PAP!,P teeected the demonstrable fact that the fret and (until attended to) the only assailable thing with them Was their complicity in it. The only sin of these is • e enotired percelption.— But thereis •invt4or elassof re l,criroi aale. Alia they %yi, see Slnyery to be renal; and vtiai how' they participate ; in it, and might free tliem'solves from it, -tint - Stiff - et theinselves . ta be over came by its allurements. l have been neliarned to hear, in BAsion, the da edetiFilts'ef the Puritans' apologizing for Sluvery.' They thriught a South ern man would like .that. But no .6elitheric wan would like that ! The .Seitltherners; thank God, aro not so .14,i1:; they . say, Slavery is rig it; if not Wage it no apology y for it. John Ran 4i4lplispoke their sentiment, when, phinting his finger at one such man 'Ccrtigress, he said, '!l envy not xhe heit4nor the head of a man who can conic here from the North and defend 'Sliti-ery." Southern politicians are .• walung to make use of such, whilst they laugh in their sleeves; but the nobler men and women of -the South grliwe to see men failing tiy.; meanly . , 'ffere at Washington it has been as stie fly•in wheat—one noble head af; 'telrAnother - laid low ; falling into in fi'llelity, as the Slavery Power has cast slims web of interest aronad them. kid those who believe, with- Christi anity, that it profits not a man to gain ,the whole world and lose his soul, turn Pale and say, " Who falls next 1" Na matter if the concession is for "Peace." So did the army on the silos desire atithing so much as peace, he'clown anywhere and sleep; and those who 'slept never woke more ! Nothing is deadlier, at times, than peace ; and invariably when, as in thie't:ase, the word Peace is but a rev'er of your desire that your person al and business should be un disturbed—a, disguise of that wily Satan, selfishness. yo American men ! too soon 3ivie you inscribed on your banner. peaciqUe. More successful had it ')icon, if the word had been in the or der in which the ancient Christian 'places it—fill pure, then peaceable. Never was there but one path given Egon to walk in :it is that of a pure fonscience. Whether . the light be dim or bright, it is in the right direc tion ; guilt id in veering from that. There may Iro innumerable crooked lines between twos points, but one etisight: What is the right lige be tween us and that peace we all crave? \V• can all imagine two men of en ;ire candor and courtesy—the one ! Southern, and believing Slavery right in itself ; the other Northern, and be lieving it wrong-- 7 comiug to an under, standing on the subject; the common postulate being only that neither must himself du what he believes essenti ally wrung. Southerner.—l. believe the institu, ;ion is best fur the white e r ucl colored EMI Nurtrierner.—l make no doubt of your sincerity, but would like to dis- t!. • • Sou.—We may do that ,Bresently.— put will you not allow that, so tong tt . s I hold that Opinion, you have' no right of any kind illegally to interfere d! what I hold legally as property? Ner.—l do ace that. The wrong is , ri.it in my detestation of Silvery, nor rpy . etideavor to inspire you with a like feeling, but in my attempting a o Tight thing in a wrong way, * $9,e.--:Which is always an unsuc- sossful way, • Ner.—Now let us define the other sidl. believe . that Slavery is the ' and wicked fantasy" that . 111 . 04 4 ghttin called it, or the " sum of ill rillanies” . which Wesley pronouced It 7 You are connected with it sin crroly, and, therefore, Unless you hare iefiiied possible light, innocently; but if I am connected with it, I sin: If ydu and I have partnership .in your innocence does not • • exculpate nig: SOU:=—Catiainly not. Nor.--If you seek 'to make me a paiity to anything which I hold wrong you Tare guilty, even though you be right, unless you can first pet-- au - 414i me also that iris right. • Sou.--It is so. • Nor..i—And if our firm cannot re triain without 'involving the in this wrong, my one path is out of it. The firm must be dissolved. • ' • • See.—Asau rod Iy. . . - . Novf, my friends, let us approach, No; this scab of Acquiescence, our national agitatiOns .thus simply which yetmvould 'bring over the ' - imie, The of the Uni-and is not a cure, even if you'bouldlget it.; • quietly.deepe ted States are a firm. Whereverthe fester would only the treacheroUsly. . Agitation is n more not the firm deals with Slavery,:all deal with otseaSe,., but.. the friendly simptern Slavery ; and the General Govern- which admonishes of disease: Ernp menthes dealt, and dues now deal tion and fever are the health of a dis with that local institution. appeal ease; a wise physican . will never - wish I them to cease, but by the eradication to you, Southern . men, is it not the of the undying cause. only light thing fOr those who believei How; thou, is Peace, which all love, Slavery to be sinful, whether it be and which is fur the inteteat of all, to really so or tiot, - firmly to declare them- come ? Let St. James answer : By the selves flee from - all share in it, if not wisdom which, comethfronz above, which by your concession, then, by what- is first pure, then yeacetible. Let every 'ever means they can, but certainly . to man in the Union only feel assured do it? . that he'stands beneath the- sheltering .... But, it is said, your fal.hprs .pQnped.