11 VOL:. 1111. Ithem which tells of higher ob jects of . life to a human being-than " possume fat and hominy." er the tristdefecta bleexternal relations. .There is some thing which whispers to them that the body is more than raiment,. and the freedom of the soul infinitely greater than the comforts of the body. Like the test of us, they yearn for freedom, and having aevieved freedom. though but for a few days, they welcome the grave as the alternative to bondage. But, in ailing this, they have in his tory some pertinent and illustriou4 ex amples. The annals of man are filled with similar incidents. There ale names that have been rosette(' ft um tha: mortality which follows all hu man affairs,- solely on the ground of such exhibitions as we have seen in Cincinnati. Nut to mm.tion the thou sand occurrences in to le barbarian times—wher!.i fathers and brothers TI e caso ul the fugitives at CillClll-. du-;fairing safety- have destroyed sari is likely to rut ite more questions those who were most dear t, t hem— iber those which have been argued so ict us recall one or two from the pages ably hef re the Court of the United lof mare civilized story. When %- s ates C. mmissioner. These are in tie idutes wai defeated by Lucullus he tbeasslves sufficient to art-u•e the, at- ordered the :acritice of his wile and waiter of every man who is interested roster to prevent their falling Into the 12 an impartial fir law ; j hands-of the enemy ; aid the writers bat beyond these is a moral question, i who - narrate the tale are accustomed airess;ng it-elf to the s:,mpathiesof tO Di l ate upon the act as a proof of the tlartrt" and noble" beaus. The fur - dignity and grandeur of his soul. air we shall dist uis ill due time., and. when Vii guijam, summoned by Appiu therefore, centine our rem' ks fur the Claudius t surrender his diugliter as • rrewt to the latter. a slave, plunges the dagger into her Our readers are aware that among bosom rather theft yield to the de -61 slav e s at rested at Cincinnati was maud, the pen of the historian warms a neither, who pi eferred to put one into eloquence as he describers the of her children to death rather than it heroic virtue of the Roman father, a n d should be returned to the gripe of the 1 ; t h e smaginarions of the poets aro time-catchers. Her case Is a venial k- j kindled into tragic sublimity.rile one.We Lave heard a great The finest of the Lay. of Rum, 2,41 of the beneficent influences of ; wr itt en by :thcatday, is decidely that Slavery, and el the wonderful tenacity in which he tells the tale of the hap with which even the slaves themselves Il ess Viigiui,s ; oue of the moist touch chug to its-benefits. Every time that I ing and effective of recent tiagedies I par negio, disappuinted with the is lieu - elect upon -the same pathetic expetiveces of flee life, or longing for I „eject. We have seen the latter, tbsiesh-puts of Virginia, returns to indeed, as enacted up.in the steget, hit original conditien, the fact is ' melt the eyes • and stir the inm o st trumpeted to the f :or wind; of heaven. 1 depths of emotion in large audiences, W e are celled upon to 'admire the ; in whose:-.6'itelderittg syml-ally with beaatiful efiectsofth e institrtienNitiin Lthe cilia WAN always mingled a Ito k nee's its very victims to fall iu admiration for the stern hetuism w ith it , and to titn""ce ti at insane uf the parent. 'Yet in what respect pLilanthrepy wlich seeks to interferer doe 4 the act of the •Romon Virginiu; with so luppy a condition. difiet•hom that ofthe pour s'ave-moth- But whet hnve such reasoners to er on the banks of the Oht rI • In the uy of the recent iecidetit iu Ohio I f one case the daughter was claimed as 11.:w do they acceuet for the fact that a wither, ftesh horn the bless': g; of bondage, and with all a mother's and tender:leer—will yet :haw the kuife act ors the throat oilier imeicent 1 Rile in preference to restor g him :o the stater front which she la-ju-t es: ailed f They will denounce the deed as a crime—they will ascribe it to a sadden and hewildeling frenzy —they will say that the woman was denseLLA—that she %sea overcome by panic of fear, aud that she knew not what she did. Well, we will admit the clime, and, THE JOURNAL. EM2:3I ~ .o'•Vm 0 Terms—in Advance to 7 per &swam, 51,p intaeert, TERMS OF ADVERTISING I== ofl2 lives or less, 1 insertion, V',59 " " 3 iniertions, 1,50 every snbsequent iniertion, 25 Is end figare werlc, per sq., 3 insertions, 3,00 I,lty subseiocut insertion, 59 tsluma, one year, 25,00 tuon:h+, 15,00 tiiairsltors' or Executors' Notices, 2,00 841e 4 , per tract, 1.50 PreceiOonal Card I nit exceed:lig eight lined ,51erid for $5,00 per annum. sy letters on lr.l.iness, to secure at 3fition, should tie addressed (post paid) to the lii!ither. From the N. Y. Tribune THIS SLAVE 110TB:EIL grunting the intense exciternei t under which rlie laluned, ask how it was thi.t aLe was throwii into such a madness of feelittc ?. I ISlavery is :.4) agreeable a rprilition to the slaves: if they are ti wall nuitured and cared fur under ilow comes it that this woman was crazed by the thought of being to tui urd to it ? How comes it that she sould forget all the dictat-2s of a mother's Least, and condemn het child to death by her own hands, rather than relin quish the posses:•ion of it to tts pre 'tended owner I How conies it that bcr companions, who are arrested as accomplices in this chute of murder, Fey that they would lather he tried far theit lives, wit' after wai d rirtrched to the gallows, than le sent buck to Kentucky 1 They know what Slave ry is, and they know what death is, and, with many. tlait have guile be fore them in , this world, they cry. " Death before Slavery." Our Southern friends who extol the delights of servitude will have to re vise their theory, or leave events like these out oldie account. These-slaves, it seems to us, are, after all, men, with all the feelings, instincts and aspira tions of men. There is something ii -.-.... --- "'"V"'"") • - - ..... _:.......,.;_z_Lz4. ,, ,..,t,....f . . - fte , ..1:‘ , ..., , t_ . .„, , -!... , ,.....,--,... t. .... : ,- '"^ . 10 , ....: . ~:a1,..-.':...lrt.'"'''i'.-;.‘.'"):"'"7A.'"..1.""--"......"-r•e".46* r'..'l`.":.?_:.'".z.:','!7"----1,.."'.f4r.t.'„ :'. „ • " "--:... ‘',.\::. ' ''. . . :.' .::. ... -2'. ' 7.1 '' '''. r'' 1 . • ,-..,:: ,i ::: •'.., - ..t• ...: .....1 .!• , , , ,-.:"1 Ir , .:i.7. , ..r -;': •-: 1 ~. -•:- 7 .-- , ,,.. . .._ • . . ..,.. ~ ..., •:,....,, ..._ .......„.„; ~. T ,• . • .„,., ..,:: ..• .:,:.......„ Z - 7. f.. I;:i.ft •:•.::;'; 2•-••••• .. . •:..t 1 ~..;,;, ...'. • ,- - ; . .:..,.L . ;• - ..'1 7 ! ,i :: ' . .. ; 1 . '. : "..-,... ~ '' I .. . -..•,' .•, .- '—: . , - ' '4:•.7.'.' •'' .'• • '''::,•: , ; . - $l.OO 1.25 aslare, under infam it); law of Rome, trumped up for the ticcikiiin, and the father. rather than suhiniz_to it. plunj-, ed his knife in the heart of that dantr,b ter. In the other case the child ii claimed as 2 Slack*, under an infamous law of the Union, ya- , r.ed - in a moment id fanatickm, and the mother, ather than )Yelil to it. draw* the knife across the throat of the child. In the former, however,.the crime becomes classic;. history celebrates it ; 'aitists spread it upon their canvat; poets embalm the memory of it in undying lines ; and the world does hit cease to admire it, while it shudders, a; a manifestation of the sternness and graudullr of Roman courage: . But, in the latter case, where there is even more . to excuse the criminal aspect of the transaction, and more to highten its patl-Atic interest, because the per petrator is a ‘copian anti a mother, the p ,or creature is hutlA to prison as a met deress, either to suffer the penal ties of the lan , iu that character, or to be restored to a bondage which the regards as infinitely worse than death, Whatever may become of her—and we trust that the issue will be left to a Jury (lithe free citizens of Ohio, who have hearts in their bodies, rather awl to the tender mercies of thoso who drove the wretched one to so dreadlul an alternative—let no one hereafter talk of the love of slaves fin• their ser vile condition. A great many of them, no doubt, who know ne better, arc contented with their lot, just asu great many white men here at the North are satisfied to live in ignorance ; but the instinct of Froedom is in a majority of them an irrepressible one, which will assert itself when it has an Opportuni ty. How strong and : mighty it . is in some, we behold in - the incident bo- DEVOTED ANO,T4E AVD NEWS COUDERSPOLtT, POTTER COUNTY, MARCH. k 1850. titre us,.where.the mist powerful dic tates ofnature and affection were over come by it, and a mother was made to imbrue her hands in the blond of her own offspring lather than con=ent . to its return t t .the subjection from which she fondly thought she had de .livered it forever. Alt no ! "Disgit4c; thyself as then wilt, Slavery, still'thou art a bitter drt:u.4ln." From the Congregation -II llera:d THE WORE IN VIRGINIA. . , CABIN CREEK. Letvii Co.. Ky. - Doe. ?3,-1855. j Eighteen )'ears ago George Rye, a member (.t. the G-qrman Reformed Church. 11 mechanic of smal).means, industrious habits, and excellent rep- utation, a Mau twenty-seven years 4,f age, prepared a nrilniscript article . of spate le .gth, tin the sullieet of slavery. and shoWed it to a fliend,iegneAing him to haed.it to . atiother, supposii g the perusal would be confined to these: two. But a ''chdrgo wai soon tn tat.i that Mr. Rye had prep'areq and was circulating "an incendiary' . document." Great excitement Collowed ; was arre,ted, thrown into prisim, told the matter laid over till.the sitting of Court. The article intendA fur but few per6ons, was read to a. crowded cLua-room ; its meaning and tendency thoroughly discussed • by lawyers ou each bide; the who'd linnet. consider- ed by a jury of men who had, when challenged .by the prosecution. stated their belief that the B.ule .€alctioned slavery ; and the verdict wss "not guilty." I was permitted to gee this article. It condi.miis Slavery in the abstract and the concrete ; examines the pro slavery Bible argonten - i and exposes its fallacies ; and i on the who!e, a remarkable production. For eig;iteen years this man - hte: avowed himself an Abolitionist. aad has' maintained the right of freeolis- Ctlibioti. Ytit he Las uot, in thiscon test. struck a single blow, nor carried any deadly weapon. May God spare his life in ISiy years, to du much service fir Chi ist. , Were a than now nn iTie ground, he might do well. The members of the German Reformed Church, are geae tally, in that region, Shenandoah, Paige, and ItockingLarn counties, anti slavery awn. So are , the United lirttliren. And [ was gratified ►n sab- serve the. apparent coasciontiotpuess ; j.eoptv. Tho-e among winen I was thrown, are of German Vextlac tion, and have not iost the bt ability so charactedstic of that nation. AlLuition p iid to the uninitig of children rhea: is a seri-useess an»nr , the yowl. , rei pie which gi%•es liniinise of votl success to an to; nest mon:ter 1 Thu thinking portioupf the c.immti nity are beginning to feel that some ' thing i 3 wrong. It dtn23 nut SCUM to them right to hold men in . such a con j dition 01;4 they cannot worship Gud ac'coiding to the dictates of th e ir oWn conscience. Vet the ministers are si lent, or else, they apologize fn. op pression. The new pip r.s abu.se and villity the Abolitionists. The hooks are expurgated. The politicians rep reseut Slavery as the bond which holds the Union together. The fainides which become enlightened move to the flee States, and many of them being to.aule to write, but little is heard (runt them sa'u tne niere,t personal items. .13e0des the people de not :cad much. They must have the living speaker ; a man who will go from house to house preaching the Gospel ; a man whose crowning evidence of divine annoint ing is the same us was the: of the Ales '• the poor hear glad ti- dings." A LIBERAL SLAVEIIOLDER.