C VOL VII and lovingly on the fair creature commenced hemming a very red bird beside him? with a -yellow wing, on to a very Ah, ves, he did so, and there was green twig, which latter had already no further room to doubt. Widow been hemmed on to a square piece of C. had cheated them. She. had Won white cloth, and the whole when com a beau, laid aside her mourning, pnt pleted, was designed to form the on bridal attire, and was going to be twentieth part ofa bed spread. IC.•he married in church. But who the seemed all engrossed with the bird's beau was, or - whence he came, was bill, and spoke to no one. Every more difficult to solve. body wondered if she had heard what Service proceeded". The choir sung they were saying when she came in, and the minister prayed and preached I but her placid countenatce soon reas -the people wondered when the cer- j sured the most fearful, and every one emony would take place. I longed to commence a personal attack. Bnt to their utter astonishment they Old grandma W. -was the first to were left to wonder. venture. She meant to "do up the For when the benediction was pro- matter" ,very delicately, and in so nounced, widow C. and the strange roundabout a way that the lady should gentleman walked with the rest of i not suspect her of curiosity. So she the congregation, quietly out of the began by praising Mrs. c.'s dress. church. When they reached the " Why, it's really a beauty. Where paveinent, he offered her his arm very did you get it?" gracefully, and she placed her hand i "I bought it;" was the quick reply. very confidingly on the beautiful soft "Here ?" , coat sleeve as they passed on. ' "No." What a morning that was in Fair- "Where then?" • mount! What a world of conjectures, "In New* York last spring." surmises, inquiries and doubts rolled 1 1 1 "0, you did, did you? But I over and over in the brain of not only 1 thought you wasn't never going to gossipping ladies, but sober, matter- wear anything but black again." : of-fact gentlemen. '" The like of such Every eye scrutinized the lady's a thing" had never occurred in the face in search r of a blush, but it con annals of the village. There was tinued as pale as usual, while she something new. under the sun; a lady answered— had had a beau and nobody knew it.. "I did think and say so once, but I Widow C., - didn't your "ears burn have finally changed my mind." that day ? . " Yoe have, ha! Whatmade you?" Ah, we wonder they didn't drop off; j "Oh, I bad good reasons." surely they must have been crisp and Here the" hearers and lookers-on crim-mn: winked and looked very expressively The Rev. Mr. R. preached - to a 1 at each other. crowded house that afternoon: no "But did you not spoil your bean compliments to him though. Every tiful white dress Sunday night, wear . one was SUe e the wedding would take iugit away up to the burying ground ?" place then; but everybody was again I "I did 710 t wear it!" • ' sadly disappointed; and if tongues Here was a damper to the old lady. -had---run at railway speed before, they j She had such a long lecture to read travel'ed then on electric wires. The on extravagance, and she was deter minister mirlit, have preached in Greek miped to do it too, when unfortunately that day and his-sermons - Would have for her eloquent strain, Mrs. C.'s been quite as edifying,. But one sub- dress had hung up in her wardrobe, iect. occupied the village mind—the and she had worn an old black silk.. • , w , i o ,,w's beau. After a while the old lady took a It actually seemed, too, as though fresh-start. Sh . e would not be baffled lady tried to make all the talk she again. She would find out all about could. After tea, arm in arm with that beau before she went home, "that the strange gentleman, she walked the she would." So she began by saying: , while length of the village, and away "Your company went away this Service had mminienced in the neat 1 Out -mint; the cemetery, • and never morning, didn't they ?" sancivary, which ti. inhabitaLts ' returned till the moon was high. " They did," was the reply. of l'airmount had consecrated to the -A nice looking dress 1 guess she "He didn't stay very long did he?" service .of God. The minister ilitd had," drawled out old grandma AV., "Not- as long as I wish, he had," the psalm and Scripture . as she listened to the widow's wan- was the emphatic answer this time. and the fist hues-of the ope Ling I'm glad I haint got to : And hoW the ladies looked at each hym.n. The eyes of the people Nvtre wo-li it, all drabbled up with dew us other. It was as good as a confession. fir.e.i intently upon him. tt- he was ,it 1:11/.7-t 'have beLn—but I don't spose j "Then did he come?" only a good. sound, ami she thou-ht or cared a word about it, "Saturday evening." pr-,acher, but he was a lint shc-'s sn varied away with him. But " Was you looking for him?" toe, and thus enchained o ot 11l give her a piece of my mind the " I had been expecting him for .a the attention of th e true - 1,11: the tie first time - I have a chance, See if 1 fortnight or more." woe-shippers The h.,use was very d o no t:: i "Why, du tell if you had then, and still—the clear, melodious roue-.