iymiTTEtl tattkit VOL. XXIII. NO.- 39. Rational gmti-Stemi Stanton pdbusded weekly. on saturday. mieiuojui ht'i-suvehv socibti, PESSSYLViSlA jSTKLAVElir SOCIETY, IDC Vvrlh-Ttnth BtrUi, PMla,Wpbla. ,r nubUMllon. or lolsllng, "ME^TynRKTSATURDA Y, FEBRUARY_7 , 1863. WHOLE NO. 1,183. * 1,0 lll'lll gtrj-^liivcty. 11i^.,'.J( il.t cl.nr.ici.-r of Slavery mu "» ",lr" ci. ,iiiiiuna and Apologls". Md lb. Il.b.l Coogicw. .< R1^" 1""1!' °?„ " Tun ,.™l» =t lb. C.i,Mor.» BUM ol bloody ""'I iiiinNiur-il ««""" "^ i,:,;;V--i. '."""'!'/ -i i.., t :» cf.";«nd,inv,ewo| Hi, i.ddn.onn :»tlf Haiavo.v.di.ppOIICntB ol °' r..t..„,„:<d friends "f peno> In Hi B„d'd.'|...iral.1o mi. — m.wtr.'. 1'v "••'-" ind lastly, o monopoly of TLiM That 'he Pfftira] teqiiuslvil.il lie shall approve I chusolbcm lo bo promulgated he States of tho ^orl'' b>' BU<:,i *" ,,„, „,« r.dior"ii; soil Ihnt he accompany '"' n,,. f |,„H .'hint. ,1 -..Ivi.nhU-. «iili -'"•!' «" 7' lr'.'-" ]„„,,,,.„ -.:...„t.-.n ol the mailers embodied ^, jr; „.i b.,llj,,i ... most suitable and proper. rn,, ih- die before iiL-oiTii-tJ 11"? ab-.-.-c relations, Hi C«d« . n»»h. i» "bi=b i,o • riribrtd u.. id» or. lordcr Confederacy. H«™ rutin J^^rt* £*£ XaTyTn^ Sortli-wes.era Stale* lb.i would lay down ncr n,mSand 1, noeld nsiki nut] protest ««1i State nK"ln'1 ,llD I*™'' ihc Lincoln cofeminent. Hi thought "in< <". proper '"J" ™«i nml m.T.'.oifs "if .Vo«A.^-,((c-™(d&(dl(j'o(nrd fm AW Behind ri"ri 'A« ««'"•' S4t,a ,:i "'" '""' '" "*) , citlv ilmjl." Tho" proper Inllo,-'ices" i' 11"1 "I"" nr0 C^rsOlbosO which are employed l.y Co*. Valsudlgbe w,)Cd. so,. . -ni ...i.«r J*.*™, -"'i-;'";" ;; t.ts-cn, Btil.stqimitiy.lii .i ui-i-ci. en Jill. ua-iss "' Hatory threap nanlo.t officers of Iho Colon ajialu, M One point bo de.ire.l especially to nolico. It could miUl» «PP"*"t io U.-n ooo how these men- aureu of relnlinlion would result—the mill of !td ,,"l ^i^o,-'' v; ! ^ Wi'iIiraJ '"''" --J"-V''-<' ;"' " C'J'""1T""IW,"/ '"," ;\ ", rCn( ^nca p r(y .^,kft.! "^ ; Ti-'-'S'^^/^ A'orrfi ond tf«i'j' <"""«" rA» Harlh-vicitern "'-" forpet THE REBEL* TAKING COVfpltr ttF TUtilR XOJirHERX ALLIES. j Norlh-Wtst cf Hi" "nilnl ch of llr. Merrick The nigna from (ho S :W»rTf iWeBu.c.it f '"" -*"*1"' ,„„! l, r \:,lli.i.i).-l....". ;,,!.. ,i,,,„l of bim. Mr. M,-rrick lulls tbe nbui tboy bBYudf-- - have no sympMb luUBt bu perrar ea\t\.\>*» uol Iwlpeil tbo mailer in und il iine »ovor been «a rliQicnlt id M»i»ncbuscite, na at ibis mot rag Ihll gnabinp; rbulorio of our liout conclusion is tb.it wq must (bo war—(in ninny of (betu n» \ loon ns potribb Let CoiiKretr ,""" "of'lli nnd of Ibo border alnvu Sl.iles loo. Tbero ,.ro tliunmndi" of ..nr Konl.ern tolotpd men who will makoaooa uldicn without much drilling. Many of ib^m am liilt ' ' freebly . Nonb aid Soul 1, notwilhsliinrt- crnor. Tbo ob- o Ibo nsgroca in b llio emplovment of balf a 3 soldiora, inkiog not only Ibo negroes " .led, but ibu fres m illowlng.wl HeBoUcd, Tint wo bi govoronifiit of (be r.,icp. ., .jlclligencu nn'd chsrne- itoonia odicora. niid ibo Soulhn Id buled by men of ibeironn race, in pofoible. Tb- j>!iic<-B wo now b Poulb, Kuw Url.-Fius, Hilton LIvrid, Mcniphii-r.^llv B il j.li-.ir, |.r.,-|..r. ll,r.vl, P M"l.,Iv ami \ iek«- burg-abould b.. mt.il.' pi".:. * of rendcEfouis l.ir tl.ene urf(J negro Hrraies nnd if lb.- buMi.-n ol .:r,linin B :.r..i ,,,.„,.,.,., !;„,,„, w-y.,u.l a !u- npolog I,,,.,.,,, tin- tb.TD I,.- P..I i\ atone.'. Ijv lh- ..urn- [vll (ou ,, „.,„!,] i„|:l. ,bu wind 01 iu.-rwi'iai> bi\o blru-l: iirmw? cuponl..' i.'-H m-rvly ,UU111 ,,f tl„J[1; K,,r ,l„-r.. i, ..liricmn^, who w re«rrwonduty Bi;cordioKtolbi.iiiiiidi'Uf;gMiionof| 1 jlJi Dnbn „ r(:;fe,!( i itmt ..livery may U« 111' rrtM.l.ii., t.'it <! r.nrr;in,' u" II" a.-'ivei> ,.....'. w „1,1 .jilfojm, uen; I. :,. il,- ...-.IK... nr.J '-. ~ " _ ,., y „l..,in [|,.j Hi lend in Hit Slate o^Jtoufrtinu/ llotia adopied by ihe ineeilnK was i received w|ib load snd loneeonilne prepwed to all msaiinres ftdopled for .a of Ibo rebellion, and ibal w« lully rovo tba war moiur'S t^i o>ji in tb; protlnma- cf Ibo President of Jan. 1. 16S3. a^ oo^ ei.lkil by the i-Tic.'ncies ol ll.o caao. contniuunhr,.; lit ....S an act of juslico lo on« olasa, and .odiclmg nl ibo eamo Umo on iiii.-.tber dun [.crtisima •>' •'•''' lioo ibo blow be;t calculaled lo reduce tbem to ohedienoe <o ilm laws. , , Jan. 16.—We bud nncih" CT-ind l.-i" >n demoii- tiration boro on Balurd»y nigBt, in ibo St. Uirlea Tbualro. Geo. Diuki. and 3-mU ^^rolberein a Bide - "-- c boploy and Gen. Ilimilloi. on tlie ii,di;pob*d lo lake any pan n. tb.^ ,i,l : I,..-, in- !:- il' ..»!"-,-. Ntarly nil tbo able-bwlied men am j been employed bylbu govornmoni or .' inr tbo liut eicbl nionlLs. Common ii% Cvo dollsn a months, h. -i.ln a on. Mechanic- nro paid $3 lo S12 a n Bidei ibo ration. DaIn, in payment, liorrov. 1!(d by tho nteUgeiiDo of suboreliiini. Capl. Hoopcr"d conclusion! am sumnwU U oflkure pmpt.-J.-. 'O.iHI i' Rh^allbydoiuiud.- ,, U"r„'.'v! L',.c!ici:'-'.'li^i.r,,-c.-i- At Old Point C Ion tl.oio a nnon anil eliihlren mi Gva buinlred a: nj falibfullr (TdmliiWerKl ultli !' :c"- i.i locleiy.as ,r..ir.ci..f -.elf-iiii>i«'ri B.i! rMUooniie-i of Vir- nbout nina bundre 1,11,,it ok ihn n jinjl'h. t<jicci'i£ ... e pmple are r'- And if il.eLim.i.l.. yovo I- - —''I ''<"" id dBiuonincul nnd hellish ''] " rrj.. r ,\n'7,M hi hi ;. lie w« •""*? If ,-r ,',,! f/l"d (."fif.f-J ^.ni.-N^ I" 1*0 W'lt'--' «/"'' ,..,,,„.,', v ;..,...... ' ''' ie r'cJuto urouii ^rL'ianl/y oppetir. !i(0».)l- nCon grefbb ! of public aenliuient il vaii.^W^ui! thai ihey W )ir.i,>,[ are f.-ln co and for feilcrnlc &IOH.-S o 1. Tliere is nc loruierlv known people of tl.o Co \VrongB too grie ,P .!... U-iltrnl Union, lo wliieli Hie ,ImI,t:iIi- Siniia will t-vtr cooteiit. out Hi.d niulli|.li<:d Imve l'<:cn ion.- :..| i(|,nii our die ribbed ri^bi?. I,_v a . tl.i.- uiipro.-Nt.--d and )*, «ici:.'l :, n„i|-..i.|of ill- [«u|jIu ot'llii: Norlti- -' —o ibeii.seUcJ u- br i,tr..,lnoed by Mr. a recoDBlrnelion of onr govern- witli Iho Sovtb-wtalern Suibh, wo solemnly lo proles I nejiinat, and ** T" „dl l.e tiOded b) Ibe Conbdern o Cogf. Ihcy arc laken up lo bo considered. \ iog tbi* "i« for 3..utbeni iud;-|«ii Olhor nations 6r State*. Etna Oil free States xnlouur Union il not only repugn™* . us &»< it will bo on'.; u (.jniii.u.niM v/ i'm( *»« ^'"l has bioutiht en rAt'tr.ir, i tc'ne/i lo yet rid of u tjwWiO. 11 Hit K.,rih-«estururilnleS.houl ,11 tha North and Easl. nnd rel up for thee i new eov.-rim.enl, and fl-.-iro to tio at peni with iho South, no barrier will bo placed in tbe way by our government, mid we ahall be willing "h Ibtm na nit ind.-pLi.dutit goM-rnuieoi, WMmmB . .braM >n,btr b. -»W nor ,»J,™"1 '" lb. Nor.bc™ ba.u.c bv oiJ.t Irom >.* „ey woul- l lie would suDi ISSf, ,li™..i b.„.fi. ih-.fti""-: will help win i's Victoria E:S ! uS™;J',,S'S.™, to .b.,, l,ul lo uiaktflbu mo?l ot hull. Wd'NiaginL in liil. p»lm as to check iho BRITISH FEELISG. gel a livicg." flood of ^q' iJruwn roporta fi duMined couree. rtoadB) tluit Ihero a— ' ,d eigbly-one negi llliurl) il.. ,.|,:il.b- of r,-lfg"virr..inei. or all Ihe fuDilnmeiiial prim:i].b-i " r.r.ul.l.'.•'." "if -"" -"' ''' '" o long a period of Inugly nyinpathled J-,ii'.i„lu,^ =:,o!b to spill TREASON AT THE NORTH. S.Y. Erp«Hprciisliuad!iorK*iilMlloflr.r,d rmlcJ niter il.ls hold Tiililon ;) and tbo eslcem 2. Wl ud sympalhy o ivdil-.d dChri Conalil Stales, and that in broken bis own pie i..id ll.:.'. llwi.el"...-. broken pledges. \ ngainBl that e.itl.n ir lo think, is t -mid. wl,..'ii volumi-ei-iiift from beni;; .i„c» s.iLdii:r,lioi..-ver l.u-sbinriijlu i ibu bnyonola on iho R ipoibiiin.cfc nnd will think—that President Lincoln oral pledged I al-o pla.'-'l b. f.,re ll.. ,et of Mr. Valbiml.gh-....- nrk<vl^t»i-.C-iiwr!^- Ui»..p'>'S r!111!"". ,; ,r ,'",.'. •^ n li-s'ler 1,1 ibo Norib.rn ],.., Ii:i- [.!'. -L I'l neet llini mesaure with his plan. It « well tl.it .t ahould bo start, d, null Ihat the p.-»| b «t el I'l begin to consider it ub ono indinpi-nsablo preeedetit 10 tbo eslnblu-bmenl of pence. To ihat completion they "ill have at bint to tome. . Tbattbe jealoiiH) ot N.-w Englar,.l nod Ihe impn- lieneo of her lyrnnuy is K ro»irig Mnm-er d..il) in tbo great valle, ol" (Ikp Upper M iwfitsippl 18 plain. That" il may beeonn! --u(li. ie.,il> •! ! and wnk-aiTtad lo overwhelm New England and break up tbo North- ern Union must bo. regarded on probnble by all who have. obBcrved Ihe coor-e ol ov.-i.ts, and aiudiedthe ™m„, -ill inlere-.ls and relations of Ihe Norlh-W obi. The PharaoliB of ihe laud ol ihe PunlnilH will essay to bind Ibo cords light.. r upon their nihiite-puyei-s ol the Dpper Mis-i.sippi, nod iliin will mnko lb LITTLE DELAWARE. and grat.ryUis ^ontrMl wH illion, and lie pledge* [ ..... wilh the Nniiunal go' realoru iho unity of eon will continue their nnd throw oil the yoko, n il r M. rriek aaya. For uaof ihe .-routli, w unrcltniiog opprea- iiiona uulil iboy -!— up (or ihemselve: i|,e Confiidertife fintea sponsible lbribeoKiniu it all times ready lo porlicipali ,. v.uutd Li I...Bt;,il.led 10 bl-B - ,„„„„:, eu.i.i.tetn with Ibeic own Bafoty and , (bnj- could not yield their ei a Ws in go' j-lMO.-il. w oil in uoh tc Cabii t. ur,id, n unrevoked mkle pnvn i the ... jib lueh Bucctus { ome limo lo Ibe Northern hydra. It will t ut the mounter—an event which urouiut* ^..f^-^'.'.J-.l :- — -t I-- -' irtliea to ridicule tbo ''— Inuoi ',',"!!," 1 '' MV EE..R Em: I ,eud J« » gP'^'.^J^ .o the- clergy. fleci """ol" il fori of the real opini pniliy with ill', iiilnslavry pollCV of tin) Ait.i-ri Fie feeling on Ihi. i-iilo ol tin.' Allaotio. Wo b iilured the tiiiirepr.iientulioas of certain organ: , Crancy Mand (.llBinplOU lluil dep'l ihirtee.i '™^\ C) - aroall J wiUing lo work One hu.i- action oi mo u ^ ^ .