- e d this and that, and will you not stand by their compact ? if there be any compact, and it pledges me to what I feel wrong, shall 1 be judged by my father's light ? But if, in obed.ence to your con science. you should injure this Union, you would cause great evil —evils greater than Slavery," Evils are not as bad as Bias. We du not wish to rid ourselves of our share in National Slaveholding, as from an evil disease, bu s t as a moral defection, as falsehood er theft would be. Evil is a part of God's Law, for he says by every prophet, "I create evil." He is responsible for whatever evils ensue ; we °ply * for doing His will. - Is not my soul his voice? And when I reject ,that voice, which as : sures me it is wrong to do this, is it nut a sad lack of faith in Moll • As one who should . Bay, " Thou, Infinite Being ! didst bid me thus, but didst not foresee, as I do, that this and that evil would follow !" • •. tVill you imperil the interest of tuirty millions of whites, for three or four of Africans?" The adages, reply the others, aro very gOod Honesty, even in the old Roman sense, embracing all that is just and true to God and man, i$ the best policy. Right never wronged any n;an: The interests of the three or four millions of negroes are not so near to its as the interests of the whites who hold them. Those we would but redeem from physical slavery ; but thee we would redeem from what by onr creel is far worse, the crime of en slaving them. If I rob you, you know lam the far worse off of the two. Then if you think thus, we must separate. We .think you in error, that you cannot think our institution right; or that even to say it is inex pedient, or an evil, dues not 'define your view : that you, must count it immoral. Certainly, nothing,. how ever valuable, should induce us to do wrong; and the South admires, as much as any people, the brave words of Phociun, 'Let justice be dens, 'though the heavens firll 1'" . lint, it is replied, it does not erid here. You say we must secede. Blit this proceeds from the assumption that the Union is inextricably involved in the policy which makes all held slaves We du nut believe that; we think the Union is essentially involved in Free dom, and that all its Pro-Slavery pro clivities are usurpations. We believe indeed, that it does lot interfere with you in your Slaveholding, nor the English in their Aristocracy, nor the Arabs in their Mahomedanism ; but at the same time we believe our Con stitution protects us from compulsory sanction of these, and protects us in our freedom, Thus, we, cannot enlist against it, but only to redeem it from tiro distractions, resulting from a mis interpretation of our compact. If there is secession, it cannot bo on our side. On this assertion, new made by a large portion of this nation in terrible earnest, hangs all the excitement, and -Iwill hang hang more and More. Crimina oion and violence serve no purpose I hero. Both are equally sincere. Li -1 diViduals may be insincere, but no large mass of men can hold together with means • and influence for any length of time on an affected or fanati cal basis. Hypocrisy would forbid the enthusiaSm manifested on both sides; and the outlay necessary for a cause cools all fanaticism. How, then, shall these be reconciled with each other, preserving self-truth fuleess ? We must set aside here those VT h n cry " Peace," when there is none. I, for one, have lest forever my faith those 'self-styled conservatives, who would rely upon . " putting.. down ilgi tation." That cry has been sounded, for a score of years, and with success any one may see by going no farther than the House of Represen tatives. Stop agitation! So Xerxes forbade the sea to advance; so the Phoenicians shot arrows into the clouds when a storm arose ; so an English gentleman wrote an elaborate treatise, showing conclusively - that the Atlantic could never be crossed by steam, which went out to America in the first steamer. . Stop agitation ! Judging by late events in Kansas, one would say it would take much more agitation than. the country has yet known,' to pu!.dorfn agitation. . . • wing of his, country, a pure man. Lei men cease to see the National Flag discolored by what they believe -dis honorable and wrong, and then be told they have nothing to do with it when each stands with his sharp in the eye of God and man ! Then shall that unrest, which is the sign of the strong lash of Conscience, cease. Then shall the word. Slavery, that dirge of our woos, never more disorganiie Congress, for it will be beyond Con . - gross. I pity the Northern man who finds repose whilst his - hand is binding slaves ; still more the Southern man. who would desire to have him find peace in impurity. , • I know how large a number of good meat in the North this position will offend. But lam .ready -to reiterate that, when their personal responsibilk ty for the bondage of a ma.i iwywnere is past,. Slavery only addresses them •.other evils. A man cannot, of course, cease his testimony against whatever is to him wrung, except by being so far forth implicated in it. It .may, however, he emphatically an nounced, to this class, that if all they had ever thought, said, or written, on this topic 7 -abStractlygood, it would be to the act.which would have freed them, or any one of them; from Lem plicity in the thing, a child's play to the great'Lisbon -- Earthquake. 