Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, October 24, 1860, Image 1

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    BY 0. B. GOODLANDER & CO. ,
PSINCIPLES, not MEN.
TERMS $1 25 per Annum, if paid in advance.
NEW SERIES VOL. 1. NO . 15.
VOL. XXXI. WHOLE NO. !G27.
CLEARFIELD, PA. WEDNESDAY, OCT. 24, I8G0.
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tiue theory of our Government tlio the- ' strife of rival factions ; i of White Mid Rod barriers which Government lias erected
oiy thut established Slate governments to roses ; of thoatrio Xevi and Bionch ; but it for the preservation of the lives und props
inuke laws to meet the exigencies, cohdi- is a solemn batttc between Highland wrong be- city of its citizens will huvo been broken
lion, climr.te, soil, &c, of each State, and 'tween Gotland Evil." 'down, and the law of force will then bo
to regulate Iheir own affairs in their own Joshua R. Giddinm. of Ohio, in asneech inaugurated. Js it not clear, then, that
way. mere" is no division of the house '; tho House of Reiuesentative. M M. the man who refuses obodiendo to the
, . . . .. ' ' r it .!! . ..... .
1804, said: , ouusinuuuii aim iuwb oi ms country is an
"Mr. Cha.rman, it has become obvious e"e,"y ' ttIe PW'c7 Judged by
'to all that these conflicting institutions of tnard, where tanJs the republican
freedom and slavery cannot flourish to ' , '
gether under the same Government. . e answer, ther candidate for tho pros
Thcyarun never be reconciled. They ev- idency not only refuses to yield obedi..
cp have been, they are now and ever ivill nco to the decision of the Supremo Court
I be. at war with each other. nine and enmo uul- "cuiauy ueciures uis inieniion to ins
IOver three weeks and less than three months 25
ents per square for each Insertion.
Business notioes not sxooediug- Sliuej are in
ferted for $2 a year.
; AdvortisomeuU not marked with the number of
Insertions desired, will be continued until forbid,
Sad charged according to these terms.
U. B. UUUDLAJiUER CO.
against ltseifiutho Constitution; it ex
ists only in tho efforts of such lunatics as
Abraham Lincoln to create strite, stir up
discords, set brother against brother, and
father against son, in our great and hap
py household of confederated States.
Four months after Mr. Lincoln's sporeli
we Snd the Hon. Win, Id. Seward, the
great leader of the black-republican party.
expressing the fame idea in his speech at
Rochester, N. Y. :
"Thus, these antagonistic systems are
constantly coming into closer contact,
anu collision results- snail 1 tell you
this
ican par-
otfnr.
THE HEART THAT HAS LOVED.
Unto the heart that truly loved,
And loved, alas 1 in vain,
A joy so sweet a love so pure
Cau sever come again !
liuto'er life's sky, like a midnight clound,
The years shall darkly pas's;
And loves warm rnyj shull thine no more
On the ruined heart aim!
The wreck within mny be hid tilth smiles,
Which are ever bright and bland,
But 'tis liko the ivy's verdancy,
That covers a ruin grand .'
Ard think net, though the eyes are bright,
Though the checks may wenr no stain,
Thftttho love lorn heart is all restored
It can nover love again !
There is a 'love' which is not love,
Dut something far more bate,
Which lives on r eilth and station high,
Fair forur, or charming fuce ;
But where two souls together run,
Like fallen drops of ruin,
Woe, wot la theirs, if they must part,
They can never love again I
6 . W. Hi7.ri.TivE.
I. . ir... . s 11
mil nui Lujuuiiiiiu , jAcuvuii aim jicu tu-
not be at peace."
The Rev. Edmund II. Sears is an ardent
black republican, lie preached a sermon
on tho 15th of Juno, 185G, fur the cause,
what the collision means? They who which was afterward published as a repnb
think it is accidental tinnnnnamrv. thn I ltean campaign document. From that
worn o: interested Jamaica! ugitutors, aud
thereloro ephemeral, mistake tho case al
political,
j Continued from last week.
.Till: Git EAT ISSUE
TO UE DECIDED IN' NOVEMBER NEXT !
J o
I SHALL TUB
CONSTITUTION AND THE UK ION
t STAND OR FAIL?
