V I' - tabu - top e 0 , orate. _ 3 II it11IT:104, the 'People's tights maintain, :liefice, ent unbribed by gain." - • • - 3 ASE. - ; • iiuki4 .elletie eh- Dpavied faigA on L A _ , ,e' ... i oti 711 ' P '" 3 40, 4 Dur re • 1 a, c 3 , . t:: Viarßot I lUnins the 1 .4.11/1 t•:.« f: , ilts causes Oiliitleate • 'IN. Rorgue, gitidertit a l tik` 6 l4eili L 1 1!!" ' ?j 114* YP s' illt4tia :fatidibyl i 1 *at win . Tiii tat , i : be little aliel)ii I : . _ 1 bitili l i-: .t iwA. e . i i , . I.ll4weleht t. iShall tve fight ft °tit 1 Ftlt are pnShablY aware that we i l mid through our editorial col. siihject of the War with Mexico, 1 mid effeCts; es much as many of I 4 pqraries. We have not been led I 1 tliis course because we do not con-1 t Direr of vast importance to the t!because the .whole subject has : 1 rally dismissed by the city press, i 1 , we lune published extracts from •Rili, by our members of Congress, e ' rious messages of. the. Presi-. h - lave been laid before the piihlic, Ife o ,'that any remarks of ours could c, e e than a repetition of what has 1 - •eh said. - nii. . i will not allow us to enter into s Of the causes which led to the -0, but there cannot be a doubt kthatthe annexation of Texas, though it may `', 'lna hay him the sole cause, has tended to ,l': / 11 „v b - Wn a iris's, 'which the unsettled state of our ffairs with Mexjeo has for a long ..itime . p a t ended . Was the annexation .of ,-'`l'emia a ilieasure which met the npproba : tion of t e ileople 1 We think the facts will warrant in answering this question in t., . . _ t., Alt wive . Mr. _Polk, previous to his !..ielection p4blicly avowed his opinion that ; -the Pon liatian of this measure, so long .'. itilked foi , vas necessary and expedient.— `"erlie a d s of of his election everywhere .1,1 - - • . .4 , I proilaitne the sarne t , and the result was his -;triumphant election. It is folly then to say, that is been brought on us by the ' EXI It it is not the people's war, 1 'lin't the President. It it equally .FA iy, that the responsibility of the upon tbe Exeeptive, in conse : rqul having removed our army of , i occt the It& Grande, instead of letiviniflth at Corpus Christi, because be n• I at kuciwp, hat Mexico has never urged this I bathe ero4nds of the war; shalias laid the causes beill before her p e ople on the broad ground th 4 we have annexed Texas; the declara ioi contains but one count—that we „have.. - ettiTexas, which she. avers to be her ...Tenho . i With regard to our right to ad ' F,'. Init . Te asitnto the Vnion at her request, it I '4W . nnne es ary for us to speak, being scarce . Iy „now isl uted by any except Mexico her . - f . nelf; d lite shistild pot ] lave said so'rouch . e • ••iiin.relal n to the causes of the war, were it .ri , atot ou •srlicere opinion that 'our country r , shoul f 3 . 4q it out, believing we have good &tilde on!I upon whi4h we base our opin- ' „10af? , •.. i . -at: it ma bisaid that this is supererogation in • - iansa....lloL tlitte is bbt one opinion on the sob- , i . a._ •at is token foi• gianted we 'mist ; e •t ti' 'id it Litt But has not ."TeVrlllitirpsliire .3 $...- virtual! ralielled ; has not Federal Massa , ectuisett ' h ', wise raised the - voice of rebel . • lieftil; • not means and measures ' for au eneigetfc - os4:ution of the war been drag- Ile , e n' g their 'slow length along through our ,pa4senti.o gras ; has not' a portion of the i • .tottlwilett need our government as " mur ,derelitiind - robbers;" and have not certain 4 of our met abers of Congress sought to stamp , ,n 1 • , -e . ' upon, the ' ltoad banners of their country, aS " I 1".1 itboy.bitve, raved in triumph over the fieldS of Palo A4o and Reseca dela Palma, " un . , just, unnghteaus and unholy ?" Charity • would ponipel us to say that much of this ttr. to I 0 • ~ apparent eittposition to the war, and this dis position tatembarrass the government in its prosecutioi, is the mereebulition of partizan I strife, Or t'4, use a modern phrase, mere talk' Yor‘" binacimbe ;" and we are confirmed in 1 O j ai: belief if their watit of sincerity, when • • .we hear . same men and the same party minting, .. r isikftOkan inting, that he who has been the i Ishan j aatiument in the boas of this iniqiii iiins A: tni)listeation for the perpetration of this fp m urder and robbery, has thereby ran • &4l,nri.self the most available man in their wholf party for their next candidate for cbe Pidency ! i - ti f ""ftbe tips in who have taken ' • ' -, I ', / • ' it ution mselve.s to embarrass the. Admin- On qui retard the progress of the war 20.,.sippert- r if the Whigs in Massachusetts were sincere in their denunciation and abuse , Ortiteili-Vtitinteets.r.iif the Whigs generally , nicsidlieet - iti 'their