away. Coxcorp, April 4, 1860. som are about to moet in Richmond oa next Monday, to | was met by radical abolitionists of the North, and their ‘The work of removing the obnoxious #ha,' Poles from 1 Mad—Colonel Joseph Holbrook Hissed, Ty, will never be carried away alive, that you may de- Teet you lagt night a brief ascount of my seimro by | take into consideration who are again to be proserivod; ie6 here, with equal denunciation. The reason al- the harbor was eontinuod yesterday, ana, cn tary to Greamed and Threatemed—Large Meet peo on.” Ho had al revolter ready for uso, and Mr. | q band of ruflaus lalming seme authority trom ths | and having wndersioed that I only escaped Unelr de- eas: ne eee aoe eee Set nee wel \ he Towm HallmSpeeches from ay told him “his name was Fay, and he made guapow: | Uniied States Senate, u body whiok kas no power (o mak: | 2oUncemont last Tuesday by a small majority eee ho Wee ieee at me De | Eemeen! enpectalion, moh WHR. novcosiatanen en tht OARS in the der.” Mr. F. gald there were some people in town who | arrcets and: handeuff froe citizons in Massaehusoks, ‘To. | 2™ again to be oeusiderod on Monday, I avai question. And it is that my Por. | of the Jersey fishermon, who, it was rumored tho diy Ralph Walde Hmer Rev. ©. W- | commanded his rospeot for their conduct last night, but | Gayl wish to add somo parueulars, as well as could | tis means of making my protest amd defonco, I would | sonal and political ae oie L = vious, would attempt to prevent it, even by violeneo if Higginson—State of Fooling, | there were others that he hoped’ they would halo all | novo and romembor them ‘a the hurry and confusion of | sreatly prefer always to meot my accusers face to taco, | me in the proseription. en etalon - | Previous, d “ &0 &e. | thoir natural lives. (Comtinued applause. ) the whole matter. und there make my defenca; but as friends have insistod | ship of some | of | the | MeO a Gee nounne | Recomsary. A squally tine was jwontly expocted, fee, ” : | ‘THHY RESOLYE TO REVIVE THR SPiRIT OF 1775. Farlier in the evening one of these men had visited my | o my avoiding Cyt peered for oonfltot, I yleld te thelr | proposition was mad) oa sensor ratiam of the county | aud preparations wero accordingly to repel any at- OUR CONCORD CORRRSPONDENCE. At this juneture of the proceedings, Capt. Bowors intro. | noure, aud finding the door umloeked, had gono in, and | Wishes, and make this written appeal: siociat | EeLie sea tbs pablicans: Uirearh’ the redicois, | snake; bal fartanaiely wet. she. lnohjliapenhiom wea chown , Coxconn, Mags., April 5, 1868 | duced the following Fesoluons, which wore subsequently | being met by the servant, told bor thas he bed aw im ee Fe eaaat cratosrany power | hoc they supposed would be defended by us, they Kopt | ty the dsher with tho offlcsrs ‘Tho oxoitement of last evening was renewed to-day in | Wmanimously bergen vec portant paper for me, and ag she understood him, it was Commer ghey poles nly pesiae Roguiee) aay eer pl on 6 pba revert glo sag =H pany ne nad to mies, iy in the exe- consequonoo of the discharge of Sanbora by tbe SUPT2M® | | Aagolyod, That Concord roms whore so was on the | Waa: old‘f it whon I Totaraed. How loog' the rutians | Use Of My country, to deoda Im aay manner upon my | lied around mo all ike irue lovers otcopatiutonal Hperky, | toed Of hal Guay, | At nine Glos Joneday morning Apel I “life, i ani . 4 Court in Boston. Indications of rejoicing woro to be ob- | 10th of Hae a ae ara reve aaay | bd boom lookigg about town I do mot know, but am in: | iis Jie y ce Bo tse Worst entany of true iivorty, who ting at have ald otbanro othe avsholdiag te: | ariegn harbor polo, under the command at Sergeant acquiesces in any usurpation on the part of any man, or eet of men, of the sovereign power of the State. If y man in Madison was to consent to the usurpation it would 1776, | Resolved, that ina.doctrine of the Revolution, ‘that | fermed thoy hi been here some hours, probably waich. and olse- Berved om all bands, and it ae Saheeine Oe era resiatanco to tyrants la obodieace to God," is our doctrine, | ing my footteeps, In which honorable Suaploymont thoy rest has been’ studlousl y Parade’ in the Prowiiersand | Brevoort, together with tho necessary apparatus and & turn hero should be the sign ‘and, that we proclaim our umswerving determination to | wore aided, as I am told and believe, by Joseph Holbrook, ee ean Abelitioaista’” ‘of the North, te consummate | force of six riggors te werk it, took her doparture signiteant character, and ls 90 turned out, Ce eee eee, ane eetitional Ilberty, | Sometimes called Colonel Holbrook, an ofloer in the Bos: | SoD onthe loss aa evartarow of tne Oeusttation; which | iny ruin and the downfall of the oause of liberty hero. | from the Eatery df romsretocacd METANTORY OP SANPORY FBO, AURIDN Mi oalved Mas te suampt of United Saas oftsars, by | on,custom House, residing, here, ang Charjoe B. Davis, | Can bo aumulled, ao aside, changed or disobeyed with | "3. G. Hinason, ono of the , returned te barge. ofce, | About. impunity, only’ by the legal representatives of tho his: discharge the pressure of the crowd was 0 | (aigg pretences, ness, ig! a rf foun : appa A ipemeny en y, ly Hare,..a8 I believe, as: people in. convention assembled. But according to ican. hore it j that 1} was found necessary to placo Sanborn ina | man of bis frecdom, 1s base, mean and cowardly; but for | sisted in committing this outrage. Some weeks aga, the ind.) Republican. | the spot wi Was doomed advisable te commence ub! in a Itter to the Centreville * » he retired, | operations. A row of thirty poles running out from the expelled Bereans, Kent ptta Narte ho tzicria at) Rowan hour's, sail dowm the bay brought thom to as Ths mob again threatening him, but fi citizens lunteor their services to aid and abet F800 himself Carleton was here as a spy,and| he known facts, but about a fourth part 0 carriage, amd whirl him through the streets to. | Prive chtet ar work, ts black ead diabolical aa the | 2 yer PY, and.) f° tho county ‘pigned the papers protesting | which was well known hece in’ all circles, (0 the moua- | Cve mo. on Si Does Fanaa ward the ‘Fitchburg depot, (This was about five fe buch the Revolution. Te AL Tae ne enemAnT Nene is lla Seaabedty Acaint the "doctrines “thd sain of the Taal! ‘ol: tains for a while, and then generally at’ Beros, having ‘ Fort Tompking, o’oleck this afternoon, and the cars leaving a short Resolved, That Congord stands by the principles vindl- | were put on I refused to go, not hat hoard any war- cated at the old North Bridge, on the 19th of April, 1775. rant, or seen any signatures, or been told the names of ‘amo thereafter, it was supposod Sanborn would tako that | #jed at ihe cia Nera age ot Concord for its spirit | pay B. Any senanites pee cere tres ee anual train for home. The consequence was that a large crowd | of noble daring on the 19thof Apri. 176 i Gosious, and reels" When they dragged me into the open air, masombled at the depot, but they were disappointed in | only equalled by vi eBCU without aller me ut On boots, overcoat or hat, - batt Fh 4 honored oitizens from a band of kidnappers, who had | Y'or'ed “Murder,” and reaisted with iy fost ax well aa T reached and attended Sunday school more than once. | was then attacked, commencing with those situated most But ao soon ait Frain dn fiat Ene, ta Daven 96. Sar easterly, and thus mere directly in the channel. he jay, & great excitement was got up an ciroulat uf tna "1" wan there sarsballog ‘tay forces against