JU it i !1 - 1 1 ;1 ; 1 2 I t I hthi EBENSBURG, PA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1850 tJTTat Sentinel, Aa much thrlargest cir eulation of any paper published in this county -and as an advertising sheet offers superior inducements to merchants and business men generally. Those desirous of making use of this medium Jor extending their business can Jo so by either sending their'notices direct, or through the following agents; John Crouee, Esq., Johnstown. E. W. Carr, Evans Building s, Tliid Philadelphia. V. B. Palmer, Esq., New York Philadelphia, and Baltimore. EP"George W. Todd & Co. have just received a fine addition to their for mer splendid assorment of new goods. Their stock of goods, for cheapness and elegance, cannot be excelled in the coun tv. Give them a call. EPThe whig candidate for Mayor in New York is elected by 5000 majority. CFUnion meetings are being held all over the country north and south and strong resolutions adopted in favor of the compromise measures passed by the late Congress. The danger ihieatened the Union by the incendiary movements of the abolitionists has called to her rescue almost every distinguished patriot in the country, and they are busy in their ex ertions of inciting the people to stand by the laws Commendable. William S. Campbell, Esq , Superin tendent of Allegheny Pcrtage Railroad has given notice to all persons having claims against the Commonwealth for work done on or materials furnished said road prior to December 1st 1849, to report them to him immediately at his office at the Summit The object of this notice is to have the indebtedness of the State on that portion of her improvements properly laid before the next Legislature, in order that an appropriation sufficiently large may be made to prevent any further delay in the liquidation of these claims. The amount of indebtedness heretofore repor ted by Superintendents has always been much too small, and the consequence was lhat the amount appropiiated by the State for the purpose of liquidating these claims has always fallen far below that which was actually required. This neglect on the part of Superintendents has occasioned much disappointment and confusion in the administration of affairs on the Road, and Mr. Campbell has vey laudably deter mined to put an end to it. If a sufficient amount to cover all indebtedness is net ap propriated by th next Legislature it will not be his fault., and those havinsr claims against the Slate may now rely on the proper exertions being made to have them liquidated. uiuiuuu.li The following is an extract from a letter of the Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Sun, published in that paper of Monday. It would seem that " the rebel lious movements of the negroes aud abo litionists of Boston has been carried to ?uc!j an extent, that a call vpoD the mili tary may be rendered necessary in order Fuv iucu. uu... .... repon oi c rapiu concentration oi troops in tne vicin ity of Boston, although a very current ru mor, needs confirmation. One thins, is certain, however, which is that 'President Fillmore is determined to have the provi . eiOQs of the Fugitive Slave Bill carried ont to the very letter, be the consequences what they may, and the abolitionists and agitators will speedily find that they have been "barking up the wrong tree," if they havs gotten up the present excitement vith a view of driving the President into t'leir measures. The President yesterday gave orders tor the immediate concentration of the disposable force of the United States artil lery and infantry in Boston harbor. There were some few troops at Fort In dependence, and the companies at Fort Prrbie, Maine, at Newport, Nev York hurlor. Fort . Mclleury, end Fortress Monrtx.', are oideud to that station. All lb troops that can be spared frura Flort da, and some cf tlw se tLat had been 6ent to T. xas fcr the defence of the frontier were also ordered to Boston. I he larger v.. porttoaof tho anny.is .employed in Gal- ifrro a Nw Mexico and Texas, aud rto r. t ii :o v than Jcu or twive com. MOUiWAMTI ini Boston, beven or eighr companies will be concentrated at Fort Independence within two days. This important movement seems to have been suddenly determined upon, and in consequence of information received by the Executive from the United States Marshal in Boston. To show that it was not contemplated on Friday, it may be mentioned that the troops in Florida were on that day ordered to Texas, but, the next day, they were ordered to Boston. .N'ominalion of Judges. Since the amendment to the Constitu tion, making the Judges elective, has been ratified by the papers in such a signal man. ner, considerable discussion has been going on among the people as to the manner in which these Judges shall be nominated. oome are in lavor of the nominations be ing made by the Reading Convention at lhe same time that the candidates for Gov ernor and Canal Commissioner are nomi nated, whilst others, and a majority, we believe, are in favor of calling a special convention for that purpose. We