11 II E INIC Mil ■ 4. ~ i ,t eCtIARVESX. READ & H. H. FR'AZIER, EDITORS.. Dies '4O Reidies. ---• a , LIFE IN . WASHINGTON; 1 . . u pttr iiibit OEti. WEBB, ) . .., .',,Prcon the Nero Yea, Courier and „Enquirer. -1- . I • ''. . WASIIItraTOW,. May , , 4,''' 1856. .„;, Those who..2.9tnesied . . the assault., say 'that upiin receiving the.hlows given in quick sue T cession - and with terrible..torce, Mr. Sumner at-tempted .to risefelirri his_ seat, to -which he 'Kai in a measure pinkined by his legs beiti under his deSk—the ;legs othieb,.lihe all tin: :desks of the Settate" m echar have plates . of iron fastened to them ~: and these plates are 'firinly secured to the floor. His first:attempt to •('iseiva.s•arailhre,Spd - he fell back itto hi 4 'Chair, and the blows of his atsailant-cliStinued . tothll mercilessly sipen his head; he His second .his ripped up the iron fast', 'enings of 'desk, and he percipitated him', seltforward ; but bilipg blinded and stuniimil, wide of - the directiOLn: in whiclx-Mr: Brooks stolid. Prostrated,,lin; the floor, and•eovered with blood- as I never 'saw -Irian covered': be' r • foie, the assault continued until Mr. Hurrays atrial Mr. Aforgan,-both ritembersof the House. .of Representative frOtn New-York, had time. to home from the extreme south-east angle of the, Senate. Chamber ;•• and who; forcing their .. way through the erOwd of Senators) and•Oth r: ers, in the midst Of i' whom Mr.• Sumner ‘v•a;" lying sensless and being beaten, seized thet., assailant-and rescued the body of Sum • nee. Of course, 1.0 not speak from person- - al. knowledge; but Me,. Muriay-intornis m 4 that not only •did the blows continue until he bad reachat the seet4i - of action and forced hi 4 Way through : the crowd ; but when be firs( threw his' arms arinnuf Mr. Brooks he failed to *Secure his right - 84,11yard at least One blo* wits inflictedupon. the prostrate form of . 'the insensible Senator,.after he, Mr. Murray, bad • • laid hands on the assailant. • i •It is not the assault Upon, Mr. Sumner pe;t i • ist: , xliich I feel called to deplore and to hold up to the calm and!indignant condenination of ,the•people of the. PnitedStateS ; but bd. tst,ise by this assault upon. a Senator of ,the United •States,in his, seat in the Senate Chain belt., and when in the discharge of • his -leiiti mate diAies; the Consti(etiOn has been tram pled under fOot, the I:sanctity of the Senatelas been-violated, freedOtn of r'debate-has been-at tempted to be supp4seed by brifte forcp_ c and, Liberty - itself—constitutional liberty • and _ freedom' of thought and action, :has been rinb-, . leSsly assailed,. and the assault been justified Ina applauded by graVe Senators, and by eV cry • Representative of the people save - t w',,, (Humphrylarshall. of Kentucky and - 11, 6 rYW - .. II ian of Ciliary .living •in.the • SbiYe States, and li- every IZep - resentative of th'ePeople who spe i the sentim en ts In ell ts or sus. tins the .measures:loMthe existing Ad niiinis tration of the count'fi. ! I'. , . . . -i -• : After nearly thirty j-ears of editorial lahiir. • always speaking mly sentiments friinkly and •• - billy, •it is unnecessary - to ,remind J the daily'. :• • reader of The Courier and Engu iiifr that. no • 'Man in the United States has ever been -kill ing tog) further in sustaining ••the eonstitn , .tional rights of the South in regard. to the Fle - mbar local institution, than ll,' have. l - haTe •: repeated ly . pu blished . mid proclaimed that- I . do no look upon B:nvery as a curse to .the • slave; but on the contrary, in•the aggregate; a great blessing,.anii so, I think, designed !.to be 'by Geld • f bizethave ever h&ld and ptib ,dl, and . lislie every /lay of my life I am moire eOnfirined in the eciriiictios that Slavery isa I _ . -airse to the country wheFe .it exists, and tit • ti4rly demoralizing to the 1..,e,0p1e who tolerate • . it.. ' .• i . . - • - '- - ' `That. it' is an- A'''ritlieratie and Anti-Repub -lieaa ,Idstitution, i 4, :proclamed by the wry , t‘irms-of•" Master') " and' - .slitve -' by }whirls 'alone it can be described.; and like all aris,,to, eratic . institutions, produces specimens of the highest refinement, the gentlest habits and the greatest culture, only to render•moie Conspie (thus the general brlitaiity:and de:ba.sing reek lessuess which 'it impoSes Upon:the great -Mas• of the people;,. Lln what section of' our . eliuntiy—whether in . theSlaye or Free States -4—occur thd Most, Stteet fights, homicides,' brawl's, and •acts otl violence 'I I am safe in saying that duringl,the .past five years. they deaths or :injuries in .the s - ,SlaVe States, &Om' these mimes, would ',average at - least two a. week; while.in ttni :Free States, during the same period; they *Mild not averaetwo ;per annum ;. and. •eveniin.those cases, the pr 4 ba: , Wit) , is, that the actors. in them would prove . . to be the inhabitants - ofilie,Slave States. i • • ' Let•me . instance the occurrences of the ii..i ? a • alluded to, within the.last five months, which • ' have. happened . here in the capital of the Na-. - • tion,•and in which Oembers of the HouSe- of, ll,epis•sentatives baV,e - been the principal ac tors. • I confine the • reCOrd to tbern - alone. .., i Firs, then, :William Sniith, an ex-GoVern ' Or of, the State of Virginia, and Membir of - the House of. Representatives,assailedald heat the editorof )'The Eiienirts , Sta,roni De cember last,in the', lobby of the House. - 1 . Seiond, Albert l l,lpst, a Member of the- House of 'Representatives, froths Arkansas, assailed anti, hieat the editor of The N. Y. . . Tribiene...in tbe\.grcainds of the Capitol, Mune* '• ..diately after leaving the House-of Reprtise,nt • •., .. . atives. . -1; -- - . :--: , . 1 rhirct, Philip - .P.....Herbert -- of Alabainka . • . • Member of .Congtiess frOm . California; I shot dewn •and killed .tin' Irish waiter at Willard's, .and is noWlunde: bonds to appear before the 'Grand Jury :and: aiFait his' trial for such prime '.• as they MaY,adji4e,him to'havecouirnitted. •, • i ' Foureh,, Prestoq S.. Brooks, aT Member of, • ' ',the -House ,of.llepiesenttives front: South ' Carolina, assails 114 beats unmercifully a•Sen-' ' i ator from 11assiteliusetts, when Occupying .his '' I seat in the Seua.tosof the United Statei, -and 1 I engaged;ini thetrausaction of . business 1 legiti- . -•, \ .