r. .. V i I . . : \ __I1'" ....._.. _....,._ [ _. -_-' ...-' ------....-------'--------__.-___-' !'ar-- --=--' ..... -_ ::: : -_r _. __ --- !:=. 'T- _. ,- .----- :_- -- !! !:_- l .. --' .- . * Soiivniii forever the dangerous questions agitating and I proclamation! : These were the celebrafed- and common interests of the States and no in Mr. Cabell and hs 'Texas Vote. Bills! for Eancombe. 1 Sljc() $Iori ion & threatening the of the Union. For John Randolph of Roanoke: and the other the bayonets of ill soldiery. By such feelings The vote which Cabell cast for the Mr. Cabell Laving awaited nine montni "" -_.. .- - - peace the ablest and most distinguished of the formed such of and until the Union first the by dismemberment held living alone, was of Texas is certainly one on te>J ete of the I this too ho denounced and as aisunioniit' R.B.HILTON&C.E.DYKE I was up celobriiies of Virginia, Lillipton." aUf'r alone has it been since adjoommcnt Tazewell. sentiments mintintd. the astdfrUhiii.ever Southern of (Congress, uhen given by a EDITORS: AND rk01>'nnron: fj ; And those are the poor thank Mr. Randolph then in shattered health, and by such sentiments alone, can it be pre. mot : T7hiCan b clout,is Dow i . --- ;h' .;.-- -- i Rcsolu and in the habits Representative. By this Bill the South busily engaged introducing 'bills fit the bene ' h he receives for standing up lo Whig! repugnance to of his whole served. O>X-E UKXYTIIIS KIOHTOFSECKSSIOXWHKXIT I , September 21 1850. life drafted series of resolutions yields to the rapacious demands of the free fit of Florida t For the benefit of Florida ; Saturday, lions unanimously adopted by a Whiff legislature a and read I CLAIMKD: AND PHKVEMT OR PUNISH up did ! -.-- ..- --. .- _. -_ .- ----- them from the hustings at a large public meet. ITS EXERCISE 11V FORCE, AND territory though for two large States. we .n 1 No. rt |i for the benefit ofE. t -- --- - .'! Oh, shame: !where is thy blush utLITARl soier ) C. D ]IOCn TIC NOMINATIONS And who are these men who thus denounce of ing his at mom Charlotte brilliant Court-House efforts in their, and made one SURELY ASMOHT IUl.CEtDS THE DAY, OCR!" DESTINY This territory while a part ofTua was Slave C"bel thin these mo\"ement are now made : support- A FREE IS FULFILLED AS Major Board) ? Some of ,them are n'TATivf.s rnoM I.CON : and fill tense of the many great and valuable services of demagogues" assembled in a South needs all her territory. Especiallydoes for the payment( of the late volunteers,another j of him weekly) filled with denunciations Andrew Jackson to the United Slates 1 W. D. Moseley, I Hugh Archer, have regularly constituted. Convention, should l.ave she need it, when she is told that she will for the payment of losses formerly incurred ; F. A. I D. the democratic party for the stand they) we owe it to our country and to posterity, to Dr.. .-----Byrd-- _._ .., j_ ...W.h..Gwynh.. ._ taken in behalf of Southern rights, in obe.' make our solemn protest against many of the nominated a candidate: against him. Now, be confined within her present limits-that by Indians, were introduced into the Senate - * ,- We are a thori7.rJ- --fft---annoai.cc- DAVID S.- dience to Wliig Re, olrc.f, and in response to doctrines of his late proclamation. although perhaps we ought not to be telling slavery being there confined, will become hI Mr. Yulee, and.fcate passed that body_ , Resolved, That Virginia is, and of right secrets Mr. C. is ignorant through the number of the slaves Where i is there evidence that Mr. .\LKI-n as a candidate fot Register of Public he promptings of their own love of right and yet as so blissfully profitless C. has ;, g. )Lands, ) at the election_._in October\ next. Jnh' 1:1:) 1 laired of wrong Surely) the people of Flori. might Stale ;to" be That a free she became sovereign so and}by her independent own SOTereign ofthestate of things past and present in Florida make emancipation inevitable. With such a done anything to carry these measures through h ' --- ---- -- -- ------ : The trit'lId ol' Mr. M 1. D, P.\PY announce him I (:ia will note these men, and express their ut. act, which has since been recognisedby we will inform him there is little doubt a prospect before r them. Mr. Cubell yet votes to the lJiuise of Representatives? He pleidj! a- a candidate for the office of Register of Public II, ter loathing: of such base disavowal! of their all the civilized world, and) has never been thai lad, the Democratic party been willing to give a portion of(he South, more than twiceas the slavery excitement and discussion a nix Lands July 0, Ift.V : own acts, in the only mode now left to them- disavowed, retracted, or in any wise impaii-: take him, notwithstanding the uncertainty of largo as New York, to the North !I'Ve excuse for having done nothing. His tomtit. - ed weakened by any subsequent act of hers. his '. ion the Southern and the because hav. well know that the the ballot box. po on question' say to the North our oppressors uents Senate, through Fellow citizens( !! we all cherish a Iiabitual through Resolved, That Virginia has never parted . and !hereditary] Jove (for the Union : l hut t it is AgMin do we disclaim the. issue the federal] with the right to reed the authority so del. fact that while he was preaching a Union ing full numerical power, have decreed that which Mr. Yule succeeded in carrying thetg' the Union ttiat! our biros bled for-an Union flran'uuM> ; force upon the country.) If dissolution egfitedfor good and sufficient! cause, nor the of the South for the sake of"-7 C. Cabellhe another slave State shall never be added to Bills, has been the scene of the lona discov flf> equal ri/it.c-un Union to promote the comes, it will not be the fault of the right judge of the sujficieney! of such route, 'was using his official influence againstthe the confederacy, and because. New Mexico, to sions upon the Compromise. I was onfj g 'C .\\'f'lfare-nol: that of a particular secticnt democratic its candidate. They do attd to srur/e from the confcilcracy, whenevershe democratic party: in procuring the di.smis- \hich ihe north of Texas is thus annexed, few weeks since that the separate Bill con. ; ; an Union tosernre: "domestic tranquil. i party or ) shall Jind the benefit/ (f Union ceded missal of democrats from office and the ap. has formed a Constitution excluding slavery. stituting that scheme, went to the House ( ' lily," and not one to cipovc: us to the horroisof not counsel it, or recommend it, and they will by its evils-union being the means of securing o a scrrtic (tifgro! ) rar, etcitcd; by those vIm not permit themselves to be placed in a false po- happiness, and not an end, to which they pointments of whigs in their stead :-notwithstanding What excuse Mr. C,1JeJ can make to the Representatives, where they were almost inj.- vvpht to be our friend" &ilion before the country by designing and artful should be. sacrificed. we say, all this, had the democratic constituents whose rights he has betrayed, we : mediately passed. If then, with such a dig.cuwion .- *'1 love the Union with a rraconab1erJeMon. olilicianswilhout: repelling cbargE',", brt h. Resolved, That while we utterly reprobate party been willing to see him return to his know not. Others who voted for the Bill, kept up wrek after week, and montl not with a servile or superstitious; reverence, as the doctrine of Nulificalion as equally without from .them libellous and seat opposition there is may assign as a reason doubts whether after month in (the Senate, these 'bills fort&tf made pome invisible deity. I lore it fr! the er directly) or indirectly), as weak and chievous, we cannot for that a great little or no doubt that there would have been Texas really owned this territory. Mr. Cab. relief of Florida have that , If the issue be the ofa . ( benefits' it HAS bestowed on ns, AND SKILL thretirefiz1se.\ ; mcur icason r give our countenance to principles, passt'l body Uf another Whig in ihcftcld, backed by strong ell can plead no such excuse I In his letter Mr. Cabell is to blame that they have ('oflMc: TO LOVE IT TILL IT ('J\ rs: TO IIUHLKSSINOS State secede, we accept it, and call upon equally unfounded and in the highest decree I h,1. not Dow : AND nncoMKSTnc: DEVTKOV.ru Gov. Brown and George T. Ward, aye, and dangerous to the liberties of the people. and influential friends from the West, Middle, he admits that the United States have no 1 lass'dthe House?-al least that they hare OF orjt TKACI AM> irnTv." upon B. C. Cabell, to stand up to the Repnb- Another of the resolutions ain a sharp and East As it was, even after the Demo: claim lo this country. I then, the United not been there voted upon. lad! a vole( been JOHN BEARD.: )jean faith, and we have no fears, Whigs thrust at :Mr. Livingston" as one of the de. cratic nomination was made, and after Mr. States had no claim to it, the right of Texas, taken and the Bills rejected, though we mig hi - ---- counsellors who wished :: := ::::: =-=-::::: : signing to influence Major Beard's Address. hough they be, that they will array themselves Gen. Jackson to disavow the principles to Cubell was re-nominated by certain Whigs according to Mr. Cabell, was perfect. Yet have attributed it to Mr. C's. want of talents We republith the Address; of Maj. Heard "iy the side of Federalism and against Slate which he owed his elevation to the Chief Mag- (the East, a m.cment'as made in the West, he votes away the money ofthe South, to buy and influence, there would be no proof of bis on the frt page of lo-day'g )paper, with n lights. Does the St'1Itillrlt'ud'r this issue ? islracy of the Government of the United State, i by leading Whigs, to bring out "a suitable up the land of the South, that it may furnish want attention to the interests of the Sate, Note explanatoiy of his rcmaiks the ------ ------. ---- and to transfer his real friends and supporters candidate for Congress." These gentlemen, soil for additional free States But it seems that he has not brought tip these on fugi- The Admission of California. bound hand and foot to his and their live slave Bill. bitterest it is true, finally abandoned their oppositionwhen It was not enough for Mr.I Cabell that his Rills in the House-has had no votetaken; on California, North and South of 30.30, with enemics-tlte ultra Federalists-ultra Hank it found that Mr. C. determin. with the whole] South should be them since the . ---- ---- --- ultra Menial was was constituent, though they long passed Sen. Tarultra her has fastened the Wilmot Proviso upon Improvementand (O:7Ciiigress: has decided to adjourn on the Hartford Co.ireniion; men,-// lwbitllalsroJl'erl ed to be a candidate, but "er.different would robbed of all the territory derived from Mexico ate ; one of ihem that for paying the vonn! . :3Uih: ) ) instant. 'iorn admitted into the Union. Another is I at State nights' and to their instru- have been their course, and that of 1 muiajorityofihe at thc expense ofiheir blood and treasure leers, a far buck a* last winter. We !leava : ----- -- --------- added to the Fiee. Slates. The power of tin* Disunion Not an Issue. men\ !, the venal and prostituted press by which Whig party, had he been the only can -that every foot out should be given to the to the voters and sufferers, to say whether Mr, 1 Xortb is thus made absolute. She has From (the tone of the 1at Florida Sentinel, < an ah.1 they have endeavored, and but too successfully, didate. So then Mr. Cabell is indebted to North ; he must throw into the bargain about Cabell has not been grossly negligent of h'i ; it is clearly manifest that that paper is endea.voiing ,,!ilion President the House of Ilpprescnta- I Ith'es lo influence! and mislead public opinion." the demagogues" referred to by him in hi* one third of the Sale! Texas And lie is duty to the State, and whether it not boyel and the Senate, clear majorities in both. Mr.\ Tazewell took a somewhat different, wi to make the election now pending turn but equally effective course. lIe wrote Ibir. Address, for his present attitude us the Whig claiming the votes of men of all parties for his \ to send some one to ,Washington, who : upon the issue of Union or Disunion. It seeks And nothing seems left to the South but sub- teen nunrbers in the Norfolk Herald upon the candidate for Congress, for it t is morally cer devotion to Southern interests So far from will attend to our interests. , indiiectly] 1: to create the i iwpresMon thai the mission. Yet was she not entitled to a pore Preside ni's Proclamation, o\er the signature tail that had there been no democratic nomination being entitled to them, he merits, for this vote, -" , tion (If this territory 7 Let the blood of herons of Virginian," but his nomme de plump from all Southern O Doctre. condemnation true Democratic) parry I ill in fa\or: of the latter, and there would have: been whig opposition sentence The last S has ' !!, been : from :Mexican battle: fields answer. Let formed no more disguise in masking the real ti"e ' cnleis at once into the piomnlgalion of doc. formidnble character. What men. of a mo t doctrine the f Does our the treasure pouted out by her like water author, than does that of Randolph of Roan on slavery question trines against; tic tight of any Slate, no mat. oke," the very humble peison who indites you; the result of such a contest would have been, Mr. Chase wa i in 1 favor of t the a Lo1tior the Senle include itself in this query ? If speak. Surely the portion I ing south of 36. ler for what cause, to secede! from the Union ) ) these Epistles. The whole series were writ no one can tell ; but this much may be said slavery in this Disirict, and said they so, we would! enquire what has been its doc. , -doc;rint's wfiicb the leaders( outs own par. 50 ought to have been hers. The'! populationin ten with the most commanding; ability-as for the Democratic parly-their support of thought that this Slave-trade bill was the la3t trine on the slavery question 1" In 134?, ; that portion. were unanimously opposed: ) to will be limply attested thl"O' the liberal quota step in this matter, were mistaken. The ty must disavow, or I be false to the history of him under such circumstances could only have Mr.I Cass was denounced for the nonintervention . ho mation of a State Government. Said lions from the last number, with which I pro. friends frredon would not stop here. lemaintainpc.1 their past !hi''es. We have elsewhere) shown been retained by an unequivocal, straight.for doctrine of \Ee Nicholson letter. Gen. ' M Ir. Gwin in the California Convention"not pose to strengthen my previous positions, andto that the act of abolition would \ ! what'cre the views of the fathers of the Ke. enrich, and adorn my present Epistle. lie ward, honest avowal of his true Southern po. flict no danger:; upon the Union." Taylor's mum,policy suited the Sentinel better. cabtl in thisConvention solitary vote was by a delegate publican paity on this secession doctrirte, at a a thus announces the right and the remedy for sition. They never could have advanced one This is the substance of remarks made by But perhaps the Whig organ includes the south of thU line, ((36.30: : ,) ; except breaches the of Constitution time when the present Executive Florida act. I : peg further in his support, while he was holding the free soil Senator from Ohio} Mr. Chase, Whig party in our" doctrine on 'the slave. those east against a State Government. There The Union of the States thus resling cd with that ral t J,and we ball not repeat them upona back dodging about. is not their motion made Seward of New York " 1 is reason to believe that the people there Convenantentercd into by every Stale with its or I on a by ry question. In 1849- a little later than the , Iierc. We will simply say that neither Coy: every co,Slates-when the terms of this Covenant wont to sustain men for such an office who are to amend Cla's slave trade bill, by insertinga resolutions quoted by the Sentinel as adoptedby dt"sircd'sta'er but overruled and they were Brown nor Maj. Ward can give their assent ) ; are supposed to be broken by any of them, as too timid to let their sentiments be known. provision abolishing slavery in the District the wealthy! and populous County of Madison ; the South suffers The' whole Pacific coast to the monstrous federal (dogmas their there is no common arbiter to decide betireen and all the time j' Dpromulges. First and last they prefer a Columbia. The motion was rejected, but the Whig Legislature resolved to acquiesce - which \\e acquired from !Mexicohasbeeti\ admitted the parties, it is of necessity, that such Stale : . We cannot belief that any State Democr-t to a Whig ; but when they arc so opinions were thrown out in the course of the in a Southern Convention, should one ... as a State-the South excluded] fromevery must judge fur itself and act as its otrnjudg.mcnt Kights Whig: however un\\, filing to secede foot of it may dictate. If in the honest eirrcisc of hard pressed as to be unable to find a suitable debate going to show what the South is to expect be agreed upon by the hghet: wisdom of( from the Union because of the admission of this judgment any sowreign Mate declares the man to represent them in their own ranks, and when the lime is fully come for the over all." Who eat their own word," when that ask she not well entitled to California' will deny secession as a right in Again we was Covenant broken by its co.States, and cltooseslo are drh.clio the support of a Whig, that Whig throw of the institution' there. He main. Convention was in agitation ? Who held it the last resort, and it is not for the Florida a portion of this territory ? If so, what has dissolve the Union thereby established for must be open and above board. There must tamed that the act of abolition would inflict as a body intended to make John C. Cal up defeated] her claim to it1 The answer is, a this cause, the has the perfect right to do so . Sentinel, with a single dash: of its pen, to blot ; be no concealments hangings back- no danger upon the Union." How does Mr. houn President ? Who denounced it a a Whig Administration has robbed her of her and this makes secession from the Union as to fiom the recollections of the past; the profound thai only." No wiring in and wiling cut, Chase know that ? He knows it from the. revolutionary assemblage i" Who gulphed rights. We s3).hal. if the South had unitedlylemanded party the 'till HI and masterly reasonings of a Tazewell, or a these she could have obtained them. There sir That's an interpretation. of the Leaving Whether the people snake that mare doub trck, history of the past. Who would have thought down own words," as put forth by the . Giles. But our main design in (his article is nature of this Government and of the poiccrs Was toing .\urth or coining !I" twelve months ago that such acts as the Compromise Whigs in :1 949, without a grimace or a groan I to notice the issue ths federal: is cvi. What pi evented her from doing:; this I Southern of the States over its unilyand destinies, from Let Mr. make the application - organ CabpI could have gone throngh Congress I What right has thi eater of words to prate! who either the first mind and the brilliant liv. - men were ignorantly or wilfully legal mo ' dently seeking fo force into the present canvass fuse to the South. Why was not the whole ing genius of this broad land, the accomplish. The Position of Georgia.I without danger to the Union-aye, without aboutour doctrine on the slavery question " ; and \\'e at onc., and without any he i. South represented in the Nashville Conven- ed but unambitious Mansfield, of this continent.It is probable that the Governor Georgia shivering it into fragments 1 .* Danger upon lie has never had any "doctrine" that we tation. protest. against, any !PCb i issue.! Nei. was <.f him the bruit came and lives to this will immediately call a convention of the peo. the Union !" No. no-no danger to the Union ever heard except the doctrine of subtris- tion ? Why did not the whole South, through or " iher the democratic (partyits\ candidates, nor day, that at the close of an overpowering argument pIe of that Slate, to lake into considerationthe so long as there are such advocates or sion to such bills as the Clay Compromise.- hat body, demand her rights ? She would] in the in Court , its presses, arc advocates disunion. In all Virginia Appeals measures lately passed by Congress.S'hat .- apologixts' for her encroachments in the South He has always been the bitter opponent of hen have obtained them. A multitude of reply to his creatcst living rival (Walter they have said and done, their efforts have action the Convention will take when as the Florida] Sentinel. The monstrous doc. to unite the South : witness his Jones)-lhat "ir inia'8 wises! every Whig partisans loved their parly helter than brighest, greatest attempt been directed to a preservation of the Union, their Ju.lge save one alone (John Marshall- assembled, it is impossible to say. We see fines of that paper would bind the South hand opposition to the Southern Address- the N'asa- country. They preferred holding on to by preserving the Constitution, the bond of that with their carried wayjby Taze well's reasonings and oratory that the Albany Patriot, and some o'her Democratic and foot, and leave her no remedy for her yule Convention, and the establishment: of the Union. They: would still save the Union, andso party to uniting Southern op- forgot that he was a JuDGE, and aboveall papers, are advocating non-intercourse wrongs. But we mistake the temper of the Press at Washington. .Oar doc- MMicnts[ in behalf Southern ri::Jits. that he was Spencer bane and in. a Souter ; far as this press! is concerned, flic efforts of as a means protecting Southern rights. Its people, Whigs and Democrats, if its federal forsooth t Surely: it will not be too much to expect the transport applause and exultation he exclaimed tine ils'condt'ctors will continue fo te diiectcd to probable that this will be the measure with their The meet acquiescence. South though submitting' to the monstrous "Great God what a man Taze. dogmas Now, 36 3D) does deprive u* of the powerof 1 that end, by urging unanimity our well which the will adopt. If fully car- Florida Sentinel . ) among peo.pic \\"rnngs'hich have been inflicted upon her is contention free suiter from Ohio and the emigrating with our property into perhaps ! ] for the! protection rights. common to them liy the late bills, to hold that party responsible I: would nOtspccil1ly call your Excct1en.cJ's carried out, it will accomplish much towards may both be mistaken in their calcula. four-fifths of this territory-it dots make this . 811.Vo cannot but regard the admission of notice to some further passages from this Southern safety and independence. But who lions of submission. discrimination, and it is, therefore,a' violation which has been instrumental in ( bringing upon brilliant article to those California and the dismemberment of Texas as strikingly apposite believes that those who have always opposed : of the Constitution.Sentinel.. her Had all hints in of iew . degradation. menacing recent cur opponents, your message as most high-handed. outrages Southern, whatever has been suggested for the lights. Yet, who was it that forced 36 30 originallyon upon protec- wielding the military and naval forces of the 1 or a majority of them, discharged their dutyto The new light non-interventionists can ony Florida right*, and severe, if not fatal, blows to South Government against one sovereign state, for ion of the Southern States, will now unite t the South ? The great idol ofthe bet, (He Union would be now safe, and see in the assertion that Congress ought cm interests. Still, if the South submits( as defending her integral limits from a rebellious with the body ofthe Southern people, in Sentinel, Henry Clay, backed and supported " ire safe in the enjoyrnertl of our rights. As it great and should] declare Mexican law to be inoperative . \vc presume she will, we have no alternativesave dismemberment, and for spurning the sordid favor of non-intercourse Who believes that any by the native State of the editor, Massachusetts is, though the Union rriay be preserved, our bribe to be offered her sabre's point that prohibits the South from going upon a ; of her two Thai State the vote We do than it the acquiescence. can no more they will not find some objections to on gave rights are gone. As the result of the late ac. and against another, for seceding from a jurisdiction to the Mexican territories, a surrender of ju. denounce the act uhich) wrongs and degradesher. ground that it aims at disunion, or agitation, Senators, and sixteen of tbe votes of her members : and tion Congress, we cart only look forward to fruitful tolerant of oppressions risdiction over the to Congress, and ' Let others laud and it if and sujPc of the House, for 36 30, for "ibis oJ: approve they) the abolitian slavery born violated (faith and a broken covenant. or is a measure ofultraism, consequentlyshould . will-we envy them not their patriotism ; but the final : iooner or later, or to They may satisfy your Excellency, that so be condemned These men may now, consequently if thai .hy can protect slavery tion of the Constitution," and but three vote ' disruption of the Confederacy. in the territories, it can destroy it. These them the of wanton a shedding of brethren's Lloc as the the it. Massachusetts "ever we deny to right pronouncing us for fear of popular indignation, approve against Verily ., ! disunionists because our feelings run in a dif. Secession-Republican Doctrine. message suggests and defends, might prove as measure they did, many of them, the South. new lights are a great deal wiser than theirforefather. ful,"as far back as 1820, could send only fhrte i utterly impotent for its objects, as the'\vhole a Senator Berrten, who is nearlyas ferent channel from their's. We are not yet The Whig organ having come out flat foot. i country is acknowledging it would be, fb'illy : era Convention when first suggested, but how men to Congress honest enough to vote ega1 l'' prepared to kiss the rod that smiles. us. Uni. ed in behalf of Federalism against Republic. criminal] and unspeakably calamitous the au : long woulJ it be before they would denounce good authority on this subject as the Flori. a violation the Constitution, and no woodt ;1 ted, the South might have secured r hef1 rights; anisrfl on the doctrine of recession, and hav. tb vividly depicts the political consequencesof non.intercourse as bitterly a they have denounced da Sentinel, says : that, in 1850, she ha* not a solitary citizM -united still, the may (preserve what is' left ing quoted Gen. acks6n's proclamation! wo tuch an Executive tear upon a sovereign all other expedients for the safety of Congress has authority, in various cases, to within o tih her borders, with the moral to her. publish tnc following extract fi'om'i: letter ad. Stale He says : pass laws in affirmance, and for the protectionofexisting nerve to another violation in the admission the South 1_ _ _ while it has to oppose ' "Such a war will differ from other rights- no power dressed to Mr.\ Fillmore by a writer signing every then :, As to the Dcrtibtfatic candidate for Con. of Californra. But now, th that Has before occured from the beginning; to ,. Attempt to Abolish Slavery in the District annul them. Freedom of the press trial) by a greu, lie does not, and never his, advised dis. himself Randolph of Roaftoke, showing that] day ; because, even by the most tontplete of Colombia jury, the right to be exempt from unreasonable heart of. the South is to receive the blow,and 1 union. With many 6thcf Southern men of how tne Democrats throughout t tne South re. success, its avowed object, cari nfeve'r bo; attained. ihe great argument in favor of the Surren. seizure and searches. with 'others, are const!. hence the elastic nature o a Massachusetts .1 tf Loth parties: lie believed (there were evils garded that document!! Now we should liketo Independence, conquesf' (, rcpafalfo'nof i der Dills! which have just passed Congresswas lutional rights. Congress may pass laws to conscience f if in Florida: intend security, punishment" 6f indignity( that would sellle the facilitate the enjoyment of these rights, while "volatmof greater than a dissolution of the Union which know tie whig parly wrongs they slavery q'ues- Three limeS has 36 30, this the South might be forced to cncodntef. lie henceforward to fight Under the }banner of! offered war; but, may victory all can be never achieved make by.Union successfu or re tion forever Adopt them, and we were laid they them bavo So,no if the authority righ' to to hold annul slaves! or is abridge a con the Constitution,ths been (forced upon tba deprecated the passage of the Compromise. undisguised! federalism! tVe should efpecialIy pairtlie breach of its broken covenant." an everlasting] r s would be given to North stitutioual right, the power to remove any obstructions I South by the North, and now, when the former ; I like (fo know if Coy: lirowri and Maj. Such the f whal to its in the ter. in it *V , Dill as a measure fraught with more ultimate The war waged to revive a broken covenant ern agitation. was promise enjoyment common has been willfcjg at last to :acqnietce injury to the South than even dissolution] and Ward, t tno latter a States rights man: believein of union, can never attain its avowed end. It is its fulfilment( The paper on which the ritories of the Union, would not draw after it measure for settling forever all differences le- for himself individually he preferred the latter the doctrine that the Federal Government may: bring conquest, may make loyal subjects, President signed these bills, thus mating the power to prevent its enjoyment for there the Ina tween the sections, it is denied us, and we ar word or hollow-hearted, pretended allies', bill it can. ,Congress may legislate pro. rather than encounter the evils the former has the I power l 16 toerco and reduce to submission not make real Unidri. The Union of free them t law, \a hardly dry, when Senator lection of a right guarantied by the Constitution told that it is a violation of the ConstitUtiOfl"Every would inevitably bring upon the country. For a sovereign State 7 'the former, tradition States can neither bo rnlde nor preserved by Sewafd, the 'hlglcader of the great State of but they cannot legislate to destroy it." thing is a violation ofthe CODslitui" that opinion lie has been denounced: and misrepresented tells us, took high gtound against the very force. .It is a solecism so to speak. Such a New York, .made a m ton for lice ertiaiitipa. This is the doctrine of Mr. Calhoun] Mr. now that proposes to per mit the South to go sr ; but he is not the first Southern. man proclamation quoted as authority by the Senti fanciful Union is consolidation in its most rib lion of the slaves lit lice District of Columbia. Stephens Georgia, and of nearly all of the where-nothing is a violation that "discrimi niL Maj.'ard, we learn, Wag an ardeht nullifier horrentform-wherein thE majority,will wield Chase from the State of Ohio powerful Mr. Statesmen of whose attachment and jealous regard for the but Southern any note. nates" against her. Would tbe Smnltup not only its own those assigned to powers . land of his birth, have }brought upon him a. and of course a secessionist ; we should tJttir subdued allies also said this was lice first step t other movements Look at This to the right; to go any where T WooU'.f'* Luse and calumny. Conscious, however, of like to know whether he has turned a summer 1 thank God that in his infinite wisdom !" meaning doubtless emancipation in The New York Sun, one of(he I least fanatical in the face of the federal bayonets? Not< *, the rectitude of his course: and the honesty set.Ve confess that we do not believe it. and mercy, he has been pleased thus to ordain. lice States 1! The only dissent to Seward's of all the Northern thus speaks of. if the "glorious Union" was likely to be sobered presses But to our extract, and a most interestingone The truths I have announced, ought and will proposition from Northern Senator to That 6* his intentions, he will continue to be the advo. a the admission of California : into fragments by it !L paper itis : teach moderation and forbearance to all who the lime. They deemed (the_ measure ditf''fl' proper, that looks lo secession or and interests cate Southern rights regardless Undoubtedly there will be clamor and do nothing of Gen. Jackson's warmest and a. value the Union of these States. Each wilt Lest c r. Many but to for the of Ihe yelp of look to the fearful to itself that thought postpone i pruen. clatter from the extreme and fanatic Southern lion: as the possible'results] of a practical in and consequences " blest friends remonstrance rose ) .. "Tray Blanche and Sweet heart,little dogs and all!" tested against doctrines up tinctured and tain pro. may attend iU own acts, and will abstain from Such was the position of that eminent con. membess-it is to be expected-but the final rying out of the "rlg' to g" any where. has taken in his admitted servativc, Mr. Wintlirop, for tvhdm Mr. Cab. result may pe written down with ceriainty.Their .- Heard to : ]Major high ground ted with the bane federalism: that they had pushing even powers oppression.TlfK Prosect decision Cotton Cropa-DiscouragiBg h Addresses lo the people of the State. Relying brought Daniel Webster and the federalists en RIGHT or SECESSION 18 TIlE RIGhT' OF ell once toted. for Speaker. Mr. Fillmore is rl be th dom of slavery in has been ibe c "I I known to baja favor ofthe Eventsare the United Ilsjinal suppression an Most disheartening claimed and their To nothing of An. It may bd by one today, measure. a 1'' vpon fa good faith of lit Resolve of a n'hig masse the marks into of wide snpporl.spread dissatisfaction say with another to-morrow, as each may find itself a. hastening to a more'tremendous consummation institution, is near at hand, and may h lo-e the appearance and ,)promise nfthec0U0c;?-, legislature, he sustained the Nashville Con which the Virginia jourals I teemed,-there grieved Its apprehended erlls ,may easily; ( Next Congress will witness their upon as one of th most triumphant, ever since the storm. Many planter, are u.'J'-5-9 venlion and believing that the, line recom. were two of the most remarkable men of the Be guarded against, by exercising doubtful Yel the thought of resist. fought cud Ion, yet recorded in th world's1LitOrl they uSl! nut ma'.o iu.-re tf1i la:1: arcrop pau.Liitblighted : I tm/i ance is treason !f'e, are called to It will have been a victory) without while all are Uienj c -' be. less thon the nor pressing legitimate upon prote that body 'to no times and who had largely contributed to powers powers i Hond inrnd'dby become The of to the North by the present election! that we bloodshed.-'a] victory principle over habit hope 1cd! in, : . who took decldtd they szcurtty, The. 'c entitled to, he advocated i it Gen. Jackson's elevation, now doubtful. WI .' outh justly und'aisoeiation of ofibal cf was bow to anyihingishe Impose. RIGHT over WKOICG. fall as a measure which, if fcccurcd, would settle ground against such of tire doctrines of the Union is (0 the common aICclohS \"i may certainly very lbort -