^ ^ rf ^ |a|n|i|[] „, iiolhiiig, but many bavo dr,dil..ll:ir,id.ll"ir;ll.,' past .pnonunily of working for ,. di -.ro to -oi Norib ; oven ,! oiler oi iV'.i'd ""fics nnd ^a.iuhivforiboSoulh- Ile goia over the inueu oaivd or, mad of ihe n-'ui..,-il righi ol =,:ee.-?ion, as ie reatilt of Stale sover.igui; ns understood by the _lave Democracy, :.nd saliMlnctorily ennoses its fallacy. In Ibia part of hia speech be tally contra, verla Iho poaitioiis lak.n I,, hi- dinluyal p redeem i.t, and brings in a.i army ol historical factfl which oiuiedly cupoi-c the weakness of the ground on l,i..l,..:lt,: l Jtighla olhem But Blwnya ,v dcler, Sen,.. ArL, Mr Dr. „ favors Mm* oof coloni- ,t ihe liii.ul.er of the p 5ident in bit January proclamation I„.oeural p!el;i. cpmy would o ip negot ion of ILeir ii.ilipi'.i 3. Whenever the friei.i' shall grow alrong „ ... tbo North train Abraham Lin- withdraw enidpro- lioo upon the ba.au of Ihe Confederate Stnle ic'maStoTall existing did ,o brought nbout.lt ,ould freely comer ntualljadVHiilBgeoi When tin broke h'ui t..,.u„, have damaaded of him, ihnt no relieved tht ulsdnr/ ai-mi'cs and prewired the co/unfai-y enliilmenl oihsrs 'upon hitprvictpb efths "~ Daily, wo nro lold, Ihere are I Bnada ol men ihat heliuve ia :.- ; mid Bach niea ouglil those who volunteered for other porporjes ahould be relieved. * . . When Iho proclamation put the war oaelus.ve y 01, the R.,piihlie:..,-Abolilioi. iraek, Ihe Rcpubll- 1,9 ought t.-'.luiiieii to be d. pendid apon for all Ibe! es, except Xew England—i v'hoic iyK/bk lore of gold n this di*/r,nxftil tear Iui*mai Mtidiralion of. uhiehfattjhip* :., Aboli usanila and thou la fighting lo frei »6me ol thi.* unpniri. ihern Democratic papers, thai New Eogland taay ho leli by other N— -thtn. .-late, out in Tbe cold, lie boaste that bIio will nol slay out if she ia pat oal. but will poke her long nos- into tiny nrrange.iient ihnt may be formed l'„r aoi *:i-A> porpose. SVuhuvo ,-,uhi of lb- fip.ieitv ot V;.i,l:. imp.i.ler,.,e, and ngas we can keep ibem out ol our own borders, a iiirti.tr of eoLuparatiio ii.diil'.teiae .'hat oih-;r irv ha-, the henvlii of tb-ir c.,.apainon;hi|i. foot a.l.e .po'^iiom-d whoihrr the n'fl ..I" the North. aiicf iho agency which New [Dn-iand hni oncrled in -nil 'in about" the division of Ibo country, ami her nersiatent purpose to make all iho rest of mankind ibularyto her own will aud interest ttniion of p,-nniiiiag aueh a root of bitterness lo lain any further asceudancy in their councils. The Puritan breed would not bo contented hoaven itfolf, anlesa thoy coald role aapreme. They ever bsvo heea contented nnder any """" hether lhar of England, or of Holland_ ,f his Stale, I lenca of aoldiera at ibo polls a fact which gato llm lornier Go .yancB. Gov. Cannon justifies I „,.„ of iirudit.ee, and dcclnre? ihat, ahould arisain Ibo i'utute, bo would not hesitate lo invoke the aid of lh« Cciural jo.v-ruiia at lo ouppn tie. v.oleac:, whi-lb.r at the pulls or else the mailer of arbitrary arre.U he is of the opinmn .LaiTxilovfll •-'; •''' ; ""1 --'I"!'"; n '"^;," ",'i'.l'. J 'it"' ,d disloyal havo no right to complaii With "- --•- - from ibe beginning, ihe best of our joornaU have remained true to tbe anti-slavery causa; that The Sfir. Dado Asuj, ir-;!.r.iri.s!cr- WcuiVb, Spectator, Xonwm/unniil. British ^t.i<id.jrd. Dial, Dirm-itg ham Foil. Mnnch-M- r Ex ini...., A' •??&& Chroni- cle, Caledonian Mercury, BetfiiH Whig, and a hud of other reprtseal alius of the i"..urtli eslato, have ptiiled from iho puro faith. The work- ing classes also have proved 10 ho Bound to the tore, whenever rh. ir opinio., has been tested. Wit- ness tbo nohlo demon-! ration of Muoehester opera- tives Ibo other day, when (hreo ibousanil ol these noblo sons of Isbot (many of whom weio aciual Sufferers from Iho eotion limine) adopted by accli- mation na addroit lo President Lincoln, sympathis- ing wilh bis proclamali whs present on the ( inU- tlie Democratic party longer ibu friend offighling undor Lincoln Luui.-i; , Net li.,» l.ot of fo-r-fifll... Ol „ ,^,n of officer", cv. a. ei.linied to Ggbt for iho Union /eel that :en duped in bti'-g forud io fi-jht lo Jr la.vr, ai.di'beni^r,™. ibe G...ernoi- grapples boldly. He shows that it it decided!) for the interest of choose the side ..f freedom. L ind commerce a.a with tho North, and her p is iiidir-olnblv linked with Ibal of iho (re He lakes high ami unequivocal ground foi ilion, reeommei a adual aboliiioi port of this thing gb Ihat I of tho iO Ibat the hot in" Ibe passago of a law foribt of slavery, and bring! lo ibo Cup I. Mr. Tb. Iiire lately, atuTtho meelinga ha-< addrc^e-l l.al'e bee.. atLeialcl wilh the FITllU Bulls. Our eiperi.ti'.e in Lund.... I,as been ^ii.lly Hiafactory. It would have done you good it" you bad heard Baptist Noel's apech, er attended ihc- ..i<.--.:i wh..h «. :,-. I'l f freedom. New- of the porta Ihat four thousand, of whom oi Iretlnreniun. One thousand are ployed by tho ovenme..I, but 520,000 hack pay i= doe them. Mr. lawyer says these contrabands compare very (itor- ,bly with tho "poor whites "uf iln- s-jutb, ot whom ,e his had mtitiy opponuniiic-s ol jndgiag. Oliiiplnins Fiieh and Furm.ni iu,Le n report Irom tho Arkansas dittri.t ta'.-'aniiall. iho stimu as that o( Mr. Sawyer, bat fix the amoaot of back pay duo the contraband*. b> the s ,.lctarueat at SJU.OOO. " 3, EJupninKndant of the Comrabaad iporb, that Ihreo thousand three hun- dred and eighty-,.... enntrabaoJo have p..-.-.d throu-h that camp wiihin the las-! si, moiUliM. Five bundled remaia. Out of tho whole number, Mr. Nichols says, " I have not been able to persuade more than fifteen or twenty lo go North, notwithstanding tho inosl l.b- era! oU-ra have been made to them. H« adds. . " They desire lo reiuniu oa the noil where, [hoy wero bora, i( they can do -o.aadjjnj > their freedom^ ^ Tllia ia Iho geliorft' League. The aoin of tbo whole oi put by iho Bobtoo Cora durivo toeBo Blalemenla, oiKmuiM'ti Jn-JbooVr*' oVine huinan .tniii.T^r deal justly with them, as you would with auv olhor — -hey will lake care of ihern- a the 31at of December—-the e' ...j strong argnaienIs. And address, instead of whining about liuoV'iiv'rrc.-iidein*. illegal nrresie, baalili-a, aad kabtai corpus, he utters Iho lollowiag patriotic aud vho cilculalci Ihot a nnllon eon hs luTOlvcd In a best i.ill's spv.-h oed to. the f of tb. CO.VHON SENSE, of the ,.l, ,.,, I, r,.l ,:ll„..|' i,- :y civil war ilioold t.vvepo.'Ti, id 1 rial of lis progress. Ihi iiie the United Si u-ftwe people, "«d bndifyingfutLati- %'L ',l: C- o>r.o.,-o[,' Slates cf Ai ,iiti. (r,it'h reio'r.-J ..' >t„xi .(' inlcrcourte hereafter, eilh:-r .,',rftv ,r ...o'.. ^W^'™^^"™ D TnoI'%' i |i'.oJi''-' >" 't ": <'-• """ J S!alc' o/ Ar,,lnli.:r ihi),...-Lie thcT>t« r-xident. i It, fi.i.iiu,'.i of ihe Cahalerate Slates. (" f J,.,»ge l<: puWi. tenliment which has octurrrJ '. s i-r i.'o/ (As Aorihern Statu, ichere- ,'.','" '.,.•; .re (, a reauil-j h-ld—sympi- l!,i-i-i i '-' ' n. ,''"y •<*th th;t b<i Mk.se m-m.'i/ ,J.-r- iious (A.il (A-cye h.n &.<-. brought about—would bo willine to tjiielude n iu.l ami hunorahlc pence with nnv one or mure ,d Banl fti.." s who (renouncing all political coti.acuoa will. New England) may be found willing lo stipulate, for desisting M onea from tho forlher pro.eo.uon ..I the v. at ,,^,.,-1 lb., . ..u.l, Ihe „...ldi ^r^Vvvhom; ,,, more ihey have potion will, them, Iho ...on- unlit bey no thoy are for any *ort of Wdom. Hundred, of il,,-,.. do not hes.tats to Bay I " We havo been eululod under falao pre- fight lor Abolition, which to become dominnut. What t under their influence, every which tbey are permitted t. Democrats at least of ihe Si. sSrlb as°ni tho South. A vi pie of this coniinont would it vegelato upou their own bar loathing ol all civilized ninal ermittcd jbc^ ; Obrlsi every coneeivalde arcam^at which had been urned in favor of ibe sLive i.: .mideraey, or against the policy of Ihe Federal K,,v, rorueni ; and then .' .* .,.__. .,.- (jemolLbing every eophialr) ehood, uniil tha alavocracy had really not a rug left wherewith lo oot.ee il the revolting dofeela of their odious cause. The Emancipation .<„,.etv mclurtca, a« you will have Bcen.bome ol the bast a.ei. ... the country, with- „ut diM.nction of sect or parly- I he name of John Smart Mill-^one of the giv.t.st in Laglai.d—tnods at the head of tho liat We are now arranging for a demonstration in L\eler II ill. lo tike platf. 291(1 lost. Our friends in Manchesl. ham are organizing branch M Wbss Ihe war broke ou tha General government, -eches, " There in but on t of ibis inip.-ndiiig a n-.i>nlion under the ma Mfe, Then the go. President, Mr. Lincol saying, "This rebelli nists said to !tiliona aud iid safe way through its Mr. Seward, ,w,isaw - abb-i oBiill.s YAKCETS POBTItAIT OP TUE KORTBBSS DLiWCRACY. llo hli reconi ipeech before Ihe Legislature orAlabami detections. withdraw ?"?? aveliue-HSeUi.hlei- 1 j.-.cli hone in tho Norlhc-t irih.rn Uemoerncy. If I in prods ma lion ol Emane oclttim ihm be would upl in Ihe States, Iho North, 1 hia Btnndard, an' while il r upon THE NEGRO IN THE WAR. rrJD.Tt..Bprl f.a,lJ Hfpotllcis. Tbzbe is a propo-.il ion before Cor.grc-i lo aid 9 the rais.oe oi 1 JtJ.ilDO „,-.'r,,E ,l.li-(,' lit ihe ' 11,..and -lnivimi Jple."-3Vi"lnoit. orgaaiiing an: poorir.g in from all ql i'i°77ie Advocate, and in private bat not less Useful, lelli i those import- iagi anddepu-l Inli.o tunli A7O0.1 c.-b-r ways more mo that Professor nhoot lo pa.«a mlo tr; " must ho put down conaliluiionaly ; and the premier, who ia fond of prophesying, added, In .:.. aineiy Jms, n.e will l-.- Tailored. ,iRt;.- a Ic.rl'ul mistake-" relur I ihe Abo- " this is ihe veriioble irreprcsihlc con- bi.h bin. predieied-lhe deaib-grapple he- „. », .,; ,„» „i d..rk.K=s and lis tn—not a p-.'tty if Slates. To ignore tho primal c- . Comprehend tho truo ur'"c!"ib' , ..-'."!.'rnin i:s were unheeded. When indprincipnliiies t eve T rjetre«lytoh^ tad Blrike Oft vpo read, I may Bay ll ful -attempts lo oblu library {thu greateat largo m --- was, that c Mrs-Slowe's e Theai cry copj ind beautiful addt ess to thi OaLEnSB.Jnn.il. nojoen^of t.-'chu,| in ^-..in.i ,:•• .t lot-n-t. and inleresting assemblages 1 was eaBM| ,„,, [0J ,{„ „„„!, E,J0r). it waa published by took place Ih.r. .,ve.ii«.g. In the large +Amftion Low k Co. on IWdnesday, intho - thu top of Ihe Cii. II..II L'U.bl.ng- It wis „ vl,, urlJL rlT,J i, l,.-. ,u,ce been reprin on the occasion of Gov. II .mil '. hong .....ted I" ,„ „,„ toIu , u( The M'n.nrj Mar and /7ie D.iit;; a,[l]ri.-: ihe Colonics ol" New Chans or. Ihe a reM hV,.,r,_ft ^ru.irkihle tribute lo tl«i p.,pol..rit; ..I of Iho day. ,. , Mrs-Siowem ihi* country, ,i- "oil a, n piool ol h. o tho naluro of the subject to he di.cuv-.d. ^„rl.,..i ;„,vr.si which these jiurnals lake in lh< locality in which ibe oceorrei.co would lake d ...... .., ....I. I,. I....II,,,' nnd 7 ,1 ihe Liiu.lt" e.irpente pOKO B i'rfix .. --ids; th'o North "aid to tha Aboh- Biids oi ill-omen, ccaso jour croakiagSj .wenty million of people W hip tun, without touching the coaloanded nigger?' Wo -.ie almost m the close oi our.-ecind year ot civil war One noble army baa vanished—where 7 Another is melting away rapidly as ibo snow in Snrinrr-lime. Two hundr.d n,,n-and loyal men, w,.o. "twenty months ago, were animate with life, enlbusia-tic. now sb.ep the -kep of deaih. ,era of Kentucky and on ibe green plr their bones lie bleaching blood makes Virginia . eyards of the Caroh .joT-u- ubject to be diaouaseil, :uurruneu would lake of public feeling, and Holccedenla of ihe ,he negniis must he t.-li. .1 u for a Inryo .hare ... ihe vre..- m _ ^ ^ ^ j ^ [q ^ ^ tbe flgl.li..;; "..iligr.-s oe.d I10L l.e-.tate 11 ice, .. , ,- j t ,, boisterous one „fa-„ [.-imh.r pr.ju.lico aeaii.t i.c,..i soldier,. t >»h '" j A m.ue ord.-rh. ii.n.'ll,- ,„ much k-.-s than il.-y think .tided lh- people ar- >.->cr ^ ,|„.u..h,|„l a-seu.llage neier e,:„.-n,ii> .-mi.," ii..' 1; """"-""\'- j" IJ 11 ";;il ;,, .'..'. i' il; ,„, ;,:.-, .,„. ;... .., K .i.- '-- " j itaoir Culion of tbo war upon Ihe South Euccoflsful, would only h.ivu the t their own heal innrkel), 10 guaru moat eQcctual and saOsfactory nupied navign'ii ;r and iln iributoucs. and to open the markets of Ibe Soulb. greatly eul to Ibeto as tbey would he by-jho po: idly ing upon the Mis- ill hivo declared tbo further prOBO- nhioli, could it be ect of destroying leeto thein.inlhe inner, the peaceful f ibosuiJ M* J.-.1 in i.ui.oed by tho Sun .,.. b ..ss would at onco.in my opinion, put [ 1 to tho war and make peace. Ihero were . iv bo hniol'.-.n l.ei'iiil.-d by the |.roininn ol Ihi- ,....- ---r- noernoy to hold out term, ol" p.-a.-e whit- ih.'v a.'.d ..po- ns a'-fp'rodiiiaied' by Mr. Vaa Buren and *Ir.l-S«lfaM '-1" if the South will agree dur- the govern Bull. irl, if "ng ill ler's .. w.jllld It...-. „,'l". Pro. ,,[,p ,,rt ib. »hall go la Wnshinglon. lake the oniu to = i-,,,,,;;,,,,,,,, of tin. United Slates, take the ret* and P *- ' r-'i" ,":iin " '" ''D,C,"I ""' Ll: 1 Tbe.e propooiiions must bo piu-etd by Ihirdaof alllhememb.-r«ofet ' :efouitha sgrefl, they b «.ll i.e.. ihoOonlcb oldCa.no. Reljel u llvlml'lr tiado wilh all tho nations nf ihe eaiti, nuuitiatogrorrljinaid power that has rryn Tbej ih .,....„( tl.- $111, omo u pan of tho tain three*fourth1 „> course 1 Ton 10 goiera.ueat of one back mlo 1 tity.Buve Iho p What u erosh of a people I No el party. The i execution. But it Ihnt -.all. uutbii There can say very rapidly. U mm.™ oa foldiers on tho pay rolls ; divinien of the ealion. But what is past eaauot liaving adopted n polity at lrisl, il,t |".-l' 11 loldll and at "ECU, or a penny, in for a pound"; it has ,wd ..._ jfladi.. 1, [,,jt intend in naf'r— the apeeob of Gov. ' ,| -,.|'.vb' b i .' 1 lull reporl el-)c u —\,-.,ond sajmg tui.t 11 waa marked by nil tch^tho' speaker is so rciuarl.al.le. Eorei- I,,a arguments were, they were introduced exceeding t.ict and dolieicy, and dtvw rapluroue I^RrrtSl ta« ^liffened the backbones of Northern pairiols, and brought a blush -headed old genii, ;tbat paying -.eerhalf ao.llio-n Ihe eovcruui-nt ia - £ the ... -.ugbyli. ,e Biieihecs who followed. ,.,,-ir.)i,tlieriinre and slav The uraveyards of t neopled wilh Ihoje v Nortbtra homea are beautiful, thu bra It has been f Now ' rivery. f„r ibe How ,ble moment, for o. ..... a maniacal folly, i inaligniiy, published an ;ion for slavery, and perhaps a rel.gi Tuesday l«si The Ti. s often „ke..l wilh Juty, 1 against the 'Z,'-ZtTujrt%: i^i'l has mii'le it'=cli the p.in- .,u,u u. ,.„„_.,,, Ml |1lo Irecloii ilself. Very trnly WlU.UK LlOTD OARBISftit. lift, ..-it. 1 ,ng, tbo oally in lorn of 1 marly if not quite io hospital or absent with and we s ia il,,- r.ruiv. It is i-ptimuled ihat 10 k p to half a million wo need 123,000 ually. Where are we to get thcuiT era. of tbo 300.(100 aiao months men e Inrioa, aad at least liliy re(;,u^nta ol f .ill march hum... before the liret 0! J iii.-diull" of ,,nr tne-eut ni'my will be e har-e before the 1st of July next i 1 ulnces to bo filled 1 Thai ia n t|uesiion Congrcsa rbn.'kieVin' by !b. r ;''"..',.' "',i,k"s within thl ji 310,000 10 S30,000 daiform, and raising FACTS aONOBRXINQ TUB OOXTRABANDB. Tbc Emsncipation League o( Boalon receni ie following effect addressed a ci of South, making it.q.i.r.c-. to 1. The number of freedom.. .., 2. Are Iboy willing to work t 3. Do Ihcy dcs.ru 10 g, i. Whit — 1." But tho Area u, much drosa, and wo aland n. mark. Slop by slop, ihe puverni.,.: - position. Though it sir iVOl-J ad. " pelled it onward I. :..u, ;.;...1 lw uvents. Judgo vbich waa iho eagle, a was Ihe far-fbiu;., and bo-.u Iho aarro.- and On iho opening of ihia now year-day ov, - (ll,|e iu ihe annals of humanity for the new t race—tho govern toonI of the Dulled Si ,B..|f loose forever from the pohey of slnve diet of Emancipation marka n new era 11 lory. Henceforth, freedom ia to JieUle a icv The deed is done—ll __,!,„ ...:., nmenl is fully its ships belli- 1 :' AbolitfonietB them and tho id which tbe .omprehensWo thi .0 lonrnt ral olhe Ijioiu clement ot iln aids thu mustei subordi their tijiacity 1 characler, ihe (eel ted. It In otilh ban nrttaed people who I. nolbin; , i„.A..d ,': luodcsily informed ago, called all ' ~ jrenl Change mid be grniiic a that ho hs.c only a few day. told ll ES.ty.m par ,«iS not war ce upon Bin sar will go l,:i to the platform bB 'V """." °"\\ "\ ", ''oineluing lo bono, however, from ihia Tho patriol "T. "r'^'d .-.'.: the i„u s of our enemies- fro,, their It ou. prcer aodWu.ur^.ncrce parly strife aud jealousies. _ OpoQ .thu. bopa| f — io parallel a party strllo and jcalous.C. upon in build our own unity—apon then lealoa calculating wilh any c esa. Congress muni nnsn« 1 pretty much na it hsi. and f ana accordingly, or wo shall Spring ia aa bad a lil aa wo w, of the country in not clean go niea khall achieve important 1 tbo Winter campaign a newcill^ With* e response. Ii thing* of cmplaUd, uud given lh. r±"J?r.;,..,b,.c ,«-* r .'"«» ,nccs—words igbt ol all ihey had ' endured and were enduring-of their properly , triend.b.ps lust, aJeclloa, rooleJ up. and all ,. pure devotion to their country, and ! 1™'-,P'« ,. ,,l ., rmmrMSnrably did their palr.oUMU ,oar above La of those noisy, ranling.time-ier.uig^-" allv e first glori^u, "end na the hr-1 tour. .Ir.olur was addreasi ihtrboll, altera! Wail "" ,., a '.'.-I nee iho proclaro iiioi, and erly lor immediila roeulta .„»_iDg ones, losing palieuw, is nothing hut a harmless thun- Pope'a hull againat the oamot. reason. Suppose a sick man, ;ited for a long time to the liesdment •haul o( medicine, beo.mes coovtooed ,1-..-= ., .. s officii -eeords freedmi Below we give ihe leading points taut of Ihcsodocuuienl that the lb.-, iouih Of these, I...... aii ibousjtiid at Ker„ W poi y a dillor- Doea bo retain hia old physic ejudicesaro.il in U-or ol tb" treit-ji ;;^'V' ,, -;..Tr :"1lo d,.N,^;'ri'im'. r a'oJ cti.r uf the new ecbool. Common *£><"'' tVh.-o Loth.-r conquered Ni iiors of tbeciiy paper* — UBl .hem? No. lie 1 naked n.l quenched, and that Ihcy iaall. profcased loyally, did ho how negroes, almost [heso document*. n.-,— nm,,nlaeluro Union scntii - TZl." Si. SS c„.,i r J by -j-to, ;b«« b. Ri West Fernauilioa and oib.-r p„rj,o-.- '" B nt lo V'-tore tbe Union iJfl. W Uoop.-r si)s lb,, .heo ^ ; ;j;r;7;" ^^ al „,„ p rid,.uiliUO.butd0 s. without enc-pnoti. »>uld '^i''.'_ i ^.i;; v,. u, ;.. ,",(, t ,^.,,bl. .he new o.d,r en. ,„U:: a,.'! jOo'lS-ll.-..'""'!'"-; '....'.,...,,-,,,,, ., ,,b Bl-.-am-:.-! « t> J H'.' l^.l.d-.T The President "u surrounded before he had an nnt.-sl .very let by p..) ' m &Ss^^S^t^-^^«^
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and by leading JouruOli Ibranghoul the kingdom, In com.
mil the public scnlimoni of Enelaml i.. il.c side or the trnt-
torons Confedcralc Mtnles— nnd, for a lime, with sech np-
parcnt laceess os 10 make 11 seem as though dial scrub
t wrfs nvenvbeliningly ]irg-.hiverv, lo tlio Jierplexlty,
•ami nsloiii.hment of the friends of free Insllluliom
ers-illy ; therefore,
riciolved, Thai It gives ui iin.ipciit.alilu snllsfnrilon
a Hint n powerful reaction 1= Inking
nutspokcn sympathy:l.ell..!.|.
e.Vorlh;
ry. bol Ibmughoal (1
defmlgable rrTortn ol
J, ins Ihuonv. Prof. CunSG
ivurlu. h sljfimlly indehicil i
ich men us Geo nor. TnoMi-flo
, Prof. Nkwmjs, Joan Sren
speellng tlio real In
mil lo ki
civil nnd religions liberty mis'. lu.:ed by ihe i, ile, oi
in, and nnliribed by the leinpunions uf commercial
.iinlj. (urine cupldlly.
e resolutions more supported In a speech of
great power and vluqnenee hy Mr. Harrison.
Speech of illr. Garrison,
Ma. PitBSipExi : I am proud nnd delighted hi follow
the footsteps of my venerable predccosior [Jessie
STEMiu.ts, Esq , of Vermont], who has just lakeo his
I sots an Inspiring example to men muchyoangcr lhan himself, in his devotion to liberty, bis
.promising abhorrence of slavery, and his desire
man recognixed and treated an man Ihe world
y exccllenl friend
eslcd a putting
Irodvd
It is capable of meeting
,and resisting every temptation. If
a humnn being may plead his or her
the right pul aside because principle
onnl considerations of isfety, divine
and eternal; and I fcc no conflict between the most
thorough non-resistance aad tho application of it in
any auppo^ible cose ot violence aad outrage. N'evor did
I have a strougor jisjuraoce in my own soul tlisn now,
that it is true Christianity, and cannot be overthrown;
but it is a doctrine greatly mi understood, often wan.
tonly caricatured, and so rendered ridiculous In the
down by Ihe combined powi
yenra ngo, when it had tea
n hat party shall hope to succ
il down at the present lime,
advocates ore luiiltiludinaun
- of Ibis naiiun, thirty
cely a single adherent,
ed in any effort lo putlow ihat its friends andThe idea ii absurd
!
one thing ii
. Who can put down the c
successfully meaauro weapon'
ixs given us strength and v
', seeing we have bad un
rhl
.1 Cod I
:tory I God I AndconuueriDg flnd to
implo,
hearts and
ciencesof ihcpenplcf Because that Imth is of God.The AtmlylJy has no offrloufe Ihat eon Ink* ahli3 wUAit staithoUter I " That is the ac-eret of nnti-olevery
acccm aad the cause of pro^lavery defeat. Whomnde Ihat declaration I Thomas Jeflerson. WhatS(ato gave birth lo the man who otlercd il 1 Virginia
;
and Vlrgioia, to-night. In Ibis hall, is ft witness to tho
liriue naturu of the Anli-Slavery cause, and lesllBes
that no weapon ngalniil it can prosper, i'ubllc mcahavo irlcd io put down tho Auti-Slatcry came, andround themselves put down. Parties have tried despe-rately lo cillnguL-.h It, nnd they have been broken hi
irecea..-Aad so it will bo lo Ihe end. Why, then,
ihould wo not always ho in a hopeful state of mind 1
tVbut (hough, temporarily, tho heoveus nro dark I
(leavy clouds moy he now nnd then between us andJ io sun, but iho sun ie still behind, shining In bi.i
itrengtll. Tlie clonds are ephemeral and will poait
iway, but the sun shall cuuio out again in tho fullnces
if his mid-day glory. So, however dark may bo (ho
iltlos in a certain quarter— and il dependu very muchipon die stand-point an individual occupies, what ho
ie&iand what is his conclusion — nererthole-ji.llio Anti-
jlavery cause Is growing in strength and numbers
ivory day nnd every hour. It baa at last so changed
tho great Northern heart as to make it Impouible (or
tho slave- traders nnd slave-drivers of tho South any
longer to remain in partnership with the North. It It
\ mighty moral clinogo ihat lias produced this convnl-
r land ; and wo need not *brink from Iho Im-
putation, malicionsly thrown by those who wish to
cunvey the idea that wo have dono »n evil work, llial
u, .. Aimiliioni.ui. !• »(irHioUtite the present rebol-
n of Ihe South. Cdrlilnly, ilr, under (iod. It is
no; but not to oof condemnation. What ha* been
,r crime 1 Is there a decent man in this anaombly,
there n truly honorable mnn in tho world, who will
nlure to stand up here, or anywhere (Lo, and assert
at when wc say, " The laborer It worthy of bin hire,"
it is fanaticism !— that when wu «iy tlio marriage
iriilltolion ought not to he nlw.li'hed to give unlimited
lease lo lust, but ucredl) maintained, we are guilty
fanaticism I—thst when w« say. Cod made tho hn.
n intellect to bo developed, and, therefore, Ibero
.ght to ho the condillnni of development secured, it
fanaticism T— thai when wc say, there should he uo
traffic in human flesh— the babe Udongi to Iho molher
-,. ii, !!ic liu band haa a anonril right to hi>
j Wirohasoiaer.il right tv^ier husband—wc
i be branded ns fanatics and eilreuiists! 1
I, sir, that wc havo dune nothing more thnr
j hive adrocolod eimplc honesty, einiple liu
.i r. i
L- jostico t •_- i.
--—-.-1man and man
, fannllcs, dl
cvUiomo
Inlldcls and Irai
o, In a nio;t
their application lo iho negro race, nnd ciidcavoi
il.irld (rem infamy llic accursed system of slaverj
he South (opploUKO).
I'hnl n ehcerlno, gathering wc boil hint evening ii
i halt I What a collection oi brains and of hearts
nl n nllllngne: i lo come fui ward again, nml on tin
of c.
... 111.; .
[This speech way bo expected Id appear in full
Ilia phonographic report.]
Jlr. (jinnuos- ropm-ied from Ihe Butiacss Committee
tin' following additional resolutions :
II. Resolved, Thai In the Invitation or Gon. Geurgo 1).
:.id (ho olforfng to lilm n pnbllo in-
to f-ICt II I'llllV
1al:eri lo .
oved li
tilth
I light Ii d; thm
\OI|.-i.|V, ,1 •-
coling the conscience anil tbs lifli
confirming it more nnd more in ft
universal eman el nation
!
My friend, Jlr. Fouler, on bei
n tlio Bl
m; Ml.. I
said-'
So do I.think the cause of Liberty will
know it will triumph. In nny fnlr Held, when wLiberty over vanquished I Wherever freedom
npeech was left, when, I nsk, wtu Liberty defeated
argument, or driven back villi aliamo I 1 know III
the oppressed nro lo bo set tree. Bo I know precise
sotllod a fact na Ihe law of gravilalion, Hint the time
coming—I bclicvo it In near—when every chain sin
fall, nnd every bondman stand (
the Lord (loud applause.). Vet, i
any II
ilness thai I have never taken
change, however hivm-ohlo to our eiin-e, very OKti
cantly ; nnd if I have been less conspicuously oxu
in view of Ihe President's Eoinncinfltion Act, it i
bccaiiso I lime not full) realized (lis vast import
of the measure ; it is not because 1 do not regard
having ii moon-moon bciirjruj tipon Iho success o:
Anti-Slliverj eauso7nna the suppression oi the r
lion. Truo, mere parchment it nothing ; nod if the
government means lo leave it just as il is, nnd lo allow
men lo lend ibs armies who Imvo no sympathy Willi the
proclamation, and no regard for tho opprcssod, I do
not know that much will come of it. But, sir, I take
it (or granted that the government, having com millet!
itself to an Anti-Slavery policy, and declared more
than Uiree-fourtha uf the slur.- population free, means
lo be equally earnest and consistent in carrying Ibal
proclamation into effect ; and iho cheering news Ibnt
comes to na to-day tliot no less than eighty officers ol
the nrmy of the Potomac arc to be " sent lo Coventry,"
because of llitir opposition to Ihe proclamation (ap-
plause), indicates n determination on Ihe port of the
government to tee thai Ihe right men, like I'hclps and
Fremont (applause), nro put in Ihe right places.
Sir, I do not forget, for one moment, the work Unit
remains lo be done. Gentlemen, personally unknown
to me, and but recently converted, frequently say to
mo— evidently very sincerely — " Mr. Onrrison, wccongratulate yon on Iho termination of your labors !
You can now disband ihe Anti-Slavery organisation,
I ha • no doubt Ii girt
ny this ; but it is
They do not yet
your work lo done."
gentlemen real pleas'
too rose-colored—that
stand the nature or Iho power of the monster to be
nlaln. It is truo that be has been speared through nod
through many time, and lhat be begins lo spout blond
—which Indicates Ilia! be is in his d) ing agonies ; bill
1 must see him dead and buried ln-fore I shall consider
my work done (applause).
aud bolder overy day.
impossible lo teach certain of our Repi
nny wisdom/ There -I M be no longer a doubt on Ihi
subject. Rvery man in tho army or navy, and in thi
lec of the government, who utters one won:i[':im-i tin- Kiniiiripitii.il proclamation should hi
itanlly turned out, nnd the place lllled by nn Ei
n ill..' lieldn tbin U.il
o God that lliis might be Ihe last
meeting et the Miiinachiistfit* Anti-Slavery Society—
Ibnt the annual meeting uf the American Anti-Slavery
Society, in May neit, might be the ln-t meeting of thai
Society, in consequence or Iho instant and eternal
overthrow of slavery in our land ;but, however cheer-
ing the signs of the limes, nu rely, while millions are
still in bondage, we mast not dream even nf a respite.
We have n great deal yet lo do. Our 'minion i«a very
distinct one. Nobody accuses iij. of looking afler the
loaves and fishes of ofllee. We Imvo made ourselvca,
for Ihe slave's sake, outlaws for tliu Inst thirty years,
and by our principle! cut ourselves on" from all hope
of worldly preferment or emolument. Wo arc not
DarlisBtis, in a political sense;we are not sectarians,
iua l 1;.|..u- We
d tects, and beynnd thei
il partiality, an
.Nop.they ai
a, and speak ol them i
llpossl
il party, o
seeks lo effect a nim-nl regeneration ol Ihe people ; bul
it il, or may be. Ihe product of such a regeneration
A great deal is said about Ihe potency of the ballol
Granted, that it has i*a volno eoj importacce In Ih;
termination of a strngile like oute. Hot there It
eooi' thing bi-bioJ lln ballot. It ii that truth whicl
,.,!.,... ,.., o il., de«piied and haled »bvo. i
*:.er-nun-Bnd feel (Ittt In
n./rht i nm-o.brr tkiwe in bonds a-! bnon.l v. Ill
them," ; I to .n liii vote, ibecetore, lo strike tl.i
.o..s.hat, jio.1
iu. It i-
I
by the Abolilioi
poliiieal result
and eflecL
A great deal
nnn-itnrnl nnd unelirintian f |drii uf complexion a i cjspo
in our country. Vet my friend, Mr. Reinond, win pei-
(ectly right in ssjlog there la still a vast amount of il
in existence ;malignant, active, uimp [.eatable, ever
jeekiog occasion to" inaull and hrow-bcat the colored
man,- and drivo him to the wall. Oar work, therefore;
is still to testify against this wicked spirit ; lo show
bow utterly unmanly and brutal it is;and, by a eon-
sUint presentation of the claimi of our colored brethren
lojunticennd humanity, at Inst get those claims ac-
knowledged nnd allowed, in every pari of the country.
Again, sir, we sec cropping out at this time, all ovor
Iho North, n great deal of sedition— licuncralic tedilion I
Think of a demoeraoy which goes for Ihe slave-auc-
tion—for making man Ihe proporty of man !—which is
ready to ilck tho feel of n bloody, rebellious and most
impious slave oligarchy !—which loborn by day nnd by
night to pul down freedom of speech and of Ihe press
at Ihe North, nnd to protect nnd perpotuato chattel
slavery at tho South! That sir, is all Iho democrnc
left in the land. I hold it to be from hell, nnd that
ought to be tent thilher (loud applause). It is impi
dcnt.dellaut, factiou.i. devilish to the last degree, n
talks of successful oppoilllon to Ihe government— ol
winning back the rebellious South, by concession nnd
compromise, lo werei.e absolute miprenney over Hie
There is n reserved moral power In Ibis mighty N„ r ili
ot oure, tli.it will, in the huur ol extremity, sweep
onward like Niagara, and overwhelm every vestige of
this Satanic democracy (applause). Uur duly ii lo
brand it by iis right name—not for any party purpose,
bul because such a democracy is Iho synonym of Cru-
elly, of Robbery, ol Adultery, ot Lust, of Murder—in
a word, ol accursed Slavery.
Lot us go on, anti slavery roca aud women, rejoicing
that thus far we have been enabled to continue, by the
help o( God ; and lei us not dream of disbanding our
organization or furling nur banner, unlil from Ihe
Atlantic to Ihe Pacific, every human being shall rejoice
in his Irecdom (applause). Then, and not until Ihcn,
will our work as Abolitionists be accomplished. Then,
indeed, we shall no longer need an American Anil
Slavery Society, or nnii-slavery papers, or nny anti'
slavery agitation ; but we shill all be united as bre-
thren In tho spirit of Justice, and sluing under Ihe troi
of Liberty, with none to molwt or mnko afraid.
m-oV^nCi!11. riejolved, Thai in
r il.e I-Yilrr
he denllis afiwo of the oldest an
idonts of ihls Society— Asphci
HonEiOM.of Neir fledford, nnd Willuii Wmrwo, of Cor
cord-wo have jiislnlncd a lo?s which wocan hnrilly expect
lo feorcpslreil loourcneso orourn'jocuilion. Tbclr ripe
ami niiinly rirliics, their 'Icnilfast and firm ndberei
antl-sl.ivory |iriitcl|ile in inn'hliie and In floole, Ihelr
ol ye I fen'l«; telf cooicernllon lo Ihe cnnlo of the
lion of slavery in all cliciinismneos of prlvalo Irh
.plallon, endear their memory lo in, an
The resolutions before the Society wby a general vote, ami without dkwnl
On molion of Jons II. Sri:rui:v:ioy,
^thon adopted
Ssti,, of Uoston,
id seconileil.it was
Voted. That the resolutions Ii
1, which rclnle to Iho esecutio
id to the establishment of a Dn
j fairly engrossed and transmit
io United Slates, tigued by the
,rlca of this Society.
of tho Proclamation,
eau of Km unci nation,
id in iho President ol
President and Score-
Enunvn (Jtjixrv, Prtsiiltnt.
(0»i- ^Vn5luunton ttirjtrfisiioiulfucf.
Wmiiisotos, Feb. 2, 166J.
Vinos tho Democrat began to fllibuslar the oilier
itghl In the House, the " dilatory niotioni " wore com-
aenecd, by Cos of Ohio, by a molion Ibnt he be
vcuscd from voting. np..ii which Vidliindighaui asked
tho yeas and nays. Coro-le of Pennsylvania roue
inalnntly lo liii feet mid nsked I he Speaker if an amend-
nent lo Cos's motion would bo in order—an amendnent Ibal ihould relieve the Interinr IJeparlinent nf
he furlber services nf tho said Cos's brother 1 There
*'»s a good deal of laughter over this personal thrust,
ind some Of the licpntiiiei mlH-n. perhaps, thought
t loo personal. Cut ij.ivode knew what ho was about,
ind he did not hit Mr. Cox half as hard ns he did Mr.
jincoln. Tho point bo mndu was thin : hero is Mr. Cox.vorking in tho Interest of tho rebels ; a whSto-fonthor
lemoerntj nliusinir New K, island, and taking every
ipporluiiily to embarrass tho Adniinietrnlion. Yet
hrough his personal influence at thi* very timo ho eon-
rives to keep hit brother in a fine office under Ihe
. The 1 1,' me.: rain
pationiat. I w I! fllltl.ei
a Iho
laucipatinii n part of his war
rtily supported, should hold
n-ity of Republicans in Cm-—so do the Republican pco-
t there is a slrange ami unaccoiintablo baclc-
ss en the part of the President and the heads of
mints in enforcing il. Tho jjeJlcu of tho Presl-
eshim credit. He in coming up nobly to tho
lies of (ho times, so far as tho enunciation of
les is concerned, but he fails lamentably when
s iu cliuo-.ini! agenLi lo carry out his policy.
inll'lel preach Cbristiunily with nny effect!
oul.l l!,e people think of a temperance lecturer
r drunk hiin-eif three limes n weckt Yet this
( 1'iviie. I
eili-t-
1 Iho
i nbou isible. Shall r
ir powt 10 tho li rated b<
cation—Uial Ihey nro fully protected on the soil whthey belong, in nil their rights and intsrests— [bat Ihey
are fairly paid lor Iheir labor, nnd nllowed'
land nnd become freeholders, hit,., others wl
different complexion. Dutas AuolitlonSg, Ol
Republieam rather than Peace Democrats have the
nili.:-c:i under n ll'-piil.li.- in Administration I
Not three days ago Mr. Lincoln nominated to the
mate sixteen Justices of tho Peace for this District,
id nearly every one of tho number are villainously
-o-slntery in Iheir views, nnd some have been sus-
pected of holding scccsion views I Yet we havo just
ancipatcd the .lares in this District. Wc are sur-
.nded by n slave enuniry, and there are slave cases
cocetaolly coming up before Iheie petty courts, nnd
the President ol the Oniied States nominates for tho
odlee of Justice men who would delight in the business
of si avo-c a lolling! It is a monstrous piece of folly and
wickcdncsj. I can chnrneleriie it in no other way.
Very likely it was an oversight—that the President did
uot know ihe character of these men— that Atlerney-
Getoral Bates made (he selection—nn milter what the
excuse, it is i.ol a good one. I do not wonder lhat The
lYulfonol Jnttlligtaeir, in view of this nnd many other
facte, has the effrontery lo in-inuate that Ihe Proiiden',
dors not mean to cai ry out an an li slavery policy, but
rather that be means i" ko Ike people elck of Hint
l.aliev. I do not wonder at Iho loioleiico of TI.C Mrlil-
gtnctr, bul of eoori.- there in no foundation for the base
insinuation. The President is in earnest, lie is honest
in thla milter. Hut ho blunders dreadfully in bis selec-
tion of men. An noli slavery policy in Iho hands of
pro-slavery men tcil! fail! I hazjrd the prediction
here, and will appeal to our history during the next
Mr. Conway ol Kansas has made a remarkable speei
within a lew days— a speech I do not agree with at nil
-but full of ability and eloquence. After listening I
tho speech, I confess lo ilejeeiiun, Ihtrt teas so much
Irulh in it. Tho fuluro will tell whether Mr. Conway
right or not, but 1 think ho did great injustice to tl
President. Mr. Lincoln hnn-.-stly desires the overtbro
of slavery— the salvation of tho Union. Ilo errs, n
In his purpose^ but in his acts. Mr. Cunway favors (
early separation from Iho South for tho simple vcaei
that ho has salt rely lost eoofldonco in the ability
this AdmlnLst ration to w.<s;e a successful war, and he
thinks we had bettor slop before wo are entirely
. This is my version of his speech. While every
lit admit Hint this n a dark boor, yet it should
forgolten lhat we msy soon win gr.-at victories,
which will put nn entirely different (ace upon our
aat affairs. A great victory at Vieksburg would
o West on lire, nnd il Jue Hooker shall win a
on liu- flappahann >rii. it will raise the dropping
a ol the nation. Successes within Iho next Ihrce.
lis, it important, will put new lite into the people,
and they will resolve anew Hist tho rebellion skill be
put Joien, and that slavery shall ho destroyed.
The groat debate in the Homo upon the bill to raise
colored regiments has been tho only work ot import-
ince in Congress during the past nook,
ttracted vast audiences, and it is not a very pleasant
ign of tho times that pro-slavery
ixeito applause. The audiences seem to bo about
qiially divided between pro-nod ami-slavery men, and
I think it is n fact to-day that a majority of tho office-
holders in this city would bo nioro likely lo applaud a
sentiment from Crittenden than one from Lovejny.
Mr. Wright ni Pennsyfvanin called for tho rein-
statement of McClellan in command o! tho Army of tho
Potomac, the galleries burst out with tremendous
ipplnu.e.
I was slrnck with " ['.isiago In the speech nl
Kelley of Philadelphia, one of our itonneh anti slavery
nbers of Congress. This ii
Sir. I am but a poor snd
e lillle duly ot a mililar
Ihi" gltmp I" 1 Inline
ill, i.iieiiieJH ..f military .
"' Speaker -
e family of a man w in .until then, had•capon ho held, r
,.. ..,,,,:
,1 the In
ile to Ih
by t ns ol tho u> and). 1.. mil.
ile- rel.elli.iu i territut v to furnish
lyrii ..-. if.-v «^ ';; i
; ;
.
; ;
;;,
."
R ,.ntl.-i.no will ii" longer be nhlom
" ':: ',r
:;
:
:l l„l|lil,ill|M( Hill
elab. . indie Iheir
tood, inako their
a the record allows they have
e war—(0 light their killW l,e
w before tho country, if they eau
c negroes should -I I loyal—
ahuiii ii-alioi-., ; and when they htako out a patonl for their own loyally.
llero is tho argument in favor of tho bill— in the list
few sentences of the paragraph—and in a small cini-
pass. Tho bill is expecled to pass to-day.
Times havo changed very essentially since tiiolay
when Charles Sumner was struck down upon the foor
ofthe Senate by the ruffian bund ot Brooki. I Ihe.ght
of this last Monday when I saw tho graceful forji of
Wendell Phillips in the Senate Chamber of Iho Uliled
Slates, In Iho House he was greeted as a conquciar—
id is ho not conqueror t The long time Abolilimist
n coiuo nnd go with safety In Washington nt net
;
indeed lie is honored. These changes nr.e hardly n,pre
cialed in Ihe whirl uf events. A few days ago I siw n
iindins In one ol iho doors loading ti the
door of Ihe Ilouse. listening to Ihe anli-idaver.v dihate,
door pushed slightly open. Ho tins nn
employee, bul he was deeply interested in tho lebato
upon his race. In the old time I suppose that he iionld
pulled out by Ihe heels if he bad been caught
Hun reader* all know, personally or by repute, MrPiUNCKi D. G.iiik, of Ohio, nnd most of tl^m are prob;lily aware that, uuaie time since, she went lo SouthCarolina, to a Haiti, :n way might open, in the care an,
Instruction uf the Freedmen. Her experience asi
aou>owifo, her acknowled^d literary ability, and he:irdent devotion to every good canse, coiiimend'd liel
io all her acquainlanees as an eminonlly suitable perion for ih" work which there needs to bo done. Wiire ii. .1 i-urprnvd, Ihoreloro. to learn that, upon Hu""'- iieml.lion uf Prof. Zaobos, General SuporLitsndnit, fiou. Sailon has appointed lier a« Snpcrintonden
if the plantations; six in Oumbor, on Paris Island. Thi
'island, at lis upper end, is six miles from Beaufort, nm'
i lower extremity six miles from Uilton Head.
Gage's eiiii is iho only white person with hor.
! are on the bland three hundred and fifty men,in and children. In n private letter the soys:
y are the lowest nnd saddest oondilioaod people
e f.niii'l/' (l.i nee it ot Ili.-.-.r isolated condition
Imvo not received so much attention ns othcra wholore favorably situated, and Iheir wanls are vcry
prossing." Mrs. (."ago saya : "Can you not, throughgood wife and lady friends, send mo n bo.v of
t Among the articles needed nro thread (linen,
black and whito), cotton spoof* of the coarser num-?3, cast-asido children's clolhes (if not too much•rn), old drones, men's coal*, nnd other garmen Is,
. II yoor friends can help Ibn poor people bi life
1 hope, 1 think Ihey will do ilieumilvi-s a great
|l::|e( ,|,l,(
tllorfer. Why si icf
P ERSONAL.
s connected with I
Pr.-deriek D.inelit-i will talk on
niiincip.ili.in l'|-ei;liiuiilion nnd Ihe AMen. in the Cooper Institute, on Pridaj
week. Give him a full liou .e.
Pnoknges(
be directed lo
lleekmnn sire
idle of clolhini
A barrel of elothii
Clllirohi Harlem.
rel of clothing, Ang
boy, N. J.
li, £ S. Oagnod, New V
C.ii!i, Thomas Garrett. WiMiry Pel ino ek, Kennel t, P
nley of Norlh Carolina is paid to have I
igning ns a reason liii opposition lo I
nation. Hie adminis I ration has be
ra—nn.offeiice to nil truly loyal ci
ragoment lo Ihe rebels.
Rov. Robert Collyer has received n very urgent call
i Music Hull, lloston, to ho setllcd over Iho 2Slh Con.
rogatior.al Society (late Theodore l'ark.-r's) ; hut lie,
la declined It, from his strong attachment lo his
jciely in Chicago, nnd interest in Ihe great Western
r fns
under I of ihe Mercantile Library A^soe
a-oa lull. We understand lint I
tame associnlion lias invited Mr. P. to deliver his It
will probably do so ere long.
.1 IV:,-: ingtun ncjiuoh'oaii says: "It may nnl be
Mrs. Lincoln has contributed more than
Washington, from her private purse, to
sufferings of our wounded soldiers ; and
that day by day li
of Ihe wliei
uvilh her own hand* delicacies propai
i While House. Tho fear of contagion and the
outcries of pestilence fall unheeded upon tho ear of
lose whose mission is mercy.
Theodore D. Weld lectured twice recently in Con-
cord, N, 11. 7/ie /iidejH-ndenf S)/mocr.it says : " In both
until-. Ih it II ,iv bus been, even in the rvln.vn-
,,.., . I ., 1 ,. t • hie, a single instance ol bin being
i.I.t Ih mil'!, ii ol "Irons drink : .in.l Ihey author
e us to say further, thai lliei* never ,..ul.l have been,
. lhat lime, Mieh ..» inst-.ii.-- willeell lle.-ir Ijinvin;; il
- hearing it. " IVo have Ibe weed ..( nii.-.thei' able ulu-
>r. with whom the l.ieiieial led. I Idrhly responsible
lice for two years in California, (hut ho never knowr heard of such an instance.
"it is with leeliiig-.it lepiil-ieii Ih.it we write Ihi-
iithoritniive refutiti ii n i.il-.ehe...l which venomtI idle ili.iughi|i.-.,iieis li.ii. '|.i.:el so widely ns tc
iake im duty to Iel I tho truth."
inilitii-,
lull ni .
ivithli.,-
allowed or i.i.l i ., .,
0'.. n,. ^r ma, 1. -
I : o Hull -i<
Dived toio ihe nunc,Slates
;nor shall there be iv.
either of tl o Stales of liel mginia, Kv'.lueky. Trontejc-..,
flrst nl
Tlioamerdmeut lo ll-.c MIssqui
as ropoi'.til by Senator llirri.
.fits of a Bubttn
JJins, ,> do Willi can iu roF-rion-e lo Ibis
eiidi in Ihij city, and we
iihe Judicial
ill.. .v.- 1 for Ihoadoption of an Eciincipalloo Oct ; a prohibition ji payfor any sieve introduced Into Hie Stale mibteqicntly to
the pnuage ( tliis .ict. and nn incrca o ol i I.OQO
000 appropriation, ..: .Iflfl
iii'lca.l ..I -.ol for nch -Lave.
i ..i
The venerable Thomeinlribntions, (ays :
" I have long known Franc
Ga^o, and 1 think her one nf tho most noble speci
i handiwork of Iho Almighty. She is willi
any sacrifice io help the d(-; : pi.ji-d mil nppre:ied
id. May alio havo her reward, and 1 know sh
1 doubt whether in all the land another womoo found as well qualfQed as she is lor the uudei
taking."
s. Ketcbum,of Harlem,
il the Ladies' Society oi Ihe Congregntionnl Church
at place, says : "Being
icon able In accomplish much ; but if our small
Ibution can iii: e inv .if Ihe-ie p. .or despised p(
- ^ «fe*~--iR?' '-** -'•'
n M.oida) evening. ^ n >" f™issing of Heaven n
her, nrc spending the
With the money placed in uur hind ; lor Jtrs. Gjge
e are able to buy the nrlicles sliu needs for less than
the market price. Three good iii/id boxes of clothing,
tie., are already packed, ready to he sent by Iho tlr.it
essel lhat ?ails lor Beaufort. Further c o ill ribulimn
,re reeded.
Ex-Gov. limns D. Moihim was, on Ti
ecled U. H. Senator from this State, la
Hon. 1'iesloii King, whose lerm expires on
March next. He is nut of the aluff of
aipire State ninrlit to inibe her Senator.
ncn this, hut it i. said that he standi pledged lo
pporl the Proclamation and nil 111
it lo give it effect.
eceil the
10 till of
hlch the
t ll,i Stnatt. on the 2!ltfi, the semi-trailorous Saui
y of Delaware made nn apology for his outragen
i.-inr two days before, tl is s.lid lli.it lie wot lain
denounced tna iiii-l.-
I'le'ekot and when, u
died to order nnd finally po
displayed n pistol and threatened to shoot iho Ser-
geant-! I-Arms. IIi3 conduct waa worthy of a cham-
[ alavcry. On the same day there was n spirited
ilon ol tho bill to aid the State ot Missouri in Ihe
ipatlon of slaves. Mr. Wilson (Hep., Mnss.) said
.1 came from the llousn, where it passed under
d of a member from Missouri, providing Tor Ihe
payment of ten million with immediate emancipation,
slaves to be y .id for who are brought into that
fter the war. It went to the Judiciary Commit-
lcc of Ihe Senate, and comes back amended lo allow
here for thirteen years longer, ftnd
doubling the amount lo he paid ; and iniloadofrcfuafng
to pay for slaves br-'imlit inio theStaio after the war.il
purposes to pay for all al.nc3 not freed under the Con-
nidation net. Ho was willing to dn all ho could t£
make Ihe great State of Missouri n freo State, but he
' is bill uilli Ih
.lib
or. All tin
twenty millio.
>souri I
Jago I
.- would not
of dollar
|,|..b.fe.| Il
,,.,...
iaj :
the said (
r. gula!
ihey m .. I. , , i.
clolhine . .1 (,,„;,.,-„;.,.
ifflcercd by wbiio i.rl.:mil- .
:i
(he ruli ,i. : .,• ,.
.
regulatiu^ as may le prl'rovid, I, Thai no I. I
rules or nrth !. . ,.f r ,r.
.
rj-lonO. West Vlr-
rotectlon if 1 would give ,,.. u in.-.ii nueiiinn nr.,1'iluivlimiivi ..Verowin'lolW .,',',. „,' '<Z!coiil.l not dev lorn ciinsletu.'i ly «,| ni.iv you llndio onprolccled under II, e I'd. i-. 1 <,.,,. riiTi,.,r,t amibandioncd by my only flrolher for mv j. ,Kti, l- he ii
under the Confederate an I I among iIk t, |, v i. „-,.
sepprated in sorrow and nmnv leiir.i i io the I. „,|.,i' .hing fhufy 1 .-ill ..I vmi for advlso nn,1 Einipathi.'e like ,i Son il 1 looio myilh your aid feek (i.iuie r.-ipeet.-ihte
i ... ill.
I'lKi, "XT-B A«l Sl« BOY r in-. -VinoI .- V 1 -
The Aoti-Kluvory Pntlrclj out 01 p.iat.n id 1 . ... t knon v. h -
a slngl .eh.l. of the nut
hit II rtillconse 1 1..
Will CO for a .. Il t .b.
tludncj i to III above ollnd.-l t,
irieo f
olllee. 1 will no,, ,
OUVB Jon
Anti-SavtT!/ QJJic At.
triijted liii
) our peep!
'lease oblig me by a call a moment If ever In i
r to servo or oblege you I will iviih the gtvjt,
nro May the Blessings uf our IL-avenlv mlilh and conduct yon Ihrougli llfu is tho pi-ayerllumhle Servantdviso Irtiuis lo bo n good tellow nnd tako care
For'-.
Notice.—The call for copies of " The Anil-Slaver
nistory of llic John Brown Year" has been so consii
irnble, that no more copies can be rent for the niuoui
•f postage, ii hereiolure offered.
Foit GnATuirors Drsriimrrriox.—The valuable and still
timely tract, by Mrs. L. M.iria Child, entitled, "ThoRight Way tho Sare Way. proved by Emancipation in
the British West lndlca, and elsewhere " (10S pages),
111 be sent by nihil to any person requesling il, and
iclo.'ing nix ctiits in uii.lel.i.je.l j.ojtage stamps. Ad-
re&i S.i-'ttiKi, M.iv, Jr„ 221 Washington Sitttt. RotUm
lLaiiiv Siirrn'.; Siv.tioi.—Ibc ediiiinible speech " OnCountry,*'dcliteredhy Mr. Smillmt the Cooper lusli
tute, Dec. 21. liar, h .-en published In pininblct form, amlemnllcil, po.t paid, f.-r a iIiree-ccntBlnmp dent b
groat numbers arc scckin.. Ferviee under tho UnitedSlates. It i.- Ihoueht th it half the men who nun il'" "rnllolilln will noon be ot African descent- I
competency a-t sudors and gunners, no doubt
by our Admirals or
-Wash. Car. THdun
Sspomlont of TBc 'A^
the Atlanlie during
aid the States
pay foil
prico for all slaves. That Stalo
;lavery would have been Ihe greatest State west ol the
All. glmiicii. He offered, as n substitute foi
general bill, giving aid to Iho States of Missouri, West
Virginia, Delawnre and Maryland. Mr. Fessendei
(Hep., Mc.) eaid the bill, as passed by Ihe House, pro
Tilled that n good and valid not of emancipation should
be passed by the State before any money wna paid.
Hat this bill simply provides for a law by tho State,
lie was not willing to vole fir making nn approprii-
l"ion for tho deportation nf thoso slaves. This was o
palicy he had never pledged himself to adopt. It would
be entering upon n boundless ocean ot expense, which
he doubted lhat wo would be able to carry out. In
Tl "C particulars ho preferred the House bill to the
ubititnlo of the Committee on tho Judiciary. Mr.
.lerson [Miss.in.il urged the Senator from Massa
etts not to attempt to put Maryland and Delaware
.eVl ii, Is State, has been i
and ihe troops beforeUrleniH. 1 liuve re. J..iil.t I, ,t il.,
ind skillful defenders of the
.ailed up. ii will do ..... j-1 service.''
Tun Nkojioto I'iout os Horn Sin
ing Jeff. Davis's well affected hoi
execrable measure recorded in Hi
man," there is good evidence thai
selves have been the llrut to uso the
have* larger black army than tin
they have only employed the n
- and , „,« ,,
'1 ed lilinil lie raroe-l ]
ike myself, lie ein.e no mont i..e imi rcjlerday ho ,
Meaning of Such a Step a.
er from Ihe Weather 1 wi
i M.i e -It 1 ,Ihi.-I|[.t ! :l„, ,.11 :.,1 -
ill on by Ihe Moroy ol
ir brielller anil'
-My brother t.
hi-..in;lil liim li,— Wltl, me
all would loownit Kegrnn if
io promlit not to lento mo an: year and did not leavo mo 1
i ho wan taken last year bvId not stay he runaway ml
"lie. Sivru.': TcrtmoKY.—Gen.Saii following short account of his ell
.il volunlter Iroaps to the ^ccrelar ,.f War i
Ban. B. il. Btsjvtos, Srenlary of War. '
in Sin I Imi.- Hie Iiunnr lo i-ejMii i lul the i, reinii ,.f the lit Regiment „f -.-eiitli r.,,-,ion V.,l„ r ,
i-i I1..H ...lufl-leil. The regiu.eiit is light ilit.ililry
Oi.-d of ten conipliii.-,.. uf nl.eul .-i,;lilv -l.i ...el
armed with nio-Weln, in. I „iik.-re I by whit.In erj u.;.'.Hi d-itl. -1. riplini ei,
1 1 me rile. I,.
.l.i;lll -1 lillle it 111. bee,, ii. ssri ! .-. ll.l r, v-'ii.-.u
t ui,.|,i-.„-.,l be one „-.- reeii.ient in ll,i , |i'.- 11a , .
. bl.o.jl.J itei.r bi- ,1-. i;...l I. tune lo get int
n, I bavo no fiarj but it » ill .via its own way 1
tho confidence ..f Ho,-,- win nr.. i.illiag to rreognirmurage an 1 niar.hcnd, and viodici", Hie oi-.- |..,||,
:
it lllu Adi .iraie.o in pniiin- ili-so men into IhDeld,.-.ol ci.i-r ll.eoi n ehsrr u t„ itrlke a blo.v t..
-oniry sod Ib.ir ...in liter:,. In no reglnion1 ever seen doty p.rfoi med ivlih so much cheer
fulness nnd alacrity. As Boollaols, ihey are peculiar).
I have never seen in any body of men .m, h entlni i
io and ,le.-p.M-:ili-i| ile.uii.ni l„ tll.-ir r.llleers n: evi-it
Ihis, They will surely go wherever they are led.
volunt. .
if the Importance of his service I.
organization nf Ihls regiment I hdifficulties which might have dfscoi
less faith in the wisdom of the nios
to report that ihe experiment in i
My belief Is lhat when we get n l
---* regiments may bo raised n
a fully|
r.ie.