the force necessary to raigo these poles oan hardly he credit. revolutionary tribunal. By Sunday night the mob | ed. On account of the great depth of the water hore,and had taken the field) and om Monday brought on the | of tho strong tide which flows through the Narrews, poled weil known thata large number of those signing Shes pepe ‘wore and are Kary opposed to amy other than legal pro- ceedings against unbappy mon, women and chil- dren. So that the committee have not even the show of authority, three-fourths of the county having absolutely refused, weeing the newly-become noted character. To avold aay ized and manacied and were hurrying him a amid threats of intimidation on the part of the | collision at Berea, by {iilegal search” of the houses of citi * public demonstration and unnecessary display, the oar- | away {rom his homo and fricads on tho 8d of Aprils 1800. | coisa Wariven, whieh ed ices Crneght ete aden we | movers, to sanction thelr illegal sotion. But waiving all | zens there withodt warrant, adding insult to injury, os- | oly of the bes and sentatdecrpion on bo sed. On riage containing Mr. Sanborn, L: A. Burotte, Geo. L. ‘MORE SPRAKING-—MORB MVSIO. aixth confederate, and attempted to put me in. I broke | these considerations, I do not {oar to plead to you, on the | tensibly to find Hanson, but in reality to Laeyh Eig air yane cigghan, a bya s : . Mr. A. Broxsox Atoorr, @ transcondental lecturer, and | {he side of the’ carriage with my fect, and may sister | merits of my cause. which they suoceeded in doing, several being trro poles together, and by reason of thoir great length Stearns and Ezra Ripley, Esq., was driven to Cambridge, ( 45 ahi and courteous gentioman, polite, afable, and su- | goizing one of the ruftians, thoy dropped’ me on vay foot | _ I it was a crime to resist tho will and action of this re- | both sides. And the revolutionary commities, driven (oome fifty or sixty feet) it roquires a leviathan power to where they got on board the cars without creating any | perintendent of schools for this town, whose daughter is ‘Again they tried to ‘put me in, but my sister | Volutionary movement, 1 — Lapeibanperier = oe pra) See a sey. age leet yroke ati than ian the cand. ‘While the ays particular attention. In company with Judgo E. Rockwood | a writer for the Alansic Monthly, bei, o., was called | w the horses, which staried, and folled thom again. Fete ete conn’ i copeiaan’ dateang’ Wilh die’ | auoeas mgubonaconel pak tea nenetlucomal one nites ors pein rear eseee ton Teas poy Hoar and Mr. Surette, Mr. Sanborn reached Concord at | UPon, and after briefly apologizing for. not making ® | They were still struggling with me and lier—five moa | 00 Yt Tee seas for this are ‘these:—I regarded the ed in the fight. What was ty true position? Stand. | Seed yesterday ving ene . speech, sald that he considered the 4th of April as the | againet a mam und a womaa—whon the neighbors came «i law for slavery,” a8 the doctrine of the Frankf ch, T advised Mr, | monseiron chain, with links nearly an inch in thickness, Bevom o'clock this evening. 19th in the new calendar. (It will be remembered that | running to my aid. The ruffians sti attempted to kidnap radical doctrine, that “there is ne law for very,’ 1g on rankfort speoch, * | snapped like a pipe stem, and soveral fathoms were car: aga the 19th was the dap on which the first battle for froodom | me, but they soon found they were overpowered, ‘Then, | Tevolutionary. |e deny the potency of the censtitution | Hanson to leave the Stale, and thus save himself and my | PeePias Wh 9 Dolo coin tine baoke SAIN ON SAN RORN, (1776) was fought in the Revolution.) and not kil thon did they read thelr warrant in the strest’ | and the laws is to set up an independent governmentin | friends from the conflict which I well know was Bh lig nie Rare seo et mg ap reap EO On the arrival of tho oars a large crowd of people were ‘A LOUD “HOLLER,” by the ght ‘ofa lantern, while I stood handcuffed and | Opposition to the existing government and awh, ditated by the revolutionary committes. On day i — ‘heve in sight from the Long Island aide, Oongregated, and on the announcement being made that | Colonel Wa. Wmmo, an abolitionist, was oalled en | half olothed in their bands. This maust have beon fifteon | te two idstinct policies and jurisdictions = of | night I stayed at Kingston, where I stated the whole thing, small ull ive \d my megaage of peace to Berea, to several slavehold: | Furthor operations wore suspended of her ore, One of the revolutionary ‘committeo being pre- | came aboard the steamer. He announted himself as sent, I was then imformed by that commiticeman that | Coroner Bennett, of Queens county, and that ® moot- they: wore “aflor mo, oertainly”—that T'was ing of the Long Island fishermen bad been held the which must imovitably, at last, ‘come intop hysical conflict. And whilst I am pppeeed w slavery on all passible grounds, my love and respect for wy constitution rs 7 a shout rout the air that | next. Ho labored under a sovere hoarsonoas, and said it | minutos after my iret setsare, aaa nee ieee cite donot, A mumber o¢ | wascccasioned by “hollering” murder lastnight. He | "Y nave lourned from what seems good authority that tho might have shook the rafte pet, hollered go loud that he was heard a mile and a half olf. | ruffians who seized me ooptrary to law, a8 Chief Justies ‘ F all other poli- ladies were present, who waved their handkerchiefs aad | He was excused from making any furthor remarks. Shaw has just decided, left House at 6%, and - country override ore A 4 oe ba Si witch they expe the od i i * (LET THEM RUN—I DON’T CARE’? and that they were in ¢ ages. Sel f them, i | tical considerations. My theory is, that slavery is acrea- | wanted;”’ and it was currently reper! & Spe. ening before, reseed themselves appeared to join heartily tn the general enthusiasm. 4‘ 1 capt, Bowens said the bost thing in this coonoetion had | am told, bid themselves Ia an old’ barn 'e stoue's throw | ‘ure of law, and the subject of support, modilcation, in- | cial detachment had beon ssen‘to “take me wherever | ling to comply with the harbor regulation, and they found |’’ which thesaid detachment was very careful not oy todo. Atthe same time the old letter of protest which | Socordingly selected him ag a committee of one to wait Hangon wrote on the 10th inst. to. Judge Field was now | Upom those in charge of the Magnolia and request a eouple ‘ talked of as being dictated by mo fat Berea on Saturday, hee ah Serpe erp nie poar up the poles them- to atir up the community to madness, and execute ven- | selves. would have done se during the morning, he cance upon me witheut time for truth or reflection, On | said, had it not been for the high wind. Under these air- eaday I was no doubt saved from this ‘ruse only by | cumstances Sergeant Brevoort considered himself justified | orease or destruction, as any other policy; and to be reached in the Bame way only, by moral suasion, by specch, by the press, by the laws, and by the constitu- tion, That so long ag it constitutes property, by laws, that tho laws must be respected and enforced in good faith. That the majority have the right to rule: because we know of no other or better way of promoting the ends of government, the safety and happiness of the whole this moment s cannon, belonging to Company A | jot yot bean related. It was this:—When thoso ‘‘misora- | from my door, where it in aa isola. seeeo eect taa Concord Artillery, belehed forth its thunder, aad | ble ipod =e ir bit ree