Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, June 19, 1856, Image 1

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C/Iji;10-4E8 RE. P & kl- 4. FRAZIER, „EijITORS.
eoitets
For The Ircklaidn►t Reip6iwn.
SEED: CORN!
1
, .
There appears. to -bee general 'complaint
of the. farmers.that their E'‘ corn doe-alit - et come
AO .ISeveta,l reasons are"assigned for i;
Re d-it:lth your favor I will
.give mine;hassd
o pen eiiperience and close observation, hop,.
jag thCieby that a iiinilar. event may hereaf
ter be Prevented: - I- d0 . ..n0t think,asltotne
do, that the corn ' - of last: year was: not fully
matur4d, because, if: that were ; the case, I
can not see, why-mine should . have been ex
erept4mine has come 4p usually WeIL. :. The
wise Offailure must beloOked for -in
. Scirnd
other quarter: if mirfirtners bad getteraßy
selected - their seed when they cutup their
cam husked' it, and put, it' up where the cob.
7 .i
Shciukk have beeri fully . dried
.before winter
exile; their seed would Pot have failed, in . a
- , 1 ..
s i- k igle instance, to &t i qr ! inate. lam quite
sure that mine would have proved a failure,
lad I not taken special- Care of it... c '•.- :
Bonletinies,corri' betomes, heated and- in--
'
ju
.red for seed, by pUting too much in ,i, shock - ;
:it is also Often injured-by ii:S: he:ben - 1 1 11g qo
zeii.::But all such can be as. readily. told, 'es
can be a blighted potatee or.rettenapple.i,- , -
The *Ural luster , of the kernel ;is dt , stroyedi
and blisters, apparently, cover the iurfutel of.
it—sOmetimes only deep between' the- tugs I
and op the edges of the:kernels, (the grains
other wise appearing' bright, and. fair) which
scan only be detected by 'shelling. la plant
corn Under . sueh eiremnstances,,is,mori than
'`hazardous; a failure is nominally tertainl—
4tuenrance of thelcob can ;pet: alway s; be
depeilaean , k; but' I t.ll,k.that'of the kernel
m • r
ay . , ,If.4ere is the earl apilarent defeat-1n
the luster 41the kermel, 'I - always ...:rejeet it---:
:because ra Y s xperienee is, that it is totally un
fit for .seed. : .l uch wee the' season fast fall—
s° adverse fot , iring corn, that I:apprehend
edi +llan:Ter i Ilen
~ twas much more liartieu.:
larlin selecting - 1..1 taking eareff my' seed
•,. h -:- - . , i •
eorn.•• • ', -• • -• . , .
. Isly ‘ inethod of 1:. 6 ' 1 , - -,: ng my seed is 'this :
-Wizep Tutting up .1.- corn, thecerliest and
1
laraer 'tars I leaVeti . d i n on.
-e , • it 4- the. stOcki till
afier. I have done eu
-,-sometimes fortten
iE .
days,- or even long,. - hen I have leisure
I tgather thern., husk , ' v ratty,-
braid into
•
strings, and hg them to
airy:place where
they will speedily; ' an d ce ':nly • dry before
fie st cOmes,•or,pat them, & l i d. /3,t
~...,
ah 'upPer room; warmed by ::,eve
pipi'e)?as
singin thrliiighiL . Our
wain complained
lirig aranary the
cram- 1
oticie of my mak
l'iirßut ,-y
.•„ cornhaving - e'`: up .
_`".first i
;'
fete," I .presume she . vill notber,er
. 11 . 1 a.
ke
,' , . . .
.. - ay more objec t ions taxes.
Imake .. -
..; . "At the tune of hiking n i er.se- Next come Prairie La Cross, at the mouth
-put in
leetion for seed, *I
... 0. .
soan as
. p n s i,ite, • iiever . throwingl i . s4 . o 1
4. drying k' i 'lti en I:of La" Crass river, in Wisconsin: It is the
handsomesttOwn site I have seen on the• riv-
w i t h tfidteer corn; * many'.
: the heap t . . ell '3 . rs
select in tha t field I ...1%,,, 1 'er beina a , broad, level,: sandy prairie, just
do. :That whirl. high' enough to be out of the way of high wa-
- plantes far a. ~ ~ , _
.." 14111 g ° beeiLl ' e. it iia- 1 -- ter: The. bluffs are thie miles. back from
k
td. ae . the succeeding crdp Ch
... tendency' th e town, and are bold and rocky, making a
- E - ',' -: ,• --
lier.. : '_. ::.
~ ..• , • . -I
.most splendid back ground. La Cross has
.! . The -e , ,
3 er aibor m the way. - propose, r: )trout too thousand inhabitants and' is • shoot
-,I do- not .pretend . tha l t my ': - ‘,4 . up .
very
f as i:
i merely
,lL . ,' The -country: back is .said
- ' methudwe very, best,—it - has - neven.failed .
t iie fine and is 'filling up very. rapidly..
- .T• better and surer waY can be adopt- : . ~.
.' me. -•
-Ire are several miserable town. Sites be
. .: . edi **Means:let us, one and, all, follow
. twee '..lCrossand Winona: This last town
... Luse sure lain we -cannot . be too par- is the 't
- it i.,l'. ° -
.A - lown of :Minnesota. Two years
in: the selection of our seed for plant; ago, the •.
dians - were there ; to day, two
. ir k- too careful in putting :it up for sub. thousand Av.
.i • .
'e
men have a home there. "I
nt use. . Corn is our must important ,saw' five then:,
'' I . - - but a dollars offered and refused
~I . crop , bad seed destroys every:fa ; fur an :improy.. busiu - Het.',.' I . doubt it
'" I :able plospeet.: How important, then' that there .is another\ w : n , t i tis. . s - .'n:
la the Rocky
•(: ;7 a almost inestimable grain should tie kept Mountains-that strtl 44
a So Much of California
.-1e front being heated while - .euring,Und •be 'its does V . Tin . ona. • :
giro is a sandy prairie
• ierfectly cured end dry before the cold of bottom, running back t
, 'n the river about a
Winter sets in, and thus be secure 'froni •dan- mile to the bluffs, and ii. leni*th aboutit-e
er. . .: . !. -. miles. . But it-is too low, at. °
.
• i . : •
/ Irian': ore genial -climes • seed may tie dations, which makes the place .. •
. . I- • Y . • . little sliaky . :
' preserved in . almOst•eny.,way:; but in Out' re- It 1...4 an . important point, being z
, e landing
~gion it is not so. -It only ',remains,. then, to place for the .country sixty miles-bagc. But
,institute and pursue that course of 'careful- the people are Med with syliculatio„ and,
tress which the eireutnstan' ces of
- our country 1 sooner. or later, it.will injure the town, In
se Signally require, , ' '. ~. !• ' • I my - next . I may have something to say - A
Minnesota, provided I 'See it... G. C. L..