-A gen tleman in Shenandoah county reminded much of C. M. Clay. He has ;laves whom he purchased out of compassion, and expressed his 'willingness to give them to any-ohe who W:.uld An better with them than he. He is a gentle man of-much iuf;irmation and :intelli gence, yet many •a- Sabbath-school sclusiat at. the: North, is better infirm- ed on the Rights of Man. . Some years' since. he pniehased a large tract of; land ? `,lnucli of which' he disposed of to Inechunicsi and others in lots' of from - three:acres: to sixty. Before rui•chasing, some 'of these men were nia, to use the gentleman's own expression, worth " three-ap.s." 0.1 the whole, that portiOn of \fir; ginia is an interesting 'field'; half a dolen schorl teachers could find con stant employment, mid au tpportunity ot advancing the cause of righteous, They would encornter opposi, tion. number of pupils would not for a While be near so hirg,e as 'if the teacher was not an Abolitionist ; but his infinente . .felt.'; the respetit and confidence of.the.p.:ople would after a time be won.; and best wt.uld be well pleased. Who will go ? Who will come here, when the way is opened, and let your core eip.oulent go to, a new placer J. S. D. . QM Some of the papere-opposed, to the Congresman from the Clinton dis trict, are distressing themselves and - trying to distress others, unnecessari ly, in reference to him; and, having in flicte,l self-torture to the utmost ex tent without any eff,:ct, now cry out in the al -4ui r souls, EVent .3.1 r. Pearce resign? From ail appearan ces, lie will not resign—however Much it miy horrify his heart-blcednig foes —su long as there is a Kansas party to upp.ise ; and in his cuu rse on that great Question of the D be breathes the voice of his oin4titueitts, and should not for a day desert his post.- Yet thew is a certain 9THEit Pierce at Washington,. who does 'not represimt the popular will on. the Great Q,ues tion, slid who has basely violated the sacred promises by which he obtained his seat. Now it is. possible that a Compromise" might be effected, and Congressman Pearce may resign if PreSidant Pierce will, and make way foi the p.:ople to choose a new'Mein- . ber, -and Congress to put Speaker Banks in the NViiite 'Luse. What say inn up-river Je.remialis to such an equitable urrangemant, under which they in gai all sklepo' nights I Pi...tree for Pear d..:—tit for Ca —surely, :" a fair exenange isno rubbery !"—Lcicis burg Chronicle. • TIM PRESLDENE ON BiNliB. O. the 24th ult. President Pierce sent a M h:awe to Congress declarato ry of Li, Cu the Kausa:S. ques tion._ It will he recollected t.tatr iu his aniiuil Mess . ge he intolu - but -a casual allusion to it. Thu present Massage however, gives a cOmplete . view of his oplitions„ a synopsis of tvi;ich we clip front the Tribune as follow::: SUBSTANCE OF THE MESSAGE A bc.ut 1. EuiogizeJ the liausas-Nebraska ME 11. Assails Guy. Reeder as guilty.of m'aleunduct 111. Alittei the pttoitle of the Free . State., wit,, tavorett Atiti-Slavery etpi- gralion L • 11:11P,I16. IV. A d ants the, " irregularities" cull/witted t,y the 13.31 dor ICutii.uls iu the eleLltums ut Kitnoaz., LUC tii to civak blunt. by tibg tbut they were apt)/ uved by tiov. tatists that Lao transter of the seat ul goveinnient by the -Legisla ture in deliaLce ut Governor lUeder's VetU.4lileS nut iuvaiidate the acts ut taid Legislatute. VL Itecuguize the election of Whit-• field as Doiegate,•and ignores . that ut Iteetler, V.ll. _ Denounces the Free-State inovecutlut in Kansas as rebehion, and goeS in tot dealing - ivith the actors itierein as tiaitors. VIII. Proulious to put down the Lieu-ztdte orgauizatiou by arms it oecessary. As:ails those who • circulate thrt,ugh. the . :Statei aecoatit. of the: Studer-Rubio outrages in Kansas. :X:.