".-1 ':':.''
oast ot Georgia
I havo the lit
icnced Ihe orga
The expedition
urpo.ie ut" bring
Ihoreaiiliof wldeh 1
nor aldo lo report II
lizitfon of the 2d Itcg
by Col. Montgomery,great respect, your ol
jr. .11 vol. -. lor lb
liven for Iho
KegliiionLi. ., -...! ii .mi ii., ,|..uht I... ni iirent us Ih.il ul niiilar one undertaken last Summer.Tub FiuajoiiiLv or Suith Ciboi.is.v.— II i^ inidei-.l.nil.
.ys the corredpuo.leoi ..I Th' <W i.i il..- l-..ii1i,.,-ii
Deparlnient, Ihitfieii lluiuei- will direct tho ainocu-'" of the enlliTnli.ai uf cotton oo Hie plantnlious
iCfl coder Ihe uu.pi..ei .,|" ih,- i;ov.?i i.nieiil .l.irin-
. . _ inline oca-ion. Ile proposes lo lnvo all Iho *oil
devolcd to ihe raiding ni eorn. iu order to afford eotne,'
relief to the SiiW<ienc.> li.-p iriment, nnd de-i-. nun. h -' [."'ibl.- the dii'fii "1 ihis llepnr
for the1""1
.
'„clal profibi of lost yi
capital inve"
a it. it Is true. iii„,.|,!|-uil
lad moat to do wiih the i
io pr.ieiil strailened e.-.iel
, it Ij will ni-giie.l, tiiuili
'
lihiblu' |!.r'.
-ible. l.'.,n
in... Hi.,
juihoriied liy
. disconiile-
r reason i.i Ihe.le^rv ul lien ll,,..i..r
of the able-bodied phinlali.
rice in the army and lallguepot.it.-ei, elc, can be well railed byM..oii'"Fiori- ii already hard "t work
\rieu- ;.|nolii[i..r.:, fur recruits.
-The report that -Gov. Andrew had'-- War Department lo eob-.i .:..l-
ea correct, as the following order
ii Iii:r.iiirur..-JT. IV.Miiwiros Crry,)
urJtml, (hut iloe. An.lrer,-, ,.
.•I until iiirllicr ook-l' to rah..
.|l,|.,.|.i.:.-: ..|" urtlllerv f-r .lull
ills and clscivhetc ~ '-
lie: lull.
111. IV Ih.il , nil
dunleera lo ho enlisted for dire.largetl, an, I may hu-lude |;,t. -->... .,1 \lrie.in ik-toul,JJ.in.ied bilo .ep.ir.iie inrpi. lie .. ill llnille Ihe usualre, hut re.|iiliiioii. ...ii i lie .i
Wi: i.i. Said—A correipondonl of tho Providence |IL.) Journal—nn ufflcer In tho Army ot Ihe 1'oi.nni. -loses a letter to ihe ediior ol ih.it p .per as follows :
"I am no negro wor.ihi|iper. I hue iKvayi believed
that a white man is as good na a negro, If he behavedwell. Negroes are an much iuiere iel in ihi i
...!-
while men are ; Ihey ni
iv h, ,i
ry ! guiltyrebels tli.un.
il ns soldiers,
oui-j). Tho n.bef-i luire ihem lo U tht agnini! un : v
not give Ihem an opportunity lo llghi tor
-e are » in ,,7„..J- rjf.iu.-i irAo or; iiuri.fl
ii'i/iwi nh'mhl jJ.jht ./",.,- rtv, t't Ihnncomt itntlfyht Ih
tho mncbin
o iho b
Stoics ir.oi
to! -'
---
,ff,ng cast, ..ol Sonwork of a day. Whsicao Reel flngora'do
now I Yards in nalls-fe.t to Inches ate lb.- .hileru
r.-s.ilts, ned yet tin- lif.l. bird ^mg' on—a plnytht
fur ii child a reh.i lor the Weary - Ho: bul fru-i
ihe ther— the eonipjiiion oi ibe dangtiler, mid a
blessing to nil in the house.
'One trial will suffice to prove the truth uf
word', mid mini' lint e-er Ime.inie the poj<e.'-'..ir
willii.elv pun null the Utile. .Iiiiple sewer lll-it
host with a nee. 11...i>.
.ei'.. i-niine wli.it hitlierto
ileemed impossible -lie.: r iioi; illltell ! and therefol
acting iu the iii.1 I., nil uih.ir re wing-in nehi—- -
nssisliiig them to aceoniplish their great work
lo this unholy rcbellio
Tub New GiJiNisnci— Dr. Dio Lands, aulhor of
New Gymnastics and Principal of the lloilon Normal
Institute for 1'hyiienl Culture, will give a lecture
tho subject In the Cooper Institute, on Wednesday ovi
ing neil. A largo number uf ladies nnd gentlemen,
members ol Mrs. Plumb's Privato Class (meeting
Dodworth's Hall), wltl bo present, tn lull gymnai
costume, lo illustralu Ihoeyotem. Tho growing iu
eject will nu doubt inauro n crowd
Tuk Ri
her of that iyof tl
lb. ii vup-tiel.oi. Ir
,. ol I'.-nii
receive the blessing oi Almighty God nnd the approv-
ing verdict of nn admiring world I (Loud applause.) |
LUox fttcoiiD, Part XXVI, is moslly ocoi
pied Willi " DocuniuriLs," connected with the progrc
ot ihe War, on the rebel as well as the loyal lido. Si:
teen pages, however, nrc filled with " Poetry and Inc
douls." Theporiralla prefixed are those of CommodoreTheodorus B:illey and Mnjoi-Gen. Josoph Hooker
a.lverinemvrii ol thi, wurii io another column.
Tug .i_vsr.it. Asn St.ivF.nv Costectios for the State
of New_York will, wo undentand, bo held at Albany
n Wednesday and Thursday, Teh. iSlh nod 2lltl)
1 ihnll give iniil.vr pnrlieiilar-] nevl week.
pay t
,- when they ask for it. His Slato
ard nnd asked help to rid herself of
d break down a system which binds them
of moral indignati..
anient prupoiei to em [.ley iiecroe-on Ihe
lo the q-.c of ni-jti "ci io die Southernletter from an otllcer ol the Cinks eupc-
ditlonnt Baton Itouge,says
;
The formication, ill l'..rt lludon aro said to he
very ili-..ng, ihe heavy aitillerj gang ..I men in-on-
7u'U)"'a'dmi'tted. inako ihe bent " soldiers in llic
1 tor berivi artillery :erviee, heiii: very 10., bit
The ,...iiind ..I ihe .. en does re. Ialfeei ll.eir
, nnd they can endure faiiguc
Mow 1 s the 1, If Co:
grew mennl lo do nnyiuing to carry out its pledge* to
abolishing shivery. It" this ohjeat wore
out. ho bolioieil tile rebellion would lose nil it
In Mtsiouri. Refuse this and he might be dri
mile, nnd slavery might become stronger Ihi
On the following day tho discussion was resumed, and' " tho Judiciary Coui-
mitlee.
Ileuat on Ihe 2Sth, there was 111 eJciled dis-
upon tho bill authorising the employment of
troops of Alrlosn descent. TI10 frioods of
mined lo put tho queition upon the passage
of Ibe bill, nnd ils opponents resolved to preveot it by
motions. The struggle was pro-
jraclnl through the night. unlil el o'clock on Thursday
1a House adjourned vwith the
iat the bill should ho open for forthi
r debate. The bill was further debated
ud 30th ;Messrs. Slovens, Sedgwick and
,15 r."..... ml
nnieii.lnio.lt
others in Intor, anil sev
cHllie and Hovder State
deoitc was continued on
onMondsy. Those who adv.1
1 .1 MB D --
RniCOcConWUngof New Voik.Tnml.,- 01 '... .i'i.. -
ofllaMachnsctus, Davis ol l'n., Olhl ol New \ .,rL. 1\ H-
son 01 lown, and Stevens of Pa. Those who opposed it
vfcroMciBr*.ThDiu.i.ti.r Mi 1., Riddle of Pa., Pendlolon
| Ohio, Maynard ot Twin.., Allen, Cos and While of
Ohio. Mr. Slovens of Pa., flic author of Ihe bill, closed
the debate in u very able speech, in which be rephed
conclusively
billth
lb- I' Il 1...
Negro i-l
111 ib... 11. and oegro (davi
..f I'oi-l lind i.in, nod .or
luly bur
R,.__._clly hi th..
avyguns within thefortifieatiuin.
are liejiuuing to realize this fact.
I it. Phillip are now being manned;s. mere are now nheut 3,Ci')0 of them.drilled in j.ronri.1 movements as infantry,
rms, by Gem Phelps, who fully resiiiod whatnmo 10 In regard to employing negroes as
Gen. Boiler could not eoiupreheiid Ihis fact,
isult was that Gen. Phelps resigned and went
homo. Gen. Duller changed entirely his opiuioo, armed
thee verv men lli.it Gen. Phelps hid (rained and disci-
plined, mid it 1- folly .uloiitb.d ib;
while working ihe
and forts Jnckton f
r discipline, and who to
who a
those who had spoken agub
I as follows, yeas Si, nays ao :
rU-i Ui thi ;*..anrV' .mi Ool.ti- ./ Brprt-ttnU
lor t : JaekiuO 1110] el ewhere, I i:iiv y e . Ie rd, l"y a c.
nany ol ,oiw .-eventy-llte, who had been a.-lee
wiliiiu the last eighteen da.is by fieri. Wierm:
or,lerl> .anil were being drilled by him, nr,d they ,-e
showed i_-re.it pr.'iiei. -"ey m company inoveni-.
Tlii. ...oipiu.v i, to be tilled up t.. 111 ininoii.oi,
it it is good music, iti ib'-L hi^hcsi fento of Art; yet
id mak« iln lioolio nda itati n f, tb.; occaaion Fcit.
Tir,,., wh.i rislttd for ., ... .- l-if ' nt.M i« not ,;o.,.l
mtbu npalrioib: u'ii.:ii.i...'e or .ebbration withoul
Jationnl Airs," "tunes Hint everybody nnR!,J
Slar-ripan^li il Ilanner," " t-.le.ry. Uallelujiili," and
rlnt not, forgot tbeii wish aa tie grntid niuhic car-
lid ihem along, and were in too mueli eestucy t(
thiikof it when i' wna over. Tbo appeal in this
--ii was from Philip eob.-r to Fbilip drunk. It wastriuiuptiniit prnciieal iJ.-worisirnti.iii Ibal ihe bij;li-
il, under proper cire urn -tain- en. spenliu to all; Ibat
,-ii-at Ail. urea! mo-ie, like the nir, thu sunlight and
nil liiieji hloMings, i- or i- to be, tho ,-oa.mon boon
of Man; nnd Hint He aru.t nl,. i„. -' irusia his pub-' ' Blcadofaioopincto ii. .boll sorely be rtiwardcd.
UnilColumbi.iB" .and "John Broihiis are all
v^ell in their wa, awl in tl.. r p-J-r places; but
they bnvo no right in uii artislic programme, any
moru than cabbages and turnips m a bouquet ul
flowers. Thuy will be all, o
iieirtly ply !
With heart and volte ui
In sonsi of Jubilee.
THE FORTUNES OP FLAX.
, ofru ufaclur
» for oi ; for ci
Juit lildollm ei
i-clmid'a golden frlnB"
At tho appointed
rahn tupped upon h
to Ibeir bearings, m
of Iho opportunity, \
ibroiL-li «-
: :/,irc\(r.s..
1 I.I......I "l
in F. P. V. seems burst-
clieek of mow. It U• ihat ihe crsii'l-.l'iu.-b
i, ,n her power lo anul
o. But renierii'-'i". .bur
Ponr Mrs. Yellow ii
.11 l.rill.ni.i -. Ii. r r.-.-utu
and tbi
Your iali-liitlif.fi llowi i" 'be rieb
i-in-i. i" tl"' > 'usoliii- .-..i.-.-iou--
i„li.„tl> lb.- -ii|i-ii." -f "r;. I'-l-
lib aAhot
iuk.i,.
.ill. ,1-J
...-in I c
,b.-r.i in neubliiuiij of
,ui-b. Nobody dare or
ih y.:mr fen' Do hum,d who need yon, tho
So In
billing il
vc and dutiful,
Illicit hlglnr, i.ietnT.
In . in the .a of It tSepte
under lie purple hhndi.w* uf the Vi Dnhilii we waited l..r Jackson's Caonon to pour shell
upon our bends, how tbe golden butterflies flew in
and out of my window ;how lie humming-bird* fed
from the hearts of the dower-, llickeliug liko fial
of (lame awny llo-.-.u v-h Ihe mini air. ll seemed so
kind in God to brighlpn ibu world with their wingedovanctesat beauiv. if call- lo beguila ibo oya »nil
ebarm Ihe thoufibt for u rn'omnit, u the suspeusu
nnd agony of the bour. I knew thut when the bel-
lowing batteries pound lln.ii buruiiig hail upon oui
hoUEes, they could not crush tbeso Hilling pulsus o:
gossamer life. Untouched amid bunting shells Hut
raining bullets, the. would palpitate away, to drink
aunahine and honey in some b.autilul valley which
war had not touched. So wilh tbesu human bulter-
flk'9 nud humming-birds ; thu war doea not trouble
them. The greal shock of Borrow from the bntllo-
field, tcnlhing so mani lives, eannnt touch crcaturei
lighler than nir. Rachel weepa for her children, loi
they arc nol ; yet tbe-e i natures dunce and sirig.nnd
dress nnd dream. What is ihe war to tbero, but a
column to yawn over in tho morijing papat
.
their esialenes mu-l have a purpono in the mind of
God, us well as those butterflies uf His which liu
malcea mil ol caterpillar*. Tocisely thu tamo purpose; and though it would he
very presumptuous to suppoto that God made themla amu.«) you and me, Btpubli&m, yet they do.
Wateb.ng tbeea creatures in their gay gyrations,
above ibu surface of society, many a moment they
wile inc to lori;ei ilm siis|ieiite .1 tbe hour ]the awlul
ft-Hlill.of our lime. The world is crowded withir,B ,
tbcugbllui, aonnirt. -,-,-J.. .;- neoplo,
pridu" lut"it. Aacend .„ ..
ill find ihe world bene
bio only to your Gud, the
hearU .who luvo you.
I presented Iba only type of aoeiety which
on +is brought t Ob no, my fiepuMiom.
en, pure, benuiiful women meet in Ibese gay
In thu shado of this crimson curtain sila the
,f "IdaMnv," her black (jar incuts coin rant-
ing almost painlully will, tbe- marble whiteness e.
her face. L'.si July ibu very 1,1- of her ifil »"" I?™
fromberon tbo field or battle- Now, like a spirit
from another .pl.e.e, ='ne fii.z.s on itiia brilliA.it „,.,
luro of life Oh could «> have helped it. the thadow
,f death Bbould never have fallen on tbofehei.utilul
-,ea ;yet we know that in ibis sorrow will ripen the
Iruit which will help enrich tbe world. Mrs, Burn-
,huwireuf,l.'lk.„.Mr loi.i.b-.mof Conned-
is anolher renliiatioii of tbe highest lypu of n
Mew Ei.jjland woiiia... rJlvesnt. intellectual, will
form head and face firccian in Ihe.r beauty, I can
],„ t ,ll. tell why, but .be remit..!:* me ol tboportrmw
of the first Mrs. Judson. The National has tts sbara,
too of wedded nnd unwedded belles. Mrs. Judge
Miller, of Iowa, gleeful, oeuivl r.ud gay, is the focoi
of vivacity nud sui.sbn-.-. drn-sinj; nnd d.nitmg «itl
ibo abandon of a girl of siiic-en, while ahe disarm
all criticism by tl„> .---. r.uoua sweetness -I ber nn
lure Then we have tm- nry brilliant Mra. Whiting
if Uarrishurg, the pretty nnd stylish Mim Esau
,i New Us uii, -hire, ibe graceful M-- »
ul mill ulglier,
WakliiB all cmib more beuullfUL
I war on ciirjlu's ivlogi up, up the moiinm
Wnero fiuib tlic IIvIhk «alen from tbo To
KcnrRoBven'shlnhtlirotio;
Wbilu voleea eiet eb.g liatn bud and bbu
In bird-like lones, " Fear nol, lo bH own
Ood yel will lold lib own."
' WLo arc Cud's ovlill " I Bik, and myrlo
Atiiwcr myqucitloii, IVblle my =aubr.-Jo|.
__ ..itioall
mi of three Mr. Conductor Zer-
deaknnd brought the orchestra
if lo attack the overture. Thia
eulion thus secured, Mr. Josiah
f of tho Committee, came for-
t'a.-i>on, who would hini'elf
,ol n, ibe hills; Iho Commille*,
i--cei-ity, had kept it hack for a
'u(( ihe imperative splendor
ih tho Muse, to compromise
mouuee m ent witlonil niilbor-
ily of her own aign manual, t wil tb" aeiual " arri-
val ol ihe |io,-„i '; in ...piiii beariiljf be said yes, hut
ily for Ibc Mm.', the ins.T.il.il.ly eapriMou-.
uowing one. to say yes in Inet. At the
eleventh hour, bowev,. ; t -'.(.! [...eiuj-m raJA'i*
QftWrswiibeomi.le.e i- '!i«as a byuiuof Liheri)
d Jui-lief, wild and -t y. and musical and very
ort, and in bis rich tones spell-bound the great
l.-The'" Egmont" overlure then began in earnest,
(3 went tbtougb at n beat; a fiery, heroic, pntn-
ic thing, in Ihe right temper lot ihe limes, uu^esl-
g gloom, opprc;=i,in. popular ilivi-ion. fear nod
uni.urs tlin sir lo in.. I lbs irimiij h of tho right,
e vision of lib. riy ami counlry to tba dying hero,
owning him wilh laurel.
2. Then came voices. The txlnilit from the " Hymnfl'raiau" conveyed, by us words, the keynote ol
the occasion ami ut lb.- "bole inimical em redpoiideiicc
,f the nrn.r.inime. Mul Hiu was tbo crilieul piece,
.bicb hnd tf. be ri-l..-d ulmo-.i wiihout rehearsal,
be done nn it wen: by laiib. being
il,. I in. .at d.tfl- ul". and 'oil ol ij.di-
"ma has been called an ago of revivals. We have
1 r.juvals in the Church and in ihe theatre, in
lions nnd in tins. The hoops of our great-grand-
ibers have been resumed, ami it" one may believe
tain rumors from aqr-^s thn Chai.ne-I. powder and
ehea nro not fAr ofl. Gothic nrchileciure. net
n-lv in ib, ecelesiasliei.l, but in ii.i t.ctilar tornit.
. rrMrm-l to favor. Mime of the lost ficcreta of
..Ivor rile—-tamer eniuueller an. Ifivsi.-ii-painter
,,.i
. .. , J ind thouo crafis and mysleric
,, „ „ ,. popular. Indeed, to such n
ui. 1 bus r. vivalatu been carried, that a learnc
n'.i. ..nth-roan M- Kournier, lias written silver;
Imaei to prove tbat *i.;rUbi.i|- wotlh saying, lb
• ortiiid.ng -,ut. has been said, done, ur [ound o.
eady ; and that, in ohon. thu Bo-called"
mo. b 'ii day. are only a eerie
one plagiarisms from the pnat.
However ibis may I.e. .1 .. |.t,.o.iui- um- •>"
ubii.b b-loi.g-i I. nib to agrieiilniro and lo ninnula.
lurca. It ia evident tbat auionu other aources i
relief to which our ic.iile .n am, li.c lurca must lui
iu the present crisis, is Hie produrlion ol lli.x. Uui
upon a time, oi course, the |.lai.t was cultivated
almost every part of thu kingdom, and homc-ppi
linen entered b.r,- ly into Ihe clolWg of ihepcopl;
hut during tho last century, it
Sowing supreu.ney of cotton,
"ngbtitwa '
eiternal fibre ; and3 divorce thesn two
as to leave Ibu latter sound, soft andlengthy. The old iv.h1..j..1 of ic-eomplishing this wasby " rclting," that is, stee|.iug tht, stalks in stagnant
ponds, or sprfadiiii; Ib.u. over imsdows, Fo as to
iposo them lo ihe action of tha dew and rain. Thodtcompotilinti thus |.ii-luced dissolved thn gluiinous
slier which hound together tho coro aud the fibre,
id left Idem free lo separate when lha wooden-bladcd "sk older" was applied. This proce.*.*, how-
iclious. uii,. ttiiin and iiiiy.rieet. Severalubstiiuics ior, or modifitaiiont of. the" rut-
ting " tystem have li.-en proposed, Mr.lVD Scbeockdiscovered llial n large pe.rOcni*gn of ftbro may buobtnincd ia good comluion. and nub grcst ennainiv,
' Blalks in water bentcil artiHeially io
ih'u lempsraturo reiiuired lo produco fetnmuiniion.
Tbo Chevalier Clauisen pea rid of Iho con- and iho
gum by soaking tbe lias in a series of chemical sulu-
lion*, and repealed maceration. Uo thus produces n
suhalanco called "lib, ilia" or llsi cotton, whieU pro-
genia a closo resemblance lo cotton, nnd can bo
woven with wool into slafls of superior quality.
Only » very slight alteration in thu col lon-machinory
is (aid to bo nccens-ary in order lo work ibis newmaterial, and under present eir. mu nances it is sorely-
worth a trial. What ia now wauled is, that aotue
enterprising man. i1"-iet nn- rs should odnpt their
„ of rtax,
eslablisbed in llax-growing i
and (.repaintjoii ol tbo fun
tl tbat should bcepliol
a of grand, u
il heti
u manufacturers
•and more profitable ..
n ; nnd the farmers, engrossed
wilh tho cull ivat ion of cereals, and Ibu
Iteck, lent a willing ear lo caluinni. * sp
ia ngricultural prejudieu iigain-t it.
G'eo.ijic.i.guiii.-d sli. ngih The farm- :
Jtrtvctti-scnicnts,
TOUN JOLLIFFE,
COUNSELLOH-AT-Li
U . lu ; .-I. --;', I he yf.lC. I
S...-. Y.,.L ., L.ln 1. I. : Mi
E THE BLOOD—
M
. I...,-, r.. I'.~. , tl'. - ii I . S: •--
hey once ndmillet it upon b.-ir in -..i ,"' i *
uli.et.'o
often plnced undohe tenant felt ti o t",";- let.
1
AuoX
,''".!;,.I:
;>•;;."
who Is
SUggCBII
'lily; MissStebb
..., goods and dinmo
ibo lovely faces of Li
Leant. ful mother ia unco uioro tuu a,
frieudB, and Iba envy of tho inulignt
-,„ ber for having" idle;:. Ther too many gra.
,i,e aud Lu.;
u again
la their
be c
i if aI long n
ii had n
T. MASOIt JONES.
V!t had Ihe groat pleasure of hearing ibis i
from the Old World ii. bis sp. vcb or. rbo Am,-ebelli..,,. Tbe poet m- novelist must eveaie-
philosopher is io originate. 1 be (iropbet ui
*Ir a gTBat occaslou, great musie, great audience
full of joy Ibat craven expression, il* inspired per-
formance, helped by coi:i._i.,u-ne,s ol -igaal triumph
over feaiu and difflculites, mating 'bu bioTory ol tho
celebration reflect thai of tbe event celebrated, can
maku a ooncert, iben the concert in the Bosloii llu-ie
Hall, on ibonfteriiooii of January 1, 1B63, '_' in honor
of Iho Day, the frovl mon. the etna.,. i|.an .i, ol
the slave, Ihe spirit of the t'aiher. and tbe Constitu-
tion" was in tbe most ei.uiplete s- nua a success, and
must retnaia incmornblo among our leBtivals ot
music Tho idea of celebrating the day of ihe renf-
firmntion of the i'ltsidenl'.. Ii iputioti prDclama-
lion whereby the ni.lion s.ul-lei.li tell .-lean Lvlore
God' and the world, was noibing strange. But the
„!„, of ...jui.lii.Ej .vi'b socb jobib-.-, the lugbest art,
ii id notion- meaner or more commouplaec, aa the rent ti
',.„., medium of c.vpre,sioti, was, for these parte
somewhat novel, a- e-ell »» .bllieull of exeeulmu
The whole plan nnd programme of th.a jnb.lea wal
based upon tbo conviction ibat thu £ reat thought!
of humanity nnd frerdoui, tbe progressive moral
,.,!„=,. af 111. kho, si, lio nub lo Ibis day Spit UBUll
ml cruuiQ.-'l or") -' iolioo'lo i.lliAliee Alld
ii'ii;,..ib. With 'be [oftieal iii-pitatiotiu and ul,
i.-i.uc.ueot, ol cliiative geu.us aud arl— .nuSl.^.l
specially. The iu.irrii.g-.- ol tbe two is tbo pr,
ion of nil history. Tl.ei need and tb.-y imply cnel.
ther. Art propbcsles. assumes tbo milder heights
,f humanity ; as long n» art breathea, lucre is «
hope, a chance fur freedom, anil tyranny nnd mean,
ncis feel rebuked. Un H,e other b.ind, Ihe glorious
instincts Of a liberty and jinticft-loviug people need
art Tor a language ; no meaner and more prosy dia-
lect caa worthily interpret ihem.
II.. nee tbe propriety oi ,...-1. btnting ibis new year
of the nailon's truer life, thia day; of jubilee, by
loucerl of gi
CMte points mquiiing nice agreement between voice
and orchestra, especially m tho " watehmon recita-
tive, so lull of Iivtii.-.n. Heeotuiuit.iments. pauses, nnd
wild, ntaiiling repli.e of wind in-ltumeuls to the
aiiKious, almost a ii.-d i..i|iiirie.s ;" W ill the nigbi