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GARRATT , DRALSR In Flonr, Feed, and Meal, Barren and Dairy Salt, Timothy and Clover Seed, Groceries, Pmvis lonA4 Fruit, Fish, Petroleum Oil. Wooden and Stone Wire, Yankee Notions, itc.ac. rirOpposite Railroad Depot, New Milford, Pa. 'Mcb 3d, 1853.-0. A. Lit MOP, 11. C. TYLER, i. P. w. MAT. 'LATHROP, TYLER , (4). RILEY, BALERS In Dry Maids. Groceries, Hardware, Ready Made ClothlnF, Roots a Shoes, Bats Caps, ood d:Willow Dare, Iron. Nails, Sole Upper Leath er, Fleh,•Flour and Salt, all of which they °Ma' at the very Igirr..acrWeelit L athrops Brick Building, Montrose, Pa. April 6, ISat. y. EVAN JESIKINS, X.Libesesa.ssioci ALimati.?amoor, FOR SUSQUEHANNA COUNTY. (Post Office address. Dundaff. or South Gibson, Susi:fa Coanty;':Penn'a.] Feb. Z. Isra—lylo wn. IruN+rrro COOPER WM. IL COOPER, ec CO., AMC - HRS.—Montrose, Pa. Successors to Post. Cooper & Co. OBicc, Lathrop?ncw bnUdlng, Tarnpike-st. I. B. aecou.cm McCOLLIIM & SEARLE,. A TTORITETS and Counsellors at Law,—Montrose, Pa Office In Lathrops' new building, over the Bank. DR. IL SMITH &, SON, URGEON DENTlSTS,—'Montrose, Pa. ,t/face In Lailirops' new bending, over the Dank. All `Dental operations will be performed in good style and warranted. JOHN SAUT'rER,' FNSTIIONABLE TAlLOR.— Montrose, Pa. Shop over I. N. Bollard's Grocery, on Main street. Thankful for past favors, he solicita a continuance • —pledging himself to do all work satisfactorily. Cut ting done on short notice, and warranted to fit. Itlontrose, Pa.. July 2th, leifl=tf. P. LINES, I,,ASITTONABLE TAlLol2.—Montrose. Pa. Shop in Phoenix Block, over store of Bead, Watnnts & Foster. All work warranted, as to fit and finish; Cutting done on short notice, in best style. jan 'CO JORN GROVES, VASIIIONABLE TAlLOR,—Montrose, Pa. Shop near the Baptist Meeting, Rouse, on Turnpike trevt. All orders filled promptly. in first-rate style. l'att ins, done on short notice, and warranted to fit. L. B. ISBELL, REPAMS Clocks, Watches. and Jewelry at the shortest notice. and on reasonable terms. All work warranted. Shop in Chandler and Jessirp's ptime, MoNTEOAE., Pa. • con tf WM. W. SMITH, (iATIINET AN CIIATR 31ANUFACTURARS,—Foot l) of Main-street, Montrose, I'a. . s nng.. it C. 0. FORMLNA 11kI ANUFACTURER of DOOM & SHOES, Montrose, /11l Pa, _Shoo over Deviltry -store. An kinds of work winoc to orOcr,ima 14,...,a6Po0marrearry: ABEL TURRELL, TNEALER in Drup, Medicines. Chemtealti, bye ./ stun, Glass At are, Paints. Oils, Varniih, Wfia tiow Glass, Groceries, Pancy - Goods, Jewelry Perin:. turn, be—Agent fur all the most popular PATENT HinClNES,—Montrose, Pa. sag tf DAVID C. ANEY, M. D., Ty kViNG located permanently at New :Milford, Pa, I L wall attend linmptly to c.alle with which he may he favored. Office at TodtlA' Hotel. New Milford, Jnly,l7, I§6l MEDICAL CARD. DR. E. PATRICK, & DR. E. L. GARDNER, T ATE GU-WI:TATE of the MEDICAL,DEPARTMENT I/ OF YALE COLLEGE, have formed a copartnership tnr the practice oflledicipe and Surgery,and are prepared attend Li all business faithfully aud—panctually,fhat rely he intrustod to their care, on terms commentqualbei with the times. Diseases and deformities of the EYE. surgical opera tint's. and all surgical disease:. particularly attended to arkltlive over L 1 ebb's Store. Office hours from 8 a m to 9p. m All sorts of country produce taken in pay in-nt, at the highest value, and CANII sorUEFGSED. Montrose, Pa., May 7th, 1.562.—tpf TAKE NOTICE! Cash 3L"'ewicl, for 311MCicialEa, dheep Pelts, For, Mink, 'Muskrat, and all kinds of Furs. A good assortment of Leather and Boots and' s noes constantly on hand. Office, Tannery, & Shop on Main Street. Montrose, Feb.fith. & L. C. KEELER FIRE INSURANCE. THE INSURANCE CO. OF NORTH AMERICA, AT PM=M:PHIA, PA., Has Established =Agency in Montrose. The Oldest Insurance Co. in the Union. CASE CAPITAL PAID IN ASSETS OVER, ruin rates arc &slow as those of any good company in A_ New York, or elsewhere, and its Directors are among the Bret for honor and Integrity. =- CHM/LES hart., Seer. .AR I TLEUR. G. COFFIN...Pres. Montrose, Jelly 15 , t 2. BILLINGS STROUD, MC 400 31S. 30 INSURANCE COMPANY, C>k Now•i's'orik. CASH CAPITAL, ONE MILLION DOLLARS. ASSEETB lit July' 1860,- $1,481,11:19.27. LLIELLMEI, " 43,0613.68. L Milton Smith. Scc'y. dam. J. Martini President: An't " A. F. Wilmnrth, Vice " Policies binned and renewed, .bp the undersign at is once, In the Brick Blockldontrose,Pn. • • . n°l4 P -113 1! " . ,14 1 ; NPS BTROYCIP dt,ent• ,::xtannommeztaavpriniki To England,land-and Scotland: sit.4llAil BELL'S iON'S DRAFTS. !ri toncieototte, JAL - pound and upwards; 'payable. iti all the principal towns of England. I relatid snd Scotian d,for sale by Co.. ilannzna, . 311 _ 162 . : =74tattrose", Pa. B. J -RAZ. - .LETON - Ambriitype and IPiiliti;ogra' 1040 Artist, mono,' t - R7Plettires taken in all kinds of Is'eather, Irak° bet style of the Art. - -t. '..orslo - • tit: Yettengill tr. Co., • and siatestreet. .I.l;asaston., - ate par agents, !hr the Nogrese. Danaratili iticlite,nittes, and - are. authorized 1,0 take adreirtimacute snd,saltsqiiittan,a for 04 at oar lowest ratno. HON.I[O. VI.IOODWARD, Delivered at Me Greql:Union Meting in Independence .81uare,!Philadelphia, 13th December,. 1800. We have assemble,fl; fellow-citizens, in pursuance of - the proclamation of the May or, that we " counsel.together to avert the danger which , -threatens our , ,country."— That danger is not recent or new. It has a history. And we must glance at that; we must obtain a clear view. of actual state - of the crisis ; before we can give or receive intelligent counsel. It was announced a few years ago that the conflict which. .had sprung up in this country between free and slave labor was irrepressible-4hat a hottiedivided a gainst itself could not standi: . -4-that all the States of this Union must become free or slave States. The meaning of this was, and is, that all were to become free States; for the soil and climate of the majority of the States are such that it never can become the in terest of the superior race to maintin slave ry in them. Everybody knows this, and therefore-the alternative form of the prop osition was only to give it .an appearance of fairness, and a little more rhetorical ef fect.. • =NAT DRINRER The full scope and meaning of the an nouncement-are; then, that the citizens of the Unittd.Statts a-o to be totally divest ed of the property they now hold in four or five millions of slaves, of the aggregate value of many hundred millions Of dollars, and that the habits and domestic condi tion of the people—their commercial rela tions, and their political rights, in so far as these interests are connected with the institution of slavery—are to undergo a , revolution. ' ' ' . Nor was thisprediction the voice of an obsure and unlit:au:wed prophet, hitt of a citizen whom the people of thefree States have .just distinguished . , in a signal man ner; - by conferring on !mirth° -highest of they had;tto gtve..:,s In so far , asitheir votes are. , tiKbe - consMered yak' responsive{ to his,announeetnent;_ they are ~.a_loud.l . ..,,,., .b toe 11..-ibe , ..- Whilst wis not to-be doubted that mul , titudes voted for titer Prelident - elect with other Views, and did not intend a distinct endorsenlent .of hii favorite proposition, yet Ss the record is made np, the prophe cy tend the prophet stand approved by a majority of thi3.people of -the free States. The inexorable exclusion of slave proper ty front the comthon ' territories, which the Government holds in trust for the peo ple of all the States, is a natural and di rect: step .toward the 'grand result ;of ei: ting,nishing slave property shogether,and was one of the record issues of- the late electidh. This policy must be considered as approved also. No t t that every nian who voted for the successful nominees meant to affirm 'that a trustee for severel co equal parties has a right, in law or reas on, to :exclude the property of some and admit ',that of others of the parties.for whom ,he holds—but so is the. record.— And While. itis not to be taken as. expres sing the universal' sense of the voters, it does, tindoubtedly,' imply that -vast mass-t es of Northeqt people -do heartily approve , ' both Of the proposition to make all the: States free, and. of beginning-by exclud-i ing slavery from the territories. The Send/seem - 4 Maine(' so to accept,, the judgment,. She holds , the property that is to be shut out , of territories—that 1 . , i is•to bb'irestricted, cribbed, and Confined, more more, until it is - finally extin guish" -,Everywhere. in the:South the' people are beginning i to leek ont for-the meansofieltdefence. Could it be expec ted that their- wiitild.be indifferent to such events: na , heti, occurred le—ihat they would stand idle, and. See measures. coo: certed and tarried forward for theriannihi ' iatiim . sooner or later, ..of - herproperty in. slaves-?.: . Such expectationsiiitiiidnlgeit were .tiot , reasonable,- The • law -,- Of self-de-• fence 'includes :tights of propeit y as 'Well as of person. And it appears to methat there must be a Utile,. In, the, progress of this conflict, if ithe ‘mdeedirrepressible,wlien slaveholders mg,lawfully All - back on their natural rights, and in de fence of their property whatever trteansof , protection they possess or 'can command. I do not agree with thenrthat' that time has , arrived yet; lint it would :be well Tor' thse Whopusb on this confliet,'lrwhatev ever ;forth, to • coniider that they. are haii .tening eri.that time; and that ' they have convinced One or more Southern States that it has already colue. , , r , ....`I , 1 ;1 :,' [ Several. States prefiliseto retire from the ,Confederacy,;and that justly • alarmi us:, `re come tegetherio consider' what may be Al'one to prevent itinnilnro bound in.'fidelity to nurselvesatid. others, to take the measure !Of .-•the whole MaitOtile:- of the danger.. p - ~- f -, ..!..,,..,,;...,:-/ . - This , i irrePreible:comes' has grown Out of he angle:axon loie of freedom.• What thatiptision ii, -Mid howit ,tvils''of-: fended by intiodnetion'OfnegrOilaVeS, ~ may be read-in the chronicles of the, Amer ! : r icaa`Pi . 4vhices; anidVS2ipiallY iiitlie - earn. I egt;Ahe,•ol64derit;':and"repeate'd ' retnonr 1 .strancis adgrisied by iCbii_o ( Teny of Viij; ginia Ito tlis-vro*n -and - Pirliainent . Of,t- $IMIIN),000 5i.1 73 '.EM 1 4011 OF THE BIONTRO)SE, PA., THUtSDAY, OCT : . ':1:,--'186:8 Great Britain against their introduction. But if the anglo-saxon loves liberty a bove all other men, he is not indifferent to gain and thrift, and he is retnarkablettbr his capacity of adaptation, whereby he takes advantage of any circumstances in which he finds himself placed. And, ac cordingly by the time the Colonies were prepared to throw off the British yoke, and to assume among the powers of earth the separate and equal station to which the ‘ laws of nature and of nature's God entitled them, it had been discovered that the :unwelcome workers, - against whose introduction such earnest protests had been mide, could be:turned to profitable account in the Southern States-- . -that the African constitution was well adapted to labor in latitudes which alone could pro duce some of the great staph s of life— and that the North, which could not em ploy them profitably, would be.benefitted by such employment as the South could afford. Considerations of humanity, also, as well as the rights of private property, entered into the discussions of that day. What was best for an inferior race thrust unwillingly upon a superior ? That both should be free, or that the inferior should serve the superior, and the superior be bound by the law of the relation to pro tect the inferior ? If best for both races that the existing slavery should continue, then what was to be its relation to the general government? How should it be represented in the councils of the nation ? 1 - low far protected or discouraged by the power of the new government? Should r 3urisdiction to abolish it be granted to the i government, or reserved to the States and the, people of the States? These were great questions, and, like all . the ques tions of that day, were wisely settled. The Northern States abolished their slavery, and so gratified their innate love of freed Om—but they did it gradually, and so did not Wound their love of gain. They sold out slavery to the South, and they received a full equivalent, not only in the price paid down, but in the mann flicturing and commercial prosperity which grew up from the productions of slave labor, 'When' the Constitution came to be, formed, some of the Northern States still. held slaves, but several had abolislizUlte,' 4...44..e..,.... 0 rne55... p . --0bzu,,,, t ,p w ...„ rent'lliat"naterarcauses woullforze it al tiinately altogether upon the South. The love - of liberty' was as intense as ever, and as strong at the South as at the North, and the rove of gain was common to both sections. Here Were two master-passions to be adjusted under circumstances of the, greatest delicacy. 'They were adjusted, mid the great qiteations of the time were settled in the only manner possible. , Con cession and compromise—considerations' for each other's feelings and interests,sa.o rifices of prejndices,..arbevance and mod eration—these were the Means by which the "more perfect union" was formed. And what .iwork it was ! If the Un ion had never brought us a single bles sing, the Constitution of the United ' States would still have been a magnifi cent monument to the. unselfish patriot ism of its founders. Not an alliance,' merely, but a close and perfect union be tween peoples equally devoted to free-., dem, equally bent on bettering their con- , dition, but separated: by State lines and jealOns of State rights—one section seek-'' ing its prosperity under institutions which were to make every man a free man, the ' other under institutions which tolerated negro slavery. Had theyenstitution fail- , ed to work out the benefient results in- tended; here was an instance of human ef fort to' do good—an effort to restrain and. ' regulate two natural passions, to compel them to co-operate in blessing mankind; which would forever have challenged the 'admiration of all good and thoug.htful men. But did not fal,tbani(Goil. lilies made us a great and .tirOsperotiti nation, 'And. 'the of Of the . *Ad, for, the 'motives of the founders is swallowed...up, ip;Watider. stills succm'of their - work. .... , ` tilt all this the '"lrrepreisible .conflict" `ignores. ' The'passion for liberty, ,spurn 7, ing the restraints imposed,l4burned oat ''all memories-of the - compromise and the Compact in those Northern `communities,' which,,under the false name of Liberty Bills, obs,tract ,-the execution of the bar . gain.n. - What-part 'of the purpOses of the ' founders are the underground railroads in-- 0 t tendo _ .promote ?- Whence comes , excesaive.**ibilities that, , cannot: bear a few : slaves in a retneteterritciry Antil.the. white people,:establit3h a Constitution ?...... 'What ,41oes,that, editor preacher know . Of the.linion,,ondiOf :the men .who made. it; whO habitualjy reviles ; nd -misrepresents 4ftite Soutliern ; peopleond .excite the iginiii . rant Aod f tliought,less hi. our midst.tolate and:pereecitto.theml. What, has lincomel of. oar -glad and, willing - obedience, At:tithe. Buprenieeouq , as.the,thial . txpositori of the-compact-? I ' , ~ . • - . - - :-,,,,,.•: Betiot deeeived.-.! Let me -not prophe;- cy smooth things" a t nd -: cry" peace -when there - is no:peace; ztet:the truth be spa; lien, be pondered, if we mean to save the "'Union.' The 'o — nfliet boasts thatitAs ir 'repressible. -It : allies.jtelf...-.witii.lequat' readiness.tO . religiott 'ap4lipflgelitp:lteo r list; Of enr - OnsslntiS ) ", g . '9o 4:44:.44,11t. : 1 ' nuils l ei: - einiinion•eause - with "taroi:lianipionki' !;of fkeclirin the: 'ip:irlil n ‘ Ver.„ .. ini;i(3*4, 0 0 : iiriiitiptit!.=Of inStrkeotiOn, , riot an4.4iseOr . d, 'at 'tone; ' *With' rreedolii . ilis - vri hell .Oti, . _. • the banner- it tears, it tramples under foot the guarantees .of freedom contained in the Constitution and laws. / flow is it to be repressed ? Govern ni4ll administration cannot subdue it. That has been tried for several iniciessive perieds, and the conflict has waxed hot ter :Ind hotter. Will the next adininistra , tion be more successful?, Hoping for the bot'it cap do, what right have you or I to anticipate that the man who has been elected will prove recreant to the maxims 03' made him President? Can trade and'bommerce subdue it 2 Look ;it the votes of Boston,; Philadelphia and Pitts burgh. , The mannfactnrers and merch ants' are the • governing classbs' in those cities. They are intelligent and quick to dibeever their interests. They have weigh ed and measured the Southern trade, and then voted against theouthern people,. Bet what if they had no —what if, like the city of New York, they had voted a. gainst the conflict, only to be overruled by the country counties? Commercial cities cannot repress the conflict, if the people of the interior lend it their sympa thies. No, no; there is reason in the boast that the States- all shall become free. All New England has decreed it. Tlie great'States of New York and Ohio have repeated, again and again, the de cree. Pennsylvania seems to have sanc tioned it. The Northwestern States at the present committed to it. f What hope is left, for the Union P. Is there a man in this assembly who deems that this conflict can go on and the Union . last? If there be, that man is beside ri msel f— her 4 a s lost his wits. I will rear Sin with no such man. But, though few tray believe that the Union can long en dare the shock of the conflict, yet many ii , opts think that freedom— absolnte ifeedom is such a boo P—and • negro every so great a reproach and evil, that' Vie whole influence of a good man's life .Ind conduct 'Should be directed to pro-, mote the one anil . suppress the other— in eulhough, as a conseqnence, the slave BtateS should be dnvicen out of the Union. This is the prevalent distemper of the pub lic mind. '" Who can Minister .to a mind, diseased ?" Fellow-citizens, I profess no ability in this _rezard s lut my ansitth is oyeand, I uri _iabetromit -- .3110 -- imiit in n ns-prism up filim the - b - eakt to - toe bps. ' - When, under the, articles of confedera tion which carried us through our Revo lutionary war, States had grown jealous, unfraternal, disobedient, and the general government had proved itself too weak .. to suppress conflicts that wore arising,the people took the reluedyinto their own hands, called a Conventionond formed a stronger government. The,- call of the Convention, the election of deputies, the- State Conventions which followed, all served to engage the public mind, and to direct it to the common danger and the possible remedy. Thus the popular mind prepared itself to receive with approba the Constitution that wasformed,and im pending dangers, were averted. .. History is said to he 'philosophy teach ing by exampleS. As we Pennsylvanians were the first to abolish slavery, let us be the first to `move for the salvation of the Union. Under the amendatory clause of the Constitution, Congress is bound to call a general Convention on the applica tion of the legislatures of two-thirds of the States.. Our legislature will assemble next month. Let us petition them to de mand the Convention. Good examples, like bad ones, are contagious. Perhaps one and another of the Northern States may do the like, until the requisite num ber have" Concurred, and then We will have a National Convention 'to consider the evils and the dangers of the day, and to devise remedies which„it may be hop ed, shall prove as 'saluthry as those of 1787. Arid note, as then 'the progress of these radiances will awaken inyntry• and thougbtfolness in Abe masses—will `call off 'their minds from the petty politics of ,the ,day and from the inischieN•ous agital49ll 4 slavery questions to the .grand jirolileni of how we can render this glonotiii - Unitin perpetual. -_ '. • • In what form and to What extent the power l of the general Government should be increased is not .for me to' indicate ; but. with the confession of President 13tichan ; an and Attorney General Black before us, that thesGovernment, as now constituted, is L onable to prevent or punish , secession, or suppress the • proud conflict that= disturbs our peace, and boasts itself irrepitessible, haye I not a right to 'asAtatne that theGov,- erilinent . - needs to, be', ptreugtheued,?— 'ilaye, I not ~ , i' right F lo assume _'that, a, G oA t al r i e oP , wili f eh )irgif' , 0 sufficient for the 21: 1 5rY'fift'Y 3v.aFfh ag9y. mben- soil v and mate, ,and St t o soyerp,guty l could 'be trisied,to regehltei,4 spread et' slay, cry, 4 thrffieient, to-illy,, when,, every , ,up:, starkiptilitieian ,egn stir 'the ,peoptu L to, in n 9 w a g ai H st th 9 d° l lle?ti 6l hlsti4htionof ouroa9lern neighkorar— l wheil , ,rAial4, jests f seditieuS editors 'like G l itmaxv„ 1 and zEcuEn, can sway jedistaturee,-,uol poiMl, r votes against the -handiwork of %VASJI/NGTPN alld,Metplao.,l4 - -.lithgnAlle f Clir# Otlli s liln , lp,ef 'such Ai!pok.ilo AE, L p,,, ER'B f lopeomii ; ;! ihyOrite, campaign ; dqou., anent, pad are a0' 9441./ i s bi. ; Illous.anfis; P 4 ,1 law Auld'aaspe,l , bo t tli- 7 -ntep ,jejlousy, Und - ) bate !live killed AR Or ~frgeroa! feel-, jugs' foi' L thiec s aytiO ,wero liarrii ,pur.,Prekh•t ken, alit - 1 1 ,010 have done itts 4. ,4a . o harm?-=- The traditions of the elders. lingered in the generations which iminediately-suc ceeded the adoption of the Constitution, and , their -passions for. freedom, just as Strong as ours, was chastened into loyalty to the Union, and veneration for the rights Of States. The'Constitution; which was strong enough to govern each men, is weak to retain aswho have outgrown the grave. a» d, amid( rate wisdom - that excited no, irrepressible (Patna between brethren, but taught thenf to dwell together in unity. inakeit strong-enough to ram the. madness of our 'day. And let the people comer the motives : for nreservingthe , They:- wotild- - be brought d irectly to the .dabates of the CO:invention, and by the antecedent and subsequent debates. I can suggest only some of them. First, our name and place and power as one of thonations of the earth. Are not these worth preserving ? In eighty years we have ,mat died thigreatimi thatPome and England were centuries in attaining. What may be done in the next eighty ? heard a sagacious statesman say, about three years ago, that in twenty years from that time, if we kept to gether, we would drive England - from all the markets of the world as a first class trader. They were' words of cheer, but there was the• inevi table if. In what market we shall rival England, or even the pettiest kingdom of' the earth, after dissolution of the. Union, that statesman and no other has ventured to predict. See what prosperity would come to us , of the Nortlon the process of the grand rivalry predicted by . that statesman. Man ufactures and navigation have thus- built up the greatness of England, and they would In the same for us as a nation, and for,our section of the nation. Manutac turiag has already made us Lrreat. In no one tesPect'arethe rise ant progress of our country so remarkable aS in its Mann -- factures. The narrow-minded-: English , statesman who would not have us. inapu fectare even a " soahl he be carried alivethrough themanidheterig.of Philadelphiai•Pittsburgh orLOwell; would, - _consistent with ;himself, curse tTie falsei#c r ds wino ,had inspired hisfunreason-Y able wisli;,and basted-to.,,die . shall' never mid to depend 'again On any. or. srYr couoporon orn000a.: 1. nue far, - at feast, - e have come. And what:eities .acid- towns and railroads and canals have we built up in Oar progress ! :How much personal wealth and social happiness have we cre ated;—*hat additions to our - poPulation— What-accretions in thevalue of our farms and minerals-r-what industry,- , have - we stimulated - and . rewarded .--7-!what con-' *ice We,' We t" Think Of then thingsMlo*-enuntryinen—con them over, one , by.One-41issect and analyze each fact —trace ,its connections And consequences : and Area when you combine them all _in (*glowing picture of national prosperity, remember that COTTON,' the product of alone-labor, has been one of the indispens- • able elements Oral this prosperity. More must. he,an indispensable element of all our future prosperity. I say it must be. The world cannot and will not live without cotton. There is not a matron v in all the Union -that can clothe her farnily or herself .without it. Nor can. England do without 4 our cotton.• . ours , ret,, and her operatives and ,cours, woiilil ataere,.T . f the rogt'Setra id not rain cotton. 'Manemit • them and -they never •raise another crop. :They need the , authority of a master and the eye Wan, overseer to Compel and direct them to the duties to thectotton plant which must be rendered 'at the right season preCiselyor the crop is lost. . And thus it happens that the Providence of that,eood,Being wholnikwatehed over usfiom the *ginning and saved. us from, external foes t has So ordered our internal' relations' as tti'make - negfo'idaierk 'ilii'in-, calculable blessiligto us.anittosthe phoPle• ,of Great'Dritain, .4. say to..ury; foi. :I de noteuter into ,the optotion whether ; the, institution ho an evil to the • people (it*, SOiitliern Statis that is their .coheerzic. not oars. Nite hove nothino l'o" do ' *lib' it; and to obtrude our opinions upon the people of ,sovereign States :concerning they domestic,institutions would be sheer impertinenee. • put do you not So and feel how giiod it was for us lb 'totl , Over our 'slaves to our.friends, of the Sonth— , how good it was for us that theyemploy-: e4lthiltn jr raising PL qaPie f9r _9ur-•lltanik% facturets 7 -,boy yqsq.it , Waft to. so -. adjust the c,oinpromiscs'ef the Catuit)tutiini that we Conhrlivein uniOn witlklinniand,reap 'the-signal advantageti fo , whicif I have ad= 'vetted,? .We consigned them to no heathen l ;thrall!;, but to l Christinn men, professing the,sainefaiib with us • --7sp,eolieg Oe.samf4, Flarign'age;•eading ''th4 ,golden rule in no 1 on`e.sided And'distorted shape; Imit'as it is 1 ;icor dd—a nile•to Slavei , as' well as mai; 1 ,ters;; - ..., r , ' - . .:,- -".- allusion te the Olden r i tile7remin4s inenflan Abjection ; which :will be urge!) mineti, that I bai,:e advanced.` If will be said:that:slavery is &Sin' against Vred;,and therefore, that 'alireiisonsldrawn fronfoir Riaterial iuterests, kOr + tovoririg ur,skctting it most go fOr'hotbingi - 'ti tie '' , ii:sia, t raifie? ilieks; is an 6i(tiki ay:ill:o6l'64 i.:lititrWhat right bd.§ the "Abi olition4 irto4rOnpuncelt ,irsiii ?' ( : .1 ,suy : - A bill 44 1 0 , 10) -....44eae5i 3 th 0 1 pa,sto n 14, Ile . , Yirsl! FrgsbY-4 1 :4P , CPurch ~°UrPONNI VoLIIVE XX. in a sernien preached Within a ireek, - 'de. fined an Abolitionist to be'ona who holds that slavery is , a sin. I accept the defini tion, !Ma:according to it mn_Liy ofotirbest ChristhOpeeple must be accounted Abe .for it is astonishing - ho w ex tensively the.religious mind of the North has admitted' into itself the suspicion, not to say, conviction that slaveholding is a. sin. If -it is a sin, then it is a violation of -some Divine law, for sin is the transgress--, ion of the law.,. - • NoW,I deny that'any such law has ever been revealed. The' burden - of showing it is nu hintarlito alleges it ; and when . it IA AoWn, VS-wee-that an d 7 0tit, thatbas-been saidler slavery. - I bind inyself . neverto raise my voice' again in favor of such a But, so far from any such law being.plahr. ly written for our instruction, whoever.,. will study the Patriarchal and ;Levitical . institutions ; will see the princi ple . of hu man bondage and of property,m man di yinely sanctioned, if not divinely ordained ; and in all - the 'sayings Of our Sav ioiir we hear no injunctions for the suppressicei of. slavery which existed under' Isis eyes, while He delivered ninny maxims and principles, which, like the golden rule, enter right into and regulate the'relation. So do the writing s . of Paul abound with regulations of - th e relation; but not' with injunctions , for the suppression. If we go to the ii oat accredited commentators, or consulitilivines really wise and geOdin our own midst—Oil, what is better, study and search the Scriptures for ourselv.es we shall fail to find a law whiclijairliin , terpfeted and applied, jUstifies.any man , asserting,ln or out of the pulpit, that the slavery ,of the United States, is What _right, then, I ask again, has the Ab olitionist to cheat tender consciences into hostility to an institution on 'whigh our Union is founded in part ? Good People any, ,we denet wish to disturb - slavery where it exists by local law, but believe it to basinful and inexpedient, we will not submit to iteeitterision,aoraSsist.tci relitOre. the fugitive to his master. Such people soon come to conceive that the more un friendly they can feel towards slavery, the more harsh speeches they can make about slaieholders,*the more they help on tha irrepressible confliet; 'the better will they immendithemselvesto God. In' soino come essential to good standing, _Accoid. lug to some .ecclesiastical councils, it would sewn that thigreat duty of the Arneripn Christian is to war with 'his neighbOes• . property, -and if 'oPportnnity•presents, to help steal and hide it. - , Alas! alas I -for -the times upon which we have fallen.' .. We must aronse,ourselves and re-assert the rights of the 'slaVeholder, and. , add such guarantees to, our Constitution si will protect Ms profferiy from tbe:'spoilit tiOn of -religious bigotry and 'persedutioii; or else we must give up our Constitution' and Union.: Events are placing the alter native before us—Constittitiona/ , Union, . and liberty according to American law; or else, extinction of slave property; negro free dom, dissolution of the Union, aid anarchy and confusion. Can any man, even though his mind has . ' been poisoned by the sophisms of. infidels and Abolitionists, seriously ,conteMplate the alternatiVe with' d'onipos6re and Indif ference Y We hear it said let South Cat* line go oat oCthe Union peambly,,' 1 say let hergo.peaceably, if she go at a ill; but why should South, Carolina be driven out of the Union by an irrepressible conflict about slavery? Other States will be sure to follow sooner or inter. The work- of• disintegration, once fairly established, will. - not end with South Carolina, nor even with 'all the slave Stites. Al ready,we pee it announced onto floor Congrea,, that the city of Nei York, tired = of her ecinneettons with Poritan't New litgland and,thelauatical interior of her own State, will. IOIPT- 0 704 1 1° 9.oo97MinitY t. 03 sot op for herselk and threw open : her ,magnificent pert to'the Vniestrictect eoraineree , of the . • Let • ns'bo wise in timer - Our resolu b. ons aro , soothing: .anit encouraging their tone, And, this; vast. assemblage is symptomatic-o f returning health it‘the. • pub li c poindar meetings an 4 , :fair-ificikin - remilutions are not: going"to save -the :Union from destruction. The '' 'people must act, and act promptly and 'efficiantly. Let them shOw the South that the. heart of the great Stito'of-Pentislirtt ids; is sound. still. It is said that the late; elections do not i cemmit,retinsylvkinia alterably to Aischievous conflict. am willing to-belie - Ye it. -I hofic iti is so.' I hope the eYentli' Of the winter - 'and 'Mir' futurfrelections will prove .iL , Thett Rentiqlvtulia,appeal to.the South - t.O statid - ,by us a little longer, till we havp .pr,oved, 'not . byfair, words, but by deeds, that we 'wilt - arrest the itrepressibleColitlie - t-•=that .we are not ready to give' up constitution al liberty for licentibus liberty—that .we fivill not stithitice all thet:memorieti of the ,paSi iad all the :liore - Of:tho•toitirtiv noo6;o"ceijok; no not for negro. dont tiVeul'::-fo`i ' we- tear '401%113744 fait i liailfOro *a° lig' ' n egr °, ‘ ll"ll° 7 4 34;.: fora`Sain.and mad gitempt:AC Tieß9iNe 'doni;---That is tlie,poor, the' abe i rtiv . e, abiiird; the' uric cd purpose ate mipeeted jiunce.. :God forbid tt' ~.„ , , arplirtit NtMBER 39.