notice that the Chairman has called a meet ing of the Democratic State Central Committee at M'Kibbens Hotel in Phila delphia, on the 20th inst., for the prrpose of having the difficulty settled. For our part we hope and trust ;hat the Committee will at once see the propriety and expedi. ency of calling a special and separate con vention, and thus keep the nomination of the Supreme Judges free from the intrigues and bargains which too frequently take place at State Conventions. Mayor Barter. Joe Barker, the Mayor of Pittsburg, has been completely beaten in his quarrel with the city councils laid out as "cool as a cucumber." Sometime since, Bark er became dissatisfied with some of the niembers of the night watch and insisted! ou their discharge, but the councils re fused. Joe, determined not to be foiled in this manner, appointed a night watch of his own, and the consequence is that, Pittsburg has been for some time blessed pan tea can be now spared for service with a double set of watchmen. IIr thntiithe nominations bromrht suit against the council., ,ors,,r. pation of power in not recognizing his! watchmen, and the case was brought be fore the Supreme Court on Friday last, when Jud:e Coulter decided that the councils were right, and Joe teas wrong, and discharged the Rule. Judge Coulter gives his opinion at length and closes in the following manner But the repeal of the ordinance, author izing the Mayor to appoint either in the whole, or in conjunction with a commit tee, was lawful, and settled the matter. Afterwards, by the appointment of a Night Watch of his own, the Mayor was usurping an authority which he did not possess, and opposing what it was,pnu ensure suft his duty to fulfil. By this means much! Prove a tow,er J strenSth to the party, m trouble and confusion has crept into il,e!the contest for Governor and Canal Com citv; the public peace broken, and the! missioner. How, then, is such a ticket stillness of the night disturbed bv those! who ought to have watched over its quie tude. Isotn property and person have been rendered less secure, and the reputa- iion oi me ciiy nas suuerca. vv e may indulge a hope that these proceedings wiil ! - I Q I cease, and that peace and quiet amonor the functionaries will be restored. Huh tits charged. SThe election took place in New York and New Jersey ou Tuesday last. Letter from Father Jlalihew. St. Louis, Mo. Oct. 25, 1950. Most Revl Dear Bishop: Do not J accuse me of fickleness, for stern necessity alone compels me to postpone until next Spring, my contemplated visit to Ciuciu natti. The early appearance of wintry weather has produced on my constitution, enfeebled by "partial paraysis, the same alarming symptoms that forced me to fly from the North last fall. I must hasten to i pj-rida, to escape the cold and preserve my health for future exertions in the cause of Temperance. This pain me exceed ingly; as I Joo.ked forward with the utmost anxiety, for the log wished for opportu nity, to avail mvseli of vour Grace's cher ished invitation to be vour guest, in the Queen City ot the West, which welcomed me immediately ou my arrival to his great Republic. With a heart afflictei! by this sad disappointment, I shall take a pasaje immediately tor New Orleans, en rouie for Florida. Agaiu expressing my pro found regret at this unforeseen disappoint ment, I have the honor to be Your Grace's most devoted friend, Theobold Matthew. Most Rev'd B. Pur cell. Our Fathers. Old fashions, they say come new every seven years; some how or other, knee breeches don't come around any more. They say when Gov. Bowdoin reviewed the troop of Massachuseetts, 1 7S5, he was dressed in a gray wig, cocked hat, a white broadcloth coat and waistcoat, red small clothes, and black silk stockings. In 1782, Gov. Hancock received his guests in a red velvet cap, within which - Uvas one of fine linen, turned up over tho! jrdc rf the velvet one tvo or thre inches. lie wore a blue damask sown, lined with i w silk, a white satin embroidered waistcoat black satin small clothes, white silk stock ings, and red morocco slippers. The judges of the supreme court of Mas sachusetts, as late as 1773, wore robes of scarlet faced with black velvet; and in Summer, black silk gowns; gentlemen wore coats of every variety of color gen erally the;ape and collar of velvet of a ditierent celor from the coat. In 1769, Gen. Washington arrived in New York from Mount Vernon to assume the duties of the Presidency. He was dressed in a full suit of Virginia home spun. On his arrival in New England, soon af ter, he vore the old continental unifoim, except on the Sabbath, when he appeared in black. - John Adams, whenVice President wore a sword, and walked the streets with his hat under his arm. At his levees, in Phil adelphia, President Washington was clad in black velvet; his hair was powdered; and gathered back in a silk bag; yellow gloves, Tcnee and shoe buckles, he held in his hand a cocked hat, ornamented with a cockade, fringed about an inch deep with black feathers; a long sword in a white scabbard, with a polished