Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, June 21, 1855, Image 2

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    0
F. _• .
hold them : back. -1 they had- moved nearer.l
IIiTDEPE ENT , REPUBLICAN,
him, and were.noW motiOnlesS.- Vivenzio 1111
looked up and sat the roof almost touching I 7- -- - - ---7izz- - -- -, ----- 77 --- 7. --- 7-;-,. -- : ---- :7 ------.----
his head, even as e sat cowering beneath it;'; cIIARW' F. naan Aato;tl;-ati snAziaai..torrons
arid-he felt that a Iforther contractietr...of.'buti 7-7 7 - -- -7- - - - . - :-- - - - -,;- -,- --7: , :,- - - - - -- - .--;:L - - - - - —* -- 7*- - --=-74-7-7-t . !..:
a few inches onlyi must Comtnence the fright-I', r _ .•`yil ..- i. mOttfTROSE; ( PA;;-:, z
furoperation. Reused its he had been.now be 1 --:- :', - .
,"' --4-- - ! - , ',. -:•
ord . utgpuilo
.11, 1 04145
gasped for .breath l .--4lis body shook, vix.dent.i Th4;rsdnt , '- 7
Iv • he was bent nearly dooble. . His hands ( `: .-- , , K --22i- i,,4 -:-.. . -----L,........ 4 ,z.
.. v
- rested upon eithet wail, and his feet, Were 1 , '. . 2. " . 1 ' THE RESULT. -
i
drawn - under him' in. avoid . the 'pressure'. in The Kno\V Nothingl.National Convention
front. , Thus he.retbain i
ed for more than an. ' •
- .
hour, When thavdeafenine: bell sounded again, has resulte as NVC.ant;ieipated and hoped,—
and again there clink!, the gash of horrid
The North titdelegatO'have refused to soc.
-
death; I3ut the concussion was now. so . 'great , cutnb to the i tuperiou ii demands. of tCSouth,
that it struck' ViVertzio.down. As he lay .1 and - the litt i ew Nothing party is rent in tWain.
-.:,gtithered up in leSsened bulk, the bell beat; Th e c , 1it .h..,1
, nes for Slavery, and the North
loud and
the r mfreipten crash . succeeded' cras h ; I ; . .-. .
,• , .
and on •came yiterions engine ofdeath , for I reedom.. No other result could reason
. VII Vivenzio's:srnethered groans were _heard
ably hn%el been, anticipated:: The Spirit of
..., pp.more: He -was horribly crushed. by the concession and!tneek Submission to the wick•
pondertius roof and collapsing sides; and the 1 eds'clieine.S of the 'Sla6lpower, no kinger.ex-.1
, finttening bier was Iron Shroud.
' .1 . ists among the; Northern people. ' The N.
braskalltiamets ?ill,, fi4h*ing, wila II its ito- 1
...
, vravattn.• and insulting Commit:tuts, the'ku-
I, . 4, i
glare SleVe - laW 'and Oe r other tomproniise
, 1
measures or 1850 that were to giv4 peace to
the cOnntry and prevent any ; further agitation
i - - - I '
'of the Slav question, together ;Iwith the
more recent ai,gressiV ! C acts bf the Slave Pow;
• 1 t ..
~
et., haSiaroused r in . the, hearts of NorthCrn
freemen-a .fbeling that politiCians and wotild-,1
be kaders inust not ebutend with4a feeling
' , 1
that Nvill find vent in finchaetion as Will make 1
1
f. 1
t* petty , onthern tyrants tremble.'. The re- 1
su i t of, this Knew Nothing Conventien is an-
/• , 7
other .t.tepdane a most importantone, of, the
North towitrds its ideStioy. -I Let ne - one al ,
feettol be surprised at the result, kn.' it Was
•1 • -
foreshadoWied in' litany things. ! When the
; i ' ~
Nebraska ',ill Waiibetore Congre, and the
,t
remoatra ... ces of the people of the Free
Statesingantst the outrage - were. irCated' by
the SoUtheilp Cievalr3lani their_ Northern al
lie,S.l%'4ll - sdprn and high disdain, ti l fer...were
- warned
; thai, the howl . ofretribatien would
come, 1 \vi „
te fi: n the people' would make their
indignittionl felt : and tlieir voice ,heard. And
that hem- draws nig . 11.,i Th'e. North i . .s.fast Pre
. 1 1
paring fir It. This country is undergoing a
silekt anti -• eaceful but Mighty revelution*--.
All thrl
ong} the North the one - dominant idea
L
in tit- ' 1 s.Of thr . - ale i- -1
. - •
•, - - • NEWS AND NOTIONS: -
- —Late advices: i fretn'Mexioo announce the
capture of Monterey by the revolutionists.
: . ---,The Germana in Brooklyn, N. Y., are
forming a military organization for the pnr- .
••pose of artne'd resistance te the prohibitory
•
Liquor Law, which takes effect on the. Fourth
1
of July next. - : - - . . - - ,
•, —Gov,. Beeder Pased :through New York
city, on t.he 14th inst., on his %Kay to:Kan
sas, where he . expected . to arrive • about the
25th a this montli
.
• ` Consistency, ' in' the National Erasccoin
, ~.
menus the .abolitiUnists, if they
,desire . the.
overthrow of Slavery, to-refuse, to consume,.
; the proliets of Slitve labor.,
L.
, . . .
. . : .Tohn L. Stephens announces: hi mselff as
.antiiinow-Nothing, candidate for Judge of
- .Coweta Circuit', Georgia, with the_. promise.
that. if elected, he 'will' decide . gny • liiW pro:
hibiting the saleof liquors-unconstitutional.
1 . •
--:-An open ' Americanl 'State convention .w as
held at Harrisb.urg lately; It- nominated
KiMber Cleaver , :an old Nativist; 'for. ca
nal
' - Ctumnissoner, i , and adopted a 'series . d .
.
-,resolutions, which, wording to•the Tribrne,-
evade all'the prom i nent political issues Hofdie
relay, - - ' -•.. • . . .
-7-The adininistr ition, at Washingti,n. have
. - -cheering mtelligen e from Tennessee. Their
faith, is strong thA Johnson, Dem.,:will beat
;G-entry, -K. N., for Governor. if the Know
Nothing. •^-
-othipgs are routed in Tcnnessee;-they.pr9b
ably *ill not carry Solithern State
against the Dentoerey.
~ .
—The question of natking State Know J.eleetion,since the Nebraska bill- passed. lt,l
Not;Aing nominations, in. Ohio, -after full i has elected 'Free-Suit . 4 . LA-k - irilors and • Legis
diseussion-,-was decided thus: For nomina- 1 - latitres• Sen.atOrs and Representatives in Con- I
' tionS, 8 - 1; against-nominations, 283. S. P. i • .' ,
tine , gress it hls caused the defeat of the -once
Chase,will, probably -be, nominated by
' poyerful d .mocratic. 'Tarty throughout the I
Republicans, :nod with the aid of the Know
- -Nothings, elected. i • ..1 Ninth litid the - defeat *of the omnipresent
-
." .;
The NOW 11 - atnpshire Legislature- has i Ktkw-Nothinas,.Wherever, as in ilw - case of
i
~ ~
. T.ejected James Bell kind 'John P. Hale, both I, cjilmati and Cameron an ittteMpt, Was made
~ s terling Free-Soiletis, ITnited , Sutfe - Senators, I,t o • use tileitiOrganizat fon for' the eleetiott of
; - the former for six l‘ierirs, and the latter 'fur 1 dunifhfliees J now it lias,slieWnitself in the bold
four: -The
,Democratic Candidates kid' one 1 ' - 1 ,
- - ,
in {and . gadant i hearing of -Wilson and his corn-
1 - tote each in the -Sett ] ate. '.Face - Fsee-Soilisni i= .
-.-)
, , • pKers, who ave' presented!to die country for
tne2.aseendant, and I Pierce- Nebraskatsm is.;
. 'nowhere.' Well-done, Granite State. - - •'-' the first time in its 114;t0i.i,-, the spetaele 'of
-The President.and his cabinet
• " . : •:
. are di,„
i l Northern men fdirletly be t.g- :1
n.,. tuuti- I
. ..
appomted and chagrinecLabout the firrnm , :ss ! stet-Slaved. in . a N4ltiorial Co:;vention ;- and
. -of the• Northern
--; delegates in the I'hiladelphia 1 . we are confident that. iiii 1.,§36. with -llcavon'::
1--
KnoW Nothing_ Covention. .They . warned ', bi • • - •. 1
rig,ateon. canse, it . wilt place a
", Northerners to yi0461 and be submissive to : .! e'- ' 4' .. ing on'
a
! ta4htul opponent of.Sht - vcry aggression iii the
',the South, bblieving that would- effectually
i' - ''
'
''use, p 'Sam' in. the IFree States, mid they Presidential chair. :, ,
fe ure :of the Slave States fur , the Oje
, " m ~..
de olo *i • pia :What' Will be_the ore immediate eon
-42
eracy.. Now they are all' Alt again. and ; sequences o"this ceparation ? The Northern
Must look for their stipport only to the South., 1
: Know-Nothing's Wil I, ‘yi tho( - 'll. douht,unite with
. .,:and the rapidly dintinishing race of North- [
1 tlte.linew-Srinethingsi a kindred organization
ern dough - faces. • j - • :
, i
,in sozn.C.r . elpee.-ts, ; • but , 1. 1 - hieli makes 0 ppusitt i on -
: .. —A 'correspondent of the Natiunal-' Era
. • I .to Slavery its hadingipritleiple, and the uni
7-proposes the eulonization of Slave States by- /• i .'
free lahe,rers as the lonly effectual
.mode pf . ted bodywi' i ll act s as the ::,K:low-Nutliings;(,f
•
exterminating. Slavery. 'Some portions of - ,Maine had 11)reviOusly (decided to du . ; in snb-
.NV%terti Virginia arc settled mostly. by'l ordinatiOtt tk - _, and harthonV with' the' alread •
.>
• _Northern men; Wlitise thrifty farms, Culti ca. ' „el 7'4 li • ' -,
~. , ,
I. poWel . ill4 n i epuo t lettu 1 pary„ on . .wn ten DOW..
- I.ted with their OW - it hands, - t -t •li.•
pt esen a-bri mg , - I_ I e: ,
; rest the "hopes in the friends or Freedom:—
... contrast to the- slaYery-blighted fields of
other portions of-the State. '- It is said that'
lAlready the' , Knew NOthitig orgzutirtion has
there are eciuntiekin Virginia in which there' been super4eded, in ti great degree by the '
s not a single Slave: I L These Northern- set- ~, ~ . .
i Know Sotnethimts in - I must of the Northern
tiers are opposed' to Slavery, and. so arc a i . '- , t l'!' ' 3 ~' ..
States, - and tis said that
,Iv ilsun and luster
large part-of the people in -several
..connties '
. of Kentucky. - I , • 1
.. lu . f Massaeh setts;- and Many • others of the
,
1 ; pv` r Soil del gates gates in tile' I'l4l:id
\ .-=-The Missouriansiexpress great indigna- 1 leading F
Lion at the arriv i al of a.• quantity of rifles in i Oda Know-:; othingCOnvention are itlsoKnOw
Kansas, intend id for the llSe. of
_the Free i Somethings;' and therr knowled;re 'of the ex--
State settlers. Threa.4 were made that...` if - 1 tein andstteng . the Free-Soil; organta
'.' tli of ' I F ' t' •l' . •
not sent back • immediately they :would be I - tion -: no:- dqu t ; ;aided the-in essentially in
' b .
thrown into - the Ifienas••'' 'there' would be
, t i strengthening the - back-bones of their weaker ,
an armed force fr na Missouri to talrethem ;'
'it was the work of the Emigrant 'Aid A. ; NOrthern Wethr4n.- • t •
•
clatiOnfur the purposelof Overawing and held- 1 - • One vexed question has been effectually
i ,
hag in.subjection the western _ men ;' ' it A i ra..i I set at rest bi- this!Coneentiun—ihati of wheth
. opposed to -the - Cori-attention of the United: ; ' ' 1 • -
er the Kiniw. N4thin .. gs are pro-Slavery or
-Sk.ties!' ,SuCI lira,the language of those '
who hold that nub.ody'lbut the minions of the i'-'lliti-Slaveri Il lose i , miserable • apologiSts I
- Slavocraey should he permitted to bear arms: i for the don hfiteeisrn of the Northern ije
,. .
I
. --- ' • i_ moetacy, w 0 hate c.o. lonrr been earplug. at
" The Know-No ' Rupture- .. ' ' position 'rt( tic• ' Ord eron Slavery, have ' ,
Delegates from twelve of the. Northern the 7— l ;.--.
„ ,i i had -at t example set them by the Nurthirn
Tree States, comprehending all New Engler)”
and .the whole of theW est, has semded from
- . KnowtNotinngs, whiet,i it is to be' hyped they
- -
the N :
"National Council of the Order of Know- will ditreirillitate in their next Baltimore GM.
-Nothings, in consequence of the platform ad; ; - rol tiOp , u v., le lis a :great was ahead of
b•i .h•q ' •
opted in defiance of northern sentiment. They : i j - r •z:
•• '
.have held a niceting:, at - the, Girard . Irou , e,-: an '' t '11.4----. they hav er er yet ( " I `"" i ' , Says
and adopted a creed ofprinciples, which they -,.the N r w 7 37( l;ek ' .7 : 2 " .. ui- 1 c i p in' efinli"le"ti"g on
lave. signed and published. Pennsylvania, e, the action of the.North4rti delegates ; " ~
New Jersey and New 1 - York do not appeni,,* . ..‘ It. l ptedges i ; t , , all tlio4e' inho are enlisted in the
annong the seceders,
bat it-is well understood' work Of heating back the kricntiachrnents of the negro
. 'that portions of the-delegation
Oligarchy andrescuin . g.the (havernnier4 ficun its pres
e atiun from Pennsvl: - .
vania. and. New Jerstly will,. :secede also:
! erastatc of prostitution, t 4 aid of a niimcrous hbdy
, - =
of Ten 011 C with tketn 11 . - i tientim . nt 0 this try,ing
. NeW Ytirk•- will . remain ; as her delen'ation 1 caistion, wholharejlist prenthe most decisive proofi
. ollt.Vp'n9t , - henvie in northern rights. So al- 'of theii sincerlty and fidellti. -It shows That the North
*4, aptiri t e scattering delegates...from Ne‘s'• En
g ., I is : now at in
. earne.: , 4l,iiid makea weighty ad
thiuin.fo the ilorig-accuinnlitting foundations of that
land and the West ; but..the bulk of the north k
f, Nnt r thern Republicanpat 7 klieli masrlret give peace
:has cut looSe from the - ICOundl,. leaving - thp. l _ to tine , nation ! and redectrna from the cankers and'
..South" to enjoy its ultratsms alone. - -., . i shames that Mare heel, fri4D ; •t-ing' ap4:l4 it for 'many Yesterday,. the Ckmvention , removed - the ', yew 7;" I 1 , i . ..
-
pledge o!, see; ecy from 'its doings, and pro- - i
Ceeded to complete the platfortn: The sub
- ject of the naturalization -laws was settled ;
-and in this, -the platform is not so exclusive
as the present native test. - -..
Simultaneous 'with this striking event, we
- ,.Base the - meeting in. Cleveland of
_agnational
representative body Of the order of Know
-Somethings, which takeS ground-' in faYor of.
the restoration "of lie Missouri Ci'Mtproinise-,
Protestantism, mil -no 1 . 1 proscription. on au-'
count of ; birth plaCe. • Every . northern -State
is; largely. represented- there; . also,' several
- slave States, includingYirginia and Kentucky.
It is thought that, the result of these move
, Moats will be the formation of a great north:
v erti party to demand the restoration of the
Missouri ComprOtiiise. - 1 The body'.,assem 7 -
bled at Cleveland,,, is to assume the...name cit s
the 'Republican party,' and. it . .has"an organ
, ization in se - eqi . ...of the 'New. England and
' Western States stifftelently powerful to-War
-rant the_belief that it will be , able .to carry
them._ 1n fact, inthose States it has. talieu
the place of the - 'KnoW -Nothing -.....rfarty.---
_Philadelphia North American.. • -..
EARLY WiEkt.--AVelearn-that a li - atdOfneW -
wheat was reCeivedlt . the Palace Mills ou the
iSth inst.' heinxthelirst . thia seri.son. !twi t s
a:portion - of - the crop - of • ; .,our stirring friend,
Dr. David Dean 'of this 'o6unty.. - According
...to'the - Pablished rates Of .the , Palaoe.l4ols,'?
this - wheat Would have - ecizrananded $2,75,per
bushel: -, It was not, "however, offered', for
bale, ••••- cohnn bus (Ca.) Xillti iier. '-' - ' .
ME
min
slot' of Sis
this &term
is pt i lt)ple is, t.
'Try mist cease: This ecinvietion,
i tintion has shown_ itself !in every-
. ; • .
•
Ocean, Tel vranh hetween ' the
_
United States and Thigland has been projeet
- ed, and thei whole w(irh cmtractied for; and
the Seientifib. Arneri4m ; says it is expected
flat in thretl years, :W,curthest., - /nessages , Will
.be fleeting lan lightniriF wings, between- New:.
Yoil and' The ()mall' Telegraph:
line is to . beta joint sepcli . work,.or rather the'
work of fm - O.toinpantes'-rieting in concert
an American . and a British.
. .
iFATAL A
.. cIDENT AT4StticiEliA.N.NA' 15EPOT—
Onthe 11 0 inst., Ptitri4 Curtain, an
cm
ploy: ee:of the , New-Vork and / ~ E tfie Railrpad
• t
Company,, li-as run over ph that Road,'. at
Snsquebant4 Dkv,t, 'i ttio(engine I. and: whole
I train passing orer-hinii, horribly Mangling his
1 body, and Willing hint instantly. i - : .
...
i. . ' L . f' .' -
i - - 7 - -----! ,
- THE RES.r9Nii FliO: 111 MASSAt'HUSETT . SL
I,
After intelligence of the I,l' dion of the 'No' : rib ,
1 . ,
!"ern, delegates *the 4.11 T, Conv+tion reach
:ed Boston : 1 th 1 e Massachusetts de i le.tation ie-
''. eeived the folio wing tqegiaphie response from
I a Boston ;Me mb ' er
o . - f l Congre ss :
~
'" Gentlemit o fb u ir aSiar i in
elation : .
s.
r:
HUNDRED THOICB4.I4O . I*OtCO /lilac you r ] one aid :all,
with 'Well dOue, good and
. faithful sertants.' Prepar e
f the way for a Olio Fuslin'Of liarties.? Let in the
light tit Kin your dbingi. I 114 liberal. I Make as few
issues as.possible:,i Let ):our addresseslae sbitip. but
brief' • • *1 •
=
-
rejettOp'by,ia vote o r 51
no ; uttra i pro•slavery .resolute
carried , cif 156 .- : %YR - 1(i
Un tho udoption,of the Fero-Slat cry
the Miirthern mernb6rs . --itll but New
u . .
as them:duty to thonselyes and their eon, i
uents (demanded, prOtniAly repudiate) thei'ae7, 1
tion of the : Convent;4n, , and ; in -the- worts of
1 • I
G9v.Pirduer,olM4sichusettsishookthfidust
from ©ii' their feet ati a. testimony against the. l '
Minions' of Slavery... . - • . -, • .-1 l'
The pro-Slavery:platform . was adoptedl on
the night of June - 14th; nnd• on ;the 14th1 the
Norlitni delcgateslield: a separate Meeting,
at ticich Henry Ni7jlsUn, , 'Of Al assaehusetts,
.. !
presi led,ind 11. M. McAbee, of. Ohio; 1 Was
chosen secretary. "Vicat--dnanintity qft* j eul.. '
1
ing Was:manifested, !and - n determination ex
pressed 'to appeal fit ni the council to tliepeo 7 ;
pie ii i i . behalfof right4pri nciples. - The follow.
1
ing address (in the Wild writing of Gov. Gard-, l '
, ,
ner, Of 11fassachtisetts) was submitt cd,•si P oned
~
by tie. delegates' prdsent, and ordered to be -
,
publiShed to the nation :' . - . 1 1 i
Toilte'Peo le of the tril'lrd Stglea: •
-• I
ThOinidersf gm;(1, citiiens of various States, r.ssenr
bled at Philadelphia on the 14th clay of June,
feel rtinstrained under the existing, state of affaitti to
affirm:the following piiniApies:
hi>at-=The
talcondittinial mstoration'of that Gine
honored Compromise, khown as the MisSouril'reliiiii
tion, I Which was destivred in utter disregard ef i the
popularwilla wrong ifhich no lapse of time can pal
liate,:and no plea for it.sontinuance can justify. And
that rill use all constitutional means': to maintain
the positive guarantee (;)i. that compact, until the, :ob-- :
ject for which it; was enacted has been constmunated
by the admis,sion of Kinsas and Nebraska as Free :
States. . •
. Second—r--That the rights of the settkrsin Territories
to the free and undistuilied exercise of the elective
franchise guaranteed to them by the laws under Which
they are organized, should be promptly protected: by
the National Executive 4henever violated or threat
ened. : And that we catinot -conscientiously act :With
those who Will not aid hi the correction of Oleic-
Nationtil Wrongs and who Will I.!ot even permit their
fair consideration and thOr full discussion..
Airld-4re further drelsrc our continued and Un
alterable determination, t, Ilse all linnOrable efforl.s. to
secure suet a InodificatiOn of the Naturalization laWo, '
aided by such an elevatitiu of public sentiment aFt
preserve. the true intere4t.s of. the Nation, 'and: will
guarantee the three viol principles of a RepubliCan
Government: SVIRITIAL FItEED.ONI, A FREE
BIBLE and FREE SCHOOLS—thereby prompting
the great'worli -of Americanizing America. 1= '
Fourth That we invOke the arm of le , delation, to
arrest- that growing evil; die deportation'hy foreign
authorities of paupers mid convicts to our shores and . ,
that, as our National Ctiustitution requires the Chief
Executive of our country to be of native birth,l we
-deem in equally neceszlary and important that. our.
Piplcina tie Representatires'abroad should also poSsess
no foreign prejudices to Idas theirjudgmeut or to in
fluenee their official actitin.
31Afisactrcsrrzs—Ifemt: J. Gardne'r, Henry
J. 'W. Foster, A. C. Carey, If. W. Rugg 7
James I
:Bug
.
fiutonyAndrew A. Richuond. 'l
tat the exten;.
N'rw-ItAmrslinx}:--Ailtbc.ny Colby,. Jesse 3121
.Stephen B. Sherman: :;;-
~
..
Vitimosr---qtyland I.ltelier, Evelyn Picrpoint, Jo
.seph4l. Barrett., It; 3f. Guilford, .To. D. Hatch, for
ace iiiir. , =sl . 'w •
- 3iiixE—Louis 0. Cotivin, A. S. Richmond. 1:1 ; . b.
Peck, Join: L..Steplkensi .John S. •,..S.tyst ard, Jl*=opli
Cora, -Li-Tile..AM. Litienp.
0/Ito—Thomas 11. Void, L. N. Olds, Joshua 11111 i-tin,
J. K. Narley Geo. It. 3ferton, A. life Kay,
jn?.
nenliack, Sclkuyler Colfax, GO(1-
love C. Orth, J. L. Ilar.viy, F. - 1). Alen, Jas. IL Br y . -
ant. Thos.: C. liktughtcr. •
racl
Cokshall,: 3fos. A. .11eNangtiion . .
• W. Daiieithower, W. 11. Yotzug t -
S. Jennings', I). L. En4=tzlian, William J. Plie
lOTA--Taine's Thornington, Wm. Laugliiiiige. •
ISLAND--Jacols C. Kilight, Nathaniel Grecii,
SivkTt..
CO;!ECT ICL .
T- -
Prri 14/. ~ Booth, Th omas Clark,
\.
D. Sperry', . I
..,
IN IscoNslN—D. E. Tood,. R. .Chandler, C.-41V
Cookj ' . ,
- - i.-
. .
:Protests were sub:Serfuently
Northern delegates, as tollows„a majority
of their sig,th ! rs haviilg'in.the mean time left
Philadelphia::
•
The undersigned, eitilen.s of the Unite'd States, and.
residents 'oP .the Statcf set opposite their narnes,
solemnly protest against,the introduction of any (Ines
tion connected with Shyers into the platform of prin
ciples of the American ptirty---lieing - conrinced that no
c t
such issues were intended to be embraced Atjthin its
- I
purpos•es and objects:
That we beliere in and defend the right of free
dom of opinion and discus:-lon on that and every other
subject not intended toile embraced within the deSign
of our orpnization..
• •1
That if the question of Slavery is to be passed -upon
and made:a part of our ;national creed, then in that
event we cannot consistently act . with Sdelitit to
our Principles and fernier professions-with anyvina
tional organization whose action on die question of
Slavory , will result in indorsing the Kansas-Nebraska
Act, and which refuses its sanction to the principles
of tin; Mis..souri Con Act of 3820. That we be
lieve that • time-blynored coniruict was an honorable
and fair adjustment of the question of Slavery. ',We
desire it, place this protest upon the journals of 'the . 1
C,ouricil,that in no futurcil time the undersigned may be 1.
charged with infraction pf express or implied faith to
their. fellow members inifailing to support the major: I
ity resolutions. .
- F. Johnston, Penna., J. Bowman Bell, Penn
W a.,
r•
D. E. Sinai], Penna., U. Coulter, Penh, John A.. 1
Pierce, lit, A. s: Livingaton,N. J., Joseph B. Barnett;
Vt., B. M.-Guilford, Vt.', George D. Batch, Vt., Rich
ard Ciminnensi DeL, E. S McClellan, N. J., W;B.."1
Dandanhower, 111., David E. Brook, Conn., BoriMe •
Kinsley, Vt.
•
The undersigned Deleptes, representing the Conn-- i•
cil of the State of Indiatta, respectfullY protest
is
the platform adopted ily 4 the National Cciancil at its
present session, and beg leave to say thot in regard to
the measure known as the Kansa.s-Nebraske bill, thole
within the Council of th'e state of / Fndiana, nor the
people, have awaited the action ofllic , Notiataal Cotta- !
di in order to form theit• opinion s
Their opinitipa have been formed . and avowed. An I
issue has been made with their political antagonists. - 1
and the soundness of 'thise opinions tested pyblic
debeie. and tried. at the / bO in llot-box. The edicts of the
National Council, however canonical they, may I be,
will be powerless to Change those opinions or
"
verso the action of the 1, people of Indiana. Al s ays
conservative in, their opinions and actions ;- al aye
mindful of th/ComproMises and Constitution o.t' the
United States; ardently devoted to the Amerman
Union, they will 'see witl -regret. the promulgation 'of a
platforaiby this body wich can have no other effect ,
than / tO to the fury of the conflagration which
thpassage of the Kansas-Nebraska bill has lighted
/ The underiigned nesp'eetfally express their deliber
ote conviction that immediately upon the publication
of the platfoun adopted, the Order in the State of
Indiana will cease to acknowledge the authority of
the National Council ; and they respectfully ask that
this protest may be. received as a termination of their I
duties an delegatesfrom that State. •
Jarnes•R. M. Bryant; • Godlove S. Orth, • -
•' °" - J; S. Harvey, ' Thos. C. Sloug Ito
T. D. Allen, , - Schuyler Colfax I
Willis* Cumback. I
•
• t .' 1 • 1
. . The Convention • liaving got rid of . ab.
(flitionista'",---that is of the whole North, ex- I
rcpt the doughfaces Who misrepresented New, 4
tort:—on Tuesday ;right, June T4th,iadoPted i
the following platfolnt of principles„.4 hie• it i
Will be seen. Commits the order 'strongly , in
t-. . ,
.1
favor of Slavery, , giving the lie to the hil' , " 1
44e,r . itieal- professions as desire to ignore l i the
Slavery question, and . imere'n e further : agitti.::
OM: of the subjeet : 1 - - -- . •
, • -1. The at knowletle'ettiera of ate, Almighty Dane 1
who rules over the Unitierio—who presidetroyerthe: i
Councils of 'Nations-4hp Coliditets the' 111914.40 t Men, 1
and iho,iin every'. step by which we- - ha4.e 'taliitic'ett
to the clisr — icteraf'an independent; nation, - his dilttin
guished US by lane tokt i n.orProfideatitkatency.l 1
. . . . . .
onal Conventtdn
I i
--Split tween N.
m*lous to our
3i F fthekAlico reports
ufutinvention the'
*ty ireport strongly
init.*inKj .,. report.
fiiseneted upon and
"S to 92..Nays,—
,
, ns Were then
`,4 YeiIW."L: -
ntrorm,
Appeal to the People•
•
t . . it The i.l‘l,.ittion'ani developmentof a sentiment
.1 Offirofoundly iptense AMerican feelinOrd paasiOnate
1 atiachmen u t to pur. country, its historyiand its institu
} F it t; of! tnitathip for the purer clays of out Nation.
I felyttlateimei of !tenet:4lßn for this, hiroism, tlatt pre»
ilcitillated - '.. ..Agyolutfett ;. and - `of rang:trim . of the
1 1 .riiiiie,' it rt 414.1 patt?Wsni that flamed Or. Ilea
' stiii#ion!l • -fir.",succesgally atipliedite protirkinad.
l• Itt The ' ' it ' acre cit,the Union 4tthesijetinfted
iStWs 4 .
~. . ' "'mewl,' Politic4 - 4Lprti.,; or;:toLatte
Nike langt* - - ashington,." the primary objectipt,
iiptitriotic desi And hence ; • .• . 1 • •.. -
Ji . ~, , -ritt. •
I 1. typpt Ito all attempts to weaken or subvert
Ir. ..4, il ~ , .1
2 F
rliC9llUpl ,. misittg.aotagettiam:-Wevery.....
principkt
,iffpoliey'lliat danger it. • • -• , i .
3.. The hay° acy of art.equitable adjustment 4, all
ipoliticat'ditte t e Cgs which threaten its integrity Or
!perpetuit... - • ' '.
I ..IV. Tlie r4ttsp l on_of t all tendencies to political di?
}vision founded on geOgraphical disCriminationS, or
lon, the lielleftl at there a real difference of interests
''' , W vierrit' Oe Ween•th,: .ip
yarietts Sections of. the Un- -
, .
ie tall ' en - 016h of the iighilt of the ' l Serritl
its
eXpressed and!reserved in the Constitution',
Ibtatoidante by the General Government
ice With 'their tights by legislative - or
• the
. (.'onstitution of these tr.,ited
to ltei, of the land,- sacredly ebli;
kt; and metnbets, and steadfast
\lnnevation'tipon its \ptinci
s pretests.'.: Avowingl that
Tmay only be legally
be ~judicial power of
Tory to . the above:
i. ik\
ce, to the laws,.
Intl, they are
mult b'Y' the
'leis .of
'died
EINI
--
, t
t.
t.
•,!.. t t.
. .
1. e
s
k. h. ,
1 - It:
11..
N l\
' 14,
'
*. 1,
, •,
t h
xi .
tii - ,
S;IE.\
tates
Land-a'c
/of all inter
ilexecutite'nefilx ,
I 0.. OhediOnt+ ~
,iSt4tesiii illb. stipiel,
lttatory ttpOn till !AS pal
!realstanhelio the Spirit ,
/plea, howifer specious pi
in 411 &Wilful or disput ed po
;ascertained and expounded by
the' United Pintel Anti as a cot .
I T. - A habit Of
,re'rermatial obedi
~.\
r whether. liational,State;{ or Munciptil,,
either repOaledfor declared Unconstilut
II proper authorillig i. /
11 2. - A t4sier !an Sacred regard fOr those
statesnianilltipWhittli ard to be contra - distil igu
h' from actsiif ordinary legislation, by the fact of t
Ilbeing of the nature of e.onipaets mid agreements ; an
!nu) to bn'tiOnsidered a 4ed and settled national poll
lle, , • irtl: • v • .
1, - , i •
ii t.
3. A rqtlieal revision and modification of' the laws
t!regulutingiiininigration and the settlement of Muni
ligrants. / Offering to the; honest hiunigrant, who tionr,
.lave of liberty Or hatredlof oppression seeks an I asy
-1 Ilan in the; liniecil Statets,
.a friendly, reception) and
ii,protettiimil 134 t, unqualified condemning the trans
‘mission,timitir s nres ofifelons and paupers..
i. • VI: The esse tial modification of the Naturalization
titaw.s.:llM-repUtii by thi Legislatiiresi of the resltect
:_ii-vie-Stateslof alit ~Staie laws allowing foreigners cot
inatutalized to m o te. The repeal, without retroactive
'operation; ! Of all'aitit oil Congress. making grants of
'land to tinhaturatized for,eigners, and allowing them. t o
rrvote in the Terryinies. I
VII, - ,llMitility to the 'corrupt means by which the
leaders /' of Party • harei hitherto forced upon uS our
!rulers aid 'our ',rioliticah creeds:- IMplacable enmity
:against the pre amt demoralizing system of renLar4=
- Sur political- suloltiviency, and of punishment for isolit
leal indePenilence. • I)itgust for' the wild hunt after.
office which chatictetizes the age.; These. on the one
hand: :Ott the Other—lMitation of the,practice of the
Purer day i of the Republic ; and admiration of. the
maxim ; that ." office shohld seek the than, and not man
the oilloc:,7 and Of the nile that the just mode ofa'seer
*tiningrfitneqi for office is the capability, the faithful.
.tress and the ho I .,ne .. sty otthe _incumbent or candidate.
VII: Relsistance to the aggressive' policy and co--
itipting tender:4;s of the Roman Catholic Chum eh in
our country by-the advancement to all politiettl: sta
iion__,4cntive, Ileihslative, judicial,' or diplomatic—
vitt those oily who dce<not.hold civil allegiance; direct
ly .or indirectly, id any foreign power, 'whether :civil
.eit - ecehisiastical,tuul who are Arum-leans by birth, ed
neation anti trairitng—tittia fulfilling the maxim -4 .lmm:-
je.tNS 6:5 . t..T rilAt.l. 00,,-.Ipi". 9 IF.IIICA: The pros: ction
'Of all eitiFetts in - the legal aril pauper exercise of
':their ciyitaml.refigicuts tights and privilege::: tlic maii, •
' tenance of the right of A - ery min to the full. time
`'..itiltined atiti.peaceful en oyment of his oom! religious
'Opinions and worship, a tl a jealous resistance of all
Attempts - hy itittyl,Sect, denomination or church to; ob
tain tan:se:elte cy over"uny other in the State, be
si
ineas:Ofany ip dal prikllegeS or exemption, by'rany
1.1 .
- Politiettl cOmbin Pion of its members, or by a division
of the allegitineel.with any foreign power, potentate or
eclesiMuic:;•!•
,!..I . x. 'rho ,retbrmation.tif the character of our, Na
ttionalf.egiOaturOt by elevating to that dignified and
. t:esponSible : . position, Men of higher qualifications,
:purer Morals, and more unselfish patriotism. ,
*1:
X. The .iestrietion of executive patronage--cspe- '
'ia]ly in the matter of aripointment to office—so farlis '
It may b e :periniXby / the Constitution, an .con-'
l -
istent:wittv the . 'coot!. ..i .
XI. ',Thii education of the 'youth of onr4ountrY - in
'achoohi prOvided by the lSta to; - which:set:oohs shall he
Common to all,, Wi th out distinetion y of creed or party,
and free Vorit any , influenee rvlimetion.of a dencn
ilnational partisan character. And Ma/mit:eh as Chris,
.tianit3iby the 3otratitutiOrr':of nearly all the States, by
he decisiOns of ohs. r4oSt eminent judicial authorities,
and•bY the Consent-fif the - people of America, 'is Conj.
idered an,elemeKt ofodr political system, and as the
Ilolv Ilible li/at once the source of Christianity and
the, - depositlary aid fouqation of all:civil and religious
,i . reedonic We oppriso every attempt to exclude it f on he s'eltoola thus
lestabliskied in the States.
~""Xl/S The Almirican Party haring , arisen apps) : the
Ming and hi Spite of the opposition ,of the iViiig and
1/einoeratie parties, cannot be held in any manner
l'esponsible fur the obnoxious acts or violated pledges
A t t eithor. =And tihesystsimatie agitation of thOSlavery
sities.tiOn. by theseparties having elevateiftetiOnal
hostility into a pikvitire jelement of political' poWer,
and
,brotight °fir inallitutions into peril, it has there
fore beemne! th e Imperative duty of the American par
t
yy to interpose, for the purpose of giving peace to the
iintiy ants i)erijetuity fc.v.the Union. And as eXpe
'Once has shown' it itruxlssible to reconcile opinions
.r
, „. ,-
.., , .-- , - -,;•*„.;- , - '7 ,
, , .
extreme' tul tbtkse winch separate ex: disputa'nts,' criiinnectient maue .:t fiery. _Northern speech,
4nd aS thelki catfibe no dishonor in 'submitting to !the kruil of bnelt:lvine, which tins developed ripid
l!orF, the Nation4l.-Council .has deemed - it the befd i illy . , .
in 111.4 sytitein since the Convention..opez•
guarahteenrcornMonjustice and future peace to ahidc A
.-. 1
. - .. •
by and maintain !the exiSting, laws- upon the subject ! e u• - i ,
„ , .
of Slaver:4i as a•lfinal- . settlement of that subject in i In the gour,Te ..r tl, 4.1,,,t.,... ~ V ir,,, , tini.-ut
, . ,
. 1
iipirit and in sub Stance. i - , • j i . :szittr: yotn‘ Ni , rtnern tueettons are all through
And regarding it as the highest, duty to avow their i with ; .yoti hai:e eart".ed them ; now •g:ve -us
tpinions upon a subjdet..-so import:pit in distinct and I the in:1;„1,. i ,i katfortn . and. we will•sweep.the
nneqUivoeil:ternis, it is hereby declared as the sense ~ ..., J . , ~ .
Of Odd National colincil that! Tong:resselections'
i,,,,,,,„,", „ o 1 .7"otittl, an
. D9 . k ! ri. yottr
'ower uudOi thel ConStiiution ' to.. le , rislate upon [the again the hattstts titiest ion- w.ll be killed. .
uhjett of Slarertr i in,tho' States whCre — it d0 , .5.0r may
esist, - , or toesclude any ktate.from 'admission intethe
rnion because iti; Constitution doeit or does not rec
i)nmize the instittitinaof Slavery as tt pan of 1t.4 serial
pystem; and esnressti piletermitting any expression of
spiniou upon the,. iewer! of , Cengress to establish or
prohibit Slavery ,Witltin any. Territory, it is the tense
of the National Cl::ericil that Congress ought riot to
le , visliste the Sigjet 4 t of Slavery within the Terri
m. upon,
Itory of the iliteited stittvt, and that any interf.ronce .
by Congreswi Slavery as it dsista in the District
t ot - Columhiswould by a:violation of the spirit, and in
Itention,6fthecot b) - 'which tha . state of Maryland
ceded /the Distri4t tnited Statis and a breach
'of the rational Glitb.t -
/Xlll. Ilse policy of' the Government of the United
ISt:awe, in hs relations with foreign Governments, is to
jexactjustie flout the strongest, and to do jnsthe to
'the - weakeSt; restraining!by all. the Power of the goy:
ernment all its eitizeta Bom interference with the in-
Iternal cone rns (if :lateens with whom we.are at pe:;ce.
MY- This National Council declares that all the
I
'Principles of the Ortler sh all .be
_henceforth every
where opeitly avowed; ti.nd that each member shall
A be at liberty to make known the existence Of the Oir
iderolnd the fact'-that Int hi . lf is la
_ Amset. member; .hmi it
,recommcnils that thire: tie_ no concealment of the
Ipliceit of nieetin of subordinate Councils.
- ,"Wondeir if the ReplUican will still endeavo s r to
convince itit readers that the ortiet. it= Free Soil ?
We shun. l' • lt.', at this matter nest week."--.lfont•
tos;7Aint
.. al. 1 ;
+0
•
DO loclk at at, and wheit yOu are satisfied
with looking. Please . let us know whether. the
order is ~, Pree-hielli at .the Xorth.•;--which is
lall that we ev'er cla t itnetl for' it: The plat-
IPirift of the Northern Know Nothings, [in
it.hid6 theme substantial planks :: The refba
ratiet ofipie 'Missotiri Comprcitnise; perpet
ual resistance'to theladinisSiotiOf Kalisasi or
Nebrasica.iii . f3lnve Mates the: . duty of the
VcdO . ,ral-f.;:ieentivetb protdet the settlerg in
the 'i'erriories in,tj*, exerctse.tif the elective
6am:l)i:se:Land a refusal to matt with '. - auly In
oivicivalsr partiati.who' will not co . -operate
for the correction ofthe'natioual evils grew
1. • ' . 1 - - ! • - - •
grow
ing. out of;!the : Nebraska- hansis legislation-
NVlire AO yd# stand, our c i se l elleut friend of.
F the' :PefizOcro t,- op t,l"i3se gre.atlqupsiions?-for
we* not aivare : tkiit you have ever defined
your, position therebti.. As "yet we believe
,You have'.oulv • dedired a , '%aitist the further
exteusie4 of slaverfiSoithivird !
, .
~
gar,m, egive up l .a.la e' portion. of the
I Republican, i this vs k, t accounts of the
Knox Nothing Contention at Philidelphut,
_ .
land the'•Kl3OVir cjihmetbilia 'conventioti at
i ' '
I •
1 traitor iidisto . vered I Phe correspondent of
iciei• - ..i :1.... ''_ 'l/I.ne Nivi tinx Tntst-Ne is known! Lie has
, elang. 'lliey are imPo , rta , nt as , indica
:., ,
... 1 i been det4tecreending offilts' patches front this
ttiiv of tne !attire coarse oz political
I.* ' " events f i hall !- He iit. Mr.- of draisachusetts !
4 via ih.ell re l y l 'e
iatarefuprual. an
.. - j Expose Mel{ traitor !" The meeting was
1 i: .
. 1 - • •-' I - 1 •', '. - „ L . : , 1 1 . .1 I •-• . ~. .
.Ulo it rowir-a•
The Triblate'li 4ep_otter A the Knowr lr . ki. _ .. , r once into Wild uproitr. - A l ktpdt
1
,•
. . . pm Vonvpiltion• ..,
.. • • 'travel* upon their feet at once , glactit - ifite,
i ..- .; . •... -1 it ' --
The Ntp I t oric t Trt bun e . appears to have , l how ling; some, 'On t'iith the`-ti atOrl' l Tiz
"j. t I •-. thl' kil ~.- )‘ Iliittlethint out !' °thefts that#Wailm it ' hasmiii
i, li,-.,A _rush wasaitade to*firdiltePt.e4.,
liatif,al veri.`ellicient lie
. .
~6.4....., l. - ..
chilli hillovZ -, 'othitta''Coritrintikut,' aid I we I l'el -
• .., •I , '2 . `- ~ idente*.hriir, some drew M,ltheirlp cold - steelo
elioni hire . lad tot' find room in` Our i ' , ( f -'l' inn a nd cettfuStO I im•a'
-,- , .it' ,. l i.,.1. . !. •.,•,., ;, 6,, , .
,•,
.-, '. . ~- s ian n Aft . Prn Of. paSS ., .
..,.
~, p p ig.
CPI ti ns tpr
. attimns,tettermi, tout as thOis tin; ilti n it, istiideseribable. ‘ , ,r! t; ,:i- ',„ ~: .4 • • `2.-I- , 11... •
poisi le,-we'pti Bah only the follbuing,l•which
.1 • .At, • thia moment Ikir . BuffintOn Of Pali
... .
is to good td,' nitted: i ' -
;
I- 7 • e , ~,
I. .Illiver` kil,tall laroe fine.lookindgetitlemarr, of
. , _
'the sid e
i 't ' , r ; '
_.s . I: • - . 1 iiiMid and fearless manner, sprung to .
.
- 1 , • i
.! 17 I IIILAIIELPIIIA, June 14. of the President, and in such :a peremptory
Th, gldrienia netion of 'deltygates .
. from the ..mniatinef 'demanded to be 'hear - that •he was
free Stat e s hlisi been transmitted you by I ttd,.. ' at oned
d dt heflo or, - l i e in
egraph.-• Thaiik God ! . There is a IVortii at ; I J a i Ccor . e spoke. . a
m style tuat'soon produced comparative calin.
last.. ' The Soul h is aghast'. / It does not know . Said i t i
r 7.7. • • - .