-• mately appertainiqg to his. station, i • . -. t: Here, then, ' . yeil have in . five months tau; . flagrant 'breaches of 'the peace on 'the part, of : Members' of :Con'Oess who were born and bredlri Slave Stew, and whci are Ile &Icily. ce. - :, ' dennintlizeid •by that :institution ;- while (hir ing the same period not-,a solitary-instance , . hail occurred of *ratters frontthe.Free States ' i forgetting- what is!due by - Public ..I.,cgslatitra • to . Jaw and- order;' ; to civilization and Ito jthe . . decencies! and eohrtesies of the ilj . . . which they Jive. •1. ~• -. , - ~ .- . .- . i r . You mustine4t - had :to the tuatfUer in i which these- - ,tiagrtiat breaches of the peace by - . l, thus() •whOse dutyiit was, - above all others , , •...• , . -•• respect the: laus ':-'italve . been treated by`-the • - : House of .whiela l tlie...offenders are, members:. , , ThefireCand.-see‘d,ontrtwes—whipi,inel.ed.' 'tors wit° failed to piotedillkiry . ersotks from polluiion ; by - 'pqauptl . y*- - reschippg ..farce - by . .:, :greater and • is inont; deeisie.foeee,..t-itiere''iiiiin ! . . . ' I . qt, • . • . . , ... . • • , I • - • ' I . . . . . . . , . . , . -, - • 1 . . , . . .. . • .: I' -. . . • i 1 - .. •- i ': 4 • '• - = ••.,-, ' • • _JC:I ~••••:-. '-. - '•- . •1 '. •4-. '• • .' , •.. : ' ,' 7 1 . ; , :i: -. ':: -- ' 4 ',— ' • '•--, f 4t- 4.- ' - i'' • !•• • • ;••• ----.-'• ---,.' - . - . 4 -;Y - 4 • ,.. • -' . I°4 . . . • . . . . I . . . -.- - :',' : '- - T": i ' ;.' ':. '-'.''' ''', ':- •', : * -'• '-.--.. :::. .' --._ . 1 .r' •-: ::... 2 . ' '''. - !:•1 . . - •'.:'-__'.-_':.'------• ---;.. - '''......-.- .. - •- ' 4 • . . , ;.. _ = _ • ... -....-,.. • , '•),-. .--'-:.:. -. 1 , ~.., •:• - -. -._•.. - - ,-. . ,-- - ...- -..: -._ . ,-:.--:: vi ••.-:,!---.- •,--!. 4*:< . ' . -: '''''. ' ....:.' -:"' : ';:-...., 1. •i-I - . , _. - - 1.0.) . I. lie itn - • , 4 ,.....,......,...-:,..,,• . ......, :. ,.... : -... : :-. : .......,..,.,,,,_ . ._,..... :.... „ .. , # . , . ._ 1 .5 • . . . . i . , . ‘ ..:.,. . ..- -, •„ g ... • j .... .., I • t -—• . . " i . . a I . ..• • ". r _ . ..„. .. . . . . , , , , , . . . .. . .. . . .. .. . . _ ... .• • .. • . . .. , • . . . .-- - • - - 1 i .• 1 4 . - . . . . • , , ! . •- • • • . , . . i - • . ~•-.. ~ • . - - . . •. . .. . ... . . , . . . . • • . - . . ! . - - , ~ _ • . . . • . . . . sidered such trivial offenses, that the subject, was not even referred to in the House which was outfted by such, conduct on the part of one of its members: . The third offense= e "shooting down and killing an Irishivaiter , ,at Willard's Hotel--was ;gravely considered , • sthe Ifouks of .RePresentadves and voted t,- be an - occurrence:not meriting investigation even i; and, every.supgortar of this Adminis. tmtion i saVe one, united in suppreasing inquk. ry ; and the offender daily takes his.. seat in Congress, and legislates and aids in 'the pas: sagaollawi far the government of the , Cry, while he himself is about to be tried for the gravest crime which man can perpetrate -against his fellOw man. .The last offender, Mr. Brooks; of South Cskrolina,' , 4l4.6t lea-t.„ hale his- conduct in quired into; but . it must, not be - lost sight ,of treat such inquiry by the House, of which be was a merribeki was strenuously resisted t every ,member of that body save two, who represent the Slave States, and by all . who sustainzlhe rresent Pro-Slavery Adminis tration. - To, attempt to describe the actual state of affairs here in: the Capital of the Nation, I worild be : 4 hor.less task. It would not be 1 'believed were one 'from Heaven •to proclaiM. 1 it trumpet-tongued through the land; and 1 yet no oue:can live here; as I have for •thdl last six .months,- without feeling • his' blood boil at witnessing the fears and-apprehetvions of fatal . unsequences, on the part I. oar • Northern • men, it any one .ventures openly and manfully to Speak the truth in .the bar rooms, on thecorners of the streets; and on the_ floor of•-Congreis. - And there is reason Tot these fears.- This is a city in a Slave trlct ;, its time is the tone and sentiment of Slavery ; its. visitors are 'mostly from the Slave States, and a large majority of them" the better portion of them) carry .pis tols and bowie-knives ; and .what ispore, both here and - elsewhere, prove 'that- they Will.. not hesitate, on occasion, 'freely to use ttiem.. They_ - are- overbearing,. threatening,: and defiant in their manners, and our people have been:oVerawed :and cowed. . . • - . 'lt is the ri-Tht. of Freemen boldly \ to ex. press. their sentiments here, as well as else where: I tell them, in all sincerity, that the time has arrived when they must do .so, courteously btt. fearlessly, on all '.proper casions and iii all prZiper places4dwe shall all, and speedily too, become as completely th slaves of the Slave Poweras are their plantation chattels ; • or, - what is far more de grading, we 4101 become the same pliant, cringing, andSydppliwitic.instruinents of the Slaveoeracy aYe the Northern - doughfaces who are.' inalle- by thepresent Administra, tion • to s diseotirse.. just S.u,:h music as -their Southern-inasteri may be pleased .t.O'dictafe for the time Lcina.. ..Aside from the favored few in the S4ve States; nineteen twentieths of their. pop&lit tion carry arms bowie knives, pistols and • sword-canes ! And against -V . :hom are th.y, thus armed ? • Against a cinn mon enemy or against their slaves ? 114 nzvsito, Sat 1 against each other. And this sOlitdry. fact. and the conscluenees.lwhich naturally flow from it.are conclusive as regards; the demor-' alizingtendencies of an institution which the present Adthinistration i acting under the die •tation:of the Slave Power, and aided by • un-r scrupulous politicians of the North, arc en deavoring to force upon the free people and the free.soil of Kansas. To this end the•en -•,t • 'tire influence and patrOnage of: the Govern, ment, ,eivil; military and moral power, •:-are .all directed ;• and alongside of the. prcimi. 