efforts to ridicule the Tplip , Ite#llsand ]discourage enlistments,. we ' imegtherato papse and consider what would bete r i esilt of their efforts providing they slibufitt su . eed. If they are sincere they ist 1 iothalta tis refuie to enlist—they would t 1.4., haveatir venunent acknowledge itself in the l irreag . they would have our army with drawn .on . i Mexico, and this merely to gra ; ify-thiellarp miinion of the minority that the 6 iiiii m 11 . tijitit-they woplclhave us do what tf,Cyai4,4.v r o.yet.done, tarnish our nation , litl,kftaot, Und colcr ourselves with eternal AVlPreaC4l44 ' iliSgraCe in the eyes of all the eaiiibletafprld. Are that party - who now so ;l ia .. f i ltptclaim ` themselves Wings , willing ttt ii mßbtlttlit,the minds of tbefroeountry for thp a napn . of th eir pterity, their acqui tjit eseeridek 3ilhat•their influence it was that I ~. pbeettNte datk ataitt .upon their - oatio4lol eac t a . r ,1•; ~16hey are iincery they tiOnld; have us at , ace desist,'and atone not fciiiW j. xi* : .. reli, 'bat "declare our ratliCallii; , I dird4judgc of : our :rights, -and the-tiu t !, i tniy '4 a ' little hakdfui",of. aeatiAtio : -.1 bar*i ,t 4 . edge of - the rights of goVel ail i e t iitig,' , ' tt. . ' • 11,f .7' i t . ttional j Uri spindence;; . itt i }V-..- _ a niLltlo A y Fed, , ,f_turgeSTs Alkalis il utailato g ~", . ,- , the world, the ambition end' EEO ~`.`~Qfli~~ cupidity of other netions-srould,be excited towards us, a /Constant reSort, to:ermiwoitl d: be the , only alternative ever .after by which' , . we could expect tO 4 Sustitin our:clearest 14d mint inevitable --iithoge-whn arehp ko:s.ing_the war_ ore.Sineere in their opposi tion, such are the results that would follow their success. Butt that they can be suc cessful in the stand they have taken, is out of the question. We are engaged in a war ; thbre rimy be room to doubt its expediency or even its - justice ; 'but instead:of - stopping' Id split hairs -with) the ,Governinent on a question upon whicb a ddubt may be raised, our National policy; our patriotism' require that we should fight it out—that our entire energies should be brought to, bear at the earliest possible moment, and the war bro't to a close by a full and effectual triumph. THEIKI ACCOUNT. The eommissioners' published last week itillicir . pet Organ, the "Democrat," a State- - ment of the receipti and expenditures of the county for the yeat 1846. It appears that the total amount of receipts is $6,883 42 ; the entire amount o(expetiditures $6,871 80; leaving in the trea'sury. . the full . and exact sum of $ll 62. * very close calculation this l .—" running pretty near to shore," it may be said.We,will refer•to a few items of expenditure found in the list, of a some what extraordinary character: "'Alonzo \Villiam, late comm'r, $139 50 " Isaac Reckliow,i do 169 50 "Jonas Carter, do 162 00 - 4 $471 00 j...00k back a fewyears, compare this ac count with 'what; was 'received by former Commissioners per year, and it will be dis covered that sinc l e those officers have as sumed to regulateithe politics of the county as an additional duty, it has cost the tax payers nearly double to compensate them for their services. " R. J. Niven, Clerk, ;075 00." ~. Little enough considering that lie is become, ex olgcio, politicEd scribe and letter-writer gcnetalissimo of the Fire-proof faction. "N, C. Warnet, Sli4iti, $407 87" , A clever sum tliii! most of it was probably i ~ incurred by conveying convicts to the Peni- • tout:try. " F. B. Streeter, counsel, €t2o 00." Formerly, good counsel was only paid $:l5. The other five ni.3y have been added for po litical advice. "E. Fuller, crier, $66 00." This must haie been for kindling fires in winter, opening find adjourning the court, at all times, wheri there. "D. W. Crocker, Jailor, $143 66." This must be forlwaiting ;upou company in the back room. • • "Offices, fire hoof, " Fuel, ' " Stationery_ i ..,-.----- —415,424 2-1„: 1 - 1 Ve'do not comp ehend ' all these items, tbo .e.; . ..n....—..'ltiat he Fireproof offices have become extraor inarily expensive to - the , , People,.whatever[the clique may think of it. " Printing [ • $230. 