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2 NEW YORK HERALD! SATURDAY, MAY 19; 1860.—TRIPLE SHEBT tence as = Obristian organisation. fhe opinions of oar Address to the National METHODIST GENERAL CONFERENCE. | screed tomcer nesanst ve recounted here Tubing | 1 tua thew roport, which st linge’ Tee ndoraqnes, pombe ne navn domevuse | NEWS FROM CEATRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA. re was common in y the spir ¢ Th . Ke tad E , ieorne mmngea 2 grruad | bt ene Grecn ota in omierin at Rady By rome Samoa to prawrre alaparet it | gauge rom aapuca, WA pce sh at as otal rom ~ democretio bretht REPORTS ON THE SLAVERY QUESTION, | wtierca arcatimony against slavery, immortal as nisown | yiexing subject, and also its uty In the proulen, vniag | ab thelr brethren throughout the Uniied | Jeft on the 10th inst, arrived at thie port yesterday ame. Hie genuine sone inthe gasoel have foliowed hit | unable toagres with the majority of the oomuiie®, 48 | Sore Te ings of the Convention recently assembled | ™OFning, with later advices from South and Central Contrary wo the laws of God, man ant uaiuro, aud ba | a unease ee a eeeten Sema oe y have develope: sivorgenoe of opinion, be- | America, The United Stalesstesuier Babine was at Asp Delegations from the Local Preachers’ | '¥! to ciety; contrary to tne dictates of covscienoe & 1 | report:— oe tween the of States in relation to | fall, poerees a a et ohn =e would frag In order to present our position on thie question with Se reeee which form the homeo cor eee. oe _——— ore 1o ” e eral Confereat « pational democratic Cincinnati Association, Tr declare the practice alartoliag o bo “coutrary | Story:~op nase we fomaget an unsivsios chee, wet ie cordial prorat ail mo Deliave tase ated NEWS FROM THE SOUTH PACIFIC, - goldea law "Y | wonderfully owned of God aad emmently saccess‘ul in Same 4 : a ree . to the inalienable rights of mankind, a8 well a8 to evo-y Soriotaral holiness over these lands; our mid aunciee, seers, and endowed in all reepects wilt | The Mimes of Wealthy | Petitions from Wesleysns in England on | 90! the Bercvvo- he Sowtence tom, | Merny vrtt 10 tn, fro, aod the anowitgy of od wa 5 te take immediately some effectaal method to ex- jog a our ane , Sr cag er cies oo 4 j Slavery Rejected. tirpate tbie abomination from amcag as, and for that par. | Were converted and cubase "uae Oc emodiat se we aid the folowing to the rules of our -” | fold. In no part of ine country did our church n followed a plan of emancipation, specifying the age | find more favor and meet with more success Reperts of the Majority and | «1 woicn every person held in slavery should be tree, and | than in the elaveholding States Firm in our declaring that no person thereafter holiing slaves suould | convictions and honest im our avowal of them, we placed Minority. be admitted ini the wociety or to the Lord’s Suppor till | Sur Insciphine in the hands of the slaveholser, contain! be bad previously comphed with these rales conceraipg | provisions which limited his authority over the slave, aa: tlavery. A nuove followed these stringent measures, 4¢- | mad> nim in reality the slave’s guardian unser the euper- Nu ect the REPORTS OF THE COMMITTEE ON SLAVERY. | fe %e ee scre*tonanont with the laws of ths States ta In short, “we wugut the converted (hat platform. During the four years, however, which have siace inter- Destruction of Life and y—Fears vened, ik bas bocome paintall ‘apparent that the construc: J tion deemed by us 20 aaltestly is controverted by ofa French Bombardment at Callao, de. * maby members of our perty; OUR PANAMA CORRESPONDENCE. Supposed to find countenance in that rinci- Panama, May 9, 1860. ‘The English steamer Valparaiso, from the Weat Voast,ar- rived at this port on the 6th inst, bringing dates from ‘Valparaiso to the 16th ult., and Callao to the 27th, 8 Jook upon his save as an immortal being, tte also affirmed and believ —_— whicd they resided; and also, io view of pecaliar cirvum- | ang to provide for bis moral and religious caltivation BY | Diente wtkin the hu cinot slave toni CHILE. y that ‘n tbhetr circumatapces bave stances, giving the members ia Virginia two yoars ia | ‘teaching bin to read the word of God, aud allowing him ‘dey tnvo conssienttovaly Judged 10 A Split in the Gouference in | "ch (> comply wim these regulahont. As iueee mee | ouena: pudle worship ou our regular days ot divae | beta bei power, to snnvrer the ends of Daso\ng fa ox Ped MINES OF COQUIMBO—NEW DISCOVERIES—GREAT sures were a0mitted to constitute # new term of momber- | service.’ Under this scriptaral disolj , We wore instru. | ‘rminsting IN ‘CREASE IN CUSTOM HOUSE RECEIPTS—LINE @ - ebip, all persons were allowed to choose between voluate ° church on the border, and it BTEAMERS FRO! ABA AMA—AMBRI@ Prospective, rily tetiring and being expelled. About six months ater { Denial ip converting both masters and slaves, besides Such ie the aio 4 the church on the border, and I ned political axioms os VALPARAIRO TO PAM , breaking the yoke the necks of thousands where | is the position held by CAN ENTERPRISE. aa, &o., ae .