The New York Herald Newspaper, April 16, 1860, Page 2

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NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 16, 1860—TRIPLE SHEET. ‘The truiuxa—The Chair calle the House to order. defore here, snd I denied Ht, Tt never Jeaat foun- } and thresten with violence the man who bas the compas. HE REPUBLICAN PLATFORM, tire genidemen of tho House to take Weir wea dada mri Laleaye atended bye sia to give him a oupof colle. And, dually, after Mr. Jonx Cocmass=-The’ commitiee hag feoa—bes it i Mi. by the | jeored ‘along she route, thie viottea : not? Husted olf mummy of “ upon th = | “The Sresxan—The Chair requests gentlemen to respect the bee Bovejoy’s Speech 6 Al the authority of the and take their seats. Pee sors theo Lad Of tiberty for themecives isn) p ‘and thetr posterity, au@ to secure the natural rights of your debts by raising the mad dog cry of aboil- every human being within tte exclesive Nasties. against the agents of your credit: Therefore 1 fove it. These Mr. Bangspaus—The meanest in the coustituulon but . A young man leads | your superior. (Ories.of “Order from the republican a bushing bride to the altar, takes the marital vow | side.) before Gol and ettendant witnesses, to leve, cherish, me, Moen (im 1 hope retrae Sve Any ony K&R—The Chair desires gentlemen to take their oe yey Pe a pt Be pay ae to him. Pe & Mr. fe . | radiant In the ‘deauty of youth; growing A Mmerzn on the republican side—Well, go. ‘Stand a for, one, will do se with plyasuré, | with the color of the rom, which e: 0? BXCITING SCENES IN THE HOUSE. Speaker requires it. I only a7: that | away into that of tho Mig: hor eye shall do wo. I think this whole matter can be | Sirs from tho depths bine, and : rf — = a every other gen. } srousd her neck like the:locks ing: ths aenarionn ropablis, § na 8 rvs a unmolested, mole on thet fatr round neck, or the wart on that | and of uttering, in ap orderly an way, any sen! HE PE! INDORSED. Mr. Bonmern—I rise to a privileged question, lump, sof hand, the woman’ whom ment that I ehoose to utter ; and yet, are we allowed to * HELPER BOOK E! The Srmacm—The Chair cantot recognise anybody, | Lwore to levo and. cherish? Seyraire ‘itt wees doit? Are we, for that, in thove Untied States, to be sub- Aqneneeennnn ant until gentlemen take their seats. the constitation—inatinct with freedom, radiant with the | jected to vielence, outrage, tar and feathers, burning, {m- STEALING AS A FINE ART. AF irony let everybody take bia seat, and | principles of universe! liberty, soleing the inspired ut- piisonment, ana ihe gallows a ‘Answer thai question, a WIGGER ° enforced. terances of our Magna Charta, redac! to DOW, men 8a} ae reservation ‘The Srasxen—Gentlemen will take their seats without preotical and organic » ne oe inece ibe, law ol natares Dutit you canes keep slavery and llew nigger stealing thicf to take his seat, and this side of tha House will do it, Mr. McQuERN—We will allow nobody to come over frova ” ide of the Hi : Vielent Attacks upom the Slaves | Us! ie (tho, Hove and bully us on this sito, (Crvsa holders. mighty Nigger. se rata sin—Gndor taah Slack Wepriodieéranérel and z g Hy 5 es F jl Hl if Zz j 3 # BSE ir ifs sj EE i i [ : . 4 the clauses that ere .degmed to Be subject of | free digcussion, them, I say, in God’s name, before PRIEN ‘Members gradually withdrew from the open ares in ery mean all tht the wildest roter jo ue mg diecussion and’all the righta of free ottizens are to be sac- y call the ‘the adopted ait. JON GROWN AND His DB, pees renee: char, ead resume! their seats. to mean, they bear 0 other relation er proportion to the | rifled to that Moloch of ory pepe well known as an active de- Order ep x -eator 2 constitrtion wi swear to support than the excres- ae, ao. an ‘Mr. Wasmuuny, (of Maine) Chairman of the Committee, |. fence on tbe hand or neck does to ‘the-woman whom the | sion, and all thoge rights that cluster around’an American the Sow bent Koti €aid—In the Committeo of the Whole on. the State of the | pridegroom vowed to Jove and cherish. He loves her not | citizen. Why, Mr Chairman, a citizen of Rome, when General ‘and —_ Union, dorder arose, which prevented Se transaction of | for those thin; , Dut in spite of them. “SoT love the con. | the ecourge was already upraised, and about to fall upon | of rain,or the blowing of the jaye under the ‘thus ni (From the Congressional Glebe) ‘Dusiness, and the Chair was cempelled to oa!l the Speaker | sti:ution, not in “consequence of ‘thessthings which are | bim, if heuttered the cry, “ Iam a Roman cit ”? it | Can subdue the ocean, when it lashes itself into ‘ome ot See Im the House ci Representatives, April 5, the | to the chair, and to report the facts to the House. alleged to be in #t, but in spite of them. But you willsey | arrested that soenras. Well, sir, is not re | Cashes its created mountain billows 4 ‘Howre Deing in the Committee of the Whole on’ the Mr. Eo:—1 move that the Flouse do wow adjourn. the woman bad right to sport an excrescence on her | more of @ cherm, it not ® prouder position | is as preposterous to think of tak: re | ainetnin Mr: Wasincny (Me.)—The Chairman of the Committeo | hand if abe chose. J concede’, and ase federal law. | to bean American than to be # Roman citizen. And | the civilization of the ages as of. ‘Mr. Lovayoy said:—Mr. Onatrman—The House has been | states that if order is likely to be pree2rved, so that pro: | maker I concede that the States havo the right to sport | are we in the nineteenth century, living under | iceberg through the tropics. It ‘sevupied for several days im the discussion of the subject | ceedings can go on, the Chairman of the Committee will |, this fungue of slavery, because it 4¢ beyond my reach. | this constitutior, with our free inetitutions—are our per- you @f pelygamy. The republican party, of which I am a | resume the chair. But time rol's away. ‘This youthfa! pair haye years of | sons and our rights to be less sacred than they were un- memter, ttande pledged, aimee 1856, to the extermination, Mr. Saxmwax—We aro sow in vor order, and I] middie upon "them. Olive shal tere sprang up | der the old Roman administration eighteen centuries ago so for a8 the, federal’ government has the power, | think-we bad bettor proceed and give the gentlemanufrom | ground the parent stem. The woman has gone m4. | and more? That is my response to_ the question why I ‘that of the twin retics of barbatiam—siavery and , | Inots an opportunity to finish bis cpeech. Imovethat | She gloats over the excrescence which has spread | recommended th mn of the Helper book. Now, it by, thi ‘Fhey bave this power im the Territerice ef Te Ganeed the House resolve stsolf toto the Oxcamittes of the Whote | and Govers ‘ter entire hand. She exclaims, Pin what about John Brown. (Cries of ‘‘Let’s have tt!””) | guage; because brave men are ‘always calm Staten. Now, sir, as we articipate a death blow has been | on the State of the Uniom, and 1 bepe every gentleman | bond, this is a dear, sweet darting, @ real love of a | This affair of John Brown brings us to the reality of | sessed. God feels no anger, for he knows no given to one of these twin, I propose to pay my respects | Willtrcep his eeat. wart, and I want to ingraft it'on hands of al! our | things. This raid confronts us with slavery,and makes | youcan do anything that other wen can do. ‘We the other. 1 want to ees them strangled pm go ry ‘The SrasxeR—Order heving beca restored, the Speaker davghters. I had it when I was married; you vowed to | vs ask is slavebolding right? and if so, what rights bes it? | preserve aot lrpeee this system, if any equal num! r, a8 ‘Doth richly deserve. will leave the chair, and the Chairman of the Committeo protect me, and I claim the right to transfer It to all the | When the curtein rose, and startled the nation with this | of could do it; hut the stars in their courses are . Conp—I rise to a question of order. wil take it. children. ‘If you do not, I will goto Indiana and get @ | tri 4 John Brown Jay there like a wounded lion inat you; God, in his providence, ‘Cuammax—The gentleman will state his question of | Mr. Wasunvey (Me.) resumed tho chair, and announced | divorce. Iwill dissolve the umjon between us.” Tho | with bis head upon his paws, a sabre cut upon his brow, | you. The universe was established upon % that tbe gentleman from Illinois was entitled to the floor. | husband, calm and firm, replies, ‘My dear, I have in- | bayonet gashes in his side, the blood oozing out, an ple Of justice and truth.. It may be jostled ‘Mr. Coss—I was going to raise a question of order upon Mz. Lovmoy—Mr. Chairman, I desired to violate no rule | dujged you in this whim ‘about your hand, because I took | life itself apparently ebbing fast; around were ce! r & iittle-while, but it will sooner or the right of the gentleman to discuss the question of the | of the House. ‘ou for better or for worse, and { thought it one of your | little specimens of the canine agent ema its grooves. You must sacrifice sl “twin relics,’ under the new rule we have adopted. Mr. Borce—Then behave youreclf. dividual rights, which I was wot at liberty to disturb. | ing, and finally one of them yel of your country. Mowever, I will not interfere; the gentieman mey go on Mr. Lovrsov—I wish to learn whether it is a violation | Bot if you propose to transfer this deformity to the | the old war horse that pastu pathy, the prayers, ‘with his speeob. of the rules to occupy this space in front of tho Speaker's | gayghters, I say distinctly and decidedly, it cannot be |,.with you in this expedition?” The lion slowly raised his | nation. Refuse or neglect this; ref Mr. Lovzsoy—I am entitled to the floor; I do met yield | chair, or any portion of it? If so, I will cheerfully yield; | dope, ‘This is my prerogative, and I must exercise it.” | bead, cast a disdainful side glance upon the inquirer, | through all tne land, to all the te the gentleman; andI will proceed with my remarks | {f not, I claim the right to choose my own position. propagandists who desire to trans- | growled outa contemptuous negative, and reposed his head | the exodus of the slave will be whhin my hour, with the gentleman's permission, or ‘The Casmnmax.— ere a — A rules | plant slavery to the Territories, ‘and thus fasten it upon | as before. In regard to John Brown, you want me to curse anew it require that every gentleman shall speak from his seal. | the daughters of the republic, “My dears, it cannot be | him. Iwill apt curse Joha Brows. You want me to Mr. Staxrox—I would be glad to know what ie the un- je. Ovas-—Or fame the Piagie aaah, done.” Tsay, therefore, Mr. Chairman, that there is no | pour out execrations upon the head of old Osawatomie. derstanding of, i eat, and of te Iman netebe 4 oes peg em pooray eg oy jeux, | feeptention. is Practice of slaveholding from the Faoogn all the. slave elding Banks = thes country fill Committee leans, <hr a ensiay race are an rior race; no jastif- eir houses wi silver, an ‘offer it, not cul dir. Asuixy—It has been the-habit of gentlemen to come | cation from the.pretended fact that it imparts Christianity | Job Brown. I do honestly ae ‘ nee eourte of discussion upon this bill, whether the “twin condemn what he did; from relics’ are in order or not, or whether the discussion is | into the aisle and choose their own position. and civilization to them; and none in my stand point, and with my convictions, I disappro’ roy fined to the bill fteelf? The questions properly Mr. Apzain—It ie a very bad habit, and we had better | ranties of the constitution. Now, there = ne of his pod aan is true; bat I believe het Reperpese imvolved in the bill #tself are sufficiently comprehensive, it. Christian men on the other side of the House; I want to that, as his own motives before im my judgment, to command the entire attention of the ‘The Cramman—Tho Chair ie aware that such has been jut it to them in all candor—for while I intend to speak of | God were concerned, they were honest and truthful; and eemmiitee, and { think gre should confine the discussion | the custom; but if the rale is insisted on, it is tho duty of veholding with as severe terms of reprobation as I pos- | noonecan deny that he stands a head and shoulders above strictly to it. When wé are allin the Committee of the | the Chair to enforce it. i ly can, I do not intend to offend any individual person. | apy other character that on the stage in that “Whole on the State of the Union upon the President’s | Mr. Abmaim—I hope it will be insisted on. ally—I want to know of you, Christian gentlemen, how | tragedy from beginning to end—from the time he Message, the gentleman from Illinois will be strictly in The CusteMax—The gentleman from [Il!nois will speak | you are to Christianize men when you do not give them | entered the armory there to the time when he was forever, and that every divine at- erder. | have no special interest about the matter, ex- | from his seat. ie strapgied by Governor ‘‘Fussation.”” (General é ib tte anrayed upon the side of the strag- sept that if the question is to be opened to this general | Mr. Lovgsoy—I bave no seat. ‘A Muunzr—Give them what? guilty of murder or treason. % ified the vy discussion, ] am afraid the whole time will be taken up Mr. AsHizy—Nor any other man. 5 queationably violate the statute against aiding slaves to with it, and the important subjects connected with the Mr. Lovasoy (taking bis place in the Clerk’s desk) re- you to eecape; but no blood was shed, except by the panic: Bil itself overi » sumed—Mr. Chairman, 1 was about stating, when inter- | aren whom you turn out to herd together ttrickea multitude, till Stevens was fired upon while Mr. Siexmax—I will atate that, as I understand it, the | rupted, that the ree upon which slavebolding was | joes that roam upon the Western prairies? You cannot | waving a flag of truce. The only murder was that of @edate may be as general upon this bill in ite present con- | sought to be justided in this country would, if carried out . It may be asked, Sir, when I confose that I have snatched heroic ition as upon the President's Message. It is within the | in the affairs of the universe, transform Jehovah, the | nocontrol over this matter, why discuss itt why talk and tees e House, however, at a Stine, fa make the Reseiaey = Jia onto ~ ns =) rolling the huge about it? Despot sacrificed three noble: to atem of crime. The nations @epecial order; after which, must be confint A Mr. Sivcumrox—I want to know if the gentleman gives ani ‘Mr. | of the earth are taught by our example. The American 8.—Benj. F. Bu mensa strieliy to the quesiion under cdasideration. I ize the | ADd mangled and Bleeding bodies of tannan Deings (laugh- | yee am be oe vs to confront slavery, and eak | Tepatiie must Tepess (sem: smone the caterer cao: |: pepslloe ta donna Lemalls = lawyer of ion pleasure of the House, I propose, in the course of abont | ter on the democratic side), on the ground that he was in- | “Mir, Lovsor—I must decline to yield to the gentleman, | what right this Caliban bas upon earth? Isay'no right. | earth. Sia dle. Cathargo est delenda. ix election ‘& week, to eubmit that motion to the House. finitely superior, and that they wore an !aferior race. ‘Mr. Sixciston—I want to answer the genYeman’s ques. | My honest conviction—and I do not know why gentlemen K ‘Te CiuammaxN—The Chair supposes that general debate Mr. Garrett (10 his seat)—The man is crazy. tion by asking him another. I want to know if he gives | need take offence, they need not unless the: je in order upon this dill, the House now being in the Mr. Lovksoy —The second ground upon which it is | homes to the negroes he carries from the South to Canada | bonest conviction is, that all these slaveholding laws have | all these events, are not these’ expressions of rage and Committee of the Whole on the state of the Union, and | attempted to justify slavery, or slaveholding, is, that | and other places? the same moral power and force that rules among pirates | Vengeance. Instead of being stimulated to revenge, Vir- m0 special order ponding. it ig a mode of imparting Christianity and civilization | ""4 Stesmmn—The negroes he steals? have for the distribution of their booty; that ginia the lesson 4 My. Lovesoy—I was about to say, when interrupted, | to i“ slaves. Mr. Chairman, I would fixe to know ‘The Cusmmax—The gentleman from Mississippi is not | among robbers bave for the divigion of their spolls; and 1p’ ought Fessenden an honest, teat {am aware that the practical quéation presented te | Bow slavebolding communities can impart that of | m order. although I do not believe gentlemen have behaved ‘very pI candid man, President of ihe Townsend Baak aed & ‘thie House and to the country is, whether slavery shall | whi ey are not in the possession. The truth is that | ir, Barkspare—I hope my colleague will hold no par- | handsomely to mo, Iam going to add, noti | oi corn, democrat of old. He will do what he believes to ‘be extended beyond its present limits, as that is the only | the practice of slaveholding has a powerful tendency | jey with that perjured negro thief. that I do not mean to say that gentlemen who are slsye- | try yard, ebe let whatever may stand in his way. He is qeeetion over which they have exclusive jurisdiction. | to drag communities back to barbarism. It is actually ‘Mr. Lovayoy—it is asked, why discum this question? | holders weuld be guilty of these Jar things—that | nées, in view of of slaveholdin; las. : Aad if slavery were contented to remain restricted, and | having that effect rae slave States of this Union; | why talk about it, when it {8 confessed that we have no | is not the point—I am talking about this matter in the Mr. Manny’ (Va.)—And come 9.—H. H. Stevens, of Dudley. Goes for Douglas. ‘ad its future where it now is, we might perhaps forbear | 804, were it not for the Christian women that cide gone | constituted power to legislate upon it? Iwill tell you, Mr. | court of conscience, in the court of right and wrong; | do with you as lid with Geo. W. Gill, of Worcester, a man of some this diecursion. But when it is proposed to extend what is | from free States and intermarried ip the slave States, | Chairman. It will be recollected that Mr. Webster once | and I insist that any laws for enslaving men have just the | bigh as a jan, anda ‘working de whether he works for termed an institution—but wi is not an institution, which saa were it not for those noble women of the slave States, taid, when speaking of the threatened interposition of | same moral force as the arrangement among robbere and others, he bas never held federal office Sa Peace he oes aoe ore eiatis = Ape Lemby A Mt Geer ae = Ruegia to snatch Koeguth from the protection of Turkey, pirates for distributing their ls. I want to know —— be said to work ‘somebod: ure, ence: , ; make ‘zadais of this practice’ and what wil they prove to be if | States to-day would be as far back in barbarism as the | {°F ‘he Purpose of excrificing him on the altar of despot. | by what right you can come and make mo s slave? | I allowed ex; ? Tam aware it has been stated State of Mexico. It is simply from that infiltration— Pia | * Mr. Savcrtox—I wish to Koow if the gontloman iatends | ,, Gentlemen, there is something on earth greater than arbi Sal yb ts Ypulse by tat veh ne THE CHARLESTON CONVENTION. Mae "oor i the morale of slavery is settled; that its or despotic power, The iighta! py 1a ‘and the | ®#y that the mother have her child, given to @thalea are no longer to be discussed; that they were eet- | to cast any insinuation or slur upon the women of the | Tehcnrtes ewener, and tie eonbeake bor id nee | from God through the ‘of maternity? Hear tied ages ago by the Stagirite of Greece, and have beon | Scutb. I want to know that distinctly and empbalically; | put tere i cadieg soon amore aking maternity’ Beiter Ste | em pei | cer Se erareeed | metre eeceeccee, | ame oe nnn Cation Nope and us as sunset w fe are ‘and aro wi ivil- G fold that palorantes Will pay, slavebsidiog will go, | _ SEVERAL Meurens—Oh, no. He gives all praiso to the | ised world. ae peuaht my tad aa Chanees of the Democracy, Precieely upon the same principle we might say: that | Women of the South. He compliments them. ‘The Avon to the Severn runs; Tte tiny wings upon my Shore sebhery wiley robber il go mere cacy | pM, Sime repent at beanies |e orl iad et vanais tn secon eae tin 0, and where adi; aman 1 men, or iment the women - - lnchuaper ihan thas of Deeves cannibalism will go, becanse | North at thelr expense, I will hold him accountable (or it. ‘Wice as the waters be. take thet Suttering and panting Birdlk The Departure of the New Zingiand Mwill pay. Sir, than robbery, than piracy, than poly- The Cuamman—The gentleman from Mississippi is not To continue the quotation with different application | @ 7 s! mp coll ‘ike is 5 qamy, clavebolding is worse— tore criminal, more inja. | in order. The gentleman from Illinois will proceed. and alight variation ofthe language, 1 sey, gentlomen, ite vie! Delegation, ; Flees io man, and consequently more offensive to God. | Mr. Lovgzoy—It is eimply by this contact wit free com- | if the blood of innocent men is by am absolute, un- | ther toh the gifted ‘anthorees? wae it ao, &e, &o. * willanies. sore vay ae ey ai a apolen eee want hem tree eed per teroy jee ee sewat pacity? te will sing ea tee wife of venerable and venerated every cri rpetrat among men a an ‘moral crecitte, ead Olsoulye andl combine then all, and | Women of slave States—who had not the poor privi earth; it will mix with the waters of the ocean; the whole | WS because she was its mother, and, the resultant ainalgam is slaveholding. It has the violence | that Sarah of old bad of sending the Hagars and lahmacie | Civilized world will snuff jt in the air, and it will return THE NEW ENGLAND DELEGATIONS. of robbery. vi ps telat preeireiree paral their purity and Christian | with awful retribution on the heads of those violators of im God’s name, my ‘is 1 OUR BOSTON CORRESPONDENCE. A Muwrer—You are joking. aracter, and their testimony against the system, that . 5 child Mr. Lormior—No, sir; 1 tn speaking ia dead earnest, | they were prevented from that retroceesion toward’ bar- i . <> Rais to mine Chak 6 ainve. Seles oat ont Sq a Boston, April 11, 1860. nai. I ‘Before God, God’s own truth. Ithasthe violence of rob: | barism. > io ve i Proaivitics of the Prominent Delegates—Douglas and Gen. ly . the blood and cruelty of piracy; it has the offensive | Several Maxbers.—That is what he said fore the public sentiment of the Christian and civilized Jef. Davis—Gen. Benj. F. Butler Goes for Gen. Jef, | _ Cberl oom) ey an to hold up to universal rebro’ " before. pedbrat Tusts of polygamy, all combined and concen- | _ Mr. Loreyor— se, i you fe into the Smithsonian a we a. cin ati Davis—The Steamer 8. R. Spaulding and her Precious | Capitol at Washington, It is also. gentlemen have been in itself, with aggravations that neither one of these | Inetitution or into ‘ou will find im- f » % Living (Freight, dc. favor of Douglas. ‘wated erimes ever knew or dreamed of. Now, Mr. Chairman, | plements of bus! imported Ja} and | Atrocity, in all ite head Sa. of slavery is pisced, #0 far as I know, ipa, showing sag a is tana developensut io holding up So peacken oe, Teprobating it. Oar, The steamer 8. R. Spalding, under command of sue Rare qrounte= the inferiority of the enslay- | Civilization as the implements that you find on the | 80d, sir, that public sentiment of world will | avery slave bas a right to bie (ai eae Captain E. Howes, leaves this port on Friday, at five jlantations. Now, sir, the truth is, that th ‘actic burn upon this practice ofslavery, ultimately secure tomem, and, tairdiy: the gaarantecr ct | of sivenolding “drags slaveholdiog’ oommunitee ‘us, | ‘a removal in the only proper way—by the action of ie slave laws. Every slave hase right to run away in spit of | F-M., for the purpose of conveying the New Hagland ie constitation, Thess are’'the thrée main argumenta | ther below the, plane of the Christian civilization of | slave States themselves pee satan aa Bidet IT wore aslave and had T the nanioe td cress n | democratic delegations to Charleston—or such as choose vat for justify slavery, and consequently vo justify age than vilization which ,the slave receives rman, my time is passing away, and I m' : ? a eaesltete 1 | to accept of her elegant accommodations for the cruise— | cratic State Comm! Pod : on. I wantto to a few things that have been neceseary to achieve my freedom, I would not hesitate to a ites. Preferences for the wey, Thold that the extreme clevgtee a eave ae. pee es ponseenians: 7 ate MD dureg 6 sactinate enduion af the jason au up and bridge over the chasm that yawns between | price only one hundred dollars, fare, fireworks and fun ee piace of Judge wells. Ts an ola , OD question, are the only d the heaven of freedom with in business 3 of ft. I am right, or the fire- | impart civilization and Christianity? It isa strange mode | While this hall was echoing with undulations that woul an of the | included. The Spalding is one of the fleotest steamers ‘Marcy, Orleans. maT atbey aren iaright i Virgin iis right of, Christianizing a race to torn them over into Sratiem, have drowned the lupine chorus of the lps, of Helper, | Cotnrottie iuat man! Give. him bis ieesar "| afloat, and has made one of the quickest pasmages to Sa- | old democrét, Has held geverai orociment Sint a8 itis wrongeverywhere. | without auy legal marriage. Among the four million bon sree ane rism, d toreb fas , | titted to it from his God. With these views, I do not | vannah on record. She is fully garrisoned, pyrotecniced TE Re oreo candidate for Congress fro the First ‘dto the first t—the inferiority of | slaves in this country there is not a single husband or LD erp eee tn| rie tare i uot legally a bonane Ta rerehild. There | from Virginia stood up in bis place and wanted’ to know fm pone po, helo sway Setave: and musiced, and the excursion will undoubtedly be jut does it follow, therefore, that (t | is nota single home or hearthstone among these four mil- | Where there was aman who would endorse the Helper | ‘lk Jon tat 8 year ago, I need not repeat it. oné of the utmost pleasure. man simply because he is inferior? | lion. And you propose to civilize and Christianize a peo- | book. He wanted such s man, if there was one here, to . ptt oa - Vs abhorrent doctrine. It would pigoe | ple without giving them homes, without allowing them ‘stand up, that he might look upon the traitor. Mr. Chair- our departare, © description of the proclisities at the mercy of the strong; it | the conjugal and parental relations, and without having ees one the cir- | Comes and takes the babe, flesh of of seme of the New England delegates to this all-important to senreriet ce rich; it woula | those relations sanctioned and protected by law. Mr. | culation of the Helper book. Iaigned it ney. I ? Who steals? I’tell you convention may not be uninteresting. So we will proceed © young lawyer, residing in Dover. that are deficient in A the mercy of | Chairman, no community can make one stp of progress was neither engrosed nor abstracted. | I did it in helping a fugitive sla togi Jost commencing life, takes an active part in politi gifted in mental endowment. Theprincipleof | in civilizing a race tll — give them you it pnatching a lamb from the jaws of es Father is an ‘old demoorat, ‘a substantial ~ 4 ruman beings because they are inferior is thie: | protect the sanclity of the home, ae we held it should {ng an infant from the talond of an eagle Not a vit tent, | 2¥ ACCOUNT OF SOME OF THR NEW ENGLAND DELRGATES, CO!- | ham. Decidedly i favor ot Donglas tip him up; if he is weak, dim regard to these Mormons on the plains | conver ® recommendation | (08 07h, 'has the uation crouched and ‘oowered in thea LATED YROM RESPONSIBLE BOURCRS. ‘3—Aaron P. Hughes, @ prominent, la living ‘weight of years, strike him, for he | of Christianizing them, sir! Christianizing them 3 lation 4 pang abamsanaeee and cowe pre- ‘MASRACHUSHTTS. in Nashua. Formerly an old line whig, Tat tor the Wir adeno tobe often ar him, and E slave States bayo a right : eet dl Srare Derscarss.—Caleb Cushing, of Newburyport, | pest six years has acted af @ oconswrent’ democrat. Ie , deceive him. This, sir, is the doctrine of | to exc! patent for it Taking them out | Clark), or of any other gentleman in the Houeo or this well known to the civilised world as one of the ablest | now a member of the democratic State Committere. Once , and the doctrine of devils as well, and there | in the sight of the church, as one was taken out not long | Out of the House. 1 will sign a paper recommending the | oh her it will t statesmen and soundest jurists the whig for Congress his district, Strong 4a ne piace in the universe outside the five: points of hell | ago in the Stato of Tenneseec, by a Presbyterian elder circulation of the Bible or the Koran, Young’s “Night | Woitser 1 mis pay © &9 the for Douglas. ‘and the democratic party where the practice and preva. | and laid down on his face on the ground, his hands and | Thoughts,” or Tom Moore's ‘‘Anacreon,” Jonathan Bi- | (Olt ie. (Langhter.) 4. tear the flesh Mayor Harrington, of- Manchester—the man st whose Jeaee of such doctrines would not be a disgrace. (Laugh | feet extended to their utmost tension, and lied to pickets, | wards on'the ‘“Deorees,” or Tom Paine’s “‘age of Rea. | Wit, and crush the bones and te AY . Prefer for Gen. Jefferson Davis. ‘Siaeeaae ee Yer.) If the strong of the earth are to enslave the woak | and the Gospel whipped into him with the broadside of a | tom,” just as T please, I claim the privilege, as an | {not me to gh lucas du sions, but you will HOA ‘ . eg here, it would justity angels in enslaving men because | hand saw, discolored whelks of sanctification being | American citizen, of writing my name and recommending | [0 ,/ebt to Eo with int flesh in your —-_ of ahey are superior; and archangels in turn would be justi. | raised between the teeth every time this Gospel agency | the circulation of’ any and every book, without being held | Co'riprws. | Wedeay it. My tme ls passing; I must go Sed in mubjagating those who are inferior in intellect and | fell upon the naked and quivering flesh of the tortured | amenable to gentlemen upon this floor, or anywhere elso. | Frown et . was ‘position, and ultimately it would transform Jehovah into | convert. (Laughter.) That is my answer in regard toit. I have more than 2 by President Pierce Superintendent of the ‘un infinite juggernaut, rolling the huge wheels of his om- A Democraric Memner—Did he get the Gospel in? | thatto say. Isay nothing about some points in the book. Mr. Apratx—I propose that we give the gentleman more | Armory, but resigned that post for tne purpose of accept- mipetence-—— (Tavghter.) I have no doubt that there is considerable bombast and | time. the offipe he now holds. Isepopular man. (Mr. Lovejoy had advanced into the area, and occupied ‘Mr. Lovgsor—Christianized ag a young girl was Chris- | {ustian and violence of language in it, because the suthor Mr. Lovzjoy—I will answer all questions, if the House liver Stevens, of boston—-a young lawyer. Always a ‘the space fronting the democratic benches. } tianized in this city since the session of Congress, by | Was educated in slave State; and the rhetoric which | will give me more time. (Cries of ‘No! no!” ‘Give him | democrat. Was once President of the Common Council of Mr. Pryor (advancing from the democratic side of the | being whipped and sent to the garret, and found dead in | comes from that quarter is apt to. have these characteris- | time,”’ &c. ) Boston. sss Douglas man, but will follow the ‘House towards Mr, SinGieroN—No, sir; any gentleman shall have | lead of Collector Whitney. ‘Senate, and the the area where Mr. Lovejoy stood)—The | the morning, with bleod oozing from nose and ears. tics, Jog) But the phi hy—the gist of the from Illinois (Mr. Lovejoy) shall not ‘approach A Dxwocratic Mewar—Where does that authority come | book—is what? It is the addrees of @ citizen of a slave side of the House, shaking his fists and talking in the | from? State to his fellow citizens in regard to the subject of ‘ny be has talked. | Is is bad enough to he compelled to | _ Mr. Lovevox—I do not know whether religious rites | slavery, recommending, in substance, the organization ait here and hear him utter his treagonable and insulting | were had or not. cero eee ey priest was | Of republican party in North Carolina and in all the Janguage; but he shall not, sir, come upon this side of the | invited in to utter impious prayers before God that the last | other slave States. I hope to see that done; and I to see it done before very long. You of the State time, but not such a mean, despicable wretch as that. Isaac Davis, of Worcester—s lawyer, and a man of election. Mr. Lovrsor—When the Jews could not do anything fortune.’ Prominent member of the Baptist, church, reeks eto bh else they spit upon Christ, and sald he was possessed of a | and an original friend of President Buchanan. Mr. Doug. devil. (Langhter.) One of the earliest settlements of | las would not be his first choice. S Virginia was made by a fugitive slave. John Smith was Distucr DetecaTss—1.—Mr. C. N. Swift, of New Bed- ‘Bouse, shaking his fist in our . flagellation might have whi} in Christianity enough to may | captured in war and sold to be high-toned, chivalrous | ford, dealer in live onk timber. Always acted Mr. Fanxswonrs—lt is not for the gentleman to say | eave her Widens ena Srventoun el (Uaughter And xin M. Chay, a8 you threaten to do; bat «iho | Turk, and put atthe task of threshing. Tho master rode with’ the whig party until the nomination of what is treason and what is not. now, alarmed, a good black walnut coffin is made, and de- | blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church ”” You may | up to the barn door one day, and said, ‘Jack, you ras- | Buchanan, and is the President’s personal friend. Mr. Porrar—We listened to gentlemen upon the other | coraled with white ribbons, and placed in the hearse, | shed his blood, as you shed the blood of my brother on | cal, hig ents you thresh faster?’ Jack—horresco refer- | He is understood to have $10,000 to carry aide for eight weeks, when they denounced the members | followed byfa hack, containing, I presume, the murderess; | the banka of the Mississippi twenty years ago: and what | rens/—flew at his master, killed-him with his flail, (oh, | Pennsylvania for Bucbanap that act of libe- | The delegates from this State ‘upon this side in violent and offensive language. We lis- | and my attention iscalled tothe cortége: ‘‘See, Mr. Lovejoy, | then? Iam here to-day, thank God, to vindicate tho | fora Harper’s Ferry Committee ! into the vacant | rality has bean generally and popularly sscribed to Abra. | netmaker of the Green Mountain to them quietly, and heard them through. And | there is a slave funeral! Is that treating them like brutes? | Principles baptized in his blood, You may shed his blood; | faddle and escaped, and came and settled Jamestown. | ham H. Howland. He bas had much influence in the | heard from. dened now, sir. this side shall be heard, let the consequences be | Look into the coffin! Took into the carriage!” You say “| and what then? A republican party will spring up in Onyfor & South-side preacher to admonish John to stay | distribution of offices in Massachusetts, and has received RHODE ISLAND what they may. this is horrid. I know it is horrid. 1 know it is horrid to | Kentucky and in all the slave States ere long; and and serve his master, whose money he was, like a good | some fat contracts from the government in reward for Is atraight out Douglas. ‘Mr. Pryon—The point I make is this— hold men in slavery. I know itis horrid to doom four | disunionists and gentlemen whom you see a0 violent now | ‘‘ Christian dog!’ A moment, sir. Let us look at this | bis services during the last Presidential cat - It is . ‘The Cusiruan—The Chair will receive no motion and | million human beings to the condition of chattels, to be | Will be displaced by more moderate and—if I may say so | question aside from its moral aspects. And I want to | stated that it was at his solicitation Gen. ey was ap- CONNECTICUT. My : All for Douglas, except one delegate (Mr. Bishdp). know what right slavery, or a slaveholder, bas to go with ited Collector of Boston: His only choice is Mr. Bu- ‘i flaves into the common Territories of the ‘Unitod States. | Soanan. MS. was defosied au Stave delegate By Ges, | On her arrival at Baltimore, will take on board a large living freight Her hnear no gentleman until members resume their seats and | held pro nullis , taken for no bergen being offensive—more sensible men. I believe in You talk about the equality of the States, and I grant it. | Cushing. smoubt.cf ve ‘order is restored in the hall. persons, for dead perevoe, tor tear footed Diasta_-tnen a2 doctrine. Ido not endorse every expression in the ‘Mr. Cox—I rise toa point of order. 1 insist that the | much entitlea to freedom as you and I. Sir, | Helper book, for I have not stndied every expression; but seat. gentleman (rom [linois ahall speak from his the testimony of all religious societies in the slave | the philosophy of the book, the idea of organizing « ‘The citizens of a slage State have all the rights in the Ter--| Edward Merrill, a merchant of New Bedford. Alw: Precious living froth: ripen gripe nnd Mr. ParoRThet isthe point take.. Let the gentle. | States is that the slaves ‘aro ati heathen, ‘cad'n'g | inthe slave Sates as galas! slavery, Tom in tavor of, | ritories that a cllizen of «free Biale has. “ou have tho | a democrat.” lected ou tho sme ucket wit Mrs sere, | ST° Lg gg em Rl di ay maa speak from Liege sere Am under the rales th civil. | and Texpeot to see ft accomplished. What is the objec. | right, I concede, Sogo into the common Territories and live | and hes the same preferences, high character of the larder and the the ie-entitled to say; but, sir, he not comme upoa this i The int that is the ? jection of the re with any kind ef can take, but you 2.—Phineas W. Leland, of Fall et petcaet at ‘wide, shaking bis fist in our faces, and talking in the style | relicd on to justify slaveholding is, that it is constitu. | United States, an American citizen, addressed himself to | have not the right to take slaves. ‘This is the distinction | Brown University in 1824, and studied science of aaa eo has talked. Ho-ehall not come hero gesticulating in a | tional—that it is guaranteed by the constitution of the | his fellow citizens, ina al way, through the , | Tmake. At a liberal estimate there are mot more than | medicine with Dr. Shattuck, of Boston. He received the | THE FLAGSHIP OF THE DEMOCRATIC menacing and ruffianly manner. United States, Now, Mr. Chairman, 1 have heard it | and for this you find fault with him aud say | two millions of people in the United States interested in | degree of M.D. at Bowdoin College, Me., in 1826, and SQUADRON. Mr. Porrme—You are doing the same thing. declared over and over again that the constitutioa | that he must be banged, and that any man who signed | slave labor. There are only four hundred thousand (hom ee in his profession for several years in Medfeid, ‘The Gnuixwax—Gentlemen will resume their seats. guarantees slavery. I deny it. In no article, in no | ® recommendation for the circulation of his book is a | slaveholders. There are thirty millions a in , but abandoned it in 1834, on receit int- OUR BOSTON CORRESPONDENCE. Mr. Cox—If the gentleman from Illinois goes on ashe | section, in no line, inno word, in no syllable, can there | ‘“blighting, blasting, burning, withering curse,” and must | this country. There are twenty-eight in- | ment of Collector of the Customs for the district of Fall Orr Fort INDEPENDENCE, Meas ane lated for him. ‘be any recognition or sanction of human slavery found | not occupy that chair. I want to know if ithas come to | terested in the system of free labor, and two millions in | River, which office he has held many years and continues Boston Harnor, April 13, 1860. Pe ‘addressing Mr. Lovejoy)—You shall | m the constitution of the United States. It is notthere. | this? Has not an American citizen a right to to an | that of slave labor. The free system accommodates | to hold at this present time. Dr. Leiand was one of the | ine Degarture for Charleston—List of Pasengers— Parting ‘mot come upon this side.of the House. It always recognises human beings as persons, and never | American citizen? I want the right cf uttering what I | some cight millions in the slave States better than the | Senators for Bristol county in 1842, and was elected Pres!- ‘Mr. ADRAIN—To avoid all er souareie suggest to | as property. It does not make use of the words ‘‘slave’’ | say here in Richmond. Iclaim the right Yo say whatI | slave system: Here is the point. if slavery — dent of the Senate. He has always been a democrat, en- Salutes, dic. ‘the gentleman from Illinois to from his seat. We | or “slavery.” why, ey when I came up to take the here in Charleston. the confidence of his party, and is an ardent admirer ‘The noble steamship 8. R. Spaulding, Captain Howes, all Knew him to bea man of courage, and that he cannot consti . BonnaM— You had better try it. pur- | and an able advocate of the principles of Jefferson and | jeft Central wHarf at fivo o’clock this afternoon afters « he intimidated. Mr. Lovzsov—Yes, sir, Iam going to invoke the aid of literary attainments are of a th order; - ‘Mg. Purox—No one wants to intimidate him. the general government to protect me, as an American has often been s contributor to several of the brief but cheery interchange of congratulations among y ‘Mr. Lova0s—No one can intimidate me. citizen, in my rights as an merican citizen. newspapers and of the day; has written seve- | ome of the passengers, and some of the most solid of Mr. ADmaix—I know that. I suggest to the gentleman constitution, because I beleive in the constitu. | I can go to England to-day, and in London, or campaign documents, one of which, “Is the North | the solid men of Boston. Gilmore's celebrated band, ‘that be contince his oe from his scat. tion because { hold, to it, because my heart is loyal to it. | anywhere clee, discuss the question of Church and State; Right,” was very bighly, complimented by a late Preai- “4 {Thirty or forty of the members from both sides of the ry part and parcel aud portion of it I believe in ; but i | Ican discuss the question of a monarchical goverament dent of the United . Until very the hag | Calculated to perform an interesting part in the interest- Bouse gathered in the area about Mr. Lovejoy and Mr. | do not believe in the constructien put upon it by those | as compared with a republican form of government. [ been a gentleman of very moderate meaus, but last year | ing exercises of the excursion, is on board, and has al- Ee renee confonion, who claim its recognition and staction to the practice of | cam do thie anywnore in England, but I cannot go into a he had an independent fortune bequeathed him by his | ready discoursed some excellent masic. The . SOmN COCERANY—I' move -tkat the Committee rise, | alavebolding. Slave State and open my lips in regard to the qhestien ¢ are to the late brother, David W. Leland, of the house of Leland oe an it isthe only way wo can get rid of this disturbance. Mr. Banksosts—No, sir; you atand there to-day en | slavery —_ ‘opens the doors of the dining hall, and says, | Brothers & Co., of Charleston,'S.C. He goes to Charles. | ®tarted amid the cheers of » multitude of spectators, the Mr. Porsaa—tI do not believe that side of the House can | infamous, perjured villain. (Calls to order. Mr. (¥a.)—No; we would hang you higher than | ‘Walk in, gentlemen;” but if a man sitting there is | ton untrammelied and unpledged and no doubt cast ) firing of cannon, &c. say where # momber shall speak; and they shalluot | Mr. Asuxons—Yea, he is a perjured villain; and he | Haman. Romer with & contageous disease, no one will | his ballot for the most ‘available man.”” The following is. list of of whom: be A.) perjures himself every hour he occupios a seat on thie | Mr. Lovasor—I cannot go toa slave State and utter my | goin. It is as much an exclusion as {f the deors ler Lincoln, of Hingham, is extensively engaged id Passengers, some i Mr. Socizsox—The gentieman from Illinois shall net | floor. (Renewed calle to order.) . sentiments to free citizens like myself. and against his entrance. So if sla. | in mercantile businesgin the city of Boston. has al. | bowever, are not yet on board:— make that speech upon this side of the iouse. ‘Mr. SixcizTos—And a negro thief into the bargain, ‘Mr. Mims—Can you go to England and incite the labor | very goes, cannot, I favor the equality of the democrat, monn tall lee! Hon. Benjamin F. Butler, Dr. George B. Loring, ‘Mr. Boxsmrs—Mhere is arule of thie House which re- | Mr. Lovzsox—I swore to su the constitution, be- ing clames to murder te ariatocracy, ox to assassinate | 8 I favor the right of every citizen of @ slave State At the Distriot tion Inst | Cologel Jobn 1. He i L. Wales, Ezra quitencach man to speak from his seat. ‘Pho gentleman | cause I believe in it ido not believe im their consiruc- | the Queen? to go into ; but I deny that he has the cast on the OF eee Reet wa Tiinais was not in his seat when he was 8) - | ton of it. It is as wellknown as any historical fact can Mr. Lovmsoy—I have no desire to, nor haye I any de- it elaveholding there, for tt is not an insti. high toned, honorable gentleman, | Trull, Thomas J. Dunbar, Hon. Walter Fessenden Be caanet, and ae pa eel 0 this side in a ey ‘hat the framone of the constitution so worded | sire Sen Suieaaben: Se te Ido claim fata was iid peirceny? tong Gat tee tes i Lege for the pe F snd friend, Cornelius Doherty, D. W. Lawrence, “ menacing manner. consequences | it as that it never should recognise the right question of slavery an; —buta practice like pelygamy. ve coun heart De what they will. He must spoak trom bie seat, beg! PRO, | rang square foot of American soll over which the stars | a right 10 go dhere and practice this high ‘crime, 80" tajus and will have | Calvin Bridgman, Major B. F. Weleon, Dr. Georgo W. dir. Grow—T move that the rise. and stripes float, and to which the privil ‘and immu. | riows to man. #o offensive to God. this is the question: ‘Toe CRarmman—Gentlemen must resume their sate. . They think that because I | nities of the constitutionextend. Under constitution, | whether these twenty: it million people shall be ac- Mr. Sox—let the gentleman from Tilinois take Bis seat. | swore to su) the constitutian, I swore to the } which guarantees to me free speck, [ claim it, and Ide. | commodated, or two people shall be accommmo- Mr. Wasuncexs. i.—Let others be seated, and xt my | practice of tlaveholding. Sir, alavehol in Virginia is | mand it. nO mere under the control cr tee of the constita- Mr. Bornam—I ask the gentieman shy he does not at- tion than slavery in Cuba, or cl, OF @ny other part of meee te tan vanten contro! or gearantee of the consti. Mr. Lovaoy- . The gentleman comes tution—not one particle. of x axD—I wish to aak the man whether | the laboring classes in Northern Bales as ‘greasy deserved to be | mechanics,” ‘filthy operatives,’’ “‘smail-Gsted farmers,” ed and secepted—whether, at any time in his life, | and they jeer at us as worse than slaves. . This insulting fhe held that the constitution ought to befrodden under | | can be, and is, ued in the free States without foot? mobeteton or injury. ‘Yet they say, “if you come here Kir. Lovavor—Never, sir; never. I always defended it | and utter the /sentiments w! you smeerely believe, and always will, whether it be the democrate who | we wili hang you.” If a aechamic from a pervert it, or the disunionists who trample on it. free State Fees there and utters the sentiment Mr. MoCrxnxaxp—If the gentleman says he never said | that he thinks—if they had more white laborers and £04 1 am not prepared to contradict him, for Iknow no- | fewer black ones, tha labor in the would be thi. %@, personally, about it; but 1 had understood that the hat gent, Wan once uttered this that ‘‘the consti- tution Vass piece of rotten that ought to bs trodden ‘2der foot.’’ Mr. Loy'Gor—Yee; Z

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