'fatly of them thinks that. thei preservation of the Union involves such complicity, let him not turn phrase-monger, but hirriseffsecede, and rot in prison, ore he pays.taxes or accepts advantages in his State through which hois inevitably involved. No "eloquence would per suade like this. 4 great action is by its divine nature irtesistihle ; great word: are gOd only when difficulties make them great actions. In some way or other, natiocs are at the . mercy-of strong men, and ten thousand . fiee be fore. one. Ti uly, says the Brahmin Devoutly speak, and men DeVon,ly li;en to thee; Devoutly act, and then Tho strength of God acts through thee. How G6dlike is it to be braVe and, true ! There never was a soul con; ceived in God's mind, ur projected in to the North orSouth, or East or West, who in itself honored dapperness or cowardice; and respected not an honest, unflinching stand on any side. lam a Southern man, and I fear not contradic tion from any one born there when I say that they Pall respect a man from the Nor th who will not bend from his principles ; and that not ono of theni thinks a douglace worthy to be valued as more than a catspaw. A heroic action, which is such only because imperilling large interests, is a new star lit in the 'Heavens. - Men see it, and feel tl e presence of the unseen higher PoWer ; they know with joy that the earth is more than a moving ant-hill.• This joy cannot be moved by any danger or loss. If the Union were sundered by such stand, does it not pay in that •it props the whole Earth ? For were the Union divided on a principle of right, a voice like' the angel-hymn of a Second Advent would go forth, proclaiming the law by which thrones tremble, and all -op pressions and evils fall as leaves in I October : First pure, then peaceable. Before all, ther m let us dismiss Fear. Let us, with Montaigne, fear nothing so much as 'fear. Southern men ! Northern men ! be one in being brave -fcq: your light and your right.! If it should be found ever necessary to separate-- ; as L pray 1 may never be lieve more than 1 do now—still would mutual honor survive; and by no event can any obstruction befall the vast destiny .for which these superb American hills and plains were plan ned. By - their great strength, these national throes proclaim the grandeur of a Nation's new birth. Hark ! there is now as of old - a voice on the angry Maters, "Itisl : be not afraid." Se rene and unharmed above our small ' cares and storms is enthroned .the Genius in whose mind once, as in an I egg, lay' the Western hemisphere, ; Golutribus, and-Washington, and '.tu our tearful prayer replies, Oh man, think you that I have created these in vain ? ' Know that until God is de throned, the :Right must prevail: he dies, nothing good can die I The telegraph announces the elec tionto the Senate of the United States of Jefferson Davis, at present Secreta ry of WaP. "Better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than a stalled oz and hatred therewith." THE PEOPLE'S JOURNAL• JOHN S. MANN, EDITOR. - •••*Stl CCUDERSPORT, PA. TIIURSBAY MORNING, FEB. '2B, 1855 THE ACADEMY The second term of the Academy tinder the -cat e of Mr. Hendrick, open ed on Monday, with seventy-five schol ars. Team after team came loaded: with housekeeping apparatus; and the. call for rooms, and tke numbers crowd ing into small apartments, remind one of the potatoes crying to each other in the hills to " lay orer." ' They are bra've students, willing to p . m up with difficulties and inconveniencs for the sake of the henfits they receive, and we hope our people will feel sufficient confidence in the success and prosperi ty of the Academy, to induce them to build a forge, boarding house before another winter. rarThe friends of Rev. W. H. Shaw are invited to make a donation visit at his residence, on Wednesday evening, March 12th, • RAILROAD DISASTER As the mail train going west on the N. X. & E. I. R., on Thursday last, a little after three o'clock, P. M., neared Belvidere depot, the passenger car coritainifig a-bout 60 passengers, was thrown from the track by the speed - of the train passing a curvy. The. Car turned ore' down an embankment of about tel) feet, and was thrown onto the forward end, precipitating all the passengers into a heap.. The Hon. S. Ross of this village, was in the car, and among those most-seriously injured.. He received a very bad cut on his head, laying bare a portion .qf his skull four inches in length and two in width. Doctor - Charles of Angelica, fortunate ly was present_ at the depot when the. accident occurred; and gave prompt relief to all the sufferers,. fife dressed Mr. Ross' wounds so effectually that he was able to ride home pr! Saturday, .and he is now (Monday morning) look ing as cheerful as ever, and promises to get well as fast as a man with a bro ken head could expect. • From what we learn ot this accident, we think there is little doubt that it was caused by the recklessness of those having 6liarge of the train. The car was thrown from the track by no break of any description, but freer* excess i ve speed while rounding a curve. For tunately no lives were lost, though nearly every passenger was injured. The car was broken all to pieces, and it is a great mercy that none were killed. Must these terrible slaughters continue I Will not those in authori ty act at once to prevent them THE TRUE MEN OF THE SOUTH. We have been charged, time and again, and in every style of epithet; with being unable to see even the good . qualities of Suuthe!n men. We deny the charge, We have admired Col. Benton, F. P. Blair, C. M. Clay, and many other slaveholders. We. have now to add another name to the list of brave and trne men in the South, who challenge „ur admiration. We publish ,On the- first page a sermon by a Vir ginian, the Rev. M. D. CONWAY, which is among the. best we have ever read, and we ask all our patrons to give this sermon .a candid and attentive peru sal. We like it all the better for its plain t.nd direct manner of pointing out the sins of the North- 7 our sins. We take many parts of this discourse home to our own condemnation ; but we find much in it to strengthen and encourage us. Then its elevated tone and sublime faith in the eternity of Right and Good, is applicable to all classes, ages, and Sexes. The reader will see that this Vir ginian has answered tliti • puerile cry against.agitation, so effectually that, no .doughface can read it without feeling his 'cheeks burn with shame. These are glorious words : " Those who deny that the full SUO - should play abore,-and henoath, and aroun any subject, can never con vince any: disinteresi person that they are id the right'"" But eir.chief delight iri this setmon, is derived from its cairn and Christian method- of -securing- peace.- A- large number of timid men in every commu nity, are crying "Peace, peace 1" when there is no peace,.and can be pone, for the reason given by-Mr. Conway in these prophetic wards i [ "Nothing is deadlier, at times, than [ peace; and invariably when,' as in this ease, the word Peace is but a cover of your desire that your person al interest and business should be un disturbed—a disguise of that only Satan, selfishness. ' "Ab, ye- American men ! too soon have you inscribed on your banner Peaceable. Maze suoceasful had it been, if the word-had been in the or der in which the ancient Christian places it—first pure, the* peaceable. Never wasthere but one path given men to welkin : it .is that of a pure conscience. Whether the light be dim or bright, it is in the right diree tion ; guilt is.in veering from that. There may be innumerable crooked lines. bet Ween two points, but one straight. What is the right line be tween us: and that peace we all crave V Those persons who think there can be peace- on the Slavery question be fore the Slave Power is. overthrovin, and the Government restored to its original . purity, may learn from the. above that all such hopes are enter tained without reason, and can only lead to disappointment. 40N, J. J. PEARCE AND THE PREVAILING SENTIMENT IN THIS DISTRICT. The Muncy Luminary has produced an abundance of proof that at the time of his nomination, the extension of slavery was a prominent . question in the District. It was so prominent that Mr. Pearce first felt constrained to say in his address t;) the electors : " Cherishing an abi-ling respect for the , compromise of the past, I cannot approve the late abrogatioa of the Missouri Compromise, a compact, dictated by patriotism and sanctioned by "wisdom 'and experience. As a fiend of man I could never counten ance or encourage the extension of Slavery, or its introduction into terri tory consecrated to freedorit." Will any body pretend that )Ir. Pearce could have voted for IL M. Fuller after his Southern bid became known, without forfeiting his word as declared in the above 1 As a further proof of the prominence of this question at that time, the Whig convention of Lydorning county which assembled on the p.72th of Sept., ISSI, unanimously adopted - the following resolution : "Rrsolred, That the repeal of the Missouri Compromise Act--,an act sanctioned and acquiesced in, by the wiible country, for more than a quar ter ofa century—was effected by dem agogues- in reckless disregard of the wishes ofthe people of the Free States —is a- wanton violation of plighted faith, , • and a measure fatal to the in terests of Freedom everywhere ; and that the present National Administra tion, being justly held responsible for said repeal, is only worthy 'the dis approbation, contempt, and repudia tion of all good and true men of what ever creed or party." This, in connection with the fact that Mr. Gamble. the then member, opposed the repeal of the Missouii Compromise, is conclusive evidence, we think, of the fact that the anti-Ne- hraska question was a prominent one in the election .of Mr. Pearce. Mr. P. was elected to rebuke the authors of theliansas fraud ; and nobly has ho fulfilled his mission.