— nan 9 poss Big gaol boo Ae mad ere SS Rot possi sie b: Pg om ad on Lye Se = 5 an J hg Nay ar This Tepublie continues quiet and prosperous. Every the mncies oes. gree o Bie ong of Seaenal ustoven . cenaty or selfish urpoten, ought to be made a teat kof ‘~ gmenget whom ‘were delogates from Peausylvania wee Spates np Ba a, To e. ming "8 13. . . " i . few of th sustained nd New . POURTEENTH DAY'S PROCEEDINGS. | | Pospention in tbo. ceclaration, We co hola im the | B94 yucone tplieated te We great ee ia soe, peraoe of | fcriturearand alo by Air. Werle), wao recsived slare: | Tho Slaten which adopted this tive electoral | Prive a aud “about tures hundred coppet SPRCIAL REPORT FOR nse — we coGaetabhomreaep ibe reaction et-eibveesy ae paneal og ove of cur bishops Then came tne trial of our anti- | boiders into Smahee, per ‘strict aocordance with = bye red nd oe on wilt a eats ere mines, are already profitably worked, a new nents crPALO, May 16,1860. | ceste to see! vuction wiee and praden' the instructions esleyan connection to thelr | ‘av lemocratic nominces, an grou iscovered, The Conference was called to order by Bishop Saavox, | Mears” In 1760tbe goueral rule rod, The buviog or | Thr CGuth covtenven that as the lever the Saieln waleh | mlesiovarice in famaice. ‘These lasuructions are in we | ceuce is chtertained of « like result ja Peuneylvania and | TM See as ok sneeet bon ented Dr. Cox, of Pittaburg, to conauct the re- koe ode aed eo ore nen OF childrea, | the biebop lived woul not pormit emancipation, the Gen- | following words, viz:— New Jersey. Taese seventeen Siates united with Penn. | b20n occasioned in Valparaiso by the reported dissovery who req <i NOx, (7 : WE aa tlention to enelave, tt a, ne heat, eral Cooference should not interfere in the case, fhe | Asin go'oales in which you are called 10 labor, great sylvania a of the entire electoral | of ‘im the provinos of Acoa- Iagfous exercises. te fo enslave them.” From 1608 Majority of the delegeies insisted thet ag @ “bishop”? was anton, ey Ir, Fior rose to a privileged question, far the purpose of | #B intention to enslave them.» From 1808 untit wow, | Feauived “io travel’ throug the connection at large, ABY c ‘The reoetpts of the Custom House at Valparaiso for the ailing aitettion 10 a notice that appeared in the colamas | {m0 "eeyrin’ eunatuied vy sand hore eye Gonnection with siavery would embarrass both hia) and quarter ending Sigh March, amounted to $1,082,000, be- ‘ ¢ church in formance of his duties, ip three times greater than ihe amount reeel 0€ the daily «ficial journal of the Coaferenos, of « men || poma quntin. at Oe heed of our premoat eraptee | iheir jucgment to be thet Bahop Ante. should cous | may bavescinss, without in be lust degree, fa public srpri: | ton of «small frection of the delegates from ee, corrempondibg period of lek your. og of the Ministers’ and Laymen’s Union, as it was call: | Swi separ be doue for the extirpation of the evi | {rom the exercise of Episcopal funciioos until be could | vate, toterfering with their civil condliion, Goceresiens Siates and a very large malo: | ““TyS indians on the Norihera. {router are stil! trouble- ed—a society unknown and unrecognized by the Metho- | of slavery? Di ) this period and more, there | Tv€¥ Dimself of sbis impediment. Toen followed that Who, then, bave changed ‘on this subject? The | Tity of the delegates of the remaining sixteen States; and | sine Giot Church. The society was compoted of very amiable’ | has! no day intervened ia which our courch tas not | c<ttmucmorognnes Dacome one of ibe great, fasta of | border preachers tave not The cbangeof ground a with | f Suoueuen woe dette arm eet xp Tho Spanish, and Bolivian Charges d’Aifires to Chile 5 a g covtest for anti-siavery | tn r an alterea , new ‘ have presented . } sua) Betas 4 tobe very good | Meiified against wlavery a8 a great evil, and 008 | [rivciples bo portion of ihe church eas esore Dively term pation or interpretation of it ‘moaning. their credaptials and been received. Styct im viow, butik was anvarecogenedwocty. and it | Chritiaswease’ "Nor bau ackuoriedgoa. suit | {0,cut Dusit daa at wbieh pow tae order, | "The minority reqpctuly mbm that the action pro: | Sus dene, wih the opaay aoned es of Soabling | ssa of at Amerioan line of meamers to run between that otices had no right to sppear editorially in the colamas | s!aveiy porition been unproductive of ood fealte. | (what has tluce proved to bo & well grounded appre. | Batheu nee ree ae melority has oon, commenced | Success im osrtain Northers and. Western Gates by pre- | portand Paname,and state that the first sieamer of the ‘There le a power in the trnth, when faithfully uttered, to | by DBO) B Dew source of danger in the pi ‘ef the paper. iniluence the covrcience of wankiod. The testimony | piven to tne North by thi eae ‘The commites of editors explained, by saying that Dr. | which our cureh bas boroe has done much wowards iho | frieicy’ uurswes begua to ugitad portioes of tse euureh | Sr'inetyne Speoonal adArees of thie Year, nor thas, part of , apd to Beevers had the management of the Advocate, and the no- | formation of & correct public opinion. Unier ite ta- | gud fears were entertained that innovations destructive to | sfllrme, not a single journal these ‘with the line which has fluence, many thoussads of slaves have been se: free; | ine peace of the border conferences would be proposed | nor any one of the memorials bject Of eight