(rildfovti ,41rportet MI E. 0. 000DISI . C11, EDITOB., Tuurada, Pa., Thursday, April,lo, 1879• TILE 3iEGRO EXODE2I4.. The remarkable migration of the cJilortd population of the South is at tr4eting much attention,and exciting the gravest apprehensions of the land-owners and planters. ,It is not confined to a single locality, but there . is a movement of uneasiness and de.... iirt.ffre in all the former slave States. The 'explanations . for this exodus,• which has assumed the 'proportions of a panic, are various and tinsatis fa story. It is allcued thatjinissa.- rb.:s from the Anti-Slavery S6ciety of Nov Yi.lirk have been amongst the inciting and . encouraging em ir,ration, and that the agents of the lialistis Railroads have circulated f i isi-- t olored accounts of the fertile lands awaiting occupation in that . State. Certain it is, that Kansas is the promised land towards which the stream of colored einigra tion is nor,: directed. And it is equal ly C•rtain that the entire negro pip ulatioD of the South has become re,tless and unimsy, inanifo•ting a ieire tt) , migrate to liansas, largv number-; having alroaly passed up tine .11i,sie,,ippi river, arriving at St. in.:ai)eti;ute. and !..titTering larger numbers ea as -1 , , , ,•(•pari ; 13,g to follow, tlefitif.te as to (les- tihati4m or meat', of support, a - dc-ii re tp (--cpe from cun,• uvil, i mprr:,st•ti 1q..1-iT2f that safety :111 I WO tI )It:+' u'IU in K.an,as • who have noted the sub ' f.Litt am! confidence 'Which the 1 -, (;rf) exhihited the ri.l}llion--a faith which ,ervcd t j tacin in r i ti;ct, s u hj ec ti oll t o , r ina,:ten,--anal Ni•i I ling aliterity= Hitt, which thc . ) chcei fully trolked fur -the support of the laud lies of f . those who were lighting to rivet still more securely the manacles upon . their HMI s, and to 'furnish the means i'2f subsistence to the arMit--s whose was Ult• perpetuity of stidden and universal awakenino- on the part of the negia) will lie of great interest. For the negro of the South, norant though . he may be, has been impressed that the " year of jubilee" was (-inning, and the day of his de tliverame at luind. lie waited with, exemplai‘ tLustfulness for the close of the ileheiliun, and hailed the not f emancipation : e the earnest of the ' fulfillment of the hopes- which had in pi red loin. The. religious and super .titions nature of the negro had led iii:n to expeet the coming of; a mil hi luni whieli would bring no., only f:•((-(irini, but material blessln:rs and !P!: ' 1111: COtt.o2l iik i l :111.1 1110 to 1:1.11 : 1 1)f . c . :52e .‘tn.l. plenty. Aliove - all tir,• to tilo party lew: rifAvt•li.in - . •:lft:ty: A lid a. igni-r:,nt az: the tulurc