- r , I clt ' : I J 4 i ) 1i ; rI . ; , , . ,. , ..i ' ' .'. ". II !' k V' 3ounrnL ,".. .. ',1 'ff','"mrt. t'1riJ: t.':7... , , ,,;" tf. , ," .Ii. J *' ." :' 1 ; , t. 1 ft f-< .. 1 r. _. ' , -- : ,. -- ..' --- . - :4' -- 1 .w BY HILTON ;DYKE. TALLAHASSEE, FA., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 21. 1850. VOLUME n-KO. 37. Thft; . _._ _._, : -. -- -- , -- -- ------ --- --- -------- -- ----- - '-r-- - -' -- -- -------- ------- -- -- ----- -- ,_._ . rr fJt.1' : ADDRESS t FROM MAJ.\ BEARD.) ; is the richt: of each citizen of each and every slavery ; ll.ese haws: nrr ssil! in force in Cali- ed, and with !scarcely a disguise, devised for Mr. Cabell and Major Beard on Disunion.Mr. Fr.m.the Jlndmt City- ,; : Stale to reside; with his properly/of eicry de. Curia: all New jl.exic-o, and we will not repeal tle nrin.jioUvon' of the man and the confisca- in his letter lo Gov. Brown, Good Ilewl-Glorious1ews t:i within such territorv.Resolved them bm if choose to enter into suchan linn of the Ca1JtJ Rcriplion ; yon And who have .the Frl'p I t To the Freemen of Florida. 2d. That in their opinion the arrangement we will do this-ire wi lake : soilers prfy. on this ing'orious assault speaking of the "passage of a 1\1 degrading Prospect of Payment fIt Indian Losses. l' r nl1olt' CL'=rn- : Compromise, known as the Missouri Compromise California hud New Mexico ; we wi I lye.1 upon the national jurisprudence and the constitutional lo our section," (the Wilmot Proviso,) says, is with no ordinary pl'asuretn.e: present l; ' .. As I am a candidate to represent you in the ," having been entered into by ,the tiough Texas 'lo make two more free soil ; rights of the South ? A statesman in in such an event, the Union WILL and TO the our readers, the letter glorious news contained In t"i. ' r, next (Ingress,nnd cannot see all of you, 1 lake National Congress, under mutual concessions. Slate, (if you, of the South will help us 'to pay front I among the foremost an eminent jurist, SHOULD be dissolved, and we should be pre. followin the Hon. D. L.from Yulee.our indefitigab'eSenator : F v 1 t thill a method to communicate with )ou. should hp sarredhiobserved" and tian'tlild. /for itj) and we wi past a law requiring! run'uway one of the great lights of tile land, who has have in that Unexpectedly : :i. There are just now two great subjects thai in forever; upon the Union. negroes the lice Slates lo be givenup made the ancient Black Letter and EnglUb pared. we jt a hope some day or other : Micros the attention of FloiidianR, one of ;Rrsolrrt 3d. That in the event the "Mis. if their masters will.convince of abo. Common Ithe study ot a lifetime ; who Let those who are turning up the whites of our citizens who have suffered so much from ;a . aJlrJ the Indian will have their losses . which concerns us Chiefly, the other concerns Compromise" shall he violated by our litionists that slavery is cOI8i the has held \ith Edward Coke and all the iheir eJf'a with horror and amazement at Mnj. What : Oasis this repaired.- fx. :\ t a refreshing is tIt whole Union. The one is the condition of Northern brethren, it will be the duty of the laws of God, and that the negroes are slates Feudal ts from porlt's malboo through a I Beard's preference of secession to the Clay that for the last t months, have to earn e relations: the other i is the the and that the claimants the real owner:. : distinguished seven heard of ,:: our Indian slaverycurstum. Southern representation to CIIJack upon are career, up a mature old age, Surrender Bill, meditate on the sentence from nothing but I shall }begin with the latter. constitutional ground of equality justice ; This, fellow citizens, is the substance of the that in nil trials; for life or for freedom, the ticinage fJrefoinl Congress infringement upon 10''' '. k r The design i of the Constitution of the Uni. and should ihe Constitutional barrier prove in. famous Compromise" lo which w(must consent : nf the. facts must be the forum of the which Mr. Cahel, in his late! circular, our rihs.; This bill in company with see.., ki , jed States as asserted in the preamble, was"to sufficient to secure to us an equal inheritanceand or lIe called traitors. ..Irla; I mean the scholar, the jlris.clnrll, fays expresses hi' sentiments now." Incase ral oilier touching the private interests of :,c/. .* .' form a more perfect union, establish+ justice privileges of freemen, then to withdraw For one I will never agree to aiy such statesman, Senator We'' ster II :acnl. of the passage of the Proviso, Mr. Cabell says the many of our citizen is waiting the action of( i ';. House of Insure dJm 'tic trRIq'llllitJ'' ," k *. fiom the National Congress, and return to terms ; they may cal m(traitor, di inionist.or fel,. What a contrast is here, to the lofiy not alone that he would prefer disunion to i its Representatives : :'.. .. t Are these objects promoted by the conduct their constituents.At what they please ; would! resist to the ** last ., eminence he stood on but a few months ago;, I I adoption, hurt in case of its adoption, he advises WASHINGTON, Aug. 24, 1850. .v..,.\ , of ihe Northern States: ? Is j justice done lo the the next succeeding session Gov. Mose- extremitv." when in the presence of the nation, he arraigned I disunion. The Union will and hull be dis DnR Sin.-I send you a copy of a very .t' t. Smith bv encouraging !i'i r slaves to runaway, Icy again, in his message, adverted to slaveryagitation. The Southern States hive taken it length- the North's aggressions, plead the I important and valuable bill orderedby a large fl . and bv protecting them instead delivering their proper stand: ; from this they cannot re. I South's wrongs, and implored from the justiceof solved'hat! then, is the difference on this rate to he e" rosst'd. As ii ia a bill of great 4 them up ? Or is i it done I bv efforts to exclude This part of the message was responded! lo cede without immediate disgrace, and ultimate Congress, the enactment of Affective provisions point between him and Major Beard ? The I interest' to the citizens of Florida> I have to i, ' Southern men from Territories which they h by, the passage of the following r resoluiions, II ruin. The cause is t common cause ; one to enforce the plain guarantees of ibe Wilmol Proviso, though more insulting, is less I ask )"u will published it for their information ''':, iheir and blood without } State if she wished, Conitulion: for the and I trust it will find 'the favor in the House w I helped to acquire by treasure ? both Houses of the .hsel\Ij uppoi S"'lllfr' cannot separate protection security of injurious to the South (ban the Clay Bill : for same :, b domestic tranquility promotea lay attacks on tioii : destiny from that of her neighbors; theyare the property-rights: of the citizens And what\ I of Representatives which it received in the :1:: , t our characters, and spoliations! tm our pioper- bound together by ties, which no powershort is devised a the great healing measure of the Proviso only proposed to deprive us of the Senate, y1 W tr; bv seditious speeches, papers, and pamph Resolutions relative to the question in controversy of Omnipotence can sunder. rf'mpdialjlstice 1 A reference of all the casesto whole of the Territory acquired from Mexicoby Yours rf'sppr..fiJlIy.. '0. between the North and lets I t designed to excite our slaves lo insurrec. RClth. Fellow citizens, we all cherish a habitualand I fdnatic juries impannelled from the very the late war, while the Clay Bill, in addi D. L. YULEE, .'. ' lion Resolved by the Senate and Ifmsc nf Rep.rcsenlaii hereditary)' love for the Union : but it is.. !sympathizers who have prompted the injury tion to robbing us of all this, proposed to takeaway Editor ANCIENT CITY. .. The seditious attacks referred lo, have res of the Stale of Florida in General the. Union that our sirEs bled for-an Union and wrought .the wrong, and whose plighted . from third of Texas.In . not been confined to a few mad men, but for Assembly convened, Thin as friends of .the I of equal rights-an Union to promote the principle of organized fellowship it i is, that man us me- A BILL to extend the tenefits of the Act to , years it Inns been the custom of several Northern Union, we view with most serious alarm the general welfare-not that. of a particular section can have no lawful properly in man, and the his speech, the sentiments" of which regulate intercourse with the Indian tribes ;' State authorities transmit lolhe independent course of our Northern brethren in relation to.I' J ; an Union 'to secure "domestic tranquil ,I only is>ue to t the jury is, whether the captured he .nme" entertains, Mr. Cabell said : and to preserve peace on the frontiers, approved :'" ' coequal sovereignties of the South., insulting 'question of slavery-a course which, maik- |lily" and not one to wjwfe us to the horrors of!I fugitive is ihe slave property of the person But, sir, I care not whether Congress !! the 30th June 1834, to the people of "u. resolutions, expostulations, and remon. ed by unkindness, wrong insult and injury f scrrile (negro) trr/r, excited by those who I who claims him !I" the constitutional power or not to exclude us the Stale of Texas and others. . trances on the subject of slavery. has already to a {, : extent, I ought to be our f iends.I But the error is of no consequence in reference 'fiom our common .territory. The exercise of That the provisions of the act entitled. , In his message to ihe Assembly' in 147, weakened the bonds which note thl'1 and us I love ihe Union with a reasonable affection. to tie goorl faille of the '* Cutnprcmiie.: thai power is against right and justice, and 1 An Act to regulate: trade and intercourse ;; '. Gov. Moseley directed the attention of that -which],, if persisted in, in the same spirit, not with 1 servile or fuper>ti.ioiis reverence, as The great Lexicographer, JoJI.SOX, sap : I t shall resist it as strongly as though it was with the Indian Iriles and lo preserve peace '. ' body to the ag tat ion respecting slavery ; and ran only terminate in further alienation, and i some great invisible deity. I I lore it fll the A compromise is a compact or bargain, in i'palpably and admittedly u1consti mal. 1 on the frontiers, approved June BO, 153-1. shall as parties; were then preparing for lh" ensu. the inf'illilt dissolution of the cnnlederacy.JrcoJred !en.itl it HAS "bestowed on us, and con l i I which some concessions are ?made on cpch 't 'il resist such a laic or th abolition t of slavery and ihe same are hereby declared lo bo ' ring presidential I election, I foresaw what was That the recently acquired lerrito.rv tint to love it (till it ceases to bestow beincs,1 side." in the Dittrict of Columbi o- the slave :. applicable in all respects to cases of Indian Ibe I-; . evident to every man who read public .journals having been purchased by blood and treus'ure and becomes the destroyer of our peace : Now no one can assert that the Compro-- trade between the States, or Slates, whatever I depredations committed in Alabama. Georgiaand that t the sacnquestion! would he the prominent which bpi full proportion was contribu. aft!!. Should I live to see that resul, I would muse Bill" made any concession to the South, may be the decision of the Supreme Court Florida, subsequent to the 1st day of Jan. one in the approat I.ingcontest. ted by the Sou.h: she and her sons are entitled hate the Union and I would in spirit, I unless the provision i for the delivery of runa. as to the powers of Congress. Laws so fatally I uary, 1936, and in Texas subsequent to the Anxious: to see the taro great parties" here equally, with any other portion of the Union. at least, sue-h a ithig as WASHINGTON was, way nego vas a concession. And if an unjust and oppressive, should not be submittedto d.uteof beraunexatiotr. Provided That when . united on a question vital to both alike, I drewa In the enjoyment of the same-ibis General whl'l he drew his sword against hip mollter assert that that provision, in any shape, is ) vhatecer rower may be conceded Con I there has been no superintendent agent, or set of resolutions designed as a common plat. Assembly, theiefore, belieiing that Congress country, and never sheathed it again till he became concession, I deny it. The Constitution: of the gress. You, gentlemen of the North t, would subagent, to whom the party injured by any \ bum on which democrats and whirs could: u. possesses under the Constitution no power to the "Father" of I hat country which fanatics United States guaranties this right. Without resist under similar: circumstances." Indian or Indians could apply, the claims of " nine in defence principles aied.ri;hts equal! pass such a measure, adopting similar Ian. are now plotting to ruin. this guaranty the SCI'bfT States irould not I Again in the same speech : such party may be examined and allowed in 'J df"lrlo each'party at the South. As I I'IIS nota guage to that of the Legislature of Virginia, Fellow citizens, we hire among us a band have agreed to the Union ; these States are the name manner as if they had been regular { Assembly- I Landed those resolu- declare it as their opinion, that, under IH circumstances of lawless ruthless savages, :that have sen'rl entitled by the tE.'rm of the CO.ffi'uiOl to ev- I South I repeat, sir, I have no (fears but that the. Iy acted on by such superintendent, agent or J.. .' maintain its and lions to a friend who introduced them in the will t the people of this Stale be times filled our State with mourning, which cry means of reclaiming their prop. can independence sustain suh-agent, in case the proofsh be satisfactory . runaway Senate ; the) were as follows, viz : willing to recognize as binding, an enactment I retards the settlement of the country, and renders i' erly. Consequently it is impossible for Con. I itll'lf in any struggle which" may result lhal the injury sustained otherwise comeswithin 1 from this * of the Federal Government; which has for its and life unsafe. laic this of or any other cause. "II i ij I the purview of this act." i 1. Resolred by the Scna'e and House of Rep. properly I gress to pats any to effect right the . j i must that I far far repeat hO\\'l'r, am , of in terrilory I very the object slavery any is under obligations . United Slates rnlafircs of t.4P State of Florida in General prohibition The government I Southern States, w hich can be properly called from , south of of the Missouri desiring a My only purposeis I #' A* fffiWv rout-rued. That the Constitution of compromise to remove ihis foe to our domestic a concession. rlarLti'J. Daily Florida Mail. u of' the United State determines how the powers holding it to be the natural ad independent iranquility." Their outrages last year caused The right of the South is complete and per. to ,ho\ that art not so entirely de- j. The Post Office Department at Washington, -1' . delegated to the Federal Government shall be right of each citizen, of each and every your Gov. (Moseley) to order out mitia1.. fed, under the Constitution ; and of course no l'enrrnlon to the; Fecra., Government, as dishonor to SUB has decided favorably upon the application for r " apportioned, distributed and! exercised, to pro. j State of the Confederacy, to go with his prop. unieers for your defence ; for this was act of Congress can add to the strength Mir and propositions to a daily mail from this city to Florida and an t -,. nr .te the welfare of the Union, and to protectthe erty, of whatever description! in any territery solently rebuked by the General Government surl right ; and experience admonishes o I what degrade i lt. If awe do tamely submit to. order has been issued to the contractor to commncc \ j i.proposed, friend from North Caroling peculiar: interests of the respective member acquired by ihe arms of the United Slates, or through a public officer who has since grownnotorious if the Constitution cannot protect us from I my the service on the 1st day of Oc'obe.r. "J Mr. CLINCMAN. deserve be [ ] lo saws we thereof; That the ratio adopted i'r i the yielded by treaty with any foreign power. for his success in a matter of prirate wrong it is vain to expect protection from the We understand that Mr. Wright cannot, with r framers of the Constitution as the basis and Rrsolred, That the abolition of slavery in interest. At length a portion of the Uiiied I majority who now construe that Constitution to think whipped sir through shall'our merit fields the by our slaves. I out heavy pecuniary loss, comply with the or. . nile. of apportionment of political power afn the District of Columbia, involving, 8 it does, States army. appeared among you to defend suit, their own purposes. the deeper disgraceof der. Il would require an outlay of some $9,- kicked of the ng the several States:, to be exercisialthrough an exercise of power not granted! by the Con. you and to r\"tho I'otiFiilution, to defeat or impair the op. : property and I lives of those whom we iep. by occupying it with our army before (he Mr, pecuniary in'crcst, my property interest.is constituting: a part of bin Circular. I to defer the daily line until pfier oral ion of the rule rf;red to, i is violation repent, we are rendy, heart and soul, with a irnn war, anJ by several other acts.: Hut' i, insignificant : but I hare an interest l which I Governor Call and lie Sentinel must either ihe opening oldie Railroad to Oglethorpe.Much .- I , able cif tle /i.it of that instrument and of ihe united fruit, to join Virginia, the Carolinas, (President FitLHOEE thinks that the country j figures cannot represent. 1 am in I as we desire, and need ibe daily mail, ', . poor everyj be silent t in regard to Major Beard else or lows ol good the those and the olher Southern States in taking to Mexicans still and lo I we are inclined to think that the of the t faith un p til tot making belongs Mongrels, as> I j Ining lu!children. T'tCSC are! my jewels; and : request . ouch attempt such measures for the defence of our rights and I I the Everglades 'belong! to Sam June There- I wish to protect and preserve, them from the bring Mr. C.hcl in fora share of their indig contractor is reasonable, and ought tu he complied ' =. lie it further Rewired, That the Wil- the preservation cf ourselves and those whom ; Tore Sum Jones is left in peaceable possessionof hand of the destro\er-from (the merciless ad. nation. with.-Jl/L/co/i Messenger and Journal i mot Proviso (socalled.) which seek lo we hold dear, as the-the highest i wisdom of f all and --- . is i pietentthe j E\'prglaJis OCR &rmy sent to establi locales of negro emancipation, and from free increase of outclass of Stales I by ;iinj os. may (whether through. a SOlder Con clt iCI, I t h Mexicans and Mongrels in possession Governor Quitman. Woman's Economy.-Governor CaiLour, of ing prohibitions unauthorized by the Constiiution. 01 otherwise) Ruggrht and devise. I of New Mexico: Comment on uch conduct negro uremlcy.JOnX BEARD. 'flip chivalrous Governor of Mississippi, Virginia, in an address before an agricultural . and subversive of (be conservative pi in. lltitolrcdi That a copy of these resolutions ;' is I is not my purpose to "slir September 17lh, ISoO.Correspondence backed by the people of his Stale, stands prepared society, says : L *t every man have the for-' ciples without( which a portion nf' the angina! be transmitted to the Go\'tror of each of the I UlleCCiSarj. :" I know that many of'nu -------- to sustain Texas in her struggle with titude to look his affairs in the faro, to keep . Stales would not hate assented to 'the[ Consti.tulion : J slave States, with a reuestlhat they be laid ate already eU serated-jiistl of the filer curt'. an account of his debts and items of expenditure : ' ) exasprra-I the United States, should a conflict out evinces the part of the advocates and l ofore the Logulatuies i as arc now in j j Ied-1 by wrongs, aggravated by insulting accuI WASHINGTON, Sept. J JO- grow no matter bow long or how black! the list ; '" supporters of aid Proviso," a spiiit hostile session.Parsed. I Rations of inciting hostilities against your own You will notice: I the proceedings that of her attempt to put down the rebell,oo in the if he don't look into it, his neighbors will-and1 ' <s.ly 5, 119. Approved by the Governor, 1649'J]11 j I My countrymen : I have nat sought the. i iI positi Messrs. DAVIS, BCTLKU, and other South first Federal gun that shall be fired against the ; if imprudent it will do no bum ; but t " tifTensive and ;insulting to the Southern pore the last winter I based it was on constitutional there are few of the latter, and I cheerfully During and spring the ngil. I I n now occupy : politics never had an ern Se:1lorf as without ' of Texas the of law tion of tie Republic ; and lending, unless Iu(. ation of the slavery}' and Territorial questions' in charm for me, certainly none strong enough ) objections WAS utterly futile, and was scarce people authority bear evidence to the care and economy of ' creased by those who alone can control it I with and will be a signal for the freemen from the Del. When in situation observe I lo Congress, became so threatening to the South cause me, for ti-e sake: of success, to profess (1trealed respect. Contitutiof woman. a to ' the inevitable dissolution of the con&:tdcru'* that the entire delegation in Congress from I principles that I did not cherish inmy hcartjs law are looked upon as idle words! in tIe strtigle aware to the Rio Grande to rally to the res can safely say, that I never knew a woman f' and separation of the States. ; Floods, cnnsidt-rcd. i their duty to warn their core," or to conceal such as I deemed rititl. of the North for sectional supremacy, and cue." The following letter from the Govern left to the care of an embarrassed estate that :- 4. Be further / &t,7r'td, That though the will of the dominant did not extricate it if it " of the one I constituents of the coming danger, and to re- I have no prejudices against the North.On .- are obliterated by rna.jorily. or of Mississippi, is the first response to the wa possible :.: jootigeet members, Florida is not the commend to them the of the with New England ' expediency sending contrary are asso- least tllaclied to the Union. But participating delegates the Southern convention, in pur. crated many of the most hallowed recollections I The amendment proposed by Mr. SKWAKD warning given by Mr.I Stephens and which% The Calhoun Slatue.-It was proposed to ." M ;u its glory and its fame-partaking of nuance of the resolutions of the Assembly.- ninny early life. I would do much to perpetuate to the bill f"r the abolition of.the slave trade in the language of the Southern Press, "we raise the statue of Calboun yesterday, but the f,, t>. the blessings uiiicb it secures and anxious to That Convention met in Nashville last June ; a good feeling between all sections of the in the District of Columbia, excited much feel commend to those who are still dreaming of wind was so strong that it was probably not ' perpetuate them,the will not bestow her con.tfdence eignt Southern States, Florida being of the union: : but that good feeling cannot 'be preserved lug among the Southern Senators, andit Southern submission :" attempted. Mr. Sproule, Agent of the Un on men who advocate, either directly number, were represented in the Convention ; by Jiosannahs to the union while .they and its author were characterised In no JACKSON 19 1850. d.rwritersIr.. Wbipple the diver; and boat . or indirectly course g4 f (fn.licy+ (r a eusuie there were nearly two hundred mIJer sc. I who control the government of that union pre. very complimentary terms by Messrs. ;\x. Aug. swain of the cutter >orris 1 nearly succeeded .a ' which like the Wilmot (r\'il'l, threatens to lected from the whig and democratic parties, vent its power to oppression. h lo GUM and D"ws Mr. DAYTON of New "Mr DEAK. SIR :-Your note of yesterday, in raising it on Saturday. Mr. Whipple, who ' sunder those ties. ubich should binn the. States without mature delihcr. this Union you must defend Inl'i your riglte prolong Jersey, and Mr. WINTHROP of Massachusetts, calling my attention to the comments of the was under the water about two; hours ascertained ,J' indusolul/ly. anon, ci"criminaton.Itr\ passed a set ofresolutionsand you must require" not only a cessation of wrongs, thought that the proposition to abolish slaveryin Vicksburg Whigupon an article inthe Sentinel that part of (he box is gone, but that In the foregoing resolutions there are sev.proposilions adopted llt' an address, proclaiming the rightsof but an abstinence from abuse and calumny: the District was i.timed. and that the amendment of Thursday last, was received late last night. the statue is uninjured, and nort lies complete feral the these crude ested, but they "I find nothing in youi article to justify thecomments ly imbeded in sound, which has no doubt con. , involving rights of the the South repudiating: the Compromise bill| if persisted in, wi inevitably destroy was I . ,Sta.tes'hicb few will deny, and none can con. which projvoted to violate those rights, and uttering the union, for they an incurable had no doubt that Congress had complete pow.er of ihe Whig, especially after the tributed to its safety. It will be recovered as r.j trovert. the determination to submit to(no com upon our honor and our 'sensibility ; woun over the subject, and that it should be exercised Missisjiippian of the 19th July. haddefined my soon as there is a lull in the weather.-JV. 1*. y.) . Will any one, for instance, assert that the promise short of the Missouri. compromise, .Never can true reconcilement grow at the proper time. Mr. CHASE cf Ohio position upon this subject. I therefore see no Tribune. l' ' old Southern Stales would have assented to with the jccognition of the right of the South.ern \\Jlt're wound of deadly hate have sunk so came out boldly I for the proposition, contend. reason to avai myself of your kind and obliging the Union, with the Constitution exists, to take their where deep." in" that it was right in itself and the proper offer deny that you spoke by authorityfrom When Congress assembled, the Southern 8 i fKOpl. property any me. no concealment, I have members generally asserted that the h' could they' 1.fore een, or had they suspectrd line of 30: 30, which was estab. Respectfully. &r, t time to vote for it was whenever it was pre. 1 8irinr ( South f should be known, that I had a right to a share of the ' the fwebility; that their means of de. lished first in 1820 when was admit. JOHN HEARD. sented. It was an important step to an important no objection new territories. fence" could be attacked by Wilmot Pro. ted, which was again lhssolR in 1613 end, and he was willing to take one stepat believe the title of Texas to the territory claim- Three days ago almost all the Southern members , riso' s recognized be by her on ibis side of the Rio Grande, to of the House voted that the right Texas and intimation here The s Executive Proviso's Missouri when Texas was annexed, and which a lime. was palpable wasa NOT wilh slavery be i indisputable ; that the forcible seizure of east of the Rio Grande, lo 42 north latitude, of future up and intention - California third time of a Compromises" in when the an recognized 1819, An has rtd.lng Compromi. . to convict of of Ibis the Executive attempt me by was good. .u, all tending to "defeat or impair the Territory of Oregon was established.I in the States. Messrs. : and BAD. any part territory national . op.elation want of candor, in alleging that .by a part of would be a wanton act of despotism, Now its is settled that the North of Mr. BUTLER gets not n