- •
what- to niakeiof it.' Thin North never acted ,
.' I ri , lse to defend Masiachusetts from ' these
so before,,. 'They beg, they implore, t iey ':eoarse.,as ' •snults, and ''base: '
calatnnies.'. Those
plea(); bot the North I* inexorable, I. . h is ,- • ,
u o sav l. she' has traitors in her delecration
not al chili! to ibe toyed back 'by .sweet words.. 'say whrit i ts . &Ise ' and - snylint•iheir P p ertiOn:.
It asked stinply , the: restdration of What 'the al peril." :But th ere are 'traitors in pother del
. - .
South.had stolen; it witsilimsultingly denied , ' . mitions,"and_if this Convention has -indigna
and . as if that INti , re 'not enough it - was told ton tol;ekpend upon those who hare divulged
the robbery- Iwas right ,Vn. spirit and Siiti 7 ,
1.. 1 What has-been said or done•tiport this Elem. - , it
stance, - and forbidden lunger to complain of must fmill upon other headithan'those Of the
it I_ 1,1 ' ' •• ". - -' • 'l' Massaehusetts. delegates.' . -.: : :
The South I has: finally learned that the He then proceeded' to s ay that a note from al. - .
North is ln ear n est; andljhough ~it . sorrows•-: I THE
Virginia.. delegate intended for -the corms- .'
- - _______.---
is thOuglilit ~Nold.not.be comforted, that its potident - ef Th e N ew York Heratd. was -bv , ItNOW.I.OI/LE, THEM:IB4T
power • over : . the Tree, States - is gon6; its b • , , ,'. • - Cr - m t . , d J une .
mpg tvrongly directed put .into hands; I- - . Evntano, ?ls BYi t!ne•Fl, 18.51
t ,
respect 4, et !weed tenlfohl for them $ l l, 'that itlContained a promise to furnish for The The e xc it e m ent: Upon rte -- •
-
their position: , Sontliern., men begged hi
p Qt.
lleraldla report of his (the dele,,,4*iitesjspeeeh, vettitian of theitlintimw-Soinething - or , e p l e•
,morning that thei Northelln Delegates tie ild the - eviiiii,g - ; before ! *Mr. Buffinton had had can ConveutiOniSon'the inerepie' .." 'n it ''`''
come backs into the Cetinell-- they te_proffe •ed •no;purPoie of Mentioning this circumstance; of secrecy ap pe ars to be •diScardeci
ever l ything—their iiiemitlik dropped words of bet the,' unprovoked and . unfounded assault learn front . gobtr authority - that they' :I ' m ,- I ~- '
s'wpee. promise; but . thli' North,
; said : I o'
Obligations
upon 4 the
'',' unprovoked
had justified _ to abolish all .oathS and '
we told yini we w o u ld g 4 if -you -refused to his c01ir . .:4 now. .
. r. - Last. evening the : I Convention. cent,
. . , 17- -
restore til Kansas and Nebraska. mid pas. •ed - The,' tide changed: Virginia and • The Xerc Illie platform as reported, by. the Corer
t io,i e . r i e s t u o i4 4 t . c i i ° .i trl o l t ° l l l :t ,A i e
or.din.'?„`..)ritY., and . nom rite • York lierottl, instead, of -111assachnsetts a nd.
•
Tim N w lottic 'l'aninNE, were irnPliCated in strung Anti.SlaVery pt
e ,r,rfa
/,
attended Mid . pirited. Ttmer e was no vu ice - Mr.lßurwell, of Virginia, frankly. Co r nfeSs,• The adoption pi:oe Pro - Slaverv/plittir
\
.until 7 o'clock. SO.: 414'43:- ittropte'il 7 1 - i.
The lie:ling ; oftlie ~.oii-Jite r n.mec titb ers this disliono Of.course there was no ewer fur ' will distinctly entinein sa I
rut/ruing, 'yas at:'B tielimekl in one of the par- now - to I" out with the - traitor.'. Th isi , Was a pledging the party to the
fors .eft 1 • , Girard I l(iiiSe. . It was Adi horse of another. color. ' . ••:-,.• - • • Nebraska . party. ' .' .'/
tin' lookiiig ace - . I The- !weak wm.mre • stro mg, ed that be Wrote the note' in oueStion, and ' at Philadelphia was made knoWn/this - nto.
Me strong wetre thrice :tined, and they sut that-he !furni s h e d th e reporter f o r The .thr. ing to , the Co,tWentrOit asserrihted - by the f.,;
i
forth theit titOderate hurt firm l i(hlr e ss. aal aid with an abstract of his sPeech•fer puha- lowing d z ispateh-i ' - ' • - /
.
statement . of pri n ciples. With stirprii:itig ui a- cation; He owned thatlit was indi sc reet, and - !.. Thmm. , -North - is beaten—thirte4n gates trievel,:e ,
nimmiity. I .Their spirit - was 'catching. • Pet 11- . improp ~r , but he did not menu to do strong
drawpln Oisgu4t. Say to ourKfrionua- at Clet e : :&
sy Ivania and New.lersek could nut resist, ts 1 Kenneth Rayner , said he'had been approaefi- w are
. with ; you:heart and.atint" •- • , , . •
The announeemeiAt / was received with s'i.
influence.: They !Live pi•epared a separmite tad in nlsitiiikir Way, and asked to'furnish re
admires - s Or theta 6iii,t ittients, difil : rinf out ports I' ' The ll ld l' 111 it
. or ciw , mut ie- taL t et , 5 ,....i.. t ..i t . giilar emotions, vvldeli gave
~ way to ren tv ,,
sebstatitially 'from that 011 the other States of - a•viohnon of the rules to comply; andrhad hopes and three times three wereglyea an,l
Del,.
•
the Nortli, \et York :kiotie is felt -- felt--: t I
rut } n refused.:.,
.4011 lie was' not disposed. to :be
repeated fur Liberty and 'lltiniatritv,
.11.titrmlon. 1Y I 3 ptes have arrived . from Philadelphia w t ,,,:-
u meta of tlici . infamy el iii . ,r deleg:itiop---t rait- hard on br4lier Biirwell. 111 r.
• H • an d , ..,„,are autherized to unite with. the Knew-50n 1 , ..
ors :dike, to l'freeduin and :their State: AS nm4diSi. sed to- press th© imifter,
tilings.Jbe good' s t ork goes 'bravely on ,
one of ths'tir - piiky from .:! ,. e.M,; 'York City t( Id giAted-that'a -vote be 14 , i4d rellevina 'the
in will nottriumpli. The - n;(1.
htaceis
them to-d,miy-'-they 'woulej be repudiated fr( in Virginii gentleman froldeenSure Whk. abler was-. Doug
"one end tit the State to the other—the enip re 'accnrdiiiigly dune. ,Z - -: • .i '. .., . word/is/ God and:Libert,y: '.- ~ •' •
TlaCeintnittee on Resolutions o fthe Know
State W61,11a trample their resolutions under . Mr.l.Sonires of Ni ( ew l'ork ho had opened
,Voituthlog Contention, consisting
,of enefro,
its feet 1 . - tiro iwilqied lifousafithinajoi•i/g. his .attack on the Ma.ssaehu,
The debate yesterday afternoon wits rat'. ow rose and apOlOgized: fo . 64' S tate, bi t s ' e,mtide th.-f6ll°Wing re o»•
er warimi.l Ifurkerniatlea,siaTeli calling • 1
his charge. Gen... 'Wil - mn Their reSolutions were revised, slightly ine,:',.
. The .preamble *
.
tuition tri hitnselfaS the fl*n r 1 o r of the Ordth
.. .• from the associ:ite—writ ten : itied aitcr,Pas•s'ed P 5-411. .) - -
i
It gave' tin aifectin g pictii re of the . orgfini-i:
.icing--4ho . se ,intiOcepr-Ceon--,!
s • erts that the servility to the - Slave Power,
: tile 'cluiraCteristic of existing polities.' par:; , ,,,
Anal in its tender iinimey; when - they inet i been so foal l'y In iscoristruesll;.mr vemi,
,zt sinall rOoutlaial lm:11.1 hilt a very ft NV hieliKi otrlulla:ltlrposes, explainin,,,, ,, the afliiiil, and de- •; is perilons to manhood, to the: best:`inter,,
hers.... f I llim• ii -W to t bel ii Seward iii9i'l l f.e uouncitilr tile cli:Lrgti against liiinaS false ; and ~' of the NOrth, and to the:liberties of the•P iE •
•....:. •
• , public : I .'• • - I • ,
said; voted for him for GoVertior, lint ji-e. ask&l a vote •as Passed. relieving him froth any , - 7
. 1
'ihe. first resultition.deelare.s . that- the iss:„.
the forgiyene,,s, or tr, Cerlyeetion,antil ..Godi's 1 ( Th:1 1011 6 ; AA ; suspicion ; • ,, ,m.`o • elided this I'
fergiveite4S, aiad he . hopeii that 'ire bhould li e l temeeSflow, farce, inalie,r'esult a which the befut•iim the Atherican public is Wh'ether F r m .t .
be limited to Free States or Slae,
,
lvng coongh matoile for` it.,/' - - 't oriel.lat Mrs ;Ina decided W l tnefe tlen the - i-bar. ' d°ml-' to . -r,
i ry to
, S , t . ave' States: ' - . : •
Gov. Brown of Tomn;srea.made a coimeili i. Ii gliiiied:for. The prenila action i_mf 'Mr. Btif:
issue has been forced ;u tI
tort .peeeh, d,ei.mi•ec.2:tii:W the refit it of tl e : fi nton tylas Ldniirable iii c.otieept•ion , and exe-• I . •••IJ- .I,ltat the .O
:- country by Slave pikver'aggressioos. - .
111. That these aggre.ssions; and
..elecially
'Missouri Conipromise. . Theyall thought t a ti e i cution, iind . saved/ilai.CounciL front the seri
the Nebraska Outrage and the assault !Tod
South, he'f.tatid;titatit.waS an unjust thing o ously Areateue'd personal collisigns , which
the - Nortlizit . - - Was .uneidied for hr tl e '.impend ed at,,the moment
,of his interfereuce.
I the eleetive franchise Ktinsasitavearoin e i
South, Imt,-If nor that thev.had got it thee: wei e , • BeybildWhat I bare curnraunientecl'hytel
liardly-i•eadv to. gi‘je, it tip. '. But he wits -t ' egraph ( there is nothing' new today. T he the freemen of the lieptiblic,•and that 11 - ,,y
mairitain their rights and' resist the - t.!-
all.--i ( etitsiii favor i:•' a platform' . that 'llia , , ;t ouncil:ls cOnsliderit , T al details of , its plaC I W i ll
'm
ditiOns Of slave territory..
...,
:-could .:ill tierce upon, - eyen if it were •no hit . ' l . tirin : ;4o Will oniit from it all opposition to I
The - ex e itt. i ' .IV. :f i lial they will mitintAn . ...rbi.. , pitionall :
than . lIP kind
ger his [holding outhisliand,l the 1 , ItoMati 'Catholics and •the Pope.
they eouldlgrOw upon - that. .•' ' • . - - . sion Of;*.atholiez. : , from time•Ordbr iS.allsolo bu i t Y .°r} '''' ' ''' l° ' ll • • -- -
V. That the filen s
. m f reedom sixd.d
' d • 'cf 1'
I- ..Ex-Go t' ..J4lniStunl ofP,inm=:ylviinia made Idi , emmtitinnechtand the ritual alterw - ,to that 1 •
, of trtiike- prlinciples, not birthplace, the •
.tea ui
i strong NOrthern
.speech i l. full - of solid argt - I e ff ect. :' . •whole value alniost to many
adi ‘ n i issi n liMo .the citizenship. -
. meta, in fayorl of restering the Missouri Jim.. i'.tla. NOrthern : - .d 'Western mem
e . hers. Will be i
A•fifteen-Winute. rubJ-ilixd• been aihipletr: an •I thus dm.i.'troved • nil, - indeed. it still settle:l' - 'l r .'. l i lt " we will repel Ver.)* ecei ez' i 'l' 6l- ':
, , 1 , ,
the 1 inter.erc .l . p,.,, t cal 41 irs hy potentate - ,
r .4 tiec iu -li i - • it'
he was prOmpti y ctioked'i.ir by Bader ni,, i dowo in 6 a simple secret Conel:ll. 7 e for
i ni i pontiff' or . priest,' as destructive of the rigAtt3
bit; •S,' .mutherti friend, ; • .but icy the aid•of ;son; !ilastietitt f the. Black Power•of the South.: '
et nuert.,YZ- - . ' •
Vvo , rshipit.-iodea , c , :e k ord?rg to tsio.dite ! te:. of ct-.. -
: of theniudet•ate Suethernmemi, loive to spec - I this...par o*e: it needs the aid vf the. Catholic s I
i ano th er fifteen minutes. wa- obtained ft ' c 'of Louitana and Alabama, and so Will invite I sel ' ncre ' nu
hinm.. -
,-•- , .
iittiein 1011/ its full . . . . -.- . . , . • i ' • VII. Reeorninends action ittaeyeralStat , •mi
..• ;;for the promotion of Temperattee. -. .
Ellis, the•editor jiff_ Tim Organ, made . But s I interest . is gone in the, further cc
1 .VIII. Agreeing-to si4Vort-feedsehools,:atl
very fair F:pee-h, inltlLV9rfOritiiik and Water
'Fit
oft c cotrcetition. Nobody ~..Arcd for .
labor and Iktrbor improvements: . .
hiring failed im t his 'Cr;v,d,j!ig pr(ip . o , ition. am .F.it sayea to the position it shnuld announce-as m
• IX. To . strive .for the election of - men
. d
• treinblin4 for tie ( - 2,4("rti4si , n•iil
.printing. 2 •Ilito Slmie .11 • It ha - s'been made a great Lactic-'
r
, integrity, .and 'with rierre'to resist aggressv
Judge t'utai ot>6c•or:i a, (I:airman: of th I grourlit St n this goestion; and though Slavery
Ctmniinittce, A cIOA the. 4 H
bate. e' ..:11(.1 - ht. ii has beerl
ti
i ontinalis triumphaut, Freedontha si of anykind • _ ; ..
' ' -- • re ready toutt::e
X.
did nut cifFe•if they ! eutilik nut 'carry :i singl I won'
.tkiiei ' grt:w test , nmoral victory which the I•
For these objects:we a
Stet-, lie' WaS - f ilit going, to' make a- phitform',lwhole I.lhistory of the • controversV' between ; with all Men under any . 'name or organn .t
atien
•
to carr 4 / ecti:tins oh. ife'lw:ifned to make •Ithose twig great elements (Attie Republic has Ito 'aid in carrying into operation these Fr,.
one tlmitt'‘iiis just—bne that did jiistiee'to the ilrecorded. • flenceibrth there is to be s new ! ei P ia T7 3 * - ••'
' . • '
Soutjr. / ..1 !
._ • .. ;lera in that contruverst. The great import
, .
; While the Mute was beimmg taken, Sperry of hanct- of the , results of tit t
;ink] hal:ana
voted i ,, ainst every cOn,promise platform
proposed. .Vermont voted for Kenneth Ray
, Ders as aleon:iidiment tot'the man;, they are
heartily Aid at result. Gov. - 7 "lohnston
and three otheri o'r the T , .nnizvlvanla
• tr i iiion were in t'avoe of tlit.‘ minority 'report.;
I— two wereln'tliyeir-oI the inajoritv . report.--L
It was tinflerstood Northern Peintsyl
.
r vainians that it they i.would vote- against the
utinority report their Southern colleagues
would gt)iv , i;litst 11)4; majOrit v pintturur, an c l
so they , .C. 6
j ulokeep the 'old keystone 'togeth
er. Pentri7lviiiiia'rhrrefoi'.e.gave•tiunanitiMui
v'ote. ag,aitii4t - theioinority ,report, to die great
joy Of th&Soqflierners. - . )1-,it %%LI) the final
rallie to /, c 1;1:iul, the Southern Penn - -
svlvitnian haling g;iinerf,all they epe(.•ted to
by' the bargaln,.con6lude4 . .tliat it would-not
be of any'pore; use to their, and voted -for
the majority to
_..arrity report.;
...!:. . 11 Ind brtilie down — ninny . strong prejudiced"
•
. A dispatch",was receivid from Know-Nod'. li gainst him, both innong Maskiehusetts mete 4. •
ings of The.Expiefs l .or4r, saying that the ;who werie witnesses to his eonduct and among
majority" repOrt must notbe adopted—that Idle delegates of the other States North and
New York .would never s i
:netion it, but Bar- 'lionth.l- ,No man went into that Council - with
ker maintained that be kiiew the State better ti l i:re.";:"eleinclit's 'of 'distrust and opposition
than - vinyl else . . " He ;;said that atter ex- "f i coinbinedligainst him; no one goes,out of it
pelting 30,00 Q members who voted for. Clark, i . with suety an enviable fame, erstieltgaiggre.-
they had ISO 000 Men Whent they could re- 1" titionitti his honor.. He is Worthy 'to, lead
ly upon in tho Ord&r. 1" ...• . . i l he neW I movement , of . :the people' of that.
Thu was scene of Wild and terrible . "
ex- i rtate, ;Which the.result here so fitly inairgur%
citement in the Council between 11" and 12.1: tea; .IGovernor Gardner brought, from .his
o'Clcielc Ink night while the votes were being 1. minetit position and the high favor in 1 whieh
taken on the :main propoitions,- growing out it wok regarded by the Moderate then of the
of a base hndlcalutnitiouS:iittack by one of r i.larth""and South,great influence to the right
the NeW Stork delegatesi"iiikin (Inc" :of-those. I ide, and ; did not fitil.to"use it effectively:and
•from lla4sachtisetts," ~ Tt' e latter Was
,ip- pri•
.),": t the Most. fitting -Momenta. - The "Maine .
1
'rate telekraphie correspondence with a friend [ eleg4ion were a unit kiln
"the start . and
in New York;
. and .was apx . iously waiting•the i
,int adamant. . They needed no ipraying
taking ofithe [vote upon the minority resole "I‘.ith,"but were at every point the sturdiest
tion, after' which .vras Ito proceed nby the I% orkers-_for Northern_ fealty to its •positien,
midnight' rain to join his friend. He ,had Icl)tew Hanipshire was the foreman in=this-'la=
recorded his Tote—the fatal but expected ree :-," ' r, and though: the , other 'New . England
sult.of the 411ot had.' been announced—he 'totes "had their weak spotsat firs; all. canto
dispatched a Message to'"his friend by the tel Iti maidlilly . and faithfully When the,• hour`. of
...,
..
lt • I‘ l 1 t'
•egraph Tunnel." who was Waiting outside,. and l_ "la N i as F a hand. At the \Veit,' Indiana
then- hastaed, to his' hotel to-prepare fur .his tv4ith her ";Colfax i her Orth.andlier . Ciintbitek;
journey. I ShMe evil-eYed doorkeeper, - or 'ranged into line with the first - roll4gill tiOd
niayhap. the • New York ;"gentleman himself,A4talijlte Massachusetts`ofher - section."f"" Ohio,
had noticed . his dispittehhig a message to his ty&preseii‘ed in most part
-by soni,=:9C,‘.olo-
.
friend ; and 4ager tinfind" cause for an assault IN"irgillnyV never tired"under the lead of heino,
ppm' anyl of the IdassitchiSegvnem hers, and ihle-heartbd Ford, in devotion t' the standard
think' -- - - -rdlii I - idr.
sing su. _..lie had ,foitud7out the great
troubling se4l 7 et or.the leouricil, he rushed
madly' up the aisle to the President's chair,
interrupting the proeeedings in Progress and
screarnidg at the top of his fungs - : The
. .
.:.,..., ..it , past twenty-tour i rilinittee chosen to draft a. Corltitu.
.
4 hours.l lies not in the fact that-they compass 1 tion fur the National: Organization—Mr.
lithe destruction of the great Know Nothings Prince of Massachusetts,
_Chsirtntur, repute',
II party- 7 —the creation of a Passion and a day • 1 yesterday afternoon.. -The Constitution pro.„
~ ,
1 is- is, (~i coinparativelt small account •
'(tlf ' lf ' ) b ut I tides for the following _officers :. Preside
If, . 3
tin • the Wore -resolute and enduring flict that I Vice-President, Sec:retary, Treasurer, an& ,
tit has iriawriirated - a _North,- and formed' the : side Sentinel ; . the National league to lie cm- 1;
in.
irallyink point for those who would gather in- 1 posed of: -delegateS. chosen by the Semi
to one:triunipliant host all in the nation who 1 Leagues is in the ratio of :each, State's repre•
,
qliencefOrh would make Slavery se'etiunal and rsentation iiLthe loWer House of Congress. -
41,iberty -. iational • 'ho_ -1, A 7 - .
~., .cy-ni. .. , -who would . tut in practice
tthe wiiel decision. of. the United States Su
preine 'Pourt that 'Slavery is a mere - munici:
pnl regulation, limited by the Verge of . the
loca l l JAW.' . . .
• Whini? all have done so well in - bringing
.• t about. results so gratifying it may'be invidi.
lions tot'fartieularize; but a few names anions
phe .N4(heru members, who 'were devote . 4
from the . start to the work of ereating a Ina
fly. , arid a' strength of Northern back-bone,
should j . ifs.t.ly be exp°sed to the public Aivpre:
cation .and -honor that they deserve: First
stands'Jtenry. Wilson of 'llfassachuSetts,. pre 7
leminent-as the leader in .the whole move
qnent. , tic-was handsomely sustained by all
=his associates, and-the numerous insitiMus !.,,r.
ibrts of the enemy - to separate them front him
Illy attached them the more closets to -his
ide:. ille has the hilliest honor in . this con
est,.eoibited the greatest political. ability,.
. ..
tii -
,erected hs. the " North Star.' The other
11 , WesterulStates, so wd). as they nAlized the
PithOor:tatiee of the struNe and the'high inter.
'tests scake wheeled into line,with their
1! .
was hard at • • • ..`
ol'v._
...., n-,., tiara at fi rst to wake a1,1. - -ti
erthern delegates - appreciate . this . vital: tic
rn
ssity tOtheselvestuld their party at home,
!. yielding nothing fro; the position - assunied
. 10 thOnlnority, resolution ; but they
. .werotii I
: inacle,ta feel it 'and the result . has I,,eiii. most
py. - They will have many
kisok back upon their votes of last n i ght I `l'
-.Weir action today as the pro.udest
• and
ilia? life. If they never do anythir Eeds
l. Gr
lor'itie cause of Freedom, these w ill m a r '
tll . OlO ever worthy of its highest crown.
, t litiremains for the correspondent of z,
XitiatinE to gratify the:curiosity of the c
eil, and especially of dear friends, filed.
egates from
-New York and Virginia. Th
Slavery question heiig disposed of, he ha i ,
call. for further labor , in this field. ilp
had an interesting, and he hopes 'net an
profitable season in tjiis 'vineyard. Ile' w ,•
take a quiet night's-mt, and to-morrow
part.. He is , na member of the Council. 11
is even ignorant of-the grips, signs, winks 8. ! ,
.nods of flits SUpretne Order of thetarfi r
Fled l3 4finer• -IY,et.:*eTY49dY
members'ot the r ,CounCil have all tat.,
his' hand-:--perhips hive whispered secret.,
his ear. If they WM& 'see him again,
them go to the ferry-boat of the Camden II
'Amboy Road: tiOnorrow , at 10 o'clock,
There they will see-THE WITH. THE C a
PETISAG.
The Co
n aniinated' diScussion .ensued uptin
proposition to Ansert.„in the .Constitution
1 article - declaring that thiS organization do r&
not intend making independent nvniinatiaca
unlessdriven to do so by the faihire or re/•
sal of other influential politicalbodies to nom
Linate meri thoroughly- . sound npon the great
absorbing question of Freedom and resist 44
to the aggressions of the Slave' Poser. ..
Mr. Seymou r; of New:-York, spoke iu_en•
thiisiastie terms of Wm. H. Seward, -a a
' person likely to secury as many votes,•if Iv;
more; than any other man- the Free State. -
Mr. Hansom, of . Massadrusetts, in a pen
! gent and decidedly able apeechn posed what
seemed
° an attempt ;to co mit this or
ganiz:.‘fion to-any paqieular,indi idual. - lie
thought we should retnembir : tha there tier
other States than • New York:-, -- -le thou_}:'
there r was - such'4l l o:tee - lig: the .st and 11
had heard of a than -named - Chase. pip+
phut Sc.]. .• • r• • -. 4 ; • ,
.1-.lessrs.: V e, -of Ind inn Prince , . of Mils',
sachusetts, Johnston- of 'Pennsylvania; Kelicr
of - Ohio and others followed Onihe same side .
in Speeches- of niuch spirit 'and s . •
Mr:Prinee. Spoke-in the higheit tisrros
Mr.
.Seward'isbility,. stistessnanthip and char•-.
aele:t and thought if he Was noinittated. uthie.
faverable auspices he Would.. sweep_ the Fre.i
States' like a -whirWind.,:Stilthe--considered
it, premature and itijudietentS to 'bring forwani -
the. nanie of any men at thiS:early day. lie:
would
.go.fOr any, inan our, order or otit - of.
it,, whatevet- his antecedents .who. v•as.itl
Freedoini'and'WOuld be likely uuite7the'
greatesst'nunibee . - of the Opponents' of Slivery extensiOn-: ills . !speeeh -Was received city'
snuch iiivori.promoted•good reeling,
_and WV
frerkuently,..applanded,• • • •
'lhd.corsirention, adjeurtuid sine die at one
o'efock ;today, having: Completed its - labors
You ha l / 4 te:istready 'received:l6 platform of
the.Order - tis i givert•tez the world:' - After its
adoption :by.. a: Note ofthe.Coriventron coneed
&able . discussion. ensued upon its passage,
whicli 'oltignent - addresses. „ were made by
Me McMullen.,ssiSl" - Seyitionr,' Tompkiii;
itieharilSon; rind 'Stebbins; 'Of Neat 'York ;
Also the.:leading - tnen from the several'forth
ern _States.
'l'lio rival 7 -', • ''•
asladopted fs,..simple ;and uitoh
jeletionablZ , ,ne oathshCitig , required, a s'ailP
[le pledge of honor beingttie test of initiation
The .folloiving - nra the men points of the pint
fUrrn to ..berend first; A pledge of the holt
t '
or of
.thiseon aO, required ;-a person to. bo r.
.
twenty °tic - di?
ciltYG pf:,age land - 40' tizei 01. •
Urilt4giiitcatiil not a ilom an
They; i,inscribe no nun; you :will iltirerceiveo l
acotnint •of his birth';plati3. •.'
": - Thu following Committee. ;was app - OinteP
un Public Inronnation C. W. Slack;
CLEVELAND, 4 . 1.111 C 15: