NC Ktottunt :67... 0 trritsqn, .fro.prittot's. .IStf~~ THE ET,UNGARIAN-PRISONF Li. Or, want of dotal Confidelme. • • • ' . In fB47 N a gentlenin interested in prison Irefortn visited the county iit4 of Pinth,. and . among the felons found one :whose appearan ce and deportment were altvgether inconsist. .ent With his degrading' position.; Tire histo ry of this prisoner is of a tilling ,character ..,-qUite a-roinantiew+rative—arid w give it. iin the words cif the prison inspector - ifft ttrs spring of IlBe=-, a quiet, chuntry WI w'n 4 illinzary Was 'suddenly thrown into the greatest consternation. .31r. A—t,-11 wealthy: landed proprietor,l44 suddenly fall .7 en sick at his neighboring country-seat ; and scarcely bad the surgeOn arrived, when the fiatient was seized witlconvulsions . and died . i with all the - symptoms, of poison. . At the in- .quest held, it - was ;found that death had re ' suited from a.cup of ch ocolate which ' the de ceasedlid taken in defiance of the advice of "his .friends. Mr. A-- 1 -- ' ahia :1 - reckles . s and I= • 1 obstinate, had lately married,: after • a some- Qhtt riotous youth. is health was shatter ed, and he suffered fr o the restilts of his - I n former coursnof • life. ' The any • before .his : - . 'death he ' had 'received .. Varcel from Vienna "'by the dilligence, ttiget)ier With a letter,' pur .Vorting to be from a fashionable: physiCian; ' who formerly bad treated.' hire for a long ';.time, and 11647 tecotnrnlniled the use' of the !'enclosed chocolate as rtl . newly invented, and I t inostlnVigorating beyrage. Mr. A-- - - • wined delighted with ' the attention of, his former physician, and tliough Warned by --his friends, and liiinself ac k nowledging that the • 1. • uncalled-for advice was rather, strange-4o ninth the more since he bad ceased.to stand . fen any connection with the physician, and did :not even know his handwriting—be still: took: ;The *chocolate which proved fatal. The re , - :maining portion of the: deadly mixture was • divided, :one--halli Of it ' being sv.nit.' :to the medical faculty 4 the .tiniversity - of 1 l'estli,the other half to tie —since in ca ;sea of poisoning itis cpstomarii in Hungary . :to have the analysis made,by tic) parties en tirely independenttof each other, for the more 'sure instruction of the medical inquest. In the present case, trOth Universities came to Abe decision. Theyiscovered, vegetable 41, 4_, „poison in Abe sample su itted :to then As: i to tbe.person of the murderer, or' the motive 1 of the dark deed, nothing could be ascertain ed. • The letter was a cl'untsy,:forgery—everi .tiwas Wion,glyilspell-:, at the office if the: if , , reinoeren only that de-iged; the -other package for trans.! the nark of sire physiei Ore sipature.; and' parcels delivery they 're I , two females, one mid . young, had brought the imissiorss Precisely atthe us time, k'estb was thrown into a still ,-gr - _r :excitement than the country town; Mr.: amthall, one of the (ta le leading solicitors of the capital ,_ an ambitious I young man, connected by. m arr iage with the &wily of the chief-justie4 and 4 the highest _lexpeeistiows at the bat, was brought to the police:station on the ebatlme of mini - der. Tio persons of somewhat. di ' biOus.character—a Waiter out of phke.; , apd a professional gamb ler—were smoking their Pipes in The dusk in . One of the by-streets of P' c, when they. and - Only observed Mr. Sainthall rash out of one Of the houses, covered with,blood,. and -shout ink," Stop the murderer r The waiter a 5-, Sated him that nobody crild have\ left. the b onse without his knowledge, as he had been -.'standing there for the last three or four min . Utes. Uponlitis asking the ea, use ofthe solicitors 1 , 3112 *ittaTy isppeamutel i Sainthall told him that having had some basinetts to transact i alth Mr. Janish, an inmaie cif the house, ho found him on entering hiroom, weltering in hieblood, whilst a strang; r was beating, him Shoutthe head with a stone. ' ' I immediately gave the alarm,' continued he,' and tried to arrest the murderer, closing With 'him ; but the miscreant tripped me and 4'caped.. My , coat became bloody. I rose and ran after him 'down ; stairs. you must liars seen him, for - ,heleft this house just be -1 fore me? The gambler, who had in the !Ti•antime joinedl.the waiter, remarked that he had not beard a ny slain], nor had lie seen 4Ybody coming nkut of the Louse, and there fore be called the pOlice. ' I The constable went up with the solicitor to Mr. Danish's .lodging, and found him senseless on the floor of his iaata severely wounded on the temple. The Mouse was carefully_ visited; but no trace of the allegea tnurde.rer being found, Mi Saint ball was taken in charge und.brought to the: Police statien. The inspector, well acgisaint ed both vritn the - social poSitio ,u of the solici ter and tbe ; soinewlk t suspicious