• - • . i„ , ' ` • • . - r t • • •,- :- ,r. ..,,,.. -• ' X •" - . . , , • : , . . ~ -, •I. .. 0% ) , ..::-. a . 4: lier 4::: ,:. 4: rei,...1. i ' , 1t.. , .....1..4‘. : , . V 4 41 1 1 11 0. 1 4 ... t. r , • ..• I . ' . • ,;;V. 4 " .4 Vk •" '' • deslol6 4 .4{,4 ;,,* • ..., ' • .'tr : • • : *. . s .. . , VV. ~. .V4l , P 4 9lk: . • • ;11L a ill . •• - ....... • . . 9104141 • .2 ,4 1. t., •,.' • .•• ), `• ‘' '. 1 .44,. - • . ~ H .._ , ....:.,..,...:..,......_.......... • . ...... _. ... appy, 41pd•r „: • • - 4' 4 , : .1... , . . .„ .. 'a ifi r - .1 , 4 ' f`4l - 461Pr109 1 0 - ..., '..... . • . , :,, , "4 . lik 11116160,4mi1it.16,ipi0. . : I ; -.'-' ' A .. • .4.• t': .. , . s . . - . . • i l lie 1 0 1.4 6 31104 1 414,-- Orie Per ~ ' s .s.-- ,_, ,-- : - .11,1111114 .. _ lis) aiftkaOption = r .„' , 4 ..4 - 0 - . • .- .r .: . „ f • , .. . *e ' ~`L • 1 ;,-- -., I •---... ~ (.yin ' Nowt* , .. , rtv..7 . • sei • ~, • .... A 4 41 . two **Woad,- et AC . Optioo of die pub- • , , 4 "" - -. -. , ,-"' If A.. I . k :.,,. 1 , , kik • . . • . f• , . .t„ , . • .!, • as - "' , .r - -. - :.•,--' -- Wel :l44lluokuMorsorawatios.oollll. . - 1 . • 110 . t, Ark ' ~-, , . _l2 _ z - ... Wile. •itilersod it Use usual rates. - • , , ... .. .. sehuitefit •. -- ... 7 ' ''''' '.. ". .: ' • ' 4,•fai 'llo4lll9ilii4ardoittr-stoil 'seatibegs And dlr. - .• - - t . • • , iiskg&Golool•? e " •• '; 1 - tgoo of Palo.. ,,. , • •• Americo?' • QINVNik Alma,D4timere ttrect, directly °piped* 111eigpiers' Tinatug liotridishaiest-- 4 " fa the tire. .. . . "ZiketialltliCL - Chre .A.CI. - "Ve t ties., - a l3t Itr Wobotor 6 Co., 171101tila ST., - 9 MAI IfOR Ilt, 1115,, lilloitt re es Of IstSeo+orl Alen-Vitt h a lirl It (4- . 11 i e Fif '. 4 4 F: 14 , f or isientissildllfasinfaetnriayltstablishineats. lisallaisifo~laW.-1 1 4sistero. YarsieTs, House knotostoo4nolin.ahlsor fielinsoax to search of sr InervorNMllMlSibecete any kind of Rearing 17( W elostildrebliabislerep. - nesko sore they secure the be bronossiilloir trona before purchasing. '111111465/41/**ollAlFook scut by mail. IllillClNta /1,6006 MEWING MACIV/i{ 9 stro l =l .1.. 1011411041004selksusde, simple in its con- Ossify kept in order. 11.4 144.4 swam AMP? LOCK-SITITII. alike t>•to( the stateria/. 3; it abotlet-serr Any . 'mad all materials that ea* biassed, -- 4. I, atoisiebe Ole - to use Cotton, Thread, or' Itillt, M*414104, tbe spool. fl.'ltishbalsi beaMe to se* from coarse to fine. **lAN** MA fa'ttio.srlth rapidity; and with out elsoirrol the tension. S. ift'llissiiht be able to 'sake the tension gronfete*ilistAus both the under and tipper ehesads,4ll4 with einifistneity. 7. thiskotsid bare se-abraight needle : curved ones tillStifillo to break. A. riii"iiiimillip aloud have perpetwlicitint motiseh his its absolutely necessas7 for heat v Ss ill should be capable of taking in the Wont pieces of work. lib. -It should he Able to bzu , l o ith a hinder, ham ,rith a hemmer; ,11,.,u1,1 -ta,h, fkil, eau cud gather. 11. It siluall he alw.vt • :en lv to work. 12. it ghould be taio‘l , l” of o-ittg the same size of thread on both •ide4 of toe work. and or using different color«i thread or silk. abote or below, to correspond with any two colon of cloth to be united. 1:!. It shonld be aide to make a long ar short Scstas. ' - 14. It should be n 1,1.. to fa-ten ofT the seam. and emantioore sewing tit.rlitly At the first ititeh. 15. It 5110111,1 run easily and mike but little noise. IC. it eitould have a wheel feed: none other. 3 are inconstant contact w ith the ff ork. it should nut he liable to get out of order. It. ft should not be liotile to break the thread, nor slip •iti t‘ Le. 19. It should nut be of.re...ary to use a screw driver or u-reuelf to •et the needle. 20.1{ should• not be lmble to oil the opera tor), deem:. tdiotild not form a ridge en the under side, nor rut el out. nor Le wet...telt:l of thread, as is the rare Ut ith ALL Cli if , ,,TITCII machine:. 12. It should not be more trouble than it Is worth. - 23. Fiu .tle. ;111 of the. , e advantages are pos se/idea Li our "diewing LADD, IV F.:INTER & CO. bee. 5, 1e59. lv 1= Harding & Carroll, ciasixissros Firr Proof Warehem and R. R. Depot, ..1", 2t; Ilward Street, .‘I,T I M ORE, MU. Feb. 14, 'f.O. 1y Baltimore PnELT. .V.ND lItt.ASS WOR.KS, 13 Holliday street. 11..,1tim,,re, Yol. ItEGESTJr:it a ag. the Propri tor-, are prepared to forniall BELLS of All *pt i on. front 10 to 10,0u0 is # 3 pound., which a trarrantel equal in quality of tone, prolongat'oa of aounti ULII durability - , to any made in the' Putted States. Our Bell. , .ire 1.1... Th of the be-t materials, warranted to Bile entire anti:faction ; al:o, agakidt breakage. ... tape Bells, rato . -.;ing from 10 to 100 pounds, alwayl 03 haul at northern price 4. For Certiticater with full particulars, seed for one of our t•ireular.. Aug. 24, 1859. I,' Baltimore Safe Manufactory. MILLER'S 1311'1101'3:11 SALAMANDER SAFES.—Tlionsands of dollars in proper ty of all 'clads, tinted annually in theme safes that never failed to preserve their vontents Factory, 11 0r:1 , 10e - street, Provi(len(e, Rhode !Mewl• and 15'1 North 4tr,,t. Baltimore. Sale- TU , 11121, N S ith Charle- 4:rect.. For dots nal prices .ea 1 for a circular. All Safes sear routed to rive satastAutium L. 11. 3111.LE/1. • No. IC S. - ioth Charles -treet, ( - RI. 17. 1A.59. [se. S 7. I,} Baltimore. 31(1. Peter Z , 311 & Son, - COMMltiSliri NiEllilll.‘Nl'S.asiii Dealer* in CORN, Corn Meal, C. uatioea, OATS, - R a re Choi', Motu Dust, MLLE. FEED, any, I!4trow, Pni ) :, Lime. _. YLOCR, Field ..ceds. Si: Ground Plaster Nog. 141 k 140 N0 . 11.2H kii" AHD STU 1.1. T, Jas. 1:, '59. I,y* _ITALTIIIOIZE, 3W. Wines, Brandies, - norms. 11L_ICK TEAS, it.c. I'. TIERNAN ja i - SOS. offer Tur ;ale the folloo hug articles, of their own importation, partic,ilarly at fami ly useit . Wtitss--Pemartine's fivicstyalc, gold and tivtiren &berrieq, in wood and iu 141.‘ ,. , Pore rixits--Sandeni.in's competition red aad.nrithe Pint,dn wood and in gliti4e. Howard Nlnrch . fine libutieins, in "raid and in gl.tiss ; also, Grxpe now Writsa-44latiannesberger. Ste . nbeeger. ' Ilareebretrier, Catnnet, Lieb-frau-Which, Neon nikberg. or 1844. CensP.rasi iftsas—Moot and Chandon'sTin eat in quartos-ie.]. , ume--Otarda ail Hennessy a flue yid pale and antic Brandies., RCII/F-4nd sad. fine JarnniCa. Antigua. Gren ada, and frams-ille I and, imported direct from Londoe. - • nOLLAND Gss—The best quality—Tiernan brand-4434 no issixturt of aromatic poison in it. 209 haft elossits of the finest Sovciiosn 11Esare, ina. 29, 1F59. ly libtioa. sahaeriber, bating been appointed hr ate tlephan's Coen of Adams county, an *Mat 4istrib eta {be balance remaining.g in thallilkods at Bacutytass &mut, Adokaistaor Oahe lattote of Damns, S. man, late of Han lingo& tows** deceased, to atilt among the =IIIPXy, firdtled to receive the same. 1) gives notice that lie will attend to the duties at kisappoilstaassit at the °See of 1 W./LeCl,an 116,rsbarg, Thursday, the 21‘iiiritliiiiiitaiirlist.,-st - le o'clock, 4. it., =ill ier tar,atirhieb Mae and place allpersons wilt . pie Attend_ 1i6.. 4 thl licol4l4N, Auditor. MkMoe. - • I ULU: VONIVSITIMS ESTATE.—Let. ' 41riihi2Intstistlott oa the estate of La hr, late otj-ltdeetcrem, Adams co.,dee'dkriatini bawl granted to the undersign. 01 4 Heattver,Tork soenty, he harehv -Vasa- abase at-al! peewee indebted to said imam to make immediate peiteelt, and those aftein claims araMea•tke same to present them rev eele meted for aettielarAL _ • t ' • ii—taATXB MYERS, Adm'r. am 4t • 1. OtalrOrr . ME _ ICOtiblk • • tt • Sarr,439L—L rs tolo • - , o at s aw of 1 lissolie, • 7, ,14 'PI - at tOrglifisksreo.- a. r, Y tittlite-ssases isiiip t slie hanky. girea,oll: ' to said 'Kati tok istrisint, „l . l o4 *orsoo., Ohm tomprosooktikers ewe. - ;1 ' await: : •= . et • H. J. 43TkHlig. YEAR,. t. Regist.er's Notice. NoTicE is hereby giten to all legatees and other persons coneeturdlUt istration arcostnta bet inafter, rnenlkoide4 will Ift presented et the Orphan's Court of Adams county for confirmation and allowance, on Treaty. du 27th of Drcenther twit, at 10 o'clock, A. M., eft: 154. The flr.t nod final account of Mosi sentt, Guardian of Lucy Ann Kohler, minor daughter of Jacob 'Kohler, deceased. 155. The -fins account of Williartll Wolter. Executor- of the lag sill and tetatncot ~ 1 George Walter. late of Vratiklio townsloit, le. d I,So. The first and final account of George Throne. .Admieustrator of the elate of John *Grew. Lite of Metaallce township, dee eased 167. The first and tin.il account of Yds Aril Spalding. Administrator of William lleniler, der aced. 1511. .The account of ,JolinlVolford..tdmiais- , trator of the estate of J.tmeQ :in, der, tlecest , td. late of Huntington toii i hip. 159. The Ursa account of Jacob Myers, F.sq . EKeentor of the last will and testament of Geo. Toot, deceased. 11;0. Fir.t secount of Wm IL Weld,. Admin istrator of the elate ofll , art Sturnbaugh. dec. HI. The account of E. W. Stable. lluardian of Wm. Lyman Thomas. Philip 11. Thomas. Barney Thomas, and Jacob I'. Thomas, minor rhtidnw ot`Jacoh P. Thomas, deceased. 182. The fer. 4 account tit joel B. Donner, ex ecutor of Isaac Iliddlcinoser. deceased. 11;3. The first and haat ai count of Samuel Pitier, Guardian of F.mannel George Tru4tle. one of the minor children of Henry Trostle, dec. 11;4. The second occountof Maxwell Shields, F.4q guardian of Martha Virginia Knox, minor child of Samuel .Knox, dece.ii-ed, exhibited by James H. Marshall and John llusselinan, Ad utini.,trators of the estas.e of the said Maxwell :Shields, deceased. lu 71. e second C 11 tof Maxwell Shields, guardian of Elizabeth Harriet Knox min or child of :ianiuel Knox, dct eased, and exhib ited by James 11. ?I all and John Mu..elrawn. Administrators ut the e.,tate of Maxwell Shields, deceased. The account of Ilaswcll Shields, Esq., Tegtanunt.try Tru•tee LA. 31rl. llarguret Witherow undclauglitcr., under thew ill or.S.im net Hutchinson, of the borough of Gettyyburg, deceased. exhibited by J•filleS 11. Marshall and John Musselzuttn, Adiuini.triatord of the estate of illinawcil Shitld., ticceaiwel. 11:7. The mount of 3Loe cell Shields, taq., guardian of the e•rticte of Sainuel 31. Witberuw, William P. Witlicruct, Maryttret F.. NVirberow, It. Witherun , Sarah H. Witherow, John Wttherow, and Charlesr.orth „ Witherow, children of Col. S. un,l ',lre. E.' J. Witberow, dece.tb.ed,m.ttb,d b 3 Ilan.ball and John Ilusachunn, Admiun•trAturs of the catate Shields, ticcea,ed. Z.I,C I i A WAIT aryEns r ßy i ritter. Register's Office. Gettys burg, Nov. 28, le:itr. RDVI'D P. CARROLL r TOWN AND - COTVITIII s ,- - • - 41' PUBLIC SALE.— subscriber. Attorney iu Feet for the Widow and all the Children, and Lerst Ilepresentatires, of PETER WE/KrlllT, deCe*Qed, will offerat Pub lic Sale. all the Heal F' tote of saiiddeceased.at the fullowin7 times nod places, to wit Titursday, 2.d day of Perember leer,. at the late residence of said dertn.ed: in Gettysburg, at 12 o'clock - , M., of said day, the property in G etty Thu rg• No. 1: TIIE MANSION. or late residence of said ileerage.l, being a full Lot, fronting on South Baltimore street, bounded by lot of flintuberlin's heirs on the worth and west, on the south by an alley. The improve- menu are a good two-story Brick Dwell- um : , log HOUR, with a one-story Brick Back-building. Wash-house. anti two additionnt one-story Houses, one of brick and the other log, with a Frame Stable, Wood-house, a well of excellent water in the centre of the tot, with some fruit trees. This property will be sold entire or in two parts, as way best suit pur chasers. No. 2: A •11.1iLF LOT OF GROUND, on West High street, with an alley in , the rear, bounded by half lot of Mrs. Neinstedt on the . east. and Lewis Myers•on the west. On this lot ere erected an unfinished two- FEW: story Frame NVeatheeboaeded MUUSK and one-story Kitchen. N0..9 t AN ACRE OF LAND, more or less, in the rear of Nee. I, bountied North and east by an allvy, on, the south by lots of Dr. John Run kel and George Shryoak, and on the *est by lots of John D. Culp and Frederick PIO* on which are erected n Frame Barn. with thteshing 'fluor .bud stable, and some fruit trees, This property will . he sold together, or in two parts, as may beat snit purcha,ers. No. 4 : ONE ACRE OF LAND, more or less, in the rear of the County Prison. bounded an alley on the north, lot of John Houck (m the west and Peter Frey on the south. The improvements are two one-story Du ell ing dill EN, one a frame and rough- ;;$ cast and the other log, xith sonic fruit trees. To be sold entire or separate, to suit pilgrims MR. PROPERTY IN CUMBERLAND TOWNSHIP. Tract of Laud. in Cumberland township, ♦dams connty. containing in all 65 acres and /u 4 pen. licb. bounded by the Gettysburg and Littlestown Turnpike, and lands of Nathaniel Lightn Abraham Spangler, Mrs. Cetairge Wangler and Win. Patterson i part of the tract is covered with ouug timber. and there is al.o n spring of good water upon ir.— 'Th• tract has been divided and will be offered in lots. as follows: \o. 1, containing 21 acres 2 perches, at Pike: No. 2, 27 acres 143 percheq; No. 3, 4 acres 152 percher ; No. 4, 11 acres 27 perches. This tract will he sold entire or in lots, as above 'Wed, as may best suit pur 'chase rs. igoli-Also. on Friday, the 23.1 day of Deem Los twxl, at II o'clock, A. M.. will be offered at Public Sale, at the house of John Moritz, on the Cold Spring road, TWo TRACTS OF TIMBER LAND, in litualltonhan township, Adanis coun ty, one tract, through which tits Cold :Springs mad runs. containing 225 acres pf Patented Land, divided into lot*. as follows : No. I con tains 5U acres 107 perches; No. 2, 127 acres 28 perehesi No. 3, 43 acres 125. perches ; No. 4. 39 acres 37 perches ; NIS. 5. 20 acres 145 pek h ; No. a, IC acres 96 perches. To be solid entire or. in lots, to snit bidders. About 120 acres of this tesr..l, is susceptible of cultivation and will make a good farm. On No. 2 them is a _ goad - one and a half story Log 1401.i*E, with a spring and some fruit trees. The other Tract contains 80 acres. more ur less, of Patented Land, a public road waiting thretigh it.. This Tract is eorered wise first rate thriving Chesnut and Oak timber, and of fers rare inducements to persons wishing to boy timber land. It has been divided into four lots, to wit: No. I colitAidar'll'acres . 9 . perctres I No, 2, /8 acres 10 perches ; hia. 3, 20. acres ; No. 4, .21 stores. , -This tract sill be sold entire, or in /Oita, AS-SIKITE Shod , i as =la best snit. The iota oi needle tra are laid out so as to have the advaktage of access to the public roads. BYwid the day fixed for the axle of the „Wail be wet or otherwise unfsvora -46, take plate on ths,6rSs fiat day thestearter.. Persons dal:retail/Friar - Dig either of the, tracts ofhloatiliirt,Land,,will be shown the Afore 11770tim Moritz, reilliimeretrair thereto. OfrAntindenoligiversediennsinede know n by • •• WM- WiXreß, ; A/4mm as ./4#4 ;or As Widow. ant 'Herd et Pert WeLtast;dee'd. izerw tr • mem .*1.1.214 Valuable Real Estate, J , „erratic, stits nd ,f GETTYSBURG, PA.: MONDAY, DEC. D. 1850. Poet's Cor'ra.er. UM/TS NOT..-MZMC NOT. '• Without baste' without rest!" Bind the motto to thy breast! Bear it *all thee as a spell: Storm line 4unshine, guard it well ; Heed nut lir , wer , th.tt round thee bloom— Rear it onward to the tomb! Ifaste not—let no thoughtless deed utr fore'er the spirit's speed; Ponder At eil and know the right, flow ,ni tlun uitlt all th,y might, Haste not-Lye:lry can neer atone For one reAlesi action done! Rest not I—life is sweeping by, Go and flare before you die ; Something mighty and sublime Leave behind to conquer time ; G/orious 'tie to lii e for are Rhea thee forms hare Tl,:ssed away. "Ilicate not!—rest not!' calmly wait; Meekly hoar the storms orate ; Duty be thr polar guide; Do the right, s,-11..tt- t.r.betide I Haste not ! Conflicts past, Cud shall crow n thy work Itt /ILA. ! Miscellaneous. THE GREAT UNION DEXONSTRA noIir AT BOSTON. Speeches of Hon. Edward Everett and Hon. Caleb Cushing. The Union meeting at Fanenil Mal, in Boston, on Thursday week, was presided over by Ex•Bovernor Lincoln, assisted by 129 Tied Presidents, including fear et-Gkrenters of the State, and site Secretstries..24lre bail was packed in every past sad away lusadreds were laribk telain adieirlsia. invrAlit trim, !$ lIPILLCI. Tine now present to the audi ence one of qurptoit patriotic fellow-citisans, whore wt olflife has been devoted to the iter vice 4hip country, in the promotion of its security, preltperity and honor—ithe Mon. Ed ward Everett. .ILotail and loo" applause, fol lowed by niniecheseitel: Mr. Everett then in his usual ,t ofu elognence, peoceeded to address the immense audience, referring to the fact that be hod withdrawtr &grater from polities ; hawing found LanortAteealal , usit ask he thought. a more useful exultation in seeking. trally the elections of his coun trymen litineW tied Siitith to that great name and precious reemory which is left almost alone Viral! the Immerous kindly associations which ones bound she afinotit section. of the cotrhlritorthee. lea:used The Talus of the Ultitme athd th e den of its dissolution wetqleseiniktif team at gth, and the opin ion expreefted that we are hp the ver_y verge of a entivolVden *Mob wifllifithe the Dttion to its foundation ; and find a fair more steps forward, in the tetreethro in which affairs have merel for a few jean put, will bring as to the catastrophe. Mr: Everett ttextprneeeded to print out the enormity of John Brown's Harper's Ferry raid,and the terrible coneequenoes that would have caused had he been anceessfhl. The people of the North who treated the 'affair with levity, did so from a want of reflection as to the terrible consequences. To talk of' the pikes mid rifles not being intended for offenaix e purposes, is simply absurd. !Ap plause.] The f k rst act almost of the party was to shunt down n free colored man, whom they were attempting to impress, and whetted , from them. One might as well say that the rifled ordnance of Louis Napoleon, was intend ed only fur self-defence, to be used only in case the Austrinns should undertake to arrest his march., (Loud applause.) No, air, it was an attempt to do on a cast scale what was done its gt. Domingo in 1791, *here the e demi population was about equal to that of Virginia ; and if any one would farm a dis tinct idea whatsuch an operation is, let him see it—not es a matter of vague conception— s crude project—in the mind of a heated. fanatic, hot as it should in the sober pageant history, that record the revolt in that ',land; the midnight burnings, the wholesale massa cres, the merciless tortures, the abominations not to I,e named by Christian lips in the hear ing of Christian care—some of which, too un utternbly atrocious for the English