38!" -. , A liberal item this, wherewith to encourage. the sadly frighte;ned editors of the Clique I ! Organ. The whole printing could ha;ie been done for half the money—and as proof' ; of our sincerityi we will give bonds with good and sufficient surety to perform the same amount of printing, the current year, I• for' just half the sum paid to the Fire-proof Organ during tl+ past year; and in a style better than they ever did it. , "Jail, ' is 23 31." li How this was a plied, we cannot conceive. We do know, h wever, that the. Jail hag not only been concitnned by the Grand Jury, but ii, and for is long time h-is been, ex: ceedingly out o4repair, and otherwise unfit for the reeeptioit -of any iliuman being, how ever criminal. llt cannot, we think, have been repaired. • "Auditor's fees , , auditing accounts: " Benj. Thonaus, auditor, $lO 50." " Lorin T. Fhrrar, 10 50." " Ira N. Haviley, 10 50." $3l 50. This is more, 4e believe, than was ever be fore received I:l3i,any former county Audit ors. Wonder if they audited the accounts political of the , Commissioners and their Clerk in the Operation 1 If so they well earned the amdunt received. 1 • • " Court-hd f USE' ' $1.14 54." , That building Iras thoroughly and at great 1 expedse repaired year before last, as ;zippering by the last account rendered by the Com missioners. lei any alteration or improve ment has sinc been made, it has escaped our observatiolt , , and we know not where to locate it. ." Uncurrept money, $lB6 00." This is shameful, so easily might the loss bate been avnided. The Commissioners and Treasurer , should dub and take the " People's Adtocate." By frequent•refer ' ence to it s " Bank Nolte List," they might ; effect a bandOrne saving to the coun ty which woull. cost.them only 2.5 eta,. edch, and they Would be thereby saved the trouble of bUrrosting scieagerly, from week to week, that plain caniiid andindependent expon ent 'nf,souild de l tncicrat'principles and Which, fearie l Ssli . 'intitd th e follies , and presumli- . to tonCof th lire-proof Faction. fire, pAyfr ct liiiilet Agelataillred; ,WO him just learned' that l i the - Detnocra -cy: _bot h it Wayne and . W,yotobiiitattidea; i hafei'lv• .. ille' Pre Bl oiiPtuc.Ti: # , rid_ 4_16 1 t 4 : , i ia(i"l,'*d igg of our firi7PF4Ot AmYeMion held;ii . 0 l oitrt-bonae• on Abe , finn - Mondny I . 4.184 •Co by silently `refusing lc? appoint Confirces meet rung Grov'ir elk* Iliht 1 egates in . confOreace on M. 'lijio iS as it, ! . ..shoUjii T dictators ; better haiiO adOpted offered in l Conyontion by F; the appointment - 130 1 r Wine caning. -They `woOld have...a finitely, better . advkintage.- alike the pleasure and the du ple to right y such audacibu In the House, mi Wednesd lotion was offered. that the vice aria immorality be instru I duce a bill so amending, the I sion, entitled " an ;act autho zens oe.Certnin counties to de whether the ..sale 14f vinous liquors•sball be continued in as to embrace the, whole which was amended so as to counties which shall ask for t' Petitions to allots , banks to, a less denominatioh than fly others to prohibii them iss than ten dollars, Idere presen l A strong effort it making ishment by death. I. The Legislature, a few da ed an act for the suppressio 'destructive and dishonest vie The penalties are very sever: of a gambling table is liable t in the penitentiary and a fine dollars. Turnpike nee •At a meeting of the Mb townships of Choconut an held pursuant to public null , of Joseph Hyde, in Frien. 1847, CALEB CARMAL Chairman, and JOHN S. PEI The Chairman stated tit meetin eL fr to be-for the purpos necessary measures to obta incorporation, and , make a from Leftaysville, i in Bras Friendsville, in Susquehan from thence to cosmeet wi Road now propo4 to be State-line, in the township i to Binghamton in oome I On motion it was pesolvi. mittee of six be appotinted to the members of the Legislat vor to obtain a a I tenor of- the petition ae forwarded. Caleb Carmalt, John S. PI Bates, John B. Wilson, Ar Edward Clark were appointel Resolved, That a Commiti to employ a competent Sni neer to examine the groom an adjourned meeting, th most eh t route for the this place on the e id Road. nd that w n nu firs rn t s; d i a t y a o d o ik u i rn ar t c o h m ne et t 2 o'clock th teroon • - -0• • report. John S. Peironnet, Josep Hyde, Hiram Bates and C. Carmalt were appointed. Resolved, That the pr listed in this and the Brad! pers. Adjourned. CALEB CARAT Jos S. PEIRONNET, Sec $33 70." 767." Capital .Pantshme If my mind was not th with the conviction that J one of our purest men, that heart in his bosom, that his were all manly and virtuo obliged to bear testimony t ing talents and public servi fluence was not commensin ents and his virtues, Ishoull ions upon the gallows, tc they are worth.' But when Matinee the deep, the unive tive feelings of the heart, th in the soul, crying out as it I. things inhuman, tinchristin as mere.morbid sentimental eases.of the public mind ; the religious convictions at cruples of his fellow-citize they shall disfranchise him ha country; when he deno kiwis of such feelings in a j the Witness stand, and cal When he attempts to fastens reed upon the communif arm of the law; it is our du, right; to expose his errors, t liat he is hostile to a great that he is weighing the gre history of humanity in the his own , experience. He sl feel what he refines to see, men on- both sides of this 'Feputation and character ibex,' from the imputation o it is pitiful to attempt to ide reform with moral or soda it is not a subject for the ch ives, or infidelity; that his respects, is of ten-fold mo than precepts;.the . do antidote along with it. IS ineet.lhis . feasoniceg, feel ho the erect of the example_ is -eiitil*6 of the than. Ije stAggor-our. faith in virtue, Of e,onseience, - to-Idevlro:f9 her . : Inonitions, and it dig Und'l Pon , 9 1 , 0 ,P t ly; say,: thevirtue . ot the,eoo copied thel is , otu;, 'duty to see that -it tofillitlieliiiest4 The le T ' r . • nday next.— ose impotent lie resolution usk, ratifying l iester of Wy. (speared to in seems to be y of the Peo- FactiOnists. Legislative. y lasf, a reso =mitten on ted to intro , w of last ses , ing the citi lide by balldt nd spirituous id counties," s monwealth, • xtend only to le law. issue notes of dollars, and ing any less ed. abolish pun- S since, pass of the ruinous, of gambling. The keeper imprisonment I'd five hundred log. bitants of the I. Middletown, i e, at the house,' !;sville, Feb. 1, I was appointed ON? ET, Sec'y. • object of the • of taking the 'n a charter of turnpike Rend lord County, to a County, and h the turnpike $ ade from the if Silver Lake, I minty, N. Y. /I, That a Com prrespond with re, and endeu ,cording to the I dy adopted and 1 'ti ;flinnset, Hiram alitinaly and 1 theemitlee. .ee be al b tried -ve Y ° " or4b I, and re ilde , eding,s be-pub oid County pa- ALT, Ch'a: pie's Advocate. I.—No. 3. / roughly imbued Idge Jessup w. "s he bore a no te For the bjects and ai s ; if I was his comma es, or, if his • 1 . ; 11 l are with his ti i suffer his op' - go for w t such me - sal, theAstinc voie of God does against and unnatural, ts, as, the dis hen he assails bi conscientious 1 2 ., and declares In the courts of ,1 nees the opera ry-box, and on s them perjury; r is own religious , liy the strong Iv , as well as our lechitn know =oral movement; 3 t epochs in the petty scales of .uld be made to that there are question, Whose should protect fanaticism, that tify the proposed I ultraism; that irge of bad mo %rumple in these e consequence tine carries its en who cannot true. it is, but ensured' by the . it, operates to stifle the voice confidence in es the repute- I may safe. 411 s oc-, these reeks; it s not descend *tare* 'l4.3vert as the people of Inearly , oll the nerthera and middle states have borne a isilent but decisive testimony against the demoralizinginifuenes of public executions • they-have made them :private. But 'his favorite argument, is the terror it inspires.L-I hope the few selectedo witness the execution will feel the full force of this .compliment. Judge Jessuti o or some one foi him, ap pears in the Rogisterldenouncineme as-a "silly rhapsodist, o 'with6ut argument or sense; as a sympathizt with tlie . murderer; as an apologist for the suicide, and as an infidel in my religion. Hi might likve SPered himself the tronble of repeating in his paper what he had before done iu his lecture; but to give himihefull benefit of these denunciations I admit once for all that I would rather be the poor 'suicide, goaded to desperation un til his reason Was unsettled, than the men who coolly an& deliberately choke hint ,o death. I would rutherlfang my hopes• of salvation upon Me commission of his crime, than upon iheiis. I have a better right to my Own life, than: Judge Jessup has, and he would think with me, if I had a rope round his neck and was strangling him. As tomy Infidelity, if it is to he tested by his standard, he is welcome to the admission that I would rather be an infidel, than possess hisreligion. It is not his preretical religion I mean; but his-doctrine, his theology. The former I respect ) ; it ill becomes me to raise the ban per of superior-sanctity saving " stand off, for lam holier than thou." I hope my hu mility will riot he construed into arrogance ; but his theolgy I discard, as inhuman in its mercy, false in its doctrine, brutalizing in its tendency, hostile to the principles and prac tice of Jesus, and subversive of all the best interests of humanity. My want of argu ment and my Weak reasoning helms no right to pass judgment on, because be publicly denied me the use of both. The law he said 'was the ;law, and he wl , o criticised it, he who reasoned upon, he who investigated the foundation of lik own religions belief or questioned that ofJud,geJessup, was a knave and an infidel; he was unworthy of credit in court. lie turns me mad coon, and then upbraids Inc for not arguing my cause. I take him at his word---1. lay aside reason, and appeal to the feelingq, to the humanity of mankind, and he 'Ai still dissatisfied. I am, like the convict, denied the use of my reason,; the benefit of human sympathy, and must submit tp be hung! De complains of my appeal from his theology to his' mo rality, to his,law, to his virtues,- to his hu manity. I did it because I thought his hu manity, his virtues, were a better authority; were o cattily- el the appeal. Ilin his religion is bk. standard, aad lie is not willing that such a standard shall be measured by the virtue, the Immanny, the morality, or the law of its possessor; it is a tacit turknowl . edgement that its injunctions arc i icions, in human, and Unmoral. I now return to my subject. . We left off in the midst of an examination of Satan's - declaration, " every thing that a man bath will ate give for hid life." Judge Jessup quotes this declaration, not for the purpose of demurring, , nut fur the purpose of oppugning us resisting the author of evil, :aunt for the [impose of aidingjand sustaining When he was -a mere lawyer, lie 1 w . [less had many chentsOike Satan, as r 0 duf as the very Devil, whom it was his t h e 'lp advocate, and the ancient leaven of cater Cr' rdi rilitigt4 re to the ~.._lnitre. , ;_he, atit th e Devi itnself, and in tin CtLec too. Now, I am no ,safficiently versed in matters of law to#Ow, whether Lmay-demur; wheth er I n* , adMit the fact, and show that after all it -amounts to nothing; but ,f do knarr that I, am not a fly to be caught in the cobwebs of form. I :will, therefore, suppose that a inantwould give up every thing fur his life; that he would give-up his evil propensities; thatAe would give up his liberty; that Ile woi‘ild give , up the pursuit of }sappiness; dim he would devote the energies of mind 841 body, to make rcpar.&on l'ir his crime, i only to society, but to the kindred of the aparted. Let us imagine that in the hour of committing the murder, . . ,_ - Amid the roses Fierce ref nzaioc rears la r snaky crew" _ chat the remorse of a g es is rankling with in; that the voice of conscience, the line that cannot, be quenched is burning in his bosom ; that he surrenders himself, like sMvers, and Mercer i l and Colt, hod Burton, • a d hundreds of others, to'the tender iner ci - ofJudge-Jcssup. it is a cemfort to the l iti Ju i ttc that another life must be, sacrificed; he glories in the achievement that another hea:=th is toJte made desolate; lte raises the gallows fur: another human sacrifice; he asks that (Mother mother's heart may be bro ken; that another sister's love -must be say -1 ered; that another father may be agol nized ; he offers to those that are already afflicted, no truer or sweeter balm than re venge, and that revenge must be gratified, not only ujou ,t he murderer but upon the innocent. l.f 3 .ometimes, it is true, they crave the death of their victim! but the instances are rare, and whenever they do, Satan him self delights to scatter incense !mon the al tar ! ! They diminish our sympathies ; they turn them 'from the. channel iti which lie who created us designed they . should flow, towards the convict; they are universally regarded riS cruel, as revengeful, us fiendish., The Judge.wisli'sktein to manifest the lat-'I ter dispositibn. He sees his victim's tortured.' .brow, he sees the sweat of anguish starting through hi¢ skin; he sees the record of a nameless woe in his countenance; be hears the heaving breast, and stifflined tongue; lie sees coursing over his half-crazed.fancy, the visions of eternity, of endless misery ; and• he wishes uk terminate these awful monitions,. the still, sinall, voice that speaks• in the re-: "cesscs of the soul ; lie stops the workings of repentance iand.contrition, with the goad of retaliation! Ile offers theiy revenge; " lie oil 1; with impatient p?tisp, To tight .1 the (Leath rope's ztraligling clwip." And lie do e s this with a perfect knowledge, that the am ount of siiffering inflicted upon his victim is a positive reliefovlien compared with that which is inflicted: upon his iiino.J cent family,; and when - he !plows that they'; sometimes Suffer 'fOr generations, from the; grief end the dishonor. .7 knew A mother,. of keen and tender Sensibilities, di e on lien' son's eon viction, even before his sentence w* ' execu t e d. 'He Was a young.men:whose eei ue u tii o n - and talents would . 1 eve done, litinOri to his native land, but 'the litair of evil came,; the ehildrennf dathness tot ,athund Ititit, and he 'fel . Does `the tlite.Jitdge hnlicief that such a man, ingitted,flWas not 8 11 6'0.1 ing More a the recolleetitaint ' .. ..the joys , iit 7 : eirly dap; tie. WY,,io:42 . :tbe.' tender." ntl t . s the : Midileations ef.theillestous;:tlitat lingir aroundlt •o c iiii s ~.o. . .ihojvicousi, : liringihg them; b kin Penitence 'tpthe rine 0 shoot 1 of sob ` " 144 dayil tDeeibe bel e that he saff red!Ancik when the l i spirit o hi s ma r ther,!ri itig, from the :grave,'„was calling bun to vitt+ and to :God,. thanl he didtrotn Ins execatihirl would any mats of Coricdt fecil ings-- ' speak not now ofthe du : of the christi ': 1 appeal to hisTeetiogs air a man. I n Would Ali - shut his soyl from that light. whiCh is a A li it to the dark world,Withirig :whi4h open's' trough that veil of i . dallTe# scenes of lake and peace, and' parity, itd*hicif ill our sp: its would fitin dwelt and Aorsliii ; scenes, hat nature in !het, robes 4. sprig. can 6eter imitate ; that. surpass alliforinslot materiill workmanship „ hopes divintly be u- 1 tiful; ler which the spirits of our depart d' it i parent,'watch with deep , and peaceful int r- • est 1! ' Pli ! that no huthanl pUniSh4ent, • o fear, n doubts, might ever w'ar'e $ t old or blighting wing over a hope like thii! may a mothei)s spirit, may the ar b reis:,,f god ;keep their vikils'over it ; until de ath free) it frem the cll that bounds it ; and it khocks!ntl Heavett's own glorious gate, to take its oWn i brightiliape and live!! Ife that bqtsts-stiblii aspiratibns as these would. dance 9pon his , mothets grave. Judge Jessup's he .rt Wenld revolt ;:it recoils while he is idad ng' . .these , lines aim the bare intimation ofinc results.', I • But la i replies why send your sylmi athiesj toil the celof the felon ; 'white repaintiOn is this ; repentlince to society; to the Yielturd laiv ; [to the !Imlay he has destroyed I. I ansWer it is alttliat can be given, 'and hisi crath pre vents .4 . % -en this; that is no reparat on ; and if the liand of the mut'4erer strikes he must v:iluedFlife of a flitnilY, it is a pcot comfhrt to kiniw that another life . muSt Ie taken, that another family-is' born to an '.equall a -1 • mounOof anguish and misery. ' Butl I do not mean to 'be wide stop& as admitting the Dovirsldeclaratidn, .tat all! h man littli he will give fothis life.; It ink with Burleith and his recfiewer,that th reverse is the fact. I have admitted :tii Judme's $ (mutat ton only to refute it; , if it haiinot been dune already I will do it new. • !ridge. jes sup:wiluld not give his religionj dnot be lieve hp would give up his (mink)t in this cotdroiersy, half as soon; if yo' . were En strati,* him itt the street, as he wo td if $Oll were tit reason with him, or satisfy iin Irbil? • dui. Bildein the lattkr case you 71 Ar h t stic coed, ift the former iiever--titider 'extrene torturelhe tnirdif say he would 'buil ; lire that is coariisred ne.ainst his t ill 1 - 4ni the mine i /1 , 116 /II Min. " ' 1 CertaiiPv a bigot e-mild not rive hi big,on-y; Burletirl; would not give his fanatici m; Gen. Worth! would not Dive his honor; Cie in or -4 est map among you would not givelhis wife, or his !child ; not a Soldier that nuionsh:Me, Yot ll ll „stay! to retain his life a 1v reek, And thereft T the aphorism of Bacon Its ncdrer the triith than this quotation front the evil i priu..ttile, "There islmvpassioni is he mind of maiso weak but !that it motes Ind mas ters di fear of death." Ii mice I 4g,i:e that the m l'tkrer is not! adequately 1 - niched; I that lal is, not deterred, and theiver severity , of the famishment, according tO th Judge's 1 own stowing, its borbarity, and tutality, I not or4y opetut( to prevent iiitn•frirn being deterrld, but - operates to prevant liim from ' being-putiihed at all. There is a egre p of wickedness in cool, eieliberate, preedit. ted Lmurdet, :hat so far from sythpathi ng ctith,* from ettenuatint , or palliating j a*er is not r-2-1.--i ~ hfc...• i,-........„ — .:. - c -- "‘ iv e, t .tew-g-te l i.e s ; those lilone in which the leW intlttids !life slinuldibe taken. •he • cold blood d, lasi ened iollahr s hot o ily insensible tit the dis grace4but he i th e east sensilile ithe aiii instances f stupid of dea h. How mahy instances brutal y, of sheekink levity, such niiscrennts exhibi under the 'gallows! Didri't Phez 1 . Boyd,l the avowed nod acknoWledied n ur ri derer Of the Pattonsy kick the sheiltr's s 1 . :Mil tlieii tell him that he Would lace 4. ,viol tom on the platform 1: Wits hi. pun ed ? Didn't RobinSpn, after enure sing l he mulliered Soydittn, openly de hire f he woidd burst out i a laughing insider gallo4l Didn't h e cry out "for a hi of mtlic.; the big crowd, and Bun4ity di ed spelF.tatorst" Didn't he say MI his ost sober trimnents, " rve suirertld n4sery ed povert enough in (his world, to c re• in, ch t about i leaving it:V l, ' Was .be riunished.2 Didn't' 'Reek the Murderer - ekeelted stirne few plars since, in Dauphin Chung, (I ink it wasi) Mock the! officiatinot-Ci§r7yrriati, who prepared to sing a psailn, ",y op4nly si ti t 2; inp. some vulghr, filthy, t bsc c, if, not blasphemous song;, n the itiid t o the 'ser vice? id he regard the phnis tine t ? LOA D too at the late Aublurn rhurdCrer . ' was he punished? say nothing new ;3f t C al' fel respotisibility of . 'lending such . _ sou to Judgl'itent; say nothing hbodt th . - efre t of such 4n exhibitionj upon i - thel by4taud ri; say nthing, about flit coinpakisortof :tick an exOcution with that Ofla ma "dose ose eel ings nie nor only acute ond Sentive, but filled ,with contriqon and penite Lie; but conadre such an exechtint Witlii.the un ishimmt of perpetual imprisonen4 wli eh, 1) if stico men,did melt feel.at first, ~igli be irnad4ise of to bring thein to Ben ottheir condition. A SPEC AT ES ' . ' Q For the eof4e's :(I. , :peate. • itIESR.S. EDITOI4B:— . I IWOIO rt' , l trorle you, 4r the publie,lwith the subjee 'of P Ire nolo,, were it no for the uncoil g for land i sever ; manner the. Diseplestof all % pie treate, by Juclge . 4essup in his Ice lee &re on . thil Death Penalty, foil. the . - .temp to Irtte the prisonl dir " il . Si To, , i n i tir t ,unpri t ~: print. .. tscsiOline atsin g ; I boil an expluna. ion in Irnyown ay, 1/0t 110 t •be deemed intrusive 'ou:of.pl' Thi Judge repr stinted that ii as 4 wr / z, to,. pi:4;e prisoners in . a llospital„bnil I, 'their *oral and i tellecttuil itlicaties, provriy, their vicio s- profiensities 'niitel a proper manner; because deg , ere, topriion as a inn: hinenc. for som act 1 1 4, had c4intnitted, in . iolation of In4:-. ' • 'Not laws only . e good:or ad itecort ito;theideas of Om Who had ilis4authc to(intte them :, a ' .if it caulk, shown a low .which has t tt.other- aiiit.thiti on niot,'s. a Poti.Jant - ,,l' f. t.hinli,ttio,...4lg,e' be:inoierreet, and,' tis, .abuse - It-Moyne ;what and out o pinco.: o , - .. I !.: ! , Ma 6 Inlslesttes,„ itretiott,fti pitiOt, 'tit , l ergiselef,whielrgi ,ealliertpin 11 II ',- 4, min lid those ftleuitieslare!igOvii to:. it :fo'r't' Oat g yeimporposesilan4o*niierie" pre' e-tift s:eonitneitduble ',het lan,nnpr . pe . r . ;"se is rehetioilile; !atal ' ..:. ittleedil-, - ).th -o" ;;sin lerim44_l4.an - t,'p., . inmii,li 0 0 .,. godup i 1c . i 8 . 43 1t40K . ,.(4 . 91, 4.41 : ',,f..:"..,Pd . a . n.` , ',.94+ . Are.t a4uire , wTIOI,- i whichtipongs, 'm %On of 4.01 iiilkontesit.:;:,Thiere , ` I: I . ti ' ..,, a i feetilty - iit.ithi!Thmtsii?' tad t hat , < 4 , , !, ~-, - - 4 'd - q, stitifitlitted!niore than- this:WC la b * . e:iiiiiirli f ! "hiiit2ply-Prail . plus. to., aec quantity Oftleienoo,Supporklis i and old it 04. .04.. l!' pci'ssitile- tole (. thing tti'tbilia 'uw4 - 10 - 6 , :stiCiedd this is ,attighir;, , Arttit:our moral f Lclaim,-4, i$ liist, , it is proper.: ' !' : ~.- -- But letlthe desire to livbibli - irtt all possesS to ,:a '*retiter,ot, less d igfi ,- 0: be: come too strong, and 'Otittnoral:t mattes too weak, the tcolasequencelWOuld-lt t !the! Emu: ululation Of 'iptopertrot the erpe ite . titOth= eiii - Steillifiridlibity'and 'dire`e't lion is result; add this. we - !talks(4,' or er' e, which the Judgeithitika'ishiiiild be pun' ' heck But the law which consigns , an badly dual - thus . organized to prison r fci 4.4 nish nz qn „And gives the primotieetto ftitiOtinrchariCe or amend ment, is 4 bad law.;, - ,NOw Phie ology pro'. poses to stimulate the moral &Cu I ies„which are too weak, by a Course'of MO' ng.whieh will keep ,them iiraction, and lei's le feelings of Acquisitiveness subside, whith hnitebeen . too strong; thereby equalizing the mind, acid ' making good and virtuous eitize,s cir - thOse who, accordineto-the bed laW., ud !Jtidgi- Jessup's !poliey; would be let it ormitisoli hurdeneifin• feelings by the 'elittel punish ment received, ittidy to break l',. h anew iii crime, with 'bat lane faculty tang t a lesson; that of of Secretiveness, making them Lore sly to escape dOteetion, and the ebTliveid ing in future t he Impishment - ju t received: We also! recognize another lac lty which we prissek,,giveng us a desire to 'estroy that ; which is !hurtful, or anything th t - might in- • jure our happiness. This feeling arises•frona the Organ of destructiveness, an< is possess ed by all; some however have • the feeling much stron,gerthan others, and onseiptent ly we find there are those who ore severe, cruel, and lord-hearted ; and w en the or gan is too largeit leads to a lov, , of war and butchery. Now, destriictiveneSs 's an ingre dient in our organization that d ceives our selves, nod when we suppose ,we are con tending for justice • and rightettisness. we mistake, it seems to rrie, the fertori of,bes tructiveness for'the inipirations f moral el oquence., as witS strikingly llluit -ated in