I 0
I SHALL SECTIONALISM TRIUMPH.
together. It is an irrepressible conflict
betwfen opposing and enduring forces,
and it means that the United States must
und will, sooner or Liter, become entire
ly a slavcholding nation or entirely a free
labor nntion. Either the cotton and rice 'and barbarism."
helds ol South Carolina, und the sugar Tne Hon. John
plantations ot Louisiana, will ultimately
be tilled by free labor, and Charleston and
Mew Origins become marts for legitimate
merchandise alone, or else the rye fields
and wheat iiclds cf Massachusetts and
New York must again be t urrenderod by
their farmers to slave culturo and to the
production of slaves, and Boston and New
iork becomo once more a market for
trade in the bodies and soul of men. It
is the failure to apprehend the great truth
that Induces ho many unsuccessful at
tempts at fin ill compromise between the
blavHAud fi eo Slates, aud it is tho exis
tence of this great fact hut renders all
such pretended compromise, vhen made,
vaiu and epLemeral."
Governor Chase, of Ohio, is ano'.lier ad
vocate of the "irrepressible conflict.' A
few days uso, at 1'ontiao, Michigan, ho
tiitif. stated the issue, or rather Ins con
ception of tho issue between the par
tics :
'I ask you to take sides and decide
wheio you will bo. 'If the Lord bo God,
then serve linn : but it Uaal, then serve
him.' 'if slavery bo right; if capital ought
to uwn labor, thon go for the doo'rine o
pcnly. If you believe that freedom is tho
right of niu, then join tho party which
li us inscribed on tho folds of its banner.
"Freedom throughout tho couutrj's wide
domain."
It may bo well lo add that we knoiv of
no party, save the black republic ins, thai
contends for this issue. The democratic
party is lighting (or the constitutional
lights of all sections for the Con nit ut inn
IS. 1 lll'V
ry
.sermon, thus endorsed, we quote;
"There is no peace for the country, no
safety for institutions, until slavery is dis
lodged from the national organism : until
the Government of the country is wielded
for liberty, righteousness, and civilization,
and not for oppression, unrighteousness,
Wentworth, an ex-
member of Congiess from Illinois, and at
present the black republican mayor of
Chicago, in an article in his paper, the
Chicago Demociat, glorifying over Frank
Blair's election in St. Louis, says !
'While tho great doctrine of tlio duty
oftheFeder.il Government to make the
States all free' thus receives endorsement
in a slave holding State, shall the repub
licans of the free Sfalcs lower their stand
ard of principle?
"J he day of compromising, hnll-way
measures has gone by. Tho year of jubi
lee has come. Already is the child born
who shull live to see the last shackle (all
from the limbs of tho slaves on this con
tinent. Universal emancipation U near
at hand. The Republicans have thrown
thc"ir banners to the breeze, inscribed with
Lincoln's glorious words, 'TheStatej must
bo mado all free,' and under it will march
on to victory after victory, conquering,
nnd to conquer."
This doctrine
and bloody road
regard that decision 1 In his Chicaco
speech, July 10, 1858, he said s
"If I were in Congress und a vote should
come upon a question whether slavery
should be prohibited in a new Teriitory,
in spite of the l)red Scott decision, 1 would
VOTE TIUT IT SllOfl.D."
Having thus set the example! of disobo
dienco of tho Supreme Court, it is not
I strange thai ins supporters should run on
in the same chunnel. Jroremost or them
we find Mr Sumner thus advising resis
tance to th 3 fugitive slavo law in a speech
in Lost on in IhoU:
"The good citizens, as ho reads the re
quircments of this act, (relative to fugi
tive slaves, )is Idled with horror.
Here the path of duty is clear. I All bound
TO DISOBEV THIS ACT."
"Sir, I will not dishonor this home of
tho Pilgrims, of the Revolution by admit
ting nay, I cannot believe that this
bill will bo executed here."
Again, in tho Senilis of the United
State, we see him again, reiterating bin
determination not to obey the law. Mr.'
llutler, of South Carolina, asked, "If e
repeal the fugative-slavc-law,-will Massa
chusetts executo the provision of this con
blitutionwithout any law of Control's?