'vent and threatening, stands the Bialying of i the Slayeomey, boastingly pointing [b: the bowie:lttiife, the pistol and ,the bludgeonostul 7 impudently .taun:ting. the entire North with cowardice ! I cannot blame. them for their, love of power'and their desire ,W extend it ; I . do not quarrel with their rudei civilization, ,the natural offspring of their peculiar inStitu , andido. not wonder at their believing •• that the' doughfaces of- the. North, :who so meekly do their. behests, are btu, a type :Of our,whole people, and that we can he - bul: lied, whipped and' kicked" into any course ' „of policy whicih they may please to dictate to • us: - Will the-North—the free,_ and educated, and civilized, apd,. peace-loving North—tame ly subinie.to the'..empudenee and the bullying ottlae.Slafce Power? This is the question which I deStre to put directly, .to every law-• abiding and Union-loving .freeman. of the North] I would, have the entire North awak en to the attempt of the Slave'Power, to ex tend the InStitution into Free Territory, .and the - :means resorted to i to acxximplish 'the ne fariothi purpoft.• - I would have them feel . that the time fOr action Eas arrived i and that not only must that action:be 'prompt and of heieni,bif We. would .protect ourselves from the encroachments of Slavery, but that if we tamely submit to the blustering and bullying habitually "resorted to 'here, in the Capital of the Nation, we shall very / Koh be taught that -Liberty of Sp 'eeeh is a Won which-weshold subject 16-the Caprices of the Slave - Power, and to indulge in it equally - with . . themselves may• at any time be visited by. the discretion ary applict,fon of the- pistol. and the bludg eon. Of the purpose of the ',Slave - POwer. , and ite Northern allies in the coming den tial, Election, there is po longer any doubt. It is openly proclaimed by-the Dernoerat ie. press from' Maine. to Texas; and only this day, the Goveruntent organ published in this city,' boldly declares. that • " whatever . other 4icstioninay enter into the coming con test;ritu. Si4vxavissot. as included in the Kansas meas ure, must in will take preve4ence, ...In - com parison with other questiOns are of mi nor importance." And in allnsiOn to. Mt.,l ochaitan's past - Federalistn and the suspicion of cause' him •to, prefer his .1 mount and the:rights of Freedom to' mere party;it s; " they' :pant nriman tehoie rec ord is . not hoirotighly : Democratic.", - ~T hese declarstions 4 are .significant; and richly will the people of tharee - North have merited the outrages and contumely which;aredaily heap ed upon 'theta - by men irpmeasdrably their . inferiors •0 regards - rnatihoixl and civilization if they hesitate to *vindiitate their right to freedutn 'of ,speech,. or falter : Pi' their deter mination:to • drive.. back ..into the. fens .and marsheSWhereit,properly 7 helongs,. the in stitution - which Washington, and Jefferson, and Madison alike eondentited,..butof which Pieta: and Douglas : and' the. doughfaees: - of the North, noting nnder the lash of the Slave. _Pow*,tai . e.beeotne..the . willint'propagand- Ii is 'tine tO Stitimer :to atiy, as a Sot fannliar':. to all who ate accustomed' to tea ihe4obites the late; = that-iii:etteiriiind \.:. 16 6 Ipl;?..ig:[s.©, z,mb.-120am'ctr.a Mat - 1..i1. - .L61,.4t - Em.l: - AO., every 'of the five last sessions of Congress, Messrs, Seward, lalo and Sumner, hav,e re ceived- at the hands 'of.Senators from - the Slave States and ihe pliant tools of the• North, ten times- . —nay, a hundred times the abuse, which in his late incomparable speech he so scathingly hurled back upon his assailants.— 4 II this has -heretofore been submitted to in silence ;.and in My indginent, toOlting,' sub mitteil to ; and new, when forbearance cess= es to be a virtue; and the Member for Mas sachnse. ita, in vindication of his 'Manhood and in the'.exereiseo( his privilege, retorts upon his assailants a tYthe only, of the abuse they have so long and! so .imsparingly heaped upon, hinLand his friends, he- is told that his " au daeity " is absolutely incomprehensible, and his purpose inconceivable! - Aliko'astoundcd that the man-of peace and the meek,' modest and retiring scholar, should dare to repel any attack %vivite . er, and .cowed.and crushed by its scathing .severity, Mr. Douglas exclaims under- the. smart of the wounds- inflicted, `.• What does the Senator mean - by .this at lacy upon the majority. of thiiiay ? - -What, I aSk,.does the Senator 'mean? - What does' hewant t't4 to do? W, alma refuse to know bins socially. Does ho want us to kick him ? '1 ask agaiti-Does lie Chant tts toatlcx him ?" ' Mr. MaSon of Virginia follows in a similar vein ; and Mr. Brooks of South Car olina, a member . or the house of Representa fives' resort to the bludgeon, and. assails him in his seat in the Senate Chaniber ofahe.Unit ,ed States. .' 1 ' : i - . The - wrong lieS at the door of those whi, I commenced the use of these personalities, and the miserable Plea that because the person thus violating the deeerum 't)f parliamentary, rules, was willing to back hip-language by the d.uel,:he was justified, in bit: assaults ; while his adversary, ifnot thus willing, to follow up his retort, is bound to submit in silence.L-L - Snell,. I. say, is the!plea of the slave power. in defense of their attacks, and in 'condemnation of Sumner's resorting to the same weapon of defense.. They . proclaim every where, that their:attacks upon:the tion'-eothbatants of the North, are justifiable, because those - making them are trilling to fight ; and that unless the assailed Senator Will adopt the law of the slav(;.power thus Manuflictitred for him, he i • must submit:in silence or he beaten to death with bludgeons, eie.ri in-the Senate Chamber of the nation. , I . MON.1110SE;:,, TtEIJ:4D:BI 7- , . J. Have we no remedy fur this Are there not amiing.us—ean there not he found in the great . North, men of -qualifieation.s.,f ir both the S.enate . ‘.and the . House of Representa tives whO poSess the necessary Moral daring and physical courage to meet. and put down this disgusting bullying, eitherwith pistol or with bludgeon, as. "circumstance.; May require .If ther . e. I k e such, let theni be, sent here as your 'll.epresentiitives :until the SouttMre taught' afterafter their own fashion that 'there not only is a.North, but that it is unal terably . determine d to assert all its rights and to - . maintain all Its 'Privileges, at the same' time that it will4in good faith. at a ll . tirric.e. toia in .ii r it.,..,,Vromptly discharge all its duties to the Utfipn, and hold sacred the rights of any section of country (whether sec local; or national,) ,under thatTonsti tution to which the allegiance o'f all is equally due. , THE SLAVE WIFE: , OR • . THE SUDDEN DUEL. At the close of the Mexican war, the city of Brownsville, on the Texas bank 'of the Rio Grande .fiver, and immediately . opposite. to Matatnoras, sprung up suddenly as if by mag developing the full growth of an urban - community withini the course daft.* months. Its singular flow of emigration. and rapid .ad vancement in business was the result of the living spirit of American enterprise, the com mercial passion Of a restless people, eager alike for glory "and for gain. Among the many aventurers whii swarm ed to the Rio Grande in the first prime of its Olden promise, * a.s . lk young -lawyer, one Elam Parks, recently from South eitrolina. Although descended front an ancient line of ancestors, and bearing in - his Neins• the_ blood of the revolution, and having received a etas sic education, yet : his father's. vices having squandered an intirense fortune, the son was left poor ; to fight . ihe fierce battle 'of life, re lying altogether op his own rotirces, with ont the hope of aid pr comfort &Um kindred or frietids. - . Naturejiad endowed : him with a handsome' person, excellent judgment, and true courage. On arriving at Ihis 'new sphere of act'tii, young Parks encountered ,an Unexpected dif ficulty. He discovered 'that there. was very lucrative, business transacted in. the court, and this had already fallen into the hands of a . feW 'advocates, who 'managed adroitly to mo nopolize every case of "the - smallest imp,or tance... • It was evidently impossible to ,sit d t own and .patiently wait- until matters would Vend by' the doubtful evolution of time and chance: , The price of board and lodging was' near, and his wardrobe needed renovation even before he was fit`to appeari at the forum -at. all. in this crisis of his,fate be conceived ';plan that looked, in . the,li‘gdit Of sober rea son, wild and ,visionary.' off all his-books at auction,. and with the--,proceeds opened a garden, within a mile of the,eity, for the' purpose of supplying the market with vegetables, which happened at chat period. to be extremely. scarce,, as the natives of the soil . wanted both the will 'and the wisdom to -turn the'rich alluvial of the region to any Ite count. As the -experiment i)linrished and Mexican labor. was Cheap, the • ex-attorney urged. his operations farthe,r, - and the little gar6n soon . exptinded into a field. To stud. up the general: result in a single sentence, the' entiofthree years found him not only itide pendent, but Vfealtiv. • Having amassed sufficient fortune to satis fy' his..desires,.he thought of selling out, _sad recurring_ again to . -the profession which he ,had been compelled to abandon,: When an in "vident. occurred. to :change-46i pdrpose. , A : fatuity by the name.of Garcia, tissutiled to be Of Spanish origin, arrived at . Brownsville, from New Orleans.. They '.were apparently in, affluent tircumstances,--intelligent i .poliiihed* it their manners, and remarkably..handsume id their persons.. - They were all dark featured, .is is commniiirtbefact With: the race whence they ..claimed desbent. , • Indeed, they -Made it a matter of boast that a slight, tincture ..of Moorish blood colored - the, current- in their. veins. Mtes3th' pOssessta iolden". key iaulocle the most'exclUsive dOork and ':beauty has the•-force:,.of .fire.; , to melt•theliardest• heart—so that the new additidAt' goes.socie- , • ty of Rio Grande, tts one might imagine, caused the. utmost enthusiasm, and was hailed as,an era.in the histori of frontier MI ' There : was a Member of this comely house hold who immediately became an especial fa vorite in the; community, and drew the•ad 'miring 'attention of 'every • observer •by . the ,peivers of her ,unspeakable loveliness. May Garcia was one of those rare' Combinations 'Of graceful fort{', luminous feature's; and spin. I 'itual , expression, that resemble I the fitultles.s .ideali of.iniaginatida, or the radiant pictures I ot perfection . which glitter in the-dreams oil early youth; rather than the shapes offlesh; ,Land .blood that breathe commie . ) air '.and mingle' with the things IpY earth: Her small, regular, exquisite Wel - revealed • a complex-I ion somewhat . dark :in I its tints, but, literally; translucent, where the warni blood could be seeo'spreading its rich, rosy sntlasion like the unfading blush .of maiden Modesty: Her eyes, .of the deepest, jet, 'ilitpeared to Sivitn - in a sea, , of light, waving and'• ntiked witletliquid fire:l l Her long, dark hair flowed freely around a bust and hostim of indescribable - symmetry., But her voice possessed, the most marvellous fascination °fall. It *as: clear, silver); and ' ringing, with ''a gentle Cadence in its tone, tit the fill of each sentence, like the lisping muti , mur Of soft-winds arneitg the pine tops. • 1 1 ' Vemales of s any description' were scarce in • ~ the commun . t , y, and this beautiful creato* ibti seemed to haveldropped, as it were, from lithe eltiuds,.beEire the end of six months had Ireftis'ed half `a - hundred excellent 'offers.-4 Illowever, the little bey- called Cupid, who Isearehes out every fair tbrm•as a mark fbr Ibis flaming arrows, fottnd, her at last. hi company with a number of young per sons she paid a visit of mere cariosity to the 1 'famous flower. garden land fell, in love at first . sie-;ht - , -- witii - the handso ' tne proprietor; .t-vbe're -1 spoecb.ti- to her iffectien with 'equal ardor.-.....- I The fruits•oftheir unieri,•within three years,. were:a soil and a daughter, who ; as a matter of course, became the idols of thir fond fath er and mother—for it] seems to be a general, if not universal psychological law. •that• 'lo nian parents, love t heir children in proportion, to their passionate tenderness ter each other. A, ill:int:Mg white cottage in the Meantime had been erected in the midst attic flower garden, and the business of the happy horti culturist prospered mitre than . ever, so that with the addition of the ample fortune brought into the matrimonial partnership'by his beau tiful compankin, he might be well considered; for- that_country, a man of great- wealth. ~ One bright morning m in midsumer,„ upen his return from a neighboring city,. the gar dener was astonished to find his lovely wife in a paroxysm orteatis,, 'and evincing other tokens of the utmost( tkrror and atiguish.-. But all his entreaties railed to Elicit any . ex- I planation from -her / lips, except the asitu i ance that she felt oppressed with a strange fire bed ing, of some...unknewn - -MA mysterious' but dreadful danger. I However, after, she be came ora degree %ore tranquil, having anaf • fair of importovrioo to--:....4...... 6 .,, 1,............6 sttr..... to the town. - On his arrival ti * ew accosted in the street I by a person he did in i t .recollect to have seen before. The strati r 'was a Man of middle iige,- with,coar se, s aster features, gleaming black , 1e,..5., raven hair streaked with silver, and a massive form, revealing the'appe,aranee of herculean . strength] :and agility. He was dressed in rich black ode cut-itt the latest .aid fashion, with gems precious ornaments. A huge golden seal,- enclosing a costly stone, dangled from his heavy watch chain whieti . l he twirled incessintlY with his fingers. He spoke in a loud,•brusque tone. "Mr. Parks 4 -they say that is your name—allow me to introduce Myself. I aril Colonel Powers, 'of Nevi Orleans, and have visited Texas in search of runaway slaves.. I. am told that you-har- L bur them." •1, . • 'You' have been misinformed,' replied the gardener sternly. • 'There is not a slave, er even a colored person', on my plantation.' -` No, sir, lam notinistaken„ . The woman that you call your itt.ife is a shive,,and was actually born in my kitchen.' Here -is a bill Of sal4:eontaining the name of her father and mother, for whose bOdies I paid down three thousand dollars. ;There you behold the seal of the'recorder"* . .court. ' - • The other reeled-as if he had been struck a•terrible blow with lan iron hammer, and gasped— ' ' II '' - . ' Merciful God ! iticannot be so. This man . must be insane, ori'am dreaming l.': • • '• 'lf you doubt my word,' said the Colonel, seltwirling his: watch . angrily, 'yonder comes old Judge hice„ whd ,is familiar with the eir- Cumstanees, and can' prove every item of my assertions:',. . The indiVidual altded to, who has been a mem b er of the Ne il Orleans bar for•, many years, confirmed the, stranger'sstory in all its particulars. : • i I I . . It would he impoSSible to'give the faintest idea . of •the , indescribable agony depicted .in the countettance.of*r; Parks, as the astound• ing truth, with i ~ j horrible- consequences, burst upon; his soul, like a flash of luri‘ight tit ping. -He, turned p le : as death, and stagger ed, as if aliOut to fa II to the earth; but by a great effort, he wreitled for a minute or more with his' grief, and, conquering, became spa tlealy calm, but stir pallid as a white piece of .Pa,per.. '' • . ' Why has this atter - been kept a secret . M So long?' demande4 the gardener-in tones of 'terrible meaning. ''.Was it a cunningdesleiv to 'win gold out of,hutpantears and the blood Of indecent heartS'it 1 --. • . I - The Colonel, laughing with delight at- the remembrance of his craft, boldly avowed his , own.iniamy. - i _ I - ..' Yes," he said; ' I was smart. I noted how' beautiful the slaves we e, and I deter mined to make it 'phy` -. the hjg est figure. 1 1., had them well edUcated, 7 s d made them, s fools, think they were free. Under this im pression they removed to the Rio.Grande.- I gave them money which they have' increas- ed, with more than Iconipound interest, and nbvr I lave cx)rne tb 'get my pay for all my trouble.' i' ; . And the unblushing villain twirled his watch chain-joyously. - -, .. . - - ' Ilow much do !you expect me to pay fir , thy' wife arid children I' ;inquired Parks.,-with '-an awful smile. 1%.. 1 „ = * ' I must have ten thousand dollars, besides the return of her; , fortune, amounting to as, much pore!' said the ClOnel - ,with the most business like cpolnestr. " ' 'Scoundrel, coWard, 'thief; aseassin I You shall never 9wn ceileeel - from the etirtlings omy yeitrs of toil r exclaitned.Parks, in a yoke of uncontrollable fury. ~, , ~. 1 1 i =INiM NE 5,1856. Mind what you say, for I will ha satisfaction for every insulting wor., ploy,' said the I Colonel, growing w rage. Then take it now!' shouted Par ing the other with such force in thu he rolled on the ground. But Powers Suddenly regained hi t Wiping crimson streams from his n 1 erated mortal satisfaction on th `.Yes, you•shall have it—now— plied the gardenei, in a voice that the wrathful veil of a demon. • I The accommodating bystanders who had I colleeted around the scene, proffi r red: their l e , services as second's, and the terms of the duel jbi were immediately arranged. It %vas settled that the two principals- should Eiaelajbe armed with a piStol,!•and assuming their stations tweily yards apart, it..the signjal might _ staff ll or' advance, and ire when they pleas- a, ed. - • . At the word, Parks moved and steadily, with moderate steps, tov4trd his.en emy. The latter remained fixed asi mar ble statue in, position, with hii arm ele vated and his dark eye! gleaming through the sight with deadly aim at his mor- . tal mark, When the other arrivell within a distance of ten riaees4, the pistol, pointed at his ' heart, exploded with a loud roar. But he faltered not—ipaused not- - --chang6l not his march. The bullet had hit- a silver coin, which bappened .tobe in . the pocket-or his vest, and thatralone had saved hi life. He never stopped till he was • with 4 three'.feet of his foe, when; for the' first tiMe-, raising the fatal weapon, - he blew out t 4 Colonel's brains. Park., with his: 'family, and all the Gar. cias, the next day removed. into _ Mexico, where they yet reside.—Yeto Yo'k Suiiday Times.. . - `From the Pittston Gazette SLAVERY OR FRE' A STRANGE MATTER, Ti l -This is the-state of the case asi we under stand it. ' At the accident last October, on the Ne.W . York & Erie Railroad, near the Great-Bend, a,plain,- respectable-looking pas senger Was atnong the injured. ,ile was net able,.he said,..to go onto the CitY,but wished to betaken to Village-Green, by the Serail- Um- road, where he had a Cousin ? and there . tarry till recruited ; 'but feeling very unwell, w he got out at Our little town of roinfret, on the South branch of the Tunkhannock, you know,in Wyoming Comity-- - -where we nursed. him kindly ; iuntil, being badly 14irt internal .Iy, the good man- died,and we buried him de cently. .We think he. was a sChool.master When at honie, and a bachelor, as we never heard him speak of either Wife al children, but he talked a great deal of a'Squire Gerritt -q..it- 1 .--, .4.- in ; hi. r ,..t.;3 7. ....4 .1",.. 1 0.......t..5. - nint.:l, named llynders, in the City, where • :he was „ going. Said his orris name Was Peinsen, and was greatly excited t n the silbje+ of polities. He was a Van Buren man, but i thought the. Clintons,ln old timek a .little more than per fection,.and regarded Silas Wright, now gone to his rest, the first saiht in the.political cal= lender.. Ilebelieved Southern Slavery had, in their days;troddenall these great New York ers,under feet, and bad now nearly reduced the Empire State to a state of vassalage, ren dering her, and her Statesmen,] subordinate' and degraded ; and now he thonght 'and ter ribly feared they were gunig to force • back the " Weolly-Heads,'! as he called them,and . drive 'out the light-haired, blue-eYed, free fla borers frem,,what he often re eated, "the Glorious Etnpire-Republie_„•' . aid he was go ing down tOsee General Rynd rs about. it, ashe heard he. governed New York City, while d as'every body knows, the City. con trolls the _State. lie had something,, he • said, to .print, About .an hour . before he closed his eyes forever; he ' - male a ferient prayer. Our minister, the Bev. Mr. - Do good, and Esquire. Doolittle, ire both-pres ,ent, and said it was an exeelle t. one ; only' the minister, wished there had ben More doc trinal matter, and the 'Squire, that he had reprobated—namely, the' crying sin of the. mad-fly-away eustom oi the whole population, rutining•from home Into the jawlsof dissipa .tiou and - death on our-railways.l . . " Father of Mercies l" said the dying man, laying one trembling 'hand over other on his panting breast, "Bless this ration of eon gregated.States, which .thou 'hit so highly favored, from Hampshire's stioW-elad moun tains to. the golden sands ofi the farthest West : froM the - orange groves 'of Florida and Texas to the glittering . nectk-lace of the teeming North. In, thy benefipent wisdom restore the ferrule and. birch to our • schools, that, our rampant youths, by bping taught' to obey, may be fit to govern. -Give the pees; ent and succeeding generations to feel the dig nity and sesponsibility of. their Positions as trustees, to transmit the Liberty- thou bast vouchsafed 'to us.unimpaired to pOsterity.— Let the North not interfere to disturb the re lation between the master and'slaVe in those States . where it exists,: It is. in the bond.— We have' nothing to do with it. :But Q, give: to - the free Men whose happy 14 it is to. es cape the, evil, the sense tq see- the right and' tlie firmness p maintain:it. May they with' _unswerving firmness, with unflinching' fideli ty, persevere in opposing, under - any pre-, 1.00, its introduction on one ftiot of Territd-, ry consecrated, by compact, . td Freedom..---.: But as there is manifold cause jto apprehend: an intention among certain Unprincipled-AchW, ophels, contrary t' the will of the conserv ative portion of the -South', o lefrept their own unhallowed; atnbitions-purposes i to force the . institutiontiOt only over 411 the tdrrit.o , iiies,:but.back- over all the Stages now free---;/ • Almighty Buterrof the-nniverst) if judgments inu4 be.:Sent to punish us for, Out !ins, -send Cholera, C i atiadalliistles,the Blasting,-wheat, fly, ‘.‘ make the Heavens as brakthe earth as iron; the rain as .powder," hilt 01- save us save us, from the curse -of stastery"-- -and- he Ceased to breathe,- -, -. : : .- 1 - : --- _'• ' ' --.. : - In Insictirpot-bag - Were fcuncl:-anumber :of letters4.' What to do with then:l:Ansi been. it perplexingiiinestion,' as' we know - nothing about'Ryttders.' They seem - tOhaye, beer. in tended ;ea- electioneering , papers. - As thoY appPar to ' have - been - dravn. (witti:p3me la-, bor,, - ire.!lnve-,coricluded, - ; Mr: ,B,icht4c• to ask the: fav o r_ . th at tvciiii • print theft% iti. y 0 4 1: 94 - . ._ ....... , zette. , ! .:- - • •ir . . ' ' '''' '' '"' -1 • histiT . 04.ir•.E. DE*. ..!; iiinuati 4,18541 BMW e bloody you, em • ite with s, strik face that feet, and se, vocif- spot 1 ere re setpkled at, r.: ' 99 a - 2 OrA IC AZIER & S CornOin,ltenue . a . tai 1. . ' utTrsa x+ . , . • I wish to address fur fellow 'eltiiens,..presentin . sistent ; with - clearness, ;ti Dress i , On my Mind agains Ire ; fie-introducing Slay nd, meaning no tiiSreil ,pu ar standing wio t sir to 'becoine my ea eedotn!of addressing thl 4ut l 6 , d that the name o :ra• - lt, the deaed atteti In the outset I wish y am about to preach, no :cture to their masters. e kept. where the . old. cad ;and stout.hearts,, upt 4nd you would not 'lit) Would disturb them It has become openly_ tee! detl that.; . by the; Co ; zn of the Republic has !very part of the Union, constrent right to tak hiat i; that; Slaves are tore,' the master has A C ' take', his Slaves *het it I 4111. his was urged agai cus-sion on the repeal of protitise. ; • . States acting on their ty; have forbid the bringh linu r ts, d'eclaritig them, 't to he tree. 'lsrOw ; it is held that . tl rides:, and renders ivoi meats. This point it,ist gitei ;but merely to stag The principle is', to o' ii State in the Leritimp been;;Made in Ohio in ti recently " iti-_Pennsylva cash ' rrom the eourst l , infifenee, at least td m i ,h ; e helieves(no; ;11 - tvi; standing that wroug) that; Slaves'brought, int notJ free as provided 14: '.'he doctrine "eolitei lished, I do not see; w whir; has the power to i liniii at all. ik. ehOOses to pAss NeW York with his ; 20; to a tonal right,—whO sh But convenience leads —six months—a year, Ajiin it may be aske7 , . isiti,i .? 1. lut does nett thelright to brinz-ls proper tyl necessarily carry Aviith it,the right to use it 1 . 1 Ile brings the Coach. - 1-larness,tCOachi • , . • man and footmen. ;May he not use his hors sb47 ; May not the Coachtrian dilve ; then:?: anfll his tootinan I mount behind?' tad b 1 eook provide his dinner- 7 and.his trained wait-; eti attend his 014, ? Suppose. he chooses to spe, id the summer at ,arattiga, and the South -1 ern; gentlemen, not ) brooking the free or , 44 , kward manners of Our white waiters, pre fe their colored servants; may . ths..y .. 6 .ii, tAs-s, to ! the Htitel keepers, at moderate wages, 20 or, 50; more or less, s4y 'at half price, besides the. further boon , of a very large influx of SOuthern visitors whoj would be induced by thiS agreeable coneeSstoo to spend their sum. tnets in the North; liila hericeithe obedient,. .sibserVient; woolyteads,.'would rout out, in Nev, York, and all our cities or watering-plae ess and country towns, our at present proud, independent and beat:r. they • are free ; citi zens of the Republieand . voters, apt ; to be stiucy ; il insulted or iniposed upon!: ; , A step further-4 a man triay , bring - his 1; rop , rty hero by an in efensible Constitution :lll right, does it not al-d.• follow that; ;he -may fi 11 . it, \ and does ; not this demonstratively b ing w4th. it the correlative 'Constitutional rii,ht to buy 7. I I L . . I 'enough for an . tbi, k you will agree that' the matter is Of 'tat a great many. it st, blush -might be it DM DOM• 1.1:MY! • - • Schoharie,:AtiOst . . 1 . 1. LEiTytit . 2 O. -..n. --- .• . i Haying shown in 4rly..tast. that if the doc trine now urged be Maintained that the' slave holder has a constitution' ri g ht to - bring his. slaves.here.r . .the Wait is at our. Public houses,-,, tiils coachmen, the ha k and nmnibus.drivers; ', mt. be prepared; to lye up their places and ek eMployrned. eIS• •where---1, leave for. the the ftther efftvt upon individuald nun examie its probable influence nu, the•Sia,te at large. IjNow,,New York . a llconsidered as two,; Img succession of yel ( I L fihusbandry, New - . paying liberal priced l•Inloor,.. ming no iiv4 t 4 advantage, 'of se du of her female .1 ' r6ing - and derearidin New York hasl4ol , / <:'t.)% 1 Nirginia 61,00,1),. •of .or, exceeding in the e l MMaryland, or three 1 , - necticut. , New York ha on, IVirginia some thr4 'New York has otu entre. i . Virginia severs!. New York rani; r mites on the &ix 1 Virginia is situr elimate in the wb, cl 1 Very well. t ttui sgement be best', she i6O years to haie gr New York in pOpUl/ genet and wealth. eholy, The details j _chal.lengeti to•give ti .hrs,we need asirno day , , , the echo arcs terrp ' is the old'ad 1 tiers,and isjustitied] give,us your sttent . with, a very long on figures, but let us 4y. Special or i lix ry, may, by soine, 1 aneount for the;mor perity of our cities.. tie two into, . orz.—Ait tionlar to tearlesi -,- PIJBLISHERS- -- VDr , :g; ; : ' ~N : a %%dent, Mit ran r five letters : to toir as brieflY as is con-. 1 0 Objections which the projected mew ery lute New York, ect,i lint froth' your 'hose whoM I most ers, have taken the 6m to you; feeling Isaiah, Ryilders will "On: : • u to understand that religious or moral Let them, negroes .evolutionary cant they should be I'lid me among those irowdd and broadly' Jstitution, .very 11 . 1 . right to' go into and: goinz—baS. . his • property with ropeity:. and, there nstitutiomil right to is his pleastire to go. I And ?Again in the dis the 'llissouri Com- reserved sovereign alg.ofalaves into their so voluntarily brot' ie Constitution- over ri, those State enact= lot my purp6Be to at% the fact. be contested in our I T case—Ahe point has he Denison ease, and Oa, in the Wheeler. ;e of ' Judge Kane the lii mind, is clear, that ill not. do his Under: - 1., that he would decide o Pennsylvania were .) her laws.* nded for being- estali ere the limit is—of fix that limit, oe any . through thi3 State of ff Negroes. A eonsti -1111 . say him Niiy him to, tarry a month where is the limit&— who. S:hall say. him ntroduetary Letter--1 with me, CoVitynders more momencand thay ore interests, than .at • ingiiied,. CORIiELIIIS Rg.MSEN. 7; 1855. d Virginia may be fair great farnis,:til led for.a . Ctrs on different systems. York with free labor, Virginia with,,Sbtre efi, and rni?iinover. with ping. the surplus. pro battels to a constantly market: I 00 square miles &Ter- coarse 21,000 the most -eess the whole State of iroes the area. of ,Con- fine seapoq. , eor four.. : noble- river through the p And is hounded for L 'en line of banadti: in the most delightfu Virginia& mode of man.; l inf oughth t,.9,_l ong run o_ trAll far, kr; FA ahead. of 'Lion, enterprise, :intent. The eantrast is inelan iptkinful, hut when weer': ca our system and adopt pardon but_ pursue, as a "LoOk 'before you e, you know, ca pt. Ryn ly comilton sense. Caine, Won't • bother y ou a perpleiong, amount of a. what. official htatisties ~;1 causes, and not, liYfr le hupposed partutliy , to rapid growth-and pros , Let-us, therefore,*ing luxtapositAnn. - • use Knoi,fill. tis.noble:iust M ' •. ~ ....- rocrt4.rtri2t. - • 1100' - - -''[l . B3.o' ''''• 1880: .. - New Vgl n Y i ° a, rk .' il4 74ol.' : • ' •9 9 4 9 , 1 42 9 ',1. 1' ,211 5 4 9 6 -B: .t ,' Froth 1830, 20. yeak.tn.4B.s4sew hasline`t'eased one rniflion,,One,:hundr enty.eight thousanOsevelf'.:hiltidre.d . ;;,, six. . . _ .. ; : 1 • . ; :-•-•--;' :- - For the same !.10 -- rars-Virgini4 --, and charming Virginta, formed by mit 'be the Queen sister of.the {I had like said "colfedertteY, bet - feared:._ the -gh • . , Daniii - Webster - Would_ start . jip....k " Ne'ho, lin . Retesoh,,het baniedera.: .Union.")- Very Welli-haVe it io,-.Qu- ter of the Union,' .:..-• •: ' :- ':_'' In the same 20 .Years Yirginie - had' ed only 2t0,256.- "The - eliriefettuiel' nut come." HOW is thiadisparity of and prosperity to - 'be acenented for I is but one ansWer.• There is not a common sense and - common intellig: the nation but whit, leashed; would., iltos SLavetti. - : ;Theinuinher of ,slav: -061. set down, butit -, "is manifest enough, to paralyze ail manly .exertio ...• DO you suppose, Clipt.r.Jiynders, t intelligent gentlemen of Virginkfare,. .ble to the evil? Far otherwise; but` ses upon them - like al heavy . ilii.tiitior feel it—know what it is•tfiat'iapressi them, and they lie nerveieis, - poWerl the infliction. •To me it appears ' in., to ttie matter as;if the whole cOnlmii drugged by chloreform, : deadeeing \ atr Eying every sentiment'and ; . passion and -that uneAttieketiing into morbid . mature activity. ' - I , tite no assailantof Virginia, Orth Whatever it may 'hive • once 'keen, longer a question xlf-Ne . ii-o - SlaVOy.' IT lIAS BECOME A QUESTION OF TIIIITE 8 • . - • It haS become a q ue stiont . whether stitution shall te . er4mitte,d.4oikn On. here, in New York. ! Slavery, by, ; cunning - and tactics,thas long rete* catty ; and now, when tke.evidenee-. niably.',l)owerful that a - scheMe W:O. introduce Slivery bodily - us; reduce - the wages ,of (air workmen eempetition—open 4.neiF markek_fo is 4avea - -drive away our labOrers w choose to sink, with_their farndies,t el. of the African, in Self : , defence it . .an iinpeiqoes , duty to inonire . what_l ,the eflects of ,slavery. wriere - eiperie blesSing Or, curse . , has-heert-, most. pek bilked. -. . ~- .-''-, • I have U . very euriou - S', matter, sir, ..lo your notice ; I I.`presuine you.,-a. ;that the - simple statement of :a : pers . l trenzis is as , available 'in coartas in*calth, -.; . ;•-. _ . .`,- SO* 25 .}ears ago the torch of in was lighted iiiSouthamPtonXiigiu* 11 lives were' lost." - The - emente.-..was 'quelled; but 'the shudder 'Of :',alatin through-the whole community, jus deelartion; ao, touchingly_:lnautifu . Rihdolph j. ', -. ; , ' •• ..' -*. " The midnight ' f bell d oes - hot 'to in ,Richmond, blitthe„. '.MAt i lkeer•-• taut closer to:her • Iziiont,. - • The alarm mese alniost: to ..phie the, horrorS OfSt.Demingo wale the soul. Not only -'vhia - • the ekee_ cence and beauty blatielied,,WAtkfe tierves, of the -bravest ,slialten: . (a men than Virgima•prOnees do no is proven through ;ail her.ftiStorYil ington ; .-- 34fOrgan, Lee, to :our pre _ cominanderrin-ebier) ..- .- '..- ..;,... The Virginia ' asSelnfily.Met, an , ] the matter. Their ..whole pre preSunied„ may be found:in; 'Nit - of 1830 to 32. They alight to be - r el in.a handsome volume or num er to he, read univerSallyiln'the:free,- .thOsit'whUre- slavery preValls; 'nit w served for their.historiCaV interest, public and _ libra r y . private ‘ - . .2. . ... . [ prom Irelea'-'.ROister, Dec.lo2 The followieg eloquent memorial to& of Virginia has beemforWarded to the El Richmond Whig from the'.ecanty Fluva ladies of which county, itis understood, tensively signed-: 1 ' ='- • To the General Aisembli Oftho.Co tie memorial of the 'FemaleCitizens ti l ty of Fluvanna, most respectfully shewe Your memorialists have hitherto been contentment in.the happy priincy of 6 ment, where they bare'-eujoyed peace under the wise institutions of a free, nor have they' until aOli Jad °Crake?' the guardians of theit_country'S right's any national grievance; hiving a/mm*l'c of their heaventivored land with:teen trade 1.4) the Author of all good, -Miil;to r guardians 'and protectors. , They re recollection of the patriotic'exertionio censors in oflice,.when the:Lind of their the fettat of foreigri thilliacin; att:thci a mighty nation were invelved in, your,' as a legislative body; The spirlt,nowin counsels which then triuMphed over, th of,Great Britain, 'end bore 'Us safely perils of an unetpialicontest. -,_ 2 , , e The som wiitioni pervad4 your whichnfinmcd, fiir 'our - enninciPattare* of laws unequalled in the•'3ndverse• '':•_E r utary code we hive seen oar sons - arise unfettered by abject restrictiotin, mid c fill their allotted istations;kinong the hoi of a Wee. hind. ~.! , „,. -, , ~,.„ % But a blight now bangs OveroUr if, ', plirprospecti - and a cloud' &Ms the .surtabine, of do map° peace throughout our State ;,, tinFeers hare", • iitutia,wail-:. ings of distress and a Mysterlentedre ' *Of wit). fearful snspicion'iliaturbi the . .. Mired quiet okour homes. •We cannot cot4eal from , elves: that al: 'evilis imongs iii, *Mehl threatene „i , t,ut,grow; the growth,tind eclipse the o ~ o : brightnessour national • blessings. A'slualow, deepeis..river pie land, ar& casts its , thickestgitic4i i . ) upon Ate- sa• , d, shrine of --; domestic,bliasi darkening over ustis_ Ina. adrauces. ~ `Vice reflect with'grtitittide that no or r in the fra-. users Of our conititution entailed this • ..11 npon•os:--, WO dreir the Minffmni - the bosom , di' t :fosteradm4, , and it , bee grailaidli mingled:with, the_.. ltd. principle ‘ - Of ournatkinal existence. It can Ito ' ° -, g,er. tectiagi dormant and inert iii oar v 9,004144 buttialhiliand-, ly for redress km the sages of "our,l, 4l . 7:Aire ' t:ire feelinglyuware dike arduous •, 0 , • i. &set tiliease - in questiolyend,nothing . but the.fiale toididance in the wisdtim and prudence of ourliee , ° t"ReeMlils. ti joined to enema Cruet 111 : 0 "''G thi q 1 ' ' " 13, - -could indnee.us thus to intrude Millitihio •-• tirucations which engage yeti!...titie' Mid i Yew a tention:' 'We feel, confident of .your sympathy in id 'lli'ilingers, ' and trust that none,,of !Mg reverid .. , i r jakupure. rild our interferena in, his delicate, matte to * it - amble degree of timidity_ , either will you .. Fite to s the extravitant esPec anti* your, - itt , est'exeitions can elfectiOt hilin ' ' 1 - renicvel ...er ' .. -ett it"' de - plore.- We are), ' to:,,ettdiMi , * ; hog° Pm. , timi tiftlicalaittnoi. i'hig.,cur brief , of.-“Fftr : but,we rook forisurd to the time whet our childtftt's. ~ Allilre 4l will Well e illtronlielt -Thitee*Ww -ns - tio tim&:.i'lfiliotild'yOur wiedoniaelletititalOncf alleviittingotte natiotudinitifortune; ~ • :Rifigui be "., inaetiei.lto:-„Ytto feu: tilwsevirlil- - , *encomia°. Ipluirti,t Our davgateei 04 their; , „ ,tarsotredes alientdix4iol4o. iiitbiakiF l 4 a1.t.44, ''. •"',lbiteres l at Itelphisibitiney,thedirectersofdei . ; ~ intchilailecd. , and the eirelieldeee - of tbeitticithate • • Ywill Weee - . Pi the: legitleilve 44ll4o9 4 ive- ' nn : .t.f their etnm '• ile" WO:Ptittay 4Plicirkter 6 - • , ~ . 0 4'; ettlii , try; C MEI ■ IN MID '856 4194 4 21,661 York sev ightt ovOy to tate say - cress - doe., rowth There H n • nswer, • I do , 1 ,here 1,, t the 135e1311 -1 t v presL •thev g upon under respect ity was stupi-. l ut ipne,' tre- SuOtti: I r IR: AWAY 1 i 1 stmt Politie H upde foqty t o § 0 :-OS by tila yirgin do: not !, the lev becorPqs vo,beep b • I:kt. ectiv ex- to bririg stiVaft• l'nt in e oath Or rrection instantly ,ified the of Jar. -1 '1 for fire sY, A ll skiing to of inn°- . r, bqt 4 . p d. biftvgr Ifire, ,as Arn I -L(1,10460 took: Alp Ingo, 4':IR i 4 Reeder published f!plies : tates !1 as pre m"every T. L TegW to c teie of the It will be ex- wwesiteof Weise(' • esdc retire ' d 'security, • [ L oyernpent ; ' apppeab Lo sedrsss.of e. piosperity f-grati !font picile• destipies.cd` • deliyeirs#cps macs four ' aPige4Ou hr -N4 I 0 -44ellid9itS fOteln 4uudicol, :daliekters s. . .ieirFatrons II El the Coen- t=la
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers