,--- i . la sulficient„bis for a Ifonni forauizaticin.- - ,But when tat I s% t ii tion2d .rtgicits. are vrol opted i of a country, legislaiiinticts, a strong and ri ': universal sen m enduing' political Orgaiii ic sentiment, of ; the ls.lortli in 'cry being deep and general, up legislative issues to. egin- ilien becomes it:formid:ible 0 % I 1 Lilted in. the canvass oft. 1848,' • banding the strength aid pow;; eratic party, its standard-bear down on: an issue sin4lar to now forcing .upon,thei coun that resnit in no spirit; c cx -1 it, -for I was then one tof tliv ..s of the veteran Statesnitin Of. after giVing my beSt jettorts, re ealivais, to ,his ~sucts," it 1 heart I received his tinat, do, sentiment is\noti dable political ol irinciples of con n the legislatioi combining with thnent, may forr zations. And' tl reference• to sla when you force bine with it, it ement„ as iiliisti~. when, votwithst, er of the Demoe er was stricken the one 'you are try. I refer to f siltation' or, tad s° ardent supporte Michigan ; and during the entit *as with a sad 63at.-,, . - - i• - -. • 1 i , In that. cant •ss New llaintaire ma* the • only northern.. State. in Which the \Vh , r I and Free-Soil . vote did not-ex . crud the I)elin'X'ratie. And who that knows anything of the 1 real sentiment of tk North, does not ' belieye that. combination. would be augmented a IMUdred fold on this iisne: For-then the.Wltigs Were divided in Sentiment on the.slavery (preition, 'now they are a lunit. . And the .-organization of the Democratic perry having:lost tliot of its power over• Voters, must under tIrN issue; go into a hopeless iniatiriti; in.. the nOrthern titateK The two hundred and ninety, one . thousand voters, who in .1848• separated from their old political a'ssociat'es and partPprgan 7 izations, to i leadi a forlorn hope, would:in! 'my judgenient,-whe i again mustered into Servive . become, .instead of guerrillas, a standrng• ar-. any to Strike down the I staff .:officers - .of. thin Democracy on this issue; as they.did in 1 . 848. The same .conseipieneeSlit seems to me; Must, be the result. Not haVuig approved i of. the. Movement/at thlat ,timif,ll therefore speink-Of it, freely "•as'pltiloopiny teaching, by .eiinnple." But, sir, as an earlyland 'constant Mend of,- this Administration, .I i "desire, the defeat 'of this bill; for its .passage will, iu my ...judge 7 meta, inSure,, beyond a 'doubt, an anti-Adiuiii istration majority in the next Congress. As . ... • .nn earnest and ilevoted.friend of the. 'Deino . cmtie party, to)rwhielitl have cheerfUlly give my best energii_s's fromearliest politieal action, lesire the deftat of this bill ; for its passage_ ' wI I blot it out as a national organization, and leaving but a n j •reClz. in every north .ffn State, it Inill live only in history. As, a lover' of " peace, harmony; and fraternal concord among the Citizens' of the Confederacy, and as a de vetee at - the shrine of this Union, with all its precious hopes to Irian, - I desire the, defeat, ,of - . this. bill ; for its passage will tear open Wounds, not yet healed, lacerate 'spirits already fren • tied, and ." the, bond of conthhinee uhldi unites the two ections of the Unto'} wilt be rent asunder, aid years ofallienailen and ,un kindness-may-intervene before it can 'be re- , 'stored, if: ever to its: wonted tenacity and . strength.. • ..- • - - I I - I would say in all ; kindness t 6 thejlepte- ' sentatives of tW,southinPon this floor, tint if you would strike down the true men. of the North who haveever ; with.manly inti6xibility, • maintained your constitutional rights vo ag,aiiSt all fanatical ass.lults, n have but _ - Ito ' passage - , 1 _ upon them the of this bill at a polit ical ical issue ; and. When,. by your own deliberate act, you have violated a compact. oflifreenioni, , entered•into in good faith by.. your flfliers for thesettlement of coitiictin g !interests;pbse r ved by, them while living,,:and maininined as such . by all s.ections;Of the Union for Moid than - a third a - of century,you will have destroyed the! last breakwater drat standsbet ween.von rights and ~thesurgt df nerflern .Aboli.tio,uism ;and . having thereby ingulfed 'your friOds, you must•be content to bam-your own ..nbsonis - to ita heaving' billows. Is' - a reekles.4 indiffer ence ' , on - yonr,lielnalfito the deep seated con . vietions of the northern mind the I . part .of ....wisdoin ? Iseit for your interest to Ihisin into • a frenzy en an abstraction that „you - '.418im . .t . p. be 'of rip kactierlF bonefit.r. -F6r whet; though you repose in akaucied sc.curity,lliatslasa-last resort, you have a. remedy against Rill aggres sions, real,or initginary,' in ..a dissolution: of the U.nion? ' 'II - elv*4d you Aerii - 4 i greater sectitity.bf making the Ohio river, instead 'of the Niagara, thel line tedivide slave from free territory? .I.low would it rerider,your prop : .eriyany more secure 4 'fixing a 'Meridian line as anationo ' -bolndary along the very bonlers . of- - your print limits ? Sfienrity, sir i 1 a dissolution of thiS Union: It wbuld' be the.lseenrity of . the maiden• . who condeali in her bosom the poignard than in the last-extremity is to take her own life, after it has .drank . th Ilife-bloatf4 the riggress.or.— It.weirld be the security of the - -strong man who, laying hold - on the pillaize of,Gaza, bur ied himself wits 1 liis.foes in a common ruin: It is-the sec.nritYl of despair, enveloped in dark-' _ness and woe. ' For - if ever -the starry. ...banner of this Union shall cease to float—the emblem . of a united Coirfedraey—the last hope of the . oppressed will go out in darkness; and a pall of midnight glom will hang over his future. If ever yonder eagle, torn.by faction and strife, shill fall rent ; .aral dismembered, it will :be . the knell of merf i s politcal -- rig.hts„ the death sigh of liberty 'o 1 earth. If • ever,. in our . na tional disasters,lthis event shall fall Upon . ' us, humanity will..eshionded in mourning,,and gloom will pall the - flitUre of man. li The Americaniis, therefore, bound to this Union• by the glories of, the past'and the hopes . of-the future, bY thelove which be bear -to hi‘offspring,,and the sympathy that throbs: ward' in the heart, of than for the woes Of his . . race. : The Consl'itution and, the Union of If'. • - *Se States, the :proudest Monument , ever reared to the Wiadoni of man, and if ever folly or.fanatieism shrill lay it in the dust,freedmia ; heaVing'ller lasilsigh, May wing her way back . from earth to h Yen: • 'Strike .out this ;last beaeon light, - thi polar star to . giiide the 1 - 13 4tical mariner o -er the troubled watersofrev elution • and • re rui, and his . tempest-tohsed hick, dismantle & and Tudllciless, will sink be-1 neatV the wave:lntid thewinds of heaten*ill hear 'to the end' of the earth the wailino of despair as they owe up from crushed human ity. But,-sir I arbor no such idootny 4ore hoding,s for tie tore of my conntry and raCe. I trust in God at when the angel shall, take .his plae?., with .ne foot upon the land and the other - upon the a, to proclaim the world that lime •is-n , N lon a , =r, the bin p er that waves so proudly o'er us • lay will stilf float out with its proud `motto, ascribed upon its folds in le tersuf living lig t. . - , 1 Sir, this is tli I only :element of discord dr ,cau: . ever.sunder d bonds of this Union; it there is one - me od to ren ler eren this liar less.. .And -that s, faithfully to' observe Ai the compromi and reconciliations ofits coU fllets, - and hence oral banish it forever , fro these galls. • .EGOTION OP' OPPICERS OP 71= GRAO Lona*or ODD 'ELLOWs.- - Thee late electio for offiCer of ih Grand Lodge of the hal liendent Older 'o Odd Tellow. of Pelmaylia,.- - nyt, resulted as - follows : •••• ' Groftlfaster—qiionlas Helm. • ' DCIJOtr' - Gialid Mtister—Lealeb V. Wright. I Grani'llituden*Dr. Francis Condie. tiia 13eiretarir-Wto. Curtis. - F:—', F.., Knox Morton. • Grand Re:lireiett r ative—Wm. Lambert. - 'We . are itifored; that. tle contest was contested in the election. •of Grand SOcreturv, aiid 4.1 tileiefore . re the rote cast for - h.otli e :candidate4. - Ctirtig, 1228 Mr. 131.itrant, 1109: . - • • -1 7,1 - 1 -7- 7-- ----- ,. _ ,\1 ',lmilrost . ..: tmt,tat. ~_. :--4--- 4 . r# Lm,misil'cincuLATtort v ls t NORtHERSTE. N.A. _. - _i=.. ----- t - I .-- -I= -,---7 1 - ----÷ ---- I - 7 - ! -- ' ksE & ALVLN: DM Emit ifs. . Cti_______ ___,...._....`_.. ;....J__ .---- ‘N Thursday,,—----..47.;e17,--1-80,"ra: tit i For WILLIAM /I' IGLER; . .. ,. 1 OFCLEA.IOI.3I4) .C0L7.1:11%.' -1- - For in ' ilge oliSiiitreitie Copm:4 ' 1 - -, • AREMIAtt• BLACK, i 1 .- l . . _ _ i• • , J:n• t.q.).io {SET COs.N'' , N. I I ,4. - • '.. ,i - . , t-t----= • \• , • , .. For Canal ICi4timil.isionco,- • . .. 1_ -; ;,HENRY S. MOTT, ' •. , . , i . ‘- \- OF PD.!: CAPt \STY. ' 1 ' : L - :-----L•40;4i 1 :-.------i•- . lA -if 1; on. I • t te . tt mi o 13 • 1Z • I D . lIEA E U tins !dip US' under particular obl i gations for i 'i!aluable:pub- , - lie! iICIU-11.5.\ 1-i: , ..1 - •1I 1 ; ,T"'°l -41 .i7." ---,-- .:7 1 j • , 1, A r.4.: cl' l he report that Col. I , rollout and is a tty I d. ,Perished in . the Rocky Mountains is 1 , in9Orrect.lHl Ile arrived h iii . New. - . York last NV - 00k. 1 . 11 the '`..Nortllern i . Light And left, for Washitifiien to lay out RtnaP 4 of his e*-11'1°ra .t!.1 1' : , •1 , .i lions. . 1 1 : . ;.• i, i . ) H l---= 4. ' .. ", ! -----. . .1, ie free soil St:del:Convention In pt. at Tiltsburg-laSt Tnday W es't,>ek. 1 , 40 'delegates 1 •- . , . - . i . ~-, , ~.. -,-,. were present. .1.. , ..kvin Ports. of ,Cliester eotin . , ty !Was nominated for GOvernor, G. B. 4R113-'. Dtli of Allegheny for (anal • .confinis'sThitet, and - I Wni., 3t.Sitptinssca, of. Mercer for Su. •1 , i s. • .•. ' l l' ~ • • ; • preme Judge. •. -i' Id - - - i • •!.AI • i ' 47 ---18 " -: : .+-•---- .- ; • Jln tOl,ilais \ pap(*lwc•ptiblish 2Cveto L ‘ . , y . . 1 .111 e sage from Gov. BIC 1 1 14!1, 1 o 'iv h kit we in- j rite the attisntion . of `` the',. 'people,' We think' theldover4. has hitit'With all Iliii; 142-,i4 ;-- - \ and that lid teas laid it l dlii," a_ dead , cOckj in - the pit.,'",. -• .i . ; •'... : ..• ' . 1 • ' f The Bill waslthis : S.Lveral railroad •Coin-' p.i ines and blink cerpt 1 t ations were proSecu ilfor a vi oi , atiOn• Of the Small note-I:1W, at c. seVeral 'tli#erei4 tithes; , A. Bill , Was .passed eci4olidating the several . offence into.: One • i dig tn i h - t . al l oereby the :payment! .of but: one - pdnalty: . 1 7 [ I - • . , • . . . • , .q.:ft The . lSAraskit Bill as , the liiiiise pasrd , tk..enath l. night, The 'folh>wi ng iwas \ !the . vote on_ en n.rosine,' Bill. T 4 Yeas. and nays, :Were 0 not {ordered On its pas, • ls ' " ' 1 , ~,,, 1 .; . leas-Mess,m. Atetia,on, Badt . oer., Benja iniii;.l3l.4:),clhel-id,l llrowit; -Butler,. Cas4, clay, -Da‘iison,.DoUglas, Fitit,atrick, G win, Iftinter, Johnson; lone. , : i klowali Jones, (Tenn.) Mallo 7 ry, Mason', Mertbn,.lllfrris, l!earyp, Pettit, Pratt,..-Ruk, SehastiantSiiields, v Slidelt„ Stu • artl,.l Thoi , f s psea; (liy.)l Itlioinfvsen (N., .1::). Toriiiibs, 04,e,v; Welli ' i• WilliainS, Wright. AYs-4,7443. Alley, Bell, Cl.-.-,ia ClaVtob, Fish,lF.Ocite,..Gileite ' . lianilin; - Jati4.‘s, Seward,, Suniiher, Wade, Wa11:41 • : :-r ''‘ • • , . . - Innuediatelvi on till 1 1 - )si,:pge: a salute _of one huud tied r*li is Wasifired I front ' the Capi tol g - - 1 • •• r' ; rounds. Tie penile - kill' fire a;salute sect. betoher that 911 inAlc, , ; the Capit.cil slialiletolti fonzilaiion • • ; ' • : • 177, 1 •C1 >--- r . , --- , -- . 1., 1 ... . : All Abolitionists. . • I - i i, • ; i • . • ~. During {the dtseussibin in the 'United States I'l•ite last week on th Neliraskaj.l3iil eon . .•.-, - -" •; ' - 1 I. eir-ring in.! the' ' , .1_ , ,.,_,,... , ;-I'/. ,, .. , -, Mr :11, milk a eorgia ,CA itiefollowinglan- glitele in r'ePIY: ti' . Mr.B.i.t. Of Tennes4;ee Who opp+d the Bill . : ... , ... .. . . "lie had nOt , 14eu able vet to see what . reason hall kienigiVen 1.. r the Senator! for v 6-. tine; 4,laino, ibelbif4.:": - • The Senator spoke jef alarm ndiagitation at! the North; This was , alfoge forl i ,the act of . Abolitionists. ',lt had , 1 1 no , t#ror for those gallant Men from the North who ivot4fOrithisThill. 1 SUChexeuse: would, lie no vii44atien for al,'ennessee Senator.— The, - iboli_tionistS. were laughed .at at home and teVerVivliere else." ' . l, .1 1 i , ... . i 1 • ' • -We pr+irnethe honorable Scriatorbeliev -0 and relit ,Wlii i.t, he uttered. • We have no .401114 that t' 6' ',great majority cif Southern ruluat Was iington really feel that the pep ', pie ; ref thelN t rtli care nothing for 4.114 repeal of-he - 31iSscrbi ClimprOniise----Care :nothing for the infringement of .',northern • rights eon tai raij in ili, Bill—care \ 0 nOthiniT! 'for the :faith , essiies i s :fth,ose Representatives,. Who have turn 1101(4 ack - f\ on the free spirit and man ., - ly sttirrient .of !the' tiorth-4-efir.e nothi ng • t• . though th l . ree•labor,or the - north shall be .- • ' pro:Ana - ed. by the defiant, anit'af the geiieral 1 governrrie!t,,larid degraded by reVoltingassO- 1 ciations th the - negro race; in its hard struts- 1 • -, 1 1 - • • - - , gle tp rna 1 e Ifor itself, a; home On 'this earth. \V.'' do notidonbi 114. they believelaud•feel, • ' 1 i. !.I h '' of • ' all this for wit i t a onesty. purpose on their, part its" is \na.ural • enough that they 1 !! • •• should .so believe..; I 'The conduct of A portioti il. i • 41 . tatiires o , , the Bepreonf ith e . ik; - •ofthlendsthe uthern Mind astray an4.coMpletely. blinds •14 all Ifrue northern, sentiment. They b :and as Mere AbOlition fanaticisur•inything lila,' .t - disposition ttl stand forthe ititera4i of • l• r the'litorthe)Tit eople; thug misleadinrilentirelY, • ! • • ! , • • - 4t , ,' .so fay a : t ie preseut. ex.e . itement is cOncerned the Minds. of Southern Wien.', .. The tittle is rap -1 1- 1 , I, '., . ! •' . • .i.• - rap idly approphing,. when thr.s abuse- will:fully i . , appear. I . The elections aPproShiligirillshoW theldonritily what •nortliern'ientiinent is . a 4 it.'Lvi!lt dO in lftnre. I: We kii i nw, (l and .- what;. 1 i • . 1 • . .. •' - will-assert tat the l 's 1; of, b e i ng ., e4 di e • a i l ' • 11.•1 Abohtiolust, that;, spirit 'iS roused no*. in I 1 • ' the rTorthert Staies "Etich as .l-never ,b6"o're . has' , , . ,s , . existed. l 1) e'kuOir thatthe • mass,Of 'those,Enen-- who Iclo'ibe i,•otiniz:--feel as' - 'tliey have •] . • • , , "'. , - -- ... . . neve fell.. before.. II) e know that they h are Bete I Mel, that the . .dav of. resistance has coat i - fullyl, and tVai they •haie iesoli;ed,— i n Y lt:*e we till take la stand We know that they[haVe•llieqUier t ed: in the' past in much which .they{ &It wrong; tr. 4 they. mere allred with; the hope; thati alit' "final settlement". ' aa , , corm, and l'eli, justly: thatiome sacrifices "'re due front I 4iri.t . ,!O hr i ing! - peaCe to. the CO& Fr nud.re to pm , public mind:), ,Feeling .o,4o thus.aud .beeiiy!tha ' Wk . - . ?reat.- political parti e s. were -maki rig' t . mt , settlement a touch stop ._of riolitii failb, they. felt doubly as, - - ~. au _ d , anti! more fullfdeterinined on aegul-;, it *sc tive-.and •O#d faith:- - thev:!helib•ed the - ~ - \ tutritind Come..At iait when the -slavery coia. tiOy!.. T y - -,,4 niren4;!aid,sicki at heal,of its attatoateini iits tai4eo, they,dici the!curtait!Ofpeace, aliontl-1 them . and- .f, laid down 'to pleasant dream" i - -!'; - -d• -- !! • !," • ' - -I -.J - -,. I- .- ' - • ~ ! 1 I.! • l 1 ! • , 1 ; . -.. . ! ate llominatio!l4 rnor, antende4 by • ast 7111itii-sAray ...... t _____________ • Thliv lurebeLiii awakened by thospirit of • 10 d • 1 , aggro6ion. . Instead -of a faithful -•acquies cetteel On Ithe ,iatlier part, the first oppor tunif ' hii:s-.been Sie\zeti tipon to open anew. the ;• • slave' y agitatimt, to breakup the. •...,..,oinpro inisesi bylivhiell it had been quieted, an\l in 7 volvel did, eountry again in stack dna . 4is( - 20r 4 :k, Feeling this they have losi all patience, --and\ l niathinpltheiri l Minth' to a desperate struggle ‘ t ; .outb reeve risen; t ileceived by 'northern Tec_ antsonay ery]pOce, peace, but we tell them in'§orroW, there is and' will be no_peace. The great) pOlitical illeer ; lias become lacerated ; 'and torn till it Will no yield to no ordinary: renieditithit will not heal. The eta el of noith4rn Men • feel that. there is . no* no t . ~ .• security iilitit in ' resistance,---that a-point at 1 l i Which r , lesistance shall; coinmence must be I niathisoriewherei and .ifTniewhere must: be here. ! Tliere will be but little exeitement,---1 little , an4ry diSenssion, but every man, feeling' iinAwssed with )iii; duty to God arid his race; with l ian iilmosie . olenin•tread, will go to the 14 F. , . -budbal and deposit there. his quiet voice,l and "tll4;uoicir: Will speak at. last in, tones of \1 i thunder, to the country and the wctld. 13e.- , ' fore the ides of November shall haVe passed 1 , jL , • - - . i awrib every. Slate will have spoken,and • 1 I • i i - \ . spoken to with the most. withering - rebitko—i i . W knoW it Mill be sii,veryinati lot blind 1 with fiinatie zeal cm' see) it in the .line light,l 1 . al'ti)lnglil• - tl4 ~W-Ould.riVc, r t the i i spending bleu.eotild thtw , dO it xitli justice and right! 1 - .„ , , - I'l • • -; I oni tneir Fide. I c erne it-must and come it will,i--,tliocur i tairi: will be lifted, the whole s - ce l 'Ue',, with all its dreadfnljconsequences Will bOlpresent to 010 • view 11 of those who • have.l! foOed itnponi tire. ,goun t 6•,- , --the seales will' w at; tit 01 front their eyes -ad light N ' 'N'llll [ burst in upon'them. They will . filially! be 1 1 made to see. the 'difference between northern 1 1 r - I Abolitionism aint northern rights,—betyreen /I interference by northern men in the. righ L 1 ;; E of I f tl4s..outli; and an Opet i - bold, and ni4n ly i.leilanie Of! our own rights; and resistiniee li .to the! spirit of "ingression. i The Post-Nnster G*lteral—A I"or- trait. 1 ' .11 GFilena;Jefersonian, one of the ablest deino4rOfe papers in remarking np onilt4 pril.Fenf ith it facilities of the west,eon ehfdeiA a follows; - . , `jT le fruthisi the Post-Master General is a' ra01,.1- reak - i»competclit man; as long as he is :it t ie,-IteadKil' the departnient, the ,west nevi& aspect no jUstiee. .. His Vision . does not •exterif... outside of. Pen us . VlVan fa." ~ The Galena; editoi-liasifernied a pretty corl i 'rect. idea-of tile- Post-Masfer• General t but he lierr4, in one paititlar, if he 'wishes - to convey the'ideaithati that functionary exte"nds his vision -over the Whole bro:0 surface of Penn ! s;yltania.l A laff,re portion; of the democraey of P, entisYlvattla pre blind Ito Mr: Campbell's inditk and hei i 4 lilihd to thd.Wants and Wish es cl' i f U . large portion, 6 . f Pennsylvania. Ik lieloMis to a factien,.not to it - party, and he f. 4.; . , . , squrs his conduct to his:pesition.. _1 ; 1; 1 e clip the' above front ? the•Demoervtie (P) c. 1 - Cil - o,' -It is wdll knonn ;to the Democracy . of Pennsylvania that. M. • c Amen ELL has de vote 4 thd energies of his life:, politically speak- , ino-2tO the sncee'ss and welfar,s' of the . Demo criticratic c party. i dna ]till; It is so beY'ond question. - Tr•suell a pitc.lll is ,the northimi-milal now exilletl, that - , . to r. • 1 to 9. 1 ,11110 man apktlatic4, uo aw tne , pro , Medoff of inaster.ud Alive on free:- soil, Will in fUt•tiri, be regziAbA, or, permitted; to bel • ex-, - 1 eeutetl. "The :•i• ! . .ilitb lui",s'faitlill.:4ll.-.r.,..4.4,1 notjui.kaild b . ' 1,.r . sLAiti‘n cf....ntrJuits and - 1 • • - ' -- • . 1. i• giurrali tOCSO 1 141 , N'e artj -, p 1i.:61 v . ..! 1 tram oif I t;" • is The.; first expresl,4ion fro ti the: lii).4 of dies, • ) • , peratc,l men and el- - iasperated eultUatinitic4:;-.- WtJ made "filvil Settleatent'' with thenilin • ti a • IA 1 - -3._5",0,;--we ,thtt i put at rest forever-Ithis whole question. "Nredliy, nOtl;Op e ned it„•,'W,, At,i: d q e.ity it in good; Lith, ,•;tee p ;111 , 1 Prosp:94tv, attendant upon tier •goOd. •faitb, w, - . , reslled .liar blessings Hebei Our:L.:wintry, aild lightin , up th - e pathway il• her t iuturi , with, gladiloss anii4 calory'. Thi4',:liappf.qui , .,--thit; imit, l ual - good .f;iit . li, was u`lot disturbed bl- i . i ‘ l ‘i(: 11,r,.14.:"tri on tcti of those wile Ita‘ic"; resis44.l the i the contrary, `tl4iv have strwroled .hone,'tlN- J,•. and earnestly t , .\:avert it, be' pres . iitiwr illO. . cow.tonmatiplicit%tbe deicd of y•rotii anti Oat- - , i n rag. its passage. -' • -;: . , . Wbo.then aro':;it - fault for this terrible state of thing.s. CleatlY it is,,thoseirlio have f6re ed'this obtioXio4hill uPon i the country,,--ithe Son'th and. its ruisrablefollieru allies. '‘'42 bare it not much u our heart to blame hlie Soutli,.for thee, fr litre nuinkind r•ne.rUr 'trill 1 content' for ilii , i'r inttiie.: , ts, and 'tlds Attar I -• • i t be exeused, thooll . we have no doubt. that 016 , 'will findl4ire loz:fr.:that ther mistOok . • ti, , .... their tine intere and that they haveshoulhave stood .up like 10.re . kinti'tesiste,1 theTiql: The "path of interest ii t oftene t st found iti,. the p; t atli of lii3Oit. '• ,:itti . . We countenaple no r6i:itence the ;contrary we 4 . .,prec:tte it, and liez•it:ltei)ot to sbi , , - that the ithaSOnable and intlanmepry appimis l'arker ' l and . at Iloston,:lin furiating; and eNieiting ;the mOh.. to - niur4er thoSecharged Wit)i' the unpleaSant rckspotisi .bilities of thelaWkn cases,. must njeet the severest-condemnatiOn of - _ all good zena.That is nut; the :4'ay to redress pol4lar , grieyancee. .1141 his We do---we :throw the .resiiohsibil ty of matter back upon its first cause, the attplori i)f . violated ;faith and forfeited national : i';ompacts. If the hot spir it of 11o:caution shall j o abroad over :the country from thi4time,!we have u l L a'shed our hands' of it, fOr6'ye - have pointedi , out the comzeiptenees - frOM thii first, and tried With. ourfeebletnight!, to turn aside the Cause that only tan iiroduc+' C==E!MB!I ill ANigr.llEll. El 4 . to- pros ide for tlio adinis4on Ordgott into ill& union as a' State, ha.s alre4tly bOn reported- in Abe S. 11c4tse of Rept4entatives, and the Legipa ture Of. , Oregon .his taken the prelinunitry :steps:towards calling gi.:•eonventioulto form a *n4i.tution.• lOoking to the adtnis rsiOn of OregOnak'a State in 1855, by time, it: is presniUM, there will be the .feini site zlinount of population in ; the territory. , . to ;entitle it toile nifw honors. • t • Patterson 'inkiligencer giv4 a etiricius incident of the late,thunder Storni: ' A little bar ( *as stand , 'ing at' a window. before' which wa.4 a young maple tree.—Affe a 'brilliant flash of light ning, a compleb4 image 'of the ,tree Was found imprinted ion her body. This is not ithe first instance . Of the•kind, but it is aiin gular, phenomenOti." , • "Thirty (innits or strawbeities'were rigid in Cincinnati, reclintly, ,for t3O, - --- 1". -- 17 - - 7 - 7 - ;1 I ' ' Itioverttor'm -- Veto bill . 04 u . . . , , Ofoo conspNlatiny into one p .for . eraU d suitsrought qatn,it the Pentthy - ii,a iraiOoad and the. l l'etensylraufa and g:Qhio railkoad for rioltbili) the. small zote . .laul. , A. 1,11! with passc!a I n't.:tr the close of the m e session: of tice lewislature, relt3asitig' railroad and eanal eopppanies front the'penal-1 tiesitiantred tindr the law of 185 q, ltroll t= ttre • eireUlation 44f.notes of other states of ;t ssldent njhiatiou titan 'five' dollars. The' tioVernor, hol - weVer f irefuses to giVeJ't hissane.- tion, and Written out his objeelions to it rttlength ai l id filed, tiltent away .itit r the Lill, in th, l i 'offieti of the seerelary'of the Clonitnon. : ' wealth , instructions, to-that:ollieer • I liver l;fith to the next legislature itnrnediatelv after pts mo.tt.itt4. The folio rind are his re,l- ~ • .1 • ! - • , Solt.: f I : • -; I - 1 'Hi . . ~ . . 1 e act of 1850 rtnposes. upon every I ; *„ cortio, ritioiltiviti 'ises 1 fOrC h l hank !oto of less donut . natioi.tmin five dollars •a.,pen:dty of fivelitindred dollarsi and upon every individ ual a penaltyi of twentr , tive d'atr'lf to be sued for,ansi reei!,vered :IS other debts are recover ed, okedna t'o the plaintiff, and the other to, the use of the, kumn't, y. where *the`l otlenc'e is . , :1, . 1 comiriit fi tte d . ,• ' J • .• „,. Thp ,bill'iloWlutithq• eptisiderafion does nut pro - pdse to ri:peal tht• 104 i• of 1850, nor is there am-thin! , in[it froin lade* b it tan be inferred, I that the Genermil Assembly \ believed its influ ! elice :to -be (vil:!. inj my cou4ideration of the, subj4t, I start, therqfore, :itli the assumption; }'that the'lawltOrbiddinothe circulation of snialll notes from iotlnit stnies is a necessary rind( wholi,isoinetegulatiLin, and that . the penalty! for ini, ( violation, ht riiqui red to - give Kt, force and effear When the I.eg,islatule were dealing with iliesubject, - if they had not supposed the flet_laii6.lt they found in force, to_ be. justdand ! -- I • j neeesrrv, they would undoubtedly have re,, I : pealed it at once and forever; But. the -bill: Lb d'u-' • i i t• i -i o ohms , of irks , : ,Le t• • ~. mt. no only tOll ~IL WI I • ,t. i •• 1 pL!:/I„bliVe,xressly provides agninst any inter- ISini:e liyhie k inightimpair its ; future force.— 1 Ilere;•lthen,lis a law; based on principles-mt.- ! I denial iv sound, cuidaining -:provisions neees- sary ti.) protkiet an interest so vitally imptirt . , i ant aii,tlr6 currency; called for'ne the .time',of its ad4!tionlby publi,o, opiAion, - coni:istent ttAth ! the trne rul4s of political economy, passed jiy i ; l Lone r.egislatlure, and after four years of exficH 1.. • • ricncit solemnly sanctioned by another. Shall;' u • such ,a•law itiexecuted ? , To ask.the question:; is to answer it. Mi.; allirniativci - must be the' universal response. 1 • - ,i - I The bill declares that "where several suits, have ihceln brOught.migainst'raili-oad or, Caual etuniiiiiies,.46 recoqr penalties incurred I by!. ' violating t. 144. 98th section of - the net of - 1'8.50,1 the shits shall be c• yttsdlidated into . one, anal, j ulign“!nt IJI! given ill` the cburt for only one penalty, toL,4ther will costs of „all the; actions!' to tin, time lit the consolidation, mind all other'; :penalties hetetolore incurred whether sued for; Or iiiit' l , Otani lie rethitted, .released and dis- eharged." I . Tliils!,in ea tis simply-t.o legalize all the ofruc - 1 , 1 es Nvliii:h a railrijadlOr canal company man' have:o:o'dt ted -except one.- • . . I * , Btit I wlty-i - shouhl One oiTenee be reserved ford', puniAmeid, while the rest are remitted: 'lt I j ihe lir‘V hifsibe . en violated an hundred tinies,,' and . . qitch 1.111,! iiiv.hti.th..! seine circumstance:l,i' ' the exeks; Whiidt should free the . party ,from(, . nineti - -ni e;ponaltieit °tight to be equally •al-I, id for! i time hundredth. If the law be right in I one e.e,„ y.t !ts rightlin all, and ifit be. wrong! in anYI it is j iilicer el-hefty -to let - a person Suffer; un•lei•l it :it fdl: • - I ' • . • , 1 But 'the, bill not call v creates I kis ditihrence I between sithilar. oqnees committed 'by the' same; corporation, but a still more unjust di6H 1 t i lletil !- - tt mrole between rorpOrationsof a par: -I tiCttlii„elas, - and- all other cotporations, ofli--I cers„brokex,'; L1ZE1.C.4.124.1.3.-. None dart railroad : and canal companies are to be favored by the' impunity which this bill- pro-. ides.. All citUr, 1 persoils and,d;o•lics, Public and private, natur al and nrlifil.-ial, rink take the eonseqiienees l which theit'fni: - conduct has drawn open iln-ni. I'Ll11:cli:•••il , !i!,Of t 1:: iiiipor:::llC,e :111,1•11Scall ifes f railn}:td aud l l cull:II colllNllicl -, , aIP: .1 eertalidy 11:0'e • no linclinatnni to prejudice • theiw in t he! heeinqilislimen t f t liele: ± ,iti mate leipls;t:ir ' . mi:i,t•lm 't her were created,- But when • 'we :Lie dealing ; i‘it:h them for‘an infraction titl , law, iMttice,:jlookingat the (pies:tit:mot' guilt or I' • linuogenee, it. blind'io all, difference between:( flick:mil Others. ;She is no rcspeetur of per.:l, suns jj or 4.4,9)i - iv:ohms. - • . . y'rhz• . penal!tie4 which It is proposed to remit Were ineurrdd Of indurreil at ally ' by, the in-', . .. ion of ; plait .; - tract ot . a law of which the offenders had toll notice; and I cahoot resist- the con- elusion that it would be ih;grading and huinil iating•to tki.PSltate tO denounce a Pimishment- for an ;Otlcrpt,e, and then refuse to execute it ‘viiihi insisting that -it is just. :It dues not censiiit withlliq di , ; nitV and honor to coin- prunijlse ; with transgessors against, her statutes. She has thrqatened and shall she not execute? If thtf statutt. s in quest ion were crtiel, unjuSt or• I uselek there could be no objections to its to- I tat reipeal,'and d full remission of all Pe - nalties incutired under it. But the General Askuii- bly themxmselites f whO passed this bill, held a contrary opinion, add on this point I' concur:: with theth. • •: • I • •, . . Andl ag,am, the demoralizing • infltience of the firc!cedeit this bill would set 'should. ,be overlooked.i If this' kind of legislation be once \ begun ; ,liitherl sit to end?. The•:iilroad and, ccanaFgoinpanies may violatelhe act of 1850 again and Again, and with more -confidence than ,le, ver expect, tb be again :11,k - dyed by ike legsthiture.• I Other ; corporations 1.4-ill claim equal favor with quite as muck justice. Indi- vidilmils will. fare gOod cause to complain. if theySlibuld be punished when corporations are nOt..llt this bill-be right I know'not on ~.ft . ,:t.. r . ground ; we 0.6 - • refuse to pass similar acts wheneVer applied for. flow shall we extend.. so great indOlgenceainl lenity to corporations and` refuse like relief to the destitute individ ual ivli,o Mat ; be ariaignedfor passing the On ly mitt lie bad. :Itdwould be batter to repeal the 1w - than! thus tt trifle' with 'mind' degrade it., - 'LI ' . . .1 - ojert tO this bill for another reason.--L, Some of the {penaltie-s it proposes to remit are already sued" fur, and the suits are --- now pend ing. ;.l am hound. tb - Witr this frain the word's oft bill. l legislative interference with the regular administration of justice; • it must be conceded; ; is Wrong,, and is calculated, to exercise a mOst perniciousinthience upon the morals; of sociiety. It hasi excited' complaint Wherever practised, and has generally produc; ed zicat evilland no good. The legislative and judicial depritMents of the government. must.* kepi , separated, .and cacti allowed to Perform its functionti without interference from the other: 'the 'one indeed is not fitted to do the 4066 asAgncd to the Other..', By this hill the Legislattire Would step in between -a ju dicial'tribunal. and ins suitors, andl in sub stance \say tO the courf-,-you may 'suspend your deliberations op this ease-cease to ex amine the laW, and. 'stop: the investigation .61 the fiictit,..for iwe haste determined -.to - dictate the judgment-without - hearing the parties- witlitnit.knoWing,the facts and:t. ivithoitt car ing feii. the law. And this we to, notheestuse we would change - the law:on - thelinit is founded, fole.wethink,it wise and, salutary; and it Johall:not he repealed; but W 6 inter fere felt' this so alope,'rnerel:rite specil ! ': favor to the Preri defendants. stihrultithat spelt proce,3ding Would .be ly imProper and uppg. . , me easel contemplated in the, bill :may . be s . urroundediby ini‘iguting ciremMitanees and, therefore sewn to impose hardship;' hut the open degra' ation4tlie taw,- and, m the, per— ... . .. lifeteude oes of the prectMent \propoSed. to life established shOuldbe'lleld above air syri-- Tate Consider i ation, and certainly ftt ! Ove .the 'roost jiber4l nnrnuuity due to transgre z :s e rs.: t is to be hoped that the parties nay not ,utTer taurti-than the"‘cials'•-of justice and th e Ondiention of the Taw may nanife,4ly, de- , nand. t:,lj,rtaittl Lfake no.pleasure,it', their 1 inist'ortun4, but 1 cannot, consistently, with a t4enSl3 of d tit to tite . . State, approve _tire NIL for their Oki . .. ;- . Ii • . !. I' It is to tft.' , hoped that the .inconvriiieee iri , tile' Use of the current :y, which is id ez d e d as an excite in case's, May be speedily tetnuved. 1 - And united efforts on the part of the railroad compani e st banks and individuals; to ;intro duce small gold aml. silver,. into channels of. Circulation, it is eontidently believed,! Wauld 'accomplish this de'sirable end. The la,dt that theiadjoidMg State. : of Ohiant t:helafelyossion of the Legislature, has; interdicted ;tll6,:ciren •lation.of 'otes not ii:sned by her inSlittitions of a. less denomination than ten dollar's Would seem to t‘ui l west46.aleeessity and utilitr of a common erfort to to= remove the difficatiesin the ;way oc the itdMinisiration of our AAA of 18,50. Stteb ame r trort, I beli!.!yo ivotil l A suo :c-ced- in nearly nil par.s of the, StatelLand suceeeding,would excriSe a most wholoome influence upon the cha deter of the curienq - , ti Abe intere s ts or comme co and tratle; aiiii . es- peel:illy - Upon the right and `rewards !of, ta.- bor . - A- . . 1 .... - , L-- . Riot 4n 110ston. it . -- 41 - w, Arrest of cf, i Fergitip,e , avc,—Prj)iii y r.,fqr ' i• ' steal stel.,lll ' • 1 , . . - 1. -:, • ' •T•I A Fuirit i iVc slave :named 1 tuns was I:ai re, t t : ,!. led in' I;oston ;last ,Friday. •• His arrei4l was v :t • lie sil - rnal , r a: 'large lathering. at . FaneniF, ,ri 1 1 • nidl.- I:e.Y.:Theadoie Pzi rker and others a& dressed t 4 J meeting. Wendell PhiliPs l also: took the +nd and spoke as follows ::.'• ; 1 • . Let: us rememl:cr Where we ate and What We . , • , ,• lace going to do.. You have said. tornight, :Jon :Will vindicate the fair futile Of flosion.—: Let me tell you you' won't do it by .groiniing At the slit4-catcher; at the - 4evere.llOnse— (Well tarland fealth4 them)—in attenipting 'the - impossible.g, -A ,s \feat of instilling, catcher.... fithere is a man here who 1.-4 an arm 'and al heart :ready to : sacritiee anything . fOr the:ll-plain Of an oppressed man, t !dintle do' it to-uirrow: 1 . - . (Cries . of "To-night . lf ,1, thought M.t could, be done, to-night t would= 'go firSt,...l. don'tprole courage ; - but I :Pro ; fess this: - 4 ;irlien (here is a possibility ofsav -1 in(' a slave from the hands of those. whO.are L eidled ofht,ers of the law, I amielid) totram ple any statute ,c 4• any man under my feet to ('do it. 1J urged the audience to wait Mittil the day tiine; said that he knew the . Faults 1, of the banics in State-st, sympathized ' With [ them thajt the Whig . s,who-had been kidked f once too often sympathized' ivith them.,.l:lle told theta ,that it was in their • power :56 to , , ,Itlockxp e,Very avenue that- .. 11iexitan ,lOuld uot he carried off.,-,11.1e urged -. them tlf.lt to 7 baulk the effort ot.bli-morrow, by,foolisli..t.tn diict-tet-night, giving the eneiny the Al4nit. YOu that are ready to do . the real work: be . not; carried aWay by' indiscretion: which-may (make - ~I' he of Our hopes. The zeal:khat :Won't koM till to-inOrrow NOB never !free a slave. - ] (Cries of "NO: r) ./. ,:' - 1 1 Mr. Phillips seeinkl to have partially !ear vied, the feoings of the audience with .him. ,when a Man At the dower end: of-thO' lhall cried out, .1" Mr: Chid rina n; I ant just inkined that a mob of ntigrilies is in cui.itt-F4ituirtp ail :tempting to .reseue: Ptriis. I lintiVe •ve.ad }Aim .to .ooind-square." l ! The - audience immediately began rapidly to fenye on? halt, and - nicitd of them - Iv'euded their way ~ ito Court square„Nrhat there ttians- Fred is given below. THE ATT :. PTED , lIEfieUE-.OF BURNS, i .. On the :dim 4. termination c.f. the meeting in Fanellili Hall, the excited crowd ; ru , hedfor Court-squhro, -poll-inell, shouting, ‘'ite§ene him !" " li t ieette him :" (17,e... Entering-, upon the eastern. avenue, in the space-Of a impute o r two,•-eral hundred people had colleCted. The officers in the building' closed the drools, when Some dozen people, some of tvlioni .vere colored, rushed up the stepsand• eeminenced Ipoundisig on the doors. A pistol wasshortly tired on the westerlyside of the Court-House, 'when thti Crowd rushed- around the litfilding. ilere seine two thousand people colket6l in h . ver y 1)6;1 spade of time. Several pistols were liied lit) thc.sowts.. I. ; The CrOwd immediately commenced au as sault upon the sonth door, on the west ;side, with axes,{-and a batteiinglam, in thei•ShaPe ot a henq beam,. seine twelve feet long,Which was.at ,o4e • launched upon, , - the stotiti oak door; Tit!e, battering-ram was Manned! [by a dozen orfourteen men, - white and colored, Who plithked it against the door until it,' was . stove in.•i i Meautifite, several briekbatsl had been thronn at the windows; -;end thelglas• rattled in all directions.• The )eadeM, or thes e , 'who' appeared :t o net as ringleaders in the • 'melee, continually ,-shouted: "Rescue kitn f'. "Bring; him out !" "Bring. him -:out 1" l'i Where is he .!". Sc. 4: The Court-p.ouse ;bell rnifg an•alarm - at.-6. 1-2 o'clock.. i.• , ,When the doom , were opened,two or Ithree 'persons rtished into the entry, but ihe officers in the building, whow 're mustered . 40111 force on'the stairgay the' alorous rioters .:so warm 4 reeeptiop . wi ; h . cltibs and swords, that: they - .quickly retreated; to the streets..- Two shots were dcharged in • the. :entry, which j *piqued t' intimidate, the 'rioters somewhat hnd they