Will Ihii honorable senator (Mr. Sumner)
tell mo that he will do it" To" which
Mr Sumner replied : 'Is thy servant a dog
that he should do this thing?" Mr Jiuller
continued : "Then you woiildj not obey
theConstitution. Sir, Ktunding hero before
this tribunal, where you swore to support
it, you rise and tell mn it is the office of a
also leads to the -long nog to execute uie v,onsi.uiiion oi ine u
r.r..i.'ii!.. ir i,i Initcd States?" fo which Mr Sumner
Williamson sn his prison, at ! hiladelp hia main to Union, to justice, to defence, to
as a martyr to the holy cu'uso of personal welfare, and to libertv. T.ut th'ir U a
liberty. There is u pullio sentiment hiVher law thuu th.) Cnn..tiuitHHi, wl.ieli
ipringing up that iv.ll brand upon tho , regulates our auiiewiiy o-er the domain,
brow of Judge Kunu a mark that will and dvotes it to ihe ainne noblw uurpo-'
mane uim exuiaim, as ma namesaue, me ses." Add. to Coint. UW.e lt Sex. 3!r
older Ciuu, "It is "too great forme to , Cong, uaije G3. l'6o.
bear. ," Annm in p tri..rK i G,.ni. Hf 1.
In 1850, Joshua R. Giddings nddresed a 1858, Mr. Sowar d suid :
letter to a meeting at Palmyra, Ohio, in j ..rhe interest, of the white racedeuiRtid
which, speaking of the lugitive slave iaw, ' tl)l, utmttk cinancipaiinn of all men.
hosaid: ; Whether that connm Munition iuill be al-
"Yet we are told we must obey this law lowed to take ctiect, null tmedfui and
and pertiotuuie thsso crimes until a slave- wise precaution.! agaii,t siui.;eu chui.o
ridden Congress shall seo fit to reclaim us j nnd disaster, or be hurried ..n !.y violence,
from such a sin against God by repealing ' U all that remains for you to decide."
the law Whether it be light to obey God Slill Uteri otJ, a fevy d t Bog.
rather than man, Pidge ye. ton lie boldly proclaimed ;
"From my inmost lioul I abhor, detect, , , ...
and repudiate this law. I despise the hu-' . V h1 commpntary upon He history
man being who wouiu otey it, it sucn a
being has existence."
During the 1st session of the 31th
Congress, we find Mr. Giddings regaling
t lie House with his law defying doctrines,
and bragging of his nigger-stealing pro
pensities, he suid,
"Gentlemen will try nnd.boar with m
when I assure them and the l'tesident,
01 man i the luel Hint eighteen years af
ter the death of John Qui:ev A darns tho
people have for their Handavd bean r A
braham Lincoln, confessing the- obliga
tions of the higher law which tr.e Sage of
jQuincy proclaimed, and contending for
weal or woe, for life or de:ith. i-i I h nre-
!pre?sible conflict between freedom and
ti , . .
slavery, i uesiro omv to say that we
, in the l;nt statre of tho conflict before tho
that 1 Imvaseen as many as nino fugitive great triumphal inauguration of this poli
shes dining at one time in my house. 1 .cyinto the Government of tho United
id:
nipn.veTiTt'TtfiS tip PtrpvpnTrn- j " . ",,a ,or 1 '. 0 tnwii iw u
. , liavo nothing to do with thivery or twiti-
AND tLiVClV. They do not proclaim 'Slavery
throuahout the country's wide domain,"
THE UNION DESTROYED !
Ml SHALL WE CONTINUE TO HAVE
One Country 1 One Uuion 1 0m Consti
tution !
SD
ON E G LORI0US DLSTI N Y ?
LINCOLN ANDHIS SUITOR.