1
Brooklyn, June' 4, 18567,
*Wertz" dorrapcmdense olthe Republican.
° Wu:ONA. M. T., May 14, 18541'
?Three days since, I - took the Steamboat ;
Mint:m.4a -Belle, at, Fulton CO, bound to
\have drarhble, 'and see some,.2of the world t,
*here the people are not so thick as they:
*ill be. And here let me say to. thoSe
*demi to visit Minnesota or any of the upper,
Mississippi country, that if you buy tickets
of the agents of the Picket boats, •who go on,
tb the cars at Freeport, you will siandn good
ghance to be taken They charge more
and give poorer fare. Watt until you get to
#ie River, and then-.make the best bargain
feu can, always shnimir.g the Packets if you
tiff The Minnesota Belle is. a St.l Louts:
boat of the first class, and; this trip; came
well supphed with ripe peaches„i"or dessert
nnd„goose-berries 'for pies. (Think. of that,
Ou:Men who On the eleventh of Mity
hadsnow.banks in your fence cortersl) Their
ca l me from NeW
.:
Fulton City is. 4 the.,POotW,here tiles "Air
me R. R. crosses; the. Mississippi; is low,'
i marishy, and very tinhealthy:', It contains sev
*n hundred - inhabitants. • "
Lyons, on the opposite side,of theriVer, is
a growing place, no‘f, ll owing to the highitage
:if the water in `tire : river, half under . water.--r
The.river.is Nigher than it has. been fur' the
last two years and I'am strongly impressed
ithat Many fleas and bed,bugs in bolt' the
?towns along the river haVe suffered severely
jti consecluence—to say nothing of the other
II
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S. A. Nzw-roN.
inhabitants. Cord wood, all the way up the
river, was afloat, by the acre; and the lum,
ber, .chick the dry weather has kept back for.
the last twO i years, was coibing•down the
broad .basom of the ." Father of Waters in.
rafts -that would make a Siisquehanna lum
berman's eyes water. • '
Savanna, on the Illinois tide, is the first
towa , a , 3ove Ftilton. , It looks old that!.
by, but as It is now holdingou to the West
ern end of the Freeport and Savanna R. R.,
it is hoped it will bijerked into quicker ac,
tion.
There are several dried up towns between
gavaftna and Dunleith. There is always a
town on the Mississippi wherever there are
five rods of bottom between the river and
bluffs, Provided there is a ravine by which
the back country can be reached.
Dunleith is, as the monument at the etid of
,_the road says, "The -end' . of .the Illinois. Cen
tral R. IL" It is .a town of `soiree pretensions
and fora Western town is very -substantially
built.
• -Dubuque, on the opposite side oftliiii
is, destined to. make one of the most impor- ,
tent towns on the river, north of St. Louis.—
The next landing is Cassville, on the Wiscon
sin side, Itt' We - month of Grant river., ':
"Clayton City, in lowa,
, comes next;..and - if
ever the honorable.gentleman after whom she
is named, , gets to be President, 'I hope he.will
recommend Congress to , appropriate five
thousand barrelS of powder to/blast away the .
rocks , and giVe her room, foie she has quite,
out grown her fonndations. One cannot.help
1 being forcibly struck as he passes along with
the great importance to the cetintsy ih the
1 interior of having an outlet to the, fiver,' by
I seeing every ravine filled by a town. .
The next landing of any importance is Gut
1.
tenburg, a German town on the lowa side, of
Lfifteen hundred inhabitants:
Nexticomes "McGreg,ors Landing," and
it is a landing and, nolhingefse. there is no
room fora town, but the bank is lined,. piled I
and jammed with all sorts of merchandise,
dewed to the . interior and Minnesota.
.Then. comes Prairie. du Chien, ancient, dull
and sick7y. A Rail Road running from Mil-'
wtutitie terminates here. It is a:-Military sta-
BM
There are several other landings, the most
i'mportant a which are Lansing, in Iowa;
Brdwnsville, in Minnesota, at the mouth of
Root river. " The Root River' Distriet
Office is at preSent)ocated here, but. is
: to be removed the first of June to Chatfield,
seventy miles up Root Rivcr.. Only a very
.small portion of Minnesota,• and that along
the Mississippi, haS ever been in -market, and
all of that has been taken that is worth the
_ MANDEVIIIE, M. T., Ntay 21, 1856.
lafEssis. Enrrous:—Frorg Winona' I took
. the valley of the Rolling Stone back into the
:interior. • For ten miles the'land.is 'general
-1 too rough fur the plow, yet there will be
.me fine farms in the valley, also many
oil's. As 'travelled along, the snakes which
the cold weather had long kept denned up,
were out. sunning themselves in' great -num
berS, and for a while I amused inyself ) by kil
ling them ; but at fast found the /job too
great, and passed ob. • Ail I saw were his
sing adders,-though rattle snakes are - said to
be plenty in the summer. ,
~
• ' After going ten miles, I Came out on to the
table lands, where a better country met my
eyes.,.. ,
-Nbriattona is on the fort fourth degree of
North Latitade. I have veiled in a rig
-
zai _ tilretion lacic - fkom that place, eighty'
aY
miles. from the er, nd here is my impres
sionof tbii,coyntry.:' ' • • ..; . .
The boil is more variable than in Illinois
orIoWa; Often on a' single quarter
. Section
• • .. .
may be, found; dee, black ipam, stiff,yellow
„clq, and , white _sand ; so • that, t‘iken as a
t
whole; it far from being ea rich as ; in thoie
_States. , et it is Very good, freefioin stone
except it-here the rock' crops out at'the edges
of the btuifs, . s. The surfiiee,iS relling, f litit not
hilly, except along. the_larger,streams.,, , On
almost every quarter:section there -is lia. :or
more fine- apringsosrge Clear - and...eiolijo--
Yg I natieed in veiy pinny instaneeilhit at,
i ter running a short distance, the streams
..`,_. 4:.0:-Ot,-4:ig:4:16.6:N....Ak6...0m:N.c.t.-.A:.0'-ail'Ol*::::.:6:A,
would sink-entirely, which I attributed to the
rock being liras. I saw vast number of sink
holes; so common in all limestone tountiies;
and in several there were large springs gush-
ing out' half ,way down their sides mid Aink.,
ing at the bottom. Of good timber I didtot
find more . than . I should in travelling in llli
noiithe same distance ; but Oak Op e.
