THE SIGNAL OP LIBERTY. ^"•'-W»V8»»- -

THE INVIOLABILITY OF INDIVIDUAL RIGHTS IS THE ONLY SECURITY TO PUBLIC LIBERTY*

. FOSTER, . HECKLE Y, VOL. 4, NO. 1O. ANN ARBOR, MONDAY, JULY 1, 1844. 1VUOJLE NO. 166.

ure I am, that all the morbid matter, secreted TO THE GIRLS. SELECTIONS. THE SIGNAL OF LIBERTY n my system, has been put in motion—not in- COMMUNICATIONS. LIBERTY CONGRESSIONAL CON; Will be published every Monday morning, in eed yet routed out of the system, but routed from Habits of neatness, cleanliness and or- meeting to discuss slavery, and form tra«t VENTION—SECOND DISTRICT. Ann Arbor, Washtenaw County, Michigan, by r are indispensable to a female, if she ALVAN STEWART'S ADDRESS. associations. Encourage young men and ny particular location in the system; and suie I For the Signal of Liberty. At a Convention of the friends of Lil> in that, by the time I have gone through the or- The following is the concluding por- BECKLEY & FOSTER, ave any regard to the comfort of others, boys to speak on this question. THE CONSTITUTION PRO-SLAVERY. erty, held the 12th day of June, an or- FOR THK MICHIGAN STATS ANTI-SLAYJKBT So- eal enough, thesa morbid secretions will be en- tion of an Address to the Liberty men of r to her own. I have before told you, I would also respectfully suggest that THIC CONSTITUTION SANCTION* SLAVERY, AND ganization was effected by calling Honx CtBTY. rely expelled from tho body. The settled cough mt females are designed, not only to ex- the United States,' by Alvan Stewart, every tract association should provide THEREFOKE OUGHT TT) SE AMKKDKD. lat I had seems to be broken up entirely, I do L. F; Stevens to the Chair, and appoint- TKKMS.—Two dollars per annum, in advance. end the comforts of domestic life, but to Chairman of the National Liberty Com- Two dollars and fifty cents will be required, if ndeed, now and then, get a little cold, as do all themselves with a variety of Anti-Sla- MESSRS. EDITORS:—The Constitution of the ing Si S. Nichols Secretary. not paid till the expiration of six months. ie patients, but the cold don't seize upon my e its principal ornaments: an attention mittee: very Hymns and Liberty Songs. En- United States recognized the importation of After art addres3 to tho Throne of TEN COPIES will be forwarded to one Post ungs as colds used to do. And, besides, no one dress, therefore, is very necessary.— It is to be hoped our friends will hold courage all who can sing, to possess slaves into the several States at the will of the Grace, a committee of three was ap- Office, lor one year, for FIFTEEN DOL- ere seems to have the slightest fear of a cold, !ow many females run into the error of conventions to prevent the admission of themselves with this spirit-stirring melo- States respectively, until the year 1808, and therefore recognized the propriety of reducing pointed to report business for the Conven* LARS, if paid in advance, and at one time. or the simple reason that every one focls that Texas. Many of the pro-slavery men al- dy. One Liberty song sung efficiently, bere is here a certuin and speedy remedy at hand. linking that to dress finely is to dress men to slavery by "du« process of law" under tion, and as the principal object of th« ITTPrevious to Nov. 1, 1844, the Signal will ready admit the country has been laid will do more to prepare the heart for our b« forwarded for six MONTHS for FIFTY CENTS, A few hours break it all up, and scatter it to the ell—when the two things are as differ- the laws of the States; and consequently the meeting was to nominate a R«preseata- invariably in advance. wind. So of fever—MO one here seems to have nt as possible ; for the one excites at- under a debt of lasting gratitude to the Divine principles, than the most splendid clause in article 5 of amendments in the lollow- tive to Congress, for the Second Congress No paper discontinued until all arrearages are lie least fear of fever, because every one feels an ntion, the other avoids it. abolitionists for having sounded, for sev-oration, or the most compact argument. ing words, "nor b« deprived of lifo, liberty, or siohal District, oli motion, the Convention ntire confidence in cold water as an antipode.— property, without dueprocess of law," were not A lady, who well knew this distinction, en years, the tocsin of alarm against this One of the greatest mistakes yet indul- proceeded first to an informal and TERMS OF ADVERTISING. Vom what I have seen here, I can never again last Leviathan grasp of slavery. intended to prohibit the States from reducing men fcW one square, one insertion, 50 cents. oubt that the fiercest of fevers are harm rdered a cap from the milliner. "How ged in, is the supposition, that we can (o slavery within their limits. Such a view of wards to a final ballot for said Represent 1 " " each subsequent insertion, 20 cents. ess, being absolutely under human control.— ill you have it made, madam V inquir If Texas is kept out, it will be owing carry this cause for the Liberty party, it is entirely inconsistent with the recognition o lative. Legal Advertising by the lolio. ecently, wo have had two cases of most malig- d the milliner. "Make it," replied the to the abolitionists—if it comes in, weand yet continue to bestow our votes on th« Slave trade, with the three-fifths representation DR, EDWIN A. AT LEE, Terms of Advertising by the year or quarter nant fever. One was a man, taken with a'ner- .dy, "so that it will not excitea thought." must use it as a rack with which to dislo- the pro-slavery parties for the town of- in C»nferess, and with the provision of the 10th of Battle Creek, having received the made known at tlico(fi:e. ous, raging fever. In three days, the fever was article of amendments which is in these think this is the best definition of what cate the bones of slavery, in the States. fices. Never, never, was committed so WOrd8: greatest number of votes, was on motion* (£$" AH Remittances and Communications ntirely routed, and in a week, the man nppeered We will never give up the Union, Texas chould be addressed, Post paid, gnin in the saloon, eating like a ravenous wolf ress should be, that I ever heard in my deplorable a mistake. We never can unanimously nominated as tha choice of in or out. We hold to the Union under "The powers not delegated to the United CTSICJCALOF LIBERTY; Ann Arbor, Mich>cjTj] hatever he liked; and though he look thin and fe. Be, then, neat and cleanly in your conquer in the County, State, or Nation, States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it this Convention. as weak, yet you might have seen him out all circumstances, and to its entire puri- to the States, are reserved to the States respect- ress, and borrow a lesson of instruction until the Liberty Party controls the town ively or to the people." Erastus Hussey, of Battle Creek; reasting the storms—which, in his weakness, romthis lady. fication from slavery. power. Liberty men must fill the town ould near tip him over at times. Four days They may be deprived of liberty by due pro- S. B. Treadwell, of Jackson, and jo, a woman whj had taken cold during the Sad it is to see a female walking out This glorious country is not to be com- offices, or political action be abandoned. cess of law without having commited crime; they N.'M. Thomas, of Schocicraft, MYRONHOLLEY. ay, and was not aware of the enemy lurking in nth a hole in her stocking, her stays puted by dollars, nor any known power Give us the town power and the nation is muy be deprived of liberty for any cause which were appointed a Congressional Commit* The following stanzas were written by W. H. cr, was seize;! in the night with a most violent isible behind through the opening of her cf numbers. I would bequeath the anti- onquered. The town power is tho pow- the laws of th* land may assign. John L. Brown ee for the ensuing year. as deprived of liberty and sentenced to be hung BcRt-KfGH, of Connecticut, and sung at the rais- jver. I saw her in the morning,and she looked rock or gown, and her under-garments slavery battle against slaveholders as an r from which all other comes. How ab- The committee on Resolutions report-* ing of the Holley Monument- xactly like a person In fever. A wet sheet or helping an intended wife to escape from sluve- een through