The people's journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1850-1857, August 11, 1854, Image 2

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    THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL.
IND: S. MANN,
EDWIN HASKELL, } EDITORS.
FIDELITY TO THE PEOPLE.
COUDERSPORT, FRIDAY, 11, 1854
L7' Congress adjourned on Monday
Jast, after having accomplished• more
evil than any of its predecessors; with
little good to olThet against it.
iar At the election for Academy
Trustees, a week ako to-day, H. J.
Olmsted and Thomas B. Tyler were
elected fonthe full term.
r Next week we shall publish the
call for the People's . Freedom Con
vention in this county, which has
already been signed by a large number
of men of all parties. l'
IV Some Of our friends have done
nobly the past week in procuring new
subscribers; and we expect the ago
nies of old hunkers to curtail the cir
culation of' the Journal will set every
earnest :Mend of Freedom in the
county at work to increase our iist.
That is the erect already produced on
some; we pvcsulue it will soon have
like effect °nail opponents ofSlavery
extension.
P Rev. John H. Wamatyr re
quests le to camey his heartfelt thanks
to the people of Coudersport, who
contributed so liberally and so unex
pectedly to his support. He received
on Monday morning last, by the hand
of Joseph Bloomingdale, one hundred
dollars, 'which he will ever hold- in
grateful remembrance as a token of
their regard.
We are glad to see our•farmers
making such good use of their tithe
in saving whatever the drought has
left them. Courage, industry, and
persever,ince will axon repair the
drawbacks of the present unusual
season. Above all do we rejoice at
the cheerfulness With which our farm
ing friends push on their improve
ment. •
C7' We gave last week an account
the most dastardly and cowardly
act ever committed by a civilized
nation: the b.urnigg of. the town of
San Juan. We give ; On the waside
of this paper a prize poem, written
fin. the New-York grerting Post, to
connnernorate the event. We hope
o person wilt fail 'to. read this admi
rable poem.
or The leaders of sham democracy
have •alrcad\; commenced active efforts
to deceive the People into the support
/If the authors of the Nebraska per
fidy.. le our friends do their duty, all
the el:girt:4 of patty men to sustain the
Administration and its machinery in
this county will , fail—more signally
than ever btfore. But to do this r will
require energy, activity, and a, gezier
.-bi faith in• the power of Truth and
Liberty.
EY As some of the Adirdni,stration
men in this 'section are trying to de
fend it from ; the condemnation oT the
People• foK the. .burning of the town of
San Juan,•an unarmed and defenseless
t-eapOrt„,, by asseiting that the iphabit
ziuts..wette murderers and,, pirates, we
publish a btatetßent, from the N. Y.
Enaing Post; which shows that the
murderers have been protected by the
4.dministration. We publish this. state-
Meta to the exclusion of various arti
ctes of interest which we had prepared.
) ' .U= 1 7M 1 r 7 .9
Senator Hover, of Virginia, supposed to
be:actingunder the advice of the President,
bas sueceeded, in Jo amending the Homestead
Dias it pessed.the House, that the friends of
this great measure nook], not know it. The
AVashipgton conetstiondent of the Philadel
phia North AntAirco hap the following impor
t:on intelligence on thi,sioNect
Since the true4tracter of the pretended
Home tend bill of the Senate has been es
posed, It meets With no favor among the
friends of the original measure in the Howe.
It Is Coned, • in truth, to be from beginnieg to
end a tivue of: false pretenses—the object and
effect of *blot 6 to gh e nil the land to the
sew States without any sort of equivalent to
the older ones. The 'bill consists of eleven
sections.. The price of the lauds is graduated
frost one dollar tied a go:merle twelve oncin
half cents per acre, and then' they are prac
tieally given to the States within which they'
lie; by conferring upon those States a prhik=
ege to take them ton body, by pretmption,
at the limited prices, and selthem at such
enhanced pricesas they may think fit, or not)
sell them at all, for the space of ten years.
'After five years of settlement and eultiva- I
tiyq Persowi may !Wes any lands as home..
stedds by paying twenty-five cents per acre, or
twelve and &half manta for such as have been'
in market over twenty years. But as the
States will inthllibly appropriate ell the lands
as sogn as the hill passgs,there will he nothing
to which the homestead principle eau attach.
if this is not bratikiug the word of promise to
'ha hope, I know not how it could be done
u legislatiye act. • ALEXI"' -
THE ntiteruarcF QvAirrlos.„.,„
It is amusing to see tie crooks and
turns of the administration party : in
Pennsylyania to defeat the Maine
and .at the same time.' to retaiiithe
support of Tempetance demociats.