/ Dings are
abundant, furnishing plenty of wood fur fuel
and fencing, though 'worth little for- building
purposes. 'So have a settled conviction that
Minnesota has a 'poorer soill than her south
ern neighbors , but is altogether better sup-
plied with stone ; •vccod, and water'
Immigration is gc?itig on at aisurprising
,
rate. More than thirty boats run between
Galena and St. Paul,4ll of which go loaded
with passengers. On the DuVuque and St.
Paul staae•road, l'eminted in . e day thirty
/1"
sOen 'covered 'emigrant wagims,• all bound
kir Minnesota. •- It iviifficult toiind one Min-
rUld sixty' acres' of land together that - would
make a decent:rant without also finding a
cabin and settler, anywhere within fifty miles
ppi are - sea t t ere d all
over. Towns are springing up veryfak—
Mechoical..laber comrnands high prices'; and
aniline tenths of-the inhaWants have; come
last year and' this, tilt:Y . have - as yet been able
to add:little of nothing to the•stock of Provi
sions, in Consequence of which every thing' of
that nature haS AO 'he' bought, at exorbitant
prices,i•Of piovision specul4ok Pork is
thirty:dollar:s per:barrel. Very many of the
cattle driVen 'in last season died during 'the
winter and spying; Which last has been very .
backward, cold, antl y wet, - but is now warm
and fine. Corn-planting has_just begun:
Settlers who go Alto the country now will
generally do better to:piislibaek where•choice
locations are yet to be ft - Mild than to
,take
fifth Choice . nearei
• The climate I judge to be, in Southern Min
nesota,,about the same as that of.Susqiiehan-
na County.
It may be-Of service to some. to state- the
method of acquiring land where it is' not yet
in Market. And first by Pre-emption : which
as the pafng into the land Office of one dollar
and twenty five cents per acre 'for the land
pre-empted the amount of which eannever.ex
ceed one hundred 'acid sixty acres, upon the
payment .of which money a bond'ik-given for
a patent to be issued'w•henever thelhnd Comes
into tuarket. It is necessary,
.before it pre.
emptiOn will be granted, to prove that the
persou claiming: it has a comfortable house
and other improvements on the land and that
he is not already the owner of three hundred
mid twenty acres of land prior : to 'this. Sec
ond :by Claim, is where'a person resides up
on- the land and improves it. By .proving
the same, ten days before the land comes in
to market, the settler has the privilege. of
coming in and payc-ing for die land before it is
thrown into open Market. Any amount of
fraud s and false swearing is Perpetrated ky
speculators and those. hired by them. Yet it
is a risky business, tor' if proven the guilty.
party` loses blth his land and. money. Such
things give rise. to a vast amount of litiga
tion.
- Louisville Journal condemns,
'prci . pr er ms, the dastardly assault of Brooks
on Sumner, and expresses a hope that the for:
vier will be expelled. In 'the course of its
article on the subject, speaking of Masssehu
setts and South Carolina; it relates thafollew
ing anecdote '' .
A pitched battle has long been raging be
t Ween the champit'ins of these two States, and
generally the harshest and most offensive lan._
cruoire has comefrom,* South Carolinians,
who don't like to be . .outdone - inanythincr.—
What 'Sumner • may- hive said about 'Sena
tor Butler we knowonot, but we think that
the old Senator, who is qtilte as, fitry hearted
as he is white headed, would - scorn the thought
of letting any younger matt take a quarrel
witli:an abolitikOst ofrAtis hands. .We: hap
pened to be in session of CmCgressdurltig rifle
of the night discussions of all-manner ofSlave
ry questions. Judge Butler, who is really a
(7entleinan of many fine and generous person
al qualitties, had become exceedingly elated
rota friequent visits to the Senatorial Restau
4nt. Sumner was commenting on the expul
h.,
sa , of . Mt..H rre
oar, a vet eitizeriof lia.s
sac,ettA from the limits of Smith Carolina;
but h 6 iid not tnen;on South Carolina's name.
Rtukr interrupted him by asking in a
fierce . - i• "Does he mean Smolt Carolina ?"
Striener l pmfteeded without 'noticing the inter
ruption. ".. demand," - exclainied Butler,
starting again 1 ,1 his feet, " whether he means
South Carolina; tVr; if he'does, let him "say
•
andl will give hint something to remem
ber me.and South 'Carolina as long as he lives."
Sumner still proce*d quite imperthbably,
'bestowing no attendee, upon his excited op
portent just in front of him. " Does he mean
.M••••••• =mom ••••••••••••••
3 J
MONTROSE, '.t.l-TITRSDAT„ JUNE 0_9,18:6.`]:
SpOh 'Carolina ejaculated Butler for. the
third time: " Yes, Ido mean oath - Caroli-
nit," thundered Sumner with - rill:lre spirit than
\we had•thought, an abolitionist could posses.s.
ile . ,finished his speech without any further
interruption, and Batter rose to reply, but
the fine old South Carolina-gentleman was
too far gone to be half,iegual to theAretrien
dods- occasion, • -
nrAt tat Indignation meeting recently
held at Cambiidp, Mass. oii:the assault on
Senator, Sumner, the Hon. Joel Parker pre
sided; assisted by Hon. Theopilus Parsons,
Jared Sparks,, Henry W. LobgfelloW, Profs;
Fulton and fleck,' Dr. Worcester, Judge
Phillips, Jos. T. Buckingham, and others.---
Eroquent speeches were made by the Presi
dent, Dr. Blair, Theophilus . krsons, Prof.
Felton, Rev. Mr. Huntington, and
.11. H.
Dana, and appropriate resolutions passed.'
VirThomas D'Arcy McGee wrote 'a let
ter to the President of the Democratic Na
tional Convention at Cincinnati, 'demanding
the' - expultion.pf . the murderer Herbert , of
California, who is one of the delegates. No
notice Was taken of it,
3'oijti64l:: .. ise!Ordip
We,.:o4WMPTitil,;ol6. following 4rtie lo l frOr4.
the : Richniqnd.,,F f n.qturor, those:, riorthern.
ed4ors w1iP 4 04 7 -tiel gum!, lth 4eetn- 1 4 1 - I Wneces : .