her pocket holes. These inheritance to my children's children, as urd for a Liberty man to vote for a pro- f,which was no crime. The proceedings against d the following, which, after full dis- WAS at once wrapped about her whole body, and one infinitely more glorious and honora- lavery constable who does not make a MYRON HO1.UBY. hanged and wet again every twenty or thirty lings are not as they should be : avoid Irowu were by due process of law, though not by ussion, were unanimously adopted : Y<«—fame is hie:—but not the fame ninutes. This was pursued about twenty hours, lem, my dear girls, they are bad habits: ble to them, though their hands might be istinction between a man and a hog, as a ust process of Taw; 1. Resolved, That we gratefully aO For which the conqueror pants and strives, nd water was applied in other ways. The next nd bad habits never answer. stiffened in • earning honest poverty's matter of property. The laws of the slaveholding States pio?ide Whote path is tracked through blood and flame, knowledge the hand of Divine Providence- ay, I saw her up and dressed, and looking as An orderly person shows her love of frugal meal, than to give them pala- Do vote if you have to go seven miles hat persons born of parents of a certain deec.ip- n carrying forward the Anti-Slavery And over countless humnn liven! veil and hearty as usual. Not a particle of med- ces of marble, built by the unpaid slave, ion shall be slaves, and provision is made for His narh« no armed battalions hail egularity in all things, and can lay her n the rain alone to do it. Your vote, enterprise, as we believe it one important cine was administered. I do not believe that out or domains ample as Esterhazy's cultiva- keeping the.n in that condition, and to prevent With bugle shriek or thundering gun— f the 300 patients now here, or out of several andon the article she wants; adisorderly righteously given, is never lost—it is re- hem from exercising their natural liberty. They ink in the vast chain of causes by which Jf« widows curse him, as they wail housand8 tun t have been here, there is one who erson knows not if she possesses the ted by the unrewarded sinews of sorft>w's corded in Heaven as ivell as on earth, anc are born in the State subject to the existing laws he all-wise and benevolent Beiag will For slaughtered husband and for son. ias the least fear of colds or fevers. Each seems ling she desires : ifshe has it, she knows sons. No matter if mountains bestride each vote given is a part of the granc thereof, which deprive them of their liberty, and ultimately redeem a revolted world from nuke the distinction between them and other in- Amid the moral strife alone, think that, so far as fevers and colds are lot where to find it, and if she finds it, our path, we will perforate, where we mass of means which will strike the last labitantg of the Slate, j jst as tho pecpla of the every form of sin and oppression. He battled fearlessly and long, concerned, a ceriain remedy is always at hand. I cannot go over or around. We have requently it is not in a state fit for use. fetter from the last slave. If you refuse free Slates are born subject to the laws t icreof, 2. Resolved, That when \re consider And poured, with clear, untremblingtone, lo think it is the dmy of all who have young An orderly person has little do ; while eternal justice as our ally, the world for to go seven miles in the rain this year which also make some distinctions in regard to Rebuke upon th e hosts of Wrong— children, to learn to apply this remedy. How the flood of light which has been spread our endorser, and the Almighty God as their rights; and the deprivation of the persons To break Oppression's cruel rod, •,a.iy (Iis:a3- s in little children originate in colds! a. disorderly one has ten times the trouble to cast your solitary vote, you, as far as abroad on the subject of slavery, and the the captain of our salvation; and long ;ibeity of the slave results from due proces He dired the perils of the fight. f the other,without possessing one half of you are concerned, defer the slave's re truth that nations have become their You would be amused to look into our saloon before we have wandered half of forty of law just as the inhabitants of Mussachuseti And in the name of FREEDOM'S GOD ler advantages. I knew one who was demption, and suffer him to groan anoth own destroyers by making expediency t meal times, especially at our dinners. Re- years in the wilderness of conflict, the and other States were formerly deprived of th Struck boldly for die TRUE and RIGHT! neniber thie is a Hosjdtal for all nations. Some he very spirit of order. She learned er year in his chains. For we hav right of voting without a property qualification and selfishness paramount to justice, we fifteen nations are now represented in the saloon he habit of order in her youth, and prac- emancipated of Georgia, Virginia am power to set the slaves free in the States With faith, whose eye was never dim, Florida shall shout and sing the Free they were born subject to those laws which de tremble for our own country when wo The triumph, yet afar, he saw, —come here to be cured of diseases that have gen ised it in her riper years. The house in as well as the District and Territories— privad them of the right of voting, while other think of the oppressed, and remember i\'h»n, bond* smole off from soul and limb, >een given over, or nearly so, by the msdical vhich she presided was a pattern of pro- man's song, in which the disenthralled o who were fortunate enough to have propert faculty. To see them at the table with ravenous and the responsibility of the voter is im that "God is just, and thai his justice will And freed alike by Love and Law, priety, and her wardrobe a picture to Tennessee, Louisiana and Texas shal could vote. So if the slave can acquire th The slave—no more a slave— shall stand ppetites, eating food of the coarsest and plainest mense. not sleep forever." gaze upon. But, oh, it is terrible to peep join in* chorus, "We all are free." means and buy his liberty of his legal owners, ir. Erect—and loud, from sea to sea, tind—food that many of them would hardly have Do not listen to that man who says rote most cases, he can enjoy it by leaving the slave- 3. Resolved, That to vote for slave-' elt easy to have set before their servants at home; nto a drawer that is crammed, without May the fifty-seven thousand men who Exultant burst o'er all the land with me for Clay this year, and I will holding country. All these things are by due holders, their apologists or supporters, in The glorious song of jubilee! to see their countenances, to see them rubbing order, with clean frocks and dirty hand- stood up in 1843 as the vanguard of the vote with you hereafter; for if you fall into process of law. order to abolish slavery, is absurd, or to' their hands to keep them warm, (for but little A man i3 born in a community where laws ex- Why should we mourn, thy-labor done, cerchiefs, new gloves and old stock- Great Liberty Army, be found faithful in vote for a tiling to prevent stealing, or for artificial heat is allowed to enter the saloon)—to this snare, you are probably both undone, ist against stealing; when he hat arrived at man- That tliou art called to thy reward? ngs, ribands and curl papers, bodices, and 1344 and unto death, and no one be dis- see them racing up and down the saloon between and will be left in a blind and reprobate hood he commits the crime of stealing and is pun any other flagrant offender, to counteract Rest, Freedom's war-worn champion! joot-lacers, scissors .& scent-boxes, patch- covered in the Presidential contest lying dishes, (for at dinner we generally have three ished by the power of the law; this punishment the sin he is guilty of. Rest, faithful soldier of the LOUD! state to groupe your way to life's end, and dishes)-—you would not dream that these people work and pin-cushions! What a shock- a mortal corpse on the field with a Clay is by the process of a law that existed before he Fur oh, not vainly hast thou striven, on a death bed be for the first time made 4. Resolved, That the plausible dec- were on the sick list of mankind. Hope is theing exhibition of disorder and bad habits or Polk bullet in his back, by which he was born. Another man is born in a communi- Through storm, and gloom, and deepest night, conscious that in that proslaveryvote, you laration of our opponents, that after vo-' expression of every face—despair has no place in is here! fell fleeing as a coward from the high po- ty where a portion of the people are prohibited Not vainly hath thy life been given sent the representative of Christ to the ting Cor a slaveholder "once more," they Graeffenberg. As to the crisis—every guest here One glance at a room is enough to con- sition of last year to those base redoubts, by law from the enjoyment of personal liberty For GOD, for FREEDOM, and the Riairrf ongs for a crisis- No one fears it. no one pities dungeon and made his wife desolate, and intend to sustain the Liberty Ticket, is a vince us whether it be under the care of a United States Bank, a Sub-Treasury, and whenever he attempts to use his liberty he pou if you have one—all would rather envy you, his children orphans—yea, you continued mere pretence to win us from the path of Then, «a we stand around thy grave, an orderly person. I have frequently Free Trade or a Tariff. Every Liberty is punished by a law or in conformity with a law The solemn pledge let all renew, congratulate you on the success of your cure, am them slaves. From such a death-bed that existed previous to his existence. In both duty,- though too'shallow to influence any earnestly covet the same blessing for themselves! cnown the kitchen of a servant more man living, who voted our ticket last Like thco to toil our land to save "good Lord deliver us." cases, the punishment is by "due process of law" abolitionist not already prepared to put on From the dark vengeance which is due— And the more severe the crisis, the more certain orderly than the drawing joom of her year, should be visited, and his name and though in one case the law is just, and in the Attend the polls, distribute votes as a the Texas Polk, or bite at the naked* So, haply, shall the LORD restrain and effectual the cure. Such is the feeling res- mistress; and the dormitory of an old wo- residence in the city or town entered in other, unjust. pecting the crisis. It is considered the dying high religious duty—it is a part of the Clay hook. The gathered wrath that waits to break, man in an alms-house kept far more clean- a book before the 1st of August, and he At the time this amendment waa adopted, Or dash it on the bondman's chain, asp or groan of the disease. The disease is the mass of means by which the prison doors

importance, and are therefore prepared to make RAILROAD ELECTIONS. THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY ANDtion, wil? scarcely be ruffled by the slightest REVIEW OF THE LIBERTY PAR snerifices for its-success, nnd to .pursue it.witl These are becoming very common, anj ,j, Key, R« B. Bement introduced the fol- breeze of discontent. TY—CONTINUED. SIGNAL OF LIBERTY. ANNEXATION. undivided interest. It is conced d that the mass results are heralded abroad as important. Aw A lowing preamble and resolution, and ad- Such is the conclusion to which we must Having new gone ti rough wiih some brie As it is now evident that the scheme for of the Liberty party are men of stable and virtu- respecting them may not be amiss. \n electibh vocated them at considerable length, with ANN AKBOR, MONDAY, 3VLJ 1, 1844, arrive. A email minority of slaveholders notes on the condition and prospects of the Lib the annexation of Texas to this Union will ous character, while such men as Morris, King on a Railroad car, or a Steamboat may dete have committed the whole party to the eup--erty Party in each of the Free Stales, as we pro great power and effect. enter largely into the sum total of the con Birney, Stuart, Pierpont, Smith, Jay, Whittier mine the sentiments of the persons present b~ port of unacceptable candidates, and of a posed, we shall recapitulate eonic of the facts, an &.c. are possessed of talents which every where Whereas, The Government of the U. ~THE LIBERTY TICKET, siderations by which the Presidential contest nothing more. Yet if the aggregate of these dangerous and wicked attempt to perpetuate subjoin such remarks as they may seem to war command public respect and confidence. The were put together, they would form a tolerably States in its origin received its existence For President, will be decided, we propose to examine the slavery; and the whole party have submitted rant. character of a party, like tha:ot an individual is lair index of the political feeling of the trayeilin standing of the severtl partips in reference to from the original thirteen States, it could JiMli.S CJ.BIRNEY, to tbe nominations, and will submit to what- The following table shows the Liberty vote o itselfn precurser of the success or defea of its pe portion of community, and if an equal proportion OF MICHIGAN this project. A fair and impartial delineation 1840, and also of 1843, except New Hompshii not confer upon those States any power ever else may be required. Surely we need ciiliar projects; and hence, from the qualifications of each party travelled, it would be a fair test or For Vice President, of the position of each will be highly servicea- and Connecticut, which are given for the sprin whatever, therefore, not warn: our readers against the support of of those who compose the Liberty party, we have party strength. ble to the intelligent voter. We shall com- of 1844: ihe fullest grounds for belfeving that its meas- Resolved, That the rightful power of THOMAS MORRIS, that Democracy which wields its million of But we suppose this is not tho case. Th mence with the Democrats, as they ore its States. Lib. vote 1840. Propor. to whole vot ures will be intelligently planned, peraeveringly or OHIO. votes for the extension1, aggrandizement and farmers travel on steam routes, proportionately the United States is derived from the avowed advocates. Maine ISM 1 in 479 pursued, and ultimately successful. perpelfcity of" obsdlute Slavery. Nor can anyN Hampshire 111 1 in 522 less than professional men and merchants; and original States, and that they can law- ELECTORAL TICKET. During the present session of Congress, 4. We argue the success of the .Liberty party just hopes of the reformation of such a party Vermont 319 1 in 159 foreigners less than native Americans. H fully exercise no other power; that the three attempts for obtaining annexation have Massachu. 1,415 1 in SQ from the general unanimity of the whole body o ARTHUR L. PORTER, be entertained. The sincprfc lover of tbv the real strength of a party whose rotes are drawn States could confer no authority upon CHANDLKR CARTER, been made—by Treaty, by Resolution, and R Island 42 abolitionists in its favor. While there is a min chiefly from the farmers, ne are those of the Lib- JOHN W. KING, g reatest good to the whole ntfrrrbef can find Connecticut 174 in 327 ority who have opposed it from tbe beginning, Congress which was not conferred upon by Bill. Each method haa been started in New York 2.808 in 157 erty party, or a party that embraces moat of tho ERASTUS HUSSEY. nothing to encourage his aspirations After a by lar the greater part of the genuine Abolition- CHESTER GURNEY. the Senate, and has failed in that body. The New 0 foreigners^ do the Democrats in this state, will 1 • themselves by the people; that the people better state of society in the principles ofsach Pennsylvania 313 in 1000 ists have fallen into the ranks, one after another. Texas Treaty was rejected by a vote of S5 to but imperfectly ascertained by a steamboat or rail- could confer upon the States no authority a confederacy. He who remains with them Ohio 903 in 304 Scarcely any are now left, except those who do For Representative to Congress, 16 all ihe yeas except one being Democrats. Michigan in lb'5 road election. Still, however, the re8U|t of ,heM they did not themselves possess; therefore, and votes for their candidates, votes for TEX- not vote at all, and those who are organized for elections is highly favorablo to the Liberty party titan DISTRICT. The Joint Resolution, proposed by McDuffie, Indiana as the individual people never possessed AS AND SLAVER*. There is no escaping from Illinois 159 1 in the dissolution ot the Union. This general mm The proportion of Liberty voters in the Free CHARLES H. STEWART. was laid on the table by a vote of £7 to 19. Wisconsin} nimity, attained after protracted opposition, is an the right to extend slavery, Congress acted this conclusion; and we respectfully submit it States to all others last fall was about one in 30 SECOND DISTRICT. The Bill introduced by Mr. Benton, who Iowa evidence of tbe wisdom and value of that organi- to the candor of the genuine friends of Free- —whereas the various railroad elections we havo without Constitutional right or legal au- EDWIN A. ATLEE. opposed Mr. Tyler's treaty, contained the zation which the whole body of abolitipnists have dom and Equal Rights in that party, whether C8'.;5 59,779 seen give us far more than that proportion. A thority in admitting it into seven new following provisions: deliberately examined, and finally espoused. gentleman travelling from Jackson, Mich, to THIRD DfSTRICT. the Liberty principles"do not embrace all that States. Lib. vote in 1843. Propor to vote 1810 States. Be it enacted, tbat the President of the li- Mnine 6.351 in 15 5. We argue the success of our party Rochester, N. Y. reports in an Albany paper they have been accustomed to revere as noble Resolved, That the proceedings of this WILLIAM CANFIELD. nked States is authorized and advised, to N. Hampshire 5,767 in 10 from ihe standing it has attained at the South, sundry elections which resulted for Clay 146 open negotiations with Texas and Mexico up- in the objects of their party; and in support- Vermont 3.664 in 14 Convention be published In the Signal of and from its adaptedness to the state ol Polk 76, Birney 32. SENATE. on the following terms: ing the Liberty principles, and the organiza- .Massachusetts 9,000 in 13 Liberty. 1st. The boundary of the annexed territory Rhode Island Southern society. In 1839, before the or- FOR SENATOR—FOURTH DISTRICT. tion which upholds them, whether they would Connecticut 1,971 irt 29 L. F. STEVENS, Prest. to be in the desert prairie west of the Nue- ganization was formed, Henry Clay had no- KENTUCKY. not be still supporting those principles of New ^York 16,275 in 27 SEYMOUR B. TREADVVELL. ce8, and along the highlands and mountain New Jersey ticed the disposition of Abolitionists to carry In 1831, Col Barry, Gen. Jackson's Post Mat. heights which divide tbe waters of the Missis- TRUK DEMOCRACY to which they have always S. S. NICHOLS, Sec'y. Pennsylvania 2.4)7 1 in 115 their principles to the polls, and spoke of it as ter General, obtained the passage of a lnw, by OAKLANlTcOUNTY. sissippi from the waters of the Rio Debeel n attached, and on which the best inter- Ohio 7,480 1 in 36 Michigan 2,775 an "alarming" fact. It has been an object the legislature, of Kentucky, for the estnbliah- FOURTH SENATORIAL DISTRICT. TOR REPRESKNTATIVES, Norte, nnd to latitude 42d degree north. ests our race so largely depend. 1 in 16 2. The people of Texas, ly a legislative Indiana 2.050 1 in 51 of alarm to the slaveholders ever since—and ment of the district school system, similar to oura At a meeting of Delegates of the Lib- JAMES WILKINSON, Illinois 1.954 1 m47 GEORGE SUGDEN, act or by any authentic act which shows the their apprehensions have grown with its at the North. After a few feeble spasms it ex- erty party, convened agreeably to pre- will of tbe majority, to express their assent to DREADFUL STEAM BOAT AC- Wisconsin 175 pired, "leaving not a trace behind." In 1805 or MELVIN DRAKE, Iowa growth. Incipient movements are now ma- JOHN THOMAS. said negotiation. vious notice, at Battle Creek, June 12th, CIDENT. king among the non-slaveholders of Vir- '36 a second attempt was made, by C. M. Clay HENRY WALDRON. 3. A State to be called the State of Texas, We have to record a sad and melancholy acci- who then held a seat in the legislature, having 1844, to nominate a candidate to be sup- SEBRING VOORHEI8. willi boundaries fixed by herself, and an ex- Tne total vote of the Free States in 1840 was ginia, Delaware, Kentucky, and Tennessee, dent that occurred across the nver,about 9 o'clock returned home a few years before, from a North- ported, for a Senator in this District, E- tent not exceeding that of tbe largest State 1.723,990, shewing one Liberty vote in 251; infor a pohtical union for the overthrow of this morning, which resulted in the immediate ern College, where he had deeply imbibed the MACOMB~COUNTY. of the Union, be admitted into the Union by 1843, the Liberty vote was one in 29, allowing slavery in those States. The condition of rastus Hussey of Calhoun, was called to virtne of this act, on an equal footing with death of two, and fatal injury to three or four spirit of popular education, and in his youthful the whole number of votes polled in 1843 to be Southern society renders such movements the Chair, and L. Wilcox, of Jackson, FOR REPRESKTATIVES. the original States. more of our citizens. The steam boat Gen. Vance, equal to that of 1840. Or, if you please, com- simplicity, supposed nothing was.easier, than to app.ointed Secretary. PUNY CORBIN, 4. The remainder of the annexed territory lately purchased and fitted np by our well and fa- liighly perilous to the owners of slaves. introduce the same benign and effective arrange- CHAUNCY CHURCH. pare it with the whole vote of the Union, which to be held and disposed of by the United vorably known fellow-citizan, Samuel Wood- They are numerically far inferior to their ments for the purpose into his native State. — On motion, States as one of their territories, and to be in 1840 was 2,461,079, the Liberty vole being worth, blew up while lying at the wharf at Wind- lon-slaveholding neighbors, and in an avow- The result of his efforts was, the enactment of a Resolved, That all Liberty men JACKSON COUNTY. called the Southern Territory. one in 358. and three years after it had risen to sor. Mr. Woodworth was standing on the deck, ed and open struggle between them, stand comprehensive, wise school law,with all the need'- present, belonging to this District, be in- 5th. The existence of slavery to be forever one ifl 41 ofthe-whole. FOR REPRESENTATIVES. prohibited in the northern and north-western near the bell, at the time, and was thrown high The number of Liberty papers is 25 in 12much the greater chance of ultimate defeat. ed, and customary specifications and penalties, vited to act as Delegates. THOMAS McGEE. >art of said Territory, so as to divide as in the air, and falling in deep water, was not States, of which 3 are daily, 20 weekly, and 2Their interests are directly antagonist, and nnd the actual provision of a haJf million of dot* found for some two or three hours. MajorTru- The meeting then proceeded to an in- ROSWKLL B. REXFORD, equally as may be, the whole of the annexed semi-monthly. Their circulation is estimated to many of the laws unstained by the slavehold- lnrs, as a permanent fund. For a few years LONSON WILCOX. erritory between slave-holding and nor> ax, of Truago, together with two or three oth- farmal ballot for a person to represent bo equal to 35,000 sheets weekly. There are ers bear heavily on those who own no slaves.*faint efforts were made to carry the law mto exe^ laveholdingf States. ers, were very seriously injured. The engineer cution, but soon the 500,000 dollars disappeared this District in the Senate of this State ; three other anti-slavery papers that are opposed Here all the elements of a liberty party ex- 6th. The assent of Mexico to be obtained of (hOferry-boat Uniiod States, to which the Gen. —appropriated to pay Stale debts—not a dollar (LT^Twelve Weeks Subscrip- >y treaty to such annexation and boundary, or to the Liberty Pfirty. when Vance was attached, was blown off, and has not sts, and free discussion will bring them out to be dispensed with when ihe Congress of We are well aware of the state of mind ol is lift—not a single district school, in good faith, S. B. Treadwell received 33 votes. tions.^} o view, at the proper time, in appropriate the United States may deem such assent to been found. John J. Adam, our State Treasu- very many thousands of the voters of the Free ns far I as can learn,is in operation in Kentucky! For the purpose of diffusing Liberty orm and shape. The Liberty party has been Erastus Hussey " 17 " be unnecessary. rer, was on board, but being in the cabin, was but States w reference to the preceding facts, and to Common schools can't live and flou-risfe herefof principles as extensively as possible, pre- objected to as Northern and sectional; but R. B. Bement " 1 " 7th. Other details of the annexation to be slightly injured in the band. Many ,other of our the prospects ef the Anti-Slavery cause generally. two reasons—first, the large land" and slavehoH-' adjusted as far as the same may be within citizens were on board, but none killed or injured he developements of the ne*t five years will On motion, vious to the coming election, we are in- It might be stated substantially ;hus: !i will not be taxed to support schools for thtt the scope of the treaty making power. that we have heard of. The boat sank immedi- show that it is as well adapted to Southern children of his poorer neighbors. The smalf Resolved, That SEYMOUR B. TREAD- duced to offer the Signal of Liberty for "I believe the liberty party, in the main, are A majority of the Democratic Senators have ately, and it was with :he greatest difficulty that >s to Northern latitudes. landholders" and mechanics are too scattered, and TWELVE WEEKS for Twenty-five Cents, right. The facts they adduce in reference to the WELL, of Jackson, be unanimously de- those saved got on shore. As the boat had but sustained each of these different propositions, overwhelming influence of the Slave Power J 6. We judge that the Liberty party will be emote from ench other, to associate .or the tt- clared to be nominated as a suitable can- payable aiways in advance. Or we will just left our city with a good load of passengers believe to be substantiaf/y correct: and I know of :iprocal benefits of family education. The rich nor have we beard of ihe slightest condem- uccessful from what has already been accom- didate to be supported for a Senator, for furnish the paper for Srx MONTHS for for her downward trip to Monroe, others may no better method of effiicting its overthrow than :an educate their children at homo or send them nation of their votes from ttre press of the through the exercise of the political power ol iliuhed. There is a saying, which is none Fifty Cents, paid in advance. These of- have been lost unknown to us.—Free Prese. abroad as they please, fn the second place, th«r« the Fourth Senatorial District in this party. Wbilo the Southern portion of the freemen, and if I knew that the Liberty party he less true for being common, that a good s an instinctive jealousy which eternally lurksin State. fers will stand open for acceptance till press has been nearly unanimous for Annex- would certainly and speedily succeed, I would BENJAMIN WATKINS LEIGH. give it my support immediately." eginning is half the work. In every enter- he bosoms or tyrants towards the masses. They On motion, November.*^ We expect that large num- ation, it has received but little decided opposi- This gentleman has attained some notoriety Well, gentlemen, we shall be glad of your help rise requiring the concurrence of many per- lever can rejoice to see them educated. Kniwt- Resolved, That a Committee of five bers will avail themselves of them to sup- tion from the Northern papers of the party. of late by having been the person who nomina- in accomplishing our enterprise: but we cannot ons, of various habitu of mird, dissimilar pre- \dge is power! Thnt belongs to them exclusive All of them are urgent in the support of the be appointed by the Chair, as a suitable ply themselves or neighbors with anti- red Henry Clay for the Presidency, at the Balti- consistently present you with Hard Cider to in- udices, and residing in sections of country y! Beside, the abject race might, by possibility, nominees, while most of thorn are silent re- Committee for the ensuing year, and the slavery intelligence. more Convention. He is a Virginian: and the duce you to believe thntour cause is just, or thai widely diverse, there are many preliminary steal a glimpse at the spelling book, or New Te*« specting the fact that the nominees are avow- following persons were appointed : We would say to Liberty men, if you following extract from a speech of his in the Vir- it will succeed; nor shall we Carry araund dead bstacles to be overcome, which are often anient, if these were too common! What mis- ed advocates of the measure. ginia Convention in 1829, will show that if he John Harris, Battle Creek. wish to do something for the cause, here coons or live DHCS on poles, or sing tflott songs, ifficnlt to be adjusted. The Liberty party chiefs might not the multiplication table, rr a The letters of Messrs. Polk and Dallas we does not participate in the sentiment attributed or plant "Young Hickory" trees, or use arty de- jave measurably sui mounted the&e impedi- slight insight into the pleasing science of Geogra- S. VV. Dodge, " is a chance for you. Get your neighbors io Mr. Clay, that "white slaves" are necessary, have already published. Mr. Polk is for "the vices of the kind. Our appeal is to truth, reason, nents. They have now a general organiza- phy, in their possession, lead them to perpetrate! Samuel Nicholl, " to become subscribers, and if they have he at least goes for disfranchising LABORERS, what- —Cor. Liberty Press. immediate reannexation of Texas," and "en- nnd argument only. That we shall succeed, and ion and correspondence—»they have presses Dudley N. Bushnell, " not the change lend it to them, even if ever may be their color! thnt speedily, we believe from the following con- tertains no doubts as to the power or expedi- f their own, pei'maneHtly established-*-!hey L. Wilcox, Jackson, siderations: find the following table cred- you have to borrow yourselves, You oncy of re-annexation.1' This language is "I have as sincere a regard for that people (the iave principles of action in which all can laboring class) as any man that lives among them. 1. The manner in which we propose to extir- The Convention then adjourned. will never regret having done so. The explicit enough. But in a subsequent letter, unite—they have survived the scorn and mal- ited to the New York Herald. It may in* But I ask gentlemen to say whether they believe pate Slavery from the nation, to wit, in ihe Na- ERASTUS HUSSEY, Ch'n. those who depend on their daily labor for their ce of '.heir adversories, and are steadily rising terest some of our readers. judicious circulation of a thousand Signals Apjil 25, he makes this the paramount ques- tional Domains by national authority, and in the L. WILCOX, Sec'y. daily bread, can or do evir enter ini/> political from now till November will, of itself, tion of the whole party. He says: affairs* THEY NEVER DO—NEVER WILL several States by a Liberty party in those States, o influence—they have speakers and writers Elections in the U. S. for ten years, add several hundreds to the Liberty vote, "I regard the question of the Reannexa- —NEVER CAN." operating through State authority, places the bundantly able to maintain the" principles of 1828, 1832. 1836, Lactometer.—We promised last month lo he par1 y—and the only effectual argument at the coming election. See to it, then, tion of Texas to the United States, as second Beautiful Whiggery, isn't it? Bat just such whole question under the legitimate control o: Dem. 650,943 687,502 763,69? give a description of the common lactometer, m importance to no other subject or question the Liberty party, as soon as they ehall attain hat can be used against them is, that they are that when you look over the returns of as prevails among the Slaveholding Whigs. Whig, 511,475 583,298 787,711 or instrument for testing the quality of milk, which now engages the public attention." We thought of cutting off this article here, but the requisite ascendency. Hence all constitu- e.v in numbers, and they are therefore weak this Presidential contest, you have the sat- Abolition, and ascertaining' the proportion which the The sentiments of Mr. Dallas may be pre- lest the Democrats should think us partial in our tional objections to the competency of the Liber- n political influence. Our paucity of num- cream bears to the milk of any particular cow isfaction of thinking and saying with sumed to be similar, as he owes his nomina- attentions, we will add the following piece of ty party to do what they propose to do, are obvi- >ers we do not deny. But every new enter- or the produce of a whole dairy. This in- truth, "I HAVE DONE WHAT I COULD." tion to Senator Walker, one of the principal Democracy by Mr. Pickens,of S. C. in Congress, ated. rise, moral, political, or scientific, must start Agg'e, 1,162,418 1,270,799 1,501,298 strument is represented above. It consists advocates of the scheme. Jan. 21, 1836. 2. Our object is one of national importance. with a small minority, and its growth und fu 1888, 1839, 1840, of a m h )g any frnme, 10 inches long, 4 wide, MR. POLK A SLAVEHOLDER. Finally, the whole party were thoroughly "All society settles down into a classification The slaveholders, who wield the government of ure greatness will be measured, not by its Dem, 956,019 1,011,168 1,12.8,308 The charge against Mr. Polk of being a Duel- of Capitalists and Laborers. THE FOKMF.K W

07** The Wabaab Standard, a Democratic JOHN HOCKINGS. Whig, and having voted for Texas on all occa- Peace, order, quiet, tranquility. A Strange Duel Blocked.—The Picayune THRESHING piper, published at La Fayette, la. has the fol learn from the Boston Chronicle, sions, wa« allowed to pass. Preserve the peace, and the Repeal cause will of the 31st ult. says, two girls or the town, A T TE NTION lowinjp candid notice of|Mr. Birney's Letter that John Hoektnga, a celebrated English lec- The nominations of Chancellor Walwortb, of necessarily be triumphant. Peace and quiet I with their seconds who were also girls were New York, and Mr. King, of Pennsylvania, as MACHTNES. on.'Texa :. turer on Total Abstinence has arrived in this ask for in my name, and as you regard me.— rrested by the police when about to fight a HE Subscribers are now manufacturing Uc> 1' received at tliu General Depot, for the judges of the U. S. Supreme Court, were laid on Peace and quiet I ask in the name of Ireland, and "The Abolition or Liberty party is now nu- country, and is about^settling in the West. uel,with pistols and bowie knives,near Bayou, JL HORSE POWERS and THRESHING J ealo of Clothiers Stock, Machinery, Dye the table. The latter, we suppose, waa a proper as you love your native land. Peace, quiet, or- 1ACHINES, constructed.in the best and most tuffs, &c. &c, No. 139. Jefferson Avenue, merically too strong, and has too many men He is a mechanic—a blacksmith, we be \. John. Finding that they would not be disposal of what appears too much like one of der, I call for under the solemn sanction ol reli urable manner. The power Is a four horse Detroit, the following lat^e, well assorted, and of powerful talents, of high moral worth and lieve. The following particulars of his his- ower, but is also a first ra'.e power for twohor- arefully selected stock, \ \i: Robert Tyler's dinner arrangements. The for- ion. I conjure you to observe quiet, and I ask llowed to endanger each others lives accord- of untiring energy, engaged in promoting it* tory, from the Chronicle, are both interesting es when wanted for that purpose. It is entire- 100 bbla. St. Domingo Logwood, Cut, mer, in connection with the previous refusal to t In the adorable name of the everlasting God. og to approved and fashionable rules, the unlike any that have ever been offered to the 5 Tons '* '* io Stick, success, to be entirely overlooked or treated and instructive. confirm John C. Spencer, ought to awaken a deep jratity me and your friends by being quiet and elligerentu had afight aw naturel—or in oth- ublic in this Stale or elsewhere; and is believ- 150 bbls. Cuba Fustic, Cut, d to possess important advantages over any other (i with contempt. Such being the case, their "Having early acquired a taste for ardent ndignation in the State of New York. Only >eaceable. r words, set to and tore each other's hair 5 Tons " inStrckj think that the whole central portion of the Un- ower. It will work easier, (that if, with lere 50 bbls. Nic. Wood, Chipped, opinions and position should be examined and spirits, it increased into a habit strong and ap- The enemies of Ireland would be delighted at nd face in regular cat and dog style. They reng:h ol power) than other powers; is more 50 " Lima Wood, *,' understood. Their candidate, James G. Bir- parently insurmountable, growing with his ion, including the two principal cities, is thus to our violating the peace, or being guilty of any re ail in the calaboose. ompact and convenient *.o move ; occupying 3d " Red Wood, " nly three feet by soven, and can be lotided into ney, of Michigan, was the first of the presi- growth, till the most of his hard earnings be deprived of Ihe benefits of the U. S. Circuit [border. 120 ••« Giound Camwood," Court for two full years, in hopes to secure to common wagon box with ihe thresher and 10 " Quercitron Bark, dential candidates who expressed his views went to satisfy bis uncontrolled appetite.-— Disappoint them—gratify and delight by peace, '•City of the Dead".—In Blake's Family rawn by one pnir of horses. Economy, strength Henry Clay the opportunity to appoint aslave- : 500 lbs. Nutgallsj relative to the admission of Texas. His let- About eleven years ago, his attention was rder and quiet. ncyclopodia we find the following: "The material, and durability, are united in the 10 Cases Extract of Logwood, lolder, or to reward some servile partisan. onstructiou of tiiesi; Machines ; hence they can ter ie dated February 28th, and was written called to the subject of total abstinence, while Your faithful friend, atacombs of Paris are supposed to be the 300 lbs. Lac Dye, nd will be sold VERY; LOW . lower than any 2 Ceroons Spanish Indigo, in accordance with the request of a meeting on a visit to a friend who owned a piece of The post-office reform sleeps on ihe table DANIEL O'CONNELL. argest in the world,exceeding in extent, those ilachineshave ever been sold in this Slate. We of the House, like a northern threshing ma- 300 ll.s. Sumac Sicily, in Allegheny County, Pa., composed of indi- land which he bad brought to a high state of Corn Exchange-rooms, 2Jth May, 1844. f Rome, Maples, Malta, and even those of re anxious to 8"ll them for CASH, and those 3 Casks Mitdder, chine on a Virginia plantation, laid aside because 'hebes. The excavations extend beneath the can pay CASH are especially irivited to call 3 Casks Blue Vniiol, viduals of all parties. It is short and vigor- cultivation. It surprised him that one who he overseer does not know enough to put it in SWITZERLAND. n us. Tho cylinders to the Threshers are all vbolo of the Southern half of the city, and 5 Casks Alurri, ously written, and his arguments (against an- earned no more than himself, should be theoperation. Switzerland bos been the scene of a short, on. 2 Barrels Red Tartar. nder a small part of the northern division This is the best power in existence for Fnrm- 2 Bar. els Cream Tartar," nexation, of course) can better be disregard- owner of a patch of ground; he thought on the It is said tliat the President has determined to tiough sanguinary civil war. The cause of dis- TB to use, for threshing their own grain, and hus cross the Rhine. They are quarries whence 3 Carboys Aqua Fort's, ed than refuted. The letter gives evidence of subject—made calculations as to the price of call an extra session of Congress, to meet ear- rder is accounted for thus: Every two years cen got up with a view to their special*accommo 5 " Oil Vitriol, • vigorous and well disciplined mind, and land per acre—that every time he drank a y in September, when he will again bring be German and High church party of the Up- aris was built: the stone is a soft calcareous ation. The facility with which it can be 3 " Muriatic Acid* er Valais have a contention with their French ggregate, filled with organic remains, of oved from oneplice to another renden it very 500 lbs. VTrdigria, wherever read cannot but increase his reputa- pint of ale, be drank a certain quantity of land "orward the subject of the annexation of Tex- onvenient for several joint owners. Whenever l< nd Latudinarian compatriots of the lower portion vhich shells form Ihe principal part. 50 Block Tin* tion as 8 statesman." very time he smoked op a pound of tobac- as. power is wanted for two horses, a thresher of Teasels, Twine, Copper Kettles, all si'Zesji co, he purled away another quantity of land; On the day of adjournment, Judge Walworth's f the Canton. Last time the Upper Valisans Here are vast quantities of human bones uitable size will be constructed at very short no- Parson's Shearing Machines, were beaten. This year, however, having a ce. Two or three Farmers, having large crops Curtis' " PRESBYTERIAN GENERAL AS- thus he argued in his own mind, and resolved name was withdrawn, and John' C. Spencer ollected from the different cemeteries of Par • ) thresh can purchase one of these Machines loxninated for the U. S. Court. The Senate not Vorort, or Executive Canton, Lucerne, favora- Screws and Press Plates, SEMBLY—OLD SCHOOL, he would leave off drinking and smoking, de s 6ince 1786—(58 years)—and arranged ac- intly, at less cost to each thnn tbe expense of Cranks. Press Paper, Steel Reeds, le to ultra Catholic ideas, they grew more bold. b threshing (or one year. The establishment We find in the papers the following notice of termined to have a house and piece of giound taking aciion on this nomination, the President ording to the receptacles fiom which they Worsted Harness, Tenter Hooks, withdrew the name of Mr. Spencer, and again Disputes threatened, and the interference of the 2j miles wei' from Ann Arbor, on the Rail Emery, fill No's., Olive Oil. the action of this body on slavery. They have that hecoutd call his cvii. ere taken. Nothing can be conceived more oad, ori the Huron. nominated Mr. Walwonh; this nomination was Vorort was obtained. This maddened the Low- Clothiers' Jacks. Sattiriett Warp, adapted the fashion of Congress—laying the sub- He became a teetotaller. Men laughed, olemn and effecting than a visit to these drea- S. W. FOSTER & CO. Clothiers' Brushes, SnutUes", id on the table. r Valisans. a;id actual hostilities commenced.— y abodes—4his place of sculls. It is, as it Scio, June'.7,1S44. 9tf Pickers, Card Cleaneri, &c. &c. ject on the table. ridiculed, persecuted, but he persevered.— After some sharp fighting, the struggle is brought vere, Paris in the grave. Here lie millions The above, with a variety of other articles be- "In the Presbyterian General Assembly, in Wherever he went he preached by precept o a close for the present, in consequence of THE MJSSES CLARKS' ngirig to the trade, have been purchased this cession at Louisville, Ky., on the 24th ult, Dr. f its once gay and busy people, ranged in and example, striving to have others enjoy the FOREIGN NEWS dispersion of the militia of the Lower Val- Young Ladies* Seminary, [miner by, the subscribers from Manufacturer- Spring, who has been appointed chairman of a teir long home, and piled together without nd First Handsin the New York, ihiladelphia, committee on the subject of slavery, reported for blessings which he so much prized. Though ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. istinction of high or low, rich or poor, friend nd Boston Markets, nnd every thing having res (he majority. Tike report expressed entire res- he had much to contend against, yet he ARRIVAL OF THE ACADIA, ived his personal inspection, he can with the pect for the memorialists, who presented a sum- days later from Europe.—Sentence of r enemy. One alone contains two mil- MARYH. CLARK, Principal. tmost confidence offer them to purchasers as the ber of memorials to the Assembly on the subject; cheered himself with the reflection, that by Daniel O'Connell—Disturbances in. Switzer- ions and four hundred thousand s.ulls, and est and most comjjli.te slock'm the country; and but clso a conviction that the evil moat be re- industry and perseverance he should eventu- CHLOE A. CLARK, Vice Principal. s it is his fixed determination (by the low rates land—Arrival of tfts Emperor of Russia in. lie different heaps extend a mile in length.— wwvei by the influence of Christianity, and not ally attain his object. Years passed by; the IISS WEST. Teacher in Music. • which he will sell) >o Drevent the necessity ot by the legislative action of the Church. The England. English Breweries.—Professor Wright has lere are chambers, and galleries connecting . F. SCHOFF, do of Classics. ur Clothiers and Manufn"furer6 leaving the minority presented a report desiring that the me- land was bought, the house built, all paid from The Royal Mail Steamer ACADIA arrived, at the following notice of the London Brew- do do iri French'. tate to make their purchases, h«i would merely morials might be heard and given '.o a select com- hem, which are lined from the roof to the his earnings, which would otherwise have Boston on Wednesday morning, bringing fif- eries: . MARSH; Teacher of Mathemntics. ay to the trade, CALL, examine the goods and mittee. Or. Plwraer moved that the whole sub- ioor, with bone?; in whatever direction the tHOBY E. CLARK, Teacher ot Juvenile Dept. scertain prices before you say you can buy gone for sttong drink and tobacco. A short r ject be imii oa the table. Dr. Spring moved thai een days later news from England aad ;he Con- "But what is that dark murky building ye turne, it rests on rows of sculls. lieaper any irhe e else. tbia motion in laid on the table to give place to time 6ince, he sold hie place for cash, and is tinent. owering far above the sea of brick and mor- rflS Institution hns been in operation since He.is nl9o prepared to contract for CARDING another. Dr. Plumer's motion was carried by now in this country, e teetotaller, with a res- The news is full of interest. Sentence has at How affecting the contrast between the T November 18, 1839. The scholastic year V1ACI11NES made in this State or East. 117 *»67. tar, with chimneys like church steeples? No mbracinv forty-eight weeks, two terms, compri- pec'able sum of money; and, having purchased ength been pronounced against DAKIKL O'CON- olemn appearance of this "city of the dead,'' PIERRE TELLER, uncommon thing; you see scores of such in ing two quarters' each— welye weeeks in a quar- Sign oftbeGnMen Mortar, land in our western country he is doubtless NELL and his associate "traversers." The Eu- and the gaiety aud dissipation of tbe city of ter—a general eXamiria '6n at the close of each In our last paper, the types make us London. The largest churches are but bird 139, Jefferson Avenue, with his family ere this on his way 10 improve ropean Times which has strongly condemned the the living, over which it is built- erni—in February and Augus?. f17-tf.] Detroit. to say that "we do not know that the nomin- 'Repeal" movement, hp.s doubts about the poli- cages beside them. They are comparable for 'T'be second quar1 of the present term com- it, and spend the remainder of his days in the ation of Messrs. Polk and Dallas was secured cy of punishing O'Cq^nell. size only to the cathedrals, St. Paul's anc About 235.000 hogs have been packed the past mences November 27. cultivation of the soil. Surely this is an as- E'.Mi OF TUITION.—For the English branch by the slaveholders for the accomplishment of Trade continues Fair in England and money Westminster Abbey. They are cathedra season at Cincinnati, the average weight of whicl DRY GOODS, tonishing instance of perservance, equal to es, S*2,50 to §5 per quarte.-. No reduction maie their own purposes," &c. This is just the re- seems abundant. The cotton market, however breweries, vast, ancient, gloomy. If they are the Gazette estimates at 210 pounds each. The "or at'sence, except in case of sicknets. and no DR1T GROCERIES, that recorded of the young man in Foster's verse of our meaning. Every attentive read- continues in the same depressed state as at the not honored with the sepulchres of the mighty prices range from $2 60 to $2 70 per 100 lbs pupil token for less than a quarter, Extra char Essay on Decision of Character." The expense of preparing them at $2 per hog es are made for music on the Piano, with the Feathers, Paper Hangings, er knows that the rejection of Van Buien and last advices. dead, they are filled with awfully deep vats which with the first cost, gives the sum of$l, use o'the instrument; $8,00 Cass after they had each obtained more than Parliament is busily engaged in talking abou steaming with a liquid which will make a French, 3,0( BASKETS, &c DALLAS AND ABOLITION. 800.000 invested in the single article of pork. Latin, . 3,00 a majority" of nil the votes, (for Cass at one the Canadns and Sir Robert Peel's new Banking mighty number of the living as good as dead AY be found at ihe lowest cash prices, at "It should be recollected, that the Northern theories. Drawing and Painting,' 5,0(J RAYMOND'S CASH STUKK, 148 Jefferson time received 138 votes,) aad the substitution Suppose this nation were to be conglomerate! Fancv Work, , 3,0 M and Central Democrats have maintained the The news from France and Spain is unimpor The rale of taxation in Boston; last yea Avenue. De'roit. of third rate men like Polk and Dallas was into one individual, with one pair of hands an Board, including washing, lights. &c, §1.7." Tho undersigned has just received a full stock, fight against Aboliton for years, actuated solely tant. Switzerland, it will be seen, has been vis was $6 20 on 1000. per week if paid in advance, or $2,00 per weel evidence cooogh Ufcat the whole party was un by a high and honorable senee cf Coneiitu'iona] of SPRING GOODS, of the most desirable; ited with the calamity of a civil war. In Tur- one throat, Ihen would one of these immense if paid at the close of the quarter. sty'es and patterns, suitable for city or country A Treaty for surrendering criminals ha Parents nnd guardians are invited to visit th Gingham , It appears ttom the Wisconsin pa- ready for UttSKirmriKG AND UNCOMPROMISING made his appearance in England. He is of cours gin and brandy, which goes down the throa establishments for building cotton machinery hav positions. de Laines, WAR against * principle wlrose mer<». euun^ation Yoring ladies desirous of entering the scho pers that the Legislature-of that Territory received ''with all the honors." of this nation is stupendous—oceanic. N orders ahead for 12 to 14 months. Bulzarineg, in this country sounds in my ears like a tocsin and pursuing the regular coursu of study, wou' Balzarine Muslins, lias enacted a law, providing that whenever IRELAND. wonder that in the shadow of such brew do well to commence at the begining of th Striped Swiss Muslins, to REUEUHON AND TREASON.—Letter to J. Willis. tern. delegates .ekatll ire elected to forui a State Con- hcu?es the people are sunk into cellars! Ye Rich Calicoes, of all qualities, colors and pat-" Aug. 29r 1840. The Court refused the motion under the con RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. Ha^ihg purchased a healthy and commorliou (ems. «tjtuli*m, aUl free white male inhabitaats above viction that, as the laws stood, they had no pow the owners of these brewhouses are very piou building in a pleasant and convenient part of if REV. O. ACKLET, of Geneva N. Y., wi Pantuloun and Coat stuffs, such as t§»e age «f 21 years, who have resided three men, great men, and men of renown. The village, no pains or expense shall be spared t Gambroonf, MAINE. er to grant it At 4 o'clock, amid breathles. preach in the Universal^ Church, on June 30ih facilitate the s'udies and render the situation o ttwhths in the Territory, may vote. This in- Swedes Cassimcree, The Legislature of this State have done anxiety Mr. Justice Burton, in an address in not only own these cathedral breweries, con at the usu.il hour. ihe young ladies profltabfe and agreeable. Fancy Drillings, cludes all foreigners, naturalized or not; and two good deeds: they have abolished all which he shed tears, passed sentence on the trav secrated to the gospel of brutality, but the Belonging to the school are a Library of be Checks, therefore -ike law raeets -wtiik much opposition, ersers. own the houses where the liquid is dricket rween th,ree and four hundred volumes, and Ph Plaid Swedes. militia trainings, and have passed the fol- FAIR osophical Apparatus, Electrical Machine, Globe Fancy English Cassimeres, and •tresaucnes efforts -are making- for its re- Daniel O' Connell.—To be imprisoned for 12 and mark the said houses with their names i &c Scientific lectures ait delivered before th lowing act for idae benefit of the Women The Ladies of the First Presbyterian Churc Broad Cloths, peal The foreigners have held a J*rge oaeet- calendar months; to pay a fine of £2.000, and to such large letters, that the widow and th school at proper intervals. Keutucky Jeans, Ac. of Ann Arbor, give notice that a FAIR, willb kig in Afilwaukie, and put fortfc a« address, of the State. Its influence will be highly enter into securities to keep the peace for 7 years fatherless may read them half a mile off. The Misses Clark will endeavor, not only —ALSO— —himself in £5,000, and two securities of £2, held at promote the intellectual culture of their pupil Blue Drills, ably vindicating t&eir cause. It is stated that s to them and to their poster- When I have inspected the largest brew bnt will attend strictly to their moral deport 500 each. do , the foreign boi* population of Wisconsin ity: houses more particularly, I shall give yoi HAWKINS' SALOON, ment. , John O'Connell, John Gray, T. Steele, R With a deep sense of religious responsibilit) amoimts to nearly or quite one third of the some measures and statistics. Suffice it U on the 4th day of July next. The object of th , AN ACTto secure to married women their rights Barrett, C. G. Duffie and T. M. Ray.—To be they would give such a tone to character, as sha whole. The present susober of inhabitants is in property. proposed fair, ia to raise the required sum t Checks, imprisoned for 9 calendar months; to pay a fine say now, they are a sad hindrance to th render it practically fitted for every station—yiel Linseys, estimated at 7Q,*W». Be it enacted, &c. Section I. Any mar- purchase an organ for the Church. Ice Cream ing to duty but firm to principle. of £50, and to enter into securities to keep the cause of abstinence. Indeed, real teetotansm Burlaps, ried wocnan may become seized or possessed Custards, Lemonade, Cake, and other delicacie Among the books'used in ihe school are, Al Baggings, peace for 7 years—themselves respectively in £1,- is far, far behind in this cbunlry. The tern ercrombie ori th'e Intellectual and Moral Powe O* When tin Appropriation Bill «?as under of any property, real or personal, by direct of the season, will be furnished in great abund Padding, bequest, demise, gift, purchase or distribution, 000, and two securities of £500 each. erance societies are exceedingly feeble. B —Kane's Elements of Criticism—Wayland •discussion in Cangnese, the following compara- ance. Moral Science—Newman's Rhetoric—Hedge Canvass, in her own name, and as ot her own property; Sentence having been passed, highly esteemed ministers of the gospel, Brown Sheetings and Drillings,' tive statement of tbe Ettgikh aad American naval The public are respectfully invited to attend. Logic—Paley's Natural Theology and Evidenc provided, it shall be made to appear by such Mr. O'CONNELL immediately rose, and sak have been pitied for not drinking wine J" of Christianity—Comstock's Chemistry ar Bleached Cot'.ons, officers tvae p-Peeaatod; married woman, in any issue touching the va- Ann Arbor, June 26 ti. 1844. Swigs, Jaukonet. Book & Barred Muslins, , that he wished to remind the Court, that he hat Natural Philosophy—Combe's Physiology—Mr Wide and Lace Edgings,; of every de«i" Biitishpny. American pay. lidity of her tit Ie, that the same does not in Piracy dnd Murders;-^Th e stewara1 an< Lincoln's Botany—^Eaton's Manual of i otany— any way come troaa the husband after cover- made a tolemn affidavit, declaring that be hac CAMP MEETING. Burritt's Geography of the Heave s—First, Se ( cription, AdmirrtUf the fleet $10,512 cook of the bark' Saladn, at St. Johns, N r Vesiings, Admiral 8,760 ture. never entered into conspiracy with the other ond and Third Books of History—M s. Wi transveisers, or committed the crime with which B. have made a confession of their terriabl A Camp Meeting will commence on the lit Hard's Republic of America—Phelps' Legal Clai Bonnets, Vice Admiral 7.0G8 SEC. g. Hereafter, when atiy woman pos- Ribbons, Rear Admiral 3»,25G sessed of property, real or personal, shall mar- tie was charged. He had now only to eay it wiib crimes. It appears tflut the Saladin," Capt day of July next, in the town' of Salem,' Washte sics—Pfayfair's Euclid,' and Davie's Algebra an Arithmetic—barker's Natural Philosophy. Linen , Captain, 2