steel hilt, hung at his hip. Nomination and Election of Supreme Judges The West Chester Republican contains the following article in regard to the nom ination of the Supreme Court Judges which is entitled to consideration, at the hands of those whom it interests. We fully endorse the ground taken by the Re publican, and trust that proper steps 'will be taken to form a new Convention, to nominate the Judicial officers. The action of the Sate Central Committee, of which Mr. Hickman is Chairman, would be es sential and decisive. The people of the State having, by a decided vote, declared in favor of an elec tive judiciary, and thus engrafted a pro vision to that effect upon the Constitution it will be devolved upon them at the general election in October 1851, to elect five persons as Judges to llie Supreme Court. That each of the two great political parties of the Stale, will nominate and run candidates for the Supreme Bench may be regarded as certain, and we doubt not that it is the desire of the mass of both parties, that the ablest and purest men should be elected. To secure such men, much may depeud upon the convention which make We suggested some months ago, that ttio jvindlilates fnr trip. Stinreme Hench. h ,d be nominaied by a special conven- lion convened lor inai purpose aionc; and the more we have reflected upon the subject, the more firm are we of that con viction. The ticket to be presented by the De i c . i 1 mocracy of the State, for the Supreme Judges should be composed of men who are not only worthy because ot the purity and integrity of their political principles, but also because of their high moral char acter as men and well established profes sional qualifications for the arduous, intri cate, responsible and important duties of the office. Such a ticket would meet pop- UUir Fi""u"1"" W......-..W .u,.. i i r ii raosl llkel' to be secured: u a separate special convention, called for trie express aud sole purpose of nominating Judges? or, by a convention in which their nomi nation may, and in all probability, would home the subject of intrigue mid bargaiai . 1 " . .1 .1 C I with a view to the advancement ot men unworthy of and unfitted for the Bench, and the success of aspirants for a seat in the Canal Board or the Gubernatorial Chair? We are most decidedly for a separate convention. The Shoemanla. The circumstances of the arrest of a young man in Brooklyn, some time since, for the singular freak of stealing a lady's shoe which he took forcibly from her foot, in the street will doubtless be re membered by our readers. He was the son of a minister there, and was discharged on the application of his father, who stated that the habit of getting ladies shoes and concealing them, was a mania, to which he had been addicted from childhood, and for which he could give no account- He would often bothei his sisters in that way; and after his marriage, his wife's shoes would miraculously disappear, very much to her astonishment, as she had never been made acquainted with this singular pecu liarity of his. The Detroit Free Press slates, that as a respectable, well-dressed lady was a few days since crossing a street, near General C'ss residence, a man with the appear ance of a gentleman, grasped her by the leo-. and threw her down. He then took off- the icft shoe, but seemed to change his mind, and ibex took off the right one, and made off with it doing no other harm. The shoes were Jiew, tne lady wearing them for the first tin;e. The man is the same one who was arretted in Brooklyn. An Irishman by way of illustrating the horrors of a solitary confinement, said that out of one hundred persons sentenced to endure this punishment for life only fifteen survived it! The Eastern papers have a marvellous 6tory about a cat-fish in the Ohio river swallowing a little negro. 1 here is a slight mistake about the matter. It was the tie- .gr that swallowed the cat tish TBS TJNTOXT. The New York Herald, of the 10th inst., in speaking of the evils of continuing the slavery agitation, concludes with the following, which contains some ideas of very serious consideration. We, however, cannot think that the fugitive slave law will ever be resisted or repealed that the constitution framed by Washington, Franklin, Mifflin, Morris, &c, will be nullified, and this Union dissolved on a question of such comparative insignificance: But suppose that a union of all the ab olitionists in the State whigs, democrats, ana niggers should give Seward a trt umph. Other States of the North would follow the example, and the democrats would not lose the chance of a final and complete victory. They would, in spite of everything, become the national party. The whole South would go with them, to a man; old issues of tariff, sub-treasury, &c, would be forgotten entirely; and the great question slavery would absorb all other considerations. The next great point would be he do ings of the Congress of December, 1852. That Congress will be elected, .part this fall, part "next spring, and the rest a year hence. That Congress will find, when it assembles, a new state of things. The slavery question will be the paramount question till it is permanently settled. Lverylhing will have to give way to it. The two parties will then be the Union, or constitutional party, and the abolitional part'. 1 he whole South will go with the former. It may devolve on the Congress to elect a President, and the hope is that the constitutional party will be strong enough to put in a man who will carry out the will of the people and abide in the compromises and guarantees of 1789. This is what the South ask for, and it is what they will have, or they will be forced to leave the Union. To this point things seem now to be tending. Congress has passed the Fugitive Slave Bill. It was the only thing the South gained in the compromise; and this was no real gam. It only secured to them what the constitu tion of 1789 had pledged the restoration of "fugitives held to labor." The Con stitution liad already bound the free States to ueliver up every fugitive slave; and had the compact been truly and honorably carried out the new bill would have been unnecessary. But the South felt insecure, and she wanted an interpretation of the old contract by living men the men whose fathers had bound them. The North gave it; and now, when the South asks to have this fresh guarantee carried out, the whole of ihe abolition party rises en ?nasse, and says :t shall not be done. lleie is the issue, clear as daylight. How will it be decided ? Here is the end. Either the present Congress, at the next session, will abolish this law, or confirm it. In the former case, the South might secede from the Union. She is driven into a corner where there is no escape. She knows it she feels it she declares it and she will do it she has no other course. Men of the North, will you sustain the course of your representatives in the last session of Congress ? If you will, the Union is safe; if not, it is gone; and be it remembered, now the issue is with j'ou, and on your heads will fall the conse sequerccs. And when the final question is decided, and the Union broken up, what will be the upshot of it on you, your families, your interests ? Step long enough to ask yourselves this question. The South will not war upon you, she will leave you. And there are your markets, your manu factures, your commerce, your agriculture, your rents, investments, your domestic relations ! Have you measured the extent of the evil to yourselves and your chil dren ? Above all have you calculated the consequences to mankind of the final fail ure of the only successful attempt ever made on earth to establish a permanent basis for the fair fabric of republican insti tutions? Why did you send up your lamentations over the fall of Hungarian freedom, or the destruction of the republic of Rome 1 And yet what was all this compared to the final extinction of the republic at Washington? Look at the portraits of your ancestors and answer the question ? And at last, when the American repub lic is dead and laid in the grave of the father of his country when the ruin is all wrought what will have been the cause of it all ? What will you have gained even for the neerro, and on whose heads will execrations of the oppressed and tor-1 lorn of all nations fall ? The Union will be broken up, because you violated the. terms of the original compact, and drove the South into secession you were led blindfolded to the perpetration of that damnable work. And will you have achieved the emancipation of the slave, or bettered his condition ? By no means. Your three millions of Africans are there still; but cross that line to free them and the first man of you will be shot. You have rendered emancipation impossible, or you have raised a war with races which will sweep every African on this conti nent to his grave. Y"ou will have drenched the free states with blood, too. And yet, under God Almighty's clear heavens, this 10th day of October, 1850, all this is done in the name of humanity and religion! Have vou ever asked yourselves if you are not attempting to make war on Provi dence ? Can you not read its design of mercy td the African race, in bringing them from tlisir hitherto unmitigated bar barism, and gradually fitting them for freedom, and at last to oe instruments oy which the civilization of the Anglo Saxon race would finally bo introduced among two hundred millions o( savages ? Can you not allow Providence to perfect its own plan of gradual emancipation in the southern states, as it has been achieved in the north ? Does history or human ex perience show that fanaticism has not yet worked out any food to the whole race ? But if you will follow your demagogue leaders, and hurl this Union to ruin, let us ask what will become of them when the ruin is wrought ?, There is but one answer to this question. If Seward, and Greely, and Weed, and Benton, and Van Buren, still persist in urging madly on the mass of the northern people to the destruction of the Union, when their dupes awake them from their delusion, they will drag their seducers and betrayers through the streets. No mob is so infuriated as honest as betrayed men, whose fortunes and fam ilies have been ruined by demagogue leaders. Even Robespierre was put to death by his own followers. There is nothing that can atone for such calamities but ;he blocd of their authors. To this state of tilings events are now pressing us on. Whether we shall be hurled into the chasm, will depend entirely upon the action of the northern people in their coming elections. CyThe Rights of Women Convention at Worcester the other day, is a sourece of great amusement to many of our cotem poraries; among whom are several incor rigible old bachelors. One fellow says that if women hrve not rights enough, they manage somehow or other to obtain power enough. This is intended as a slap at those hen pecked husbands who permit wives to do just as they please, and throw suraT bowls at their liesre lord's heads if they attempt to interfere. ye have no doubt that many a poor devil of a Husband leels luuy convinced of the power of woman. Whether petticoatery has any abstract right to make their hus bands miserable is not considered debata ble; that man' of them exercise theou? er is beyond question we speak not from personal knowledge-, but according to honest public confessions, made by many unfortunate married men belonging to the editorial fraternity. The Baltimore American admires the progress cf the Worcester ladies very much, but is surprised that some antiaua- led oid giri, like L.ucretia Mott. did no'! . . . . offer a resolution in favor of abolishing! 1 "esday u furtive was it ttir uhby the institution of marriage. It expresses duyl gli " f r CauaJ.i. uiidr tlie f.lljw a determination, however to stand out J c rc i::i:t imcs. w;;i ;1 are 1,0 50 J to against the invasion of men's pr-ud pre-! b A slave escaped a tw days rogative by these desp'erate women, and iSl"Cc fro IJ o :e of li.e back counties of carry the war into Africa, if necessary. Missouri nd came to ibis St.iie. Ilia If womea are determined to have right cf suffrage, the American snornr.--' th 1 r . priety of men claiming the riht to io housework, and hiring out for nursing particularly for that branch known as dry nursing. The only extraordinary circumstance, however, that marked the proceedings of the Worcester ladies, was the prosecution of business without any great exhibition of excitement. During the whole sitting, r.ct a cap was torn; the debate was continued with out any pulling of hair and not a single face was scratched or dress disfigured. Another circumstance worthy to be noted was the entire absence of babies from the ! con veni-on. i ne assemo;ing cl tnree or fcur hundred women upon one occasion, and no babies at all in the assemblage was remarked, particularly by the reporters for the press. Their absence accounts for the orderly manner ia which the bus iness of the convention was conducted, and partially explains the secret of the covention itself. About ninetenths of tfiese progressive women are old maids and grass widows without issue; had they husbands, who could, by exrecising great pa tience, live with them, they would be perfectly satisfied with the world as it is; envy and mortification sting the old things to the soul, and they are determind to upset everything, not in the hope of bettering their own miserable situation, but with the intention of making others, particu larly youncr and contented wives, and fascinating young girls, as miserable as they are themselves. Nothing disturbs an envious old maid so much, as to see a happy young wife and mother, or a hand some innocent girl who attracts admira tion by her artlessness and beauty. Pittsburg Chroiiicle. G?A party of Mormons, under the lead of Elder Orson Hyde, are making the journey Westward across the Plains. The fcdder writes to tne frontier Guardian that occurred on the route via the north side barked from every bsat that stops, and of the Platte, while the southern route isltvveen one and two hundred have a!rrt-J Atreu-ed whh irravps. 1T ae- V arrived at this port. A like rapid iaa-1 intend to return ou the North side of the Platte and faithfully examine every foot ot the entire distance on both routes. W e are taking points and distances, and ma king observations which we think will be of essential service to the emigrating pub lic another year The third trying part of the road for stock is from the South Pass to Green "'"'i a uiouukc ui BiAiy-iivc unless tjauu .1 1 1 .1 1 t ouu oic sage auu aauu ueau Horses, mules, cows and oxen, with snow-capped mountains on your right and left, are about the variety which the eye meets in passim through this section. I would give a more flattering account of this region if I could conscientiously. . lt Mr. Whitney had travelled these uiaius as we nave, i minK nis ramwouisiui; vi i- v. - ., i i II . 11 .l. nici w vti. - - - - - T.. IF tiro hV0 rrnnrl iKirt miles more will allow us to zaze upon ; rather different landaeap." speculation wouiu materially minimal in; iwiucu " nuiui u- - his own estimation. I would not thank j from slavery in Georgia, atwiit t0-,-Congress for a grant of all the land that 1 1 since, by tha wife, a woman . ver coon Kotirppn Laramie and ibis cnmnlaxiiin. disomisinir herself in ra-1 Bad Newt from California Mr. Jacob Zeigler, formerly editor of the Butler Herald, writes a long letter to Messrs. Croll & Marshall, the present e itors o f that paper, dated Stony Bir North Branch, Middle Fork Americaa River, California August 24th, 1&50, ja which he "draws a dark and cheerlejj pc. ture of the gold regions. We copy a pa. agraph from the fetter for the inforraatio of sncn of bur readers as may bd sSicted with the "gold fever:" "By this visit I learned the fact, that there were coming in, about, 503 person daily, by the overland route," and that era. igration to this extent would continue to come for at least the next forty dayt.- Should this be true, I know not vtha $3 earth they will da. They kn Wnonotijj-a. selves what to do, and they have come to this country under the falsehoods aadoU. representations which have been an ar9 daily sent to the States by speculators 15$ snavers. And now thai taey'aie herethey see, when too late, how egregiously ty have been mistaken. Hundreds who can dispose of their stock, and thus realize enough money to lake them home, are go- ' ing; and those who have been fortunate to bring enough money with them, are stay ing just long enough in the country to ie cure a passage back. One year morr 134 all the exaggerated reports about the fold of California will sease to create excite, ment in the States. There is a fearful responsibility resting on the" shoulders of many in this country, but they are of the class ol speculators who care as little abou? the poor emigrant, when he is once here, as the hungry wolf does about the lamb. Daily thee are to be seen men in droret ging from the valleys to the mountains, and trom the mountains to the valleys. without even a hope of gaining enoogk money to take them back to the Slates. The one feeling of being able at last to strike a rich deposite, and thus make a for tune, prevades every one, and keeps up the unceasing and never ending running from place to place-. From a fact likejihis it is generally 'sup-pesed, it will go hard with the miners this winter. There it truth in the seppcsiiion, more truth than poetry." A Fugi'.iTC Esuptl. I -Y-l ,'itcagu uzmocrui says JJzmocrt On pursue rs hearing ma: ne in 1411:1.7, lit. I-ased o.er to th.it city, tdkl!i? w.!3 tnem itinjtr.er s ave who w.:s to iJeiitily the runaway, a;;d w .0 ii tti y !iirvJ Irom h:s owner a: s) aiucli pr Jir n givug a CUJfa:;tee t:;al they .voul J r 'la n h' m :oou order uia coiHtaion as wssii rece.v-u. At VJJ ucv trie vre n lifiiraici J rg"ioual i the runaway had taken the u;le track for Cliic?g-; and forihwMti th j-ji.'.vrueii 'J Ml. 5 Cliy , CrlUgl.iiJ Wie:i uiw- who was ta identify the tuiiif along, with them. Here, however, they received the unkindtst cut of all. In the first i!ace, they learned that the man they were af ter ;vss not here and never haJ been; in the ne l tf:e colored Leoole 2J r , 1 1 tiit: r hvu-is to scther, cave tne i.ero taey broj g'U with them for i Jeulificaticn ru:- poses a hit as to how 'things was wor ing," and on Tuesday evening they shipped him off by rail to Canada, wher by this time he is safel' set down bycnd the reach of hio pursuers; they. p:or fel lows, decamped fr the South the same evening, their departure being hastened by a threat cf 4'tar and feathers" from ttie excited colored population, who are up in arms, and nigtt'y, as well as dsily on the watch for white erntlemen with sal- jiow complexions and bread brim hats. Canada tr.d u,c Color d Fniii'Tfi- N-Jt withstanding the sympathy festprl bv ihp t ':i unci i: ti tailors St t-? passage of the fugitive shve law, tHef arnear to be unwilhns that the m'Stta t slaves sho.ih! boc?:ne their 1 Ji.speaairy :s tn: line of Michigan of Ca.n Ja. 1 ht s the cs? in? w l.irl hm nuuibv-Tcf ihe Am- herslLurg Courier lays; "We have i.vei fivored for th laSt four or fi'e d;is by nn influx cf l-ecolo red populatiL'i: fo;n the States. vh s? si vent, though honorable to the provin ns n land of 'ibertv. could be verv rBf' ficiallv disoend th 1 ip habitants of this frontier. On tl.is immigrants are cli,f'a sable cloudi of ! continue? at all points along th fro i far as heard from; and if some ac be not taken by the Legislature ia 1 matter, this part of the province musts3 be overwhelmed by our colored bretbrtu When, some years ago, the Fo:,r,'sI flocked over to this province too Tap our liberal Government imposed a p Lindinsr on ! chnrda fr.-trr t lm nl hT !U Ol ttie A"',u' ; f- - . .... "v'v' J " . . , .:.:-a, , M"c" more neewari ' iq preTer.i wui w j - j population. Let us see if our ru.en" imP3e ,l Fugitive Starrs. r V , : r,t r . i r ..!....., i .:. -:n anu"-- tn I ..., V .11. ..m .. . I t-..,-l 'J - j 1 . c Sjll- - - 1 itpo -mil li-ji'dlimt Jn :ri ?S 3 em youth, attended by her husnanu 1 I slave servant. aince men tncy u-- 1 I ii
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