character of s ..tt, the ewe Witnessessoa st him admitted him • , o to bait, and wheii the ease came .before the; ease came • Magistrate it was dismissed the statement of The witnesses being too alight for. substantia ting the serious charge of, a_ brutal murder ;against an educated mairi whose account -of the transaction, though in itself not entirely. satisfactory, still outweighed the pueely neg ative evidence of a ;waiter and a professional gambler. Sorne ineidentscertainly remained unaccountable for, i Janis'', -11 elm.. _of seventy,s was a kind of unlicensed ;broker; OMB :PD . P i c'Yed by usurers and gamblers of the loselA deseriptiOn. What timid' a .mats of Saint ' ball'sst an di n g i n - • have sought -t,hs :l o d g ings 1 If the transactions of any .4 his Clients= re quired a personal interview •with the broker., r he might have been. ent fs j i .by a clerk. ' But , on the other-side, w:hat.p4..sible object could :the solicitor have bad lin ftswaultitb • ..a: :Ulan ' Inriruxts. like Janish I Agaitp, it was auspicious that, whilst Saitithall deela'red ho had given the alarm, none of the inmates of the licluse had heard any noise or scuffle. Alt these ques ions were amply diScussed at the coffee house and in the drawing-rooms ; and the solution -was looked for speedily, since Janis!' was not dead :; AA, in filet, althoull the surgeon en ttitained- scarcely any ?!are when the old man was-brought to the hospital, he began slowly to recover. Examined by the magis trates, he deposed that he tottld not tell any-. thing whatever about the a:AMU ; that hav ing been in the cellar tasting wine in the af ternoon, he felt drowsy, and was dosing when he heard the doot opened ; and before he Could recognize the person entering he was stunned by a heavy blo'w on the head. As to the solicitor, healed him the most kind man he eve new,, and he disbelieved there fore thi,veyidenee of the two witnesses, who stated that tbeyhad not seen any person but Sainthall coMittg out of the house. The whole atrair . began to fink into °WM on, when 4,6:implication turned public atten tion on Sainthall. The Vienna police 'pro ceeded -in .tracing andarresting the two fe males. who had posted the package with pois emu. s chocolate at the parcels deli very. They were the wife and daughter et lanish Thunderstruck at heating themselves charged with murder, they declared their innocence in the most emphatic Way. According to their explanation, Janish, who for many years had lived apartfrom them at nnex-, pettedly to Vienna on a visit, and give them money, saying that be was sent alt the way . from l'esthby:a: gentleman with .the solo ob ject allaying it_Sealed parcel posted without giving any name,. that be received ten pounds for the errand besides his expenses.: The fe males tookthe mysterious packet to the office of the parcels- delivery, and looking to . the di rection, found it rather - strange that, coining originally'frorn . Pesth, it was to' be. sent to a country town in the neighborhood of the city but more than 250 miles from Vienna. Still unaccustomed not to niind other people's bu siness, they posted the parcel without suspi 7 cion. - As the character of the two females was, not very reputable; their statement did not find much credit., Orders were given. to put Janish under arrest, and to examine him about the affair. The old man was still in the hospital, and, without knowing anything about the disposition's of his wife and daugh ter, corroborated, their statement in` every particular : but when informed that the par xel posted by them bad caused the death of Mr. A--, he suddenly exclaimed : " If this be the case, the man who assaetted me must have' een Sainthall,' for it was he Who gave thecommission to post the parCel." The excitemeracreated all over the coun try by this' revelation baffles description. It as just at that period that, in consequence Of the congress of Verona, steps were taken by the court of Vienna,to sispereede represen tative government andiother free institutions .4- inzflungary. Several , successive • orders in, council had been issued, all of them uncori,.. stitutional, andOone bearing the signature of the chancellor. It was known that the high ly respected old Prince Kobary, who at , that time held the_post of a keeper to the Empe for's conscience, had refused to sign the de crees, which, therefore were issued by the vice chancellor, Count A—, the head of the family to which the poisoned Mr. A.—be longed. The count had never been rich, and was now embarrassed in his finances, whilst the junior biatieb possessed great wealth. Af ter the decease of Mr. A.—, this'. was rep resented only by - ; is sickly' child, at whose probable death the extensive estates of the family would have devolved upon the elder branch. The public colnected likewise the death orbit. A—'s fireter,'which had been suspiciously sudden, with the undoubted poi soning oithe son. Everybody at Pesth well remembered that old Mr. , scarcely six months be.fore, had died in a box at the thea tre, of an apoplectic fit, as the physicians said, but certainly 'immediately after having taken a glass of lemonade offered to him by Sainthall, who being the iolicitor , of the fam ily,atood in critinuous intercourse with both branches of the A—family, with the collet as well as his utifortunate kinsmen. It wait, openly said .that Saitithall could not have any permed motive in poisoning his clients, unless as a 'tool of the count. Exaggerated reports of the case spread like wildlre all over the country, Sod damaged the count. The case assumed a political character, and an'impartial, thorough-going inquest becatoe of the highest importance, not only as a runt ter of justice, but even of policy. - Amidst the general excitement, Mr. Sainthall seemed al together unconcerned by the grave accusa- I timer brought against.. him. With his usual coolness, he refused' to. put Oa case in the hands of airiwyer;and conducted it ia per son with - the greatest ability.. No further proofs against ,hiracould be found; Janish wig utiab!e, by circumstantial evidence,- .to 'corroborate)* statement, and thd crime re- Inaitied,, wrapped in the most completo.mp- At /Ast i a nal inCideat led to'theiirreit of the sielieitot.. At timAsaapitat where' Janis)) Still lay, - afeviralerostordiscovered nursing trios who did: betaiii r io , o4o and had entered - under false „fret:einem - The boor hetr.atorma as .Varber, :whose premises arsenic was found,' together' 4ithitioineystperst *lag a ,resenitflaUdelto tiiiiitft*emslimedinTibetaialpacket of oboe olate. I:jere then, was a club to the Mystery': .4 aid brought 'Wore , 1 itiVE ARE ALL EQUAL BEFORE GOO AND TIRE iCONSTITUItION., 4 .4aines BOchauarr. 1 : 11 ontrost the police magistiate. where he at once ac knowledged that Sainthall had lent him mon ey for the rent of his shop, .but he denied altogether any cognizance 15f the forged letter Still, this indication led to no - result, and the 'researches of justice were baffled, since the female and the batber made their escape on the following night, accompacied dy the turn key of the triah • Sainthall'spial lasted fully two years. there is no jury irpthe Austrian dominions ;. prose ecution and 41 . 4ei2ce arotarried by written allegations and numerous replies: During this interval, dre poli &ail excitement subsided _the Emperor Francis having apologized for his encroachments upon the constitution; Count A—who was to bep impeached by the Hungarian l'arliament died at' Vienna; Ja nish died in the hospital; and Mr. Sainthall was sentenced to three years imprisonment for his murderous assault on the broker ; but' the charge of poisOning Mr. .A - 7 --was "not pitmen." his subsequent life was miserable; shunned by Al persons of respectability, he fell into low society, -and became s the legal adVisor of usurers, gamblers, .and swindlers, until last year, when a forgery he could not disprove, brought If; tack to the yell he had. occupied previously:- Such was the career of a man . who, his high mental capacity been coupled with . moral principle, might have ariun to eminence among hiS country men. Edecatioit of Utisbauds.tiu4 Punch gives-us an • excellen t article on' "the . Education of Husbands," worthy of the best da -s Of Caudle—as follows : • How suggestive is the new "year of bills, and the (Ali' of housekeeping I It is:fearful to reflect how many persons rush iuto matri mony totally unprepared for the awful change thatawaita thein. A man may take a wife at twenty-one, betel.° be knows the ditfereqce . between a chip and a Leghorn. Wo would no more grant a =triage lice t nse to 'any body simply because he was of age, than a license on that ground only, to practice as an apoth ecary. Husbands ought tobe educated. We would like to have the following Auestions pit to young inexperienced persons about :to marry. . . Are you mate sir, of the price of Coal and candles . . • :Do yOu know which is the more 'economi cal, t h e flitch bone or the rouni . How far young man, will a' leg of mutton go iu a small family f' - . llow much dearer now is shyer than Brit-- ase giro 111 e average price of a four post cr I Declare, if• you can, rash youth, thesum per annum that'chemisetts, pelerines, cardin als, bonnets, veils, caps, ribbons, flowers, gloves cuffs, and collars, would come to in the lump. , ' If unable -to answer these inquiries, we would say unto him, "Go back to school.", lie that would be a husband should under go a training, physical and moral. .11e should be furtivr examined4hus : • Can you read and Write amid the noise!and yells of the nursery. • Can you wait any given time for break . fasts Can "Yciu maintain yonr serenity during a washing day 1 , • Can yon cut your old friends I Can you,stand being contradicted in the face of all reason I - Can you:keep your temper when you are not listened to Can you do what you are told without be ing told why .111 one word young sit, have you the pa tience of Joh I If you can lay your band upon your heart and answer "yq," take your licenic and mar- ry—not else. To this a lady writer makes the following addenda under the head of "Questions-to a Girl before marrying'—in the Newark Daily. Are you aware of the piice of cigars, clubs, and oyitens I Do you know how to make a piece o tough dry meat, rich,. and juicy, and ten. der ! Can you "get up" an abundant , tasteful and savory dinner,on short notice, and with twenty-five cents , in your pocket I Can you bear to frequent presentation of bills with no mosey to meet them 1 , Is your wttdibbe well stocked.? expect not to have it often replenished Can you bear' with the cries of children, pinched by outgrown shoes In one word, have you twice 'the patience of Job? • - A YOUNG gLIN'S CUARACTER ,Xoyoung - nian who,hasa just sense of his own value will sport with his own character: A watchful regard to his character In early . youth will be of inconceivable value to him in . all the reinalniiig years of his life. When tempted to deviate from strict propriety of de portment, he should asic bim self, "Can • I atf, or 4 this! Can I endure . hereafter to look back on - Chia r. -It is of mating Worth to a young man to tome w pure Rawl / for ibis is the foundation .of &pure character. The mind in order to be bept.pure must be - employed with lop* Of thought *hick are themsetres lovely; 'ass toned and 'elevating._ Thus the mind - bath in its own pgWeT ,010 lefee*lf or its th emes of ineditetiee. Iflouth only knew. how dura biesta4itoe 4i ? I is. the injury produced by attaana dintltn, Sornin!, #ie the indulgence or ilegrnded thought—if . they only realized, howl frightful were! the Moral depravities. Which 'a cheri.xliea habit of loose 'imagination prodnees'en the soul, they would alma them as the . 'We a a ,serpent. The power of books to excite the imagination is a fearful element off, moral death, !when em ployed i n the service 'of rice. • 'The cultivation saran atniable, elevated and flevling heart, alive' to all the ticatitieszvf na ture and all. the stkialititTes of truth, invigo rates the intellect; gives to the inde pendence of baser passions, and to [the affec tion, that power of - adhesion to whatever is pups, and grand, and good, whichl is adap ted to lead.out the Whole nature or man into those scenes of action an impression,i by which its energies mai be rnot effett artily lemployed and by which Its high destination may be most effectually . reached. • . The faculty of, exciting - these fiictilties in beneVotent and self-denying efforti, for the welfare of our felloW-men, aro.so Many 'and great that it is really - worth while to live., The heart that is, truly; evangelically benev olent, may luxuriate in an age like this. The promises offered are. : inexpresbidly rich, the main tendency of things so manifestly in' ac cordance with them,' - `the extent of 'moral in tluenee is so great and the effects f its em ployment so visible, that whoever aspires af ter benevolent rictiou, and readies for things that remain for us;to the true 'dirndls - of his nature, can find free scope for his ect, and *all inpiring 'ilkenies for the heart. • ADDUESS • • Td . ' PEOPLE OF PENNSYLV;INIA. . FELI.9IV• CITIZENS : ' i ,r • 1 The • Central , Cotinittee, appointed. by ~ . 1 the . Democratic: State Coavention, have ought ,proper t rou on tho ques- Lions which you musT, decide at thit tik!xt elec : - don. In doing so ► the shall tie• tandid, frank and fair: Apart frant the principt,e which should bind all men to the' truth in; political discussions, and in every thing else i we are well aware that any attempt to mislead you would injure our .catise. It is' nearly three months before the election, and theye is no reason to 'relieve, that , the public mind *ill not use the intermediate time in con- sidering the great tneasures before lit. We arc perfectly willing ;that whaterer,l we may say which is net justified by fact and reason, shall beset down aa'so rnur,b against Us, a gainst our pt rtyy and against otn! candid . ates. e Mime has passed for the discussion of Badk and Tariff qtri.stion , .. We hear no pro posals to enact a Dania upt law 7 , -nci word of opposition to the Independent Treastiry. All these questions aye settled agreeablY to the Democratic opi4ons upon them, 'fhe rise, the prosperity, and. the fall of the great Whig party, are themo for the historian, and foul of instructive less4tis ;'lmt we will not dwelt on them now. - 1 , - / It is the present ; duty of the Deluocratie party to stand titer _the Constitution, and "shield it and . Save it; or perish there, too." It is our task campain to boat its ene mieg, separate pr combinedjustaSthey dboose to - conquer think with an overthrow 'that will be a warning,to them for my a year. And it must be ddi . e,or this Union'is not safe fora day. . „ We know how easy it is to sneef at any suggestion ofdanger to the Union. i But we know also, that the" federal relatioUs pf - this Government dare so' delicately constructed, that tbey - rottY be ruptured at any tithe, by a Serious error Of the people in choosing a Chief Magistrate. :The States of the Union are not held togetherly physical force like the ..de pendencies of a Kingdom, nor even by politic al power, liWdifferent parts of the same State. They are independentsovereigutiec, United by the gentler law of mutual attracti9n. This law, operating on- their own free will, made the Union, and when it ceases to operate the Union will tie unmade. Let .a President of the United States be elected excluiiively by the votes of brie section, and on a principle of avowed hostility to the men, the ineaSures, the domestic institutions; the feelings, and the in terests, real er supposed of the' otheti section, and what must be the consequence f We do not say that it would certainly or necessarily dissolvethe Union. Perhaps the gPod gen ius-of the I.4public,. which si has brought us through so many perils, might save is again. Buithat man, must be intellectually blind, who does not!see thatit would put us in feare ful danger. For this reason the election of a sectional candidate must be regarded as in itself a great public mil-fortune. The party th4t avows opposition and hatred Owards a certain class of the States as its motive and rule of action; is entitled to no aid or com fort from aqmatt that loves his country, or dires to be faithful to its governme9t. The greateit, the wisest and the best men this country ever produced, have 'warned us lila the UniOn could not last undeethe con trot of a geographical party. Need we se mi nd you of the admonitions which idirerson .and Jackson have . given I If.the solemn voi ces which collie from the tomb al, Mobut Ver. itoui from the ',set tits'ye at Monticello, and from the gravi; at cite ,Ifensitage, haVe ceased to heVegarded, then we are, keit i9deed. The most 'illustrious' stitesmett .9f , later • • times felt the same fears for this Union, and assigned, for those fears the same reason. Clay and ,Websteri.': snd their great coapattiou ! overlooked all Sather considerations in , the of torts they' made to avert this one , portentoui taiamity. Etat Mr. Fillmore,. the; KtIQW*, Umber 11 1050 Nothing (but Anti-Abolition .candidate, ,bas not hesitated to say that the Union cannot stand in case an Abolition candidate like Fre mont, be choten ; and he lets it he very plainly uhderstood that, in such a case; be would think a dissolution of it perfectly jus tifiable. When cop consider these things in connection with the fact that the ultra-Abo litionists, most of whom are acting with the so called Republican po4, openly profess their desire to break up the Union and tram ple on the Constitution, how can you doubt that Fnunotit's election, or 'evenruiting con siderable of a vote for him, would prove to be a fatal mistake. Yet we are no alarmists. We trust confi dently iu. the perpetuity of onr,present Gov ernment. But that confidence is based in the conviction that the people will take the ad vice of Washington, and frown indignantly on the fresh da - % tens. The safety of this Union must depend - on the triumph of better principles than those of Giddings and Sumner, and Garrison, and llaleiand Seward ; and upon the election of a' better President than John C. _ Fre mont. These nreh attempt to justify the miserable crusade which they are preaching against a portion of their fellow citizens, by asserting that the South have encroached on the rights of the North. They have pertinaciously . de clared that. in all controversies on the subject of Slavery, we . .of the North have been over= come, by the superioi euergy of •those who favor that.: institution. "The -Staveoeraci; "the lash-of tht glare drivers . ," "the aggress ionsi of the Slave- power," these aretbe' s! , t with which they . describe the latieneo o 'tie Solidi in our Nntiotil Count:Us. Northern men who do not, join them in theirclamerou/ abuse of the South, are chaiged with cowardice and habituallY callea“D,oughfaces." This has been repeated se impud ently that and se epnd ( ently that many persons have at length been im . pressed by it. There are men among us who actually think .that the North rha.. / 3'. been the victim of grievous wrong, to w / liich we have been submitting with: . disin,eetui tameness of spirit. This is an artful appeal to a . point of honor on WhiCh all inetrare sensitive, and it is not wonderful that,those who are weak enough to be deceived / by it, should also be weak enough to brea,k out into denunciation of the South, as a cheap and safe way of shor ing their 'cottrage. . Candor recites us to say that if there -is truth in this the Democracy ought to be de feated. If that party has ever counselled sub mission to/wrong, oppression, and injury, itis not worthy of your confidence and support. If we, - have ever yielded to our Sonthern brethien a right which the Constitution, in its letter or spirit, did not gi ve them—if we haVe made any copm-sioit to them in the way Of compromise, which was not required by a fair and manly sense ofjustice—then we od mit that abolitionism has the rigid side of this argument. Hut we totally. deby the truth dent accusation. It is false in the aggregate and false in detail ; false in every one of its We pronounce it a libel on both act ions of the I.Tnion. "It muld built IA inven ted in a spirit of sheer mendacity; fit can be believed only - by gross ignorance or childish credulity. The fact that' the Demotitttle party iwthe North has,behaved with honoiable magnan imity and fairness to the: weaker section— their brethren in the South-this is our crimf! -this is the wrong whitkgre and our fathers have been heaping on our OWII beads for three quarters of a century. This is the offence which the Abolitionists Would punish by bringing our Government to a violent end, and by covering our whole country with shame and ruin. . Before the formation of the Constitution, it was feard that the interests, opinions and feel ings of the different States' . were so various and so much opposed, that no general gov ernment could possibly be estaglished. Such was the-view of the subject taken by Washing ton himself but the - effort was made. It owes its success simply tithe fact that the right of each State to manage its onn _domestic. con cerns, in its own way, was fully conceded. It was easily forseen that great difference of opinion and feeling would exist, between the people of the several States, in regard to the treatment that ought to be bestowed on the black race,:who were among us, but not of us L---who were on our soil, and yet nut a part of the peopleraOr qualified in anyway to be our equals. This race was then held in slave ry, or inveluntary servitude, by thilawspf alt the State. except one. But in the Worth their numbers weie few, mid the 'climate unsuited I to them, while in the South it was just the re. I verse. It was utterly out of the • question to expect unanimity one subject like this. It could be managed in one way only ; and That Was by•agreeing that each State should deter- mine the whole natter for itself,- and on its own responsibility. It was tl.eh solemnly a- . greed dist . the Federal Government should not interfere' with Slavery, and that no State should interfere with it in another State,eith erdireetly:or-indirectly, And all the peoPle• said amen I If the solemn, natttranees of mn4 tual forbearance then giVeni and sworn to so often Ante, have %in belied and violoted, :ft hats not been &due alb the consent of the Nmocracy. • The 9ueStieti. of involnntag siutitude , had engaged the earnest.auentioU.ef the sages ef the' revolution. , - Theta can le, no`detibt that . if the y could -have provided •-fin‘ - its arneliOM tion And gradual entanelpati t en, they-,would have done so. They found it, however, in. corporatel in the social system of alt the states but one, and they dealt with . itinccor ding to the exigenciof the timelin which they,tiVed. We all know that eVen_iit that early day it was a subject ot mutual irrita- . Con and excitement; and although the won-, derful uses to which "the cotton plant\ has been applied, on account of the subsequent disceveriea in the =mut:mauve of machinery were then scar* anticipated, it is enough to shy , that the republican fathers could not dispose of this slavery question until they agreed upon the basis which led to the for mation of the Cohstitution ; the reeognkiby of the domestic institutions of the southor the ratio of representation, and in. the prchis ion ter the restitution of fugitives &Ca/labor Twelve of the thirteen Sthtts tLlt foroied the Constitution, held slaves at tlti; trine that in strument was adopted, and h the quitt oli eration of their poptilar exuhroVe sovereign ty six of these States have since become - free. Throeghont all the action of the 'framers of the fg:deral Constitution, the idea whit% pre vailed was that which. 7garded the negro as infettor to the . white, and until AbolitiOnism is able to convince / the present generation I , that' this idea is ilhigital and lintrlie,) and-to do this they must agree to the doctrine of a . perfect equality-between races,) all per , manont legislation th the subject of the ne-i gro rade must and will be, controlled by the same 'sentiinent. In the free States, at the present i day, the negro is subject to a moral, and inimany.resp . ects to a physical servitude, quite as injurious to his Condition as . the most .fabulous pictures of Southern :slavery represent hisbrotlitr's tohditioh in the South to be We do not call the Northern , negro a slave, but in what free :State is he theequal of the white f . In some Stotts be is preVtn ted from voting, in others he votes upon property qualification; even in Massachu setts certain disqualifications are thrown in his irayby those Utopian philosophers, wire constantly prate of theequality of , the races; in others still he is met by a statute that ex cludes him altogethet ilvin entrance upon their soil ; and Hutto is he recognized on the same level with.. the white. The white who iaiermarries with the black is every where regarded as a degraded being and in schools and diththes there lt almost a uni versal bar bdtteeti the two razes, so that the Titles of society and the laws of 'the States; Oren in the cotiimuditia tho horralavehtil ding region, aro inexorably opted to the negro. Why is it that Abolitiiiiiisiifloes ii6t begin at home and 'reform thase things I 13ut.again, there ia no power 'Alia . can prevent any State from passing whituver laws it luny please under the- Federal Qmstitu tion, fur its own Coinfortandprottdtion, and the very same theory which , induces us to respect and to recognito the great doctfitie of State rights in the South, undet 'which it holds its own shires, compels us also to rec °grate those laws id widen we have tefinted in the North, in regard td the free blacks: The North regulates its eolored popiilation as it pleaSe.s, - atul is protected in - doiitg so_ by the Consiitution of the United'Mates: All the cegtoes Uf the North are teittebe s nted in. the ratio of federal representation, and yet nearly all are disfranchised and alienated by the laws of the North. The South dOes as it pleases . with its tutored population, stave and free, a r ttd is protected under the Federal Con stittition, but its slaves are only represented in the' ratio of threelfths itt the federal rep resentations In II moral point of view, it seerrul'atlleitst inconsistent that these Abolitionists, who are entirely silent in refettme,e to this C , onditidn .of the negroes in the free States, should be so extremely vittiperatite when they come to treat of the condi ti on-of the tWgroes of the slave States: Both belong to tbe-sirnoinfe rior.class, both are so regarded in all the States. The South found a legacy hi slavery transmitted to it by its English ancestors, and the C,nstitution respected , the histitn tion as it existed when that nutriment was framed. The North, while it has rid itself of slavery, (so far as the name ,is concerned( still ratains the right to protect Itself against contact with a race which is , stamped as in feller by all classes of whites wherever they are, found. - Northat States, in the exeleiso,of heir undoubted tsobstatuiiionitl right, .consul- ed ,wbat they deamed their q*ntnte interest, and, one after the other, in their oath tithe and their own way ' abelished slavery. Against ibese proceedings in the North the South uttered not a word of complaint. .Bitt the views and zpinions of the Southern States. were wholly averse to abolition. , They he: In 1880, this cry *if Southrea aggression Hoed it to be utterly impossible, without the on Ntirthisra rights agaiii rose lb a pitch greatest danger, not to their prosperity only which wined to put the Union in extreme dais' . but to their very exigence; This was an ger. Aisinilte trouble was allayed by a corn , , _ _ • they opinion to . w hich had as good a right , ,pormise. The iiaturei character and terms of as-the North had ,to the' _ opposite one. "But the Com promise will anC" 6.4l °W much agr,res they Were not suffered to eujny ‘. rind ',to mit glen hrid beim cOmmittedthen, There were uP oo.6 :in quieineef -% A Peace-t the yeti five measures included hi it. I The ridthissiori firs t Congress after the geTeiM* - got was.ON n t' ailit° ! nia 45 a 'l'l ' o9B6 u.. .2. The tern% ganixed, a petition from the' North Was pre- tatial organization of _Nevi Mexico on thil rented; praying for the abolition of,slavery by principle of nonintoritattott, - *ltch it:wsi ethigtesit Treacherous attemphi deprive would exclude Amoy. 3. The', the South of her undoubted tights.;to,unia! purchase tra large portion ofj/sgas, age ; h er olio _ a g a in ' , have been canstantiy. Wig-. froth the jurisdietion•of slate strata.' wi de, 1 1%e - f r amers of the 6onetitiation de- 4. The abolition of the slave `trade in the dared% its preamble, that one of,illol , :Oat ztelitriet of Cotunddit; , ZU k T, f ug i t i ve slave obieetain adopting it *a* “_to denies - `law."Tate first four of thei- meam i res , were an . - t re oquility." Itut the -Se dementia trail iiioaverY, and were deity raided by the . North, g ills?' of the Sends hasheetiooostmettt and The. iirth o . ne, (the fugitiin stave law) was a tl4 - but to the Con= ruelly aF.F.alled .by Northern Abolitionists, c°nesii43ll):!lot thee. Sou otatriii,l4;',i-ii. : sin.tk#.... - 0.: • ~ who kew Veft well thiii they had na basl. basewhateser with tha , matter.- „ A. majoritrafjdl,#4States nude the no. greets free withont L epiesition from abroad. That it was wise for the ;forth to do so Alt agre.ed ; that it as just arid Pioper the sOtith to makecomplaint ip . true .ICeir let us see whether tho South bat . gained any advaliages committed Any tvarlsionm with , reference to the new Statv: Alain° and 'Vermont were _admitted as fret:: - Spites., and nobody asked ti - 40 ,... t0 put 'briery inta thbir Constitutions. This was a mattai o ou.rse,, and so -treated all round: -But with,reference to the Western States; tileirczemption from alaver:y was not 'Cm:ti ter of course. The South Might hav'e preven ted it if she had - secs proper. The whole of the territory north and west of the Ohio, awl east of the Mississippi,- belonged folio . State of Virginia. She owned the land, - tricklutd power tti control the settlement of every.. acre. What did she do I She' magnaiii: ittoUsly gave tip ndt wily - her political jurir; diction, but also lief proprietary' right4o-thki" Federal Government, allowing the voters of the North to settle its destiny, and all itzi - proceeds 'to go into the general coffers. Cow necticut had a spurious claim to . a-part of it —a claim petite!) , like that which ahead. up to a part of PennsylVania, and which wai decided against her. Bur. her clahn to thil Wedeln Re...erve, *As conceded to her—tifikt kept it, sold it, and - put the' proceeds %Usher' own treasury. Virginia did not protest eyed when the. Ordinahce of 1787 was parsed; abolishing Slavery within the territory, which she had thus generously s given away. Wii.4 there-any aggression in 'All this 1-1 f then; was " enctilachment" cut eitheiside, whocorn: witted it I If there was a wise concession;: froth- whom did it comel The Territory of Louisiana, including. What is now Arkansas; MisscUri, Iciwa, Nebraska; Kansas, and th % unoccupied , iirikleinCisie: yond, *as . purchased from France in I #o3- t was all tlave territory. We took it with a French law upon it lvaliaing slavery. It cows dot be made free without repealing tire . law: Missouri bad been settled 'long befori:. by persons., who owned slaves and who had heit them there upon- the faith of \ the la*: They were not distdrhd ddring her who! existbfice its till- organized territory. shed She proposed to come t . into - thett • ' ' as a won State, her people, in the exercise of-as plain :t rid& as ailjr people ever. Possetised, niade Constitution for theniselves, in which, with almost entire unanimity, they recognized th' rights of the slaveholders-to retain the proil- - etty- acquired under previous laws. Then arosi the wildest yells of faEdicism. Large mass es Ofpectislti in the North; and *especially in New 2ogland, led on and "excited by the id- ilanumitory appeals of their haders Ere* at L Blest frantic: rage::' Yhe solo erase of - this outcry was that the people of idissond had made - tlieiiown donstitutionittaiiit•their own views, and had not perniiteed it to lx _ - made for thew liq antislavery Illt;t1 residing itt. the Northern States. This was-the hea4 and front a their offending. Nothing else wac charged againgt,them., Yet every Southern - ‘ member of Cony w ho the opin. ton that Missouri Wad a right to make it& own constitution trap called an.. aggressor it _Blare driver and 'a tyrant, while every North- I ern man who assented to' the . same proposition was denounced and Abused** d donghfaca ana a recreant to the rights of his - own section. So fiercely did this storm of calumny•bigir tiat the whole govenurient Incited and reeled to its There &tented no way , lef: to avoid a . war but to compromise. And each s 'coniptn raise I It consisted in au igreement that Missouri might exercise; tot andoubted right, and have her own constitiftion if Congress would abolish the taw legalizing slavery in all- of the territory outside of thst - State and ly ing north of a certain -That Congress: bad any power to dd ttlis is now almost uni, %%mmHg doubted, and by, a large Majority of the peoplojk . is totally denied that slavery can be ftsteed; either in or out of a Territory ; by the legislation of the General ,GovernMent, Thus by mere claMer and:abuse the , North got.an unconstitutional ailyaritagee in return for yielding to §otithern State a , privilege which no fair man can deny: !anidainly hes oirn. But even this did not =datisty the- Abcr lidonista., They Ontirktted tb insult the South for hot giiiing..up everj:thint, - vented their abusive and 4110qt:one epithets as vig orously as ever upon the North because it. lead; hot insibted on wore. 'Was this Northern or Southren aigrondoof •