Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, June 12, 1856, Image 1

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I
CT ARLES ' .r . . REA
..CA.NSAS REVISITED.
lEM
*IMMURE CLERaIIiAN TARRED AND FEATHERED:
1 ' I - -, .•• -: • _ ' •
' ,I •
.L.,
REE S TATE •
.n lli o _ , TEL,
i,!, ,
x - -. •} •
. lLAwitEsei. Mayllth, 18A0.- • :
. Mit* of the Chica:4o! riihuae. :-!--1 was.
itiecirme4 !this'afternoin that the Rev: Pardee -
Bliiier, a Clergyman of the denomination of
iiansa's Disciples who Wasrput on n-raft and • .
sent deWii the Missouri Elf,er last' Autumn,.
arid who:had reeentlY bc'eni tarred and feath
,. .
tized at Aichinson, had Jilst!- arrived: in Law
. he. i sent the subjoined note, and it die,
ite the reply annexed to it: • HoW hing, oh
icOilth, t3yi , long - will.you submit, , to this cruel
trial ttiwiird,ly slate, Pciwer 7 lye, out -in
titit:isits-; 'nionh to '''::..ubdue them. ' is a free
fib. r. -' I , .\. --„ .. •• . r. J. IZ.,
• ~ LAwENCE. l'Alfay 7. '
itEVIERR . it
N
1) r i ARDEE 11E1* LER :41DeariSit:
• -- 1 :46 friends of Free; Speieh iU the Free
Stag Wlten the news .if the outrage-'com
'tnltiOd 'ot your perion; •is received. in the
North, will be anxious to read a• rOiable ac
;.
connt or At.- I shall endeavor 'to .secure for
your wrongs- . the attention. of , th peopleof
Mirth. It. .
, = ! ; ! Resfiee' tfully,' .;. ~ - -. • 1 J. IL
A I
~ • • . LlwanNea - Way 7.
1
PIitERiREDPATII '. • Esq :—Deart Sir :---I
..
thank you for jrbut . bllo, go-t.:34, pleasure
in komplying with yout-Tequest, . 11 , have - al
rea4pOSted at . statement of the cfie to the
Editor ! ofthe St. Lou 10emocrat,) . a as the
Lawrence mail, it is
'stlid,' is often i ntercepted
orbexamined it is prbbable . • thatiniv latter
1 I -
may, not Iva& hint. I Suljoin aeqy of toy .
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leter•to that journal. 4 -;:,
'One- : !year ago I came to KanSn: Anil
bought a claitit en !Sugar Creek,; Atchison - .
,CP.mty. .
..
On the' 16th of Atimilsf l the. Bor:ler Ruffians .
~ ei • - •
of.4he- t6i.rn of Atchison sent me ,dowtV
. the
.-
lit ' . s.soitrillliver. on a raft, • i • - .
!We parted under a mutual pleqo . 1,11181
if My life was spared,.l would comp ' back to
Aiehison:; and they that if 'I did chine back.
t.ll wetild bang me. • • ..,,- •I. . ...
, 1, ,
', aithtul to my -promise, in NoveMberhis-f ;
I f!t•turnCd - to Kansas with Joy family ; vigti>
ited • At4hison in open . :day, announced my.
ser on Mind;-and returned` without- niolciZta. i
titan.. - -1 : • - , .
:Kar4;h 11Ceing yet sparely settled, 'and hay
•[
in'p few' ; meeting
,muses; it - was determined
that Butler should live .on our claim
with_ her brOther's
turn to Illinois, and resume my la, ors a,- a
preacher I have been for,a number of y
in, the employ of churches in the counties of
13rOwn and Adanis Illinois, a lAtjtirity of.
whose: members. were,
.I, suppose, (horn and
reated iin, kent uek !•
A'prir 30th I returned to Kanslts land cros
so the Alissouii at Atchison.. -I . :p l oke to no
one in te. , Wit - save with 'lwo tuerehailts. of 'the
plaee, with Whom I had busineSs transaCtions
'.since my first arrival Territo
remainec. only a fed' minutes ; h went to'
My buggy to. resume My. journey, N. ! hen I was
assaulted .22. , t i10 bert S. ;Kelly, junior editor of
- flte•SpialteMSo: 111 , t1 ( !was d rag-
gfd into a giiieery, and there surrotinded by
a company of South Carolinians, who are re
kyted to Inlve been sent out by a iSuutli4n
Emigrant Aid Society
. In this last mob. 1 nptieed . .only two were
citizens, of Atchison or enffaaed . in the _former
•
nigh. I I •
It is not reported that these emigrants from
the Palmetto State seek out. a Oairn and
maker. fur themselves a home ; neither do
! ,
they enter into, any , legttimate
They yery•expressively .describe themselYes
as having" come out to see Kansas throug,h."
They yelled—" Kill him?" .
`sl-ang the d,,d Abolitionist .t" j 7 • • ;
• ': One 'of their nuinbr• bustled up . too me and
- demanded—"'Have you a revolver?'' ' ' \-.
• .
I rephed---" No." -;•. , -• :•_. -• I
• '.". _He'
.hatided me a pistol saying+" - r,llcie,
- take that, and stand of ti-p - steps and G-,-----d
' d-L-4-, it'Aon, I Will' blow 'you thrOw , h 'in an
ih.itan P r t• , ...
•; • •
3 •
: • , El replied—" I liavgno - use for yqur weap
on., , 1 • . , - •. - , - I ,
..
i i afterwards heard themcongratulating.
.themilves in refertibee to ibis—that . they:had been honorable ;With me. The fellqW•
litS
tri; • f trict ts, tnt r I tis comp
anon s ,dissuaded
him from;shooting me, saying' that they were
-l oiina3to•hane Me E 1 •
if
(;can picture to Myself the look lof a Cu
bari -bloodbOnrid, just ready rOth t-ipen jaws,
to, seize a panting sla'ye in-a Florida sWamp,
• then 'I imagine we have a correct dagnerreo
type Of the expression ; worn by these emigrant
tepre'Sentatives of the manly_sentinienti'high.
ss icined courageous, and magranimons feeliigs .
t,:ii, fl*South Carolina chivalryrwben first they
acentOd in their own itnagination--4he iblooil
1
Of a live " Abolitionist:" ' ;,. •
" bang;film !" they . yelled ; ''" bang, him I
ttarigkhe (1,----='- 7 4 1 Abolitionist I" I ;I:
! . ' , Whey l .pinioned - niy arms behind me, ob
_ taiued a rope,' but were interrupted by the
entranee of a stranger--- ; a:'gentletnan, from
iMis.sOuri, since - aseertained, to be ' General . ,
. glut, ila lawyer of Buchanan Count c. • He'.
itaid:: -
, • . . ;-3
i "Ify friends, heal. me...,„ I am art: old man,'
brid It, is right you Should 'hear me. I was
:•:tkira ;in 'Virginia, - and have lived many, years
in Missouri; I atnb slaveholder,• and .desire
;Kan!as to, Ite l mad a Slaye:State:4--if. it can,
. 1.1 3 ,e done by honorable • meads.. Bdt you will:
destroy the _cause . -you are' seeking:to build --.
'•
Mi l: 1 You have taken; this man, :,who • was .
pea bly passing, . 4 . through- Your street' and,
sloboslob' the highway t dotng do person any harm.
• •
We Onifess to be la* \ and order l men, and,
eFa
shottld be the last Ito
_Ori:nit , violence. : if
;this man hits violated the law, let him be. pun:.
•lishe according to law; but for the sake of
IMis uri-,-for' the sake of Kansaa—for the
',*ake-of the Pro-Sla 4 qiry.eause; do riot
_act in
i,hisl way." . • -'; : : • ''.' : i'-
. .
!.; • They dragged' me into another groceryand),
appointed a moderator.
~ kelty told his ste
t;. , .
.;•y;• -
3. . I iose tp my feet • and "'calmly -Aud in re-.•
li -.. , ;
tepeuttul• *gunge, began to tell mine.. I was
ir
repeatedli jerked to my seat, acid so roughly
jiandled that; was compelled to desist.
My friend ft.;nn Missouri againearnestly
bespught them to set me 'at liberty.
1 Kelly turned shOrt on hjirisand•said---'
I -you belong to Kansas r .
He replied-,-‘,‘ No ' • but e_xpet to live
here in Atchison next Fall; and_inl, this mat
iterl the-interests•of, Missouri and Kansas are
- ideOtical."
•
M Lan/ii) 4 a ltrigyer in Atchison, and Mr.
lliettsow-a. i . - •merchant . .of the same
. . .
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D .. 454 1-1. -. H. FRAZIER, 'EDITORS. i . .: ' '- ' - 1
1 foNrrß()st, TiIIURSI)A Y, - 'JUNI 12,.1856... - _ IF AziErt &SD •ITH, PUI3LISFIETt -7- VOL`
..; N 4
• .-
r VOL' 2 , -
• /
• 1-- -
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both Pro-Slavery men—also united - with_
Gen. Tut in . pleading that I might be set at
liberty.
While these gentlemen were thus speaking
rheard my keepers mutter—" D—n you, if
you don't - hush up, wOl tar and -feather
you." _ , •
. ,
When Kelly saw how Matters stood, he
came.forward.and said—”, He did • not take
Butler to have hint hanged ;,only tarred and
feathered." Yet in, the. other grocery they
hid said to the mob-that they should .do as
ti ey pleased !:" He.dared not take the. rb:-
1
sponsibility of-taking ini life; but whe these
unfortunate men, whose One-idea,is •on -the
subject of Slavery and SOUthein Big is has
become: insanity—when . these irresp •iisitle
South - Carolinians;• sent lint to• be hill dogs
and Vood hounds for Atchison and Stringfel
low—when they could' be used as tools 1O
take My life,H he was ready to do it.
Our gun-powder Moderator cut the discus
sion short by Saving-,—" It is moved that But,
ler'be tarred and feathered and ;Tulip .. thir
ty-nine behes." .
A majority said q Aye ," , though a number
of voices said " No." The' Moderator said
the:affirm:it Ve has it."
bt . gfin to , speeulate how that sort of thing
would Nvgrk as fir north as the latitUde of
Kansas, •There was a - good deal of whisper
ing about the house. L saw - dark; ominous
and threatening looks in 'the crowd.
The Moderator agiin came forward, and in
an altered Oiee, said
•" It . is moved that the ?flit part of .the sen=
tenee be resiinded. l
•
• It was reeipded;
I was given into- the himds of my South
Carolina overseers AO be tarred 'and feather
ed.-- They Muttered Aliojigr, ovt:lM'at this is
sue of the matter: "13y—," • said they,
" if we had known it woiiid conic out in this
way, we would have let • ,shoot But
lett, at the first.. de Ns oithj have done'it quick
er than a flash.' •• •
One little sharp-visaged,. dark-featured,
bhlck-eyed South Caroliuian; as 'mart as a
cricket, who seemed to he the leader of The
gang. wa4 particularly displeased.
you," said he, " ii 1 comer all the. way from
South Carolina, and Spent so ranch 'money to
do things up in, .I.lch mi*:4nd water style as
this.:, I s." . . •
r ,„
- 'They Stripped me natlod' to the waist, cov
ered my body With tar„, and then for the 'want
of feathers,' aPplied cot ton*o(il. Having ap
pointed. a :vat mitt co of ;Three to certainl y hang the the - next time I . sh,taild come to Atch
ison, they tosskl efothei into my buggy,'
pnt toe therein, accumpanio me to the sub
urbs of the town. and sent Line naked Out up 7
on the prairie. -
I adjusted 111 .attire about tme a best 1"
could-, and hastened to: n'Yjuiii my 'wife and
two little ones on the banks of the Stranger
creek: 'lt was rather a sorrowlul meeting af
ter so long. a parting.. Still; we were' very
thankful, :hat,- under the blessing of a good
Proyiclence,_ it_ had _fared iio worsa .
tu. •• •
• The first mob tliat sent M' e down the Mis
souri river •(:)n araft, always excepting Rob
ert S. Kelly—were:courteonsgentlemen edin
pared witi . the last one. When I was towed
A'ut, into the middle 'of the stream, I do not
remember to have heard a !word.spoken by
the men on the shorel Their demeanor indi
cated that they felt themselves' perforthin t , ,, a
plitiful duty, though - . perhaps they • regarded
it i as - a necessary :one. ':.This last mob, when
they left me on the border of the town, shriek.
ed and
.yelled pack '.of. New Zealand,
cannibals.. :.The first .mob did not try toi
abridge-my right of speech.. In reply to all
the hard and bitter thiags theY said against
me, they patiently heard Me.to the end.
nut these men who have cinne to introduce
into Kansas that . order of. things that now ex
ists in South Carolina, savagely gagged me
into silence by rapping my fitee,`.ehok ing me,
pulling my beard,-jerking me violently to my,
seat, and • exclaiming ":D--u you, hold yohr
tongue." Ail thiS was dune while my arms
were pinioned behind Me,.
• ask now,' as•they have asked al
ready, what is the . true acrd proper cause of
all these troubles NS if!th 1 have had in - A tchi
son. • I.have- told ,the.-world . already, and can
only repeat my own words. 1 have said •
"•The very head, and front of my offending•
bath this extent no ‘more,7_. 1 'had 'spoken
among my,_ neighbors favZrable for making.
Kansas a Free' -State, and said in' the office of
the Squatter Sovereign, am - a Free-Solid.;
and intend to. vote tier Kansas to lie a Free
State. .It is true that .Kelly by an' afOr
thought has added two new •Cotints to his bill
of indietment• against me.' The first is, that
I.went to the town of Atchison last August,
talking abolitioniSm: I have . not the honor
being an Abolitionist. :,;And second, that 1
somehow or •other talked improperlsOrrthe
presence -of slaves. All this is not only. utter
ly :false, but the - charges are "ex-post . fti&o
for not •a word, was said ef this. the davt.tiev
put me on the raft. . •
'The New York Tribu4e publishes moos a
Methodist pi.eacher that was put on a raft for
preac,hing abolitionism.. I tuft a member of
the denomination known as Disciples, (Camp
.beiiies,) and haVe never alluded to the 'Sub
ject of.Slavery'in my preaching. I publiSh
•ed a narathe •of the whole affair in the Mis-'
sou-ri Democrat. not one word Of which has
ever, been denied; to the best of my know!.
'edge, 'except 'this : i said I had heard that
Kelly was born in Massachusetts.. lle . says
he was - not.- that lie ; was• born in Vit.-.
-ginia. -
_Robert S. -Kelly, junior editor - of the
Squatter Soveriignottid , QovernMent Printer,
_shall be born just where he' pleases:
Still, it--will be reg,arded as mysteriouS and
incredible that a - man shotild receive such
treatment. for .uttering iWords as I: report my
self to have .-uttered„- , :, The 'water is clear
.
enough whew the fitets:are understood that 1
will explain.
.
.Prior - to August 16, 1855, there Was prop
.
-erly.speaking no Free State party organized
in Atchison county—perhaps not in the
.Territory of •Kansas:' l . Free voters did-not
know - their -owrkstrength, and-ail were di-s
-posed.,to-be prudensome - were timid.—
Here in Atchison county we were determined
that if the-Border Ruffians were - .reSolved to
drive 'matters to a bfOody issue, the responsi
-biliiy of doing. so:should rest wholly with.
Ahemselves. There'-are'-many - Free Sollars.
*".in This county; - brave men, who have no eon
,
seientious scruples to hinder, them from arm
ing themselves and : preparing to repel' force
by forte. , The Border Ruffians.' sought, by
a system of terrorism, so-to' intimidate - Free,
Soilers as them from : organizing a
Free State Parts•;'Or even discussing the sub-
" DO
.. • - -
- .
jest of slavery and freedom in: Kansas... They
-carried this to such extent .of outragegus vio
lence that - it came-to be currently reporteci
th4t it was as much as .a man's life was worth
in the - town of Atchison;
. to say . —" I am .a
Free Soi ler." .
We deprecated violence ; and wished a
'peaceful discussion Of the subject. It ,was
thereforeanost fitting that a man whose prO 7
. fession t forbade him 'to go armed should put to
the test of actual experiment Whether, an
° American citizen of blameless life could he
. permitted to , enjoy the right of free 'speech—
.the privilege of . expressing vicw.s favorable to
- Making Kansas a free State--such views be
inn, uttered without any• thing of angry and
abUsiie or insulting language. It was fur
this .purpose the above ‘surds; were spoken
and which has been the c' use of all my troub
les in Atchison:. •
If the Bordettlioffians ha] permitted me
to depart in peace •:they would - have been
without the shadow -of.an excuse. to rnitioilte
its atrocity. But, whatever might have Ceeti
the r:result,..l had counted the cost and was
prepared to abidu the issue. • -
'lf there. is any class of 'Men t hat stand 'be
hind the curtains and pullthe wires, we would
respectfully represent to them that it will do
no good to urge these understrappers on to
these deeds of siolence and ruffianism. . We
are not of 'a z class of Aen' to utter childish
complaints at any wrongs that . we'may suf
fer, but we knot.ourrights and we -intend to
have them.... .
MIGI
In conclusion we would sugeiest to South
Carolina that she had better send fur her.em;
igrants home again.. They will do her cause
more harm than good. 'however, • this way
of doing work may. do among the field hands
of zt.rice plantation; it won't do here, at all.
We, in . Kansas, arc not made ot•metal to be
worked in slieb••a lire. Respectiblis,
. _
BUTLER AND DOUGLAS COARACTERIZED.
.• Awn Sperch ; in the Senate.
, [We exti set from the full report of Mr
Sumner's . g .eat speech, the passage deseril t
inn. Messrs.:Butler and DOuglas, which 'thie
of the chivalry sought -to avenge in the Sen
ate Chamber in the trues Border-Ruflian style.]
My-task will. be divided under three dif
ferent head4—First, VIE CRIME AGAINST KAN
SAS, in its origin and extent; Second TOE A
"koto;'ciss. Fon. CRIME ; and Tbirdly, THE
Taut REats
But, befO e entering upon the argument, 1•,
must say something of a' gerierW character,:
particularly! in response to what has fallen
from .SenatOrs who have raised themsel ve's
to canine:nee on this floor iii chainpionship of
hunian wrongs ;. I mean
,the Senator front
South Carolina, (Mr. Butler.) and the Senator
from Illinois, (Mr. Douglas,)- a ho," though
unlike as Don Quixote and Sancho Panza,yet,
like thin couple, sally ..lords together in. the
s.linieeanse. The, Seoatae'crom car,.
Los runny hooks of chivalry, and be
lieves himself a chivalrous knight, with senti
ments.of honor and Courage. 01 .course he
-has-chosen a mistress to whom he has Made.
his vows, and who, though ugly torpthers,
always ; lovely to him ; thou, polluted "in
the sight of the world, is -chaste in. his sight ,
—1 mean the harlot, Slavery. 'For : her his
tongue is alWays profuse in words. . Let h'er
be impeached in character. or .any. proposi
tion made lo -shut her out front the extension
of her • wantonness, and no extravagance of
manner or hardihood of assertion is then too
oTeat'ibr this:Senator.
The: frenzy of Don Quixote, •in 'behalf of
his wench, Dulcira "del TobosO; is all sur:
pa-sed. The a‘erted rights of Stvery,which
(-shock tamality of all kinds, are cloaked by a•
liantieaie claim of evality: If the Slave
Statesvannot enjoy what, in mockery of the
great - fathers of the Republie. he misnames
evality iilui, r the Constitution—in other
words. the Mil power in theaiational territ,
ries to eompel fellow-men t , .i uni'',aid toil; to
separhte husband and wife. and'to - s.ll little
children at the auetionbloek-- , --then_Sir, the
chivalrie 'Senator will -conduet the State of
Sonth Carclina out of the ration ! 11,roie
Knight ! : Exalted Senator ! A second Mos
e
come for a -second Exodus! •
Bot not content. with this poor menace.
which we have been twice tolii %vas " nitias
iired";" the Senator, in the unreqrained
airy :ofhis nature, has "undertaken. - to apply
opprobrious words to tho4o "who ditE•r 'from
hint ear this &or. 11t."5-calls them "„sectional
and fanatical;' and_oppatiltion to th e usurpa-
Lien iii Kansas, he denounces as " an uncalen
laliAliMaticisni."' - lobe sure, these .charg
:t.4 lack alrgraee of originality,•and all "semi-,
;ment of truth ; but-the adventurous Senator
doeS not hesitate. lie is 4lte -nneoinprotnis
ingomblushing representative on this floor of
zLflagrant.sectionalism,-whiell now domineers
over the : Republic, and yet with, a ludicrous
ignorance of his own position--unable to see
.himself as others see - flint—or with an etTron-•
tery which even his- lite- head ought not to
protect from rebuke,"ite applies to those here
who resist his sectiottati•vn, the very epithet
Whieh designates himself: . •
The men Who strive to"bringback the Gov
ernment to its original: - when Free
dom .and • not SlaVery was national, while
Slavery and, tiot.Freedom was sectional, he
arraigns, as sectional. ills will. not do. .It
involvesi - too great a perverson of terms.- I
tell that Senator that ,: k t is to - himself and to
the " organization" of which lie is - the coin
miffed advOcate," that this epithet belongs.
I now fasten_ it upon them. -For. myself, I
care little for names; but since the question
inns been raised here, I affirm that the Repub
lican party of the Union is in no just sense
sectional;, :but more, than any other party
national . ; and that it now goes forth- to dis - -
lodge from the high places Of. the Govern
ment the tyrannical sectionalism of which the
Senator from South Carolina .is one of - the
Maddest. zealots. • -
To the charge of fanitticism I also reply.—
Sir,' fanaticism is foundin'aur'enthusiasni or
exaggeration of opiniOns, particularly on' re
ligious subjects;
,but there . anay be a fanati
cism for evil as well as for gold;
. Now,
will not deny that there are 'persons among
us loving liberty too well for their personal
good,• a• selfish generation. - Such there
may be, and, for the salve of their exatnple,
would that there were 'more! • 'ln calling
*in - "fanatics" you last contumely upon the
-noble army of martyrs, frOm the earlie s t
day down to , this-hour; upon the great tri
bunes of . human rights,,by whom life, liberty
and.
.happiness on - earth have been
,secured,;
upon. thelong Jine of devoted patriots who,
throughout history, have truly loved their
• -- - P.
country; and; 'upon all,.who in noble.,aspira- "s a ps" down the throats of the A.
tion for the general geotli"find in forgetfulness pep 1 , and he Will meeta similar fil
ei
of self, have stood out before their age, ;and 1.1 . " ay - convulse this' country w
gathered into their gen•rous bosons the fe
. ..3 Like the ancient madman, het
shafts 'of tyranny and: .i*ront j , in order •to fir.' .. .. titisi vast Temple of - Constt
make a pathway for trutl4... - . , -Li e. o yiirander than Ephesian "don
You discredit .Luther, Vfen alone he nail: he ~ net enforce obedience to that c h
ed his articles to the door; ofthe Church at, eaPtOrpatiOn. . . . .
Wittenber , and then - i4t:the imperial dei 7 , tv Senator dreams that - he 'can subdue
tf,t . .
stand that he•should retrarft - , firmly replied,' tit 'N - t.:orth. .'4le ' disclaims the open threat,
" Here I .stand ; I cauncit... do . other Wise, so bitkik Conduct still implies it: II w little
t ,
help Me - G-pd .. l" You d'yered it' Hampden, tit;i t enator knows himself, or. the strengtltof
when alone he refused to pay the few Ail. th • use. , which-he persecutes! He lis but a
lings of ship-money, and floook theAhrone of mir - i Man iagainst him is an tniinor l prin-
Charles I ; you discredit iti filton, whtn,amidst, cilili Wittrfinite power he wrestles ;with the
-the corruptions of a heartless Court ; he lived in! nge, land he must fall. Against filth are
I
on, the lofty friend of liberty, above -- ques- st :- er battalions than any. marsh'ited by
i . .
io n of. susp i t i on ;. you diecredit Russel and an r I arm-'-z-the inborn, inerailie'abl ~ invite
Sidney,-,When,. for the sake, of their country, oil 14 - etititnents of the human-hear • leninst
1
they calmly turned frotti family and friends hiqi • nature in all her subtle forces . 1 ,, gainst
to tread the narrow r.iteps of the scaffold; !ion hitit '6' 4 6 God. . Let bin' • • try to. .subdtie - these.
discredit the'early founder,s of . American in- 1 11 • ' -
stitutions, who preterred the hardships of a rti 1, , •'" A. . .
nal of coninierce i
wilderness, surrounded bv .a "savage foe, to. -- . fll "74 -
me
-- ' t '
linTacitiag Imo at Plymouth 6harch:
injustice on beds of case;, you discredit our
later fathers, who, few innumbers and weak 1 1b.re was quite an excitement v,: , sterday',
in resources, yet strong in. their cause, did not 11l ing at Plymouth Church. Brooklyn.
hesitate•to* brave the mighty power of En , - Tie; astor,.Rev. Henry ,Ward Beecher, near
. , .
land,. already eneirdling the "globe with h er thi lose 'of the usual morning !services,
P: I. d afler reading the first line of the lase '
morning drum beats. 'Yes, sir, of such are •
li nil, and in justification Of -what-he was e
dict fanatics of history, aCt..)rdintr. to the ,Sen. . -
i - I' '''' . 1K tti to propose, read to the congre gation the
awn - :-.
a '
But tell that Senator that there are charac- . paillge in the Xllth chapter of `St. - 'fattliew.
'1
I.
: tars badly eminent, of whose . fanaticism there th tithe 10th to the 14th verse,. tit which
r-th t t ptory of Christ healing the within-61 hand
cut be no•question. SuCh wire the ancient
Egyptians, who - ivorshiPPed diOnities inl in n.-- " 1 iP.Sabhatb.day is So beautifulNtold.
.
' ash forms ; ? the . Druids, ;'.ho darkened the 0 then lltn,tineed to the -congregatiOn
. . ,
forests of oak, in whieh 0.4 lived, by sacri-. th o.wo Weeks ago heliad receive( an int
pr I n t eimimunication. from WIL - hington;
tires of blood ; the I\teikans, who :attend=
se tiig . forth thata &a:tain young ...Woman
cred countless victis! to the propitiation
of their obscene idols; jt i he . Spaniards, - who 1 waAfthere..oiohat - f been put up tor sale at
under Alva, sought to fitrce the dnquisition
th . i iinction mar .by her own ackm re , d
i lmlob
upon 'Holland, by.a tyranny kindred to that tit I :r; that a sl: se driver who wasrlletp-ilint
. .
i now employed to foree,l iSiitvery upon Kan- e,
_ , itli the eireninstances of the ('lre,
• took
.
sas ; and such werethelAlgerines, when . in mn conclave, after ii4tening - to a speech Pi I ( " 1 her, lardbought.her for the sum of
sole
t 4.1. 0, intending to give her an opportunity
tcs 4 ,tain liol.• freedom,. and • thus Gave her'
mit unlike Old, of the Senator troin South
1111 the sad! title, sur•e, to -_follow 'were she .
Carolina,
,tlis•v reSol ved to continu e the: Slave: ,-. 1
. . i ISepv to the' :plantations down South; that ,
ry of white Christians . , mid to extend it to the
tlo4lsame slave driver himself ` f arprOpriated. ,
cauntry men of Washiligitail Ave, Sir, ex
'4. 11,) towardS her freedom, and hel obtained . '
tend it ! % And in this same dreary catalogue -N
a le amount 'from another- slave driver ty
faithful hk:tory must record all who' now, in.
himaeonaintatice, leaving
. $lOOO 1 - liic . h the
an enlightened age and it;) a land of boasted
had yet toyaise befOre. she coup be free,
Freedom,. stand up, in pen'ersinfiff the Con- 0,1
B. Vatting on generous and go o ,' m e n .in
:ititution and in denial 4 immortal truth, - to
\ fishingtott 'city and in Baltimortj, - :the girl
fasten a new shackle ntiOn their fellowman.
ltAined subscriptions to the .- amount i , , f.
It the- Senator wislu;s tO - See fanatics, let. him
The writer of the comtuuniation re
look around among his c,W•n associate • • let '''''t
. ( 64,,,,,,-A the aid of Mr. Beecher, and ihe church
him look at himself.' ,I -
,4 . 1 i 1- 1 i . presided; •' raisin; he 1 1
NN IR I it „ in .te .itt.-
[lntl have not done l i vith the Senator.— ' s: .
There is anothe m
r atter •egarded by him. of • • 1
41
1 ‘ ,.) this affecting. story Mr. B. replied by
such consequence that Ihe interpolated into . lie • would
nut move in the matter, - '
i
the speech of the SenatO w - r from Ne Hamp. nit t I that
( 5 (,ably fearing. that an intpositfon vas a
shire, (Mr. Hale,) and also announced that' (L '
b 0 t to be practiced upoit , hlin.) unless the
he. had prepared himself with it to take it in
was sent here.' herself.' Thisf-was con
his pocket: all the
,way to, Boston, when ,he 41
sea ed . to on behalf of her master,• by- the
- expected y to nte . ss ... t ..4 heigo . p . !:l l 4) c. f . :.ilL tm ke .
gr , giving him her" parole of honOr that, in
-e . -..,e ..--4 . 1... ! ..., to .:raise,the sum necessary,
of truth, I stop for one moment,. and tread: - it
ji would return.to him. - • Mr.ll 1 -ot,c-iet then;
to the earth. The' North, accordant* to • the I s '
ii 1 u affecting manncrodluded to 'he respeet
Senator, was engagdd. ifil the slave tr t 'ade, and '
d u,‘ to wOman, whether slte,,Nfcas bond or fix -:,
helped to introduce slaYi - ts into, the Southern
eAt;atcd or uneducated, 'rind c2nrluded by
Siates ; and this undeniable filet he proposed i it, Iliting ,
the young ;woman, who' Was present
to establish by statisticP in statist* winch his
it `the church,
,to come upon
. the platfinart,
errors surpassed his sentences in Tiuinber.—
N . 411 which invitation .she c.omp ied. Slie .
.But let these paSs for tie present ) that I may mit scarcely as - dark acs au Indiair,land had a
de:Q .. . with his argumentl.l • . - . '
and intelligent co.unteliaiee. Her
Pray, Sir, is_ the acknowledged turpitude
I a p i - ;l; l e s a u n ig nice upon the speakers' f t:lnd, . evi
of a departed generation to become an ex- ' rly much disconcerted bet;ire such an hill-.
arnple for us-? And yet, the suggestion of I '
, nit use assemblage of 'strangers„and fearing,
the Senator, if entitled to any conSideration• l no
doubt, that the much - needed. money
iii -this discussion, mustihave this extent. I wOold not be raised, so excited the l emigre
oin my friend from Ne I - laMpshire in thank- gation, stirred as their feelings were, by , the
iug the' Senatorfrom Seuth Carolina for ad-
W
preceding -remarks of the speake ,that the'
'clueing this instance ; ' for it gives me an op
hut tears streamed down the wear ler beaten
portunity to •say,, thAt the Northern mer- 1 -
5 ofmen,as - , ~.
cottntenanek.. strong
ehanus with Moores in EiOston, Bristol, New
- softer cheekS of beautiful women.'
port, New York and Philadelphia, who cater- . I
The officers of:the church them passed a-'
'ed for'Slave - ry during .lie..yearS of the slaveround the dates .-1 '1 .-
.-*
1 . „ , nda thouh the, congrega
trade, are the lineal-progenitors of the North
firm had noprevious-knowledge. i r expecta- .
ern men,. with homes these places, " 6 ' tion. that" there would be such a demand
lend themselves to Slavery in our day ; and
especially that all, wh iher North or Sonth, idly rThd
made upon their henevolenee, they were rap
-1 y . 1 y_ ; Several'
pit intimated to Mr. B that they would be
: who take part, direct! , lor indirectly,. in the
conspiracy - against Kan 7 _ls, do but continue responsible for any..slit;t-e ‘ oming irkthe col
the work of the slave .raders which you con:
lection, and that he miaht, relieve the girl of
demn. .
suspense. This he did'', but it also reached
- It is true, too true, alas!' that our fathers the ears of the cOngregation, who ,1 in as great
were;- engaged in this ttatfie; but hatis no suspense almost as the girl. herself,forgot
apology for -it. And in repelling the author- t: the sacred character of the ilay , and gave
ity of his e
txample,
It rep also the trite. ar
veat to their joy in a loud clapping of hands.
gement founded on il earlier 'example Of Mr. Beecher remarked. that lie did not ap
Engfand. his true that our mother. coup - . 1 .
etl e cla .) oh frof
1 . 11 ?..„, hand; int the church
try, at the peace of Ut l reelit,.eXtorted from • I : r n e Ze l .t..".. s 'abbath, but as the deliveirzmee of a
Spain the Asslento (lontract,. securing the s l ave f rom ,,-b ondlite was a - proN,r occasion,
monopoly of the slave trade with,, the Span- fOr li j(2y ., and,gladn ' es..'s, he would her content to
ash Colonies, as the whote pfice of all the ca it .A. 1 . 70 LY CLAPPING. OF mums". The
blood of great victorio ; •that she lii ,,, tled at
t-t- sum . contribfitcd was SEVEN lII*DRED AND
Aix-la-Chapelle foranbther !ease of the ex- t •
SEVENTY . FIVE dollars, besides sec ral areel
, .9 . - t es
elusive traffic ; and. adrain at the' treaty of of jewelry - which' ladies' unprepared with
, 4. ' - t . , ,
Madrid, clung to the wreteneuPtracy. It is money had east into the-plates; 1
true that in this spirit Che t power of the moth- - - Ive" 'understand that the • girl haS a -child,
er country was prostr.tie: to the same base
'.ind that the surplus funds collected are .to be
ends in her American cr
Colonies, aainSt in- applied to the purchase of its freedom, and
dignant protests from our fathers. All these to aid the young woman in settling herself'
things now rise tip in judgment against her, at some useful occupation here at the North,
Let us not follow . -th .. Senator from South
Carolina to do the ve Y .-- evil today which in
another generation we condenm. -
As the Senator froin South Carolina is. the
Don Quixote,-the Senator from Illinois (Mr.
Douglas) is the squire of *Slavery, its very
Sancho Panza, ready itr do all . its humiliating
offices. This Senator hi his labored address,
vindicating his labored report—Piling one
mass of elaborate error upon another miss
—constrained himself,l, as you will -remem
ber, t4i unfamiliar d4ncies of speech. Of .....„ 0
.that address 1 haVe nothing •to say at this too- ...., Ivith. 511 ' 1
ment;.though before I sit down 1 shall show . ~,,011, and nothing nva. a!
something of its fallacies. Raci go' back itke one. .
now to an earlier occ Sion, when, true' to his 1 ‘ IT -
II:U{.1;e impulses, lie tl rew into tliis discussion
"for a charM, of . pow Oul trouble," personal•
ities most discreditab oto this, bOdy, I will
i
not stop to repel the limputations which he
.cast4ipon myself, but J mention them -- to .re
.inind you of the "sw altered venom sldeping
got," -which, with . other poisoned ingredients,
he cast into the - Cauldr i on of this debate._ ~ Of
other things I speak. IStanditig omthis floor,
the Senator issued his!rescript, requiring sub
mission- to the usurped power of Kansas; and
this was accompantediby a Manner—all. his
own--such as Jbefits i tthe tyrannical threat.
. . Very' well. Let the Senator try. -I tell
him now that he cannot .enforce any. such
sul •
bmission. The, S ivator, with the Slave
Power at_ his bitck,,i Strong, but -,he is pot
. .
wong enough for thy.. purpose, He is bold.
"He shrinks from nothin Like Danion he-
May etv
, laridare 1 (cudace I taupours r yd
ace
P' - but even his- audacity cannot compass
this Work... The -Senkitor 4opies the British ;
-officer, who, with i3o4stfai swagger,-. Said that
With the hilt of his Prord hey would 'cram the.
- .
PARDEE BUTLER
Female Faces.
. • . , 1 •
I know a' woman who might' have been -
the ancestress to all the rabbit :4 in all, the
hutohes in England. - A soft, down`--looking,
fair, placid )voman, with king h: looping
like ears, and an' innocent -thee of mingled
timidity and surprise. She is a sweet tem
pered:th ittg, always eating or : skieping, who
breathes when she goes up stairt r i, and who
has as `few brains - in working - o tiler as any
human bang cam do Islith. Sh is just a ha-.
man rabbit;and nothing n on. :lad she - loCks
like one. . 1 • :, ~
We allknow - the sett - wornan 7 —the best
of the type—graceful, animated,
intelligent, with large eyes and
who walks with a firm tread, but:
and wtio.can turn herhaud-to anyi
true setter woman is alivays min
is the real woman of the world.
°`:Then there is the Blenheim
covers up her ,flice with her .ri
holds her head doWn :When she d
shy and timid, • • .1
theie IM the grepli9und,
lantern jaws land In
knuckles, generally rather distort
There is the cat woman ; too'
stealthy, clever, caressing; who
out noise, and is great ln . the wti;,
went. limbs are so supple
backbone 'so wonderfully
_pliant, i
sweet, no, manger 'So 'endearinl
tracts . : your secrets- from you
kngwqhat, . you
. : hat4 .spoken,
hour's .conversation. with that. ,g
ring woman.has,revealed to her
dangerous race .it has been your
•
e., The eat woman
She has claws hidd
ad.she \ Tan draw Id
• •
is them.
, .
to hi,
Pew,
silent
crall
olt. 1
4 nerican
yi l
lne4r-•
ith civil
may set
tutional
; but
yranni-
. ,
, . .
n 1 there ,}s the 'cow- r uled .
4 - timan, gen
!f' phlegmatic dispo4ition, given.tO - pi:
oks and teetotalism . • 7
. 4 there is the lurches Comaii,.the strong
i.,
:.dlworinui, who sea rough coats, With
clirs pockets and la ge bone buttons,
liOse. bonnets fling a pitefid defianeCat
iomty 'and tlishion.. 1 have never seen
: lion headed woman, exci - pting in that.
E
,Egyptian figure,sitting With her hands
r jknces, and pinning grimly on, the
un world, as Babas is. the lion headed
:..5 . :4 of the Nile. 1 , . - . ~ •
A
mind'
all n
and v
both
a tru
blae
onh
MCI
gtalc
From the Pittstoi
SLAVERY OR•PI
aus Remsen . to!I
E=
LETTER' NO.
1 •
1 •
;nglishinan-an,•;_ 4d Sc
to share a . jolly , ' t
dew, the Englishman toot
appr u his friend that alii
his 'u conscious habit,;(ha
SaM Johnson 'in hirr,Y,to
and aped he would nut b
it Ain good part,,
.4; 0,:
SAW ey, " only fou Will
whi of mine, for when
hear any man abuse' old
apt t .knock him. down."
N W I like the Scotehin
his .art , was in the right
cherished a local pride—a
the 'UndaUon of patriotis!
thin big it would be both
i .
honclr if we nourished thi
—th s Ilioniepride, a goo
lousty ithan we do, hero i
tann ingly charged upon
we in•Li, so steeped-in aver
in bsiness, money genii
that we are insensible to
of hi 'nOr, patriotism, and
Sou .horn gentlemen, lea% i
age! ent of their estates
littl trade and almoSt t
- theedium of a listless ill
i z,
ties t>th their busineSs ai
1 becunie aders—knoWevi
'whekl i to find and how to
•finelgentlemanly- fellows,:
the !knee to a master' on
,
sioniand perfect recogniti
ity, Ithey would treat Os k
desgrVei . Slavery is i '', wit
uniqn, a witching watcha
ly'letipatched, like the ~
wir? is heard and obeyc
i 'ovals a master. 'Tye t
visions among them i ,i bu
.. n p ( ali r et- 1. to T b h An S rth till ein a
rul the Democrats lof
ibe} ,
have their Whigli
in pparently friendly C
NVligs ; but really_ to .
fee milky to govern Os. •
are the ruling passiOns
bu
.n a Otwithstandin the
W•lter -
I
. 2
I •
1 1,i3e rules'the Coukt, tl
eryi` ',. intelligent
tiofi ' 1 from: "Macedon
'Sw[ , de"----in flict
i , •
"iteigna LO
i .
' ttO you remember t,
froin her body the hea'
in eig h t of his Couit
'y
ot) remember NI.I. upole.
. 1
fu t gosephine. to .thelbla
liOal liclir to the imperi
ol4book exhibits ambi
" qnly fall down and s
kingdoms of the earths
Divide and conquer
talons. '. All History t
tief and states are as a
as Jealous of power,
" *lto bear no rival bi l
and if possible more t
not ans. Extraordinary
dulgence have brought
:btit is their right to
o t ofl divine right ;likt
I
t le'right least a 6y Ares
1 .
I
te le s i ;cc an t d hei l r ee u p t i m n : n st i
ted to control the
king
te4 : , .
An
dow•
"IFortnne,- like woman,'
Stoops to the forward a
I lOvit . far they haVe ..
.
• 'broad-staring, dog
i.(" I wonder What
!') has given to the
{rates in thirty-two y 1
b for four years. 1 I_,s
uMing.to imagine N
)portion to numbers
egrity and patriot
dollen. Whence th
Ch of the Virginia 1,
'l.. , Not so our New
• n 1 frOm a free State.
re found. to combine
'.I like to have said s;
us ; to turn titemloutl
y have condescend ,
,Y es , certainly;"
.1 the firs-; place !an
Fond to your 'heal
:en very- much like
Ilan who were to go
Y killed. A Crow ,i
I; their labors. • "!W 0
n, " now we•will dil
prow, and,l will . 1
I! • take the - Terke!
'rol,v-." ! "Ahl" el
' Say - Turkey to me ,
I,
rallied to the Indian
t;sit, down i . Sattsbed
or our Superiors iil lo
,niented, ' ! ' `..
Let uilook one Ste.
i , 'en to the ,Governm
.tte ' to wit :.• jeffer
, ikfadisen, Monioe, ,
v 1j,,.. two, it my liit - i'
I r.- Van Buren, Mr, -;
11.1, 4 41 n this be so 1. . •
u tiVe w , e not made a i
‘lativepopulation, ' I
0 • • ! .1
1
:e/1 formed,
wavy hair,
a light one,
hint. The
ried She
inglets! and
alb, and is
otniali, With
and large
elegant., too
*oaks with-.
y of cndcar
us no
!oice
am. ,
•1 1850—New Yin
'1 " usnda.
Two hundred and ti
atblel , what a plan ,
longer uttniitted,
'Ached ivery lo.w p
. She -.ex
before you
utl half an
a.ap4 •
ui, pur
-1 every, roost
study
a dan s 4ricms
n :tint velvet
lid when • she.
Gazette.
EER,ON. •
rah Rynders, Esq
! II!.
tchman having sat
otfle of mountain
the precaution to
•n in liquor it was
11la so much of old
abuse the Scotch,
offended, but'take
certainly," replied
have to Indulge a
irunk 'or sober. if 1
Fcotia, I am • very
an ; he showed . ihat.
place, and that he
, borne sentiment--
m: I cannot - , help
forour, interest and
is noble. sentiment
deal more Sean
. New York.. It is:
s in the South,that
ce.---so. wrapped up
g, and speculation
) the Meer dietates •
State pride.
l ing mainly the man',
Ix overseers, having
4 commerce, cheat
e. by making poli
. pleasure. They
ry card in the.pack,
draw it. O,they are
if.we must bend
dur humble submis--
,
on of their superior
li6dly7--as we should
It Them a bond of
ord, that, oraculOus: . ,
- hispering
, lightning
wherever ..a slave
lere are seeming di
it is only seeming,
-e their Dembcratic
In contact' with 'and
he. North: So too
ties, to bring the r m
intact with Northern
nable them name ef-
Love. and Ambition.
of the. human . soul,
iiallant lines of Sir
. .
e Camp; the drore," ••
kiww tlftat Ambi
ceg =dinar' to the
•d of all."
le Sultan %5 ho severed
1 of his best beloved, ‘
nd . Janizaries 1 Do
In sacrificed his faith
ted hope of leaving a
41 throne ?. The good
ion ' in- its concrete :
orship me, and all. the
'tall be yours."- . •
s the maxim and the
aches that- etimniuni-
lubitious.to rule and
individual despots,
then near the throne,"
I nscrupulous in their.
, .
1 success and. long 'in
the South to belieVe
rule and reign. A
! tlitt of the Stuarts --L
i iipt:ion and . superior
, frOrts have' been qi-
GOverinpent. T 1 it
xini is found in 'the
born to be controiledi
d the hold',
/ucceeM is shown by .
lac eftil filet, that:Vit.--
I meat this Cre3ar feeds
I nion four chief msg.
ars . . New York only
uppose it is'nOt ; very. -
'ew Yorkers equil in'
to capacity, learning,:
sm,. to • the Virginia
sAiparity in honors?
residents were re-elec.
Yorker, not. So . any
Enough of the South_
with our fierce (and I
, useless) northern fac-
Of Vice Presidents
d to
I • •
ay, the- South:, give
you !nay ',have the
its'. content. " It ha
le White hUnter and
snackiln the -game,
4 nd a Turkey reward
, II," said the cute white
ide.' • You shall have
ko the Turkey, or ,1,
I, and ;you May takC
ied the hidiaw, yoti
lone."- . . • We. htvie-hard
zp. irit of reMoWstrance.
viththe•crOwe what
, 'WS, Conteinpublewnd
further. 'Virginia has
Hit Six Secretaries, of
on, Randolph, Marsh.
'Upshur. New, York
e accurate, namely--
\ c
Ire We: really inferior ?
'stake in stating, the
tuluck, the boot;
e t.
k.' '3,097,394
• 1,421,641
. ty thousand; nioie than
is. hiqe exliibited,und
0, 611141. we, not have
int it dek-hAtttiOn, not
only in tim estinttition . 'of tile world; bu
in-our own? .
- but 'the SouthlinOtitcl''.
They give us all thi piekin6
fall from- the collection or
What are Presidents. Or. SeciewiesAit
t , O . .tis T.
~Here are thoUsandsfeA- . itfany
on:the-spells. very few., could
'to these: eleVated stations:" The': !h;
dog will eat "dirty pudding," said
in - reference - to-a -literary - Lady, WhO
nantlyr refused' .' to_ accept -a , pension
pounds, but took it,. there net a.kba
, prid e i ' as well as. personat pride, !to , ib.e
tidied and taught, .ourl..childreal: n -. . 07.
-respect-us-if we 'do novrespeet ouriehl
. But let us go :back twenty years.
modern gro*th seediS, ttl4 0 veralu*,4
Lit take,only the Free WhaiBsfrOmi
Federal officers may be - teltiettid; an
the. woolly-heads,
1830—New York' had 1
" Virginia had•+
The rest of her population
1,211,405 being— •
- 469,857 Slaves, •
- 47,448-fre4-NegrOes.
and
• 517,i0d "
So that,-as long ago as 1.80; • Ne
had double the *hite,popullitlete - ol
and 173,880 over - and above..:,'
.
Now will it not excite the. *dal
of nine-tenths of our people tre be :to)
the - Free States. did .; not ha;
of the House of Representatives
except I. W. Tajlor from 1809
period of thirty six years ; tber
vie, of Indiana, was, endured ,
turned out—then 4. C. Whltln
chesetts; was condesciendingle
term, and turned mit.. The SP
the appointment• of Committees;
portant and -influential °Terser
cal affairs at Washington-to: be
any other hands bit•otir Aristc
and Slave-holders. ' Very much
land all important appOintorent
made from the order of Nobilit
much complained of.;
My present purpose is rathi
line-of study to otbers,than to.
this thread. But it will repay-,
amination and every leaf. and page
close the vast disproportion of eleva
influential offices. held hy.Slave-holde
ing reference-to their relative -.White
tion ' over those of the Free States.
Pausing this, fer the presewano ,
ter demands our attention, . certainly
less inagnitede..and interest--the •
Representation, which tends . greatly
vast and increasing degradation of .N --
Truly, it is in the
-bond,—the peund
is pledged.—so fiir, hard wile the b
must subniit to it with the best gra.
[Yet your equity judges,l think, wil
that COutracts, are soaidable•..wbee.)
come unconseionnbly . oppressive.
of the solemn matrimonial euntette
inv.o the honor _ and. high impor ,
position of Speaker; of the) House, J
dolph took occasion to hay—"Bir r i
a crown in this Republle j it, is the
occupy beneath that gorgeous canoe
me van to recollection how many
besides Mr, Taylor, for his brief
here in New York, .have ever had,fr
up to 1856-66 'years . ? `I do forg
some gentlemareversed in Congress
tory inform us. I Perhaps Mr. 'Car
could tell- its4or Gen. Ward—
Oak ley—or Mr:Dickinson--or.
Not one ! !
Shame to .us that we.bave sent n o mail .td'
Washington, fit for, the statiOn—or . a
great
tr shame ihat, having men fit, we bad.
,not
patriotism and state pride. enough to lay aside
our blekerings our Gtiello and .. hibealtb e
baseless factious; and united to supp rt.them:
Or thirdiy,.-thae we have not exe bisect the*
tact; unien, and firmness fo secure h Refection
to the Chair.. I -
Let me piit a - case to•your ;,coma
and native' honesty;: ! . ..
A. sells to B. 100 acres of lan ,;adjoin
ing B's fine Plantation, buildings and int,
rt
iprovements. c B. mortgagee the wti le for the'
1 e at of one grain of Indian co per - aerd ;
the -tiyeaii• Awe the second yea , for the
secon acre ; ' 4, the third Year - , for the tkird ,
aer:'; - 8, the 'fourth, year for the forth, acre
—s I on, doubling in geometrical o opertion: ,
At th end of the'first ten years, B. puisi,rig
half pint of core, rnbs his hands in. xttley..-- \..
Tett acres are paid! for. ' It is, all " iiieley , !"
—" Hey-day I" with . him. We. re. in
_no .
htirry.---talce the next ten years"; B
. `paye his -
8 bushels corn fut. his twentieth* , thet,ld_
be sure is not se 'very rnueb,hut h e s cratcher
his head diibioiisty. as he peers in the Or; i
tentous future. .But the future co 6i, - and
the demand of 8,000 bilshets, for hits,,tbirtiettr''...
acre, the succeeding payments beeniaing,do; •
excites him to an " Od welts !"--" $ thttelit!"
scream of agony; lest he lose, • no, the one
hundred acres,. bought' of A. that 'cewcitilil
readily abando; but the fli;mesteet. else.'
Then there are Contracts ,voidahl: forthi3ir
excessive evreasonablenese. I think' too Witt- .•
out g oing _to Virginia for preeeden 'there is
such a principle that Contracts ma -be - void
for want of Congideration. Abeors ing with
Mr. Brodiiax that the tiourbasgon, by when
any political subject which concerns, "he whole -
nation, should be tabooed and' Ogit . edits of "_
too delicate a nature for public:di ussiOn, ' I
think-it would be yeti to enquire on What
foundation rests this claim that the property
of the South- should be represente 4 in', Cim
gress, and not the property of the North.—
It would puzzle a) wiser map th) oven a
Philadelphia lawyer to answer the , question,
was it TlO*Pfor the first time mooted, .to the
sati.sfaction of any rational and impatliattlibit• '
ter- But of this hereafter. lib' immediate
object is,:tolook - liiittle into the - effect `of the
shies repre.sentation. '' ' ' -,' :I'.
in 1839:-(the aWtraet of that y
'sus lies before me)—Virginia had '
~ 991.300 whiteinhabitants,
47,348 'free. Negroes. . :
', , - - ----"r...'
,'-'•••" '• ' ' - -
741,648 ''....• - - - .
But she had'469,ls7'Ne i grb S li t
~t 4. ,
These by the cruelly obnosion. 3.5' rut)
added 219,85 3. to herreprese..ntay e'nututer
equfdling—outuuttiNemg,count baltutiting
the couuttes,ofPutnatn,Jstdrolk, W ste4iter, .
and Kingsr "is ii" possible Ir_ -!! Aye--
Throwin Alhany; the 'Capital Cott fY.of the
'State;'Whicli has 53,0001" ' Still ' t 'elritnia •
Slave'powui
, Prepeeprat i ei. Bill ig e np.'pld
Dueleiss place her in the. seta or Teediark!
t l •
. 24
eien
I§
that
• •
r 403.1
State
ttici
pt;ire
,ro
inirag;
of 50 -
State
eat
Our
whom
omit
bites '
18,186 free
00
- -
13,680
'l,o make
ploy.
1
. 1 ,
York;
rginia
onder
that
ill dis
..'. .and
s, kitty-
M -
er mat
of not
's ..of
;tb . this
flesh
del h ;
tell you
99 -PTert
r- Refer:.
f;cer;ol4,he
ina Ran=
'there is.
.eat
,you
T ." Let
akers-
eiffr, we
sm 1789
t. viE -
lonal his- -
Nr -, Judge .
What
.
on sense
arts Cen.
WM
II
M
Iv