• • Those papers that charge him with having mistaken . the " prevailing sentiment," can give no proof of their assertion; for all the facts are against them: The members of Assembly from his District, have unanimously endorsed his course, and a majority of the voters at the last election declared at the ballot-box that the "prevailing sentiment" in this, Congreisional District, is against the repeal- . of the Missouri Compromise, and against the further extension of Sin 7erv. . Tho • Fusion candidate for Canal Commissioner in this State last fall, was quite as strong an anti-slavery man as N. P. Banks, and he was nom inated on that account. His vote in this Congressional District, is there fore a fair test of the prevailing- senti ment. It - was as follows Nicholson. 2033 996 2034 1332 634 292 Center Clinton Ly_eoming Mifflin Potter Sullivan 7371 - - 7144 Majority for Nicholson 227. So Mr I - Pearce has not only reflected the wish. es of . the party that elected him, nt he has represented a majority of the voters in the District. We hop., there fore, to hear no more of his mistaking thi sentiment of .his District. Let those papers that persist in opposing him, do it on true grounds. If we are to have a 12th Section Trdy Nothing party in this-District, the &cmer it is known the better. If not, then there is no shadow of excuse for opposing the course of Mr.. Pearce. It has been suggested that a distin guished citizen of Mifflin county will be the next candidate for Congress, As at present advised, we shall be happy to support him ; but we would inquire of the Lewistown papers if they expect a candidate who will vote to Please the slaveholders. If so, we think he had better save the expense of the campaign. We shall support no man who will not be as true to Freedom. as Mr. Pearce has been ; anti we believe a Majority in the District will be equally firm in their opposition to. Slavery Extension., PLEASANT WORDS There are a few.disappointed men in our Y Maga, comparatively - new corners, who, manifest their chagrin at their ill success in efforts to rule the• comity, hy asserting that it has a bad reputation abroad. This slander has no foundation except in the poisoned minds of those- who utter-it, Our rep utation has greatly improved within the last ten years, and is constantly improving. Our people have only to. keep in the even,tenor of their way, pursuing their temperate and indus trious habits and their enterprising spirit, to secure 'reputation that will satisfy the highst aspirations. The evidence of this may be seen on every hand. Take the following paragraph from the last Harrisburg Telegraph, as a sample.of the many similar ones that might he published : • " Tisa contested election case in the• House ofßepresentativeslbetween Mr.. ?kit:Gime, sitting member, and Mr.. BELK, contestant, brought a largo del, option of the citizens of Potter county here as witnesses, as the alleged irregularities are located in that coon,. ty. V We had the pleasure of mooting : the entire delegation—aarmg thorn, the Sheriff of the county. A more straight-forward, intelligent, self-re lying sot of men have rarely viSiteds the Capitol, and they boast that thers• has not been a licensed hotel in - the county for three years, and that they. would starve the Sheriff out entirely did not stragglois from other sections come in once in a while to violate the. laws. They claim; that they take more newspapers 'in proportion to their population—Aave the hest neck of woods and the hest population in ..tlerthern Pennsylvania, :and their lir- - ing illustrations go far to sustain the latter assumption." The men who made this impression' on the writer of the abdve, are simply fair specimen; of the mass of our citi• wens. A friend in Jiarrisburg writing to us on business, adds to his letter the following, on the same subject : , I am highly gratified at the im pression the Potter county friends Made here. I have hoard gentlemen ipeaking about them several times:in the highest terms, for intelligence and deportment." • That will do for the present, and until some proof is furnished to sus tain the impudent falsehoods soindus triously published, that our reputation abroad is bad. . _ Tun election of Gen. Cullom .as Clerk of the House is regarded every where as a significant event. Gen. C. voted against the• Kansas Nebraska bill at the last session, and running again was defeated, on the score principally of his apposition to the Nebraska measure. Although a Ten nesseean and a Representative of a slaveholding constituency, no member. opposed more effectively the repeal of the Missouri 'Compromise, and the usurpation of the Nebraska Bill, them he. At that crisis he boldly maintain ed, what all privately admitted, that the honor of the South was . pledgid to the maintenance of that compact. His firm stand emboldened other Southern men, .previously wavering, to take the same position. -He failed of a re-election last - August, but by less than a hundred votes. His vin dication by the House is alike honor able to itself and to him. The charge of " sectionalism"- the favorite cry against the Republican party, needs no better refutation than is given by the fact that, over -looking the local prejudices which confessiiill guide its rivals, it is as ready to honer worth and character in Tennessee, so im Maesachusette.—PiUsburg Gaut's: Plumer. Idol .934 266 1310 436 347