•Pri,ii:Ses . an Act looking to an early otgatlizatitiuOl the . State Gov , rntiiezit iti -Kansas. • We and eot"autif:;ised these: 4111- ions, in.fact we have ceased 6) be t.ur.- ised at aily nit of perfidy which Pierce & C.,. hare crirnalitted. may commit: Tile Etc. Post corrinictits on this Message no foiltAvs: . . •112. PIERCE'3B9N33ridZBISOF The iasils 41116 m.ii•uiug gave vs an agreeable surprise- We have a message trim 'Air. - 1- ) ieree on tile jeci of - the truuli:es in.Kattsa6—port them, we meue; for though the con ditiott'efthat territory is • trrsile , the occusioil.of sepdog it. to ekrire'33., the.lawleis iuri,ad uf.the. Alisioniti3us is left vutnf cp:k.ideration. Welvain- ed jut such J weisugd us this.to give IleW ardor and ileiermitration to those who are nom,' occupied with certain broad and compreben-ivei plans fur gFring a character to the western set- tiements. .1 It is remat kahld that - ws cannot get Ild of the Ii lows. question. It ride 3 on our shoultleislike the Old Mau of the Sea, whether we will or not. M. Pierce at one time would gladly hare put it ()ht.' of the 'way, - as his annual message.: sh , ,wed, in which 'he dismiss ed it with the briefestitnention. and at the :ape tint! threw Out the threat Of a war with Eughind, ai a tub to arnu ic that heavy Whale, tile public. Tint public occupieditiell awhile with the war schemes of Mr. Pierce, and did not seem' to like them Whi c h we eovied a day or two siocu from the Charleston _llercury showed petty eleally that lie had not taken the ta tic course to get the s.upport of the South Carolina politicians tor. the Pre,-idency. Ilealierefore, returns to the Kalsas - question, and in a smt of despefation offers nets propsals f'or the support of the South, in the shape of a promise to - stand by the Missouri ans in their tuntiltion of the . govern ment of Kansas, and enforce the de testable mditiances which they . pre tended to coact., at time cannon's The President finds many thiligi dune in Kansas which de nut please hint, but lie . makes a most extta.n•di nary selectioa for the put pose of ceu• sure. The calling ,eia cOnvention by the people to frame a constitution for Kansas 'as a state, he declared to be contrary to die public law and the rule of tight. Fie denies the doct rims ul popular suverig :ty t7t that applica tion; the people of Kansa; have uu light to make a constitution in that manner. Bat though this convention had no amiority, and tlnilga tae con stitution ju-t adopted in Mr. Pierce's opinion, fur want of the prop er formalities, aoother bUdy has been sitting in klausas ‘yliese authority and whose proceedings he thinks no pos sible coull vitiste. This I. is the legislatioy appointed by :tran gers frolu Missouri. Of this body Pierce says, that whatever may have been the infornialitiela of its election, it was for all practical purpus.ts a laic ful body." , Infornmities! Winne did Mr. Pierce lesru Eoglish ? 13f lug "iag intAi the tell itury armed bwileters from Misaniri, gilds on their slitailders, and cannea is their train stolen from the United States arsenal, and deicing the voters flour the pulls, Electing members elthe Kansas legislature by the votes personS who lived in Missumi, was an informality. These ale but :tines; they du not affect the authority of the legislature, which has still power, ac cording; to Mr. Pierce, to pass any law it-pleases, just Or unjust. If they te sist au uojust law passed by a legisla ture never elected.by the people, but imposed upon them by strangers, it will be his duty to call nut the United States,. troops, and shoot them (lowa. This, he tells them, is •• protecting them in the lull - enjoyinent of sell government." The President is. a -grtat wag 'as well as a great states man. In the midst of this ferocious jesting he. tkes occasion to 'reprimand those who have, ~ promoted emigration:to . Kansas With tt view ..of making - it a free' state. - While he has no censure. 11,r thetnellviTii;inareliedlitto Kanias with armS'inlireir'ha•ols; and usurped.. the functions of n legislature, ho da "nouuces those. who simplyLexerciss the right i)fpeicefulemig4ation. armed inioad is well enough. though • perhaps a 'little informal; a quiet eat• i L rratiOn is an t uipardonahletiffense..... What- in;iulet•ce in this! By what. authority-dues this man, who has pat. into the executive chair, presume te , tell us who may settle.in Kaasat, sod . % , ilitioluA stay at home--who may help their neighinws to emigrate, and. low" may notl What wairant has he fur occupying the twa Houses with his denuaciatioui, of times whose only idense is that they have become lasi dents of Ka 'Luis, where they have. at perfect a right tti he as he has to b. 0, Washington I Did we elect him for this 1 • '- • . We have Fpokon of the message as an opportune one, and yet, if Mr.. Pierce " were uut su proverbial 4 fititGless to his pledges, we should have some uuiigiviug us to the use *Thick' tue slave tinily !night • make of it- it diiviog Lunt to extreme measures. uruivauee of toe mock legislature Wuiensat at tee tiawnee Missiou will never be obeyed; toe pzaalties enact ed agdinst theOiJeus.lou ut the savory queztiou Witt in.t. tu ; the cotz..:es ul 111ut.1. ,Nut never take the te.t-k,atti f‘n• tut: 6 . upourt of slavery pleset toed ny the spuriuu's code, and yet Lucy will vote st tin; elections. l All tme Littler bum:irons and tyrannical edicts pruniulguted by that. body Kill assuredly be disregarded and trudtica Lu.l,r tout—they euttuut be obeyed by irecinen. 31r. l'ierce will thou bare to coasider Waetner be will execute s ' The --a.itier* ids tuJa:Ave ut (.I.lton:in tnem upon a tur whuse light of self-goveru— meta. 1w indulges ia the dreary joke ut prutesbi..g such pruluuud respect. We are certain that he will *not fulfil his htuudy thtcat . uthess forced to Lae ytules.t urgency of this islavettulders ; and let them reins Aiwa as \jolt:A/I,ly they may, wu cat scarce lit lug o.irselve to believe that he will reutitre u yolt slieh all alt of madam this mestage will hate tee eiloct ut e f ticuuragi.ig those why. meditate uew attacks upoa the rights aid hhet•Lie . s ut tile static:is ul Kausai. ThLiPresitleht is u:i their side; We plottilies theta the asiztuoce of the goverioneot ; anti thus iticitetl, it will tp,t t,c z.trange if we soon hear of pre pal talons for new uut.rage:-. Tho peo- htu ut the nee Jtutesmust step to uttw.ien settlers ut liansus pad_ their ruffian unernies, and give (them the protection tvaich the goxernment do mes. - Let the- as,uctations sinuuthe the pussugu of the emigrant to that Country; title remove the hank. billy; of a border lite, be endowed watt cu.pit4l cotnateosurate to their object. and tile woiß is done. They will then be able to duvet the cuursu of--that vast-stream of emigration which it continually 116y:icy, to the West They will then be able to Pour their him. dreds of thousand.. into tegi.lll6 where tun champions of slavery.tiepe to ea tablish tio:ie unhappy inititutien.— The:/e will overrun Kansas, secure New Mexico &o• freedom, and occupy Wczterti texas. IT was a saying of a great divine. that he had found inure g oet. in peo ple called bad. and more bad in iser.- .ple usually considered good, theater expected. - Tai% Merchants of St. Louis are about tio build au Exchange in ib EN A .doctor down South, says there it nothing to fear float yellow fever. ii yuvi can keep the pitient afire lout enough to gat over it. •' BUY life best agricultural inaplennats. Soave ono flays that politeness is lika. an air cushion. There may lie vela ing in it, but it cases ourjoints woadik 7 , " - 40, RE A - =SW EICSI =II •-• Fl=i2Ol "iv •, NO. -42: lIMI 12 ma