language, are of necessity veiled it the obscurity of the Latin tongue. Mr. Everett here read from history a short account of the horrors attendinz tlie servile insurrection in St. Domingo, anus - pro ceeded to address the assemblage as follows: Now let us take a glance at the state of things in the Southern States, comembers, as they are, with us in the great republican con federacy. Let us consider over what sort of a nopuration it is, that some persona among us think it not only right and comthendable, but in the highest degree heroic, saint-like, god-like to extend the awful calamity which turned St. Domingo into a heap of bloody admit in 'I7SI. There are between three and four millions of the coteried race scattered through the Southern and southwestern States, in small groups, in cities, towns, vil lages, and in larger bodies on isdlated µtante tions ; in the house, the factory arid the field mingled together with the dominant rice lit the various pursuits of life ; the latter aldeuel ing, in the aggregate to eight or nine mil lions, if I rightl.T recollect the numbers. Up on this community, thus composed, it was the design, of Brown to let loose the bell-hounds of a servile insurrection, and to bring on a struggle which, for magnitude, atrocity and horror, would hare stood alone in the history of the world. And these eight or vino millions, against whom this &rightful war was leiied, are our fellow-oitizens, entitled with ne to the protec tion of that compact of government., which reet:guizeatkair relation to the colored - raoe —a compact which every sworn officer of the Unien or of the Staters is hound by his oath to support I Among them, sir, is a fair pro portion of men and wouuto of education and culture—of metal and religious lives and charectert--virtnotts fathers, mothers, sons, and daughters, persons who woold adorn any elation of society in &ay eeuntry—men who read the same Bible that, we do, and in the mane of the' same math* bald at the throne of the Lane God---foiercieg a class of Men ftvnt which have gone foTtlamte of the greatest and pureet'cltarsotots Whieh%adorn our bletoty—Wailllngfon o righthltn, Midi • • 24tat' 11'0f, Iditishidt Theo ate 46eitrilie women, for whaetibosoms pikba sted g Meenre tinsofdactitred In, Nets lie d, (0 be !Abed' in the heath; ursn is r nit*. Posed, meet irr.e 6. as riot hvento nave shown, to be g Only for oppotc Waite to use them IPlirt t baud ion 40 or finir different °OW 51a" i * taZki , 141 iiohoorift mocked", viehol alt the Bowthelw lind pi SrArthio, with the e . aosesion stir bama. I bare enjoyetiseas hos • " the eity an Ikea plheselod the prjAce le!icMo itedinteett, • ',llolkid sto "'Mtn! IS MIGHTY, AND WILL PRIVAIL." the character of toe father of his country, and to inculcate the I.bessings of the Union in the same precise terms in %%Lich I hate done it here at home, and in the other rortions of the land. 1 hare bees admitted to the confidence of the domestic circle, and I hate aeon there touching manifestations of the kindest feel ings by which that circle, in all its members high and low, mister end servant, can 14 bound together; acrd whet I mintemplate the horrors that would have ensued had the , non et large. Mr. Cushing was received tragedy on which die curtain rose iit Carper s Ferry, been moot aut o through ell its scenes 1 uith deafe n ing of fire and sword, 6f lust end murder, of ra- app l ause, coot proceeded to make a most powerful speech. We hate pine end desolation, to the final catastrophe, , lam filled with em ohms to which no w eras room only for the following extracto : can Olt justice. Who denies that John Brown Netts guilty' 1 Who toys he did not euelortake inviteinn and and Th t er he e t w c 7l ' l l' & ll e• 4 ' K 'r • - le u ft " t e ll( t ' 'e tll lj n i2 " t gi o tt n f e hl r i P: ' : ' llt .i " perpetrate it? Who says that he did not station of those, if fle PIII • it th e r e le' who , meditate treasen and endeavor to perpetrate think ?Ent the welfare of the colored ra ce . it! Who says that he ofd not slay pnermed coald by any possibility be promoted by to and inoffensive men in the stteete of Ilarper's pieces, of such a movcinent, and who are , vo Ferry . oo man Idealise this. All that is willtpg Jo purchaerthat resort by th oustly a said And done, in regard to that, is to aroma saorihet. The colored populati o n of SL do - ' that those acts of ntrocions and ferocious fele,- Mingo amounted to Lut little short oft half A ny-that these were not meritorious ftel.l. I say, then, nil lower to the State of 'Virginia million, while the whites amounted to only ! ___Eappinuse nod cheers for Vi on:dal- I env 110,000. The whiteompulotioo of the South- i all honor hi the State of - Virginia, to her jniii ern States alone, is then rgrexate. outniiin- 1 hens the (-elm ed race in the ratio of two to coil authorities, and to hyr eseent re nothori otr; in the Union ' nt large In the ratio of tics. All lionc,r to the State of Virgin - i, that this• treitor and murderer-appreliended in selren ti tine, nn&lf (which ileac en avert) the very act of his treason and murder-tuts the! shculd he brought into eoutliut. it could plat u ]- that this traitor and murderer was en only in the exterminatiou of the bitter [ after scenes of woe for r Web howling° is too; duly, Only, lawfully tried and eon% icted tie eoraino to the Into of the lurid-tot alone in faint. and for wbichhthe liveliest fancy has no , I a edequote images oftiorror. , • the State of-Virginia,-lint of every one of the Such being the *tees some one may as k! Statenef the Union. {Applanse:j why does mil i the Sootli fortify herself sgOihst I Rut, then, gentlemen, in these moat extra -1 the pie-ilAs occurrence of anent eslastropne,. e / „Tooter manifestations which Irate oceufred , by dointtray with the orre greet source in the /stew of Massachusetts and everywhere from alone it tv,,Ri ring ? Thin is a _sp ra y er meetings, public assemblies of re question easily osk Ad /am nothaware 1 joieing snit' or preteutled seheeription--top that it is our duty at North to answer it ; t 'douse and laughter]-in all this it la staid but it may be obsert that gloat and radic al i ' that the? e is extenuation , if there is no other changes. in the framework of 'moiety, iak.t " r 't suggestion