States, together with a; portion — Cie wes published withowt thelr Kavwlodge. and many thoveands herwuo would hae» doen | gya'trcted.. These teure wern,to tome extent, quaied | bas Desa Tead sf Any tneeting of abe eee OT: | of tha’ of Delaware, edberents of our oa RR MS LOCAL PRRACHERH! ASSOCIATION PRAYING FOR NO CHANGE | flayebolders, ba ined aod many thousands wm by the assurances that our Northern charobes were true | vote of the apbual couferepocs on the change of Wie sue supporters of its principles, were thus, by sheer | Pen Enly Lowest oo iS traile of merchandise’ and TN THB DISCIPLINE. who are stil) boldivg slaves, are doing $0 with covariances | to the iotereste of the border, aud would faithfully resist | wes not ascertained uplil alter the action recommended to | foros of votes cant by Ca ce from States that will cer- = ‘The deputation elected at the Conven'ion of the Local | } at case. But for this testimony, a numoer of Wessern | gi) atrempta towcestroy its power oF to change the Daci- | the General Conference had been submitied by the sus. | tainly vote for the repu candidates, compelled to | eee states that in of the es. . re hod! of the | States, now free, and embracing & vast rauge of territory, | pling. These aesurances were corroboratea by the sym- | committee and adopted, and when ® motion was made to withdraw from the Convention, becanse 1a the suage Preachers’ Association «f the Methodist Church Would probably to-day be slave States. These facteare | Daihy expremsed for the borver in the organs of tbe | obtain the names of the eomferences from which the peti. | of a distinguished delegate, they felt “that it was a purn- | {ebllshment of the American line, the cuseey te Waited States, held at Baltimore last June, was intro. | our acewer tothe question “What good bas oar enorca | Chured generally, and the decided action of ab least one | tion for a change of rule came, the number of petitioners | Dg imputation ‘upon the héaor and patriotism ofthe party, pF elgg a yiee Has wag @aced to the Conference, baving been appointed to present | action cp ihe subject ever cog het & sia) thing ‘het | of the New England Coutevences. The aristian Adoncate | {n ench dopferevoe, and the number of members in said p rape bey chime t0 have princt- toed Panama, making four steamera a mooth, iasiead & mem rial to the General Coference, requesting that BO | poncsge—tbut thourancs more have been restrataed oe Can aie eee be erway C4 os that an pet eee, the table pe eed er ——— a _ 2 oe deciara. of two, a8 at present. « new rules affecting church membership ehould be in- | from oppreanpg their iellow mem, and that regions of | Cr guciphoe which suail make the € wan | oa ene ae anorenees Soe opposite interpretations by is carn ” 7 | The French abip of war Dageay Trovite, nia a eorporsted into the Discipline. In thetr jadgmeat, the | country by many times larger then tome of the mightiset | by ihore who bold them & condition ot membership’ | “2. The minority farther that the desire of Je cannes refrain {rom expressing our adzalration and ee ee ie, eres oe Vera sutiues te bari aed " a itnebiel aintain. | @eree of the earth bare been secured to freetom | Zum's Herald replied— Deeming it both udjast and im- | the church at for apy important im our rales | % of lofty manifestation of adherence to prin- Callao about the 18th or 20a» ‘unity of the Methodist Church depended upon m To the charge that we are violutitg tho laws of | Doiisic, it ie ber intepuion to abide by the ooustitation of | on the subject of slavery is not indicated in | Clple, rising auperior to all considerations of waa expected to sail for + tng the Discipline as it is. So far as the right of member. | (be land, a brief scswer must euilice, If we choossto | the church as it now ie, and to wae her constitutional | the petitions that have referred to vbis commitice, | 10 all trammels of party, and with a ‘eye | Of April. pe ship in the Church ia involved, rules more stringent ia | Kory as free as we cam — the evils of slavery, how 40 | rowers for the extirpation Of elavery a8 prudence, the | to cemand such action as is set forth in the report of the | '0 the defence of the constitutional of the States. baracter could not be enforoed, and rules Joes | WC (UUs violate the laws of the iand? Do the laws of the | best interests of the whole church, and the providence of | msjority, the whole number of petitiouers being lees than | _, The delegations of other States, however, PERU. their co} a 7 land require the members of the Methodist Episerpal | God may demand.” New Eogland sustained the Herald | one in twenty of the entire membership; and in those | (including a few delegates from the seceding }), not | SEVERE EARTHQUAKES—GREAT 1088 OF PROPERTY ewingent they did not desire. Church to bold slaves? How fo wa jen violate too law | in this declaration; and the Provisence Conference, to | conferences that bave epoken most largely, two thirds of | lees faith{ul in devotion to principles, wore more hopeful AT LIMA AND CALLAO—LO8S OF LIFE—ABRIVAL OF Mr. Sucker, of East Baltimore, moved that the paper be | bY declining to ote them’ % A ste piestice soy show 1s sipcerity and to quiet the fears of the border | the entire membership have remained silent. of obtaining from their brethren some my 4 A FRENCH SHIP OF WAR—PUBLIC CONSTERNATION— Bie Advocate, which wen | [vl Wuensne nes will porads lend We be charged We bretbren, at {ts sersion, in 1847, passed the following by 3. The action of the annual conferences, as express | Dition of sound les, and decided on 5 Fecetved and printed in the Daily Advocate, whic! violating them? While we Oeympatoy with, Dat |» riring vete of 4 to 4— ed im thelr recorded votes, does not indicate such | tbe Convention after declaring, however, thelr | On the 22d of April, Lima and Callao were visited with = pans cy on the ether band etrongly ma, the mad projects | Rervived hab we are saiiefed with the Disstpline of the | desire for ® constitutional change as to call on | “¢termination alsoto withdraw if their jast expectations | severe earthquake, whisn damaged more or lees seme ‘Mr. C. C. Luom, of New York, chairman of the delega- | Of reckless and desperate men, woo in defiance of law | Church ae ii e.op the eu »joch of slavery; aad as we have pever | thig General Conference to inaugurate an attempt | Sbould be disappointed. two hundred and filty buildings in the former ‘aad »c. 1 feck by violeot meavs clther to establish or destroy | prop's:den aeration ia i so relthe~ dowenow.and\awin | 1 "secure it by sending “Gown “a new rele tie | 10's thus apparebt that there was almost entire unani- ere tio, addreered the Conference in thename of twetve thou- | fiayery, we earzer ly pray that the lime rey #000 oom? | eorneciion wiheur trethren ofthe other conferences we wil | {@ tecure, it Dy sending down & new rule for | Kier mothe tn ue delegations of the ouly skies Om —— Gage ne A Kt fund local preachers, who were their colaborers ia the | when, through the blessed priaciples of the Gospel of | ver sbice by that taking the highest vote obtained tn the several an. | which ute reliance can be for democratic | Were fifty-two distinct shocks, some of which were of con- 5 ‘ This 6 Conference, at a sul session, an juration—say from & half @ minute to a minute, " Peace, slavery bal cease throughout the length ant fare baequen: , re ) conte! >: electoral votes, whilst there diversity of oginion aa Gharch and were bretliren beloved. In conclusion, be ssid | yregctn of this fair iand. But #by avoald we sek any | affirmed tbe pledge previously made as foliows:—We ie leker et ie Geet ee fo the lias or ry the . rN enone ake throughout the city. hes i n division in the charch should come, ia the pre’ | change i our Duciping, if it has worked s> well? Wo | edge oureeives Wo ma ntain the same conservative and | Somber among those voting, and Bole ehere meen | ot these privciples” ‘Nor le it matter of surprise that Ia & bo eae etna eteeen wt pis mun ot tbom rung ence nation, who were lookin, on their delibe- | anrwer:— true epti slavery ground by whic! 00 > 4 copjuuctare so unexpected and anomalous, when, in the , many ee an Bere ce cnitee teeumes local preaca 1st Much of our present chapter on slavery has e- | ferenues has alreaay beco ne distinguisued.”” The late Pre- ‘poe ele howe poner pe pa A ciples, the voice of a day or twa, Some 12,000 people were encamped or), ers, who ad labored with them {a building up the charch | come obvolete by the changed clreametances since is ia- | sident Ota aboot the rame Nae adaresand a lei to the ‘was overborne by that of Obio, and 1 Teghntyt oon eh ee of property in Lime 000,000, , they~d: th 1d te rt or jot | troduction, and the chapter # jo conseqa t, throng paper, Zim’s Heraid, Bas were forced to succomb to Vermont and Michigan, TF the’ civistoa applause) aod. whoover shoud airo: | sufflcient answer tothe question with which ie as tbe Methodist’ Epsoopal Caarca’ South § wee the re- ty | In Callao the loss is only about ‘nunaber of the internal controversy should now laws of many of tho qnte it,or whatever arm was raised to destroy it, they | Owing to the pr 4 i i i i i iL ti H would udence, yet with Grmacss, say — the rule in the can have wo pra ered as closed, and the church should In the subsequent of the Convention, how with pr mow al ng pare that eh where we bave shy considerable member turn energies to ite great totereste, viz, a the Frovidenso See, Sn over, we thiuh eens Eiotinas De discerned —. ae 4 Tooch not a siogie bough, the chapter, by making oae rule for offical le, education, Xe Tals was uct ouly the ‘all the the Convention to recede ‘om Lima. ae er In youth 1s sheitered me, for private members of the church» fai eeniment of New ‘Bngland Dut of the whole cuarea, end ‘afford, ether by an amend. | ™&2¥ lives were great i TH protect it now. ewbor y our real doctrine op the «ubject of was fully ¢ y 118 offh sal In Bap, pA A.4 4 DLW. Brueror, of Oaeite, callod up & memorial signet | We donot see the propriety of eine cor tae tere ‘cali attention to the fact tba: the General Conference when te principles as would sect. Se mete Be =e 2 Trench: by Rev. J. Start, of Brookiyn, acd one hundred aod ele | class leacer another ‘or the members of hia clase— | of 1848 appointed no committes on slavery, and bat one aan and ‘the harmonious bm fn with such « formidable board, ven other les! preachers from various parts of th» Mo | oLe rue for a trutice and another for the mem or aitting tian was presented ou the cabject The’ same General nour. | action of the ‘and that fi was only because of these | B8¢ produsd a SS — thodiat Episcopal charch, strovgly in favor of a change of | by bis side—one rule fora steward snd another for ference abolished the ‘‘plan of separation,” and to all intended | timations delegations of the remaiving demo- — ot eoFure eupenaie the view tan yale oa siavery, and praying the General Conference | the person of hom he collestaqusrterago Such dis | under Ns care the scattered membership which hed been fe what | cratic States consented to join In the ballots which tok | rorcis, of the ‘take measure t down sisveholding as asin Tho | crimination», we prceume, wilt be admitted wo be wivuont | cut off by ',— m Kentucky, arkanrae aad Mievoari. become lace, with no other ¢ifect than to induce an adjournment | tne: ‘ pl ny | which is that the French a ‘ot the petition waa receive? with load applauss | any sefficiemt foundation, aud we beilove they are prac: | Itcrestea Conferences there, 80d thousande have been ‘auaderstood by | to Baltimore 28th June, whilet the seceding delege | }e' olen ¥ Caliaa, ‘tbe anti slavery portion of the bouss Healy élaregaroed converted and gathered into the cbursh ia those Atates. 7 | tons ad to meet at Richmond ou the seonad Moa- | Te sense "rane autpoing tet EN imatrerun, of the Rock Ruver Ooacerence, preseuted | 2. Within a comparatively recent period, diferewess of | The sentiment ot the church remaiget substantially the Rains day of the same month. pote tH Li, £) Li. fe deich of petitions on slavery, purporting to'here boon | opinion bars epreng up, a4 to the bearing oor present | pate daring the four sucmeecing yours. Al tho General quatty oe be ‘of facta (be path seems open for the united Oe Can Re ‘Bent by English Weeloy ans through Rev. Hiram Matiison of | general rule has on the surject of slaveboldiog A few | Con'erence of 1852 no committee was appcinted on ‘and cripple, if it doce not altogether ‘Sur | Sction of the party, and no insuperable obstacle opposes fm oe wy, Te attempt crke "The metaoriaiats cuiceat ths Goneral Crate | among ua Dave covtended that the rule condemas only | slavery, and only seventeen petitions were preseated om " Gostroy OST | the restoration of iis harmony. 8) believing, wa insist | fuforoe the ‘ er “<4 ence to no longer tolerate the enormous crimsofslaro | tbe African slave trace Ovbers beliere K couse nus hot | the sutject. Thess facte are not only siguificant but they {| that oor position as e8 of democratic States | Callen will bring intélligence Co Iholding in the Methodist Epigcopsi church Sadjoined ts | the fo and Comestic traiflc Othere, thet #hileit | ere covclusive, The General Conference was Ey and constituencies forms mo just bar to our right, bit re fat faye i B recapitniat on or ine ber of memorials and tae bum “ondemas od irefilc, 6 Geete iene the heltiog of of the border oborohes and ihe member- 7. The minority etiJl further believe that such » result | Tatber imposes on us the duty, of joining our counsels Majesty TIL. The latter to be the Sore Sut Uebeten val renee Goat eteas tat Jro0ld nvotve'e toes of postion and iniuonce tn slave: | Wh hose ok one camoarete vretaren anne Sanne Gate | case. Will Dinster @ good deal, but will finally ing 10 trate fora certain paryoee 1 aldo, Dy fic miptoatina, chord comag tie Innaer aiateieatnenerteoiaee eal It ie pisin that, if the Ccnveotion shall at Baltimore | 7'!4. 80,000 | conce’ be holding for the aa ne purprs» Mec al acviow ape sympathy wes feuihful wo ns it might require many long years and a surrender of ad- | ¢0pt a satia(actory platform of principles before proceed. ECUADOR. & From other Metbodties, ree memorials, rep: Jatt view we atk & somewhat more particular | to abide by the Dicipiioe ap it i In 1850 the dan. | very, es now postesse:! to regain, which rust be ——-7 1 candidates, the reason which dictated the Te ‘aid not oy ana proosyetagaey ON What is the epecitic thing wivicd ihe torms of | ger oF future aggressions ov the part of the North ani | Cua % every ome who iy sake, “What shall bo | Wiutrawal of the deloguiions of the eight Slates will saat Veeeee gah ot Suapnest, lan badi : the general rule forbic? Not the Dayyog or sevliog of a | Bert wun cietinetly foresdadowed. And between the so@- | Sone for the extirpation of the evil of slavery!” Dave ceased, and po motive will remain Tefusiag to | CoDeequently Bo news bas been Irom thas. morlals, signed by seven munis'ern and 6%6 others 672 | human delog almoly, but the baying dr coiling wita wn | sions of the General Conference in 1852 and 1856 the agi- | “Site turner otijected to tie action proposed in the | Wale with their elster States nor for Belding an adjourned | 4°*F!F. 4& From tweive Anu Siavery Sovietios imaiet) 2,000 | ibteption to enslave, Tee buying or sellicg with an ia- | tation op the question of slavery im the charoa made report of the majority that it would operate most disas. | Meeting at Richmon. On the other hand, if toe Convention, levtion to frie, i# not feroidden. Whet, then, ie the | first real developement Toe papers in those portions of | irously upon the interesta of the enslaved, not only de. | D reassembling at Baltimore, shall the just ex- BOLIVIA. Daa meaning of the qualifying phrase—-wita the in- | she church began to denounce their Drethren o@ the vor |. priving them of mitpietrations by which thousands of | Péctations of the democratic dele. ‘There is no news whatever from this republie, tention ensisve them!’ This question caa ad. | cer. and this 0 far influenced the popular opinion in the them have been 0 essed and saved, but withdrawiag also ations cannot fail to wand unite the eight * reasons why the Conference #00uld not receive those pa. | mit of but one axawer. The person has airesty Doea re | Northas to shake ite coulltence fu the ministry of these ‘rom those by whom thetr emancipation most, if it ever Kata ‘ehich have ajoaraed io Rchinond Ineither event pare. He was prepared (> prove Guat thors memorials | duced 10 slavery before he can either be bought or sald. | conlercoes. Here was the origin of tbe outaioe pressure | 's ts ecnres—ihe iiiucnce ot taste charch ix regard vo | were would be Setlon in support of our Prine NEWS FROM CENTRAL AMERICA. ‘were the result of the efforts of Hiram Mattwou, who | Even io the foreign slave trade, the persoos have been | which the North now pleads as the onty reason which tbe majority of the Committee on Slavery, 1856, by all the States which can be on for casting made representations, avd, as be (the epeater) thoiglt, i | reduced to slavery before they coma tato the | Discipline sbould de changed on thesubject. Ie id ’ Presiden misreprereniations, to bring the Gritieh Methodists ia of the trader. And im the domestic traillse tne | ral Conference of 1856 the first official effort to diffuse | _ From that the tial Election im Costa Rica—Aa~ em avalanche upon the General Conference Ie odjectet or sid are already im a stete of slavery. { Dsciplne was made vy the ministry of the North, ry vi ier te syeem, the dele. ticipated Troubles in New Granada— w the precipitation of that eralanche of petitoas apn repeat, @ the meaning of the phrase, | thesopp zt of ibe mem! DP. Oat ef 790,000 not ry eats th uston frow any ober ~y~ , Rich. The Panama Railread Company, dev the Generel Conference and the Metbodiem of America | ‘With the intention to ensiave them’ only antwor | 5,000 petitioned for a thange, and most ot thess . ‘decome > EAppiause) He Odjected to that can be given ie, it mesue with the lateation to conti. | tsiced by the personal eifurts of preachers. ready | The Panama Railrosd Company’s steamer Memorials, because the British Methodists those! nue them in slavery, by continuing to bold and use them | firet ect of aggression was made by the ministry was Convention at | from Central American ports on the Pacific, CF Sek the embarranementa of the position which thay now | @# siaver: or, os in the case of Ky patting it im the | mitted in 1856. The reason aacigned straggle for tbe | Panama on the th inst., with the following cargo, via:~ reluctantly. He was proceeding to urge further otbert 10 continue them in siavery What, thea, niy-pine aunoal conferences out of May tnotbe | oo A Aerts ~~ Feasons for the rejection of the papers, when he wae in asked the Geveral Con! ‘that their turn the scale, to Packages of cochineal, indigo, 1,663 bags tg Den Gonae, Havens a ane raised 4 S nteans ot a - oa | fee, 98 bales India rubber, 338 packages sugar, 2,563 points of order. was great con jor & while party con. pay RO ie excitement, whicn was | Weir epelavemest. This is what clotoes the act of biying on Blave: at clear sto dory | Mite® 18 bales deer eixins, 14,600 feet lumber, end 28 t to 2 point by or felling with moral turpitade [i w the enslaviog ” report presented in accordasce with their views. passengers. . L. Hircscocx, who offered a resolution that !t was the | therefore, by the continued holding and usmg af | report presented two propositions—one for a geueral for the Her dates are, Sam José de Gautemals, April 24; Le i F sense of the Conference that ander the call for memorials | tiaver, which gives crimioslity to the baying aad | by the constitutioual prover to probibit ‘the Union, Salvador, 90th; Realejo, Nearagua, May 1; Paste, petitions, no member bai a mght to present petitions | felling. The holéing and using are the only stimulus to e the other demo. p pa eee Bae oe te Piemnt realens | Do gcity walle. “We euneete, Wsrefere, ines on the cratic ‘of an in. | Atenas, Costa Rice, 34, ‘The Pxnewext said that he wou!t prefer the (+1 erence | bolotng any | eamig dre She culy Sepang Soma Oe iy pledge of withdrawal ‘The only item of news brought by this steamer is that ee Oo creas, Ve ee Seen spake te es — Perstatentiy determine | Don José M. Montealegre has bean declared elected Presi- sinful ¢ oment fo far ae the rule ¢ontemns on the themsely ea, PERE stn. ieee San an one — ry a “tue tocratany Gevired to know ‘what he was to do with aa the buying and rd ‘all tow Whe armful of momoriaie, Dr Dompwer having said mat Sives crimicality 10 a0 act o Rishmond be NEW GRANADA. Be had ecthing to do with them. a ee joined from Pennaylva. OUR PANAMA CORRESPONDENCE. ‘A Vore—Burn them op et ofiirm Ret the belting of @ Dia end New York—aye, Mr. Moopy remarked that he thought he woult have | cumstances, sinful; from eve phere delegates are Paxama, May 9, 1860, the opportucity of eaying that Americans could manage | wite it would be wrong ¢ found our party, but | TAc Hlection Law—Congrese Stell Refuses to Repeal or Modk- America (loud ) Sek eo Se howe in the Convention, | fy Gen. even’s Pamphid—Tne Panama Reread @. Raxen, of the Black River Conference, was allowei | Volves, also, the moral right to by because of their respective fhe priviiogs of saying thet bis Conference was in a0 way | OWNEr te that slave until toe Benevolent inteavan of free. | delegations: Company's Charter, and Remarks of Bl Tiempo, dc. for those memorials. | img can be carriea into execudon. So when, owing For it is overlooked Im this oon: Dates from Bogota tol¢th April have been received Passat called for reports of committoss, which | to Whatever circumstances, the immediate sunder neetien, ‘been taken eatirely by Ae pets ane was response! to by | ing of the legal relation would be maaifestly States or in etther event there wae a bere. change to note in political affair Dr. C. Kivowury, of Erle, who crate Se yim, } Senin quatnahed, ined when Gevovinds ntaeee m4 majority ip the Convention an hey a capital. Congress wae still in session, but would adjourm aad proceeded, amid protgund Rieooe, tor majority | jaanee, ae Found cosetitutional principles, it was only by taking | soon. Twoof the representat tves from this State have bees epert ofthe Common on Savery, oi whion he war | 1 eve\reesom atthe cat practcabie momect, such Fert ot go votes yy Saletan oi, an encor part by | retained. Gen. Herran bas published an address a chairman — Su act of holding # mot only not wrong, but it may be « jivided States, an ap erent and factitious majority aged MAJORITY REPORT. | dey. It ie something necessary to se done in order to secoveded be preventing thet recagettion. phiet form, under date of April 7, recommending @ Committee on Siave ¥ offer the following report — | Confer Permanent freedom upon the person so held. In ‘The anewer 10 oll (hs foregoing, questions svowe to we modification of the election law, and, im fact, ie He who apake as never man spake woald com. | ‘uch & case the bolder is uot released from the ootigation to be clear and .. The line of conduct we suggest | Going ali he can to prevent s ctvil war; but hin the eum of al) human duty, as 2etwecn inan aud | © Myo Unto tbe servant “that which is Jost and equal, Jeade, in our to & reconciliation of differences 5 jan, in one Ddrief sentence, he modi Siviee figan ed Meo-enapages ate porseut summmoamage oe + on @ ‘basis of Tt leads to the united and har. | S@vice ie unheeded. Congress has peremptorily a —_ , | oo reewted l Sentence in the following memorable words and to bee by al! means that then 'y therefore recommend the adoption ae, oe, eae hh refowed to repeal or the law, ag 1 notified you ia ‘whatroever ye would tnat men should do ants you, ‘AOd Pareatal reletioosni, Hi fash legal provisions asare | it resish the encroachments of the Sonth mow. It has | ing reolutlovs.— ved Prophets, | practicable shall be made to prevent such persone and | steat\iy resitted the Sooth wll thie “e@ent Moment, Mothodiat Eplecopal pripctples which none itl Ay kay iS capriaeelen their posterny from pasting into perpetasl slavery, From | fearfal cost, and with constant, coftice I bee restcted food faith hog rr bf — Lecmpeie tice Seospunented beak without making any c' n the law, « revolation! [9 words, “ Thou shalt lowe thy neighbor as thyself.” | We foregoing conmdorations it appears to ws that general | proslavery aesauite in ihe palpit, on the platform and | itself the question, eball be done (or ly vind! the action of the seceding delegates who | likely to break out at any moment. dL) Theos precepts form the mora mirror wavch God has | Twit *hould Ip plain words emboty the bones doctriae of | tbrough the press order stood faithfal to the | tion of the evil of slavery?” and it hes will thos bave secured the object of their and Mr. Sanford, who was commissioned the Pana’ pq bung Pi porore ail bumacity.. Into this mirror every man | W* church, ae well on the aubject of wiavsholdiog a8 | Iiscipine under tho charge of pro-slavery from the North ly and before the world to bear its have merited the applause cat gretiete of allt dame Railroad eome time since to proosed to for the\ | ben to feo bs On that of the save trafic, If the trafic for mor | ans of abolitionem from the South. It bas never deniod in, and to exeresee i disciplinary cratic brethren. an extension of 7 hes mot end a2 be eece that of others. "| gepary and parpores should be condemaot, so | being anti slavery; ft could not if ft wold, and wonld not that ite members might be kept ‘omepstied ‘The contrary courte would, we believe, be productive Ld Sheee proce | alse aboolt the holding. Aod if, aa almost waiversally | if it could. The border stands now where jt hes ever | connection with the system, and that evil iteclf be re. | of mischievous consejuences. Time does not permit the | tented the = sdmitied among uF, tbe #otr't of the aie condemns mer | stond: and thoogh pressed sorely by the friends it hea | moved from among men. Action of the regular organizations of our party in the re bed of other Goleon ny | C*DATY and seideh slayepoiding, then why may we not | never forsaen, aod by the fore it has always resinted, ite | Resolved, That any change Of Our Discipline upon the | spective Sater, and who alone bave the power to speak whieh, an ght cpon ail the relationships gubsat Detweon | Cothe thie epirit toe visible booy, ang insert the word | representatives come to this General Conference ask subject of slavery, in the present highly excited condition | their will, to meet im council and give instructions (9 It's eaid that he (Mr. Sanfore) bas offered to the go. mn cut hia fellow. and that which we would hare a | DO}ing '@ Our presest rate, rudjrct to the eame discrimi. | for no change in the Mectpiine, : hatever, bat, | thelr Celegations? How is the voloe of California of off0r. | Yernment half nica keys Ep rye say, as gin mnomsee | Ninf cas" fe bag sg sr hasg owen, wy | etna ee ees Eset Gi: | Kineand igs ote p ts cnventgu say ge | sre ps Ihave to do, if we were in bis ciroumstacces ani hein | Would read, © , | davebolding for merecneer; to our xas and Vi to meet in State conventions ani give | tbe three per per cont, Sure ie act menrare four duty. Toe sasieresieat | jen or children, with Ah intestion to enslave them” | Dut we have never beld tether ve expremion oie wil fore the middle Supine ‘arising from the transportation of the go critoe tS weal af man bas 0 rigne to aoe, Cie. | true fiewn to Gavery Se semmserente venir will Gnem thonsunes es biuaere Tis Se geil or his pomterity, and what no man ever didor can | ** 1840 01 be suited | or Richmond im accordance with their. Evident | *iderably or are now entre Tue conssadt sability of the forciole separatioa ‘Out of the forty: ai ly, this capnot be done. Evidently, the (rre 27 say Seetes enters», u04 that uele prodia ara Sotcisen teres of tavery rr an of eae tee | more, brethren ip the North and Northwest have yielded t the | wore in favor of the ma) vn ot on tem own joage rt te pF ‘The right fixed and not which every enlightened mind demres to be free. | my mareee: rams an vltraism, which by their own ection th: ‘When the reports were read, allow for instrection by their constita- very considerable amount, mater tor tow which slavery interposes tn the way of the | 4, We\mal l proger, ve largely cotributed to create, we atill battle for Mr Twowny have in the encter then, by the delegates of the seceding Sven prviete i coarse, Satorvance of the and parental relauons, de. | 28S key eoseateg: | States to return to Balimore, a refusal to defer the Ret Reve Bea abtred cea the Gree neat Sacaing | auee [able necessity fort holding i wont. inevitably rewult ia | take ce before ‘which their parents, as God has commanded, | jected, and incurable division of Gur party, the sole conservative or- coat eight millions, ie now worth ten, and be oe things condemned site tae Bible | upon @Ajourned till Friday morning, to-mor- ization remaining in our country, in ite a core, worth eleven or more at the exptration of the term, “| = oe holiest tad, bom bon | meetin peg Ty a LE 4 fea "we ‘ite Ct : aS hath tee toe, “Win Ganaenoees of Ay which cannoi fail to Fe cerrencas and tavislobitiy Of the Garrings soreness rr ‘were crowded with visiers from ail parte of the some, | ese ef a ingle slectoral Soraggie i wnwortly of one mo- leave fort mftone clear prod what good, could Rot New ‘one of the corner stones of ell Christian civinration | "the who appeared to be interested In the reading of | meat's Granade eftect ia pilin, ts Basvery, a0 it vxiets nthe United States, is fondamental | Rigen 2 Serebitasa cover the discussion will probably be R. W. » M. RA. GARNETT, It seems the Company wetted for the ‘ah war with thie most ascient and sacred institution. | T. A. Morrie commenced on Friday, and it ie the universal A R. TOOMBS, moment when the federal government has injadi: Wha would we teuresand saves ty desire, if we : that the report of the majority ts not ‘and Soh SLIDELL, W. K. SEBASTIAN, ergaged in miltary armameats to wustain an ‘were in the of the Injured oa | there ia not much probability that such will be JEFF'N DA’ R. MT. BUNTER, party combinaten, oot wow weasel, pr Sav elow . A ayeom 000 be. of the Conference) the progressive will for L J. M. MASON, amount in cash, what could, if well Provo very jing into merchandige. which denies a man the of | rence, we t to menstann Jacrigas J. ORA) , J.P, BENJAMIN, LCT & property . ot the peace of the church, ) rere be yuan 3, Ganteet, waned eae Sc a ver, AMES JOHN R. , *hat now are inere is danger THE MINISTERS AND LAYMEN'S UNION OF JOHN W-t UNDERWOOD.’ | Bat uch alain Forenuey Be van ATA 6 Bears THE METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. p imgigon bat wong te nati ote moral ce ‘The Minister's and Laymen’s Union, composed chiefly of Usrrep TROOTS POR ORRGON.—The steamers sy may, therefore, set at nanght by : : Bagle, Kay West and Chippewa, says the Cae ‘all the efforts of the good men of both parties who iry to @o ye even 80 to Journal of the 14th inst., arrived on prevent » civil war. We much fear that Senor Ospina ‘of feligious education in the init efter taking ia stores, ia, 8 few honre thelr ar- And his friends camnot reat the ion ot nad‘ uteoten Wrectad epee, chance L. F. a if ial iH i raeter. Seer een 3,774 toe tt no han eee vicres relations tn the deat? then, a9 from w= Sew Sevees, teuinetive able to make but SAE iicfeivg ‘conastsrarions, teh Lert Patme are sofficient t jostify the opposition pata (thirteen: oven gallop H if a ining, we have manifested in