This is rather a difficult undertaking,
but with shrewd men,:whii . think all a
fair in politics, and who pe.y no more
regard to truth than . to manline:ss , and
honorable conduct, the task is not so
difficUlt as it . might : appear at first
blush.
The action of the Ins e t Legislature,
under the lead of thelligler:influence,
in defeating the Maine Law, and
adopting a resolution submitting the
question of prohibition to the people,
was a trick of the politicians to defeat
the Temperance movement.
And now . the game is to induce
Temperance men to give their zeho/c
attention to the mere resolution of the
last Legislature, and pay no attention
to the members of the Legislature and
the Governor. If this scheme is suc
cessful, then the politicians will have
succeeded in defeating the Maine
Law for at least another year.
Precisely such a resolution was sub
mitted to the people, of Wisconsin, a
oar ago—a majority of fire thousand
v oted for the Maine Law, and yet the
succeeding Legislature : did not come
as near passing the law as the one
which met before any such vote was
taken. •
And yet in the face of this action
in Wisconsin,. John Chambers, P. A.
Van Dyke, John Patrick, and tweli - e
other old fogies of Philadelphia have
issued an address in which .they say ;
No Legislature will dare 'to refuse
the passage of a bill in the face of the
demands of a majority of the Voter's,
fairly expressed 'at the ballot boxes;
and we have the pleasure of assuring
our temperance friends . that we are
satisfied that any one of the distin
guished gentlemen who are candidates
for Governor will promptly give his
sanction to such a law.
The Wisconsin Legislature did do
just what the Bigler Temperance men
say no Legislature would dare to do.
With the action of the National Leg
islature on the Nebraska bill in defi
ance of the popular will fresh in mind,
the voter who relies on the abOve
' assertion will prove himself easily
gulled.
We have not seen a single reliable
Maine Law paper that endorses the
above.; on the contrary, those papers
that have done anything to secure the
triumph of Temperance, are unani
mous in counseling differently. The
Williamsport Press speaks of this
address and of the duty of the people
as follows, to which we most heartily
subscribe:
Our attention has been called to
the following address, signed, as will
be seen, by distinguished friends of
Prohibition and able champions of the
temperance reformation. We concur
heartily in the sentiments of the ad
dress, so.far
.at least as they bear upon
the importance of a full vote upon the'
question of Prohibition at the October
election; though we think it a matte
of no small moment, to elect the r led
kind of men for erery station; espe
cially when it can he done without an
extra effort. With all deference to
the distinguished names appended
below, experience has shown that a
Ldgishiturd may be so constituted as
"to refuse the passage of a bill in the
face of the - demands of a majority of
the voters; fairly expressed at the
ballot boxes . ;" and the open declara
tion of at ' least one member; during
the last session, affords evidence di
rectly in point, that a majority for
Prohibition will be unavailing, unless
proper attention is paid to the elec
tion of men who will respect and obey
the will of the people. Prohibition
is the main question, but to secure it,
give us with the popular vote, prohib
itory men.
But what. would you think of a pai
per that should publish thi:6ddress
of Chambers, Van Dyke, Patrick and
their associates, as the action of the
Harrisburg State Temperance COftrefi
tion Would such conduct be any
thing less than a deliberate attempt
to deceive votes into the support of
obnoxious men? Call it what you
will, just that thing has ,been done by
a: Bigler paper, and the same paper
asserted that the Harrisburg State
Temperance Convention endorsed
William Bigler as reliable for the
Maine Law, in the face of the adop
tion by that Convention of the follow-
ing resolution, which" — is a most em
phatic condemnation of his Excel
LIE
11. Resolved, That as the letters of
the various candidates for Governor'
have been placed in the hands of this
committee, and we find tbat--thecan. -
'(Bastes taf the Whig, Arnericati and
Yrea,Democratic parties' have all an-
sweire4,to our satisfaction, and as we
.do ':not` wish,., to expose' ourselves,. to
the .charge afbndue partiality to sly .
particular - - party, we therefore deem
it inexpedient to recommend any par
ticular candidate; but that justice
may. - be. done to all we recommend
thatithe letters of the four eanaidates
.be_ published, together with tile-inter
rogatories in our proceedings, that
the people may judge for' themselves,
TIM CON Y sin LON
The supporters of Douglas and his,
Nebraska progeny; 'by dint of extra
ordinary efforts and personal visits to
'most Orthe townships, made out to
secure nineteen delegates,. and then
six more were elected here in Cou
dersport, making twenty-five• in all—
leaving half the county unrepresented.
The ticket, as we said last week, had
been cut and dried before. The Peo
ple have taken no interest in it, and
we can see no reason why they. should.
This is all we shall say about the men
nominated, for we have never thought
it worth while to praise men on the
Independent ticket, nor run down the
men on the Slavery ticket.. We ex
pect our friends will nominate men
so well known that no amount of abuse
can disturb them; and we have too
much respect for our principles, and
the intelligence of the people,to stoop
to the discussion of the private-char
acter of friends or opponents.
We 'shall give the resolutions of the
Douglasites next week. The ticket
nominated is as follows: •
For member of Congress, H. H. DENT, late
of St. Louis.
For Prothonotary, THOS. B. TYLER, late o
.New-York.
Recorder, Asnacw JACKSON.
Treasurer, HARRY El.Lis.. •
Two Commissioners, H. ROSA, H. NELSON
of Wharton,"
Two Auditors, J. H. WRIGHT, HARRIS LY
lAN.
rir Our hunker friends are sorely
tried, because the people of this'
county, in their sovereign contempt of
the caucus arrangements of small polio;
•ticians, have, filled the offices with
competent, men, who do not cringe
and fawn at the feet of slavery. It is
amusing to witaess the impudent claim
which these caucus men make to all
the offices. It is no use, gentlemen. I
The People have tried your way of 1
filling the offices, and found it,anti-re
publican and opposed to the . best in
terests of the county; —that under the
caucus system an incompetent man is
more likely to get the nomination than
a competent one; so they took the
matter into their own hands, and will
hereafter fill the offices to suit them:
selves, to the great damage of hun
kerism, and against the peace and dig
nity of those pro-slavery politicians
in Coudersport who think this matter
of filling offices should be left to them.
Thus we see men who have scarcely
gained a residence asking for the most
important offi,co in the gift,., of the
people, and growling and snapping at
old residents lip-cause the People have
asked them to discharge responsible
duties. And these grumbling office; :
seekers desire to pass themselve,s off
as samples of disinterested patriots.--.
democrats par excellence s and the only
persons entitled to hold office. . .
19P We used to think the Erie: Ga
zette was something more than a mere
party paper,.hut its . efforts of late to .
use the Anti-Nebraska feeling of the
People as so much Whig capital, is
too notorious' to be overlooke'd. A
few.such papers would make'a union
of the Anti-Nebraska forces of this
State impossible. If that paper has
any desire to see Pollock elected, it
had better cease its foolish advice
about bringing all the Anti-Nebraska
men into the Whig party. Every
such article in a IVlng paper will
drive liberal democrats away from
Pollock, and can do no possible good.
FRUITS ASEI FARINACE/I THE PROPER FOOD OF
AIAN, etc. 'By John Smith. With notes
by IL T. Troll, M. 1). Fowlers & Wells,
New•-York.
This is a neat volume in magazine form,
with a beautiful colored frontisqiece of fruits.
Like all the publications, of this popular house,
the work before us is written in, good taste.
Shows great industry and research, and will
have a good effect if extensively read, in
increasing the desire of the people to raise
more and better varieties of fruit.
Price 25 coque per number.
IGF'At the meeting of the Couders
port Library Associatios held on Sat
urday last at its rooms, M. W. ?Jana
was 4ected Librarian for the present
term. The Libiary is therefore Moved
to the Journal Book Store, where the
stockholders and others will please
call.
- R FREEDOX
TER ; 13111OR
;:.::11esolved; , ,.That:the Mains of:Freemen,' se!tli.
intt iegard;# farther politio!ti.attachmentsts
the e/ ' I •Y safflf, 9r
it i rTHlii, President.
F. 11.o4THAID, Beer i tarie i,„
A. E. Nu.se, ,
The above resolution was adopted
at an Anti-Nebraska meeting. held at
Wellsborougbk Tioga Co:, 'July •
'As 'desperate efforts are made 'in
this county to drive anti-Nebraska Ilern
ocrats into the support of the Slavery
party, by denonncing the "Union of
Freemen without. 'regard to former
political attachments,". as fanaticism,
abolitionism; and every horrible ism
that can be thought of, we shall keep
the attend()of the People to this res
olution, til its importance and ne
cessity is thoroughly -understood.
The Hon. IL, G. WRITE is knoWa
to some extent in this county; 1014
shown by tho nearly unanimous vote
given lira for .Judge. And he is
known as - a candid; high-minded, dear
Righted, conscientious man;. with tal
ent unsurpassed by any man in this
district.• He does not mingle in or
dinary party strife. We think our]
readers will conclude that when a
deka-rat of this character', advises
" the union of freemen without regard
to fanner political attachments as the
only safety for freedom," it is quite
time to pause in their submission to
party usages, and see if the advice is
not of the 'highest importance.
But Judge. White is not the only
democrat who gives such advice.—
Judge Wilmot is still more emphatic
in urging .the people to throw party
trammels to the winds and unite fir
the overthrow of the Slave Power.
W. C.- Bryant, with other leading
democrats in his county, have signed a
call for a Union meeting similar to
the one now in circulation in this
county. In Ohio, Michigan, Indiana,
and Wisconsin, the best men in the
administration party have united 'in
this movement.
And yet, in the face Of all this, cer
tain small politicians hereabouts, but.
would-be great men, have the impu
dence to demiunce the movement with
all" the epithets that minds fertile in
such language can invent.
If the opinion of Judge White, as
expressed in the above resolution,
does not have more weight with every
earnest opponent of ',the Nebraska
swindle, than the whole set of dema
gogues in this county,, who make sub
mission to party of more importance
than the triumph of Freedom, then
we are greatly mistaken in the intelli
gence and independence of the masses.
A single reflection will convince
any candid mind of . the truth 'and
force of the resolution. . • -
Franklin Pierce was. elected as a
democrat, and so was a large majority
of the members of Congress. They
pretended to be in favor of respecting
the Popular will, and Yet
. to • please
certain Nullifiers North and : South,'
: the - President undertook to repeal a
solemn compact of thirty years' stand
ing, which a Majority of the people
of this Nation suppose to be a 4 bind
ing as the Constitution. • He
took to do this: against the hno‘ len
will of the people, and without the
request *of- a single petition, or the'
voice of one public meeting. AnrYte
[succeeded in ;accomplishing thiabase
work. Howl, • By means :of the md
thinery of: the party. /Without this
the work never could:lmre been done.
And it •,ii. by
. means of the . same
machinemthat the authors of.the Ne
lxmaka outrage are vainly endeavoring
to sustain themselves. 'Without the
organizatiOn,rdthe old line Democratic
party, President Pierce, S. A. Doug
las & Co.,' could not sustain them
selves for a - day.' The menat Wells
borough, who adopted the above reso
lution knew, this.. Every sensible man
knows it. He also knows that the
compact • breakers do not care a fig
for your milk-and-water resolutions,
so you will only stick to the party,
and - sustain the old machinery by the
aid of which they triumphed over . the
people. It is votes the :conspirators
against libtrty are afraid of, not reso
lutions.; for it is well said by our znalr.
ons Methodist :friends that even.-- is
lined with good ones.
• up There is an article on the fourth
page about plowing, which deserves
attention.
Nearly an' average of 1,000 emi
grants have arrived , at the port of
New York each day during the four
weeks ending July 24th.
DM
What to You Propout..to-DaAboaritt
tiinetcen-twentietiia ortbe peopl
:of this county are oppoipd to. 116..
•Nebraska perfidy. Thep . feel ;that
great wrong has been done.
Thep
know how it was done. They know
that, if the peeple of the North quietly
submit to-this-monstrous aggressierrof
the Slave Power, the whole' country
will won be bound hand- and foot by
the slaveholdere. Knowing all this
we ask, What are god. going to tio
about ii? The Southern leaders of
this movement say you will grumble
and growl little, and then ;submit.
The old line Committee of this county
think most of their party friends will
swimait, and so they propose to go on
in the,old way, Which is to sustain the
Administration and approve the Ne-
briska. bill. Every man of sense
knows that the only way to preserve
fre'edom for freemen is to repudiate
the party that repudiated the people
The Administration ha undertaken to
revolutionize the natio3 by setting up
the .will of the Cabinet as above the
will of the People. It, seems to 'us
that every man who has a spark of
Manhood' about him will say that such
high-handed - arrogance should be re
buked; and that such an Administra
tion should be taught that the People
are the ruling power in America, and
that the President is only the servant,
and not the master. Frauklin Pierce
has assumed to control the action of
Congress. To our shame be it spoken,
he'hai succeeded in part in the repeal
of the Missouri Compromise. He has
done 'it arrogantly and tyrannically.
The party leaders ask you; the People,
to sustain him in this anti-republican
course. Will you do it; or will you fol
lciw the advice of common sense,and the
good men of ail parties who think the
SlavePowerhas ruled us long enough?
That is the question now to be de
cided. Active and leading old line
democrats all over the free States, say
the only safety for freedom is for free;
men of all parties to unite in its de
fense. Do you do ubt the wisdom and
necessity of such action ? If not, show
that you are men, and not the mere
tools of small politicians. , Follow the
convictions of your own judgment as
to what ought to be done'to curb the
power, of Slavery, and rebuke those
men who have set at naught the pop-,
ular will, and the country will be safe.
Follow the advice of those men who
teach you that the proceedings of a
cauctis are entitled to your unques
tioned support, and that every refular
nominee is entitled to your vote, and
you will do your best to keep the
country subjected to tho rule
,of
Slavery. .
"WNW ROGUES PALL OUT," Est
The Harrisburg Dcpweratic Usiion
come to be one of the .- most inter
esting of our exchanges. Each num- .
ber has an expose of some prominent
leader of the sham democracy, which
it does honest men good to read. The
following extract from a leading arti.
de in a late number is doubtless pret
ty near the truth, awl will be read
with evident delight (except the hard
vford.4) by every true sou of Penn
aylvania t ' •
..We again repeat, that James Campbell and
his jackal], Forney, have inlhsed into the
Democratic party the elements of its destritc
i taunt we repeat that the unmerited elevation
of James Campbell was an insult to 'Pennsyl
vania, which has excited public indignation,
and has led to a formidabje organization that
nowthreatenslhe defeat of the Democratic
party; we repeat, that the relenting pro
scription in Pennsylvania, of the friends of
the 'venerable Cass, who was assassinated in
the Baltimore • Conventiou by the Campbell
clique, has alienated from the general Ad
ministration two-thirds of the Democracy of
the Keystone State ; we repeat, that if 'these
intriguers are not repudiated at Washington
and in pennaylvania, the people will pass sen
tence upon them at the next general election—
and in proof of the truth of these assertions, zee,
appeal to thefuture.
We invite any responsible friend of Mr.
Pot.Locx, the Whig candidate, to point to uny
official act of Gov. litot.xit that ha,' been at
variance with the interests of the people at
large.—Montrose Democrat.
How about that Beer Bill that got into His
Excellency's breeches pocket Would tk't it
be well to label that pocket " Bills stuck , here!"
—Wdlaboro Agitator.
How abont.the pardon of the kid:
napper ALBERTI I Also his refusal i to
demand from the Governor of Mary
land the surrender of thi murderers
of SMITH at Columbia'?
And now, in return, we would in
rite ticm Montrose Democrat, or any
other admirer. of Gov. BIGLER, to point
. to any official act of his that has tended
to promote the interests of the people
at large.
James G. Percival, the poet, has
been appointed State Geologist .of
Wisconsin. -
DE/IXDI/CY
Party men are prone to be l e d
away from the fundamental principle
of their party : A name, in the halal;
of tho,designmg, is often made ad.:.
coy to.:catch the votes of honest me : ,
for the _baaW._purpoles... -Everybody
this; yet 'the nick constant's,-
rr
Bucceeds,. Ii view .4ese .facts . ,i;
becomes us to refer
,frequently to “ k 1
first principles. Let us analyie lie.
mocrady. ,
• -In . what. does• DernOtracy eomisi;
Does:-it consist in :blindly followbp,
the dictates of self-constituted leaders, :.j
and obeying their dictation in opp o .
„w on to reason and ennsrience - ,':Doe f
it consist in being bound by the bond
of partisan orgalwi l al ion rind-m.011411t,
our' .opinions to tuit Its requisition.,
changing, and tni-eing at Ls beck!
it to advocatwdort tines now, and op
pose them when it suits the putin. , o
gflwlitital - co , termwtge"s I, r L „
uphold measures lvbich we believe r„
be false, to pursue settish ends, and -
make use of falsehood, treachery and
deceit. to adVance 'the 1;0 tunes tint
pamper the vanity of •broken thin u
party hacks, or to elevate men to high
official stations vrhum 'we know to
unfit and incompetent?
Thiti seems to be the opinion 41t.,
man v; With them, whatever thing re
taiirleading .politicians choose to ca!t
Democracy, that is Democracy. • W e
believe differently.
- The Democracy we profess is dm
which lodges the supreme power in
the hands of the people, not under
the control of. the few. He •is the
true democrat who is told, honest,
free and independent;' alike fearless
in the - advocacy of truth and exposure
of error. He consults the good of the
.whole people, not in the exaltation of
political tricksters. He confides in
the integrity and intelligence of the
people, anti is not afraid to publish to
them the malt, though it should con
flict with and disarrange the plans of
demagogues. He believes the people
can form their own - opinions of men
and measitres.and need no coercion of
partisan lines to bring them tivcorrert
action ; nor would he beguile theh
confidence for selfish purposes.. He
arts in conformity with his• own. elfin-
ion, conscientiously _and without re.
glad to the authority of men in office.
Such - the - democracy we- avow.
Such is the democracy we have prac
ticed. We regard independent thought
and action as one of the requisites
democracy, - and he who counitels or
votes in opposition to Lis real opinion,
.;either tin ough fear or to serve any
faction or purpose, is neither—a free
man or a democrat.—Sullivan Coaiity
Democrat.
To every word Of the above we
spond a hearty amen, and we should
like to see any of our opponents show
that it is not t.
, true democracy, or that
this paper has ever 4cted .ineonsistent
therewith:
TES 'PALT OF THE EMIL .
The New-York yearly 'Meeting of
Free-Will Baptists set an .example of
dealing boldly and faithfully with the
sins of the day, which we hope to see
all the churches follow: The follow:
ing, among other resolutions, were
adopted at the late meeting of that.
body: -
Resolced, That it is the iiense of this meet
ing that the late triumph of the sl a ve power
in opening the Tetritorie.A Ratters and
Nebraska to the curse of Sim erv, Ints been
invited by the indifference of the .northern
church to the sufferings of Christ in the per
ions of the poor, and by the-substitution, ott
the part of the clergy, of '• lower law" ear
moos to the preaching of the apostolic dee,.
trine, "that we ought to obey God rather
than men."
Resole-a, Therefore, Tlait repentance and
confession of sin, and the bringing forth works
meet for repentance, are the duty of the
northern church and clergy.- 'nit among
the, / works is a raft/sal to adn.t• those guilty •
of slaveholding to communion, to ell/nth-fel
lowship, or to the pulpit; a refusal to aahni
to the treasury of benevolent societies. the
price of blood; a refmal to cast ballot Tipen
mere party ground while the great intere44 of
human liberty are nt stake, and a:persist/no
effort to induce a healthy public .sentiment
that will •cnose the repeal .of the Fugitive
Slave law, and consign to the felon'-s infamy
any man of the North who consents to" be
come the - tool of Southern despots in their
efforts to reduce to Slavery any human being
who comes to dwell among us, or •is our Ili+
way to .other
liextilred, That the veto of the late bill' to
suppress the liquor traffic by the Govermm of
our State should lead the . frientls.of temper
ance to vest no man with the executivia or
legit/Wive power who is not a known and
tried friend of the temperance comae.
JAMES GARDINER; Moderator.
M. C. BRowg, Clerk.
Elmo to be Torte into Kansas
The St. Louis latelligincer rays, they the
proscriptive itetNe in which the resolution+
adopted by the late meetings held in Kansas
have been understood, " is distinctly, repudi
" ated by those who introdnced, voted for,
"and adopted 'them. They avow that they
" only meant to amen their tight, under Ilse
law, to go to Kansas with their slives, and
"that this right they meant to vindicate by
" force, if necessary;"
. .
Welk esestin that sense we think the reso
lution* are nn insult to the American People.
But what we desire now to call attention to,
is the fact that the slaveholders treat the re
peal or the Migsonri_comprontise as.authorby
for them to force Slavery into that Territory.
Will the People gustair, the party that bag
done such mischief / •
M!=:=2
There is a movement in. Ohio to stove a
free emigration to lit.tnrac
la