TERS.
nor uo they proclaim "rreeuom iiirougu
out tliu country's wide domain," for the
simple reason that the Constitution leaves
thai question to be settled aud decided by
tho neonle of each State, and each Tern
tory when they come to fjrm a State con
stitution preparatory to their admission
into the Union, for thom-elvos. Gover
nor Chase would break down and tramp
i le under foot his solemn and salutary ob
' ligation of the Constitution, for in no oth
!! iviiv ronlil hii imitv unfurl tho banner
HEHOLD THE RECORD 1 !cf Freedom throughout the country's
This doctrine aleo means the abolition of ,vido domain."
alaveiy in the States. If it btrue, as the IJon. George W. Julian, once a mem
black republican leaders assert, thatslavp bpr of Congress from Indiana, and at this
are not property, and that they are only time, the republican candidito for Con
held by tunrpiition and tyr'ny, what is more cress in the banner black republican dis-
nntural than for such men. when they get trict in that State, at a Fremont miset-
I into power, to put down this "usurpation ingin Greenville, Sturko county, Ohio, on
and tyranny," and declare tne slaves tree : , the lUlh ot September, Jtwo, tnub ueuvei
Abolition is the natural and meviianie . ed himselt :
consequence of the doctrino that mun j ' H is no use to deny it any longer. Our
cannot hold property in man, and hence republican party U a sectional gai ty, because
we are not surprised to see the same men , the South has forced us into it. The
whoprocUim, also, the abolition cfbla stumpersof this old line, hoise-alealing
very in the States. j democracy, not having the fear of God be-
Notr, hear Henry Clay upon this dog- fore their eyes, charge us with being ecc
ma : j t ion al I tell you wc area sectional partly 1 1
"I know there is a visionary dogma is not alono a fight between tho North
which holds that negro slaves cannot be and the South. It is r tight between free
the subject of property. I shall not dwell dora and slavery between God and the devil
long with this speculntive abstraction, between Heaven and hell."
That is property which the law recognises Qn the IGth of January, 185"), the Rev.
to be property. Two hundred years of Hnn;v Ward Reedier, the pet of the black
legislation have sanctioned and sanctified republicans of Brooklyn, New York, in a
1 t) 1 . ..- . 1 . . , r. il I.!....
negro slaves as property.
1839, p. 357.
UNCOLS AND UlS SCITORTERS !.V HVOR OF
THE "lKHEritESHIBLB COMl'MCT I"
"We believe Mr. Lincoln claims to bo
1 il. i f . i . . 1 1 : . . : u I . Ann(i:t"
i ine autnor oi vuo ii lein us.iiiu lumnn mi i n...:ii, i..,
.... r.., :.,,.,! ,,. , that ministers will meddle witli improper
tUBU. Al IC'IBV, no UIIU UIIU 11UK jv uv- . ,. ir.,1 f
lltni'i, Im mi I ri'mit-rwci 1 1'n ml H in!.'' lw.t tvoen a
slavery and freedom; if, indeed, ibis bei"01,1
the iiisue in coi llicl ; if, indued, tho 0110
or the other must triumph and the other
be, crushed out, then, us a nialter of sc'j'
d'eucc, tho.ic so believing, whenever the.y
get iiiio power, will wield all that power
lu crush out and trample under foot the
slave Slates of this Union, ami to emanci
pate their slaves. This it the doctrino of
llio "irrepresib!o conflict" so loudly de
fended and advocated by Lincoln, S iward,
and tho blaek repubhcuii party. Are the
people of this c uiilry prepared lor lliis?
Men of thn North, tiro you willing to eu
g.iue in this crusade ugiiiiist your Smth.
ern biviiiren ; to drench this land in all
tile honors of civil war; to cut the throats
of Southern men. "bono of your bone
and f!eli of your flesh 1" It yea, vote for
Abiidiam Lincoln !
The disregard of the black republican pjr;; fur
tan , then Hint upon the constitution and ('
decision of the supreme court cf ths united
Males '.
It has been well and truly tuid that "the
law is the concentrated majty of the
voice cf thu people." 11 e ho violates a
law, therefore, not only insults, but com
mits uu oflence against tho people. In
this Government especially are we called
upon to yield obedience to the luws. In
no other way tan the Republic exist. We
have a written Constitution, which our
fathers made nnd which wo must observe,
ifweexpectto preserve our liberty, our
independence, and our tniuii. Hint
Constitution says:
No person held to scrvico or labor in
one State, under the laws thereof, esca
ping into another, shull, in conscquenco
of any law or regulation tnerein, bo dis
charged from 6ucli scrvico or labor, but
shall bo delivered up on claim of the par
ty lo whom such scrvico or labor may be
due
'1 recognize no such an obliga
Tlio Hon. Edward Wade, of Ohio, in
the llouso, Aug. 2nd 1855, said :
"lhus, sir, the Ihnce-exeerable fugitive
lecture in New York city, on the subject
of cutting the North from the South, suid:
"All et tempts at evasion, at adjourning
at concealing and compromising, are in
vain. Tho reason of our long agitation is,
not that restless abolitionists aro ubroad,
bd them. I clothed them, and gave
thcnl money for tlreir journey and sent
them on their way rejoicing. If that bo
tr cason muke the most of it."