applicable to the me, that should ins dot relations of lirPlye millions of men, change our impression of the chnractoi and will not wait on the bidding of en impatient Nets of Brown. Extenuation! In thi first philunthropho. They can entry be brought! place, genthuen, what extenuation ? We about 'ln the lapse of time, lir the steady I hare been told that John Brown was madden operation °I . Peth•heoll. eerinotniati and moral , eil to perform these nets by die sense of the motes. Have those who rebnke the South „ wrong plutnittet/ on him, in the violent death for th e cootinuance of slavery considered t hat ()rune of his sons in Kansas, •and that that is neither the present generation not the pre; to sixteiluate Ids acts. Is it no? Felkohciti eeding one is responsible fur its existence • i 'VIP, we live here in a tio-io, luus community. The Aortic:in slave-trade was prohibited by l vridtall diesesurities of life and prate around act of Conereto.fitty-opie yenning°, and many A xis, under the shelter ant only of *Liars, years earlier by the separate Southern States . hut in our relation. as reunw.eitie_ne., But I Ttle entire colored onpulation, with th e ex- ' ~,,, wish me , to una"""fo those fertile "i' prairies '" ‘ "i eeptinn, perhapro of a few huudiels hurrep- , h' - ' ,the far West-So with ate to the frontier eab tittoosly intruiliseel, is pante to the soil - in of the piercer _ ewers of she far Weak we Their mince/owe wore conveyed ft mu Africa' are in the r - J' hi ' sid H o f 1 night. In the dead el the in the ships of Old England and Neer Eng.! n i t o t, the huolhan o repos i ng in the beloved land. They now number between three and . arms of his wife, with their dear little ehil four milli:me. Iltui any portion. of any Pal dren anound them, in the fancied repaint of ty or opinion. proneteed in • sober earnest, i: their commas security under the laws of their Practieta method at wal " lesal.44111 "" ; P liti "" • country, they are aroused from their alum / believe rotate ksie Mr"' in wil putts of the • i hers by the treacherous approach of armed country. are of optnion thnt free labor is I murderers. steadily gaining grinitid. It woold, in my The husband-the husbands are torn from judgments bole altnallY Prevailed in the t "" the arms of their wives, they orerothlessly northern time of the etnveltulding States hail I slaughtered in cold blood-nay , that youth its simnel" not been unhapoiir retarded by ;, fin children are brained bora*, their eyes : thaithitatiaitagitationt of the day : But Isms . . . s ____ meillitika I eon hear now w the ailing cry 1 NV person. whose op entitled to tool of that fi , or womau, fithata ....rn Ayie. and of slightest respect, eve r ken to sketch that usibappy Lunisia Wilkinson; that wail out the dotting of a pen for effecting the , i no ery which must smite upon the ears mid ' change nt once, by any legislative measure , ' the ImArt of euish acre • of us, as they din, to I that could be adapted ? Consider telly, I the limbs of the murderer, and pray for She I pray you, that it would be to ask the South I , children of their hinibunds and thelf children. I to give, up one thousand millions of property, I Bat they appeal tti e merciless heart, they which she holds by a tie satisfactory to her. , r , P kto a merciless eau, for the' speak to self, as the first step. / " lestimltteannn " Joh n Brown. [Applauseand hisses.] Are, of en adequate outfit for the self-support 4, t o John Brown. [A voice•-" That's a lie: - the eron icipated millions ; then reflect po the i Cries tat "put him out," and applause and ra denge ent of the entire fnd4iltrial system mum s h i 1 3 t I say, and deny it elm will and of the , iuth. and nil the braneheirof dean who dare, [apoLtuse, and cries of "Good," coerce and manufactures that depend-en its "Good ;") whoever denies it,'l env , that man great stapler' ; then the necessity of conferring wits John brown. [Applause and ithsties.l . - iequil political privileges on the emancipatedencd Thu h e was th ere , hi s sword dripping with ruce. who, being frbe, Would be nothing less' if anything less were *insistent pea cefulpea, 'timbering men nod children-his with tsar political system ; then the rouse- sword dripping with their gore, and that gams organization of two great political por sword from the State of Massachusetts. [Ai, ties on the basis of color, anti the eternal feud , Ahlij ieh . I soy this is true ; it is true, by in ' which would i'ao ' between them ; and finally I control ertible et 'lento ; that evidence exists the oaerflow into the free Statist of a vastll en record in the report of the committee of seultitille of needy and helpless emigrants, o ~ tne lionise of Representatives to examine into i who, being excluded trom many of them (amt i the disorders in Kansas, anti I say that mai among others from Kansas) tioniti t Prove d ooms act of John Brown aac the comnienees doubly burdensome where they ate admitted. moot of bloodshed in Kansa... And by the ollhoOki we, sir, with all our sympathy for , lurid light of t h ose bi a sing house*, and by the the colored race, give a very cordial meet,- i . . demoniac cruelty of that man net tent ()tea tion to two or three hundred thousand 'lest.. si Ito by all that, we have the hey to events tote emancipated slaves? Doe* not e'. cry ;welch otherwise alight have been a mystery. candid ratan i see that every one of these steps i ~ nlet wits the commencement of blooodshed presents difficulties of the moss formidable , 1 in these United States, mid it was in reset charecter-sliffieulties fur wh 11ich, . far _ e i" m f R.113,11` spirl t that John Brown, with an insane know, nu man and no party In " l' r° P''"' n I foroi.ity of cruen, proposed to rtivagh the solution. And is it, sir, fur the attainment p eaceable ir.halotatirs of the State of 1 ircitds, of ohjects so manifestly impracticable, pup- and millions upon millions of white men, aye, sued, too. by the bloody pntliways of treason' and of whiten omen, too, to servile instil reetion end murder, that we will allow the stupeit- , nod cavil war, and to outrages indiseribahle, dots evil. which nue threatens us to come too l impossible to imagine-worse even than a on the country? Shall we permit this curt ` million oi , d eat h s. So noon] fur that pretence wady compacted body politic, the nicest ad- of extenuation. Anil. then it was further said jusitmero nf human Is tc oni, to go to pieces ? that John Brown was ma , iane, and therefore Will we blast this beautiful symmetric form; , „,„ ,_,, os! lowsuto not have been coot icted. Was he paran ze this powerful arm of public strength; . insane? Gentlemen, we ha l e many notes had smite with imbecility this gr e at nations/ in occasion in this c,.mniauweattli, and retlecling telle, t ? S% here, sir, 0, where, will be the men hate had taxa...ion to meditate upon Ai flag of the United States ? Where our rapid- sailor question. I c•tnn n. oleo. Cott goes- Iv increasing influence in the fondl y of oa t l ion without speaking opei. Gentlemen, ti tri.? Already they are rejoicing in our di- I s o o n I speok•dpenly ? [Cries of " Yes. yisione. The lat.', tureign journal which I. y e ,.,. 1 1 nth that in this commonwealth of hate read, in commenting upon the even; lot musa,biThe 0 u, and in the udjuiniiig State of /larper's Ferry, dwells upon it as somethingl New York, there is a handful of wen, of in. that 'osiltcon,pell us to keep the peace with tellectual men of the highest culture, literary the powers of Europe," and thst• means to , and scient men, Nan would seers to be horn dike die law frotivethem in our own Interne- : to bless _their day and their generation.- noised relations. I Wendell • loth!) , , nipplanee and hisses,] meant to hare spoken of the wrech of that i Lloyd ti istin, [appiouse and hisses.] The magniticeio and mutually beneficial eominer- 4 OUUre Per r, N't Aldo Emereoe, [applause end vial intercoor.e which now exists between hisses, and cries of •• chi on" and "name the producing end manufacturing States,--on them")--ititd Gerrit Smith-[cries of "Good," the ,husulu tariffs in time of peace and the •• Go oihl-who `..,y constantiy troeiling upon habitually recurring loirder wars by which it i one single idea-that idea a right tire, it you will be annihilated- I meant to hero 'ai d a I please, in its object-but Ly coma:lotto broon word, of the navy of the United States, and in , upon a siiroe idea have he.. . omen:ion Am " . thehich inheritance of its common glories.- own l 4 upon that idea-have become utterly lost Shan we give up this? The memory. of woe to au moral relations of right and wank._ Fathern-of those happy days when the omen I [Applause.t In their private relations: sos of the North and South 'toot! together fern Am , o f t h em would injure hair even o f my the country, onAtfought fields ; when the! heado _p mighter i o w es s u pon the question of South sent her tenon to nf shinehuneue, slavery, and theta such is toe atrocious ferocity nod New England sent her Green to Carolina of timid into which they hays been loeuoyed by -is All this forgotten, •'L all the *turista this tubstoutimia diet they declare in so many that we two have shared ;" all tie joint la-. words-end, therefore, I may soy ' ' ts In 141.-• burs to found that great repablic ;--Is this "all e read i nette to break „low, till tuto r s i„,„e ballet 7" and Will we permit th i s l est g r eat mid divine- Nay, under the ihduence of th,s experiment of confederate Republitomisin to (man i a they b are set 0p i n tits n ommen _ become a proverb and a by-word to the na- atim i th a re op en or hate- A ye, ut hate, such aims? No, fellow citizens, ho.. This `loci- as I.loura only to the damned devils m hell. ous Union shall not perish. Precious lega i ty iso ir istu v; s k ir ilkse , , epiesmee ap o sissik of our Fathers, it ilktl! V) down, ilint°rlni alAd and wayintof hats.) I wry they have set up cherished, to oar Mletaim. Generatiods un- this religions of hate. Oh, bloophuull Om born l ' hall ini° l its t r iTtilles • as we have God! that, to tbingsisre in this our earth! dune, audit* we *are mix poor 1,1 ail beside*, They have am up tbis re k t k itt o f Iwo, sail wq will transmit to them the boundless wealth they y bleephateiutuily call that Christsarrityl of ittehlessiog. Aye, that this religion of hatred-to this ielimediatel, after the emicluaion .of the d emon i st s fi tita tiais t a t _te this tes oh iv on toe Iron. Edward Everett's emphatic seed eloquent subject en InsittotiOne-they hats mien , • aciumei,sticarar every, tendency to disunion, Seed • all is of devotion in 'the hunt= inert- thereie ofmipiratiow to Sled sad so the immense assembly broke forth into the beeves. *. * • it * * . mist gititneous and vehement appianse.o. [t o o I speak fur Ito party now-I speak foe Nitre vociferous cheers watjurea Al ththh h . th e u tt i on : fte d rw h oWttimh ibelkO i lin rot ornahlie gentiousitit, fhlknrhtlCy the fieered Tram*. l mho *o w* Ailli. 1100 441 1 11 , . ir , bhp* *ming of bliOla alaprlnt 461 1 wett /1 ;4 1 =4 " :71 """11111114 1 0 0m. Id Oa - not lAA • ' %se • ihe elliekoVitolieitstlit aim, parkas tos _ cummta's arizom. The chairman came forward and said that he would have the honor of introducing to the meeting another of the most eminent citi lAMB of the United Statee—a man who *we entitled to the confidence_and honor of every citizen of Massacheeetta, and of the whole eouutry, in consequence of the great cervi ces he had rendered to the State and the nit- =IOIZIE ITV DOLLAR* A.TRAR Dow d ivid ing the 'von tryotrise la youtiaajesty and eteenigth sad mash them all. ( Loud a pplanse.l ' A Voice.--Ws will tit that at the proper time, Mr. Cushing,—l would rejoice at each nn sTslot if it brought paste to the country ; I would rejoice at any defeat myself so long ad unity and enueord be preserved. [Cheers.] So that this Commonwealth bo redeemed to its proper place in that glorious galaxy. the con stellatiou of the Union, Gentlemen, a band of drunken mutineers ha% e sailed hold of the opinion of this Commonwealth—the avowed and proclaimed enemies of the constitution of Ilmotachusetta. [ Voice—True.] I say a par ty of drunken mutineers have seized hold of tie control of the State. Where is the helms man A Voice.—Burnham. Here there was one unanimous roar of laughter, in which all persons joined, the speaker included. Burnham is the hquor agent of the State, who has lately been im prisoned for refusing to deliver the account boots of his Roles.] Mr. Cushing.—Where is the helmsman, I sty flits be sold himself to the mutineers ? No, gentlemen, hot the mutineers t. taw] with a pinto! at his head snyinz, obey our com mands or die.' [AzlpMunc.] And so • the good ship of State drifts, driity, drifts—with the storm still howling Around her—drifts in _to the gulf of rerdition, with the black flag of the pirate hoisted at the mizen—eye, end the piratical death's head at the fore— black, black, from deck to keelson, I say the good ship of State drags on .to perdition.— But where are you. eitizer.s of 31.1satichunetts, who should be her otos? [Applause ] That good ship in freighted with ail 'your earthly hopes ; you and your wives and your deer ohildren WO there as passengers. And you all sit in torpid apathy, or cowardly indeci sion, or stolid despair ; you all sit and see the drunken mutineer' as they aro about to blow up the ship and all it contains, and you do not,more a hand nor an arm to redeem her 'from 'ruin, and carry Ler buck to the path of peace and prosperity. [Applause.] I ap peal to you citizens of Mitrisachuaetta; I en treat you to awake from this lethargy. Arise, I ety, people of ItuistiLhuretts I arise in the Majesty of your aright, and redeem the honor and fame of the- rod oI oefnmelbereelth.— (The speskerTerilletamid loud sad eisliamkrj eireerintpuil applause.) Letters were then read from a number of distinguilhed, northern men—including one from ex-President Pierce—all cordially en dorsing.„tbe object of theineeting, which ad joursed with three cheers for the State of American Export§ for the Last Fiscal Year. Ike Ninth and the hovai.—The exports feast the United States, during the last fecal year, embracing specie and American pro- Agee, amounted to $835,894 4 386 ; in addition to which we else exported something orer twenty millions of foreign produce, making Al of our exports shove $356,000,000, and exceeding our imports for the same period a fraction over $18,000,000. The specie and American produce exported were - $335,894.385 Specie, - - - - - 57,502,305 The bunt of produce conse- • quently exported was - 4298,392,080 The Washington Constitution classifies the amount furnished by each section as far as possible, by giving the amount furnished ex clusively by the free States, the amount furn jilted h 7 Loth the free and, slave States, (which it is impossible to. separate and desig nate the respective amount furnished by each,) and the amount furnished exclusively by the chive States. Free States exclusively Fist tries. embracing spermaceti sad v. hale nail, dried and salt fish, $4,462,974 Coal, - - - - - 652.536 - - . - 164;981 Total free States, - 5,281,091 Free and Slave States-- • Productsof the forest—embracing staves and headings, shingles, boards, plank and scantling, hew n timber, other timber, oak bark and other dye, all mann- ' factures of wood, ashes, ginseng, • skitu and furs, - • - 12,099,967 Product of agriculture,— Of anitnali—beef tallow, hide', horned cattle, butter, cheese, pork, hatus and bacon, lard: wool, hogs, horses, mules and sheep, - - 16,594,81'1 Vegetable food— Wheat., flour, Indian corn, Indian meal, rye meal, rye, oats, and • other small grain, and pulse, biscuit, or shop bread, potatoes, apples and onions, 22,437,578 Manufactures, - - - 1112,471,920 Row produce, - - - 1,656_,104 Total, free and slave States, - .1114;411,493 Steve STATIlti t itscLawaticia • CO tt0 , 13 Let 434023 Tobacco, - - - - 21,074,038 Rosin and turpentine, - - 3,554,426 Rice, - - - - - 2,214,1118 Tar and pitch, - - - 141,098 Brown sugar, - - - 199,99: 4 Molassee, - 75 , 699 Hemp, 9,379 Total (slave Sasta,) - RIC4PITCLATIO3. Free States, exclusively, - - 6,281,091 Free sad slave States, • - 84,417,493 Slave States, exclusively, - - 180,993,499 TOtst, - - - • $278002,080- • - The Constksaion *Jaime Asa the articles eatbraced in the amount •of $84.4470193 be lanxisot alite to the kbor of the free and slave States. at, knit one-third is justly the ,prudatns of slave labor. We hare, therefore, Ills fief thit out Of 5278,392,080 of 'exports of- desnestia industry, over $41011~11) of the ono is furnished by thew Stasi Avows as slats States. ilfrAileekvi named Green was bang on Friday week, at St,. Joseph, Me., bir smarder ing Ms MAJIARt, I. M. Wright. The-lit. Jo- sepa West, is giving as amennaar the me ga, 'the rope bin finally militainic'tha pin came. says : was knocked an; and the nietini dropped iit4 the trap data.; but awing to some pa in tying bie bands, be was enablett o . cat the VITe and draw itiannirepOn the aesfuid p l ats. His handairere thmk tie& bn isin4 him, and ' shoe some time Spent in peso paratfon, he was let WI thutimnlifine.-- this time he fen-aboutett, and wee killed Awed boitaxitly. ' s 'gob or a puserga. rho lures a ‘ .Pnar Ts*** ileOetrees . an d :be day b9irottl lala „. 0 inadn sonfeesion of his crime. it ' taisterfrtredret - bia . aI kindly, Sad s teer ,it mo W at wintle him, aad thaoelfteeiteit' , 4Ma giv• Id sitoot• bithWinemee Woe. iSiN aiel'Ammt kid ft de so takihniesOn. . .' E2"l quote-Ws ist arias isorWpofoteilly to show that, thaw peals perposee4 ialahilosa every particular. have ceased to bithee to a Urge portion of,tlan peopis t erlibo h ematatee. ' These people may no longer boohoo Ale entliesiasts consulate* P* wised and have obtained a pol r and ascendency in moot of ttio states elfd is tnany of =est , A vet 7 large. numbe% of 137 engaged in prumulgetiNg a still larger number ere.of their sentiments, with r _ political and nartizaavwevet , . They bold largemeetinpik.ud t et, ties, not aluno fur the disemetkut oflltter_ps-‘ culiar views , bat for the run.* 46d491tonne ing the Constitudun, the Wire Sind t Onion. They have their eongvegatkreleand their tiin leers, and wherever fends tjtil hen AppMen tion is made libreed for easishanne e -ib abet their fefluence may not tail tes‘be ntitehdifed. The Pch of)IA, colleges, lyeetune.antimanat of the public institution, &reaped for theilftwn gntiun of their doctrines and the 'ouilalto co of thdif power'. Many of them are nd among the merchants, m n %Acta rel.. and its italists of the Eastern aides, who tale Otetr money and employ their influence in IldtkOcklet disunion cause. NO. 12. , These people do not only denounce Olen- D atitution and despise the U • r it e have resisted, and propose resi st the lan s of Congeal., pepped in °WI. ' e Constitution. They base done that _ lence andwith arins, where b y eitsllssit the United States have been killed. T4tet have organised societies in order to seed amakopias cad iununitipn,.into the territory o(S/Ipkillait ed States fdf the purpose of creating 4 ti 2 war. Bodies of men were thus rebid i a nd subsisted-id it distant torritorystssiseing iiiii luertile oollirions email titeepeopie, by property was destre,Nsd , towile pi tita • nd burned, and citizens of the United tits W ed, ma ki ng it necessary fur the Federal - o*er tei quarter troops in the Territory tatestore order and quiet mining the intabitaite:'Tliey have convened in n foreign hind end ndoftted a scheme fur a Provistondl CI ivernittent. which contemplated, among other things, that an invading army should be raised anti quartered in the ssantps amboutiopk i m of the Southern States ,wherefrom Inbeititriary and predatory bands could sally flitiriollnrn and rob, and incite the slave populatie* to mkt, n geqeral insurrection and mmusterip of the white populatiun. They have so ter car ried out this scheme as to have one of their chief men quartered in Virginia, whom _they provided with large amounts of tndny Teethe purchasing of pikes, muskets, pistols, apetuu; ammunition and provisions. His place s oe tor.sibly a farm house, was made the.lasad: quarters were these arms wore depoeitud .t and at which those elegaged in 'the undertaking were directed to assecrible:' 'Whilst these ar rangements were being plashed - forward In Virginia, other points were rizade.depoisk for the itsserabling,4 men and the getheriqg of arms, with the view of Dating aimultaianita attacks in several seething of ‘ t.ce Soutii. -4 By haste, mismanagement or stupidity, Itaitier's Ferry wits theoely place at whish a n pt was. made, and this failed from the i . • 1- thei of the slave population to join, ettn ry to th e expectation of the lender and ad- E a rising. But violence was done to tb •of Virginia, her citizen, were unlailu • r ed, their property seized, and ati of them shot although unarmed ands no resistance. , t These acts of robbery and murder: have since been applauded and the actors eilisised in the 'berth. The death of the lealFer'Orho made himself amenable to the laws of 'Vir ginia, and whose condemnatienity bar Oelerts was inevitable as well as just, has beso t As. Oared to he a martyrdom meal to hoar Savior. White and black, men and women, have assembled in this And other 'Of* in large numbers before and since the execution of this man, and openly made hiftsete theirs: in other words, they unhesitatingly silanseate insurrection, murder and a servile wee istthe South. Although such nteetinits2are Law ful and treasonable, the-Mayor of dal In terposed with his police ferm i not Oa 'se, fhem, but to arrest any law abiding who should dare to proelaial hiti.views Or dis sent from those of the meeting. Tripecimble meetings, in which murder, amused Ova war are to be enflamed and advaeated, are, therefore, not only allowable, but,•ieeke city of Phila delphia, have., the express .sanotion and pretection of uor.constiteted ao/ileormi. In view, ther4ore, of the 'oriented Wye resistance to the ,laws of Cupgree•-•iir View eche arming and setinii3ing a body-of teen Mr a territory of the 14tiats for itheoletepooe . et waging civil war—in view of Ibis ropsdeon of this purpose in a more genoraLwairierthe Smithery' Stater.-in view of thomeplaaperith ti i n tse which the late acts , in part eseentio of plans, have been received, and the n ot i the murderer and the condemns ' the authorities of the State of Tirgiritt, ' an der the solemnly of the 41 , ' . , She adoption of these actisby the poll • .-, -; y calla' Republican, sit far es can bei)a. ,•• by the journals of that party, and the en y rt and protection of treasonable meet'. • ~ a Itbpublican Mayor and Polices-eitd k ' „ ly, in view of the general impunity fer •, • s and treasonable practices th- ; .„ - t - the North, n'ow under the sway ofthit_ ,04, . • - / seaza party, we meat unhesitatingly "-- ' the purposes of the Constitution bare rt ad and eon no longer be maieteiried, er to perfect the Union or insopettitteduitiewpan ciag47.. Lei the ipsne. then, be made. TisiOppo sition and hostility se•the Union, this laws, and the Coustitution,•of. which We barMpo tan, commenced and has been fostered tirthe North. The South bus been loyal, mean take care of !tenet; she in able to rifilatel pel, or punish all traitors who may lbrade her sail er intermoddie wits ber•dessentlikon cents. SLe can do this and remain to the Union, or if preferable, , separate anklierrn a new government. Rut the Northlia449)trin -herself traitors, incendiaries, and ItioloWters of riot and anarchy. More than i s a''sah© has within herself those who hold Maids al legiance to the itible and the Chriliiblifilik; ten as they do to the Usatatitation Union. The issue is then With top Shall the the work of treasntilbe stinitestiet vro ceed? Shall nseetinips la beid hawitir - lisidst la si wherein treason and sturdarairwl daringly, tau i ght,, and the esaanplit use who engage in Jaen, landed and fur the emulation of oltr @Wiens' • h i lie journals be Printed in oar swilnivisa air. [ catated for the purpbse ofdestroying' thews unwept by creating ii wide epreeshliii.fec, ' tion led lawlestnese main Ifor iii4e (Jr shall the conserratise, D. . and peaceful citizens of the Ninth illielniiiii to gusher, and by 414041 isseatgi, f_ pielible, and if not, by a lOort tai arms, enirtlillifegi tation. either I* liliinting the sighs** fqr ever, or by ski vlnetkaus Mow rite , W seek laws cad n prettinsent more &lint to thdlr Torpedo aistitniani uglii a lay, let thelnennise omedee ' Lurch. aedelay.,---iinsissilik*ut, : ., ao 4 ,li.z e ,:i - -- - - - - - $/88,893,493 .5& Death a tiritr 4 iik: °- dist ezebips, PISA, :::) 4. o f 4 simitiblp ant 4"11,11 .- .1r• bi*wife.) in Un ' 9 the *goo respeetivstisAf it isit 4111 key hid loirdesised aid prated* '7,. fife togotheroinestlist visit ' d t spiiit the. 10 0 044 Z./Y /4 --- / ; 1111 tises.„ . _ illirrbelettehoi • es the expeedituter of the I seat tor the 11.0 V, • 10004/Wil& - itt 4uoo, ammirpred ow: 44 1 ,4 ”sh. ISE=
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers