{ title: 'Republican watchman. volume (Monticello, N.Y.) 1828-1861, February 06, 1861, Page 2, Image 2', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031367/1861-02-06/ed-1/seq-2/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031367/1861-02-06/ed-1/seq-2.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031367/1861-02-06/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031367/1861-02-06/ed-1/seq-2/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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« merit o mies THE REPUBLICAN WA ss TOE?\ - ivoLnnnfiss N0.. 1708. a anti mom If SP. J_~nt~___nni., bnt fb but N3 tet 60 fottut b tee 4 U Enahsn§§i essgtsasssaefo Spt . £810 M img K. pee tnt ___. { John W, Juan)\ §loz%r—¢— *o f (/J James F. Bradys --- Bos “L‘miilm d. rain. . bert sagiesa nog 'mevT. llllnin w. Wright, m Wilinm 0, -~ ; Rhodet. [From the London Times, Dec. 10.) Sigal\ [lgpiaw J | Statement lmade at flagellum” of {y Faringd. the 220 of Nov., 18602 - \| of aringdonAgricultural Library rign the condition of the the adrancomont of- ag | that\ everything\ could devise, of money \command .of» new and improved iniplemien 0h: Agflculturdl Library, mt ifim possibl it Two yéard ago, L¥ead to the rum? ite departments, and on eavored to show whith; science of art had | and ther, perhaps, mn experiment may been made tributary to this object, and that not merely itrimproved. nothods of cultivating the soil and the introduotéiog t machinery, but also\ 4x \ the“hreeding, £ (know the;om emba Swell. gut whether, 171 iiuity whic gyms? he case full x 1<l ap gr?“ the work, t «hurl (a good cottage so edonomicall BAT, g & fifemm for 'the 'Investment Ohio, erent which a la- boier cab pay» cin only. afford a in: the majority . would mot -be sufficient to - yicld a ressonnbre interest on the capital sunk Ta building: his\ dwellinghohéfir’ iHete:. sugeeed, but As a géerieral rule, no land- lord could furnish his property venient and salubrious _ tenements, ..at Buch: arate uponhis out equal truth it is their snterest.qlso. We __.. IA. man.who earns so |' : cult oral many. shillings & week; Laborer;in which attenfion \to | cortatn moldicum “13191993le for house the vast efforia that had been made, for rent, and that sum, ‘ inal} | cases,\ B Ja . o3w.n_-s~nnsnjfisflfix C thnk! | nefedHANNEEEGESS shh§§°a§§5hs§se§n§ nhshhshfis HeBesHise efihfihehfi :| ap Bans 4L - B __ { Robart W. Allen éwtflnsgeosnnstemn Dante B, \ \ Ohutlés 3 N5 H. Van Wye): i Stephen St, J, Gardnor, Samus) Morrison. Jolin D. Onell, 3ER sets! 915; E l whim“. : SERE | Wihhime, _ 5 i Lewis W. #8 Pleroy, Elfitiaqtn“ ltfifié HaSHH 88B| Doer\ i rn’finfihhfio HeBoxnie | Lgasgénihnfimnenhne Edwin Datbes. Wilton, M, * 1 John W. olnaton. HM Jamies D, Decker, NHH RSRY HSB “eEE‘”hs5§o§so§sw “gut-J Ji A e AE l Enfihhttsnsh’h SEasE seeess| Taber, _ L-domnh - as to the accommodationnndniimber of} \{ voluminous to.Iny . before . this meeting, a, factories, whi Tread feeding, and 'housing of cattle in dry, |. clean, well-ventilated buildings: at-the |- same 'time I pointed to the fact that |- fhilo all these 'ed forth in that direction, comparatively, had been dona to i improve thewell- -boirg of\ the Iaborer, -Add especially. regards cottage accommodation, . T sse observations,» I believe, are Austen ifue now ne they were two years since, and, feeling a deep interest in the question; - I have amployed compatent persons to a | it every town and yillnge ia the Faving-| © don Union, to obtain exact information |. [inmates in every, oottege in : the Union ; thatinformation 'I hold in my hand, but as-4£.i8- foo minute, circumstantial and I hate made. adiieetmf the' yormlssion, T. wrll Wolstone—Man fnd. Ino grown up sons, and in illegitimate child of | the daughter, all sleep in. one room; man and wile with a son and two daughters, | slgep in one room two matried couples 'and a child sleep in one room ; man and Snead on Van fly}: VAN DXKE PULVEBISEfi We present below “(he other Side 8m of She. scriptural {afgumiont: «on the 'sd gent of slavery: It Js as \ clear as mud yt and hs brll ant as chartonl' a antic afforts were call- = it: is : Exceedin chnrks shd - A madversioris 'on. the. Rev. H. J;:Van. Dyole sermon c Pretslied. Jany) T: 1861.1\ have Read. Vah Dyck genpon: on: Slavery, it is very. Good tl. 'Bad he ought to 'of | ) BF | Proved theidewish Slayer and\ Ainari 'car Slagiiry was Exactly alike, in all it} workings : and\ Bearipgs; IF, 'there ds\ a |. : 'Great Difference, 'God: may aprave- of | \\C\ Jewish Slavery; and Hate and abhor |°¢ P. American Slavery can V,-Dyl: or all the; Y.. Dyaln in the Uniterss ' \Prove Jewis Slavery and; American Slavery are Ex- 'actly a Iaké in allit working, and Bear- qufidorélnoyfltoto worl (fiventi he mireon:| pmfiosdingrof rtnwefiocm‘i 'Btate\ Convention he lg in Albany, onghursday glito net affair wfierce'ii‘tagla 41nd Erlday hf-lnsl. webk.cl a Jr.“ wach We haye no'} h6°lhllon in sayingkthnt worte nowe no-othelzassomblpge - of: .Nehr¥ork' ve‘r’xwas rendered \m usinghls powerful influence aniohg : the: people ;othis charge and: neighbor- Ans hood to induce them to discontinue the é“d “mTtupresentfawpictnre of suck |- in\ this; the 'ninsteenth a humnnrty Bblusk.- ndflwlleh it ll fembéréd that all this i6 suffered in order that so-called: nobles tiny ~réevel=in ~Itxary\ and - Adteners, \it ‘seemsnutspgsthat the miserable victime do not rise gnd slay their | oppressors without marcy. W s wo lnennand indignation. The’l‘r : admitsthah“thc English: pai fieshand blood are' starvmg, or\ liv'ing like herslo around them I Thousands petit on the Queen’s ata- ampsred with\ luxuries, degradation and misery, such - brutality ll 'Ex-Goy. C :| the permanent Prest per t '11 celled igh:to. order, on the: part 'of) the State Committeo, . Mre Driigs of New Yards nominated urch of Orleans as. lerapora- Cariied With loud a. zvdiii” ry Chairman. ,, plause. The following temporary Secretaries .. were . appointed: . Henry: McClusky: :of Kings; John A. Griswold of Rensselear; Dr, A. White of Cayuga ; H. A:; Reeves. of Suffolk; E. O. Pertin of Kings <**> recess till 3 ~ The body ofthe i g: { over 00 delegates and 'alté ates 'and tthe galleries densely packs : 'number of ladies were present- 3 TheHorr. R. H\ P exy-Ho R of Albany. ° ',.,,W8thilit 'the lis G 'and Secretaries. '* .- 'The Hon.. Stephen.. Clark of. Albany, and Shorhurrio :B. Piper 0 Magara, were appomted 'a. Committee 'to conduct nt:to the ghair. - \As Judge Parker: appeared. on. the. stand he was recéived with loud and' earnest applause, When order. was re- -stored ho addressed fhe Convention. -- Mr. Ludlow called up,\ the, resolution ° Vice PreSideuts for &: Committee of two fromeach Judi: appointed \| as suchCommissioners on the nestly but- respectfully urge upon Con- %;| grees Ammediate action for the adoption of such timely 'find adequate measures of conciliation as gre in its present power to epact, and .to submit to: this | session atnendmgnts of che Constitution, for ratification by the: Convention of the |- several States. and that, in. the failure of Csngtess to 'act, the' Legislature of. ['this State bei. requested to take , the steps, under the Constitution, for summoning a general , Convention for proposing amendments to that \instru- ment.. - Resolved, That in the opinion of 'this Conventions compliance with the re- quest of the Legislature of Virginia that Commissioners from the Revaral States .be sent; fo Washington to confer upon the presentfcrisis in the affairs of the na- tion, is eminently proper and expedient; vl aud wart ust that the Eegislature-of this £0 trs {State will immediately respond . to such request by the appointment of such Com- mieSioners Buf further - . Resolved; That should our Legislature not appoint said Commissioners, in view | of theimportance of that This Coorention hersby appoint Millard Fill- more, Addison Gardner, Greene C. Bron- ] | son, Erastus Corning, Horatio © Wa‘slnngton Hunt, Amasa J. Parker, 'Charles O'Conor and Samuel J. Tilden part: of the friends of conciliation in the State of | New York- <-- Resolved, Pending these remedial nneasures, we implore the: States in the attitude of 6 Secession to stay the sword | and-save flie nation from civil war, until the: # sober second thought\ of the peo- «ple of all the States can be rendered of- ficient in perfecting the. work of com- promise and: in the restoration of peace. To'the Southern States which bave not seceded we also earnestly appeal, to join 'hands with us in staying the progress of f dissolution, and in preparing the minds 'of our countrymen to mest on some com- . District, GgSamuel J; Tilden and Gilbeit Dean . of NewYork: ~ Second District, W. H. Ludlow. of Stiffoll and ingsunless they intend to make God the Author of sin, Let Every - Honest man'| ~: [Examing the' 'Soriptures, 'V.. Dyok Re: a Herons: Lqvitions 25 44, 4a, the Jews : 1 ~Sava'|~~ W. ‘ William Kelley of | Dutchessr Third 'yas ta buy there Bond, man. ndd Maid ‘an fizzy?” like Scfichbfidgéeki X Re on ovo JB District; A.C. Niven of Bulli fan wad of therd:NMebouts the: Heathens, and. off bad. fwho read the: 'Walohmar ve Severe) {OnE ( t.! Indge. Willard 'of Troy.. Fourth Dis: the Heathens that:- Lived among them, mark which . at- | trict, Jolin Cramer of Saratoga :and A. and thos@ thatS6ld them must, of had. ie, fOllOv-‘lng ;| 0. Hows. Ofgssd 'Fifth. District H. Some: Right to soll them, the Jair, ©'otter weighty. reasons fms snehfbahg & 310313“? id [ama red. with an outburst of have to buy'stolen men- and mai ade tho: Watchman, whi Pue. fierlrimor. ixth «District, allar \ e was received with an outburs! any Honest: man;. Reléete- a Ju ‘re 8.030; \ of Cortland and C. Stebbingof Madison, enthusiastic applause. : He said : would aprove or countence's unjust l'roin a Roman Catholic neiOhhor—(an Beventh District, Isaac Butts of . Monroe |; Crnitemey or tez Coxvexmon: I one Resson fry the' Jew, was to 'Buy \of PO and. George® Hastings 'of, Livuigston. aro iar advanced in years, and not in the '\ there near Nabours wisthat they might | 7 ; | Eighth, District, G.« Wy Clinton andJ | habit of \attending conventions of this no thoAhe Purch: was oanfull ong, NO | rea éVerplsnk of Erie. 2. character 'but I gould not resist com- Honést man -will buy stolen or. unlqwl'ull .. The Hon, Horatio Say mour, appeared ing here to énter my proféest against civ- good,; the 46 Verse; 'there, Bond; men |\ onthe tnud 'and was received with en- il war- I have Been the Horrors of such 'and maid, was aPhl‘t aud Parcel\ of the :] thusfastic; applause. 'He\ 'addressed the.] a conflict.. In the war of 1812 niy house familey 'at: the Death of the Purcher, | Convention at: length,\ in a, speech 'of io Plattsburgh. was sacked by the Brit- they was the «Property of the Heir at ~ 1,\ | marich force and eloquence. ~*~ ish. ~A battle was fought opposite my Law, he had. no Right to- sell \them or 5 'At the conclusion :of 'Mr. Seymours very doors, and the bullets that were A ks the applau a4\ enthlulsgmuc, fired fall 1th hailstonestnround nay davwell- io 0 2 ; . . 'land the, Conventions Journed ti 9 1 2 mg' n the ~caserfient of my door re- tilts-£23 3323236 Ex: i Re chrfglxilil’leyl : k l, i hienges show on-. < \Sl il to: morrow. 'mains; to \this day, embedded one of senséis a man Life time, At other. timés | persuasi ¢ ; . ALBANY, Feb. I. 1861 -| those bullets, a memento of the fight. for Eternity, the Jows Now this. was the The. Democratic 'State Convention In that struggle I saw my fellow citi- Lai of Cbd before 'he mada the, Purch, reassembled at 10 o'clock this: morning. zen8 'Hot down\ by my side. hé:Bought:ths: Bond. mando for is ere \. The attendance was larger than on the I know, then, the horrors of a foreign Zime, if he~'Sold;- him 'or Barterd him first day, the ~entire hall and galleries 'war, and they are nothing: as compared away he Brock: the\ contract, and Dis being densely crowded. \> with the horrors of a civil war. ~A civil 'obayed . God: Law: \this would be\ Sim, |- .~Mr,: Ludlow. from the 00min te on W131 “film“ among brethren, 2° are there was only. two * way,; a 'Bondéman.| | resolutions. reported .A unanimous. series, 4!\ brethren in this Confederacy of States Phillt Kibe g Hor Amend d ( Oomtltntlor: { ; mor ground, where they may preserve to themsélveés' and their posterity that Constitution and Union which has heen fraught with so much,\ happiness to this people On the secon lutionhemg read, Chancellor Walworth appeared on the platform, and his venerable look claimed instant attention from 'the\ Convention, Wfsm‘msfmz wife with daughter and two sons .sleep in one rbom, Watohgeld-A~ Iather and three, douahters sleep: ifong room on ground | fiaor ;. sqveral persons in a two roomed cottage of whom two-are. lodgers sleep-, 'f ing in t heynutry, a fathorsleepingwnh his daughter, 17 ; years \of a age, and the . wife in another Hed. .~..; - . Shrivenhnin—Six. cotta es, havmg 35 g] nlfiifilh‘lyfihg; athzbmlglggyé) UB- | inmates,\ sleeping in 5x bedrooms, of procurin r - the desired mformntl’ou. While reg {$20 {79th growh' up sopwand daugh to Ma tnmlznefi fig“; Eb dgydfiilh’tlll/i $th mic- * Long wot-Man. nndmfe wrih A child mormon Piitribts gro aovn aiken to d 16 Tie “zit I“ o {ll l\ gem. flatly £353“ a gill?“ hesdqharterr and hnéoremon- 33?th Jill? fifbngondxgfiizn: 21,22}; mghui‘lweflfi h note of 5mm“ on will be fxfmfmfg“ to be “mint“. the fog in one room ; two daughters, each if“: vols win returnsg for Irwin filmy: Fourteen: later, in 1490, the Bat. | si. | ”Gfi flg‘é’ogw-‘L $37°a3m§ & Bronson. **'se§sqqsse§h‘§l§r§l’£€“°' Saule the's “m“‘é‘ll’lil flfilfifilfimllo sll t. ttlio Into olegtion, for pubMc fillhfll‘v’a taliltdtho a! otod olth'o retested distrofe gaingt ded gens! Cumin Greene C. _ 510981 ‘JthCIBMiN 10] 559 tare'figforany thmy'f” we cannot .endorse. ; for .