"Mr. Bennot of Mississippi. I wall t to
know if tho gentleman would not have
gone one step further?"
"Mr Giddiugs. Yes sir. I would have
cone one step further, I would have
driver, the sluve catcher who dared pursue
them from my premises. 1 would lime
kicked him from ir.y door yard if he had
made his appearance, there ; or hud he
ho atteiiiyled to enter my dwelling I
would have stricken him down upon tho
threshold of my door."
Now hear the Rev Henry II urd Besnh
er :
"If there were as many laws as there
arclines in the fugitive-slave law, and us
muny ollicers as theio were lions in D.m
iol's lion's den. trould disregard every law
but God's, and help the fumlive. The of
ficers might catch me, but lut him, If I
could help it."
WTe ask every honest man in this broad
land, can any government cxIbI where tho
people aro taught to disregard and resist
tun ijon.sl ilut inn nnd t liulaws? Does not
slave law, with its catch-pole bevy ol slave suc(l a glale ot things inevitably lend to
hunting co-.umissioners und deputy mar- ,uuci,y an 1 tho overthrow of Govern
shals, AccOHirs a nullity and numaneclhe ment? By what riglrt do you hold your
-illunous concoction of slave holding us yOU. douses, und vour property of
surpation nnd dough-faced subserviency i eve,.y cicscl.i)tion ? Ry what right do'you
and dissolved liko atubblo before the de- i copet. your debts ? By law and tho de
vouring lire." cisions of your courts. But the laws and
On tlio 11th of March, 1850, Senator the courts not only guurauteu your rights
Seward, of New York, thus spoke in the 'of property, but they throw around your
Senate: I Heci the tegls of their protection. Sweep
"All Ihi" is just and sound ; but ussum-! away all constitutions, all laws, all courts,
ing the sumo premises to wit.- that all ' and where is the protection lo lde nnd
men are equal by their nuturo and cd' na property ? Then the law of force prevails
lions the right of property in slaves falls then confusion reigns then anarchy is
to the giound ; for cno who is cquul to supreme then the s'.rong and sinewy arm
the oilier cannot be the owner or ptoper- and the brawny
rf lli il. ullier. ll.it voj nnswe.r ihilt rights of propirtV
i lm Cintil.ition recognizes monertv in fiau violence tears asunder the bauds nf
l 1) would bn miflleient then lo re, mu'.rimony, und gloats in its bestial free-
,.!.. , ihi, rti,i.v,V;,i,r Min.itwn Ml ST love! JJoyou preier uim state oi uuairs
BE void, because is reptignuut to the law . to tho (jovernment you
shoulders decide the
and of life- then ruf
Under this provision, the Congress of ttde. lriiother it recedes or not, we
of naturo and of nations.
Again, in his speech at Albany, New
York, October, 12, 1855, Mr. Seward said,
"It is written in the Constitution of the
United Slates, in violation of the divine law,
that we shall surrender the fugitive slavo.
You blush not ut thehe things because
they are familiar as household ivords."
Still ngain, in his speech in the Senate,
March, Jd, 18.), Mr. Seward thus assail u
the Drod Scott decision and the Supreme
Court :
"Tho Supremo Court also cun reverse
its spurious judgment more easily than wo
can reconcile tho people to Its usurpa
tion." "The pcoplo of tho United
States never can. and they never will, ac
cept principle so unconstitutional and ub
horrcnl. Never, never, f.cl thecoirt re-
shall
17!I3 passed, and Gen Washington upprov-
ed, a bill for tho rendition of lugiiive
slaves, In 1850, Congress amended this
bill in some slight particulars, not alter
ing ils main feutures, or violuting t je prin
ciple of the act of 17'Jo. 'L'ho man -vho
refuses to yiclu obedience to the Constitu
tion and this law, as well as other laws
reorganize the court, and thus re firm its political
sentiments and practices, rnd bring thoiii into
harmony with the Constitution and the
laws of nature."
To the samo effect is the address of the
republican State convention of New York
in October, loo :
Iterance in his KPeoch ut SpringfieTd, lift, , l 'O.nes, that parties are tisregardlul or
5 nois, on ho 17th of June, 1858. We quote . their country's interest. 1 hese are svmp
: from the volume of Debates between Lin- toms only, not the disease; tho effects,
coin and lougla., page 1. Mr. Lincoln ot tl'e causes.
- nid "Two grout powers that will not live to-
1 "NVe are now far' into the fifiU year .gother are in our midst and lugging at
ioe.e a policy was initiated with the a- eac-i other s throits They
vowed jUjcct nd confident promise of o her out, H-ough you seper ite hem
r-1 ... t ..:.; r. a hundred timesi And if by an manc
OeT o eort thJiJ-lto MUt blindne.s you shall con the
itationh notoclyiiot ceased, but has wu. end send th. . mse. led donate
Mn.tu,u ..,n.-n.,1 1.. mv ot.miou. down toyourclnldien, It will go down,
jit will not cease until a crisis shall have
peached and paMed. 'A house divided a
gainst itself cannot stand.' I believe this
Government cannot endure permanently
naif slave and half free. I do not expect
jthe Union to be dissolved i 1 do not ex
tieet th hni:K to fall: but I do exrect it
kill riuLA ha Hiri.lnfl It will become Mr. Sumner, of Masaehusett, thus reite
pill one thing or all the othsr. Either the rata the "Irrepressible conflict" doc
opponents of slavery will arrest the fur-, trine :
the spread of it, and place where the "Senators sometimes announce that
tmblio mind shall rest in the belief that it they resist slnvry on political grounds
u in the course of ultimate extinction, or only, ana remind us that thy say noth
lWi advocates will push it forward till it ivg ol the moral question. This is wrong.
, Jhall become alike lawful in all the States, slavery must pe resisted not only on po
Id a well as new, North a well a jlitical" grounds, but on all other grounds;
outh." ' whether social, economical, or moral.
1 Hon little thii man understands the Ours is no holiday contest j nor i it any
"It is one of the most lamentable fcat-
mado under its authority, is an enemy to urj,HOf ti)0 present democratic dcgeneiacy,
hiscountry. that it Ins invaded ovon the sanctuary of
Tim Constitution also established the iustiec. und from the seat once honored
... ... ., I At .1.1 I CU
Supreme Court as the court ol last resort, by Jay, icutieugo, r,nsworiu ana mursiui., i ftn l nR Us C0iuurnmil,inn ,vill be
lo interpret the luws of the land, und t.o-v strains its equity through tho sievo of .,g re(tal.,lrt ,,0,.ion,. u
UiuKes Its uecision oongaiory upon every sccihuiaiisiii. hi i;;rinii n raivu,.
citizen, lie who, therefore, ret uses to o- t hoy aro tiifgraceiui to nib nmitra w
ley its decisions, is an enemy to his coun- wh.ch they belong and the age in wincn
try. This matter cunnol bo dodged or e-, we live. The infamy of the Pred Scott
vaded. Inculcate in tho minds of the decision 4s but a lgiliinato sequence to
requires only to follow this simple rule of
action: lo do everywheio und on every
occa-ion what ivo can, und not to neglect
or refine lo do what we can, nt any time,
i l . .1 it.n , ..KntA (i.A f, r , 1 fill I 1 1 fl t.
people a disrespect and contempt for the the efforts that hare been pu t forth to . icu,ar occ'ati0n, we cannot do more.
t ". . r i. Circumstances determine posMmiiiies.
donee of the nation !''
who
laws und decisions of the courts, and our
Government is destroyed, und might
takes the place of light. Strike down iLe
bubvurks of tho laws and tho courls, und Senator Wilson, of Masnehusclls,
where is the security for life and property ? scem to have been n pioneer in the cmie
By what title, then, would tho farmer ttf assailing the Supreme Court, it will be
. t , i . . . 1. . . ......... 1... 1,4 I, ta l.,n, I I ,A inai. lumn ill. Ionic I II A . 1 ...1 : 1 jr. ; .. 1 1, a I V r.1
fftitlieringvoiumeanaMieiigiii ui, rvn j i uwi " ii'i " i""ui , ieuiriii"i'iui um m , ...
dt -p, to wste and desolate their heritage. men hant his goods ? Ry that title only Philadelphia, a band of abolitionist, with
Letit be settled now. Clear the place. Bring j which the mountain robber of Scotland ias8more "Villinmson at its head, refcuod
the champions. Let them put their lan- proclaimed, when ho said that whilo one R fugitive slave from the hands of the ofti-
cesinrest for the charge. Sound tho shock of grain remained, or cuttlo grazed crrs 0f the law. For this he was tried
trumpet ; and God save the right 1" on lowland plain, the Gaul, to mountain condemned and Imprisoned. Referring
In his speech in IheSenate, June 4. I860 " wtninir. Tin n,
....... , . inlfH li filial 0 niV.n Pi i fr U lUnn anul.
. .. . .... l . i J iU LV I - vw, .... - I
How important it is to every citizon' "We shall change the Supreme Court of
that the Constitution ana the laws oi tue the United States, and face men in that
country should be observed and olieved. court who believe with its pure and im
The infraction of one law leads inevitably maculate Chief Justice, John Jay. that
to the infraction of another. If one man our prayers will be impious to Heaven
is allowed lo violate one law on the ground while we sustain and support hum.m sla
that it conflicU w ith his ideas of duty un- very. We shall free the Supreme Court
der a "higher law," another man will vie- 0f the United States from Judge Kane.
late another law on the same pretext, un And here let me say there is a public ren
til no law will be observed, and sll tho timentsprining up that regards 1'assmoro
States."
Gov. Chase, of Ohio, in h' Bpeech de
livered in Cincinutti from which we have
uheady quoted, said.
"For myself I uiu ready to renew my
pledge, and I will veuturo to speak iu
behalf of my co-workers, that we will go
ttraiglit on, without faltering or waver
ing until every vestige of oppression
shall be erased from the statute books -until
the sun, in nil his journey from tho
utir.ost eastern horizon through the inid
beaven, till he sinks behind t ho western
bed, shall not behold the footprint of o
single slavo in all our broad und glorious
land."
Senafor Wilson, of Massachusetts, in his
Boton speech in 1?55. suid :
"Send it abroad on the wings of tho
wind that 1 am committed, fully commit
ted, committed to tho fullust extent, in
favor of immediute und uueonditio.iul
abolition ofslavery, wherever it exists un
der the authority of the Constitution of
the United States."
In a letter written on July 20, 1835, the
dame Wilson wrote :
" Let us remember that more than three
millions of bondsmen grouuing under
nameless woes, demanp that we shut re
prove each other, and that we lubor for
heir deliverence.
"I tell you here to night that the ng:
ilatiou of this question will continue w!iue
the foot of a slave presses the sod of tiiu
American Republic."
CONCLUSIO.v.
It will be perceived that we have midc
no quotations from that slill more ultrit
and cxtre.ii a portion of the republican
party led by Win. Lloyd Garrison, Wen
dell I'hilipH, Abby Foster, Gerrit Smithf
lied pa: h & Co., who have the merit of ue
in more out spoken, told, and violent in
their uvsaults upon tho Constitution and
the Union; for tho reason that, though
voting wil l Hint parly, yet some of lie
republican leaders in some of the States,
such as Indiana, Pennsylvania, and New
Jersey, where black-republicans is ol sIoa
growth, ufli-ct to deny their authoriiy to
speak for the republican party. So, in
these papers, we have confined ourselves
striutly toquot itions from the Kepi e,enti
tive men- tho admitted leaders the en
dorsed aud everywhere acknowledged
founders, creators, and nurses, advocates,
and chief supporters of the republican
party -tho men who mado this party,
whoso talents sustain, whose counsels di
reet, whose nets control it. No man cau
gainsay their authority to speak tor it,,
for they themselves constitute the party.
We have made fair and hoiie.-l quotations,
from their speeches and lelte.s. And
now look upon the record. What doesU
ail mean ? The dissolution of the Amei'i
cun Union, theemancipation of the South
ern slaves, and the reduction of tho South
ern Spates and Southern men into the
abject position of colonies and vassals.
This is the "bloody goal" at which bhick
ropublicanism strives. And what is th
lusson this brutal prngrninine ought to
instil into the hearts of conservative meis
of tho North 1 Wo urdiesi'atingly an
swer, Union lor the sake ot the Union.
When bad men cambiue, good men ought
lo unite ; und when tho bloody banner of
fanaticism is uulurled to tho breeze, nnd
when treason, grown audacious and defi
ant, no longer skulks in secret, but wills
shameless front proclaims its piinoiplew
und objects to the world, it is high thuo
for tho fiiends of law and order at the
North to rally around theConstitution.
ar.d to raise aloft the flag of the Union,
w'.iile yet we huvo a Constitution, a Un
imi, and a flag, and before these Black
Republican revolutionists succeed -in in -
ni'i,..,l , i-.l nl we nniiir. o ' auimruim:' a rei'-n m lei mr iiKKiiierar
the fo.'itive who lavs his weary limbs ot ' nnge of St.' iomingo, nrnl before the Re
your door, and defend him us you would ' public of North America, rent intofrug-
your paternal gods." i ," ' 'i ,' -
I "Correct, your own error that slavery i fuel only in the page ol hrdory. llieiy-
h li any constitutional eiianntees wineii ; is mu
may not be released, and ought not to be , country that has tlio power to resist and
relinquished." "You will- soon j roll back tho waves ot 'anat.rinm. 1 ha
inio an t"1" " "
' party. 1 irmly pluniea in tlio nearts oi
I il.a Amnvi.vm neoiilo. des.cended from t ho
In his speech in the Senute, March 11, pU.0 ttn,i tetter dav of this Republic
1850, Mr. Seward said : ! rintompornry with Wathington. nd del-
"There are constitutions and statutes, ! ferson, and Jackson, it slnnds forth to day,
nn,ln,orefintilrt and codes civil : but . as it has ever stood the ic nvmpion
... i;Ji,: siiaing nstioei. Poust ilut inn and the Linen.
ril, whw wo 7rs founding Sti.es all cohered nnd everlhiown the BUek Re
these laws mnt be brought to '.he stand-! pnbliear. disunion party upon one battle.
rH nf i Im lnw of of God. and mu-t be held.
tried by that standard, and mint stand ori
fu bv it.
HOW-
ll
now haver it
yea, then vole lor uo men who scon at
constitutions, resist' laws, and duly the
courts of the country volo for Abraham
Lincoln and Hannibal Hamlin,
Lincoln and his supporter l in favor of the aio
lilion of slavery and the higher Uiw 1
Iu Ins tenth-of-July speech in Chicago,
(seo Debates. raue 15.) Mr. Lincoln, in
reply to some strictuies on his Springfield
speech, said :
I did not even say that I desired that
slavery should be put in course of ultimate
extinction. I no s.w so sow, iiowkveb;
so the: e need be no longer any didiculty
about that. It may be written down iu
the great speech."
"1 have always hated slavery, I think,
us much us any abolitionist 1 have been
an old lino whig I huvo always haled it ;
but I have always been quiet about it un
til Ibis new era of the introduction of the
Nebraska bill becan. I always belioved
that every holly was against it, and that it
was in course of ultimate extinction."
Mr. Seward, in his creat speech nt
Clcvchui:!, Ohio, in the canvass of If IS.
used tho following explicit nnd unmista
kable hinguago :
"Slavery can bo limited to its present
bounds; it can be ameliorated. It can be,
nnd it must bo, aiioi.isiif.d, nnd you und
I cun and must do it. 1 he task is us kiiii-
brine the parlies of tho country
elluctivo aggression upon slavery."
of the
It has en
"The Constitution reculates our
nrdship ; the Constitution devote th
Lei the conservative men of thi.
country now rully to iU standard, ana it
will ngai:i meet, overthrow, and vanquish,
Ibis dangerous enemy to the Rermblrc.
si t jive peaoe and security to the Unic
I