o Ling tilde) a. Semeph Holbrook, Custom House ‘officer, They must found a woman in ana Mar! ing, bel have been in town two hours before they foloviously en- taken altogether, for spontaneous demonstration It was | orig) She was asked by one of the United States | tered my heuse to asenult mee T epencd toe ee bout as stirring an ailair as could have been | oilicors to leave. She declined. The oflicor said he should | to the young man, whom I conclude to be a sonof Mar- desired by tho most ardent friond of the cause in which | bo obliged to assist her out. She still declined. The offl- | ghal Freeman. Sanborn is-enlieted. After the excitement had somewhat | cer expostulated, and said the horses might run be of and Nothing but my own resistance and that of my sister, timely taking the stump and shewing the true people of | in postponing further operations, in order to afford an Jed, bir. Sanborn addrcesed a few words to the | ghe be killed. “Let them run,” said the young Woman, | Mies Sarah E. Sanborn, prevented me from bel iod portent nee poles by thelr owners, ; cont ana was then escorted. to his residence in Sud. | ‘I'don’t cate.” (Tremendous applause.) Capt. B. re: | away by this band of kidnappers belore help could arrive. | of the governed. a eared ieee Navas ale we |, Meco Maas Tchad Teele Coe: Ane ie) niet hanes Were ay, Soe She romero ee vi poop pmee he Dury street, whore the crowd left him after giving him | ferred to Mr. Edwin Bigelow first eamo to my aid, and in tom mi- | Will acquiesce—and if wo thus rule they must also acqui- | mob knew tho whole thing on Monday, an eup- bene ede ‘the shad fisheries, and whose sole peou- repeaied cheers, The multitude then proceeded tw the Sgr piss oF cen ie ; nutes twenty or thirty persons, neighbors and friends of ene oan eseiire, ee come heens noe ofan pa it with ere — on Rleoakagatien Ji Bi the neces. Tesidence of Gol. Joseph Holbrook, on Sain wirget, and | Ho said the last timo he met him, when the melee was | mine, were around me. They compelled tho rending of | Beem oppoted to, nce decor Boreengene te arr erm baie enancenceaee Durposs, that Twill net | Ary apparatus therefor. Upon their promise to remove saluted him with going on, he cried, “Stand by him—stand by him, War- | the warrant and the giving of names, which the rafllans GROANS AND HISSRS. ren!"? (Great applauge.) Capt. B. hoped that the memory | yery unwillingly gave. Freeman treated me with the Colonel Holbrook is one of the most respected | of Hoemer would be entertained with all honor, and | most courtesy, and I took pains to inform my neighbors citizens of Concord. It seems that ho furnishod tho | that his bereaved family would not be allowod to suifor. | of this, and entreatod them specially not to injure him. I United States cilleers with some information intended to | {Hosmer has repeatedly said that he would nover live | also requested them not o maitreat any of thom, and I facilitate the arrest of Sanborn, and consequentiy brougat | to see Sanborn carried away from Concord; and, un- | th i none were soriously injured. I was takem by force down upon his venorable bead the Indignation of tho | fortunate man, he did not.] tunity, and not to replace be driven into acquiesoence in their usurped power, nor at the first suitable oppertunity, an fromthe defence of all the republicaus who are attacked | thom at any ti Sergeant Brovoort, gave the in their persons or property because only of their ro- sehen he ress osi sae be etme ch pole _ publicanism, They desire to rexew the fable of the wolf | place were left unmolested. The Long Islauders comple and tho lamb, and by the committal of outrages against | that great injustice : recede Sova tte aa wy friends which I am pledged to resist, to consummate | ties, and that great pgmrered peo be — pa Bw with a show of public justice their own oriminal designs | ¢rmen to the north mn and near jersey have given mo countenance to the escape of slaves, to insubordination, or to servile insurrection. Henoo, on the 4th of July, 1866, at the Slate Lick Springs, in this county, when tho Rey. John G. Fee avowed from tho stump the radical Abolition doctriae, I denounced it from the stamp. He was corresponding Secretary of the Cen- from the kidnappers by Sheriff Moore and his poase, thon i rah ppc ’ ‘ ie Sanbornites. Col. H. is full of pluck, as was evincod LOUD OKIES FOR “WARREN!” (WARREN!”? pumbering some 200 mon, women and children. My ma, | tal Republican Club; at our first mooting in Richmon. . pe Renae ear ating reg end Jov. Dorr during the Rhode Island | There were now loud cries for ‘ Warren,” ‘Warrea.”” a ateas Were Nathalie d Droken tn tho | Was displaced, and’ a republican elected in hisstead, | against my life and oause, I publish those facts that tte mselves be: Fobeliog, Heit now, and. has boch for soma timo, a | Tho Puusionvr’ (pleasantly)—Do you "moan General | Rare Weriacen pay eee aoe nine PARE broken in the | Wien he was mobbed in scvoral places—when his ce- | honest mon may not be deluded; thatwe may stand or fall | hind « olaimed right of Now Jersey over « portion of the upon our merits; and mot be overwhelmed with clamor, | waters of the harbor, extending half way to Now Y¥ wich is the strong weapon ef mob violonce always. The | bave been heretofore Sacro) sed. ioe considered Governor may make his domonstration—the “minnio | themselves much aggrieved, because they only woro in- rifles”? and ‘‘caunon’? may come otto eviinguish the just | terfored etn Fetes ee a Bele re Pre- laborer, the Rey. Jas. & Davis, asked my ald in defending Mr. Fee, I addressed a letier, dated Ootober 8, 1857, de- clining to identify hoy in any way with Mr. Foe’s dec- trime or action. These letters wore first published in the Washington Republic, in the faco of the Custom House oflicer in Boston, and a democrat of the | Warren? 3 diglocation of the joints. I have the handoufls in my poa- old school. After venting their spleen upon Col. H., tho A Voice—If ho ian’t @ genoral he ought to be. (Ap- | geesion, and shali keep them to show my family, and at crowd next proceeded to the Post Office, where Cnarles B. | plause.) - | my death give them to the town of Concord to be hung in Davis, the Postma: as saluted with BLOOD—DEATH—DRV ASTATION. the Town Hall, if the people will accept them, that thoy RR GROANS AND MISSES, Mr. N. Hexny Warren wasintroduced,and madea bitter | may be reminded a 4 pactheia all Mr. Davis did nothing but to sdvise that tho law offl- | speech against the United States officials, Ho called them | “AY ,be reuni dale Liters yiltee ie we bete world; and were. republished in the Louis- alled them to it and they express these in ovary cers should be allowed to do their duty, and let the law | ‘miserable scoundrols,’’ and said they ought to have beon | geo Mr, Carletoa and his fellows ‘brought te justice in our | Ville Jownal and other Kentucky paper. Again, | weehall not be intimidated by this now Leaner pela Ba eae take its course. The crowd cried, ‘‘Three groans for | put whore they deserve to be, and where they will be if | courts; and I shall direct my attorney, also, to institute | When the movement was made against Bereans, I | power in the suppreesion of our rights. If civil war y reed Robin's was next visited, and the work gun, it will be against our most,earnest implora- ef piling © eteat, ip the poles was proceeded with until their Uions of tho forbearance of folond and mest soloms Pratee: | owner, a resident of Staton Island, named Isang H. Yan- took the same neutral ground in letters addressed to Richmond Messenger and to tho Cincinnati papers, one copy of which was published in the Ciacianati Commercial, Davis,” ‘“Threo groans for Holbrook,’’ and Mr. Davis, | they ever come aga'n to Concord. (Applause.) For the | guits against them for damages. Their warrant bears stopping upon a Dox, told the crowd that “the boys com: | last three mouths he had calculated Upon an attempt of | gate Pep 16, six woeks nasties all which time I have posing it would be corry for what they were doing by to- | this kind to take away Sanbora. And for that length of | been in Concord, and migit have been arrested in broad against the ag duser, putting off in a small boat, came aboard the i. morrow evening.” More groans for Davis, and some | time he had bad a rifle londed, and was determined that | daylight any day for the last dated Whitchall, Ky., December 28, 1869, but which, 1 | tics of all—if blood be shed it will not be first shed by , hhioses, afier whieh the crowd dispersed to attond ifeverything else fatled—when rescue by cutting the traces ety ate Ag ‘ows by nha ee Matinee 9 aan know not by what means, failod to reach Judge Fields | us—if the States shall fly to arms, and ctiaene North ond pores had an Het to with “s rays 4 SPONTANEOUS MEETING IN THE TOWN HALL—srimireD axp | and all other means failed—tho officer who attempted to | houso by means of a forged letter? Does this look as if | wntil the Monday following, and tho oxilos boing gone, I | South become involved in one common ruin, let those cannes erent toes nn ok ara went into tho Messenger oflice and took it away, as the | shall begin the conflict answer for the ond. eocasion for its publication had passed. Again, I heard that J. G. Hanson, one of the exiles, had returned: I wont, on Friday last, to the house of Alexaa- der MeWilliams, where wo ae oe rene ‘we coincided in opinion, as we always lone, our should separaw their fortunes altogether from EXTRAORDINARY PROCREDINGS. carry away Sanborn should take the bullet from | our liberties were in danger or not? It having been announced, on the arrival of tho oars | that rifle into his head. (Loud applause.) Mr. Warrom | — Tho full bench of our Supreme Court have set me free, ‘fat soven o'clock, during the firing of the cannon, that a | referred to bis Revolutionary ancestors, and said ho was | and I return to. night to Concord to pursue tho duties of meeting would be held in the Town Hall, at halt past | now prepared to vindicate the rights they then sought fo | my profession. F. B. SANBORN, seven o'clock, at that hour tho hall was partially filled | maintain. His impulse last night was to take hold of ‘by people of both sexes, particularly the weaker—which, | ‘‘them men,” and although he had not laid violent hands | Eimterprise of the New York City Press. ©. M. CLAY. island. Sergeant Brevoort then informed him that it wag Army Intelligence. thet 6 i MOVEMENTS IN THE MEDICAL STAFF. (Baten sland) permitting thetr erection within the line Astistant Surgeoi Richard F. Simpson, Medical Depart. mentioned. it will appear, proved themselves almighty strc in thia | upon a man for seventeen years, and although considered | | ‘rom the Buflaio Courier, April 5. pes A . Ugecond oncord fight,” as ivis termed: Whe eabitoment | before that a pansionste and quatrelsome persou, hecould .|" ‘The Henles tiare ane aries eva rearacted with | Hanson and bis party ment, now on leave of absg"ce, is directed to repair to | If re taneiaencataies ie nateict, there is a slashing of the day and the hour was intensified in this meeting, | not resist the temptation to floor one of them. (Mr. War- | the Hudson River Railroad Company, to run a train | Un Saturda; Fort Ridgely, Minnesota, on the Ist 6! May next, and re- Socal rj general State law, ‘nd the appearance of Mr. Sanborn in the hall, abgut | ren, it seems, smashed a window in the carriage with a and there vine | port for duty: at aie expressly for conveyance of their FB to Albi 80 as eight o'clock, was the signal for another outburst of enthu- | bean pole, the first weapon he could find, and for the act or Feach the trains Paving that ‘aty in the thoruine” For siasm, As others entered, the applause and cheering were | was floored by the driver, Mr. Foss, before he exactly un- | instance, the newspaper train is expected to connect with most enthusiastic. Sanborn’s sister, who assisted so | derstood the character of the operation. Mr. W. is ade- | the Steamboat train on the Central Railroand leaving P. Assistant Surgeon George E. Cooper, Medical Depart. ment, i8 directed to repair to Fort Homroe, Virginia, aad move from the State, as his presence would be a continual valiantly in the defence of her brother, and who will | termined looking personage, of short stature and slight | albany at 73¢A. M. This train is due here at 7:40 source of discontent, and might possibly invelve the re- % Tonbtiece bs Lamsortntigod qa aseount of Ker exploit: Cag | prBhias: Tat tel ben's Gaek eye, add’ ookaaytibagh'| Sieaee Geet aes this, the newspaper train must aye | Publicaus in conflict, when innocent, men might be po Commanding officer of that post for tempo: to another row of poles, received with unbounded enthusiasm; as also was Miss | he could pull a trgser of a rifle about as expertly as al- | New York as early as three o’clock in the morning. illed. I stayed all night with ‘Stapp, Assistant Surgeoos Charles H. Suith and [L. H. Stone , and one Anna Maria Whiting, daughter of Col. Wm. Whiting—a | most any other individual.) ‘We understand the enterprise of the Now York Press isnot | where the samo views were uvered and concurred | are directed to repair to the oity of New York on the Ist ee acted ek, lady who took a seat in the carriage intended to convey | RALPH WALDO KMERAON SPEAKS—HR DENOUNCES CENTRALIZA- | to bo limited to this achievement, but that it contemplates | im. I returned Berea, enforced with | of May next, and repert to Sui 0. A. Finlay, Prosi- and by promises and ap- Sanborn, and by spreading her crinoline, did not a little TION—PARIS AND FRANCR—WARHINGTON AND AMERICA, an extension of operations by sending express trains to | ® parting word the same advice, and was leaving | Gent of Medical Board appointed to moet in the'olty of suspension of the work of for New York, for examination for promotion. Temove thom themselves, toward muting the forcible entry of Sanborn into the Ratra Wapo Ewgrsom, independent im woalth as ho is \te still more remote, ‘also in every direc! Vehicle.” Something more in Tefereace to the proceedings | transcondental in politics, well known all over the Union epee The Vaden tion trom loood, 7 is now under discussion, of | Ped, and Mr. Rawlings introduced him tome. He asked if visited, them one Of this courageous young woman will appear as the narra- | for his ecoentricities, ° and at the same time | continuing the express from Albany as far as Buffalo, the | me what was the public feeling towards him? Ireplied | 5,- First E yay Nd. nee Aeyal vanes yeaterday as rs tive of the proceedings of the meoting progresses. for the warmth of heart, addressed the as-| point at issue being only whether the pi 1 be | that I would speak frankly with him; that I was, as he tes’ Unned Bien to take effect Fe! y 28, eae ox. IN THR MEETING. semblage. He was received with great tokens of | carried into execution the present, or -be to the | well knew, to his political principles, and could | Sy" any Moesloas Wht Wave Te lay bes York harbor. Eight Among those of conservative and moderate views who | approbation. He commended the expression of the | next season. not stand by bim in any way; but phat my porsvesl feel- | mitted ;by the Navajo tribe of Ii ane oat tne @ had promised to remove, but he fympathizod with the objects of the mecting—which | feelings of Concord as given by those who preceded him The cupidity of the New York press is as unconsciona- } ings wore towards him. Thad not with the | ment of New Mexico having been reported te wiad end seemed to be to exalt Sanborn and the republican party— | end approving the action taken by the citizens in defend- | ble as of the railroads. Its conductors are deter- | Committee, but I had spoken to some in their confidence, tleroy, ‘commanding that ‘Department, that ‘mai & small wee such ‘gentlemen as Danl. Shattuck, Keq., | ing the rights of one of her most esteemed citizens, de- | mined to make money in every legitimate way, without § and the feoling wie gan need him rhea egy has caused’ ao Beery commanding’ all im. He was aa- ever Om account ef rn, I was told; it an old whig, President of the Concord’ Bank, | clared that the greateet praise was due te the herolo | the least deference to prescriptive rights and fatenosta, the primcipal moneyed man in the town; E. | women, who, by‘their prompt and devoted exertions pre- | We should like to know say psy tenths of the W. Bull, Keq., a prominems American republican; | vented the attempt of the officers to snatch him away | oountrypapers will have in the market with ci papers Capt. Richard Barrett, commander of Concord Artillery, | from his friends and his home and gave the alarm tothe | of the same date and sold at the same Price. Hoke isa demoorat, republican and American ; George Heywood, | town. The lesson learned here is of the greatest political | manifest invasion ie the vested monopoly of the coun- ri oe he would leave the State for his own safety, as | aw to avold the possible =e between Aid on and the committee because of Presence. remarked that he found no fault with me; that every one must try:— Company ‘‘J,”’ mounted rifles, oe McLane pany ‘‘B,’’ mounted rifles (Capt. borne’s), and Com- Feq., town clerk, an ‘“‘old young”’ whig; Mr. L.A. Surrette, | importance—resistance the most vigilant and determined | try press, which threatens a considerable. portio stand on bis own convictions, and that ‘‘every dog has his ats ‘were counted , @ morchant in Boston, an old line whig; and others | to the tendency toward centralization.’ Let us hate and | with the fate that railroads: have inilic 1, mae ene 4 ay Ra ao He ier {Crt Jesse » will roa od . Ttis the intention of Ser- of lesser note. 4 dread it. As Paris has become the mistress of France, 80 | coaches and canal packets. The grievance threatens to ing leave of him I went to Kingston, whore I stayed | months ok ‘be taken. ve this co . = efforts more to- The meoting was called to order at § o'clock, by Capt. | Washington aspires to become the centro of America snd | be ‘most tolerable, and not to be endured.” ‘Tt-should | ail might with Whitt Moody. Whilst ‘there, Messrs, | Months will be ta (Capt, Elliott), and “K” (Capt, Walk. which has Charles Bowers, shoo manufacturer’(atrict republican). | all the power of the nation tends toward the national go- | be cnoountered at the outset with the moet strenuous re | Brosddus and Newland camo in to see me, whoa I ox. | oy °mpaniee Sant Tilak), aad CY (Onn, Walk it is evident that the At this time there were about 500 people in the hall, a | vernment. Lot tho States resist the government and the | sistance. Pressed the same viows. I sent for G. W. Maupin, an old | °};, mounted riflemen, Wil proceed to Fort Craig. scoonplished thelr purpess, strong baifof whom were females. The number is sot | cities the States, and the villages the cities. That is the We recommend the organization of a league, to dispute | hunting companion, to spend the night with us, and to | j¢ ‘Third infantry, with one hun: ‘and stan — mo further diffucity oa the large, and was probably twice the number that attended | greatest protection of the law and the government—that | step by step the insidious advances of that monopolizing | have a friendly talk about the whole matter, as I know teal t, ae uty men tho Johm Brown meeting held. The entire population of | the people are jealous of their rights and ready to resist | monster, the Metropolitan Press, Let it be motsind of, | he was one of the commitiee, ang had mtea the purer byte ee tl ae wm eremnete at Lap THE SHAD POLES—THEIR SIZE. Concord is about 2,500, On motion of Capt. Bowors, Dr. | the slightest encroachment under any circumstances. the plan of the Clinton League, and, following in the foot- | peacemaker when Tony was attacked im the firat raid soma . ae t Hers Most people who see shed poles standing in the water, Josiah Bartlett was called tothe Chair. Dr. Bartlett is an A BULL PUTS HIS HORN IN. stepe of that indomitable combination, no doubt it | at Berea, as I was told. I them ia pany i Third infantry (Capt. Schweeder’s), | as they pass by ina steamboat or look from the shore abolitisnist, a temperance advocate of something more | Mr. E. W. Butt, gold beater, and famous as the ori- | will make itself cqually formidable and efficient. | W- Maupin, in the presence of ber merechctcbidlltcey) imagine that they are mere litile reeds or saplings, aad than fourteen years standing, and as good natured an old | ginator of the ‘Concord grape’—a® Bacchus in a Maine | To assimilate it in name as we i gentleman as can be found in any meeting of this sort | law district—formerly a member of the State Sonate,and | its illustrious prototype, it tout be. cat “ the any where. Chairman of the Republican County Committee; aleo | Franklin uo, As it requires legislative co- DR. BARTLETT SPEAKS. Chairman of the Board of Selectmen of this town, anda | operation to @ success, and as nothing cam be ex- ‘The Chairman briefly congratulated the People on the | member of the Town School Committee, asked if Concord pected from the rump of a Legislature now in session af- discharge of Mr. Sanborn. He said—God bless old Con- | had degenerated? He spoke of ‘-thieves in the night,” | ter its unkind out of the ton League, it shouid ally cord. He was willing to sacrifice everything for | and all that sort of thing, with a view to encourage i8- | itself with that betrayed organization to elect a new Gene- the defence of right. And tho ple of Concord | tance under circumstances that occurred hero last night. | ral assembly, that can be relied upon to enact a pro rata were ready to do the same. yw could it bo | REY. 7. W. HIGGINSON IN THE ROSTRUM—DIVING PROVIDENCE freight bill and to impose tolls upon the railroads. To besure otherwise, when one of their most respectable citizens BLAMED—VIOLENT MEASURES PROPOSED, the State has been already canvassed prett; thorough. ‘was seen manacled in their strects under an illegal war- Tho Rev. T. W. Hicorxsox, of Worcester, well known | ly with this object. But there is no telling win will be.the rant for his arrest. He asked if this was nota reason | as an abolition agitator, spoke at gome length. He said it | effect of putting another Richmond in the field.” ‘There why every citizen of Concord should resist? (He did not | was not his fault that he was not here iast night. He | needs another hmond, if wo may trust the ori ns of Gay particularly what, but the sentiment was received | blamed Divino Providence for it, After some remarks, he | the Clinton League, to resist the influence now revailing with great applause.) Had it not been for two ladiss— ut the question, ‘Will Concord maintain the action of | at ‘Albany; and who shall say that the count Heels may ‘Miss Avna Maria Whiting and the sister of Sanborn—San- nights” There were cries of “Yes, yes.” Batin | not succeed in constituting iteelf to be hh Fenonnied Dorn would now have been on his way to Washington, | case thero should be any doubt upon the question, he champion? Atall events, {t may command the peering beyond tho roach of any habeas corpus. Hoe then intro- | would repeat it. He did not repeatthe question, but he tlonjof,trying. ‘Tolls and Pro Rata,” be its watchword— duced repeated his interrogatory—As many as are in favor will | a heavy toll‘io tax the carriage of New York city papers MR. SANBORN AS THE MANACLED PRISONER, NOW FRER. gay “yes”—contrary, ‘no.’ And there were no | over the railroads traversing the country, and a pro rata On the appearance of Mr. Sanborn, there wasastorm | negatives. Making especial reference to some People | tariff of freights roportioned to the ‘distance e which of applause, accompanied with a few hisses. Mr. San- | who were in a corner, the reverend gentleman’s re- they are conveyed. Let the tax imposed be sufficient to Dorn oaid:— : marks were direoted especially to an effective military | prevent their sale out of New York, at less than several SANBORN’S SPEECH. Organization in this town, to carry out the principles of | times (if not more) the price charged for them at home. ‘He had first to thank them for the most prompt, gene- | resistance to United States laws. He said, if such a thing ; Tous and unexpected manner in which they had come to | should be stated here it would meet with a response in above commands will concentrate at a given \der much at the out which is raised against Point, and march through the Navajo vountry, in the tem by 3 ip captains and pelea ws te toms ‘meantime sflording better protection to the frontier. navigate in thelr vicintt ;the remains of the late Lieutenant Julien May, mounted | had one of tho poles taken abead of the Mi fea Skt aeg a ea | see oe ee Hae tacked us, the republicans, on account of our ples, ae te be al Commissioners might form that we would defend ourselves to. she last; aid than ig | OVeF t0 the friends of the deceased.” ance about whlsh. they roosive "#0" many "oom: Personal Intellig: a selected from a row southwest of the Batiery’, fen, Wood, of Portland, Maite, ts stopping at tho | nd when aboard its dimensions ‘were taken. The venue Hotel. A. Susini, P. Brignoli and G. Y. Pieri, members of the | Sistcen foot from the ond it meanased twonty-elgnt okra Ttallan Opera troupe, are stopping at the Everett Hoase. | in olroumference, and the total length of the le, son ieee Gardner, of Masé., is stepping at the New | one splice, was noarly cighty fect. ‘Now, when it is cew- if sidered that a vessel in passing over one of these is Governor Buckingham, of Conn., and Col. Loomis, | to break it off; ‘short, leaving an ney, snag, or ‘sawyer,’ of the United States Army, are Stopping at the Lafarge | as the boatmen call it, and when it is bered that House. -] many of these poles are of groem hickory, an idea may be The natives of New York residing in New Orleans havo C been invited to attend a grand supper which is to be giyon bt Ghee reir State Association in that city on the Sny assassination of any one of my iy; that I was for peace: that I had told our friends at that whoever Stood in defence of Hanson would do so at his ewn risk, “And we would not stand by him; but that if they cleared themselves of Hanson, and were attacked in their own right that we would make a common cause—we would to the woods and defend ourselves to the death. ‘This, men of Madison, is my whole connection with the radicals of Berea. All the time against their doctrine—all the time for the peace and safety of the community. tay toon dat tha eteiegont ak pid Seren y), ©: was ag me, and that I was sht to have dictated the letter of Haa- war, I my remarks at the court une to Slear the popular mind of all apprehensions. ‘The falt the Lt : A succeast| ! surgical operation was performed w deceased eye of Hon, Jefferson Davi by Dr. rhino jsehood whole alle is a his assistance last night. Bat it was a case not only of | other towns, es; ‘Worcester. Ho argued that there Fire in the Woods in New Jersey. Tprlec te folios Saturday, and we are happy to state t . Di his own, but their own peril. Ir his opinion had been"| Was nothing’ at the bottom of the United states govern. | 4 STAGE DRIVER AND TWO FEMALE PASSENGERS IN Tabet {hei rel ‘1 eas nee Tate Ta] | 80 fer éeovered from ta ect that ho. hopes ta be asked before hand, he would have said ‘Let mo meet it | ment, as had been evinced by the decision of the Supreme FEARFUL DANGER. tin S20, wore t able to resume bis plaog, in the Sonate in two or three neither seen nor known Hanson, nor beéa at Rerea since my Northern tour, and therefore could not pessitily have "Now ft farae oust as had expected ow oul as from what was said by Mr. Newtoa in Richmond on Wedneeday morning days. SHAD FIRHING. Gov. Stewart, of Miasouri, has been hung and burned While upon the subject of shad poles it not be in- in effigy in Independence, Mo., for vetoing the free negro | app! to state afew 1008 in regard to Co bill ices . °° | carried on in our harbor, aac We sccordingly a alone.” There was only one thing he would | Courtof Massachusetts this day. (Applause.) Mr. Hig- [From the Trenton Gazette, April 6. change, and (showing a pair of handcuffs) he | ginson referred to the visit of yey puimoa, a Ui The Mount Holly Mirror of April cota fire was Said there was fitness in this. What is this | States officer, to Worcester to arrest a fugitive slave, and } Taging in the pice in Burlington county, last week, to a the emblem of? (A Volco—"Tyranny.”) It is the badge | his retirement from that place under an escort of a few | fearful extent, and of course doing great damage. It of ‘slavery. (Loud applauso, during which Sanborn | friends. He reforred to the necessity of a military organi- | started on Wednesday, at Garontown, half way bewween shook the mantcles.) Ho said the So held zation to resist 5: future, Red Lion and Friendship. 3 ‘dn the presence of G. W. Maupin and otbers—that | Cyrus W. Field, N. Y.; Capt. Dickersom, U. 8. 4.; W. } {ew items da that 3 -. Pree atcles.) He ald the Souiherners held them naiuaciseie iy apa Ebert Dobbins tack up. Hotes fo Weare Oh the republioana had nothing to do mh Hanson, wore for | 1. Jenifer, U. 84, eu, EP Alexander, U. 8. Arend ait? Sahormen begin to Lae ee eae asad ces for freedom, he trikes at the interests of the slave 7 ce by Brown’s Hill towards " \~ 4 fooa! a ride, are in Washington. 2 with Le ower, and hence the whale power of the wees wore appoiniod By the Chair Nootaaatits toroeeet tat clay of which place ae Daring cat riday. "The ox. of the ey) their Doakse, wore Tadaly search, het] at the Supreme Court of Boston on te Mint 1,8 bet [Ate arivon tate Che aed wits mci rtp while rougl r to crush him. Applause.) | devise a plan to mect the views ex] by the last | sien BF diet time was & distance of about was preseated from George H. 8; king for & di- : ‘When ho wag arrested, he had committed but few crimes, | geoctor’ anit Free ia Aeeaat | six miles in length by threo in breadth. ‘The moat of ene | Eve YOU here a copy of a lottor written to me by Mosars. | Yorch trom fis wire ss Beeeges! rhe neces take them out requires @ steamboat of we fewor than ho could’ wiah—another outburst of ap: pnd report at a future mesting, viz:—Mossrs. | timber that It passed through was of wacarter, ie eal seeing the whole cause of the diftculty; | tho ‘airs. Nolly Sprague’ whoee tortie ae cena | power. |The cost price of a pole is about five oF ax a plause)—in the same cause. large farmer, ect Capek masta; Nestan Hoar sue) The Ore, at inst aocounte, was doing considerable das | ich original Tle, slgned by Haley and Biand, by J: | ties have recat STarauhee poverateans tte Ge baer. Ue hired lel eyo j AL, Rawlings, can be seen by cal ‘upon me:— Berea, March 30—P. M. My Free ©. M. Crar—I drop you a line stating the facts concerning the fight. Inthe first it was not bronght about over Hamsom, but over the treatment to George West. Tho committee went to the house om the hunt of Hanson. Weat is im the last stage of consump- ‘KILLING NOT eS — OFFICERS REGARDED ~ master rnd John Brown, Jr. (in the dry goods Mr. Sanborn continued, by saying that If thoee ramans | Dusless, Bo relat pee Ed rote aie atiempied to cary, a lan nigt ad boon Kilt Tmanefesiarers Noches Baan ie ony, Woolen , the deed would not have been deem: 41 — Rest, i unlawful. ‘Tho perpetrators, would not have been ‘eld ee ee oe nen, amenab! laws. They ought to have been the ae X6iled: | (Applause.) ‘Such men are not killed. Thoy Jerre nar eeagain took tho stand, after a motion to The libel alleges that the parties were married on the 19th Sputinreeaclare sata aaeineeny Meat pide i Sor may ‘as ten dollars. Now the: vith Albert B Hal of Augusta, “Maine, ‘at Island Pond, meulercl bolas a hare teltiver ahoora ae fermont;on the 14th of March, and at Chicago om the18tt | seven thousand ge shat @ capital of or seven ty” ceria conan fm Parties who) fee living to- | thousand dollars is thus invested in the thea aonsey of the counsel for the husband stated that the wife was'seat | NeW York harbor alone, Ageia, sot at bots re mage, and it is not believed can be fully e: while the present dry, windy weather aiiens i; The Mannahawkin stage, on its way to Mount Rolly, on Friday, met with a narrow eseape from the fire.’ The driver, before he was aware of it, found himself almost in the midst of the flames. The great body of the fire, how- ever, seemed to be in advance of him, and he turned adjourn had been put. ‘sid—W! around to make good his eseape ; but he had not procee: and told his daughter toshut the doer, and the; Insane season, the entire ‘‘take”’ of each net recurrences: le like vermin. (Renewed applause.) it any | of the Supreme Oourt’ of this Comumemontth ced ace | fur before the flames checked him tn his toueek, wnt ac. broke the door down,and they culled, aud’ ubeest Wert vie Be Smeal auetes atinesee, ss of the ebb ao ae” tae. and every, one of them had been ‘laid under | discharged,I took my hat, and was leaving the court | V8! bliged to pursuo his journey in another and his daughter; and we went to see West, with no view oo re lay, Says:—We learn that | twenty or thirty fish as this the sod Concord, not one of those whe did | room. Friends camo up and asked mo what I was gol In a short time he again found himself surrounded by | of seeing any of them. We met thom, and I begged for | &2U™! “i r hd io friends of Mr. Henry Shaw, the gentle- | quaatity always New York, Court at Massectae geen indicted. So the Supreme | to do, Had I not better go away, and thus avoid any | WE lames. Ho saw no other course to pursue but to go | Peace, and did all I could te obtain ik "I intended to take promise verdiot, ald’ him a visit of satieetaer eee gor | GRFIBE the iad reason oerad Court of Massachusetts decited to-day. (Loud acclama- | further persecution? "No, f sald. i will go back to Gee. | STAight abend, and urged his horses to thelr utmost spe, | YOUF good advice. aot whem the verdict of the Jury i toe way erening | two hundred th: «nd navies Feet oe Vgnon the Senate, or the House of Representa. | cord. He then explained the cause of his discharge, on hoping soon to'be free from the devouring element. Bui FRANK BLAND and GREEN HALEY. | cash was known, ad complicated pros ae a ee | thal ye piscato .' epioureans!, In the ava Gon | ane auets, ay ae bs ie Ch vee oe — the grounds that an nt of the Sergeant at Arms, of the bel: rps giegontd = Miva beer, GS an Pico h ths betel are a of the facts—but net | The “defendant” looked Tuite smiling tag jv ee Rave beat Ny se bri Vee ‘fin, posonnl any by every means.” (More appinuse.) Mr‘ Sacborm saat | Lalted Sites Senate, bad served upon him, and | nd ‘it was Impousiole. tesco Hee ane stopped, all {acte—the languago to the daughtor of West was | opened some long necked bottles on the occasion. A gen- | But the «0 @yery low amount wYhen compell- be was ready to mieot any other offence against ihe | Dot that ao in Person; and said that if that | Oincg fore milsute or two, tan wre La = Fd gross i ae eye, and I therefore sup; is. | tleman, who came in Sunday evening on the Pacific Rail. don in their sx : their numbers imereases; South in the same manner ho had done last night. Deal- | of the Senate, himself, shor che in eave, ke ent | a terrific extent, when suddenly the, sche ete iee | rear cheae the only outrages. A similar offones to | road, reports having seen a pole some thirty fect in | “Thome: .iehtthe tsk are caught in the nets is ing with the Southerners was not dealing with man, fh nate, himself, should come in person, he would away, the horses started, any ae a3 smoke clearing | the children of the poor brought ona revolution in that height surmounting the Tower. (Mr. Shaw’s residence) somewhat cur: Peo think eat mm dealing with demons. Tho system of slavery should rigatied thuprtce Shere Rt iescren nag a great mass of fire bad Crossed the Tod's short fase ibe The 8 ah rd ‘oep into the hearts ‘of trey from the top of which flapped a red flag. : Fee ee eae eee thowe ud Pred opposed 4 em not to be it did, from a branch of the government; a vance, and was making the most fearful ravages in | millions of Americans. The battle of the 26th ft fc ‘scoping’ a crab. the contrary, iia ressive, but to meet the encroachments of slavery with | as ‘a’’ usurpatie & ite track to the right of him. gotten ass ~ Do: Shad not is not concave’ or ‘hollo ag a on the rt ig) March will never be for, : mestic News Items. not concave or w like @ crab not; it ten force, "fuat is the aly argument some people can un- | and “he ae a: 2 eae a —_ is tml He was soon enabled to get entirely out of its path, and | You may drive these men into as oat eae Excrreweyt ix Purey CouNTY, Miss.—AN ARMED GANG OF con, lta upper corners fastened to tho polog,.* ee ee they mane gc bo law to protect tigers | he addremed might go with him or not. It rested with | felt thas he had never before been in so terrible w posi- | burn thelr housce—-you may hunt then down tive cay | N#cRoEs at Lanck.—The Paulding Clarten, ot Wednosday Tuamhed to an nance ete’ to 8 hoop, which, in tara, ia nga sand they must be met and dealt with as | them. But personally, if cver called upoa by any per. | HOt. Ab one time itappeared to him that the flames must } beast, till the last one falle by guperion focees Lee eee | last, Says a gentioman camo all the way from Acgusta te | ® to aa or The not is thus stretshed gach. Mr. concluded by saying, that so help him | gon clothed ‘with any powers emanating from roe Cored | caiifely surround him and cut off all means of escape” He | cause te the cause of umerioa liberty and the holicat in. | [is ee ad 8 few days ago, to procure track dogs for the Perpendicalarly in the water, and as the fish attempts ¢ ee ee ee naa tas Practice the tcachings of the last | States Senate, he sdoUuld resist the execution of the | N&dtwo female passengers, and, as may be supposed, | etincts of human uatufe. ‘Their marcyrdoya wilt light up | Purpose hunting a gang'ot outlaw nogroos who are m- | Pas# through he is stopped by the meshes, and on his at- pi tenth elp them in pursa- | warrant hey jyere frightened Deyond all description. Fearing J the fires of civil war, which will porvade the ‘Union, any | £2808 Perry county, Miss. According to the socount | Iempt to retreat is caught in the ills by the cords and same . coring. ) Mr. Saxnorx concluded his remarks without any per- ey arc nld perish in the fire and smoke, their J be extinguished only’by the downfall of one or the other | £'¥em by this gentleman, who is as respectable a young | “rmly held until the fisherman comes at ebb tide te re a Sa TS 2, yy, | Spin marta, atte taaa’ P| teeana were eva of te mo pontlanen, ™ | Sagat owe wi hin se Goi | unt any Sih soul game Sos eras | sami sn ‘ one <n - | & BOUQUET FROM 4 DOSTON DEMOCRAT TO MISS SANDOR —RE- ———_—__<_— solate the land. with guns abd other weapons. wen a aia ere eeeethed rei ges ARREST OF SANBORN, ETC. Our Long Island Correspondence, Mea of Madison, 1 stand by those men—t | pry "precited of being ia league with them) and one maa James mgt gy er rte = poeta apart orig Menace Se oe Eee | Rieraty Sheri Moore arrived. th the {rain to-night, Sour Havay, Scrrous Covrr, L. 1, April, 1860, J tung bY the, conslitation and laws of my ma. | Gur informant saya that oa anprecodented excttessni | Matcheetor and’ Bolton Tallreed i t6ai cod eeoed oie {his good town of Concord has been foremost in this bat- | bouquet, sent from x cemocratle jamer of feminine heroisca | 7M Hlecion in Brookhaven—Democracy Triumphani—In- | 1 stand by ‘the liberties which Tighter owes, | exits In the community, anything that was | cet toa of the lato Wm. James, of Warwick, the founder He for freedom and law. Applause.) To express, he | in Bustoacan tier Ape of feminine aa (quatl on the Body of a Drowned dan. m our | over eccasioned bi of the noted Wages | Of the modern railroad system, has discevered a mew fathers, and which my own blood has frem the bo; as Revolution eae to ‘ msi 4 very bate ‘been present to defend. I stand, in a word. Frankfort speech of January 10, 186, which I desire tp place before the world as the ground of my faith and my Said, our joy that our friend had eacay from the jaws | d Of the loa vasoathed. Law le ia alliance with conssisnce, | Ceuroe® ¥© Teeeue her brother from the United States ‘The election in the town of Brookhaven camo Off you. and ag ng of this hour deafens us in our love for fres- Sanborn was terday, and the result is an overwhelming democratic majority of three hundred votes over the black repub- e Arrested aftor the meeting to-night, their | complaint made by his friend, Mr. L. A toareeee tocese expressed his deepest satisfaction that Dighoet judicial authorities had sided with them in this | mult oa the Unifed States ‘ot pal Gud Botoenl, We 66 Ue toocted. Ail thoes Sil be oan cials. This complaint | licam fanatics. Protty evidenes of the attachment of | S0tion. 1 and hospital, is to be erected. All these will be much is made, ag I understand, under the advice of emint ® majority of our people to the principles of | _ Tahal in ne way whatever recognise or sub: [irger than the old ones; the chapel and dintn room eack faux t t iP reary . eeaiere FIRE Lt lg 9 Boston feet pee It will cover Sanborn with the peony folios and the Union. ees —— revolutionary committee. At my country’s Pa iat 4 to be Je of holding 1,100 convicts. The site of the puted to be 8 man of presceten nent cared a of the ‘State law on @ criminal process, and , The body of a man was found in the bay opposite Mo- | freely risked my life in her defence. Two years in exile | Old is to be for cells, of which 240 are to be a id be subd Wao ele ean cor usiness | him within the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth until | riches. Am Inquest was held by Coroner Jarvis, and jt | from my home and family; mine months in a added, making 1,01@ in the prison. The work will be irtry oat Maat betas bguonehe | Sune nersn ecruny Mid. ‘Retin | afape'n ws na anges ri bs, | Pi aah Thre eases ear hntagaet | Omled ern a ern fr 3 ir Jn Conoord. Ho denounced whathe term- | @ shrewd movement on the part of Sanborn's faces, | ~ ee ont sive reomebrhegg ce of my birth, and Which you were soe hee zy formeriy Postaas at South Hadly Falls, y and st mothod the United States prevent bis transfer from this town to Washington. plish their purpoee. Early in the reported that Sanbora severely maltreated one or a es there & poor boy, und fe United States This is the course the Senate of tho Gand b Officials in ‘thelr attempt to take him Pp LS earn formerly Postmaster and W. L. Waterman, one of his bondsmen, wore recently lodged im the Northampton jail by the United States Mar- |, under an execution for a balance of $750 indebted- IMPORTANT CORRECTION.=-A paragraph appeared in the ‘Hxnard some time during the year 1859, announcing, on Hi Fr} i away. the authority of a chaplain in the United States sorvi Ingraham to the States took to arrest one of their fellow citizens, \oe, ey ness government. Ingraham was he said, should have been in thelr plane the 1 obiteaenean ea ; that a laboring man could live consfortably in the interior fall in vain; and it will be cnough for all my leng | removed frem office two or three years ago, and claims {hpplaee} He thought somebody should have taken | ple, “dows of the best oltion y a law-al Peo- | of China at a cost of only one cont aday. The paragraph | Cherished aspirations, if perchance atone | that the amount im comtrovergy is not duc to the govern- Fespoanibiliy to arrest them at the time of the arrest ia they’ will maintain thelr’ devodon, to it has been returmed to us from Hong Kong with the follow. | {or the wrongs of my rave, and these spoall at last | ment. of San’ That & mistake. Many had beem con- | hazards.” ‘The proceedings of tho last tw ing endorsement:— A damned lio; it costs four cents per ‘Wurrematt, Ky., March 31, 1860, OM. . A Farner axp Sox BURNED TO- Daara.—Tho was four | diem." ffitiasted because tho alfair hed ‘boon conducted in | hours, aa desorbed impartially above, will wford some i. ma Argus of April 8 says that the dwelling house, barn and ira eevee We ee te tie their dhs Da og 54 floation as regards their real feelings with respect to the | Waotmaurn Parnowrva.—Governor Moore, of Lonisiana, Lr Weta Ky., March 20, 1860. thelr contents, oot eof ar three horses, three i The Concord people didn't ring the fire alarm. bolls a2: (A mandate of the Senate of the United States. | as, with the consent of the State Senate, pardoned twon. secret Of the leaders of the attack upon the | carriages, cow, hay and graia, and farming utonsils, Cording to iaw didn't cheer according to law-tbey | in nOuet itmay appear at the drst blush that the peeple | ty-four convicts, seatonced to undergo avvariety of pun. | “radicals” at Berea, was to republicanism in | were destroyea by fire about. three o'olook 7 r ; ia’t “ 16 law-n(load appinans) and y vas ignore nationality, yet the opinion of of | tshments for crimes of all grades, including murderers, | Kentucky, and more at me, aad sad to relate, Mr. Warren his gon, t @ia’s groan spplause)—and as | phe best men among them is Adverse to such a teohy, incendiaries, ke, Lrolied upon the justice of my enuse, and the - A about eight years old, porihed in the flames, : } ‘ 3 ’