- pnmon .; Chn't - inches to the. local spring { near at hand ia Tus | with an illegitimate child; & son, aged ¢ 20, cohabiting with a woman, and. four \other persons, making A0 in\one oom with two beds. . Fernham--Eleven persons sleeping in two bedrooms, both on the ground floor ; Keven persons ditlo; ten persons ditto, son 'and daughter, over ©16 . years of ago, wrth two.othér persons, sleeping \in otie \room'; three sona and a daughter | and two younger children, with: father and mother,.sleeping in a room 8 by 12 feet; two single men lodging with a toin and wife, with fourchildren, making eight persons,\ 'sleqping: in one. roopi; Tabirmed, for rt King's Mountain took plate in | North Carolina. - Col. Fer guion, who [commanded one of: CornWallis's divis: fons, was attacked and surrounded 'by |° a formidably body of backwoodsmen; many of them from Kentucky: and: (Tonnggaoo, and sfter stru gle, they. were utterly defeated, afte? t roe Pht. 2, Olartér V. Wyok recetred | hunds Hater af ll. mont'rtivo In-Gbgross, unholfuhor £22313?! 11232321513; He$$t§§hlgi 1m mm 0. It. Yan Wyok 1 vote for| countrymen; -* wore hin I“! rill‘gl' 6.3 0:15:21, 6mm \I voto for Blow spot. \ c Ed “P011 “IE Ore , Ne « M Qovernor; Ohn. Yan. Wyok 1 volo and D. any , othor soul-batrowing m,“ i “at,“ ard 0. ty. Yanik a Yoto nad ohorsotemtro of those. +4 11mm“ helm 80 \l\ for coronor, Philllp whom 150 your or Juatige of Her-lone a Yowd for Member of 'B. ING.-—Bothol lst, 1, Jan L. Atow»| ”We? tonal olism, Sitt Bn,\ on rs». H. V? yok 1 yolo fox Merabor of Assembly umlooon, John 0, Mall geosived 2 votér for Spo- oll Qounty Jud :* Cosheston, Bartér them\ way, fs Good ghat- | .;, ism, im. making up the tigke Aof town of Form se: antagonisms should not a ready henhzed‘in a paralysed tales, 'indnstry,_m; a broken:and\ distracted DAR“! Bt John 1 voto in; gran; Jamar L . Frotmont, Disb man 3mm ¥. ie i. Be. 9.Aer \Wand n Uongront mollk 2 voter “31:1! ll: lltzvom $? m d fut Bpoolat Co, Judge. avn Hs Hot Hepresonts his 'too vote for Member 6 Ammo): Wkklvoto for 308m?“ vo in con Mun! I vats for oun vote for Go. Clark, nor avotou for IUv + ty Char . on, Dist. 1ot, charm? Wyok 1 vote, r hates y Van Tok pote a fou flamingo? é ot ongrem flor A County C Representative In Gon» tried bagn's souls,\ *days which [ two brothers: and two sisters, above 16 . Niven 1 vote. for ofioon veto for Te narrates: notfi Olrk. ember, Mak 1; Jo-i mum voto for Tteprexgn- 7:00. Vim Wyok 1 vote Imb- .Gsrdnor 1 C urry 2 votes foe Oo, Clork.]' . Joli a $aiiex A communion? f more numerous, (Influence of \passions protracted sectional controversy. For What the Republicans aro R npo nsible, : ~' y The Republican part might be collated; but they would fninflygdepiot the hor. H rors of n fratricidal war taking place at this: more advanced . stage of our t history, with a population tem: times and acting under the engendered by Who ato responsible for the prime t 111g in ong. room. \lodgers making twelve persons, sleepin in two rooms.: A Tanngdon.—Sixteen collagesJn Red- 'row ; this is stated to be the .most wreiched ~ plage the \reporter ever saw. Nine cottages lately indicted for' & his '. ancd, but still very bad. - In :one:cottsge | the drain flows .into the sitting room; e:- ears 'of age, with father, mother and four children, malnnrr ten persons sleep- Littlewofth.-Man and wife. with - grown-up son, five children, and four. of the Preserit time may.only be a war:) 11ng time, the Jews was forbid to Deal. in Stolen men under: & Sever Penalty, 8 and Selleth, him, .or if He': be ' found ' in imits Jew and Gen- tiles, are' Law, Deuteronomy (4. 1 if aren, be found Stéaling '. any 'of .Death, ther i (ils no \Exodus:$L16 hé\ thrt -stealeth 'a oin |' is Hand, he Shall -Suréely?be Put to | -could obtain: his : freoddom, when 'the l., in family of the: Pucker hecom Extingt, 'or proce when God Destroyd the’Nationaltv of a } Nationy Lhave mo: Doubt that- mill: he | therfate.6f our Southern States at\ some [ time; if this kif of Blavery is not got Rid | luxury of reading copies:for which they have paid: like men ~* O, person, person i Stop writing sil- fly 'for . H Inake no 'more.. pol cal harangues—Jtry to exercise brotherly - Jove toward your : clerical neighbors—don't he a station \couritry * wae caf t appeal to ien »ow,. pomtinu them to: practical results \Tor proof that? oarpredictions lof. the bnnefiil consequences fo; ibe apprehended from: ; the suceess:0 n‘eétropal party, were well: grounded truthful\ utterances, and # not vaip' 'indag mugs circulated for politi- cal effect (Itis necessary;: 'and would produce a salutary effect to rebuke 'the\ turbulent and rations snirit manifested ' by many 'of the principal men of. the Republican Resolved, That, the éfisis into which [ the:country:Bas been thrown by the con- flick: of sectional pensions, .and | which has-alreadyresulted <in thedeclared: ge- CEEBIOB‘Df six: States, and . the threatened cooperation 'of nearly /all the other States of.the South with them;, the seiz- | curb of Government property and of the F¥edéraldefenses-the confronting of the disaffected. States 'and \of. the. Federal Governinert? in the attitude and with | 'the armament of civil.-war-is 'of such a mature: sswiaismg All patriotic: citizens |. above the:consideratipns of party, should Ampel them,to 'the by which: '-the people of the South are our breth- ren-not only' nominally, but actually out brethren. In-Georgia alone, I 'have the names of one thousand citizens whose ancéstors were the near relatives of my own.. In thg sama State alone are over one hundréd-relatives of The Afamily- of Hillhouse, whose sania is known as that «of one of the patriots of the Revolution, aud whose: descendant how occiipies a seat in our State Senate.. 'And fo scattered all-over the South- erii States, are all”near relatives of the men of theaVorth, and, perhaps, there is scarcely, a member of this; . Convention ' and in anbther the drain-atfront door h 'Who nie Edab 01“th for. the. m‘k' Is offensive.\ Three edttages arebadly of his Brethera ot'Isral and maketh Hone which Bavaheoirlostl ThoRe- ' for «Water., 'Beveral tottages lns. shad agi chantdizeof‘him’p Selleth, hind, then | st the thiefsHall ' .who has'not some such ties i In the States l vote gum, 20, hunks homo Atleg V on £2 of the South. be as brutal, in ford rmntntlvoln ongrunt ; M 19m atthow R. Lindley Historian Iohn | alone these:calaimities may be averted or hd Wat ule lor 3 for County Ol | their further prog: ess arrested. publican party, otkp L. A. moi-o: L vote w Bloro vote for C olmtfl 8d, D. B. AtoJohn vo #, C. wate for Ram-storm 4 vota for vote for Byoolal dge, 0. Yanke ol, 0. Meribey of. ongetia;. David Slater 1 vote for Coun: Clef ; Nathan 0, alnrkzvotérror Bohobk loms tori R ; R ° OnOre Von. Wok 1 an d Con m ,B. Datby| - Who hoo! Ootamisy onoxfi’o Yfiohnstonl. n Tusten, Conlen Y. Whole Xyoto, Ohartes Yanok 1 pa I voto, Chatlon 2. Van Wick 1 ”mm 1 votoéhon Wyok 1 vote for \Who aro res The Republican party, lean batty. ~- «Who aro\ the op compromise to' save Row loan art y.. Horrors of GiVll Ware j . detordny. on boned one of the: Brook- lyn ltrry «boats, twt republioans syerd, thlk-] ing it a very b we, gs gar ¢ f)n se attanger of “mull form nfe ta: In a manner somewhat 6x» + glted, and difsoloning the marks ot what was oned n tortible wound Tn his \hroast aald that way reqalved whils battling Tor| Republi llbnty in Italy ; and thit if the gentle- whom ho then nddronod had any / ac« ml “Forum in olvll war, they would a?“ y of p lunfiln todfiintoslo horxars of this 'desoription. \Thera woo truth in the. semark.: It ware wall ifthe people of this 'countiy: could batter understand what olvil war . 18, with- out learning {t by their awn bitter expert #1100. ,'I‘hoy would stand\ appalled before doing ons aat which might pron pitate / it. homathlngmy be learned turning to the history of the Amorlonn 36V“ of. Indus paidente, From boginning' to end tho sondicts ofthe Whign and: were By Aite of surpoulng Atrocity, ~- oft ensign of, Hott: Stanwix; (on thal : Mohawk River, in the year 17 corded that Gan. oxkinior raltbd Abe. brix lila ofthe neighborhood to . relieve the Kort, but fall into on ambBuscads of (Tortes and Indt diane, and neighton mot: neighbor] - In dexaly confiict\ 'The encountor was} exessdingly do» grate; quarter wnesinlt at glvon go}; Adke lid hora were install- 449,\ says the hlstorlnn & when all was my en the anther Atill beld;; the mug, Ill at Into a nel hair’s Asarh 1. % \fr bl a??? saint nod been ipiwdsd nothai Inbtance, g moslty which rohwmgmfigifigfig throw:i 0064;700 At the uapttite of} Start Griawo dmmmw Copnbnt- Hout. After mo atl nfito x89) Q,“ The Armprlosn® lald down their mong mad din} randored to tho assailants : but The Ponamy:. ombastle style of \the no-|Th | acuity of subduing the Eoliihern States, | Wh tha» Uni-} 7 it 1s ra}: ho are in uvorot‘ coercin S ate Tho Republican arty. . g is \Who ard - deter stvil wart - Thel’tepq lican party. :- & ooould feseld fionltionmhloh Aftfea . 3: tryw Republican ; ho\ iii-om: fued. to- pr prevent ,( they cad) Civil mined the polip: publicans being \oarcied. gun} 'terraindd, 'honeat bf soldiers -—.‘roiir. Gomm: , uh—w— of lat {fig to Mr. mid Mra ofl of dig thetin. < Previdus fo this, - had torb: two othare, - hid proved fatal to,; (child nov FomiAing to o‘n’ t an dg fort the'\ hearts of the afflicted pr <The ~City of‘Hndson eo; hilation) -of= About * §,000, mint! new“?! &nd there as to fdety 1 the oi wreaked, wipon ap ° of thaiym 'yéar. . £46407 JEwo git, -eagh 12- Thg 'where: arrested. y ® they walkout, They : were.. committed.. to. aute Sf R sing? 310 ,000 im bat \stooks 'gre. continued, lod on by Major Broomfeld,| 3 a New Jordoy T ofi An . th e story /g on, whan he eatoredt tha Fort ha inquired who doimmazded,\ do, dyntd camo . forward saying, 41 did st, ii you do pow,\ odnmltnrodo Mvoring up his swordf— (thereupon, Broomfield , plugged .the: in- atruntent into Lodyard's branat. flirty .of a?! 3422234an of Connectiont whom : hg qunimanded, ware at. - te #, at the miasatore o ouln thrgzllo ottho Sus uohanrirjhgfimgifq’: tookadvant‘ifio of the ab senco of nently all u Ie hodlod mon, who wore thon, in y mndet Wwiinnwn. and Jedons gm! o moo white mon and- savage he wholg vill “fl wan desolatodmsdnholow women and olilldron who escaped to, t monntains Altorys % credible suffering. ho yorkbed under n On another gccasion, whon the British|in her ea 1m. in possguslon of Tong Ty) Island, Wash: n being anxipus to learn th mommy, Nathan Hale (6 g a doen \Kale College wo had pxgqumifiq‘ga 2 assignment it. son t wa weaks ago;; heclogloat andtio‘ooo' egrfnatdogs 'off {he Fresh Home, nuke may \of Philsdelp The in inc %. rum har to poison Horablt, four: olill'dront {Ff h Nal ly sold har an‘nxcellont { opritemernine (may l 'Wtticle, thlA s'mart B ng.wrong;,. was Bent to otMoitgamory, Ala, With a noto thitfiy‘plneluh ing no Inkling o tfi'v to take. the whi k whipping i in his plane. A little 'itisprouted sponsible for secession? 0 are responsible for - all trouble in our qountry # The ”Replillfi [« nonta, to an tl;o Union? Th}; . med .to proygke holy“ tragic osysoiof thousands out of emplo this the publican p ploy . ab thi time! hut have sattled al nog: (literate: that}2 fogg- xs omgorntii, ominous f IMIMKOHOLY Drame on Tannin TX Fauicy ay Drernr- fatil. disease \Is camping | yo ritkiBers of children.in the. River Uountisk; : In. Port Jams, Or A Aigo County,\ intently aohlldlag ong» | _ Hornbeck; tired 6 éon.Galled upon 'to follow to the which this terrible “£11110 ot ahi wreokh. ke tat Tloyda', stove n' drill. : five versals moi-10 average, \each day «Albany; on «48 /. . common - 4m?“ hr}; findmnlliprqhsbly‘ gust to' Ne Pilot Dhuglh Esq“ 'of\ Sonnet, 9 (Cayuga OCobnty,'1 osrocently Klimt“; 0 + ne at E‘srsonsnnttl peconte | 'T. 18 efw eading |- Auaband. and “unwant- egro having done -some. the. police: lait week, heating him to have. | ® a objeq g he got afriend to dJeliver 11. and 1 girl drapped &, core kernel r, at. Jersoy City, soveral a faw days since, - and & surgeon was called in 'he child is a little stats of 'drainage. > TLechlado.-A., man and wife, . with \ pell moll\ qogether., grown-up girl.all sleep in ord small room ; & widow, with tor yand 'p lodger, all'sleep in- one room i a! sow. aged 24; the ocoupan 16 decency, I says gm reporter hottnges are very hld i the .women, ~ - Luta cS I1, carofslyf'fit to'liva tt, [Saif eccl perty]: «ana cr | Wydfiren) “cotti‘égor # tle at 'down. Shildron and ' two In lnonogxoomzl = gik one small roo: d. wife with -tiwe. cl '\ 'dron, Jive: nd sleep in ote goom- * wretched lace,\! ? goers d abd a 3 & a widow with five? childi xhorfnthornll Steaping -I Drainage bad, ard a most dils idatodstatel c ~ Bullocks® Pits.-Fifteen cotta most dilapidated state, many of the (PtS 4/8 A tors, copinginiinc’kmnlh ngtor.- 'daughter, and s mone smallhoom” Pts \Dla g [Gommbnts 'froid the t London Timon]: € first is f ills timnt Soil rise. fFojecl as we read the s that“ fin! notiomqf Towfulness and wfulndss hove \nio place in suc hem, Our by fact? ard fay. worst \lodged\ thawqur :beas ufden, . 'more, in termswfslloplqng Adinnass, and oi’ii snthoirity i area at wi obs 0° report. Sram spbutlandish }:1 \diftrio; of z = remo } province. 'The res germ 8 Adt gmfrom Comemara.or: Y“ 'The 'eaie.ts close at. home, & | favorite coufty\ gf; a hoyr's run of the mia? irepolts, mormtygf 4 Unites what is to bad done ~ angwor to the guestrou. of landlords ta provide. afifficient 'and. wholgkome: aboden' for their laborers + and «xo. can \lumen fark TJ pike“; «- Temale lodgor: and five children, sleeping Buckiadd -A man and wile. With two grown-up girls and two other ghila« ren, alf sleeping in one room ; a man and wife, with four children, including a grown up son and daugh- 3 tyonlan‘slept for along time with a. ts Hyve 'with some regard a not seen any place, hero the unmarried Dahtottho 'pottages 'in B a village ar vol'yoldtroms - of them; ¢ Wrefoliedptnto' find olight to be taken Kikghton Lola—Most of the, cottages have only-one small? bedrooum, yét 'the | ; families arerlnrgomndthcanoi-ity’tsko \ma 'Todgets. Exatople-Mam and wifo. with men\snd :th¥e6 imen Todizers, mahngfl p‘e ons slhep- j and wife With grown- tip daughter fud son, and four illegiti- yonte children of daughters, #ll alger in. th '- Chime fiFathér with two daughters 80 gplljrgrown up; ; sleep-in--ofé ten and |: |: es generally on : t (p ofa ham Adt ge SAuillies 'of “son?“snd it da * A\ man-add mfefiwthi Mis! nughtqnmdzothert children, dass in ong rooms a man and wife, 'a ith his wife, all- sleep ifim Bible ns: JET children as an item |, es 'of. misery, but wa cannot | | 1g dichorrthisfibt is to create\ uny 11m! is the very gist of: the: \présent Here,how “Wis the truth told-oneé' Mme iipeached? erge; tod; that sit: lis | a moland, winner- N Mins, andm the 18 sit : ‘Vsl‘e 'think we can |- Itis the daty'* thoiv.sitates With w‘pémteddppgtmflflfgl‘i Gooheotonifintho € nd thou away Evil from a snio n forbid tsteaTmon sndm ; dize of him, where there Athonty'f'o to hnystolen men' & Dyck says, the Siti of Slayety was never is a Baze fased untruth, :I Timothy. i} 10..the Law is made,; {or innn<Slayers 1, 'men and Pack them on a ships Deck To |- «close with certainty of murdering two. or' . Dyck as 'been over' the | sea, he must no. what an awfull Desth i ‘ll‘, must be, for a man to be 'choaked\ by | own Vomit when Y. Dyék or 'any 'oth |-man can: Prove from - the \Bible th very in allit Parts is\ Ex- the illemshm Bspnd «men, and A intothe son,. V aegisgrsxtoflhn *Atofen: men; can 'it be Proved the' Iowa chained thera- Bon them; intoaPnblu- c markett. ot fail\ tp’Pe tV. Dy mad] a Great Blubdér to whips \them- throng Slavery He should have whipd nth ”and meqord A L851“ «Orme to: givergood \advice they te- for: using forgethis 'Tokn Brown Error; they that \take sworn : Perish mthjha wo! And Praying to thete. to give hp Ah# sin;6f : Slavery; before the. J udgmenlé 'off «GC 2.8 overtake them, if this is Crime thenso. -j much of tbsNorth‘ are Gruity1 If ySlsrs God’JSlaveryhs' use of thePresntvtroublcs, but 'anaz \tion is the occation;, we grow'd to: Big it: Burst, 'this -#ill <the, fate of:\ gfo our, fited States; zilziisq onr; orn: hon 'Therd ato two pointa:in Mr.. Tucker's pngtionel Pride -as: mado u ‘vflndw 1) at once nrrestnttzm Pride as\ Evil:Oavetnéss:-t6 45 the stirs ofglavery John Sneed . H8 Grover WEaIcouoBamn Mach: isin dur Judgmenfigustthé thinglfomho family [* If you ant your work do well;\ edipeditiouslyl, and handsomely} with ihcntiitmost stillness, p ng fiomngvaMschine Coders 150 'Chesmint: Strgot- ilsdelphn 495 Broadway, baty - Baltiingré; treet; fpoifinsti place otDavidMoGollohghdengnod be} 'and make Méichantdizs of theni, \V. | spoken of by Christ or his apostes this ~ thrée Hundred of them und throw them .so ‘ithl‘a @ | ~. «I men-and roaid together, and | Brought | 6. Sold | Dy is Jim-sledatthd unitairn {Eresc ofe;|: ore oon “Wit; mahi to\sleep\together, as the toad thiss the maching to do it. It runs BSU: orwhioh ihi very, much, Ii \tie. tel Iyonngdnd iner»Strest, “130st21 F- Jso the gospel Do thi And. man Stealers, no sin to . buy ' Stolen | mas h hands, nre perhsps, \would' not hate, been aby timiea and under different sircu d: AlLthese,wettrust,, Hed Fed upin 'ttie:fiitre hu fo. repose, burisd: s whicmthey» hid E:with.you; vd have: earned hing fynuraes‘fi ibilit igling'thoina:that environ onr' pat fow .are willing to lend ahslping handy ntlhe future is f th i Becker, and are sat- .és to his * call i? we.suspact than ubs; nesting; t: yf mile } ro hg over Graham: totllenpffllmlrzdésmyx e ha ve nododbtyonml'l findvour- h al the so ches ahd bruiseswe ave. re Rane geweraiwritten by us which [ f glll. ( using one hal &) cud heel yi: Granhbr'zthh s iate reach by an expression of their opinion perso | nLSalem uncafe authorized 10: their, customers 'the privilege \of man's oke against any com: 3 the Jcarse of slavery, aud | Tepublicans would F sas blotted out of th an: Republic. Sif ny. cof- mixo-ss- that, - roposed shoul 'be 0° party} which, in woul dcr’ushthe republish party A {honest, well- meaning:); «powers * & sllhatrn iMongcup y “$1933?“ \For ey 5 those now 'beyond their] |- ATh e tomhon of the Union and the reinwg ; tanrtrqoncesmon Awhile our 'Government, I of} of the Louisiana poréhase, exceeding n party atthe Notth claim that they should: :~Resolved,; That in 'the opinion of this Convention. the worst and most ineffec, :| tive arguinent: that 'can be addressed by jal. the Confederacy or its adhering members secefling States. is: civil: war.- letwnr will fot. resto the Union, reconstruc- ration bfithe:Conslitution only . tothe {ofthat spirit of gonciltation gin ' which: they were ~] fonnded:p afd'that, 'there is nothing in | ;| the nature :of Ilénding difficulties which, a does it- proper to. adjust them y ~comptotmies \sich as 'by the pric tics of- our: Government, have been re- 'sorted. to in the Settlement 'of disputed \claims evén~with foreign nations - Thit believingits title to the Territories in' ~the' northeastern. four originkt iterritory 'and also '«rpart | all-the» domain? w ich the South, \_ | deomands in Joint occupation-that hav-) 6 * ing concéded thus muck to a 'foreign 'ia- | if | tion:in:the. interest; of peace, it -would 'be monstrous. to refuse to .Acttle ' elaimg be- . | Aeenzthe people 'of our oh land, and | avert “destructiom iom > -0ur, com country bya'sivailar. compromise : « Resolved, That,. wherent 4b-is obvious that'the di ssolution of, the: Union. 'only be prevented by- the of a | \policy\ which shall be sntefac Border States;, itis of them. in their patriotic ithese: controversies And: inasmuch '2s. support. | these.questions gro :\ tion: of. territories Bot jank etherefro tom time to\ time, bee Resolved, Phat inasmuch as the\ pol tical convulsidug. Whiclithreated the de traction of the tountry»were:n contem cplntsd At/the;tithe; ( nithe & {which |, cin a P est e sef- , thes adoption of the Crittenden ositL» other measure act & States,) a and that {| regret. th yto‘he ifforts to adjust |- '| was.rendéred yet more impressing \, affecting - when-Mr. W. H.=Carroll took ['the floor, and with all, the. eloquence of ; | deep feeling appealed to the North to .my opinion, to send men to butcher our own brothers of the Southern . States as it would :be to massacre them in the 'N orthern States.\ We are told, however, 'that it is our duty-to, andwe 'must. en- force thelaw. | But why-and. what laws .are toshe enforced ? © There were laws that were to be enforeed in the \ time of the American Revolution, and the Brit- Ish Parliament and Lord North sent ar- 'i jes here fo Enforce - them.. But what «did Washington: say in regard to the or- forcement of those\ lawat That man- honored at home and abrogd more than. any other man on earth ever was honor- ad -did Ha go for eafforcing> the laws ? No, he went to resist laws that were op- pressive agaiust a free people and against . the injustice of which they rebslled. Did Lord. Chatham go for. enforcing the laws ? - 'No, he gloried in defense 'of the liberties of America. He 'faide' that 'memorable . declaration -in the British + Parliament \If I wat an American cit- : tzen,; instead of, as T: am, an Englishman, Thever would submit 160 such laws—nev- er, never, never;\ * Buck is, the spirit: that animates our Southern brethren; and shall we war up- ° on them for it? -No, : We: must avert givil war if possible, close - by ax- | horting: my brethred.to\ do all in \their power to ayert civil a mar,. ((C i vonviliation-anything . but; no: man among: us, in hi our, will ' conscience is clear and that hgreau lay his hand upon his heart and say, ~*I did all in my power to turn from the bosom. of my country the hor- | tible blow of a civil war,\\ -- George of Orange, and. Mr. Sou- Quéens, both natives of Virginia, responded in touching terms to the re- marks of Chancellor Walworth,; and a large portion of the - Convention gave velt to their feelings in' tears The scene © and Hand ére Rdid a any act to plunge in civil war. ° The venerable ppearanee of Mr: Carroll and his allus- 'to bis ancestor8; rone of whom signed éclgration of Independence, while S: 'his grandfather Daniel Gatroll; ceded to [the United 8 his manor on which tunds the Federal Capitol, touched he to . Convention, and when ~olosed; a unanimous call was the adoption 'of the second tes- elution, against civil wary: by - acclama- tlonyand it was carried With a burst of apple 6. 'that made the : rafters of the ‘blllldl ip.ring.. / This scene was the great feature 'of the morning session. > The, resofutions were then adopted +. Without amendment, > Recess. {.. AFTERNOON SESSION, ‘The Convention reassembled at 4. P. Io md Mr. Cook of New York moved that the \thanks of this Convention be ten- dared to the Hon,. Simon Cameron; U. - S. Senator from Pennsylvania, for the noble stand he has taken for the Union. Adopted.: ~ h Ex Chancellor Walworth moved a a. | afmilar - vote to the Hon, John J; Critten- eng U... S..Senator from Kentucky. ° dopted with acclamation. d 'On . motion - of Samuel - J. Tilden, & Compmittes; as appointed to correspond W131 democrats: of-other States, on the 'eu jedt of & General Convention to