- • -
°sag diSplay fe01.1 2 ,..:in06
!. laccv re :
•
gard .to the; ontrage . connaitted qn.
ner. No-, doubt they 11l find:insnqh a
mauifeStation of opinien as ~} i 4ey (tan consci
entiously Approve: ~ ~1
StibLNER.I.DISCIP;.I,II.---I.,tHE. NERD
' R.1.7i. IZEMEDY.-A few SouthHEn jotirnalS, af
fcciing an (..eliisive refinenlnt of feeling• or
regard. for the , prOprietiei of Official -inter
cqurse, unite with: the Ab(isliWa: papers in
e9ndeulniug.the cluistiseu:Lent inflicted upon
Sunnier by.the, Hon. - P;. , }rooks. We
I have no patience with thesi.. niehly 7 mouthed
Pharisees .of the Press: Vihy not speak out
and declare,nt 'onee that rdu Ail!, shocked by:
the'brutality bf a slueholding ruffian!' It:.
• is much moke:planlyio sdOptlhe violent vo
cabulary of the' Tribune, than'' to . insinuate
disapprobation meek in the aceentS' of a con
. .selence-iiiiittith saint.
_
"In the main, the iresii :of.' the South .ap
plaud- the, conduct of mr,J.)3r.)09,
_without
conditioli or limitation.
..9ur approbation at
least is entire and iitireserv,ed. We Consider
the: act good:in. conception: better, in execu ,
tion, and' btist'of all in'coilseqiienee. ' TheSe
vulgar Abolitionistsirr thez'Senate are7getting
above themselves. .TheY tiive ligen iniiored.
until they tbrget . their poSition. ,', They have.
grown saucy; and dare to Ire!impuderit to
gentle Men! ' .'Tow, they are. ' L a,' low; mean,
smirvy Set, with some li !le' book- learning,
but aeutterly 'devoidof:spirit or - honor - as a
'pack of Curs,. - Intrenched ehind "privilege,"
they. lauey-They can 'slant pr the South and
insult its representatives. n?th ' impunitY.;
The' truth is, they have lten suffered to runt
too long without;nbllarii.''': they must be
, t)
lashed into subMislrion, utimer; in 'partic
ular,- ought to lias - c;- nine... d-thirty early
. ev-1
cry-morning. .He a great. strapping, fel
low, and. conld' stand the enW hide beautifully.
• Brooks. frightened MM. aid at the first 'blow •
of the cane ' he belloWed like a' ''biill; calf.:
There •is the blackguard Wilson, an ignorant
Isiiintick. cobbler, . swaggering in excess of
muscle, 'and .absolutely dying. for ii , beatiini..
Will not somilii - Ay take him hi liiiiidl•. Hare
is another Inigered : faced, SW - eating. Seeim- .
drel, Whom sorne•gentlernAri should kick and
!:cuff untillie, abates something of his inipii-
L.dent talk.: 'These iiie 141tf' perpetually abu
sing the pcoplh''and representatives of the
' South for tyrants; robbers,, ruffians. adulter
ers, and what net. Shalt we stand it? . Can
gentlemen sit Still 'in the 'Senate And Flous,e
of Illipresentatives, under air-incessant stream
of denunciation from -wretches who' avail
themselves 'of the. privilei of place to in
dulge their 'devilish passions with impimityl
In the. absence of an adequate law; Southern
gentlemen must protect ;their. own
,honor and.
feelings.. 'lt is an idle mockery to challenge
One of these scullions. .1 It is equally useless
to atteMpt to disgrace them. • They are in
sensible. to shame, and can be brought 'to roa
son only by -au applicationfof cowhide or
glitta perela. Let, them 'Once understand
...that for every vile word spoken against ' the
South, they will suffer so intirly stripes, and
they will soon . learn to ,behave themselves
like decent doas—theVi can: 'never be gentle-
L-, - i
men. •-• . _.
Mr: Brooks has ipitiated ',this salutary dis
cipline, and he deserves applauSe for the bold,.
judicious nviner in which he chastised the
scamp Sunlferl . It NV s a proper act, done
at the proper'time,.an in the proper place.
Of all phices en earth the. Senate chamber; the:
theatre of his vituperative ',exploits was the
very- spot gwre Shmner should have been
made to suer for his violation of the deem
-cies of decoNua debate, and for his brutal
`denunciations of: a venerable statesman. It
was literally and . entwely :proper: that he
should be stricken doWn and beaten just be
side the desk againstwhich' he leaned,when
he fulminated his filthy'Utterances 'through
the Qtpitol. It is idle to talk of the sanctity
of the Senate chamter,siruie it is polluted by
the presence of suchfelloWs as Wilson, and
Sumner and Wade. They have desecrated
it:'and cannot now flyito it.as to a sanctuary
froM the lash of vengeance. - •
"We trust 'other gentlemen will foll Ow-the.
example of Mr. Brooks, that so a curb may
be impos - ed upon the truculence and audaci
ty of abolition speakers. llf need be, let - us"
have a canbig or .coWihiding every day:. If
the worst comes to the Worst, so much the
sooner. so much the betto.." •
Ii . ,
0. C. L.
. A GirtiTEß-PPI;TER 'WALL G THE . EVI- ,
DEN . CF, AGAiNST H,14. 7 T1 Buffalo Republic
gives the following deco .of the transactions
of a txmnterfeite ,at City, hone day last .
Week : "The individual had passed a counter
felt bill upon Mr, Flint, 'the Treasurer. of the
theatre, who, procured bislarreSt, and convey
ed him to the box office to!be searched. As he
entered the office lie pia, his hand in his pocket
and took something thercifrom—supposed to
be a roll of bills--Whichrhe quickly thrust
through the. ticket winnow
,to a person on the
outside, probably a Confederate. The person
fled, and althOugh the - officers pursued fiiin
they Were unable to capture' him. Ahout
this time the fellow observed the bill ,that hip
had ,pa.s , zed tiplat .1 1 1 r; Flint lyipg .on the
counter,'md with it. rapidly and ease that as
tospishett all Who saw- hint, seized 'and swal
low'ed itl. Ile - was ithen - searched, but no
-tetinterfeit . moriey wag: fontirupon him. A
. hand Som e. sum' of good honey, and a . valua
,ble gold watch, were found and retained by
the. officers. Ike w 11.4 locilied up for the night
and taken to. RocheSteri next morninir—be;
with his 'confederates, wing e.senied from
the officers there." ! • ! •
AID FOR KANBAS. - A cOrrespondent writing
from Chilgo says: •-•.-Thendjotirned' meeting
of SatUrday night for the 'finther considera
tion of Kansas affairs and ratification of the
Republic= ticket, was- the largest.ever held
in Illinois. it was rc. , solved to send five. hun
dred settlers frOm Illinois to XL'ii4SZtfirt and
$15,000 'was subscribed for that purpose.