= of ILe But the good old dame began to you never told on't. either. Had he spea.ker were the only sounds that f ea r s he should never have the desired,. any business in the place ?" throl,bed on the balmy, golden air. denote. She hurried through her "He had." N% hill! the mid-summer Sai-Lath morn v ,- a ,ihi n , nn Monday, and hobbled i "What was it ?" ieli i'reathed i n to that holy place. over to the widoW's as soon as pos- This was neither more direct and first syllabl.• of the second line silk, Lot the door was locked, and blunt than the old lady had •meant to - was tremf , ling on the lips. when a one o f the neighbors said Mrs. C'. and I put, and she forthwith apologized by ru-tie at the d.Jor,. nod th e e oti mice the gentleman went off in a carriage, I saying: . persons, a lady and gentleman. nobody kotek.yvvhere, very early in the "I didn't mean that—l—l only the charm. lit a second morning. Yes. and never got home i thought I—" - v,•! V eve turned from the pull-it to till Line o'clock in the morning." "0, I'd as lief you'd 'knew as not, or,.ad aisle, and watched with Look out widow.. Your character jhe came to see me." yore than ordinary eager - Less the is on the carpet. i 0, Widow C. did your good name nro , ress of the couple. A most search- If she knew it, apparently she didn't go down then. Be careful what you - ing ordeal they we: e subjected to. care. for the next day she-went a sail- say next, or you'll have only a rem and when fairly and quietly seated hug with her beau, and the next ram- nant of character to go home with, and in the front pew. immediately in float bliig; with him off .to the mountain, I remnants go very cheap. . .of the pulpit, what a nudging of el- and on the next forenoon went with "He did, did he, and he didn't come bows there was—aye, and how many licm in a carriage to the station house, j for nothing else then. But was you whispers. t,•ie and there not only wept as she parted i glad to see him?" In vain the sound. the good, the from him, but actually embraced and . "Indeed, I was. It was one of the eloquent, the handsome Itl r. B. StalLlit. kissed hi m !!! happiest moments of my existence." again to steal the attenti,.n aids bear- ••What. in broad daylight?" ex- - Well, well," said the old lady, ers. They had no eyes or thoughts vlaimed grandma W. "Well, if I hardly knowing how to frame her fur anYbody but widow C. and ever heard of seed the like on't." ,next question, "well—well, he's a widow C.'s y,mag... genteel and dash- , Little - Nell, the 'old lady's youngest real good looking man, any way." ing looking attendant. grandchild, wondered to . herself if it : "I think so too, and he's not only HoW shel.d cheated them! Hadn't W a s any worse in broad daylight than good-looking, but he's good-hearted; td.e said she didn't feel though at any other time. Perhaps you will I one of the best men .I ever knew:" vould ever wear anything but mourn- Wonder too. 'We do at least. " You don't say so! But is he Mg? And in spite of these protest;:- There was a large attendance that rich?" . Lions, hadn't 1-be c6me out all at once afternoan at the weekly meeting of 1- " Worth a,thonsand or so," said the dressed in white, and walked into the sewing society. Everybody went lady carelessly. the church in broad day-light, leaning .who could possibly leave home. "Why, dela if he is. (Why, you o n the area of a youm , gentleman I And what a chattering there was will live like a lady, - won'Oyoul But Yes, indeed she had. She would when the bustle of assembling was what's his name?" . have plead guilty to all these charges,. over._ There was but one topic, but The old lady's curiosity Was now gm:4:: ones as they were, and to the that was all-sufficient, all-engrossing; j raised to the highest pitch. last two how many witnesses inight the widow's beau—for the gentleman "Henry Macon." have been subpernaed. She was ac- j mest_be her beau—or-at .least, ought "Macon! Macon! Why, wasn't tually dressed in white. A beautiful to be.that vour name before you were mar robe of India mull, tucked to the j Everybody had something to tell, tied waist, with an .open corsage, display- something to wonder about. But "It was." , ing an elaborately wrought chimisett e , - suddenly every magpie tongue was "Then he's aconnection, is he?" drapery sleeves, trimmed with the hushed, a universal stroke of numb - "He is." 'THE PEOPLES JOURNAL. I PCRLISHED,RVERY FRIDAY MORKING, 3Y *ASKELI 61. AVERY. - Terms—lnvariably In Advance: On espy per annrun, 'Cage subscribers, TERMS OF ADVERTISING I ignore, of 12 lines or les.s.l insertion, $0.50 3 in , ertions, 1.50 every subsequent insertion, Rule and figure work, per .143 in_sertions, 3.00 Eery subsequent insertion, 0g..50 1 cohunn. one year. I eohnun. six month:, 15.00 Adtninistra:ors' or Executors' Notices, 'lOO Sherirrs Sales, per tract, 1.3 J Prufe , .ioull Cards no: exceeding eight lines ;.n-erred fur sl.no per annum. tr AU le:ters on bus:nes., to secure at -len:ion. shou:d be addressed (post paid) to the l'uhl:,tu.rs. ICHABOD TT JOHN G. \%ILITTIEft Viteard the train's shrill 1% hiitle call, I saw an earnest look Ite:eeelt. .Ind rather by that look than speech, • neighbor to:d we all. And as I thought of liberty. [street. Marched hand-cuffed down that swurded The solid earth heueath luy feet Reeled fluid as the sea. I felt a sense of bitter losg— tihanze. tear:ess grief, ;:nd stifling vra:h And loathsome fear, LA If Loy path A ,erpent sAretched across_ lore of home, all pride of place, All gener,m , confide:lce L.nd San: ,111, - ,.. 1ier10; deep d.,gust Aul angni•h of d:•gr.ice. Down on my native hill,: of Jure, And home's green quid. hiding ,udder darkne“ the f:!1 of in:dnigh: upon noon: An! Law, an unloosed nt:in:ae Mi.id-drunken through the ti:::ehness trod, khoinina in the ear of God The hiaiyhemy of of rung. • (sh. Mo;her ! from Illy inasnor.e , proud Cite ss . .d renown. de sr Uomsnons‘ealsis. Lend this; de a:r a breeze of he:slt4. ‘tsd wish ..are essind. Mo:her of Freedom: wi , e and brave 11.1:e awfil' in thy s:renz.h, — Ak. tue 1 but to the mead: I ...nod upon her g e ! ---, THE WIDOW'S BEAU. =I richest Mechlinlace, undersleeves of the same expensive material, a white crape shawl, a white lace hat with orange burls and flowers, white kid 'gloves and light 2;aiters—such was the description every lady had on her tongue's end to repeat over as soon as the service was ended. And the gentleman—he was dressed in style. Don't he wear white pants of the latest pattern, and a white vest, and a coat of " satin finish," and white kids, too; and don't he sport a mas sive chain, and didn't he gaze often THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. $l.OO 1.25 pals• seemed to have fallen on the group, as looking up they perceived the very lady about'whOm they were conversin g so eagerly, standing in the doorway. "Good afternoon, ladies," she said in her usual quiet way. " I'm glad to see so large and happy a gathering. It is a beautiful day for our meeting." And then she proceeded to the ta ble and helped herself to a block of patchwork, inquired for the , sewing silk, which having received, she sat down in the only . vacant chair, and COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, SEPTEMBER 8,1, 1.854 "Du tell, if he is, then. Not a cousin, I hope. I never did think much of marriages between cousins." "Henry is not my cousin." "He isn't. Not your cousin. But what connection is he, du tell, now?" "HE IS MY YOUNGEST BROTHER!" If ever there was rapid progresS made in sewing and knitting by any circle of ladies, it was by those. com posing this society. for the next fifteen minutes. Not a word was uttered, not an eye raised. Had the latter been done, and the roguish - and ex- pressive glances which passed be tween Mrs. C..and the minister, who, unobserved„had stood on the -thresh old, a silent spectator and • curious hearer, ',/trhaps," mind you, Ave-only say Perhaps, they might liave guessed more correctly the name, character, standing and profession of the wid - - ow'S beau. ABOLISH THE FUGITIVE SLAVE LAW SPEECH OF JOSUE( QUI:HCY. • In the Whig Convention at Boston, on -Wednesday, Aug. 16, after the votes for a candidate for Governor had been cast, and the Committee had re tired to count them, the President said: GF.TLESIES : I have to ask .of yop the favor of perfect silence and atten tion to some remarks that will be made to ydu by the venerable Josiah . . Quincy, Senior. [Applause.] We cannot shoe• too much reverence and respect to the aged Whig who is now about to address you. • , .. Mr. QUINcY then came forward and spoke as follows: • I came to this meeting by invitation, as a citizen—not as a partisan ; with no intention to volunteer a word on the occasion, but witha fixed purpose to respond, if called upon, as became an individual who has in this world -now little to• hope, and, .1 thank God, nothing to fear;—who has behind him only the memory of the past, and be fore him the opening orate, in which he Must soon be deposited. Frcam such an individual ,vou have a right to expect words of : truth, duty, and so berness. 1 come not here to utter vituperative demonstrations - amainst the slavehOlders: of the South. They • have used the powers -vested in them by the Constitution to their own- in- terests, as every other selfish associa, tion of men would have done under the same circumstances. In . every step : of the progress of the slave power, they have had members of the free States •as ,half workers. lf. - the States would regain their•influence, they must cultiratc a logber standard of political morality among themselves: they must disgrace the doctrine that "all is right in politics," and reffard him who bas so notoricusly sold him self for place or for mike, as a traitor to principle and to his country. The, Nebraska fraud, as it is called, is nothing more than the last act - of a series of aggressions on the free States which slaveholderS have practiced•for more than fifty years, in no one of IMEMI=EII=I . . ful except through . the divisions and corniptions of the free States them selves. So: far from complaining at this . Nebraska perfidy, I rejoice in it, It is said it is "the last straw that breaks the camel's back." I trust-in heaven that this. Nebraska perfidy will soon prove to be the last straw which will excite the camel c< the North to rise in his strength and toss from his back one at le pt of the many burdens with which he is oppressed. The . N e-1 braska fraud is not .that burden on . which 1 intend now to speak. There ' is one nearer home, and immediately ' present and more insupportable.• Of what that , burden is, 1 shall .speak i plainly.. The obligation incumbent upon the free States to deliver , furri-• tire Islaves is that burden—and it must be obliterated from the Canstitution . at every hazard. And such 'obliteration can be demonstrated to be as Much the interest of the South as it is of the North. The circumstances in which the people of . Massachusetts are placed in consequence -of that burden• are undeniable; and they are also undeni ably insupportable. What has beetr seen? what has, been felt? by every man, woman, and child in this me tropolis and in 'this community, and virtually by every man, woman,: and child in Massachusetts. We have seen our Court, House in chains, two bat talions of dragoons, eight companies eg" artillery, twelve companies of infantry, the whole constabulary force of the city : police, the entire- disposizhle Marine of ' the United States, with its artillery ' loaded for action, all marching in szili port of a Praetorian band, consisting of ' one hundred and twenty friends and associates of the United States _Mar- 1 I shal, With loaded pistols and drawn Iswords, and in, military costume : and array—for what purpose? To•ESCORT AND CONDUCT A POOR,TREMBLING :SLAVE. I FROM A BOSTON COURT HOUSE TO THE FETTERS AND LASH OF HIS MASTER ! This display of military force' the Mayor of this city declared to be ne nessary on this occasion. Nav,'More, at a public festival he:openly took to himself the dory of this display, ." . de claring that by it life and liberty had been saved, and the honor of Boston vindicated! 1 - make no comments. I 'state facts as the ground Out of which spring the duties of the::people of Massachusetts. I state another fact still *more conclusive and illustrative of those duties. This scene. (thus awful, thus deteitable,) every inhabitant of this metropolis, nay, more, every in habitant of this Commonwealth, may be again compelled to witness at any and every day of the year, at the will or the whim of the meanest and basest slaveholder of the South - . This also is undeniable. Now, is there a man in Massachusetts, with a spirit so low, so debased, so corrupted by his fears or his fortune, as to deny_ that he is prepared to say that this it a condition of things to be endured, in perpetuity . , by us, and that - this is an inheritance to be transmitted by-; us to our chil dren for all generations? .For so long as the fugitive slave claulge remain in the Constitution of the United States, un - obliterated, it is an obligation per petual upon them,. as well as upon us. And is this inheritance we are about to transmit to our children an inherit- ance • of , freedom? • No, fellow-citi- is substantially as follows: tens—it is an inheritance worse than , It was quite evident that,-for some slavery. , There is not d negro in the • reason or other, 2. very strong preju- South that can be compelled, even by dice existed at Greytown against all his master, to cut the throat, or blow Americans; a prejudice amounting to out the brains •of his fellow negro. almost a positive hostility, and to con- Yet, so long as the fugitive slave obli- i ceal which no pains whatever were gation remains, there is not a militia taken. The immediate origin of the man in Massachusetts who, may not be I difficulty in which Borland partici- Compelled, to-morrow, to cut the at was the homicide of a negro • throat or blow out the brains of a fel- capon - of o a bungo, or -river boat, low-citizen, at the .will of the basest commi ted by Captain Smith, of a Southern slaveholder. My fellow-cit- steame plying on the river. Not izens, believe me—the time has come withstanding published statements di for the : people of Massachusetts to reedy-the reverse,. this homicide was look upon this slave clause no longer i considered by the Americans, almost in the ever shifting,-ever dubious, ever without exception, a deliberate, cool suspicious liirlit of party spirit, but blooded murder, without a shadow of under the influence of an enlightened patriotiStn, watchful of the signs of the ' ' alliation. ` There had been som . sinusre patriotism, difficulty between Smit, and t • e times, and anxious concerning their negro. -- Onskhe day of the homicide , duties to themselves and their pos - Smith's steamer ran into t • negro'- terity. i But I hear some timid brother bongo, when the latter thre t • , o / exclaim—" Why, this is, in effect, a shoot Smith if he broke his boat. The dissolution of the Union. Did not the bungo, however,*as uninjured. Sub- . 1 ,Southern slaveholder tell us before sequentlY the steamer started down the adoption of the Constitution, that ' the river, - and after it had proceeded without the fugitive slave clause they some distance, put hack again, appar wOuld not come into,_the Union, and entiv for no other purpose than to run have they not told us every day since into the hungo, which it did, crushing its adoption, that whenever that clause ,it like an eggshell. At this time the is obliterated they will go out of it ?" negro was Sitting in his boat with his And do you' believe them any the : gun across his knees. The weight of • more for this - reiterated threat and testimony is,ithat he made no hostile eternal outcry ? Does not the , nature demonstration against Smith, having of things speak a louder language neither risen from his seat nor raised than that of these threateners? Are . his gun, when Smith deliberately shot ' the slavehelders fools or. madmen ! him.. Immediately upon being shot,— They go out of this Union for the put.- ' the poor fellow got up, - and while at--I pose of maintaining the subjection of tempting to step, from the wreck of his Their slaves ? Why, the arm of the hungo into the boat alongside of it, his • Union is the very sinew of that sub- strength failed him, 'arid he fell into jection! It is the slavehoider's main , the liver. And yet, presses who es ! strength.. Its continuance is his for- teem it their duty to defend the Hol lorn hope. I go further, fellow-citi- fins victory, right or wrong, tell us it zees. I believe that by the nature of was universally admitted that the ne v things, by the law of God, and the law . gni was shot 13 Smith in self-defense.. of man, that clause is at this moment A warrant was is - sued by the Mayor abrogated so far as respects moral ' of GreytoWn for Smith's arrest, and obliation. There is a principle of an officer went on board the steamer, moral law, which, if not strictly appli- as everybody , knows, but was pre cable, is sufficiently analogous to the vented from getting . his prisoner by obligations resulting from that clause.. forcible resistance of the passengers, It is ce.csante ratione cessut et ipso l e x. : headed by Borland: In aiding. the Now what was the understanding and Minister Lis to resist the officers, the what was the state of things under : passengers did not intend to endorse which that contract-was- made 1 The the murder of the negro, or absolve free States agreed in 1759 to be field- the murderer. On the contrary, it drivers and pound-keepers for the , would have been-a very easy matter to - black cattle of the slaveholding.States, . bare had him bung on brief notice by Within the limits and -according to the; a ‘• Committee of Vigilance," had ei . fences of the old United States. Be- I ther of the acknowledged leaders pro- 1 tween that year and this, Anno Domi- , posed it. But Mr. Borland, in a speech nilss4, those slaveholders have broken : made to the crowd, as well as in pri down the old boundaries, and opened , ate conversation, told them he was new fields of‘ unknown and indefinite i instructed not in any way to.recopize extent. They .have multiplied their the authority of Greytown (deriving black cattle by millions ; and are evecy, ; its authority from the Mosquito King) day increasing their numbers, and ex- , as separate and distinct from Nicara tending their cattle field into the wil- i gun. derness. Under these circumstances, To permit the Grevtown officers to are we bound to be their field-drivers - arrest an American citizen and try and pound-keepers any longer ? Ans- him for crime, would he to recognize wer me ; people of' MassaChusetts. the authority of the Town government I Are you the Sons of the men of 1776 ? - in the fullest sense; and so Mr. Bor er do you "lack gall to make oppres- • land urged them to aid him in " crush sion bitter ?" ' I would willingly dwell ing out' - ' this scion of the Mosquitoes. uponthisinpic and others which are I If the government of Greytown was in my mind, but I have already occu- illeril, - deriving its powers from in pied more thammy proportion of this competent authority, the act of the debate. I have pointed out your bur- offiCers who attempted to arrest Smith den. I bare shown you that iris un- could only be looked upon as the act supportable. I. shall be asked how of a, mob,. proper to be resisted by we shall get rid of it 1 I answer, it is mob force. • In this opinion the whole • not for a private individual to point steamer's . party concurred. - And, of the path which a State is to pursue to 'Course, the arrest and imprisonment of cast off an insupportable burden—it Mr. Borland that night was also looked belongs to the constituted authorities , upon as the act of an irresponsible of that State. But this I will say, mob, without law or authority of any that if the people of Massachusetts I kind. .: .• adopt, in the spirit of their fathers, as .. • one man, solemnly , the resolve that they will no longer submit to this bur den, and call upon the free States to concur in, and carry into erect, this resolution, this burden will be cast off, the fugitive slave clause obliterated, net only without the dissolution. but a newly acquired strength to the Union. As Mr. Quincy closed; three deafen ing cheers wer e given for him. MANY ladies. have two faces, one face to sleep in, another to show to company; the first is generally ttserced for the husband an d family at home; the other is put on to please strangers. COL. FEEMC . 17AATterr gnINE • A Washington correspondent of the N. Y. Daily Times, writing under date of Thursday last, makes the following interesting statement: Col. J. C. Fremont was one of the American citizens present at Greytown at the occurrence of the "outrage" upon Isir.Borland, fer which such fear ful retribution has been visited by Capt. Hollins upon the town. As be is known the world over, as a cool, clear-headed, and truthful gentleman, his statement of that transaction, and the facts connected with it, cannot be otherwise than highly interesting at the present time. Upon questioning him on the subject this morning, he very cheerfully communicated to me his 'understanding of, the - affair, which ..A TATTLE girl had been playing in the street until she had become pret ty well covered with dust. In trying to wash it off, she didn't use water enough to prevent the dust rolling up in little balls upon her arms. In her trouble, -she applied to her brother, a little older than herself,' for a .soluiion of the mystery. It was explained at once—to hi: satisfaction, at least; 'Why, his, you're made of dust, and. if you don't stop you'll wash your self all away!' • "This opinion, coming from an el der brother, was decisive,. and the waibing was discontinued." 3 NO. 17