Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, May 10, 1855, Image 2

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    The, PhiladelPhis kleetiotr
It seems a little . pibblemittical who have
the greatest:eau.le to reFoic4 over the xestils l
of the recent m nici pal efe4tion Philadel
phia. tome of the DeMoctatic.Paperi have
-been exowirig o' ex the rine thoegh they
bad something to rej&ce 'Their-lUrtnerl
arrogance seems to have been effectually
. whipped'out oftheiti, end they are now thank-
Position of Parties:
fill fin. very small favors.
is these 'a pro-slavery party at the North ? The election for City Trmsurer was close,
There is'a party that, instead of ' ignoring the •
from the fact that the Democrats supported
slavery question,' has long been and still con-1 f m - r -
Ilag gert, the Whig' candidate - for that
tinues the active auxiliary of the Slave Pow
er ; that approved of the'Nebraska bill ; that, office, thus for the oc casion asion uniting both the
partic4 l against the Know. Nothings, Apd
since that act has made Slavery the great is
yet, notwithstaialingithis fusion,:llorton, the
sue before the 'people has generally nominat- .
ed and supported Nebraska men ftir office • I Ainericanaindidate,fwas elected by -322 ma
and that has been mete and defeated by the , jority. ' At the Oct4er election, the •Dern°,
cats of Philadelphia,gave Judge Black 25,
-people on that issue, throughout the Free 4149 votes, and. Thomas H. Baird, the Amer-
States. Facts, then, point out this party, the loan candidateJuid 22,104. NoW, the united
sham Democracy, as, at least in practice, the Whig and Democrsitio" vote for Treasur4r;
Pro-slavery Tarty of the North.. :Nor do is only 22,688, while the Atherican vote"
they generally deny that this is their position
'tint openly advocate pro-slavery measures,' figu res, 458; Which ' i party , 11ecrdistingr.toisht::
Sher
except in few localities where policy die-. r - y g , u th' . e e N D -P d Pe moc a— rarieran d dr i da y te ing f2 City GoM
tates a different course, to conciliate thC . Free missioner, is defeated by Hill the 'American
Soiler&t.
candidate, - by 197 majority , one hundred ard
To call off attention from their own posi-
seventy-seven votesicaat . in the Seventh Ward
tlon, so emphatically opposed to the ?rind. for . G. Hill having been rejected by the
plea of true Democracy, the organs Of the -
Return Judges. 1
sham democracy - are raising the cry of 'anti-
The. Afnerican candidates for Assistant +
slavery against their opponents. For those Surveyors were. elepted in most of the die
who vote pro-slavery to make this charge
trios. The Demoerats are also in the nil;
-against those 'who vote antislavery, scans
nority in iioth the . City Councils, but the re
remarkable enough; but a portion of the op- cent extravagance }of the old Councils ha d
position are United in a secret organization '
aroased - the eitinis against them, and the
and this fact affords an opportunity to assert Anleriean!enna i sas were i n se i era l ewes
that that organisation -is pro-slavery-=that
defcateitfor tliat effuse. - •
pro-slaveryism is one of its. secrets.- If such , 4
is the fact, if the Know Nothings have placed In this election lee have another exemplifi
cation of the present weakness - of party: ties,
theznselies on the same grounds with the
and -the d e termination of the people to reform,
sham Democracy on the slavery question,
abu'ses 'by whotnever committed. The
they deserve to fail - and will fail; and they .
11 - orth American
l ays that the true Cause of
and ,. the Free Soilers nuist part company,'
the ,defeitiof so mrly of the Anierican candi
their proper place 'being with the party ; they
dates fur Cotineilriten, was the determination
have heretofore belied to defeat.
The- P rem. - of many independent, right-ininded men, not
Des from ia-hich this conclusion concerning the
attached to either i the Whig or Democratic
position of the Know NOthing,s, is drawn . , are
standat4,- to vote for none but good and coin:
`'.rather slight. They have not as an organi
zation openly declared their hostility to slay-
potent candidateand tliaLthe result should
I be a - warning to the Americans to exercise a
,ery, , etlierzase t'lian by voting fdr . Free Soil
little more care the selection 'of their nom
men—with one-or two exceptions in the earli
er - stages of their existence,—in every - election
;that has been held .in the Free States. Is
such evidence to be taken as conclusive ?---
Let those pipers that make the accusation,
rand yet have the impudence to assert that the
Democratic party is Free Soil, try their own
party by the same test.Whey' did a Dein
-tieratic State ConvOion,. „ in any State, ever
pass Free Soil Resolutions? If they' do not
.take open anti-slavery grounds, .are they not.
-pro-slavery ? • But this pointis more effectu
„alli settled by the` vote of the people, than
•by other meads. The voting at the recent
,elections, shows that the,North is divided pri
marily into two parties, those who adhere to
- the national administration and disgrace the
name of Demoeraey, and those who, placing
;principle above party, and believing-the Slav
ery issue paramount to all others, have bro
ken loose from the old organizations and en
listed for the war under the banner of free
dom. It' is only necessary fur the Know
Nothings to show to the Amisfaction of.all
,that they stand on the Free Soil platform, I
, like thoae.with whom they. have voted, and
the national Democracy' be. left alone
un their” glory } —undisputedly the Sole -pro
gavery party. of : -the North. lu Massachu
setts and - No:villain, pshire, according 'to the /
telegraphic reports, the State Councils . or.'
-Conventions - hive within the present month
taken a - strong antislavery' position: • In
New Hampshire the State Council adopted
resolutions protesting against the ierkia, of
the Missouri Compromise,
,and against the
Nebraska bill 'and Fugitive Slave law, aad
pledging the party to resist the further ex
tension el . Slavery.- In Massaelmietts, the
State Con tention •met, May -2nd,. and was
largely attended, and its action decidedly
snti-slavery. Governor Gardner and Sena
. nor Henry Wilson are among the delegates
appointed to attend the Know Nothing
Con
ventian in Philadelphia in June. "Strong an- I
ti-slavery resolutions were passed, and it was
generally admitted that the order most take-,
position on the atiti-slavery plat. Corm.
Let the'order throughout the' 'Nerth take
the same position, and act in concert with the
Republican party, and the effectual over
throw ale Slave DemoCraey at the next
Presidential election, may be confidently an
INDEPENDENT REPUINCAN.
CHARLES F. READ AND 11. IL FRAZIER, EDITOFIS.