the appearance 'of the Lecturel• ui the time of its delivery; which could not b accounted fur on any other principle ezeePt that of Phrenology. ' I,'lci wonder that !! those who had been acqualitted , With the. man, and, more recently .seen his . bencvnlent feelings bursting forth In the _late TempSrance Con vention at' the prospect of the:amelioration, of inaiskiucl, awl a stop put to te wretched- ness and Misery brought ,about by the salt of intoxicating drinks, sliriuldn -, " can this ; be Judge Jessu p.?" so altered, o severe, so, devoid of pity, that the bcnei•elsint desires or PhrenologistsJO ameliorate the condition of those unfortunate beings who :are confined in prison at Sing Sing, shoulC be treated u ith scorn. and : !contemptl ' ! - But the true cause may be : fact that the Lecturer was exert tellectual Cu:allies, to satisfy t tirnents ilf.his audience, that Is troy the life of a fellow beingad for crime, , which act springs all tructivenesz; One of his arguments was drawn from the fact that' men! Far; therefore it was right to of a murderer, ." for he mad community." •;rind to satisfy toninest -that it was just, a a exclaiming, "1,-mri th - olariffai our beloved Washington!' 'Nk vast difference 'between ,men other in battle, and a common prisoner out of the walls of a we have coufiOed him for week chained down to the_ floor, a . • with iron handcuffs, thenvleadi to the scaffold, and tber'e put 'I rm;rtal existence delibera him to death !Hid Washin,' , the lives of his P risOners, th would have beep correct, but', very insignificant . . Therefore pelted to belieye that- such ad energy, such.ical,.such powe tion, and. such- tkwanton,disre ! .l nevolent' feelings •of Phrenol spring from no faculty which except a highly excited state O destructiveneip l And, indeed ty of the ; human mind but d and self-esteem • prompted' the that he " while sitting on that • der Court-house was an instr hand of God to punis Irin for t It could be nothing else4---it is: gunge of •Selflesteem to talk of BIM jig sh- Oat that the and of destructiveness, tiro deal penalties:' But I -forbear,'hoping that' . ! so - distinguislfed' in society as with the power to accontMlisliS will, AO • /akar"' Olings • from the higli;stme - ofobreitem naturally acquire in on iittenip' king the lifalif a 6tttujin. bei sentiments will againprevail,?a ure atone; for;tha aberrations fa . correct course, brought , about • siop of questi • Capital Punish= " But 'I would that ye should an req M ~thatAtts„thitrs..wjecia, haves hap have on outl rather unto the fur gospol."—Phr6 I 1f2. , . Through Mercy reform is a( the antiquarilau habits of barb stitioa, aad - 4orgoreal torture, greatdr" comfort§ o 'toleration merey, l dim! . 'tfiithei ham the the , gospi i l,!' khan. sectarianism by-its dettihlktorturt ; , 11 ferren these linos, to promote-tbe fu went 91.4e0Itfuti ..b.YAdvisipg, c pm Moo i,seaso,,,. mer from, ,. PT9 l . l S 4l,, . ftrl d agUitts.l..hosolliticritag !with us w - hilltitiloi.l 4 ll l gMtrOsPecO bl ' 0!01 1 Y19 1 ti.)o.oo'.4 Bl9 lPlYirtiii B 9 th 0 1 , AdvaPeM. ll .1e 91 10 11 4 10 i 9 tion.fif thq _V-iNillitY• L T ," tho i se ()PPOseui. , !TWO; 4 04419 , yia.writo.to tb tos; though., thy ; : had {ever let w o r4cli-t" 11 006 All.alli rut!, a[4loWS9ar bwirnik OPE filnOrgiiif iii#,:betPir.tio it he arlite,kr!lkytt APPbtslqt Bo o 9-„ k risitikOk *maples .up much aol tiler 91 1 .oi4iftifilieMnoO r - t h l .ThuoliAoghtilimt readil o.o4**o{ l Ll 114,04 g tobe inir • ay ce. ng lye 1 ing . rity that ish. lust ftgY ° F . and tam I r P r * xkr, roan , no IMIN 11 4.14 rt 4 iirteil, *lite sieknese ve I some. Vs. tiklow uitieti ex. 'nnd in the ising his in e moral . sen- I . might des punishinent ne from des- ' companson re killed in ake the life war on - the lur • Conscien-, I •Uled: to our . I*t(i t necr)nd here e is rnn a laying each ty taking a .- rison • where and months, shackled g him. forth n end to his lely choking a destroyed comparison ie argument II am com ctrine, such of declanla rd of the he rsts, could an posses-gel, the organ of whatfacul structiveness • declaration, each in yoti meat in tl4 eir crimes!" he very Jan high station, n pains ati4 n iddividunt ludge Jessuji, • much goo 4, are subsided nt 'they must to, justify to g--his moral d in a'meas , m a hitherto y the disclaim as:Cal-And ; • A PHREN LOGIST. Adirocate.. For the Peopl =1 !MO I erstand, bretii• nekuuto tw heranee of thili vaneing from rism, superg towards ieniperance, . 'rtherance of ef I: e e l yo Y el oe ' r .e e t advance.. ro es t g re vi l36ll soutimeßtii in heliOltaf 1 0i44 1bw..04144 to.the 60e.rourArt. juprej_ i 3 rliV4:4 1 10 11 #1 1 .114 t 7 - iand. ll lWrk 01fq*P.10444 t:o4r.ocatik, 'iort-Payer , Meath.pliailq =1