\ k ob' ',ui ^iit>'; ;c>. [pel. ^o. JH \S\ R. P. WARING, Editor and Proprietor. )> A FAMILY PAPER-DEVOTEO TO POLITICS, LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE. MANUFACTURES, MINING, AND NEWS. ^ PRICE $2PER YEAR—In Advance. (E’li!' ItiilfH—Distiiirt na t[it Soillora, but out ns iljr |ni VOIi. 3. CHARLOTTE, N. C., FRIDAY MORAIIVG, JUNE 22, 1855. NO. 48. A llcuiitlfiil l*ociii. [The Hrst iftii’g, in ihe way of business, that our h.iiids touched on Usi Monday morning was Ihe charming poem on “My Brother,” ffardly [ had tho morning risen through its first hour of; M^n.-'hsne, when as we were wondering how much of the genilu Sahhnth would attend our toil .hrwigh ^he busy week, this delicate and fragrnnl f.,:.‘ntii brought Ms sweet refreshing to our hearts. 'I'hi* fiir author is but seventeen years of age. A liighiy-gifled Iriend, whose eyes is nlwny* open In iho tokens of genius and whose heart is full of (hfi music of poetry, writes us privntely about her. 'I tie (uctH of tlie let'er arc inuchinfj ; nnd while :!elicucy forbids our using sevtrni things nnmed in It, we may yet stMte, that ihe circumstances «tth which liiis child of genius has strngglrd are auch as lu move nny heart to deep feeling. 7v/.s. S'mthern Tinifs.'^ ITIy ISrotlirr. oh. briar-rose, ( /.iiiibor, j AtiJ CDVi r tlif cliuiiilicr— ! 'J’hir etiainlu r, so dreary uml lone— j WluTc with iiici k!y cIuslcI I A 11(1 t V' H >i> clipxc, My hriitlicr lies uiidtr llic stone. >1), villl( tS, CDVtT, 'I'hc ii.irrow roof ov» r, | O!;, covt-r tlie \viini';\v aiul tloor I l''i.r iii:vi r tlic 'riirciii;,'li tlic il.iys :mcl !\l .iLc sliadiMv s iicros.s tlif tlonr ! 'I'lu- Iili« N :irc lilooiniiij', llic lilits r.ri wliitc, Uli r- hi- jil.iy-h.uiiils U'l il to b ; AihI thi' sweet cherry lil i'-soiiiit niir.v (>ver tlic (11 bin!'-, ill tile olil roof tree. ’Vheii I iie.'.r o!i the hills ihe >lionl of the Ntoriii — til iLt; y, tlie ro.ir ol the river ; I -i.ivi r ::u.l ?h;ike on the he.'irth-stonc Wunil, A> 1 I liiiil> )!'Iiis colli ‘''lorevt r.” I! ^ h’l'- ii.iiids lire I’-ihi. (I, :uid never .ig.iin, | V> ,i:i tlie (il'tlie ro!iiii or [>!-vi r, iS'iii II (lie n.:muL/ ii e.iii' , with her liee»i ;iiiil her , ;; r.i.: SViil !.» })'. I V til l!ie nieailor.-cioVer. ( Ml, !i'm r liM !i brother. M ,• .s\vt«t ii'tle brother, }i; ill' ji.il.iee 'ihove the ^nll, ( )■:, [ir:i V til' '>(! iir.;;els, Tlie Miiri !-■, T .. ta!.e nil — V. lii ii !i!c i^ I 'l'lA Ai.i» ;; rr.o.\ nk. I'.n* S.,;»«-305S. \ ni' riilici III' ilie M.ihib- imr makes liie I'nIldW. iii^' . n |i'’'';’I' ti III iwn !■ :''t! lir ihn n in i h>- i> 'irh- ( rn S il'». We li'id I' III (he .Mn!iil(‘ Ixv^'tsft! : M,. Ivi.' I : Al!o\s me. thrniiob yo'ir p^qier, to r I r I'lililic I'liiisiili ;;ii|!iii, :i ^ugge*iIi■ln nn ihe 1 e iil tin.'i'. iMe acl ul 'le* L‘ i:i.«-I;i!ure of rl.U'' 'i ae net re|> rrt d u> liemg a ri.i’.tul''t miil It' ii:hiii1 vml.itiun iln- ('onsli'ii'io:i ol ihe I'ni 'iJ (uiiii'li 1 jirt >iiiiie everv n-enUier 1 |/)|' i,e^i'l:iiij! e li.'i I >«orn to sii juiort.) e\r r V fii'iii wild vo''d lor it i- ol eoiir-*'' guiilv ol williii nn l ('iiiriipi pcijurx. It i' j imI thiit fill ixoud ci'i- •/•■UH, esjueiulU ol 'he S iutherii St.ite*!, slculd do n 1 in llii tr power 'o seciiif the re|'e-il it siich nn nrt. fir to tiir, t ii by fi i.iliiition. (Jim* i;! the most oflioiis [iriiv ii|iiiis (il :lie ;icl lisdl, sn^^oe^is to my iniiid :i V'TV (ipi)ro|>rMile, nil 1 il |^» ncr il!y adopk'd, N verv si.flii'i’nt mm’H.' ol relfilialioii. J be net (irrivub'!», m siibstniii”'’, th.it no !a\v\er i«i M I'-^^t- ebus* tis xli;;ii itid orappe.-ir for anv S >ii!heri: man III an\ elVort to recover a lii::i'ive sla 'e nr.d*-r (he provision-* of the I'ligiiivc S!.tv- l.iw ; and if he does :((, 111-, iicn-'** sli ill be reVok'-d. .Now, mv siigeestion i-i this; 'I’h it every law- vr m the S'luihi'in Siiiti s >hill pledge hini'H'lf to liis breihren ol th>- i: u and ihe roinmnnity, llial he will not iiid in tie- collection of anv ib ht or cl iim for II eili/en ol M.i>..siieliU'eIts, and will not pro>ie. rule or deleiid nnv >uit for a citi/.'Mi of M.issarhii- feil.s, in anv court, until the net relened to is re- Mysteries of the Dark Lautcrn. I that in voting to exclude Caifiolics nnd fnreignt’rs \ sia, he has evervtbing to apjirelietid ; that it is I from office ib‘-y no mor** proscribe them than you now gnfiicieii’ly evidf ni that no hostile .Muscovite and nboiif Know- do in voting agninst Whigs? I can ever land on our shores; t‘>al the Cossack ilfc doctriiK-M, ot>j«‘clN und No. 1. Question—W here was Know Nothingism start ed ? A7isicer—In the Northern States, nnd its ob ject then Was to exclude from those Sta>e.» foreign mechanics. This jt proposed lo d(j by e.xtendmg the period of naturalization, so as to preve nt these mechanic;} fr«)m voting and holding r fl'ice ; but the scheme failed, for the leason that these me- c/ianics seek our shores mainly for employment that they may earn their bread, and tlie exclusion referred to did not lessen their nurnbera. Q—W'bat then ? A—Why corrupt party leaders, mainly from the ranks of the old ^Vhig pariv, puw in the pre judice against forei.rriers and Roman Catholics n clinnce of reinstating themselves in popular favor and of gaining power ; and so they obtain- td possession of the orginizition, changed some A — Yes, but tfie fallacy of this reasoning is ap> Slone of civil order—the very lile and ess.-nce of'. Some called ou* for Sam to get up, but Sant all socif*! integrity. ^ et Know nolbmgism bowed f,.]t so conrpleiely demolished he could not rise, to a spell and an influence more potent tlian truth, and had n t a word to say. Ho had probably must remair> aLa romnntic ilistinice ; that invasion i ;^nd reconciled the conscienc‘-s of men 'o resort lo beard of Virginia elections, parent. Catholics and naturaliz'd citizens have is entirely out of the question ; that wiih France | equivocation and slippery construction to deceive - as much right, according to the Consliiulton, to the thing is quite difTerent ; that sli** i:, accessible i tho public. But there was a monitor from on hi*>li hold office find to vote as natives and Protfstants on every ’“i le ; that a combined l-^urope could I in the breast of every honest man that must ut have. No Know Nothing will deny llii.s. Whigs pas? the Rhine ; that a combinaiion of despots and Democrats, as such, have no Constitutional giiin.'t Louis Napoleon is not quile un itnpossibili- right to vote ^r to hold ofiiee ; the Constituiion tv ,* iIihi he is a parvenu o:i a ilirone, jmd is there- knows no such classes or parties. All ci'iZ'iis lore detested; that Ru-=sin, ,\usiria and Prussia have a right to vote and to hold utTice; bu! we do rould crush him, and possibly rniiy attempt it ; The Tlaniacs at Work. 'Pbe telegraphic despatch in this morning** times whisper to him that ibis was wrong. j i),.lia, giving the particulars of a liquor riot in Know-nothingivm bound its votaries under the Portland, .MiMne, which roulted in a eollision bo- third degree of its riun.l by a solemn oath lo main- ' iween the people and the military, should be read lain the Union, at all hiiz irds, against all efTi»rts ' •, pondered fitiingly ” by every intelligent ol factionists and of secessioni'ts. Hut it now here , jjoutbern man. It is another instance of the boast* not vote against citizens, but against W'higs or that he bus tberelore a deep inti resi in dim:nishinu j bound its members to stipport llie Constitution ; j upry^^ess” of the North, and of the triumph of I)emoerats ; that is, we rio not vote ao-tinst a nifti the jiower of the Autocrat ; that Austria, also be- j yet that Constitution wns the very life and soul of peculiar “liberty,” wiiich requires every one because he is a eit'zen, but, bfcau»ie, being a citi- zen, he holds political prineiple.s which wr- disap- prove. iSurely ihis is not pro.scrioiion, but mere ly the fX' rcise (d’ the privileges which llit‘ people have, under tJiP (Jotmlitutiun, ol carrying out their views of government, j’ut when we vote ngain.st a man because he is a Catfiolic. or because he is a Prote^ianl, we (‘rect a stniidanl of qualifi cation higher ihan the L’onstitufwu ; lor tfiat in- strnment e.\pre««!y prrnides Miat no religi..us tc-si ing in danger from the same dinction, would ; ihe Union. It could only have been made by it. of Its features aoded others, and, by means of paid ! agents organized lodges and rapidly ^-pread the I ,o!..ra:ion establiVhed Order throughout the free Slates. j ,,,, Constilntion, m.ke it praclically nuU and low aid the Older reach us of the South ? i CVrtninly everv ci izen has the 1-lt was imported here |.,r selfish and politi- „hvs!cal power of voting t-’pro-cribe ei her Cath- cal o! j 'Cis, just as abolitionism was imfiortcd some i Qijp*, or Protestaii's : .it th«? thirty y‘'-'rs >.go inu,Jio.t..n and New York from ' ;„.,.poues to proscribe the Calhnjic, and who \ hxeter Hall. London; and it has been spread in ; Know Nolhirii who has P- willingly -Nsist in the wurk if she dure ; that ■ Kus'iii is ,;ei bubbiy-jork, and that ihe restora- lion ol I’.'i ind would reli;ve htr from the oppres sive paironagi-of a friend ; but limt Poland revo lutionized, what would Hungary do? that there ' lies ih(! .'ear whict> make snpnieness ol so long a d ite ; ihai an alliance with Frmce and Kngland, her dominions guaranteed, might emlx-lden Fran- den), ai,d tberefore war will be with us lor sonu; time—inert asing iii vil as it progresses. I'rom ihe Augusta t^’onstiiationalist nnd iJeiiubhcan, May 30. to do as Neil Dow or Tlieodore Parker requires, or i.ike the conseqviences. 'There are certain n\en in the New England S ates who are deieimined to permit no freedom lo exist, iuit such as they choose to consider b’gi- iinate—that is to say, who really sap ilie Ibunda- (,n .Monday evening at the City [liill :o hejir this State mainly by the same nie.ms employed , 3,,,) kerned by the ('onsiiuition, must ‘ , ! choose between his oaths—he inuU bnulc one or iiat has been its efiect in the free States? | af/,r/- ? .,1 —In conjunction wiih the aboliiiotiists, and q—'I'lial, I admil, apjiearsto be plain and rea- j address from the lion. A. H. ‘S:« phen.^. NoHvilh wi. 1 In I soil ers cast out (il the Democratic p.iri\ , , snnabie. I liiv’ other questions to propound, and , standing the shortness of the notice—it being a.'- am uiih tlie remains ol the old \ big part\, il ^ j(,,. conversation will be continu* d. i nounced only on that day, by placards at public has carri. d every non-sloveholdu.ir Stale in which ; J_.Verv well—1 shall bo happy to continue ! places, there' being no papers issued Monday mor- «ltciions ia\(* recent.\ t.ikcn place. I rofessiiig j ,],,, conversation, and lo answer any question ^ou I nmg, that .Mr. Stephens would address his leilow- may put. j cii'zeos—the pe.>j»le turned out e/i iiimse to hear 1 striking at one of the fundamental princip'es ol Q Olio word more; 1 mi have made certain ■ tle ir distingii.sheil mid patrioiic represenlative. j the Constitution, which declares ihere shall be no s'a'enienis ahoiit Mr. Ravner; is be not tuiw in |'I’he [mU was crowded lo sufrocation, and bun- j r> ligious test as a qualification for olViee. lie. to Ih! true to the Federal Constitution nnd friend- ' ly i(j the rights tif the South, it bus, in every in- | s ance, e|e\ated Irecsoih rs and aholiiionists lo j itliC“. ProfeKsing to be a no.p-arty 01 gv^nization, Il nf« fiercely assailed the ndininistratijn of Pre- : sident Pierce ; and [irofessitig Stato riglit.-; anil a sfiict corislruciiofi (d the (’onsiiiu imi, it has uni formly opposed the Nebraska-K.uisa?- act, which (>()( ns those territories to the. slav- hoUb rs of the Siiuib and tiuiiranlees the right o! th*' peoj l-'here lo have slavery or luit as they may choose ; and in Mass .chustils they have null lied tlie fugiiive. slaNe law npon the {ironnd tlmi it is unci>nstitu- tion.il and that it is the dut> ol ihut find other free Sta’es, (IS Sf^itrs, to deliver up tl;e esi*;ipeil slaves ol the South. 1: has sent 10 ti:e ll'Hist'ol Repre- ■seiitalives si>me sixty or sevtn'y aholiiionists, and to the Sen lie some seve’j or eight of the same stnmp. In no case has i! eh c: d a Democrat, recoiiniZ'd by his paity us such, t'l olllce ; in no case has it chosen 10 (Joi'ortss from the free S:..tes, »r lo cfiice in tho.se Slates, any (jiie sound upon the (jiie.stion ol .'liiverN or in lavor ol ihe Uioitive slave law. li struck tJown Shields, in Ihiiiois, because, tliougii he came fiere in iofan- cv, he fiappeii'd lo be horn ri Irelmd ainJ ia a 1) inocral ; ami this, though Ip- had long served hi? State in tie- Senate ol ihe i/nion,and notwilh- s:atidiii'' in the war wiih .Mexico he di-tmi>uished D !iiii''ell as lh(? I r;ivi St of the brave, leading the r> giinenl of a siavtdiolding Siate in the “forefront ol ihe holiest baitle,’’ and lalling, shot through ihe luniks at ('erro (iordo. it dele.ii. d tin? D rnocrat.s ot New I l.toipsliire and Connecticut, and put in ;d ice> and ihrouob it, and the principles it cons'Crates. Without it, the Constitution would be valueless, or worse than valueless. 'I here was ihe abolitionism of this order in dis guise. He called on Southern men o notice it. He, .Mr. Siepliens, stood upon itie (ieorgin plat- ‘ .,f j,n imp independence, by elevating their form. Should Kui'^ns be rejected on acc-unt ol (^,^vn 'deas into an arrofjant despotism from which slavery, he w as for resistance. Send bun to Con- 1 ti,,.re is no ajipeal. 'I'bey are true descendants of CIS Jcsepii; ami it is qni'e clear that conflictin'’ | jjress, and h»* would resist il there ; if unsuccess. ; ,|,j. I’dorim I'athers—trtKJ to their bigotry — their coii'iderations will ke°p Austria neu’r.il : that ! lul, he would return to the people and tell them lo 1 le vanilv —their dictatorial disposition. Tho there are diflii.ulties now upon Etirope no one can { resist it. , he.irt of Plymouth Rock itself is not liiore hard or It Ind been said that the foreigners who came | I'heirs, and in the liturgy of their acct to '.his country joined the abolitionists in tlieireru- 1 ,,,j|y nvo principles can be discovered—the fun- snde upon our rights, Jt vv«s not so; he knew it damental (iiineiples of ihe Cromwellian saints, was not so, 'Pbe foreigners w ho came here came ■ „ }^,ch are embodied in the famrus residuiions :— :in"( I'nllinsia!«li(; | « i’h a reverence lor the Conslilulion Where did | ,|,e earth belongs lo (Jod’s saints. ciits ol' Touifiit>!i, 1 these foreigners mostly settle? li* ihe northwest. i g, cr.nd—'I’hat we are bis saints.” and TIiouiaK. j And from the northwest came the best Iriends of the ! 'I'lie name of this pariy is L'-gion. In M issi- An immense concourse of our ci'iz“ns issembled , South — from Indiana, Illinois, and low.i , the last the only free State which had never bowed tc ab- oliiionism, and now l\»r '.he first time to be repre sented by a fre(» soiler, when Know-nothingism had sprung into exi>tence. p'very Kriow-notbing took on oath ttiat he would support no Roman Catholic for ollice. This was Philad' l[)hia laboring to thoroughly nationalize the Order ? — Yes, be look his sea', I suppose, on Tues day last, in the National Council, with su‘h men as iUon. of .M:issacho»etis, and Hale and Tuck of Neu’ ilart pshire. If iheir cre dentials were geini'ne, Mr. IJ i\ner, it is to be presumed, recog- nis(*o E)iem as in.iher Know Nothings ; and v»’t such men, as their past lives prove, would insti gate tiie slaves o^ the South lo raise upon and murder their masters. Mr. Rivner is a slave- bold’ r, and nn doubt sincerely devot* d to the rights of the Souih ; but in reiving upon such nifii, or dreds were standing outside, unatde to gel in, and | iherelor**, who look that oath look at: oath incon- clamorou.5 for Mr. Stephens lo come out on the ' sisleiit with the supp(>rt of ihe Constiiutinn. It Meps. Thi-* being suggested to ihe speaker short- j was an oath in violaiion of the letter und spirit of ly alter lie o])eneil his addres.s, Mr. S ephens said | ifial sacred instrument. he ould acquiesce cheerfully in ilie general w ish, ' U{)on the exclusion from ofTice and disfranchise- chusetls, ('onnecticiit, .Maine, and New \ork, its Hjiosiles are always in the caucus or on the [d it- form. 'riu'ir crusade embrace-; twi> primal objrctu — the deiMinent of the South and the annibdatioii of inn'ividnal rights. 'I'liey .ire led by orators and publicists of no ordinary ability ; s; eaker^ d gen. uine im iginative lire', iike Henry V\ ard IJeecher ; journalists ol great audacity and exquisite acumen, like Charles A. Dar.n, and preachers as thought ful and soii'>roiis as .1 ^reiny ’I'aylor, at the head of whom is the Rev. I'hemlore P.irker, of Roston. Any attempt lo underrate ihe power of such in- t'dlects as these, on the part of the Southern States, is simply suicidal ; for we |»erceive their influence I loo plainly in the late history of lln-principal cilisn Indeed, of late, thr-ir i'li.'an havo ale, our citizens, to the number of two thousand, | ijss emphatic nnd forcible in his denunciation ol j f^rept sieatbily into this section ol the country, nnd cerripel-'ed lo stand on the damp ground for : ibis feature o>' Know-nothmgism. Upon the social laken root amongst us, as is evident fronri the e>'r- Miid prt ceeded to the northern portal of the hall. ■ ment of foreign-horn citizens, ihe orator was no j pf North. I lere w e re want ol a suitable pl.itform. ' evil«, the injustice ami disastrous conseqot nces, { dmi reception which Parker received u short tiino .Mr. Siephens commenced his remarks by e\- ! ihreatening strifes and bloodshed and civil war, of j ngo in D«‘laware. pressintt his regret at being compelled to speak in 1 making men aliens lit heart to a government 1 [i true thal Stale; has never bren very relia- the dark, for it was always bis pleasure when he | which thus made war upop their religion, and set I i,l(. n.s a menib'T of t/ie Southern family. .-\s John spoke to look the people in the eye. He said he • them apart on account of their nu'ivity as a degra- j (j^ (^ilhonn. with his inevitable instinct of tru'.b. against hope. cii ; find il a He is in the minority in that Coun- coritest should arise in it touching the (jUestion of slave y, he will he vot"il down, and m iy be expell ’cl. Yet fie is b'nind, accord ing to his oath as a Know Nothing, to submil to among them. j lation, similer to that which is now reducing many *.* *,1*1 cities to tlie a-[)ect -l huge witclie^’ He paid a just nnd eloquent tribute to those true , cauldrons into v. hich every evil ingredient is flung, men of the Norlb who bad so long and patrif>tically j ns if by the b md ol Hecate and her sisters. It i« stood by the South in her struggles with abolition- 1 worse than lolly, then fore, lo despise or ignore abo'i'ionists in the;r places ; and it did this npon country what fie promised us it would accomplish the stiength ol the anli-siavery fei littg, the D rno- crats 0/ liiose Slates being then, as they are now, in favor o! '.be liigilive-siav e law, and l!;e admis sion of Kansas in'o the rnion w iihou* relerence to the (|'ieslion of slavery. It e lt“ct'-ii ninety-nine- hundrethsof ihe late LegisKitiire ol .Maseaehusetts; .and tha: body electeil to the Senate of the United .Scales, Henry Wilson, a vulgar, domineering, and radical aholiiionist, who [mocI lirns uncouipro- mi'ing hostility to the fugiiive.slave 1-iw, to slave ry in the District ol C>'lumhia and in the territo ries, nnd to ihe admissie.n of any more slaveb.ildir.g Slat* s. It voied, by a large majority, *0 reijnest the (lovfrnor lo remove Judg(‘ Loring frrun hi.s : o|»en a p'Tplex^d P'ige in the history of the war ; si’at on the; bench, because, as a n'.itnmissioner (>l j ibat our diflnniities do not r ll pri'ceed from Rus- ihe L'niled Slates, he xvouhJ nut p>'ijni c himself by . sia ; that there has bt'en a difierence of ipinion pealed. i his sbovild em'uace ail corpora’ious rt>|ijsinjr lo deliver up .\nlbony Hums, a fngi’i\c , beUveen our g"od ally (d France and ourselves ; chartered f y that State, and all parHierships !^^ing business in lb it St.ite, but not be ( xtended lo citi- /.ens of thal St.ite dom;cileti in nn >ther State. 'Po .nake ihi.s efl’cta.al, il must l)e* very generally ;ulo|)ted Ii! iJie 'ou h. If eenerally adi^p'ed, it iii i'ins me tis inevilaMe Heel would be vinu il'y Jo outlaw these iivjiocritic il r«igiif’s, nnd close our Courts against them, by fair nnd conslitutionul *neun«, as lijey liave i iiileavo'ed lo do. as to us, bv nn imcoiislitutional act. As a meniber of the iMobile bar, I mnke thi^ suggestion lor ihe special ronsideralion of ihe members of ib.e professu>n ^hfougboul the South j nnd if it shall be lavorably receiveif, I will endeavor to have it pra.Mically car ried out. (hher riiizens miglit .Tid, even more efTicieiitly, in just retaliilion. Our planters nnd farmers .ouglu to refrain from buying or U'^inij any article of .Massiicbnselts manufacture. C)ur merchanis, esjiecially, .«hould refuse to buv or deal in any articles o! .Mas-acbusetts m ujufacture, or to buy any part of their stocks in that State, or to employ M.issncbuseiis shippm}!. Rut 1 w ill not enlarge on ih.s pvdnt. My main ohjecl was lo suggest Ij mv predcssit)niil brethren a mode in which they miglit practically express ibi ir pointed con- Jemnation nf the odious act, and jirobably accei- rlate its repeal. V'.dward S. Lyitoii Ralv/er, in his speech on ih»' stamp duty, temarkeil ; ‘ You have been led to inler ihat ihe .\mericin press is left in the hands of ignorant aiiveimirer-i, whereas the remarkab'e peculiarit} of th'’ .\rnencan |)ress is that it absorbs nearly all the intellect ol that country. 'I'here is scarcely a sialesinan of ermnenci*, an author ol fame, who does no.' contribute lo the American ptTiodical press.’ in attempiing to maiie terms wiih them, b.e hopes ! had traveled over more than half the Stale in or- ! ded class, the speaker was eloquent and convine- : declared, i? con'd not be counted upon by the pro- der to mei't the pee.ple of Augusta to-night. ing, and the repeated [)laudits w b ch greeted him | slavery section of the con/edera'ion, but even he Since bis communication to Mr. 'Pliomas had j from the beginning to the close ol his address, ; scarcely foresaw (hat it would so soon become :i been jiublisht d, it bad been said tliat the reason of , rising up from every side of ibis dense assemblage, | staniping •'round for ,Abolitionisl lectiin rs, \\lier'» bis retireni'Mil from the canvass in this districl was ; wrapt in eager and earnest htienlion, [iroved how j fanaticism might rear a iriiimpb'ini frejiit. Even his fear of being b' aten. For bimstdl be was | thoroughly be had enlisted the ftelmgs and con-1 in New Orleans, we are not quiie free from tha tl;_ ac ion of a inaj iriiy of tho (Jouiicil, whatever ' alr.iid o! iioihing—hot to do w^rong. Of that tie 1 vinced th'* judgmetil of bis auditors. We could , disciples of the New I’ngl.md propaganda, which that ac'ion m ly be, or withdraw from the Order. | was afraid ; bur of’ being beaten, be would not give j scarceJy realize in such dernonsirations that there I rnakes its legitimacy by ibf: nior*i rninp'iiit intolfrr- If (le sliouhJ agree to stand by the Union of ihe | a fig for a man w fio was net willing be fjeaten in | were.m all probability, hundreds of Unow-noibings 1 ance, and openly Ihreaieps us wiih coereivo legis- Slales under all circumi-itances, or to i^iiore the I deleiise ol what he believed to be right. He had (jueslion of slavery, le; ving bis Northern as«'o- j come ihere, then, be said, in response to varions ciates /r e to .agi'ait- it, as they have fieretolore {calls, to announce that he wae .sgain a catiddale done, in the halls of Congrfss, fie will not be true, 1 lor Congress from this district. Norninatt’d, he in my opinion, to ihe interciits and the rights of j said, iiol by any two-third>* vote, but here npon ^ bis Slate; and if, 0:1 the contrary, refusing thus j this stand I nominate mysejf for Congress Irom i isrr. He pointed out who it was that had voted ; the energy, ability, and unrelenting malice (j| thtf to aoree, he siiouid withdraw from the orier. he ! tlie Hih Congressional district. | in Congress with ll.e Southern delegalion to spare ; fanatics who have proclaimed war on Southern Mr Siepliens was here interrupted by a deep ' ihe South from the Wilmot proviso, that badge of' principles .'nd Southern men. and en'luisiastie shout of approbation from the i inferiority and degradation with w hich she was j One of their chi(“f hobbies is the liquor law, boru iireat orov\d he was addressing. He continued, i threatened ; that had n-lieved her from the .Missou- | of ihe angular brain of Neal D'>w ; and ihey ride that this Know Nothing order hail been created, ■ ji Compromise restriction and opened Kansas to ■ it to death. My Uncle 'Poby n> vPr rode a bobby it was said, for :lie purpose of pi.tiing down dema- : the influ.\ of her citiz'-ns, and aided her in the en- ! with such kecnly-spui red heels. 'I'hey have rid- gogiies, small men, ant tricksters. For himself j actrneni ol the fugitive-slave law. He rt f'erred by | den it in .Maine, to the great disjrust of every sen- lie was no trickster. 'Pricksiers never walk in n.ime to the noble exertions of Douglas nnd Rich- j ?ihle man. Phey nre; ridin;; it in New York at open day. They skulk in biding places, and h»: i ardson, of Illinois, to protect the Consiiluiion nnd ; present, and 0 bull in a Chin i shop could i.ol eard.s and ignores this test shall obtain supreme | w.irned the people to beware of leaders who re-j the riglits of the South under il, and w lio bad sat i elTect more destruciion than this crazy liobby- control. I sorted to the dark in order to concoct their schemes, j up w ith him two days nnd t wo nights, vvitbou! rest , fiorse, wliicb in its design and workmanship, is j It bad been said by «ome who iiad commented ; lo secure the passage of the Kansas bill. , purely a “ Yankee notion.” If it were a merfi TJic 'B'alR in K]ii^I:in!. , b tter, but none of whom had the biduness i lie slated that these are the men at the North , nit.ick on the liqu'ir influence, this hobb\-hoisicnl In bis gossij-ing stvle, ibe usually correct gatli- | come ou', by those who were shooting at him | that northern know-nothings were endeavor ing to cbarye agninsi the grog shops, the rum-selling in the dirk, that Divid and his adherents formed i beat down; that of all the northern men elected ; grocf>rieH, the small hells of dissipation wfiich infest n secret organizaiion, and that Samuel Adams and | to Coi;gress since the passage «>f that bill there j all our large cities, we, too, w >ul,f get antride of others formed a cliquj lor the purpose o( striking ' was not one know-nothing who bad voted for the ' ihe eccentric machine, and give it a looie rein tiiid a blow for American liberty. 'I'liis object, said ' measure—not one who was not hos’ile lo it; that an easy seat in the saddle, he, was revolution, and the object of ihe Know- i of the forty-one ihat iiad voied for it twenty bad : Rut it is more tbm ihi'‘, aiid no'hings was revolution. Jt is to overthrow the' been defeated on nccount ol that \ote, nrwl that the Coiisiiiution of the country ; to create a religious ! twenty-one ihat were left were the friends of will thereby openly (tonfess that it is not national, hut sectional, and has failed to aecoinjilish for the Approval 1 f, or acquiescence in the “compromise of 1S5U 'vas tiie lest of both tlie last Whi^ and Dernocrntic national (%inveiiiions ; and the Union Will be imperilled, and the rights of North Caro lina put m jeopardy, if any ))arty vvhicli disrc- ere>r of the week’s “'ralk on ’(Jh.inge’’ n\ Liverpool furnishes the following important u' lu-r : 'J’he talk yesterday wms, that we are« about to slave*, to his master; it enae*teij v.bat it calbd n that Russia has made as \e-l untold cncessions ; •‘perseinal liberty bill,” makinir the fu^rjtive slave that she desires peace above all things; that her law, passed m pursuance of a [dain provision of ; proposals have met the approval ol Austria; nnd the Constitution, null and void within the State of in part ol (Ireat Riitain; lbft, in point of lact, ,M issachuseits; it appointed a committee to visit J e.ur government bad acce[)te d them : that, so fiap test, when the ('onstilutioii said thal there should be no redigio'js te st. 'I'he Know jiotliings kne'w that their eibject wa.s revedulion; they knew that they had '.ak> n taken an oath not to support any amomi's to an in- fringe-rn'Mil on private- rights, n devstruction of if» li- vidualisrn, an abpolule merging of [lersons 111 of the South ; that it was our duty te> a'and by, to overruling [lartie.^, wh;cb strikes .1! the r ioi ol '>!1 encourage, and to cheer them, 'j'tie danger te> seieial and p'di'.ieai p ivile'^M «. Its uncoris itutii.n- eiur rights was not at llie; Nortli, if we,- woald be; al tv has b'e n deerlare’d by the fore*most le-gal in firm lo our friends there, nnd '.rue te> ourselve s, te'lects of ili" d y, and v't it coti'inues its disa-*- Calliedic for ofTice*. They might de-ny it, and ex- | W'e had friends in e-very Northern Stale — pnlri- irons course*, even wle n il l as to wade- through It is another five sanction, obtrueled ibe-rnselvevs into n priv.ate* ! amity, that they did not conceal ilie fact from their ' perv, Know-noihiny construction, fiut there was n ^ would stand by eturse-hcs, and bf- true lo our own instance of ibal Nortb rn piiibinthre>[)y which ban Ca'holic sediool ke*pl by females a*. lioxbury, in- supportors ; that Sir (Jeor^e (Irey communicated monitor wi'hin wliich told them they had taken it. , princi|di;s. 'Phere! we;re irue niem even in .Massa- ! t.fen so well illustrated by (Janning m tho “Afiti- the nunneries, and the commiiiee, un'Ier b’gisla- , pv were the ministers ai ibe prospect 1 restored 1 pl.,in away the d'-mal by some casuistical, slip- i e)iic and true men, who Wf)uld slatid by us il we i[it blooej e>f Arne-rican cit zei;c. sulteil the females, smedt about in the bed rooms the glad tidings to .Mr. iTngiit ; that Sir (leore" and sinks for P.ipal horrors — one of the commilte'e regarded peac-^ as accompli'hed ; that Mr. Rr’^ht havin"[ with him a lewd womm. who was ente*r-, was too bappv lo te ll the j'.yons intelliiii'iice 10 tainetl at the Hotel at tlie Slate's e.x pense ; and the ' others; that France, however, bad to be consult- members of the committee ^e-nerally, though when . ed ; that no doubt was cniertnineH) of lier ncquisi- in their seats in the Legislature a.s pious lo all ap- ; enc*, but ihat our geivernnv nt mi-.calculated the against them; ar.d tbe*n intreiduced a bpauliful pearaiices as any Praise'-Cod-R irebones, and policy of our ally ; thal Louis Napoleon ti'. once pass «ge of sacred history : ‘ It was after Judas had zealous advocates of the .Mai; e law,enj .yiiio them- , rejected the proposed conditi ms ; thal the ministe- sedves with the best litpiors, and having a “ good lime ol it” ir; th'dr work of intolerance and bigot ry. They nfterwards expelled the member — one (i,ss — who had the woman with him al Roxbury, upon the principle that h;s sin was lound out, but ne)t very deeply deprecated, lor even Hiss had ihre alenetl that he would expose bis cornr;ide-s, lor that, in truth, the kettle was as black ns to pot.— So they hustled him out. 'Phis Legislature was led, in its assaults upon loreigners, upon Catholics, rial crisis in I'rance had elireci re;rer('c,ee to this (i«‘t»'rminaiion ; ihnt, vulgarly speaking. Lord Palm* rslon was thrown aback; that there was, however, no ground for the charge; in the Tine s of (lisuniem in ihe Cabie.et on theit ques'ion ; thnt a kiiovvh-djre o,' it ope'ra.e'd against Lord Eilenbo- roiioh’s motion ; that the Lords would not com plicate nejfotialioni^ at such a crisis; that we are bound to Fiance as last as treaties can make us; thal we can do nothing buf in conjunction with her, Mr. {Stephens conlinued for some time in an el- i chusetts. 'Ph-re Were twei hundreiJ guns fire-d on Jacobin,” nnd by many of the modern vvits. It is oqu'nt strain on lh‘ sublimity of truth, the foun-! Roston ('ommon when tin! goviTtior re-cently ve- : a pious [trineiple, such as Douglas J'-rrold efe»- dation of all h'>nor and integrity nmong men — a ; loed the fjill to remove Juilge Loring from office crib's, which says; “ Fri*ml and brother, live a* want of which, ns bad as the Kiiow-noihings for issuing a warrant to restore a fugitive slave; lo ' the Lord, nnd ihit is to say, ns 1 may »co fit; cfiarge* the Catholics to be, could not preferred | bis owner. Out Ihere ivas not a know-nothing otherwise-, 1 11 punch your bead.” among ibem. 'Phey were fired by the true nien ' If we desire to test the vilue of thcec so-culled of thal Slate, who still felt the s|)irit of ’76 thal Nortliern “ reforms,” we must look carefLlljr to bbiZ‘d 01: Hunker Hill. 'Phere wore true men—: iheir results. Wfiat have they been up te> this? naiieirial rrM'ii— in X-'W {I imrisbir^. in t’oiineetlcut, In \»‘w Voik the liuogling and fiasty manner in in New Ye)rk, in Iowa, many in Illinois ; that our ubirh the probiidiory law was drawn up by thu minis!e-rs of the (iosp-I who might have joined the i [o’.icy was not to join the know-iin'bings, who L‘'gislature, not only rendered it inoperative n« eirder, lo repent in sackclot.'i and a>ibes, and to go we re fightieg these mer., but lo stand by our legal inslriuiient, but produced a state of atrairi about und preach from the pulpit on that text, : friends there, and soon tliey wejuld rally again, and ut.der which the sale of intejxicating d.'inks became ■‘w hat is truth ?” * gain strength. p're)m t w»nly-one ibey would swell , altogether uncontrolled, unregulated; and even He here- eloquently appealed to the Know-noih- up to thirty, to forty, to fifty, to one hundre-el in ^ ihe inle lligent mayor of lh« city bad no precc- ines lo burst asune/er ihese oaths, which bound 1 Congress, They would stand by u.s and our ■ dents l-.’^t to him bv wliicb bis nfTicial ce)urso them dow n as w i:b cords, and abandon this spirit ; rigbti, and with us save the constitution and save should be directed. lie was compelled to fail back of prevarication which ihev fiave adopted for ihe * the country. > upon first principles, nnd re ly upon the diiiCretioti betrnyed Christ w ith a kiss, and Peter denie*d him tbri'.e, iha. our Lord asheel, whnt is truth?” He called upon all Kneuv-notbing, but especially all and upon the constitution of the country, by «ixty nnd that there is no backing out ; ih.-it we must go ■ ^.urpose of violating the Constitution of the couii- , Mr. Stephens beautifully compared the entrance ol the ciiiz“n* themselves Pre>testant mitiisteri ol the (gospel, who, in their ' on, and that L>uis Napcdeon will go on ; that the ! if^ t Hl* poured lorthn glowing, patriotic, and lor- of this orejer Irom the Nejrth into tlie South lo the I In .M ine wc b arn from our de^patch'*s of this blind fanaticism have forgotten the mild precepts* precis,e terms of the Rus'ian propositie>ns are not cibie appeal in l>ehalf ol tiie principles laid down entrance of Satin 111 th« fe.rm ol tb« subtle serpe-nt meirning, ibe consequences have been more diaas- of the Son ol Cuid who di>-d for ll e-ir redemptie)n ; known ; but thal H is believed they emlirace-d, in | m his late b'lier against Know-tiothingism. He' intf) the garden of Eden, with a lie in his mou'b, irr.us, nnd ihi noliwiry were actually compelled to •iiul w ho instead ol teacliing Catholics, if they in part, all the preiposals made at ihe cemfe renc s on ^ depic'ed, in masieriy si} le, ihe corrupting and dis- ; calling on Eve to eal of the friiit, for in that day fire upon the people ; ihat the fan^'iciim of N'eal Fools .\M) TiiKfR .Mo.Ntv.—An old stove bedong ing to a district in Cornish, (N. H.) discarded for j R >yner, who, twenty years ago, it« irrperfections, and worth in itself less than a d'dlar :s the bone eif contention between two pug this country need such traehing, ibe virtues ol (’hrisiian birbearance and charily, are themselves lollowing the example set in Europe in the dark ag.'s c. grinding down and torturing those who ende;avor to W()rsliip (.lod in ib'-ir O'vn wa\. (1 — W’ho are the leaders in this Know Noihtng movement m Nirth Carolina ? J{—This will be stated more luMy he'reaftcr ; b'll one ol tie se leade>rs is the Hon. Kenneth in the Conven- r.d the; Ci>ii5lilutio;i eil Ne.)rlh ( aro. lina, delivered an unanswerable argiimr*tii Do^v .sboulcLbe gratified, and the rights of indivi. He concluded arn'd great cheering. duals suppressed by the most active agent of des- ,Mr. Tejimibs wa.s then called for, and responded jiotism—ibe auihoritative bullet ! 'Phus the now lean, and uni'uinly character of its secret organi- j in a most eloquent and impressive speech, nnd m millennium has been bnplited in blood. The era r ,tion—the anger 10 liSerty, to the p'^ace of com-! bis bappiesl manner. He lully coincide d in Mr. ' of the Samts is again Uie era of massacre and not. munities. and t 1 soeiil order, of secret political S'ephen’s sen'iments, and utfer d a splendid eulo- .Moloch is again substituted for Christ. the third point ; thnt the Czir agre*^d not lo in- ' asitous inllue^nces to result to seiciely Irom the de- > she should not surely di^". crease bis rnvy in the Eiixine beyond what it was ceiiful, equivocating, and fraudulent practices of! in May, l'?"i4 ; 'bat ships of all nations niight pass Know-tioibmoism—the anti■ American, BOti repub-; ihrouuh the* Dardeii'lhs, and ihat 'Purkey mi;;bt augment her fl tl loan fqu.iiily with ibal of Ri-^- sia ; that, hr th« conditi.ms what ih* y may, it i* conc aves*, plotting in ihe darkness of midnight for giuin upon the principles ol .American liberty, civil It is lime that ibe S ulb should lake h^ed of he advancei.aent of purjioses not disclosed to the i and religious—upon the noble feature of religious these things, and caUnIy resolve to oppose, to the to be regr*fed ihat w bal Eeg’and approved shoulel lie rejecte d by France ; that it id iiiipoh ic to sei k ^ ^ . to imj'ose needle-s luimiliai ion on Alexander; that j public ihey souolit lo ;overn, and whose rights ; loleranre which characterizes our institutions, and ; best of its ability, the progress of this Northern he dare not sijhinr. to a curtailment of Ids fleet or ! ;i„.y aimed lo control «nd dispose of in this clan- the wise policy of inviting to our sliores foreign ' [iropaganda which has already created so much lerri'eiry, nnd that, practically, il would ame>unl to i destine mode. He held ihal such conduct waj i emigraiion. : trouble ami sufTering. It is time ih'tt Ihe land of nothing if be did; that Purkty can exist ir. ihe ^orihy of men and freemen who held principles \ We regret our fpace will not enable us th;s chivalry and roierance phoulj raise il» voice and vic futy of Russia only in the protection ol Great | worthy of huccess. : morning lo give a bketcli of his very interenting hand against toe growth of bigotry and moon* . II r I ( w bn vn'n.i to )nve the C itholics Britain. 'J'rutb never skulked from the light of day and speech. | «truck fanaticism in iw midst. It is time that we .sing from it amount already to over five .lun- ^ le ri'^'ht to hold otTice thal Proicstants en- The further talk was that Loui- Napoleon had j f,jd it.,plf in dark corner^, afraid of discussion and Mr. Thomas, of Elbert, responded to loud calls • should act on the d-fensive, and show a resolute ” nlterioi designs : that a mntinuance of the war j inveslijjaiion. It w'as tfie characteristic of error , for him in a few appropriate remarks, wfncb were ; front to the incursions of the open and undi*guiS'' naciuus individuals, i.nd the costs of the law soils' the position be now occupies with relerence to dred dollars. The deleiuiat\i was charged with . tnking the stove without leave. 3hort viaits Lire best—rtiind thutl joy O—But does not Mr Rayner and his associates 'vitli Rus*ia^will enable him t.i carry them oui; I ^^d of i'al8eho>;d thus to hide, and there to work j well received ; afi^r which the metling dispersed 1 ed tyranny of the North. To your len’e, C dedare that t/iey arc for religious toleration ; and i that while Eng'and has nothing to 'ear fmm Rus- j out thoir purpjscs. Truth wus the foundaiir.n j in high spirits, and in good order. I Israel JS. O. Della.