MQNTROSE,.PA,
Thursday, May 10, 1955.
ticipateL
IZg7—.Ciununhvs, of the Philadelphia Bul
letin, is as fine a fit:madmen : or a Northern
Doughface as can be found outside the lines
of the sham Democracy. .To read his corn
.ments, one might doutt'vrhether hevonsiders
:the slavery party, or the free State party,
the most to blame for the acts of the wretch
es who:lately so grossly: violated the laws,
that they 'might force upon Kansas a Missou
ri Legielatgre. Notwithstanding the settler's
from the free States have comported them-
_swivel' as peaceful, law-abiding citizens, guilty
of no woesecrim ethan a desire to give Freedom
to Kansas by their votes, the Bulletin is base
enough to place them in the same category
With their outlaw 4:oniquerors, as the following
extract shows: _
' "It is unfortunate Far the peace of the martin. that
the slavery disputes should hare made:KanSas the at
-Snare region for ultra men of all kinds—the despe
rate aboiltionista; The men who can..recognize no
medium and moderate course, but wha will be satin
- fled with nothing lees than the establishment of their
own extreme views. The representatives area& par
ty, that 'hate assembled in Kansas, are fanatical, and
they will cling to their peculistr views as if it" were a
sort ofholy duty. To secure them they are quite
willing to violate written laws, to upset an election,
trAtuport voters,, to lynch their opponents, and to
threaten those of opposite views."
-I:463FRUTION OF TBE Wora.D.—The end of
Tithe, it appears; has at last been definitely
flied at`the 19th of May inst., and not the
jolt of April as seme of the newspapers er
-1 'roneously stated. The prophet Daniel we
bete ve I s daily relied of as authority ;lir
this statoPAß4it, and, as the 'Second Adventists'
:say thdy_ ilavie figured up carefully and can.
not be mistaken this time, the public may
t ramp sly &,ri - ye them this chance to redeem
• their credit, with the understanding that an
other postponement will be &tart° their rep
- • utatiou as j'rophets iutii-preters of mph,
;
Brow Nothing iois•
Acc9rding to the; icrigo, Democrat; the
Know liothing State( Council recently held
- ,•• t - • •
- in that C,ity, after a stormy session, finally
4 .•
split on the Slavery question. . They are di
vided into tlie 3"onathans:' and 'Sams' of
whom the fomet . are said 'to. be anti-Slavery
and 'and, the - latter anti-Catholic
And anti-Foreign.. Tice Sams are' said to
sympathize Niithiludge Douglas; and to be
chieflyciz• ropOsed Of old Hunker Whigs and
old iHniiker Deiiii.?crzts, men of pro-Slavery
• 1. •
tendenetes. Diniglas attended . ai . .a lobby
• • • •-
member; and eibreised all his skill in pulling,
t I
the wires furithopro-Siavery division, but the
result vas the ir iroHnpletti.discomfiture... The
Free Soil ditisiOri were - cornpletely victori
ous, and their orponeuts--those who did - not
conie-.OVerand 4oin the successful partylett
-
in disgust. • .! 7, • ,
:This is anilthb . r illustratitin :of the conse
,
quenecs thatininst follow an} attemptto give
,a pro§lavery eendeney to the order at the
North. 'No party that Suecumbs to the
.Slave Power, apd either renders it active sup
,porti like the 'sluini Democracy, or consents
to yield a submission to its aggressions;
like one branch of theNortlierp KnOw Noth
ings; can e'er !obtain the syin patbies OT votes
of true Republican Freetnn. • •
-
L tier ~tisA
Coi:rry.-4As fitr as we can
learn, the proicet, for erecting the new - county .
of Litekawaanh out of a part ofLuzerne--the
County Seat of which Would probably 'be at
Scranton—h 4 been defeated in the Legisla
ture! The ;qtiestion was fairly decided by the
people of the county last Fall, in &vir of the
.division, whiCh is , desirable both frOm the
great extent' Luzerne ccninty, (being the
•
largest county in the Statc!, by two hundred
square miles) and from the rapid increase of
population and wealth within the limits . of
the Proposedeounty. If divided _ as propos
.l
ihe new county would coutain about 30,-
- 000 1 inhabitafts and the old one about 40,-.
'OOO with a prespeet that eventually the new
would suipa.o the old in Ovulation, wealth,
and importtMee.
Tux CmcrOrrt Rters--Twe'Vzsmcv.—The Coro-
ners' jury em*ncled to enquire into the cireurnstime
es attentrmg the death of Patrick Drury, one of the
victims of thel.eleetion riots, closed their labors on
Thiirsdayeveiting The Verdict, says the Buffa
lo Commercial, place; the responsibi li ty of the com
mencement of the riots upon the foreigners, who seiz
ed Ithe polls and prevented the Americans from vot
ing: The exiitnituition lasted two days, and over one
hupdred witnesses were examined before the Coro !:
ners'jury,
The, verdict of the Corooer'4 jury, as above
.
recorded, fp in accordance with the statement
that appesiin ed the Cincinnati papers, imme
diately after the riots occurred ; but, though
thus verified by the solemn finding Of a jury,
; •
on the spo - toye presume'the truth of these
istatementa will still be denied by
. the anti ;
American Tress, whose policy it is to bepraiss
,
the fi.l i reil,r# Catholics at the expense of our
own dountrymen and•the truth.
1 '; I •
galcolm Clark, a pro-slavery leader
in Katisasi was shotdead at Leavenworth City,
May 1, by Mcßea, a leader of the Free Boil
ers: A lisPute arising as to which party had
the majotity at a public meeting then holding,
Mcßea j re the lie to Clark, who thereupon'
,
struck him With a club, and Meßea drew his
revoi verian4 shot hie, assailant dead. Meßea
was tile' sco ure d and confined hi Fort Leav-
I
cnwortki
The l~te~t paperi froin!Westerii Missouri
say that Cit.S. Park, of the Luminary, has
been selrei4ly Lynched in Kansas, and his
house hi Park rale burned to the ground.
Thi
Tribune inquires, in view of the recent
i -
outrageoutragen anus, vr au is to be done?'
and eplies,'as Should the whole North, Re
peal Nebraska The Tribune also
states the great question which is henceforth
to divide the people of this 'country, as fol.
No Freedom ,outside the Free
Stag,) °tin° Slavery outside the Slave
States.! That is tile issue.i—Let every man
chooselb i seolors, itnd be prepared to Supprt
"them,fror the struggle is at hand.-
Tenobers'
In pursuance of notice,' the :Susquehanna
County / Teache: rs' Ai4,teciation .met at the
latite Comniodionalnipiling known its the
Methodiet'Meeting llcfhin in Herrick Centre,
an Thais' iday i May 3dii1855. The i'resident
hOt-beifig‘P"lfitti ihetlueetiall was called to
order . by Thntiias and on motion
H. IL Ellie, EN.,:wali elected. Chairman pro
tem: The exercises Were opened with prayer
by Prot Richardson.P t Miss Charlotte Ellis,
a distinguishediesch4 now engaged in teeth
ing in *aria county, being present, was
called upon . to give a description of the course
pursued in `trashing iu ttmt couaty, which site
did. in a very' clear. and interesting manna,
and it proved- conchisively that the 'true
friend's of' ethication were thoroughly waked
up in , our sister county.
Prof. lijchardson made a few appropriate
remarks bn the deplorable Condition of many
of the schoolhouses in this county—thiit in
many instances he found that appropriate .
SCllty were not provided for small scholars,
and in some eases a fotal neglect of ventila
tion.•
The best. Ma . nner nf interesting small chit
,
dren was the taken up and discussed at
length by Julius Tyler, Prof. Richardson, Z.
L R. Cast, and others: and it was the de-
Cided opinion of the . : teachers present that a
slate and pencil, "simple as it may appear to,
soma, was the best means yet tried.. -
It was, alsn decided that copy-plates were
indirpeusably to rnakegood pen
men.
The Prcsetft sChorfl law was next introduc
ed., and- was very .Ably discussed by Prof.
Riclu►cdsoni,L H. #.llis; Benj. Wurtrous and
others. OnJmotion', the . Convention adjourn.
ed "to meet at 7 o'elbek e.
EVEViNG
. .
.
The Assiielation! were - entertained with
li li
speeches frcip Proc:Richardson and J.,Tyler;
upon education in general. They showed in
a :very cleat and logical manner that every
child of the ;Old Keystone, rieh or poor, had
a claim upcin the State fiur a liberal educa
tion. - 1 I"
The rt,%idne of tl. session was spent In
~
cussing the: 'new fai
wally , and the members gen
ally parttk ° of the discussion. The'prin
cipal objection' rai4d against it was, that too
much was.4.quirv.4 of the Directors without
giving ther4 any compensation for their serv
ices, but believed that the principle was cor
rect. It *Ss :remarkell that in some
,places
in the county the law was not enforced, and
in those pinees it *as mostly objected •to.—
They‘wisli4d to sec it rigidly enforced, and
whenever S better one was presented they
would willingly consent to have this repeal- .
ed. On Motion, fhe Association adjourned
to meet atithe 'Methodist Church on Gibson
Hill on Irriday,' ; ltiay 2 s th, 1855, at 10
, , .
o'clock A.'S. h i large number of teaehei s .
in attendince; nj &the generous and hospita
ble mannei. in ,thiCh those from abroad were
received;:, 'ens another proof of the deep
interest thi., good iteople of Herrick entertain
for the cause of: education, , fur which they
have hitherto been so long-distinguished.
•TitcstAs D. RIME, gee.
- We find by the .resords of the Commis
sioners of,Emigtation that there is a startling
decrease in the number of end
,grints that have
arrived in! New York. sinte, .the first of March
up .to the )resenOate, as compared with the
corresponding period of last year:\Althotigh
the returns for tbis month are not yet coin
plete, the additional increwe,- if any, will be
very trifling. 'The numbers that arriv
from foreign countries at this port in March
and aprillBs4, Were 34,906 ; in March and
April 1855 (up to this date) 5,358, which
give the ienormosis decrease ' in two months,'
of !,,V,548. In the period of last year to which
we allude, 13,506 emigrants came from Ire
land, but, from the first of March up to the
present, the arritals from that country only
numbered 1,6814_ which exhibits a falling off
to the amount of 11,825.
Varibus minor reasons may have combin
ed. to produce this result; but the principal
causes May be ,fairly tra ced to the crusade
that had been waged in some States against
our imioarteil pepulation; and in a Still great
er degree, to the late season of unparalleled
distress l i vrttlett ,ivas experienced with more
or less IntensitY; throughout every portion of
the Union. Thbusands returned to the old
sxsuntries Anring the past Winter, taking with
them aeetsanta Of the sad instances of destitu
tion which they, have witnessed. Their tales
were stifficieriCto dispel the golden dreams
of perSOW intending to emigrate and induce
them to retbain at home, and bear a little
'longer the,wrongs and oppressions from which
the had made hp their minds to eicape.' 7 —
N. Y. Times.
There seemi:, a deisrmination to find' fault,
whet)* With :er without reason. The cry
set up :above that the American movement,
which is evidently meant by 'Abe crusade'
itgeirnit our iMported, population, has result
ed in C.heeking;emigration is utterly foolish:
But ifit had thus resulted, wecan see noth
ing very. alarming in it. We cheerfully wel
come 'foreigners Of every clime to our shores •
but, While so)nany native born citizens and
such jlsst nubiners of foreignersidready here,
are stt want and suffering, in consequence of
the great stagnation of business, there can be
no gbod reason for complaining of a present
decredise in emigration.
But we go further, -and assert that this de
ereasie is an ietual benefit to the country.—'
Wekitinot' want all Europe at once. Ye
are Willing titi i take it in instalments. But 'we
want, it no titter than we can assimilate it
with the habits and language I
of our
people. , l •
• When the ;butch settled in Pennsylvania,
they came in such numbers that they' formed ;
a nation of *twelves, and to this day use
thelinguageof their forefathers. Whereas;
in this State the emigration was of that mod
erate chara , c4r which permitted the emigrants,:
to aisimilate with others, and thus form -a
hoinogeneoni race. •
There (la be no doubt that foreign govi
ernMents it - re-clxvking this emigration, in
inisi;sure, for the
. men are wanted at- home.
Btit4this country s ill not materially suffer,
if there iiheidd be no more emigration for
seine tithe* cotne.--;-.Asi6ers American.
fA Lint* . TOO FAsr.—The Democracy of
the Second Ward brought out their big gun
oti Wedneiday afternoon, and commenced
44 a saliite of one hundred rounds in hoer
or: of the glOrious election ;of the fuSion tick
' Theyihad fired some four rounds, when
Aidtlrmani Flood rushed to the ground, and
antioiuneed that Messrs. Rill and Morto
ere cleeted. They soon pulled up their
stakes, dragged away their cannon, and t*
sOved Save their powder till anotker Oc
casion. We will not attempt_ to explain
their feeling s .—:-.2Cortlt American. -
t •
Cori s erenckmee of the National .Pa.
=UMW BECOMING POLITICIANS
Rart,lorin, N, II.; April
,25.
In pasCtiin*Jray" fweutv-iire,yeArs •agti,
and mOret,f the, Methedist, B"aptist, Free.W ill
Baptist,: Christiitn; and Universalist Ministers
of thiaState;,cmhracmg not far from
,two
thirds ufthel*hotennmber in the State, were
•moitlY INneeetlats in politieS. The Congre
'gationalists,!PreSbyterians, and Unitarians,
were mostly Whigs. In those trine, many
ministers:4f the Democratic party Were act
ive politleitins;'lThey discussed politks in
the circles th€,7, Met, ! voted at the p011s„ were
often ehnSen IcteshiterS, made fervent prarers
for the perrietnit,r, and spread of our glorious
liberties at military reyiews, FOurth of July
celebratiOns; and', at political conVeintions.—
When J4ckii,p l ,: San .Buren, and others; were
eatnltdittes A:4.i the Presidency,: some . Minis..
tees attended Meeting's at which' political ad.!
dresses Were given, and Offered. prayer. •So
late as IMO; at:tt political meeting addressed!
by stimip oratois of the Democratic party, et'
minister I:gerea a prayer, which was consider-i
ed so valnablel•that it was published in a po4
Riad paper. • Anyone who read. it could,
but see that,. it,Was quite. pblitical. - Demo
cratic miniatersiW i ithin half dozen . years'
have attended i m
s embers, ['ethical conven4
flogs; for the notnination Of State, county, and
other - officers.-Even in the present year; in
one county : , iaiinister, who was the only one
that voted with the Democrats, in that pare
of the State, attended the caucus just before
the election, anti was an active member. I
In alf these and other eases that might be
named,there. was no complaint that ministers
were nieddlitmi with politicS. No, no ; that I
• P!
was. all f atery Well. They were patriotic, and
"for 'their :`country!" •
But since 1,835. a change has been taking
place. The I)ernoeratic party prcoing'reere
.ant: to the tree principles of Detnocracy as
they wire tnahltained in the days of Jetrer
son,- ministers have left it. : The party be
, coming'. prostituted to the upholding of Slave
ry and!to,lbe extension of itj ministers haVe
been leaving Lit,..so that xi• present but very
few support !tt„ Perhaps out of 650 minis
ters now 111 . '14 State, there are not fifty that
are'ofAheDeMocratie party . . - hundreds
of
the ministers, ere opposed slavery. They
are for;temperiinee, peace and liberty. They
do not:Makethese the subjects of .their dl
courses; they pray for those in bond; and
occisienally some of them Make God's. vlo• - •
lated law•spealc . out
,in tones of thunder,-
71sis is more particularly the case• on the tin
nual fist :and.*.lianksgiving days.' Formerly
those ibis. laid become seaionsi for aitutie
ment and feitSting, so that churches contain
cd'bUt feiv hearers: Now more attend, 1
Buti While ministers have been taking this
course, some of the people !mite been in ago
ny. Ministers could be active in politics
While Oetneerats, but, to be active for
. the
cause . of
..I.iieedbm, Oh,n i l " that alters the
case !"such adO, perhaps, was never
heard tet such .a subject :before.-
," 'Clittitch
and ,State. !tinited !" "Ministers preaching
polities!" ':Ministers: cleetioneeringl" and
the been vociferated loud and long.
Editors of tlelitical papers; haste called upon
the people tt; leave the ministrations of such
political 'prict..s, and some ktf the people liave'
declared::they would not hear, nor help tip
port,', such ministers. ' But; the heavens, have
not fullest, seS yet. • I
jlumber of ministers in the State
heve gone into the Know NOthing moventent.l
• ;
I Of this I have nothing to say, as to defentling!
theni.,.-..`A. little time will (show - whether the
coarse wa-i! wise 'ornot. • , .1
•
.
That t‘lasi who have tiqnotinced Mini‘ters
for meddlitiwith pOliticsfas described above,.
andMio hate left meetings, now feign them.
sel<<es as hatigry for the Nyorcl.'nf Life. I.leY .
want ministers who do not. meddle with
04*, No, they must not be politicians. • .they
may say tee' the public that Slavery must be
let alone; j that the Ftigi l tive 'Slave Act, is
haw ,anti nittst,be obeved , they may attend
political conventions, if ttjes are of the Xern-
ocratic , p4.ty ; but farther ithane these',:' they
must tint:O. If any,itnuw of some such out
of ernploy.will they not send them this way,
that these 'few bleating sheep, ''scattere4 here
find there, ; 4ithout a shepherd, may get rome
thing-to stiStain their pour tarnishing souls 1 :
I; • JOSEPH FULLOStON.
.
;I(krom • Lon4oA',2line4)
4lf the Americans can shiny us the way to • take
Sebastopol,sre should be qttite!ready to learn, and
to et-0 them' every credit_ for the lesson."
'Here, now, is a capital epportunity for the
exercise of-whatever surpliis chivalry" and
" tuilittFy glory" our Yankee fillibuiters may
n
still, haven hand, utiappropriated. Instead
going-to lie down and die under the hot
suns. of Central Americai journey to the
Crimea,--according cOntract,—it :trikes
124 would ;be the much more sqnsible proceed •
ing,—especially at this season of the year.
Then again as everybOdy knows the Rus
sians ategoverned quite as dpotidally as
Cuba Would-it not be qUite as patriotic to
set " the 'people" there free, as to be fillibus
tering about " the ever faithful isles,"i whose
people (by the way) usually. manifest their
gratitude to us, in helping to shoot u§ when
,eyer 'ohanee. to fall into their hands, pris-
Oters 'I :Besides, would it not be tbe great:
est of glories to hate it said that Brotherl
Jontithati did what neither John Bull nor!
Johnny 'Crapeau could do, after trying eery4
tiard,.--that is, be took Sebastopoi'l Only!
think, of the Star-Spangled Banner waving in :
fritunidi over Ports Constantine and; Alexanj4
!---*ith the British Lion, and thO
in. nowhere. Annexation of the Crimea.
would follow, of course,—and the next .Con:
areas Might as-. well prepare to receive , the
member from Balaklava., and the gentle.man
from Perekop. If *e "contract"iwith the
for the Sebastopol job, what if we 4
*getiinte a war with Russial The result 'will
bei..after flogging her; the re-anuexatton Of her
'North lAmeriam provinces to our
'thus bringing in territOriciut of which! we einje
half a dozen new free soil States. Thereforet
we . say again,—gentlempifillibustersH
the .Crimea There youl will have foemen
(worthy of your steel,—and, (if the Thunderer
is ,not joking,) you 'rill be well paid for, the
job, insight drafts +?n the Bankof England,
and that will be something better than Cuba
aerip, l 'or 'President Walker's prornise Ito
payeLLN. Y. Express. I
,4
I •
.There has been for many;mopth
project,on foot for( the ;introduction of 'six
thousand Coolies fiora China into Cuba,l as
plantation laborers to supply the place of 'lle./
groek the,importation of whom from Africa,
is to:be prohibitedrif possible. The English
impit;alists having the matter In cltarge W,ere
delayed in their arrangements by the Urgent
dernlind 'of vessels for the Criniea, which
rindered it diflica4 to - effect suitable charters
in I4don. They;have finally trabsferred the
spend, of their labors to New•Yorli, whett
vessel is now fittiqg out for Chit4a, und4r a
co,niract for '1,250i emigrants.. They' will be
brottght via Tanama. -
Mr" In the, Pennsylvania Senate, May
4th; the bill for the sale of the 11fain Line
was passed finallY., It fixes the 'price at $B,
006,900. ' The 'House - atnendmenti to
the bill relative t,i) the I:ights acid duties of
husbands and wiles concurred in. The bill
to erect the new 'county oftackliwanna; was
rejeeted, and thecharter of the ,Ohio River
Iniprovernent Cotnpanv pa .sea
00nnelani-/Alooao4ri - r:
1 • TT
;.I.4II.TFORD, Ice'T); •
;'• The Legislature of lii S tA
Iticte.d Win. T. -Minlr, -ilintl
. .Terpor fut ,the ensuing year, '
follOws-:' Min0r,,177: t• Inghtu
..Ttje other State Pffieurs were
ms Geivernor delivers his •:37
. , , 1.-.
ternoon. • i , -• ` '1- 5
The Message Of the GovetnOr was ache
cred this afterndOn. :,. lie 40;unmends that
the proposed lititendieent, to the Constitution
Hextending the right of suffrage to colored
persons, and requiring persens to be' -able to,
read and write before being ii c hnltted as elec•
tors• -•=he allowed to l'go to the - people. He
recominendsnn apprenriatic ' h in aid of the
State . Agricultural Stkiety ;,'says the income
()tithe School Ri nd the iivis year. bast been
• 8128,108,_ \making a divide
.t 1 •of 81 25 for
each scholar, and thinks it i the duty of the
LNiSlature to encourage ed cation id eery
possible way, and istri favo of e.
of
meri
torious School Districts a'o py of We c bster's
U,iiabridgee Dictionary. 1 e says he should._
regard the repeal= or. modifi *ion Of the'fro-:
'hibitory Liguori: LaW as detrimental to • the
.best interests of the. State,'' serving-that the
effect of the law', has, been-s eh as to recom
niend it to . general favo . 'and that by it
t
crime has been lessened; pticerty and misery
alleviated, and the •happinc:is of many a fire
side restored. ale', bakineg in: the -Treasury
of the year is st ated at 8;6;000,
A ppropriations :for the Dq; Dumb-, Blind;
'ldiotic, and for the State 1 furor. School are
recommended.'; Ho favors , such a 'remodeo
iie4 of JudiCiary 'systen as will fiteilitat.
the settlement of causes. j he says that the
banking institutions of. th • State are in la
sound and healthy CoeditiO2 ; : that
, the mill, ,
tart' W m
Will compare favorabl • vith t hat of sis
ter States. . Ile considers that in' the recent
election the people rcfl rated their' . em
emphatic
condemnation O t •the act organizing
the Territories of Nebraska and Kan.s4s. lie '
enters larrel v into the ceOsideration of this
Pernicious infinence arisink from' the extent
and eharacter.Of the foreiPn inunigration.4-
After alluding' to the liirge. and inereasing
number now 4nnuAlly cciii4ing -among iii, the
Governor ~:ty, : - This large mass of aliens— '
.1-.
some of them tinctpred ()lith the social infi
delity of continental liltni}pc, very. many of
lieiri blind 'followers of An t•ftlesiastical des-
polism,. a Jarge majority t'ff , them without cor
pertaining
Oct ' , ideas ,of the duties- at to 0 . 1- i
.enskf republican . Geyer ment, and by ,ear:l
Iy' prejudices .tourtly Unfit to learn them- --.
'differing in language, national customs and
'feelings, and scattered min. ' -all the country, I
Istilliwit tenaeitV.holdinii \ on to-and °laser- .
i
ivin4 thou) enstonts l and d - Tfrom among them. 1
! r? •
as appears - tiorn 'Ole staozities, of crime and 1
!patirisin in the differeni States in this Un- I
ien, conies a rmajority . :or .he inmates of pris-
!ons!and alms hom4es: wilimi these things are.' I
!cons i
dered 7 • and, in add 'ion, the. f ts.t lt 'I
!our, taxes are largely. Ink`•reased fin• the sup
; pori-of our treign.popit ation ; that in mane
i
instances, the abitsheinSes of the Old World
hate been emptied, their . prison doors thrown
open, open, •and the inmate* transported by the
eov
ernmentto our stioi-csa wise regard for
r.,
~••
.our safety as a'natiori requires'additional leg
-it,:latiori.with reference tolforeign immig ration
~After considering the rights and pr , i t jl e gp zi o f
foreigners the . GOvernuitadd,s : But as a !net
: ter of policy, •eonnected;with the privilege:Of
citizenship to be Conferred-upon the alien, we
ha l ve the right to ingniAi how - thr-fbe allegi
t.ance due from the inCn hers of the - Poinish
. ~ • i ,
th , ~,, . , ,
Church is compatible w tue,Legianee due
,
i to thew adoPted,eouintT ; and if we findlnat
combinations fur piditreid action exist, corn
' p',s&l o f members of 't is Clinrch, throwing
their entire) vote one! •av ' or the other, -as
the wishes and.feeling ( i 21.1 interests of those
ei j r aitrolling May:diet:it, mid further, it' we
find that these combinli loes.are but instru
ments in the hands - of diemagogues, either on.
i ---
tveborn or- thiewn ups our shores by the .
I , t'onlry • i howl irr- of r• '
revoai . u ) . i,,s Europe—then a
••
strong reason is.fourid shiny a longer residOnec,
should he required bef"re. the - alien .ran be
mituraliZed. The :144 - age closes with a
re
capitulation of the pt4 - ers, constitutionally,
of the' Legislature over _ this subject.
~
Wc have had . to day one of the fi nest par
t des. ever 'witnessed of this • city; - •
r i•,,
1 '.
' • ...,' • i
i A White , woman.
The New Orleaps;
:itint of a suit which!:
in that city on behalf 6
lle(res that she is Wr
claimed av a slave fiy
Prleans, and Joseph 0
'der an alleged purelupi
I • rasa letheof late Ji
ipetition she declares il
inarr,ett's house, she
hit mealber:;ofh's
w e
Ito the world, and actol
daughter.' She ham; li
white persons, •WELS
colored , pup .
- are . rig
ten_sat in the.dresS
tres, where none but,
ed to be seated. Sl
and' passed for. a fr.4. - e 4 ,,
than ten years., - whi4
freedom.'
• Several years prek'
she . ceased to resin jiinhis house, bOught am
sold property in herb 11 p . name, and Was sued.i'
.the various courts of the State, and did man
other nets'inconsiSte't With a state,of slaver . ,!
all of which were de e with the,Wnowledge I
said Barrett,: She, :: ys that Levy, her pr -.
T.
tended master, kit}' all these (* . acts at 'tile!
time of his pretends; purchase, and that Ch-',
hen, who claiins a :rt interest in her, wiisi,
also conVersant wit ' them. By their per.+..-
cutions they -have it'4jured her feelings, amidj
I t
reputatiOn, and ha.V , i4 subjected her to mu 4, ,
trouble 'and expenSik,and she-prays the Cot t
not only to decree.ber to. be a free persrit;.'
but to. render a verdict against Levy and Clici,
..lien for . damages in the sum 0f524100. I
d
The plaintiff in this suit . is, now in Cana('
.5.
and brings the suitiin order to obtain perri
sion to, return to ht home in New °deaf
•
. .
,
• FAWNS •IN 1.:- 7 P*Elt • GEORGIA.—We h
sad accounts from{ he north part of Georg
The Daltott-TintO i siys that many people
without corn, or O,zi i y means to. procure a
And besides' therelis none for sale. In so ;
4. 1
neighborlx4s, a ushel could not be obt
ed for.:love'Or mo ey. Poor. men Ore 4 . 31
ing to `woilo , -foil t a peek Of 'corn . a day.
they plead f` our ' ildren will starve," t
arc answered, " st*will mine, if I' part . 1
the little I have-' Horses- and mules
t
turned out into `th z woods, to wait, fur g .
or starve. Thel niequence is, that t Ose
who have land ca only plant what theycim
with the hoe—th cannot plow. . It is Se
riously ' .argued i iithat, *unless assisted ini!m,
manyi ot the poOr• class of that sectionktll
perish.
. i !
faiLAND.---Th Irish are buying, up lre
land,;and-a aipi I.
' the'Cumbered . tates Bill,' 'which praides
for the sale in sli t all lots of !urge lande3 ,i....
tates burdened, ' ith debts, land to the va`lue
of one hundred illions of dollars- haslpa3s.
ed into, the hay i of the common p ogle.
The effectof tli measure in stimulatin ' i en.
terprise and thr4, is said to be won rful,'
and its fruits ari. seen in the rapid .d r4se
of paupers hi ilfe public, alms-house. Here
is a futuri. for I).ehuid, cure.
ection of Coy
3, 1855.
; e this morning
il kienn, fur iGoN.-
e vpte was as
Dem., 70,
also eipeted.--
ess:age this sif
g for Freedom
Delta publishes an ne.:
as heel): commenced
'Josephine Smith, who
ngfullv and illegally 1
ionel C. Levv, of New 1
hen, ofCharfestOn, unil
• Made at the sueeesl
dah Barrett . • to her
at when she lived in ,
, sided
.there as ,a. free ?
unify, and was know l
)wled by Barrett as hid r
' ways associated with,
eated at schools where"
'admitted, and haS of
cles of the public then
•hite l / 4 'persons arc allow
has enjoyed liberty)
- ,
white person ..for mor
gives a ' . legiil right t
ous to Barrett's deal
ey
ith
ass
a r
fi,
A r
r
Porlage,Coanty (Ohio) Democrat, a Snow
itroihing paper. •
•
./4 ow t
_ .
* . - • Nevertheless, we;will crave. the
libert 1 !to ash that, in our judgmept, he A n .
ti-Nel ~,aska issue cannot be mord' elearly,de.
fined, north peat rights of :man -better
chant toned, to the present conjnneture, than
with t.'e fearless," incorruptible:,- and able ex-
Sena it Chase, as our Gubernatorial nominee
and s ,, ''ndarea:bearer. And this ideft,'"we no
tice, i :ivery prevalent with men of all former
politi , al parties, "who now purpose to act to
gethe iin the great Democratic Republiam
Peop 's movement, , His: Congressional ac
tions re A known., Prompt, active, indefatiga
ble, lc, on occasions powerful, ;true to every
inter lt, conicerated to the rights
,of humani
ty, o 'posed -to all: oppression, and to the'cor
rupti i and assumptions of doughfaces and
slave Molders ,' no lures Senatorial 'career can
pros tit a .brighter record. His election io
th F" hief Nalpstraey of the State w ould place
-011in
... , ..,—..
In the protideit possible Anti:Slivery
n before the voild. Shall we -not have
ioral influence ()f.sueh a pOsition
Ohio,
posit
the i
-,---
:n°, who more worthy to; bear the bon
tial represent the interests of a free pea"
han the brave chivalric, and talented Ben
c. F. Wade? . He has the ring of the•
!Iletali;htid a more powerful, effective,
fearless champion of freedom the Senate
et: boast. ' Upon •of .next Legislature
devolve the ditty of electing his flumes
.[ Here, then, is an . important..alement,
Senatorial question, to mingle in our next
tie& . campaign. Who 'so worthy. in. the
ent attitude of things, to succeed B. F.
de, as 13.F.:Vade himself? .He should
C-elected. Let the people; then, .secure a,
lidature which 'will. re-elect - this eloquent
faithful Senator 'to the . poSt in the United .
4 Senate which he adorns'. ° •.• -
c Slave.lletnoeracy - proscribed Senator
re, and disgraced 'the:State by placing in
stead the miserable bar-room politician,
, h! Let•the people, now
,put it beyond
rpower thus to proseribesenator. Wade,
the election.of any such ,'doughface and
-,ile. ' , - • -,. . . .
.° .
A
ors
pie,
jam'
true
and'
MEI
. . .
Vhat, then ; shall we dd.? • We should re
member ; . . . .-
The infamons Nebraska swindle.
4i,That- th 4 great issue is, Freedom or
Slpery-Clr this Governinent-one or the 0th
.,., .i •
O. That the Democratic Republican Party
o the People is the instrumentality by, eans
o which to vanquish the '.despoilers of Men,
at 4 to_ secure the blessings of liberty for our
-51
te s t
the,
po o cp ur le b
ehilf Port a ge
children. .. . :
..;
as a,coraponent
p r't.of the great. army of Freedom in- Ohio,
c . fltivate; politieally, the spirit of union, !tar
n, oily, conciliation; and cordial'endeavor, that
they' . may effectually. bear_ a hand in accom
plishing the . great results
,due to the genius
of bur free institutions,, to the rights-or Our
rao, and our (nit: individual and colleefiVe
% elfare. - . .
. . .
•
Arraigned for Slave Piracy'.
• .James D. Darnan. the Captain of the brig.
GOV Engle, who was arrested in August last,
ii 4 the charge of taking on board his vessel,.
4t§,ome,port on the coast of Africa, 500 tic-.
itrbes, With a view to make them slaves, .is
..,,
O , w on trial at Philadelphia. .
.'' •
I. :,The allegations are that.; the Grey Eagle
iviis an Americart:vessel, and owned by Geo. .
.n 4,1 w
larsdcn, Sarnuet S. Gre2.-,:_.Zahn Jan A.. Macha.
i, or by some owner or Hers unknown ;
1%
kid that the negroes were taken on . board
itfie•verei on tile 14 of April. 1554. ',
i! The defemknt has been in prison ever since
: I
his commitment by the U. $. Commissioner
Ica! take .his trial:. The negt:iieS Were...landed
'on the coast of Cuba, and txpon the arrival Of!
one of the creiv at Havana, he gave infirm
:i4l, at td the American Consul; who :sent, the i
WitnesS. to New ). - ork*with Such Other infor
i_
matiunras lie was able to :procure,. in order
te secure the arrest of the defendant, who.
`had escaped frein Havana;
.and was Mier
!
ed to.he in New `York. ,
The defendant came to Philadelphia, and
Was shortly afterwards arrested hy . the U. S.,
Marshall Wynkoop and his deputies at: a sail.l
Or boarding house m Pend street. At his
hearing before the Commissioner, some five
Or six witnesses were. examined, Who testis
lied 'that the defendant was one of the cap.
tainS of the brig Grey Eagle,. and had charge'
. iif the vessel Mt her return voyage from the
..I
Coast of Africa pcia port in the isCand of Cuba.
ii That he landed 'the negtoeSl on the island
bf Cuba, near Cabanos, by - bribitia-the officer
0
stationed at that point, and received 'for his
eargo seVeralhundred thousand dollars, - whiCh'
Was shared_ anion the .owners,. officers and
:crew of the vessel. Se veral :of, the counts of
:the indietment l eharge - the vessel with 'being
f a foreign one, but allege , the defendant to be
is citizen of-the United States. • ...
I,i The trial is! for life or death-
,' • . KNOW NOTHINGS u CCitIRT-PreviCSlS to.
impanneling n jury . on Wednesday last to
try certain parties charged withriot at the
township election, inNockamixon, in March
last, alleged to have originated from an
feeling existing between,Know Nothings and
German Catholies,•Hon; THOMAS Ross, coun
sel for the defence, challenged tho array of
jurors owing the fitet of their , having been
selected and summoned by a Know Nothing
Sheriff; that 'as . Know Nothings, men might
not enter : the; jury box unbiased, where those•
put upon their defence were Chatholics or
belonged to a different political part l y. The
challenge was argued at some letigth,,hy Mr.
Ross, in faver..of setting aside .the array, and ,
by Georgel.w,Esq.iri . opposition. Witness,
es, supposed to 'be. Know _ Nothings, were
' , called and eitamined, some of them uudergo
ing a thorough Cross-examination from Mr.
Ross relative, to - the secret order of Know
Nothings. Some of the question a-were over
ruled by the Court, an'd it wasleftdiscretion;
ary with the witnesses to answer them. The
Witnesses called to the stand were—Sheriff
Fel !man, '. Jroshua Stack house, Dr. Samuel
Bradshaw and William Balm. During the
examination of , these witnesses, the Court
room was densely crowded, and,mneh curia
osity wai-ivanifested to find out the miste
ries of Know Nothingism. Some of the !wit
nesses- admitted - they' belonged to a secret
order commonly known as Know Nothings
that they were bound by an oath not to sup
port any Catholics or foreigners for office.
The Quirt over-ruled the challge of Mr.
Ross, and I tsar consuming the greater part
of the afternoon,in a. fruitless effort to bring
to light the see,rets of "Sam," the Court pro
ceeded to impannel a jury to try the .Nocka
mixon riO.ers.—Byek,v County Intelligeneer.
!'
Riot as Woniebsdorf—The Militia Ordered
Oat.
READING, May- 4.
A riot has 'occurred among the Irish - at
Womelsdorf, sixteen miles tioithwest of this
place.' The rioters burned several houses and
barns, and ten 'to fifteen horses and mules per
ished in the flames.'. The Reading Battalion
are on their March to the Scenes of the riot.
Qom" In Spain the Roman Catholic Priests
yet continue to refuse
.Proteitants both the
right and the rites of burial—that is to say,
the use of cemeteries, and the legal perform
ance of religious ceremonies over the dead.
By late 'advices ie appears that a Protestant
Minister in Madrid, assembling with some of
his British'countrymen for the purpose of di
vine wotithip, had been brutally outiageAl..
The gOnititlitiOn.
ANOTBIR NATIONAL CELEBRATION.
We:give place,in another part of our p a . ,
per, to the.very. able report of our tea ts ,
man,llon. 4. It. Tyson,. "made to the I.
toriad-Soclety, on the subject of fixing, a day
for the celebration of the a doption , of the.
-constitution of the United States. ,Thiele
such's' Manifest propriety in this nievement,
that the, wonder only is, that so many y ears .
of happiness and prosperity have been perat_
mitted - to pass under this admirable instru
.tent without a movement of this kind. Thd
great bulwark of our liberties—the . .sheetanl
chor of all our hopes—it is by it only that we
can live and exist as a nation of freemen ; and
in these days of recklessness of powerclihe#
the spirit of unscrupulous' etrort for gain and
territorial acquisition stalks abroad from one
end of the lan4tothe other, arid 'alien inemi
-sistent elements re to , be seen on all sides,
we may well join; in the effort to quicken_the
minds of the people in reference to it,:and to
reinsurrate it-i 0 the memory of the gencr,
tion with which We live. -
`The constitution' of the United States, in
the language of Mr. Curtis; was the means
by, which
_republiein liberty was saved.
from .the consequences of impending anarch
y; it secured that liberty to posterity *, and
left. it to dependion-their fidelity to the Un
ion: Without this fidelity, it would prore
a phhi , tom, and it is therlfore that the under
standing of the entire people should be fainil--
iarized with it, - ithat it should come to be
'looked upon as the Bible of Liberty, the text
book of freedom, ever present to our children ;
as the cloud by day - and the pillar of fire
by night, which should guide us away front
the , rocks and qUicksands, on which the hopes'
ofireedom have always been wrecked else,
where. -
If the Historical Society of our city will
inaugurate the Seventeenth day of 'September
in such a manner as that it will' bet added to
the National holidays of the country, which
the people will observe, they will have per.
formed a most; valuable service .to their let:
low citizens. -We are a money!making, ;bu
siness-loving people, it'is true; but the !inn.
tional heart istill in the right place, -and
-there are thousands upon thousinds in , our
own; as well aa other communities, whi
hail with pleitanre and delight the .establiXh
ment 'among las of Censrrrenos
Ph ila.- Daily Nem. -
causes of Crime.
In &late nuMbei of the North Americit'
we find an iiniitiruetive article on * the •sources
• ••
of crime in - this country.... The writer says •i6'
will not do to Charge all the crime, vagrney, '
and 'paufieristri of the countr y to one ttrOdu • e- •
ing cause, as some of. the - Temperari , !e
pers seem disposed to'clo ; but that they are 4::
attributable chiefly to . the following aises: 14
••i"
1.---Intemperance. 2. 7 --The• Importat i on of
swarms of fOreign conVicts . and pauperi.
Orphanage, at : anearly age. 4.--Want - 0fa . .,f0.
••;
trade. .5.--4lgnerance of..the Conimbwrudi r.
-
meuts of education. • 0. --The eon•
dithin of the',negre races,
_especially' e4caped
j! .
or liberated slaves. ,
. -
From iimong Vie statistics adduced. fivtlie
•
writer to sustain his position; we extr et , the
folloivinn— •• •
In. the 'Western Penitentiary. o•f
vania the majority of the convicts are fine;rr
perate.. -
. of•sixty-three convicts reeelOd
to that institution during the year 1854,• the; "=!..
intemnerat t elnumber 44, and of 105 di ielra?~
eel, there were 90 intemperate. Of jibe 1.5:11 - ;
1-emaining in the institution at the dos e of
year, 114 Were intemperate. But,
•
ante is. by'fie means the otrlyrcailse .
to till our prisons and alinshouSes, as] static.;
tics abundantly show. • Ft r instance,: of: the'
273 convicts sent to' the Philadelphia pounty.
Priori during theyear 1853, there were
without a trade, 50 could neither•-rad not r . "..1
write, and 114 were if foreign birth.l.
•-• In the WiSconSin•state. Prison, at-illedate.
of the latest official report, there Were IP
convicts, Of wham only' 33, or less than 011:%
• third, are' 'of American birth. Duiiafr,,, 60
year ending
. November. 1 1854; there wer!i:
4734' perSons . sent to the-House of Cerreetion
in Massachusetts f of Whom 3213 - were of- for?
eign birth: . Of the 2358 paupers affinitted to
the Baltimore -AlmshouSe •during . they*
1854, those of • native birth numbered
whilithcise of foreign birth were 1097;
• the inmates .of the. Philadelphia
two-thirds are , of foreign 'birth, and ads is the _< .,
usual'rule. alseof those ti:p• whim
door, relief is extended in this 'city.; 01-tfje:,
26,415 paupers supported by
durirtg the year 1863, no less than9.4 l '
.
are '6O. down in the reports as foreigners.
the four' cities of Albany, Buffalo,. Brooklic
and New York, the whole number i)feenvc-i]
Lions during - the year '1852 wa513733.4p ,
-whom *2 were foreigners, and Only Psi 1,1
riatives.'. About one-fifth of all the conviOqi
Were unable to read or write. 0f282 10-1,1
sons committed to the Schuylkill co'unty plis4J
bn in the yearlBs3, no less than 200 w
foreigners: Of 320 persons committed! ,
Sing Sing prison in_the year 1853;1 the
ber of foreigners was 157, and 43 ;could .=
read; and 183 were orphans.
4HB! rSESIDZNTI AprEo THE KANEAs Eirt
TION.--,We are willing to believeFhat
serted by the Washington correspendeit
the Coitrier and Engtti - rer, iliat the,steri
the rejoicings at the 'White House 0 . 0, 1
Kansas election r is, false. We 411 )&0
.W
Mil of, the calumny from tho paper: 1
"'Arnong' other outrages perpetrated;
the ttitehism division,of the, Nebraska
is :%that of originating , and eireulati
infainous Wander that the• ,resrat''et the
riots 'in Kansas,
,called -an eiection
eel orated ' by a drunken debnuch
White. House, in whicti the President
ipated. •
- 1' * * i.
" To 11N:stride the - faisity of Ouch
tions I may repeat thatl have Veen JE.
by ardent supporters of the. Ne4ras4
and consistent adherents of the administi
-that the:President wa4 indignant)nn ht
,of the 4.4olenee and 'fraud which btf,
praetise'll in Kansas,and soixprWed h
to Judge Jobnaon, si inemb6r of the Tr
rial Cotirt, now hero. , • '
" Tinit a portion• of the Cabinet
please, with the result, and nit at 41
eertied at the means by which i 4 was 6t
is not unlikely: But they had au ca
,tha ?White, House' to give expkision OP'
satifiw:tion. The' time for that le49; 1 (
not' arrived, thdugh, n.P. el3 '
charge that any inember of the ;preset
eminent is capable of , so outraging P'
pr9ptiety.r
titc.-L:Froml report I+, l
by the Almshouse.Coninaittee - of th B :
County (N. Y.)-
,Board of Supervigar 3,
gather the ibllowing facts :
Whole namberia Almshouse,
Nativea, '
Foreigners,
-.Femperate,
:Whole number in . Hospital ,
ativ,es,
'Foreigners, . '
Children foreign born or parent- 1 V
Nati4es, •
, I ,
O
II
II
j