A committee Was aPpointed to procure fur
ther subtwriptions and taketharge of. the ar
rangements. . 1 : . •• q :;
r R - enntor Ticnittntll'hati prqtlYelltabil
which hewillisnon Subraiti to -chi'
Lion of the Senate, proposing,. with a ( * r iaitiof
the restoration of peace in Kansas, to annex,
that .Terrltory l to, -I , 4ltbraslca7r.thet .414tus ?af
all the officers of Kansas, and all,the lniv4
supposed laws, to cease,
NMI
L: • The Herbert ,Oaset -, , -
• We clip the following froni.tbe Cincinnati
Times. at will be seen that the Delmiertitio
i.
party.hern alretuly, to see lieakera ahead :
__. i ,
TO THE fifimanzas OF THE DEmOCEATIC :CATION
- . zr . AL CONFEHTIO/L ' - 1 -
• . - lin .NASSAU STREET, New York, } '
. i", ,May 80th, 1856:
GEFreiStiLEN :—A word
than
in time is
tie
'said to worth 'more than gold, and I beg
to offer you such a word, by favor of the
Cincinna i ti press. . You will have-tie your
door, I still hope not on you'r benches, a dele
gate frotp California, (Mr. Herbert) on whose
hands smokes, the' blood of it poor country
man' of pine. by birth, "lately triurdered'in a
public btel at Washington..: I - address you
a simpll straight-forward question 7 . —do - you
mean tat admit this man a seat in your Ccin
ventionil _ 1 hope, 1. - sincerely hope, you do.
not. Ite is now under heavy hoods to Stand
his trial for the murder of Thoth _s Keating,.
and if he hai not decency enough to stay
away, you, knowing-all the insulting:and un
justifialile eireirmstances of the cese, ought to
have f4tling enough to ; keep4iim out. -
I am, known to several of your numlier,
and thlugh' never personally engaged in any
Presidential canvass, of the three' 1 have wit.;
nessed iin.the Unite States, there are those
with- yOu; who can certify that?Sll, my prefer
enceis have _ hitherto ,been Democratic, and
my action accordingly..` In 18521 was among
the firSt, the most earnest, Sed I believe not
the leaSt efficient in resisting the artful- at.
tempt to make Mr. Pierce answerable for the '
catholic test in the New Hampshire Consti
tution. The "campaign", 'publications I .: of
that day, issued from the offices of the Boston .
Post, Albany Argus, and Weshington Unjon,
have recorded, bow
_ready. for' the . mainte
nance of a great principle,- in .:common with
the 'lass of citizens to which I belong, I Was
then found to obliterate the - memory of loth
-vidual wrongs. ' -
Precise v in the same spirit, -
l it I now ask .for
Mr. Herb 's exclusion. ' Since 1852 a fierce.
social war :as been made-on the adopted cit
izens. So, long as tt vas confined•to sectari
an presses_ and midnight mobs, we endeavor
ed to resist it with a firm forbearance. i But
when a Democra "c.inettiber.OTQigres and
delegate to your. nvention,'shoots, before
breakfast, aIA oiking !Owefuse he resent
ed being, called a ±-d--d Irish son or a: b--41,'
it. is full time for us to ask you, do you Mean
to separate that man from your rariks,onto
overlook notorious fiefs, or to vindicate the
equality of all classes of citizens high and
low, native and foreign-born, in practice as In
theory ? Looking anxiously fur your deftis
iUn to your proceedings Ii remain, gentlemen,
very respectfully, your Obedielt servant, ,
I'noltAs D'Aticr McG,se.
*.t . l
-; • .
„ I .
Ors 4 "CiTICAITITTIONAL 'OMITS.” .-1116. “111-
stitOoli guarantees "the; libarty of Speech
and'of the Pre.ss." _Within.
; the: past week
two Printing Offices have ' ; been destroyed by
•catcricinade", for exZreising the one,'and;a Sen
ator in Congress Beaten. 'down and Manaled
in his seat, for availing himself of the !other.
The Constitutimi declares. that "the right
of the - People to keep and bear arms shall
not be infringed." ! Within the presentmonth
persons acting_uhder. .Federal'autlibrity have
-forcibly- seized two Hundred stand of;
. artns
and a field-00c belonging to citizens Of 'Kan
sas, and turning them upon their laWfirl own
, ers. have driVen•thein'frOm their homes.
, There is ;a clause in the CoustitutiOn de- H
Blaring that4'no person shall be deprived of
life, liberty or property without• due process,
of law.". The grass has: hardly grown over
the graves of Dow.and Brown, the one shot,
'and the other'.chopped, to, pieces by .o'.ederal.,
•permission; and Lawrence has been
. reduced
to a heap of smoking ruins by Feder#l com
mand. Such is American Librerty. in May
. 1856.. Douglas' threat. is fast becoming a
reality. •
. 7 We are being "subdued." I
The Louisville Jou rnai twill. not ad!,
mit the excuse offered fOr. Abe ruffian prooks;
that the personalities in Sumner's 'speech jus
tified the cowardly tiSsaillt. It: says ithat the
personalities of , Sunaner's _spew!' Werb
worse than the speeches. of. Douglas are,,bab- .
Runny; and that they; 'had the advantage :of
being expressed .in a , style of schOarShip
greatly in contrast with the •sljpshod hillings
gate of the Illinais• Senator. (The Journal is
not surprised thatthe 861ith Carolina people
approve of Brooks' cowardly andbrutal con
duct. • The, reason given : • - 1 • . : •
" There, Were* twice' as • many • ti.aitors in
South Carolina in the days of the Re : Volution
as in aVy other State in proportion to popu,
latiOn,land we think • that ht* soil-as a gene
ral rule grows 'worse Men sow. than it did
theo.” '
•
The ruffian Brooks. Will have to go o
Louis
ville and challenge Prentice; if he is akibitions
of being the championlof South Carolina t -
ries..:
EASILY SATISFIED.—J - Adyiet r S &Orli Wash
ington state that Brooks is. erfe'ctly
-satisfied • with .General' W,ebb's letter. If a
Man . -can be satisfied - With a severe) excoria
tion—one where:tkneries are laid Tare and
steeped in poison,lllo Mr. Brookslrnust be
eminently. satisfied., If. any . One L .pleased
with a complete aisiOtion and analysisof
his owneOundrelisni; Mr. Brooks must ex- .
perienco eesiatie sensations: If an oxhibition
of sheer brutality, so drawn as to excite'.the
scorn, contempt and' Iderision of Intl good
men can be productive of ,pleasurable ono.
tions to the - perpetrator, then the SOuth Car
olinian;, Must realize' perfect transports of
joy! • I
,
Three companies, of U. •". troops,
numbering 280 hien, passed throligh
burg on-Monday, delitined for. -Kansas 'and
New: Mexico : l'Thciy were under Command
of Lieutenants Du .Bois and Dierrill, •and
comprised companies A< and 13 of the :2ao,
and company , F of the ist dragdotii—the
first ,two to be sent= t 6 Fort'Orfteily;
sag, and the latterto BantiVieein Nei,Jdeic.
A MURDERER SOREEEINCI rt FFIAE:":--
Amon(' House' those in' the' Housf Representa
tives who'' voted .NAVOIf the raising of a' coin
,roitteo to itivestigatetho 11841104 Ott Senator
Sumneb.,`4?as VUALIP T. HERBEWL the
niuraerer 91 the Irish waiter, liea!ing.i— elev.
T 4911444 # 4 O OS: ci*q l Pilell
neart,is the m 9,0. tpreeteat' thing in .:tho ''
world-4q fact, ii perfect honeycornb=liiit'of
•setts. ware,
,lER & smrr-H
,
• ''S ne=l„ , :.TZ .11 "it/1
,:i" {FRA
-- s- -
From the Ettstet T i ( mni:. , ;
eVERT,O4 rimpp* . .. ,
_. V ERY , O$
to /140/ ByMers t If ! sq,
:,.. -: -:-.: LETTER TiO.:TY.•;_--;:- :..._.:.:. -.—.: --_,..
A : wo w iths you about. the-Constitution ~
Capt.-Ry derS; introductory' tO my • fourth',
i
letter. studied eulogy . Wotildbe as mauk- ,
ish and', - t Or.Pl*,aa a school - bny s a:YOUrth.
of July 'ation,! or ii . emnpliiiiiiit - to - the. sun'
;'for its eneficent • rays:72 ' ' NOMPblit , tii ' mad
man; No in or South,. would delinerately.dis- •
solve th Vnion. • Its blessings are:urispealc-
able, an yet many men of ardent -tempera-,
• „rnent, b - ond, the; line of . discretion, • use' ii-;
langueg' and adoPt, or advocate, reeastireS, l
which tepid to.'endianger it- At the. South it
was..onc4,avowerliin high stations, ” Liberty - ,
first, and then thSCOnstitutkin," Even the
eminent Berrien report - 6d to have said "I
have ben taught to regard the'Union Of these
States , as essential•to their safety. . But there
is a strngerneed I name' It 1". .For the.
bleSsed nstitution,Of course: I A ;late Rich-.
m ond aper, leader of the .faithflil in the
`; Moth r of President's," ..prOelaimed 'that - if
'Congres refused ' resedadmission tri - / kanSas, ash a"
Slave S ate r (notwithstand the; Atchison end
Stringfe)low outrages of all Law and right,
human and divine, to intpad.uea ittlierejthat
act wo . f d be of itself .a djasolutien of the;
4
-Union,', d Mason ariaDixors line be the ei,
,
tablishefi bOUndary.' By whatauthority that
paper spoke,:kvetwe not infernied. 41-eorri
prahend:thnthreatit amounts to this, ":Rep.;.
resentsiyes • in, Ccingress from : New- York,
hoWev: r clear. may, be your convictions .of
dutY; : t 'Jodi' oath- 2 4e the:will ()flour Con ,
i s
stituen , te'the ultimate and pernianent In=
terestrqof the whole Union - on this matter, re
"nem*, you have no volition,-no freedem,of
opinio' at: action ; .411 must , be, violated at
the be es of the Slave . power, and you. must;
;
act tb . traitor andieraveti, 'Or we will. 'rend
' the' bo di of Unicin - asunder"' ' This 'sounds,
to say the least, - very , strangely: Are these
gentle en in earnest, or ylo they deers_ a ma
jority fus so timid that they ihaVe*onlY to
shake tlie threatening; lash and we.will obeys
1' If tof fi cial . Paper at Richmond is regard-:.
dit
'.ea' pealtinebyttuthoritY and is.
this 'is.'
delibe to threat of Virginia to New Ycirk,it
is .hig time for. us to be lcioking about na;—••
The i nstitution is ours,,,and .: wg. 4i i 1 . 'piing'
.to ithile:there.is - 4 plank left.
~Turned a,
Way - from Washington the iric i piiry initiSt be
met, jvhere will the Free States fix'theirSeat
of government *ln •Ithe language ;of -.lkfr.
Web ter " where shal t! We gel"- UnderAhis
menee will not the most ardently .attaebed
M
'en s of ''Washingtoir be fOreed to . consider
1
whe er it'is Prudent Ito lay
."Ont - oink single
penn ' more.t.o . improve, or adorn, a - Capitol
for ' irginia, And- her new Government; from
t we are to be , -by , her, unceremonious
- ly a d ruthlessly riv.en ?
Representatives
present
fileit ties of travelling ;the Representatives of
New ' York
.can go to pincinnati, Indianapolis,
Det oit, Chicago or lowa City, with less dif
fictilf y than,: forty years ago, they could get
A
to ashington. . Will all these discussions,
fore d upon the, country by the Richmond
papr, tend, to 'the _rise of,, property •in ) the
1
Dis rict, or on- the I - Virginia or Mnryland•
shoes or the Potomac 1 - The deadliest ene
my f the Federal. District and .• of Virgin's
cou a hardly • inflict a 'More serious, perhaps
flits .wound, to the interest of both,, than 'to
ass ite a position which of . necessity must
sha'e public confidence in the Continuance' of
W hineon•as the seat of the Federal' Em-:
. pri ..:, - ISuppose.the 'North drivort;away, the
rep ration made, will not Virginia' see that
Rol e Must go to - Constantinople 1 That the. ,
So t here Empire innst haVe a more central
Ca itol, that the Southern-most healthful pos
itio on , the Mississippi_ will-he the , place
pit lied upon:. ...tinder the startling -view. of
a', o st' to be deprecated contingeitry,.will not .
no hers
. fartners now buying laud extensive
ly a Virgiiiia,'having reference to the grow
in' markets. in Washington, atop:their 'pur,
ch es t . Who will 'tiny City ' tots, build and •
pit l ied
rove, when they are-' taught; from 'Mai
in nd that the permanence of the Union,: and.
'Xi sequentl y the continuance of. the seat . of
1 vernin ent 'on the Potomac, 'depends,mi
',. igress voting to endorse the Atchison and
tringfellew outrage 4 '?-- • Let the' responsi
lity rest yin the aggressor , my, give us. fair
• y, and estoperpeftia to'l , Yashington - ns the
tiof government, and 'We will thake, her
queen cf :Cities. . ' • .
r the , :onstitution, Captain Rynders, in
:ad of a homily, let me tell you 'a story.
i o
)nr - late eloquent and orthodox Dr. Mason in
tisitingßoston, desired to display his almost
ar equalled powers of oratory, and, the Bos
tonian polished Arians were equally ,desirous
ohearing.hitn. But' those con fl icting point s
o doctrine ! . The matter was - compromised
bf
an.agreernent .On his part, that in his: ser,
;lion he' would not touch the ' distracting
tlietne.l, All were instructed by his wisdom
aid elutyped by his masterly display of oi
-1
a ory. . 4 .9ut there ,was a path, not unforbid
dpn in terms, open before him. • At the close .
4 the parting hymn : the Dr.„iii full rind .sol
rpen intonation, took them - all. by surprise : by
rbading the Doxology :' -
.., ~. ,
,1 - • "To God the Father—Gad:the Son,
,-. And God the Spirit, Three in One,
• • Be honor praise and Glory giveit -:.:, •.,--
, By all on earth and•all in Boayna. 7 •,• I,-
. .".Ans blistered bathe tongue.ihat wilLnOt
y 14
.Alnen.!' ,--,. - • • ,f ...,
- : . . .. .
So, Pray. I, that thie,ConStitution ,and:-this
byUnion of . independent 'States, boinid
by - it' into' one Nation and enk,-.people,'May
last till ':— • •.- --‘:f '• • - I; r ..—.'
Corneli
PI
se
th
The see.growsdim with age,.• - •
nature . •
." And bl i s tered bi ."tlet! (onpue that hot
tsay
}-3,4 what? 'or •of.. whet "issNew
[ 1 1Ork• thee she . should claim ~i►r'tiddible voice
in
thie matter ''of!" State . rights'? ~-T htit;"she
I ;should presiutpe'. to ..taker a tend ~in,,resiOattee
!to the•,. scheme , : of .iityery,tinto t the
:..States now: Free t
L: A most -- .*tritordflifttlr•.:pisLoC i r§ 'irei - tdpre
'me.
fEVaii r olotti ititigligCnttitiiceis'ilcit ,• :im '
mn: a :thousand,' it lehelieved,iiras aware of the r '
e strength of the .gior rnStste,,oo4 : es .
this.,atWr is unfolded to, thetp,‘e,Sch: one,
from ; the highest AO the tile4linithie,
j . "-Cstly Onsider that
• • Con tretid :naMbei - e'
Idet4.positton, imposes: 'high' an&
:dta - in:grent.eMergeo cies
would prove, Alike. tOiejk.tpher
Interest :. and - her boner anti whet she-.owenthr
her; sister Stnites;North;
'rem n either silent or`tnneti` x;: `_;:;:s
But, to the :Document..' quote:from - the
00)1 foga thc conveml loin . of-. thei,C41.09.1!,
1111
SZATZ4
1 1.5, 4.41 i 5.41111 , 4;
Br.11"1 - g.
r
tt.o.
-.r .. ~ii' ~
=En
' 1 2.3
Lisl'irs.:-.).L;T:3.
El
r
Effi
':- .?:
EMI
p': t ~ Sri
jrF
piopitftaty-torder: of dietAffllfto s -Vb1:6440 -:
Elelieff heoldfiftetiteSPO
of 1852; whealkii.'lnertsitrtistliOselr, 4 o~
frosted . by. thvirofit
• - "Aikifrisas:'i c .••
Delaware
• F l e si i da r., ,
? e• • .-.• •••• • • 4 . 1•,).Wi1iP
• Texas;;... ' . •-• • • .•'• •
- • 10191 .34
. . 1 4'35;1024 1 .P .
• 000 .'•
• O
.'..;11611-51t,”/
r'•
Virginia ; . L.
• - •• el
Aggregate of 11 - Stittis,': l '..sls
7
• 1*
Vote ot Nevi York,..' . •
" ,
, .
I •
Being 7;135 votes More thati, - all': the '1
,
ers. . . _ .._., ,] ,
. 6 .. ,_ 1 - .4.7., x :, il ;,:„, ~:
But there is another view more astonii!ti. ;-
ing still. In the same-page of- the Coin - inn.:
dium is stated the number , of white malen t .,lti
each State; 21 and over: '' :- 1 ..1• 1 :-- . 4 1 1 ,
'
Alabama, .. :-... . : 1 . - . .2.•... - . 1 920110';' F-
Delaware, ... . :'..1....: ..`. :,.11,00 ' :
Florida,. . II; .. . ..-..: ... , ..P..... - :;1,2.5 . 1 1:''.
Georgia,.:... - . : .... :. ; :77...112,116 -- ''
Mariland;..... ::'. -,-:: .'.'100,35t,',
8
• Mississippi,........; .-'....-:.^:'.: 1 7g,94313'.. - ,
* ' , Teg5,....... - .'..; .--...c.' - .,.. - ; - 4.1,9 ;I
-i ...- Logisiana,... .. . . 1 :.. '.. ; : 2 i ::.8411;5 ft -.!
~ ~,
Virginia, . : .... ', .'..... : :..,:.':2
.of , iF - :
The same States except North " -" -- '1' t '
qtrolnia,. : .'... :... ;'. :.. '.. - : --- ; 51 90;1 1 $1:'' - '
In New York,: .. ;': .".;.'; . :;•'; 4 .'2.8.19,38if ''-'
95,!31
,
excess in Ne*.York nre.thiliirliniei'*'7''''
- And - are we to-I3e brovi;beit4-tittiinWholi- -
ing the knee in' submithsibit; -by Sielltdolik
Georgia, or the Kansas CiinsPiratorti l'l''
.:-''`j-
One view more: :' I - -.: —:,', ----, Il .....-
'',
1850, whole whiteliopulatin'in' ;'`-'+' -
tbe non : Slaic; holding State*: - 13,03%0541 . ' .-- „
Sarno in the Slave Stater:.'l';6,222;lr 4 '
41
--- •:--:- -,
IMMO
. 1
Less than one half 'white
Divide thwhole by':.;
'6,22241a
Whith in SUiie,Stntei,„
. ..
' . t . !, ;,-.- 2950 68 :,7. , . . -... , :t.
less than a third: And yet-th*Ptitteigifit
30 Senators out of the 42: - ' i' - ' ' .I - .`.: .
The 10 Sup3st natitedy -.Virgini - nineluded t ,1.
that have 44,267 lesi : white persons , , ti'atiel -.''
over, than New York ) giVer2O-Vtalted i ,Stiites . e .:;:' 7 . •
Senators to 2 (only two)
.from. New' - York. , •;.-'-'.
1 he 11 Stafes s moited, Virginia litelola,
that gaVe in the great contest fiti President ' i
in 1852, 7,l2sviess votes than Nevi: Yaa, .
give= to the United States Senate 22 Senators
to 2"( only two) from New York:: ' ''' r
, IM" 40P" WTo Preseryi and j extend --, !,
this most unjust and flagrantly 'ini4uitions. - - _,..';',4
preponderance of power in - the Set* . is - the
f
Object, and has been, from -the' iiegifinine of -'---'.
, the Nebraska ontra3.' ' ' - '' -'"'''' r -- I_''
A' single additional representatifelin - I'lete -
lower House, is to i theta Ofcbrapttiatiii4 , !,-_,„
little moment: ' A Slave Stateili,wartted;no ' .4'
matter how small
. 'in population , isltif twb • -:i.
Senators, , the'. immortal Stringfellow - Who t,
throttled Go./..Reeder, - fer one, and ariother -,
likt him, it his match call he !blind this Aside - ' - .4.... !...
,of a nameless . place.; f: ': ; ' - ! : . **l '' 7
The two would be . tamirebly - qtaliflealte _ -,''s.-;-'
)
brow-beat the Senate'tind' k: . :4 tbelletiatiiii. . - ,e , '
1
from New-York. Too liiipoitaat'..th''
light of or Oise' earelestely by;lint , cifthaii ~r
solemn and-Weighty importF:ieTATlC"kiii i - , ,
-
at issue . Fair and., equal - tepilditin-ft .- [
the-foundation of all OtitigtepnblicatOinsCitit- ' ...
tiorjs. Everytdeviationfrbwit is Oiteitifti-
wards despotism': ' What islliiTioOd'Af
Lilliputian States being hatched in the hot
bed
of Siaysy, but the - corrupting , odious, ,
old Sarnneclose-borough scheme, "
which b e .., -,, , f .
[kindling good sense at England -Would* - , :t
'longer tolerate, and her combined aristocracy .
~.,
could' not preserve'? -i . - "1. -- - : - " Ir '. - - I
. . What was the ground worit-'--the'rnist,„er -.„.
moving principle, of the Revolution - 1
..,
_Rep. , '_.f
reiientation—Resistance' le 'being . tattetr or-. : ':'l
governed by la Legislature, over Which ) we , -'; :1?
had no, control.
~ "I . •,. -'. .. : 1 .- --` ---"'"-)- ':: - '7 - 1.:5
- Let it be borne lin Inind,:that the- - p i e : --:',-, i ,
, - ai-,
aim is tai maketheSenate the mast, etgliiiiis," ,
:1 ,- ;' ,l
in the Governtnent. -- '-', . ' -- ' 9l ' ' -': , -.,,z.:1.
MP' i lAgr Theidete'Aible - dodtrine 101_lc- 1.;;;:'
listed -on, that the Priaidentl-twii , thiittirbi it;:.:
Senate concurring 7 -may form - 1014:atiiiitilt - . 7 ' . PS:
any foreio povier, absolutely binding -'," IA;
the Ilouse of Representatives; if fOrActitiy. 11 ,7 '
ment of minions or tens ottnillion.% ci'hr(ll., 3,:: :•.,
dreds of Million 4 no matter—the Hotiecites `..ii4,.
no right to ask ar question,` but' lal,lmiliidlo t-1,
proride , ihe funds.:: Heade l ,rephdltitiptithe .-",
ootion, derived from reason' . and 'titnikti. ''-.f..t
tors, that the-people - were . '
-safe fro' 'iligOtk_ IV,
sion or , imposition, while their itnmediateilfdl , -4 - if
egates hold. the' . purse4trnits: , - , 449.. Cuba *-If r -. 4
might be bOght, witktryie'ittltitittitroieto,pay ~,...
an hundred ' and fifty , oilthonwadoltatiifand 114
•tin4ther, thqt thel Island' illibilld - - torthietthlie I
admitted into the.Ution-aSoll444oinr:ltti4o
States .; with twO; &Or, or ‘sii-43ahateit.49Er 4,.-1
legislate-fiir_New-;YOrk.• ' Aid ar,giVithat l e. -
treaty might ifiliti madeWitlißrittil,'rei*.; ... 2 ~-; : ,, -j
ing, the' African slate trade, lied' itl i til4;', ~- ,
'that vessela froin'etich;:ceintrY: - sho 'lt -h e
- free admission into viol -part' Of bitithrpv. t"-'
tions, with the uhniolested:'riet,tO l dieti46 : ,F,,
-cif their eargoesito whortisorreitnhOtlit et t::
s .;, 1:::
posed to purchase,'
-A;
l
m , ' ~
,„. ... % z . :
.
Ailthis . requires evey - noW, 'le-*cko
calmly, with care, And-; OEliiy 2. ,
ahilitie t-1.-t t:
constiltional•deetritie :- ' A aCce/Itlyll --
''loov‘ltheiwholepeeplikid'eVei3 '*l
ifg a due regard'forits oiftireierfa;
'..' l'.ll, =
ignty aitendepetideCeeirforii4, ' :,?: .
'there is ioi g iaiixistifig'oo - wit etiL ~ - '; j,J-. ~.j
"a President aidtivo•thitita drill& ; `i . . ,„3-.)
trealt,*ith•iirtiliowir;kik‘-fikii*lie.. • ..'" -- .--.4-44
that infidtioui ;ridrifiqt= . iiMitteritii*.' , ! "*,' .- - z°, o l
'control intr idealllegislitikaits l'': l l!" . ,"__.,_____ .:::,,,-4:4,_,
'-' 'Atli:Aker ' 4, iiitiz,leardelf - lietel . i PtiIIINVIIK* Iciii
' , opened bs' - 't.tie!iliiii.loWol . 6d . 'f. , tltilte ";! ~:-..ri
portiOtied'ovvr - bi l iw , sb.thwi .--7---1 .....,,,,.. -
,:.: ; .-pi
i sitor,
except in 9riginatipgroventiebil*Zril
legiiliabitqcoeveiviit4'ilifitithie • lti .',..t,
0 . 46 , 4106 - or public policy IC :- ,:_11(* ) -2. ? .'
'her iale , Representaiii* V i and, tsT '
would net tralize - the Witt draft''.
Culicesslthi4 hi btlirs -dikktlonceithki
rll4
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