a a . WESTERS DEMOORAT.i CHARLOTTE v A STREAK OF LIGHT ON MR FILL MORE S DARK PATH. The fallowing letter is interesting, because of the information it supplies in regard to Know- May 26. In the Senate, Mr. feller pre sented the petition of 75,000 citizens of Cal ifornia, for a Wagon Road to connect the Pacificwith the Atlantic States. Mr. Wel- hMJil Ufiiin:r. JnilP 3 1S56. Mr- ri'Unorc acceptance of the v , N othing nomination. It i infinitely more ler introduced a bill fdr the construction of A PATRIOT. interesting, however, as an enthusiastic ex- ! a military road from the Western boundary Wall- ; J. .. Med. , V.-.u. u di.-tiiigui.-died position of Mr. Fillmore's opinions on the I of Missouri to Carson Valley ; and another Whig ..j" Richmond county, . ('., has with- repeal ot ihe Missouri restriction. j bill for tlie construction of a military road Arwim from the K now Nothing party, and, as rbe lines in italics admit of no equivocal i from El Paso to Fort Yuma. Mr. Pugh op- :u u letter to tl.. i'-i otter iUe Observer, us- construction. They ure equally pointed j posed the admission of Kansas with a Free Ins reasons nr uumiuoningupaxy. j iNut m yvewnog .ur. ruiunuva . jatate constitution on account or tne small Jr. St..l in 1-li voted fop Um Rr.-i time, oppoaitioa to the repeal of the Missouri res ; population, and hu was very severe on the I ond tlie rote was cant f -v Goj (iruhara a- j triction, un,i hi pledging hiin to its restora- j Emigrant Aid Societies. He replied to the gain t I'ol. Moke. Sin i then, he baa .-tea- ' tmu. What else can he meant by '-bring- argument ot Messrs. Seward and Sumner, dily voted for tl.t caudi .t. of the Whig j hur.k t,lu COWitry to its old conservative Mr. SeWard introduced a bill to authorize party, lb Ofcwjr su4jortetl any other can- j position ?" And this result Mr. Fillmore j prot etion to be given to American citizens ditlatetj mt$H hist Congressional idee- proposes to accomplish by the instrnmen- ! who may discover deposited of guano in the thn, arfeegi he his aid to Mr. R,.:j, the I tIity of the "American party," "tlu; only ; pacific. The bill was referred to the com- andiuaje u the Know Nothing party. He i efficient centre" on which the opponents of mittee on Foreign Relations. The Senate been five times a Whig member of the ( tlie tvansaa-Mebraeka Bill can rally, and i then adjourned. eu. ral Assembly from the Whig county , organise for the restoration -jf the Missouri In the House, Mr. Humphrey Marshall, was likewise requested. These officers are as this Government still believes impli cated in a riolation of the laws of the United THE LOGIC OF SHARP'S RIFLES KICKING BACKWARDS. The beating of Charles Sumner in the States, contrary to the reiterated instruc- I Senete chamber is the natural consequence tions of their own Government. . This.com- of the powder and hall gasconade and rant plicity did not rest for proof solely on -the ' with which the fanatics of the North have testimony of Stiobel and Hertz, but upon ' een making the land riag for several years original letters frm Craiuptoa and others. ' past. The Message gives the details of the evi- Not long ago an aged citizen of Mary dence against tliose British officers engaged I land, pursuing a fugitive slave across the in the business of recruiting. The message lino of Mason and Dixon, under the author was referred to ihe Committee on Foreign ity of the laws and Constitution of the Relations, and after a slight debate the Union, was waylaid on his journey by i Senate adjourned. bandits in league with bumner, and shot In the Hoi;se. Mr. Campbell, of .phic, down by unseen and cowardly assassins. reported a resolution to allow the committee ' The venerable Gorsueh was not the first or . - Richmond. The reasons for the present i COrM uf Mr. Steele are those of a patriot. W ' He says : I shall not support tbe nominees of the IKaow Nothing) party, unless I believe them BOSj likely to defeat the Black Re publicans. Then, objectionable as the po sition of the pai l v is, I would not healtat ftO support them. 1 regard iIk. rightaofth South as paramount U every thing !.-., ami I never will sop port a party which docs not. in my opinion, boldly stand up for the guaranties of the Constitution, and thus pledge itself to protect the BfjOtion bi which 1 live. And yet, I do not claim to be u better firiend of tbe South than many who differ from me. 1 have not questioned their honesty, and will not do so. I have been ami am a believe in that part of the Kansas Nebraska bill which leaves the peo ple free to mould their domestic institutions a may please them ; and I announced in the last House of Commons that I w ould support no man for United States Senator who was opposed to it. 1 voted for Mess! Hadffer ami Bunuger, who were known to be its friends. The platform (if it has one) of the American party denounces the repeal of the Missouri Compromise, and .tlu-refon places the party m opposition to thu Kan sas bill ; for it is veil known that the two are incompatible. For that reason, 1 can not g. tor I itlmore uml DunteUon. 1 trill nai sfrneancs President Pierre jr signimg u bill uSrjeA resksaesi m oihus statute from the books, when by foul injustice was June fo thr South. I cannot but oppose a party which, though claiming to be natiomml, has not a Represen tative in Congress from the North (no not one not even the gn at Fuller.) who pre ferred the eloctaoa of Gov. Aiken to Banks the Black Republican. I cannot support a party Nwati every Convention in the Nor tnrrn States denounced the Kansas bill, Compromise. j from the committee on the judiciary, re- Now, this is genuine Bbjilk.-Republican- ported a bill authorizing patents to issue on ism. Kobody can deny it. Mr. Fillmore j the final adjustment of the California land ! claims, prior to January, 16oJ. The con- closed with those memorable words: "Liberty and Union! Now and Forever! One and Indissoluble!" What a descent deep as Erebus from that time and that man, and from those noble words, worthy of that man and of all Time, down to C. Sumner, calling his adversary in discussion "a skunk!" Richmond Dispatch. KANSAS. In obedience to a call of the U. S. Mar shal, a number of troops, a few days ago, made their appearance at Lawrence, the head-quarters of the free-soilers of Kansas, and aided the Marshal in making a number ice H of arrests. A demand was then made for of the gumner investigation to present their last citizen of the South, by verv many, the arms in the hands of the free-soilers. report with u journal of its proceedings at who has been thus murdered in cold blood j lhey rctusea to surrenuer mem, anu wnen any time which it shall be laid on the by the Sumner confraternity whilst lawfully Speakers table. The resolution was adopted exercising a privilege guaranteed by the unanimously. The President's message .; Constitution. was received and referred. Mr. Grow, of Pa., from the Committee on Territories, Not long after that brutal murder, a citi zen of Virginia went to Boston, Sumner's and the "American Party" aim at the same e nd which Seward and the Black-Republicans contemplate; the difference between these leaders and parties being simply a difference of opinion as to which is the most "efficient centre" on which to rally and or ganize an opposition to the principles of the Kansas-Nebraska bill. It will not lo to :iy that these are Mr. Kennedy's and not Mr. Fillmore's senti ments. Mr. Kennedy puts the words into Fillmore's mouth, and declares that they sideration of the bill was postposed two weeks. May 27. In the Senate, Mr. Trumbull gave notice of his intention to introduce a bill to prevent civil war and to restore peace in Kansas. Mr. Slidell called the attention of the Scnnf.e to a telegraphic despatch giving Mr. Sumner's statement before the House Committee, and published in this morning's papers. A long debate ensued, with some excitement. Messrs. Slidell and express his opinions. Kennedy has aright j Douglas disclaimed any knowledge of the to speak for Fillmore. He is Fillmore's contemplated assault. Mr. Toombs denied confidential friend and accredited agent. being near Mr. Brooks at the time, but ap But, in truth, he implies that it is a matter j proved the act. Mr. Butler said had he of notoriety and universal concession, that ' been present he would have assumed all the position assigned responsibility. Mr. Wade said if the prin ciple of assault were to prevail we must submitted a majority report, proposing to ! immediate vicinage, in pursuit of a negro man, Anthony Burns, whom some emissary of the Sumner fraternity had stealthily spirited away from Richmond. The valiant fanatics of the town of Boston, character istically courageous qn their own muck heap, roee up to the number of many thou sands, for the purpose of preventing a single unarmed citizen of the South from reclaim ing his negro man. A few patriotic soldiers were called out to protect the single citizen against the multitude of angry assailants, and succeeded in awing the ferocious mob Mil. Fillmore occupies him in this letter : HON. JOHN P. KENNEDY'S LETTER OX FILLMORB'8 ACCEPTANCE. Baltimore, May e, i?r6. My Dear Sir In answer to your inquiry as to the acceptance of the nomination by Mr. Fillmore, I can only say that I am in daily expectation of hearing from himself upon this subject. I foryarded to hup, about conic here armed. Although you are four to one, I am here to meet you. A man can die in no better cause than in defence of the liberty of speech. Mr. Wilson said the assault was brutal, cowardly, murderous. Mr. Butler promptly and emphatically denied the charge. The subject, after upon the Virginian. Nevertheless, an Irish lad, who had volunteered to enforce respect to the laws, whilst accidentally isolated in a crowd of these Boston Thugs, was marked as a victim and murdered by an assassin who was never discovered, and who proved himself as expert in the art of secret murder, as any pick-pocket ever did in the leger- ; further debate, was dropped.' Mr. Cass me miUUle ot .March, the letter of tho Pnm. mittee, annrisinar him of the nroeeedtniya of : the Philadelphia Convention, and soon after j nnflle further explanation in reference to the a duplicate eoiimiunic hute plicate. 1 have as yet received no Crampton correspondence, which misrepre tiinication from him in reply. I attri- L. i l ti , , ... this to the fact Of his bavin set out ' !fU him' 1 b rdr bcinS th for the north of Europe, and the delay in cident to the- transportation of letters to him on his route of travel. I have no doubt. the President's vetoes, then came up. Mr. Toombs defended the veto of the bill for the Improvement of the mouth of the acceptance, and have no I Mississioni River. The snbient wnf.,rfl.,.r however, of his hesitation in repeating to you what I said a few weeks ago to some of the members of the American State Convention at Greens b trqnirb, S- C. that a formal letter of un qualified acceptance may he confidently expected at an early day. It may he, indeed, that Mr. Fillmore. having received the announcement of the committee at the moment of his return from tne Continent to England, may defer hi.,- and opposed the admission of new States I answer until be arrives hero himself; but upon the question of his acceptance, vou may assure your friends there is no reason to doubt that it ill certainly be given. Mr. Fillmori is too deeply imnressed with a sense of his duty to the country to shrink at such a time as this from high responsi bility cast upon his political position. He is aware that his past service, in a nerinri of great embarrassment and danger, in the domestic affairs of the Union, has formed the principal inducement to the call which has lately Len made upon him by the Con- into the Union whose Constitutions tolerate alavery. I aunnot aid in the snccesti .f a party, at the North, which caQs upon me to defon.l it against the Irin and the Roman Catholics, while it is untiring on my rights, i r iL i , ii Hii-i can i ici us in. me, we, who are not troubled with Foreigners and Romanists, ought to allow tin in to defend themselves. I cannot support party which is rmti-Ro-rnanism in North Carolina, and not anti-No-mftnisni in Virginia, South Carolina and Louisiana. I cannot sapper! a party which joins with Seward and Giddings and Hale (not F. J. tV Son) and Greely and Sumner, in denouncing the present patriotic Execu tive, on account of his 're-opening section al agitation, by the repeal of the Missouri Compromise." I cannot support a party which in June endorses the Kansas bill and in February denounces it. i discussed. The Senate then adjourned. In the House. Mr. Walbridge, from the Committee on Public Lands, reported a bill granting about thirteen hundred thousand acres of land to the Michigan Rail Roads. A motion to table the bill was negatived ayes 67, noes 80. The bill was then passed, ayes 78, noes 57. The House adjourned. May 28. In the Senate, Mr. Pearce, of Md., from the select committee of investi gation into the Sumner and Brooks difficul ty, presented a report stating that no pre cedents are to be found except in the House of Representatives, the Senate having never been called on to pronounce iudement in similar cases. Several of theso precedents were cited, and the committee came to the conclusion, that, although the assault was vention in Philadelphia. He would not be l in violation of the privileges of the Senate, admit Kansas as a State with a free State constitution. The consideratian of the sub ject was postponed until the 25th June. The House adjourned. May 30. The special Committee ap pointed in the House to investigate the Brooks and Sumner uffair, reported to-day recommending the expulsion of Mr. Bracks'. They also censure Messrs. Edmundson, of Virginia, and Keitt of S. C. SECOSD MESSAOjS. The President's message on the subject of the Clayton-Bulwer treaty contains only a letter from Mr. Mercy to Mr. Dallas, in J which the former says that the proposition of England to arbitrate is not fully under stood, but is supposed to mean a reference of the differences to a third power, assuming the ground tint the only difference of opinion consists in the interpretation of the treaty; whereas our government considers that England had no possession nor tern- 1 demain of secret theft. loriai jurisuicnoa in central America, when the treaty was sitrned. While Emrland contends that sie may by virtue of an old protectorate of the Mosquito territory, take, and with a military force, hold San Juan and the Bay Isknds such ideas are totally irreconcilable with our ideas of the inde pendence or neutrality of the Isthmus. Instead of submitting to arbitration, the more practicable way would be to annul the treaty, and relieve the United States from its present restrictions. The President cannot consent to admit a doubt as to the construction of the treaty. While declining to submit tbe treaty to arbitration, he suggests so far as the right ful limits of the Bay Islands and Mosquito Coast are concerned reference to eminent men of science. He instructs Mr. Dallas to ascertain whether the impending differences cannot be settled by direct negotiation, and if it cannot, then to discuss the conditions of an arbitration relating to political geography, it being assumed that all other points would then yield to a conference with Lord Clarendon. an attempt was made to take them, the free soilers resisted, and fired at some of their opponents. This was a signal for a destruc tion of the town. The Free-State Hotel and Gov. Robinson's residence were burn ed, and the office of the " Herald of Free dom" battered down by cannon balls. A number of arrests of free-soil leaders were made, Recder fled, and at the last accounts was at Chicago, making a speech against the destroyers cf Lawrence. But one man, on each side, it is stated, was killed during these exciting proceedings. After the pre paration which the free-soilers had been making the last twelve months, for a bloody conflict in maintaining their lawless and treasonable proceedings, when the hour of trial came, they played the hound from the ouron;n "The bosom of America is open . ceive, not only the opulent and regr t stranger, but -the oppressed and rr of ALL NATIONS and of ALL KvH GIONS, whom we shall welcome to ticipation in ALL OUR RIGHTS V' PRIVILEGES." Washington KD "Our civil rights have no depend our religious opinions, MURE than r"J auu ireometrv t scribe any citizen as unworthy tbe confidence by laying upon him an ineUbl'C city of being called to offices of trust" emolument unless ho profess r. aDl this or that religious opinion, i8 $ . him injuriously of those privileges lul vantages to which, in common with ' t' low-citizens, he has a natural right t tends, also, to corrupt the principles, nf a very religion it is meant to encourage b bribing with a monopoly of worhllv i. ' bribing with a monopoly rill externally form to it. Every person has an o ai. .u ...;u -..ii "urs iuusc I, hu iii lAiLi iKii iv proicss and into a discreet avoidance of an? open assault leader to the tale of the pack. And so will rrom tne Boston Courier. ROWDYISM IN HIGH PLACES. the man he has proved himself to be. if from any fear of contest or consideration of personal ease, he should decline a Btunmnna which so strongly addresses itself to his patriotism. knom, and so do you, with what nra- found regret Mr. Fillmore noted the action oj tne n ,s, nt administration and its friends in oyemng anew mat angry ami dangerous discussion on slavery, by the. abrogation of the compromises o"1850, and with it the. re peal ot the old Missouri Compromise. He I mean to discharge my duty to the conn- YforLsaw, in it what has hem so sadly realised. a more e.rjispi rated agitation of sectional strife and increa.se, I difficulty in the way of peaceful st Ulement ; aid now, when the mis- chtrjkas been done, I know that he looks untk a strong faith to the American part if as the only effective centre upon which the intel ligent and patriotic frunds of the Union may it rallied and organized, with, a good hope oj bringing back the country to its old conservative position with reference to this unhappy dissension. He confides in the loyalty of that party to the Union, its devo tion to the constitution, its true estimate of the national sentiments of the people, and its determination to maintain a noaiti.i which shall enable it to check the excess of faction in both extremes of North and South; he confides in these as presenting a basis upon wlncti all sound and earnest friends try. as an ladepondeat tn eman, and I shall support the candidates of that party which endorses the Khumis and Nebraska bill and Fugitive slave law, if such a party can be fonnd, by whatever name it may be called. If the condition of the country was such as it wn in ISM, I would vote the Whig tick et, if one was presented. Now, things arc changed. The great issue will be between the friends of the Constitution and the ad vocates of the "higher hiw." Southern Know Nothings I believe to be good men, but I have po use for Northern ones. (I found them pwt hist Summer, when among them.) My belief is the race will be be- tween the Democratic party and the Black Republicans, and that the ticket of Fill more and Dmelstm will not carry three States, and not one which would not other wise go for the nominees of the I JemoeratL party. Tbe first object ..fall Southern men of peace and constitutional supremacy may be united in the administration of the gOTs eminent. The virulence with which this party is assailed just now by the two antagonistic organisations which have entered the field against it, is an ankiMtwhwltrmon :. ' , ' Each ought to be, to defeat the Seward alliance, strength and a proof of their feurs at all hazards ami sacrinYes. and for one I am willing t. make them. Very Respectfully, WALTER .. STEELE. N. B. I neglected to say that 1 once belonged to the Know Nothing party; but when I found that Northern and Southern Know Nothings were by no means tlie same thing in principle, I left it. ,-rt r VKgptm belvneing- to thi mi. it was not within their jurisdiction, the of fence being only punishable by the House. This being in accordance with the strict parliamentary law and the requirements of the Constitution, the committee recommend the Senate to make complaint to the House, and submit the same in the form of a reso lullon to that body. Resolution adopted. Mr. Tombs, of Gu., only voting in the neg ative. Mr. Mason made a speech defending the President's veto of the bill for the im provement of the mouth of the Mississippi, after which an adjournment took place. In the House, a bill was introduced ced ing the public lands to construct Railroads in Minnesota, Nebraska and Kansas, and a bill was also introduced ceding government lands to States wherein located. Mr. Green wood, of Arkansas, presented a bill to ro peal the act establishing the court of claims. The House passed a bill granting a. million of acres of land to Louisiana railroads. Mr. Galusha A- Grow, of Pennsylvania, asked the unanimous consent of the House to in troduce a bill admitting Kansas with a Free State Constitution. Objected to. May 29. In the Senate, the House bills granting land to Wisconsin, Alabama, Louisiana and Michigan were passed. MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT. A message from the President was re- We made such comments as occurred to us yesterday in regard to the assault upon Mr. Sumner. We are no friends to violence, and especially are we unable to justify the mode chosen by Mr. Brooks for his attack, or to find any apology for his selection of a place which should bo kept sacred from such scenes. It must be admitted, however, by all who are disposed to regard the sub ject reasonably and dispassionately, that the portion of Mr. Sumner's speech which prompted the act of violence, and which wo publish to-day, is excessively insulting and provoking, and not only highly indis creet in sentiment and language, but unjus tifiable, in any view in which it can be re garded. We should despise the son of Mas- J sachusetts who could hear his native State arraigned in such a temper without feeling and manifesting his indignation, and it would be strange if a South Carolinian did not re sent the arrogant and contemptous tone which Mr. Sumner saw fit to indulge towards South Carolina. In regard to Judge Butler, inasmuch as his expressions were more pointed and per sonal, they would be likely to excite even keener resentment. Mr. Butler is an old man, long a member of the Senate, an ac complished gentleman, and a most aimable and honorable person. Of course he enter tains extreme Southern opinions on the sub ject of slavery, but his character deserved ly stands very high ; he is a gentleman of urbane and courteous demeanor, and is un- Emboldened by impunity in many like secret murders and acts of unprecedented outrage, this Thug fraternity proceeded to make arrangements for carrying on such transactions by the wholesale; and accor dingly obtained acts of incorporation for the purpose, under the name of Emigrant Aid Societies. What acts of rapine, mur der and brutality have we not heard their speakers defend and extoll during the pro gress of this Aid movement, and during the heyday of Sharp's rifle fanaticism at the , North! Ward Beecher sermonises from the pulpit in the name of God and the Prince of Peace in defence of murdering Southern people in Kansas by means of Sharp's rifles. An octagenarian professor in New Haven boasts that he burns with a desire to shoot a "border ruffian" with a rifle of Sharp's manufacture, and has publicly exhorted pupils yet in their teens, to unite with the Killems who figured noisily in the congre gation in contributing the deadly instru ments to the aid of aboli ion emigrants in Kansas. The telegraph is bringing us accounts of the inevitable results in Kansas of all this Killem logic and gasconade of the Sumner fraternity. Southern men and government officers have taken the Beechers, Sillimans and Sumners of the North at their word, and meet their minions as insurrectionists with Sharp's rifles in their hands deserve to be met. Let us await the result quietly, for there is no probability of but one issue. Who felt any surprise at hearing of the attempted murder of Sheriff Jones, while lying in his tent at night, by a secret assas sin shielded by the cover of darkness ? This was but a link in the chain of secret and cowardly murders of which that of Gorsueh was one, and that of the Irish lad in Boston was another. Richmond Examiner. Q ceived, announcing the dismissal of Mr -A i I. . 1 .1. If t r , . , l i r, , 1 1 .a oi uieni na.o tiieir own serious reasons for mo revocation ot tlie exe- t unking it expedient to spread the opinion j luators of tho Consuls, at Cincinnati, New ! iversally beloved, esteemed, and respected " .IT!"3 "1L;tns u feline, or 1 orK and Philadelphia, who were implicated ought to be withdrawn from the canvass. in the ,i;,fm .i:k.,u: . l, - , uimi.uiuc. aiso enuorsing Mr. Marcv's renlv to T.nnl nkm.1.. l J v ii i i v. i i i e 'll Mr. Sumner's personal attack upon him was, in our opinion, unmannerly and inde cent in the highest degree, and none the From the Columbus (Geo.) Sun. THE SUMNER AFFAIR. We attach very great importance to this affair, and all similar ones. They are not petty affrays between man and man, but between North and South. It is impossible that they continue to recur without rapidly precipitating a much greater struggle, to which North and South will be the parties. And to say truly, we see no escape from this issue at an early day. The South has acted on the defensive now for many years. Her enemies have been reasoned with, but without avail. They seem to grow more fierce in proportion to our own mildness. Well there must be a time when argument shall be exhausted. That time seems near at hand. For ourselves we confess a sub lime weariness of argument. We have ar gued and argued ; reasoned, and entreated; appealed to justice, to patriotism, to com mon sense. But it all does no good. Are it ever be, with men in a bad cause. As the "Richmond Examiner" remarks: "We have never felt a doubt of the issue, if mat ters should como to the arbitrament of arms, between our gallant "border ruffians" and the gangs of hireling clowns who boasted so loudly what they intended to do with Sharpe's rifles, before they got upon the ground vis a vis with a resolute enemy. Af fairs are only reaching a natural consum mation. Tliose who have had tears to shed over tragedy and blood in Kansas, are likely to bo amused at news of a Jbut-race instead of a fght; and Kansas bids fair to become a sweepstakes instead of "bloody ground." The Herald of Freedom, pub lished at Lawrence, Kansas, on the 12th of January hist, issued the following challenge: "Come one, come all, slaveocrats and nullifiers ; we have' rifles enough, and bul lets enough, to send you all to your (and Judas') 'own place." 'if you're coming, why don't you come along V " Well, at length thoy pame. and the editor and his party went, w;th coat-tails stream ing behind so straight that the boys might have played marbles on them. Gen. Pomeroy was amongst the number who escaped from Lawrence. Boeder, it is supposed, left behind trunks containing let ters from parties East, involving him iu a conspiracy against the Government. Col. Eld ride is en route for Washington to dc manddamages from the Government for the destruction of his property at Lawrence. The Hotel destroyed, it is said, was owned by tho Emigrant Aid Society. The abovo intelligence at Boston, caused a call for a public meeting, to assemble this (Tuesday) evening, to adopt measures and obtain aid for the free-soil men of Kan sas. A hundred thousand dollars is expect ed to be obtained. It will, however, avail COu. malrini. frYhiSl r n v o t si ,ui,l..n.... P . 6 v .11 oi ma fallow. citizens, resulting, NOT FROM BIUtr BUT FROM HIS ACTIONS, and ftj sense of them." Thomas Jefferson. "Resolved, Thai the liberal attmbfc, embodied by Jefferson in tho Declaration of Independence, and sanctioned in the con stitution, which makes ours the land of m,er ty, and the ASYLUM of the OPPBgos ED of EVERY NATION, have been CARDINAL PBXXCI9LES IX THE DEMOCRATIC faith, and every attempt to ABRIDGE THE PRESENT PRINCIPLES OF to. COMING CITIZENS and the owners ,f soil among us ought to be resisted with tW same spirit which swept tho alien and se. dition laws from our stutute books." c. solutions cf the Baltimore Democrqtif Con vention. "The history of tho present King 0f Great Britain is a history of repeated iu juries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over theso States. He has endi-av-ored to prevent the population of these Btatej FOR THAT PURPOSE OBSTRUCT ING THE LAWS OF NATURALIZA TION OF FOREIGNERS, RKITSINi; TO PASS OTHERS TO ENCOURAGE THEIR MIGRATION HITHER, and rak ing the conditions of new appropriations of land." Declaration of Independence. "No religious test shall ever bo required as a qualification to any office or public trust under the United States." Constitu tion of the United States, Art. i, Sec. AND SUMMER GOODS AT not! ling. The race of free-soilism in Kan sas is run. FROM NICARAGUA. We have accounts from Nicaragua, which state that tho Costa Bicans, after their late defeat, in which they sustained heavy loss, fled from Nicaragua by land, having first shipped 300 of their wounded at San Juan del Sud. The Costa Ricans say they had been deceived in regard to the feeling of the people of Nicaragua towards Walker. They expected to be received with open arms. Baron Bulow is bitter against the false rep resentations. This news indicates that Walker is firmly established in Nicaragua. With the large numbers who has gone to his aid from California, New Orleans, and other places, he will be fully able to con quer all opposition. In reference to the Quixotic invasion of the Costa Ricans, the last Wilmington Journal humorously speaks as follows : "Walker it appears has rather flaxed out the Costa Ricans, who have gone home with a flea in their ear, after having "come down like a wolf on the fold" not Shakspeare. They swore that they would not leave one of Walker's men alive, and grave hints were thrown out that the unfor tunate "Filibusters" were not only to be slain, but afterwards eaten. The Nieara- guans would not turn against the existing NO. 4, GRANITE ROW. mm A Mr. Marcy says the more to Mr. Sumner's credit that it was made in Mr. Butler's absence from his place and from tbe city of Washington. laR FILLMORE AN ABOLITIONIST ! That Mr. Fiilmore, the present Whiff. I rs EMM, ami American candidate for the next Presidency, is an abolitiowj be doubted for a moment, bj those t;ispoe l to think undayt honestly we .-co Soutln ru (?) papers, in Mutes. protcc!Iv ;oiithorn in sentiment, 2enp, ka ticra.uiii- hu aams at ;heir column head as without respect to their connection llis prospects, aererthqless, are better than any man who can be brought him. In the South I give him Delaware ' dated 27th May 1 .....I X ... t, I- ... nwui Carolina, Kentucky and I eiinessee, ns certain; Louisiana and Mis sonr,, I think, will also give him their votes. Virginia and Georgia Sm mv . . .. ; o r ...... --. anu i-,-,. i . ii MiwLivit.i.: i. l t i . am ...... tl .i . i- -,, . In "lid 1 1 1 1 i , i . . . i l , . i j.i r j - 1 . Tl"- mwuga i uo not count on m lw ic inenuiy rela- j - l" cnecn. me neeuom ox ue- j slavery question mut bo ettled and if ar South thnT LTWelt lr t7;ueraJeDtii- The '?at debatie CCfct-1 ement avail nothing, patriotism nothing, not socak. ie , s.; l1-::claimer to V1,1,ate thB s of the Jt and fair princ iples, is another question, the constitution nothing let th stron upon future devehipoineuts. lutre j L uited States, and expressions of regret which we will not discuss now. But, in our I have recently returned from a iemwmmm ' that' contrary to the intention and direction judgment, no man who professes the doc- t resident lias carefully considered Lord Clarendon's note of the 30th April, and is much gratified by its conciliatory spirit trj.i nirtJ..t 1 , t i , , fnr,.n- . j.x . ,. r - , : gv.riim.i iH, m nnicii acs mciroiny chance we torever to nnrsiiA f hla TwiHon i n . . v " not RiHrlJ n 1 77 V I Qt Seen,S hmv the jvaJij; business works, not. .Bitterly as we would deplore a dis- 1 i i ....... solution of tViii. T ,, , pvlicm they occupy the position of defendants solution of this Lmon, wo would welcome it ; ;nstpju1 , i. a. imppv e.xciiange ror a nte of nMmofnal C...A .1 : 1. r i 1 v- ...-.v.,M " , thn' ik r.r ii r. mi. -win .u,i v . wuiei reimis ill tne oimre The accounts from Nicaragua are up to No person can reasonably suspect us of j be a change and that right speedily. The mruum several .t the South..,-,, . i or tin. ntL , i... l i ?. . trmo of ,ir.nrr. a.i i i w-vwwwmhctjjbii i .......u, luno naj oii'ii SUCH lllirillire- I fvwvvl una u ii-m i. cwpiuj lliai t, cannot Wit'i pleasure observed, while tb.-re. ih,.t m..i,t . . , , . , I t-in.t ..f io . - , , , , ! tin. lm T-. - r ... . v ' ' r-uw.-mciory io tne I'resuient, and "gg which niewuiuiy provones wln nr.. Tl" -cuieru-an partv were wisel v callino-into i .u , . , ., noar0 . I J anillir IIUO tho main inmn U nl..,..: n r . , war. find tnAn ,,,1 .1.1 1.: ij ami v t T,u lr "eCC, as candidates for their elec- r. r"""-eeun-ntt iqajeaiy s : " u"ucu""' l" cem muiseu s . l nc-Kets anu torotlier responsilde trusts, 1S mus removed. J.ut the""""" non-resistant aerences. And . out In in the worthiest nnl m.wt .l.t;, . President pttrnmnU . L. . : if be find MmuW i x. I afirarion. of nn, nn rri a. 1 0 .., u.-,,cuSe. x neie musi : rpnnblicvvl.no tho r-o.to f..n .... i ........ - my iu.- i i v lua of internal commotion, with a prospect of the speedy overthrow of President Moras. The elections in Nicaragua were progress- j ing, and the re-election of President Rivaa was considered certain. Q ititution nothing, let the stronn- arm w 0 give us either a peaceful tranquility or an honorable grave. There is a God of battles as well as a God of peace, and to Him we may in the last resort, confidently appeal." tho next proi.j. nti.d ;andjdatc. Oh con- M.-tcnoy, thou ;:rt in deed so rare a jewel, as scarcely to be found on earth never among political parties Of party men. There i one consolation, ho-vever, Mr. Fillmore will not be elected; mark the propheev brother Whigs. Mi. Millard Fillmore, the polite and ntieauudj ! .ditiouist, will mt M the next Pr-tideut of these I'nited State.' in our opinion, although no partisan in ..ueh srraaiblea, uml no dog in that huut, j jat, wo opine the Democrats will tree the coon spiln Camden (S. C.J Journal. A P06 Brsixuss. A man wuited $i0, 000 damages firsflD the N. Orleans Crescent for libel, but the jury after mature delitera- 1 ' iJ'7 0 'uni the round sum of one cent. it a a I optical bods I liono that th own and approved for their conser- concur with Lord Clarendon in the opinion : suff( r the l,e,'tltv of his intemperance, who without resnoot to tl..;r ... ... r , . - With the nartr thV. ll.M " 'Vn ! that Mr" Crampton and the Consuls are not ! can be bluI He has voluntarily put l,,g only to their infinites with the party in ' imPhcated m t"0 proceedings. Regard- j b,m8" "P011 par with the intemperate seidiniontnn(opii.i..n -theygivingabioader mZ those wuo have n connection with this j au1 violeut' a"d must submit to the conse in. n o just foundation to their own now- i Government, he has not ..L u i queuces. iEson informs ns that a trmn0. . - w i. -iv ji 1 1UI 1 - I .Majesty 3 Government; but in the cases of ' ter' wll ,,nce taken prisoner in battle. common fate of ancient times, on the i -I m.uhuu . . 1 - u i.iMii- una wu lit 11 OPS 0 - tc u nc ouu as til . ..P: intend to make any interruption in the ! eta non-combatant. "Non-combatant" party, larce enough to embrace everVfrieud ' dillomatlc rtatioua between tho United j sakl enemies, pointing to his trumpet, of th. t niou and the Cstitution, mad ! tt8 Great Britain; but, on the con- ' as tne-v Im pared tu put him to death, "why, you bold in your hand the verv instrument 1 none taat tins course will ho adopted I J J ' out in tac cases ot " P'l! generally, and the objections of enemies si- ' individuals mentioned, ho deems it 1 claimed exemption fironi tbe K''r' lh ih,,WiUg tht iu t,le "ouduation ' Pper that their relations with this Gov- Prisuncrs of war, in ancient at Mr. I ilbnoro, the American organization j ernmeut ceat-e. In taking this step he does ?ronud that he carried no we ha advanced from the rKnruMn, nj I ... . h iWT"Bw . , ALAS, HOW FALLEN ! Mr. Sumner, in a late speech in the Senate, likened Mr. Douglas, of Illinois, to a certain nameless animal which emitted a noisome odour. The U- S. Senate was once as dignified and decorous a body as the British Hnnsp nf T.nnU TTr.n- I- f 11 i t - t.::: "l : " , 1UliCU- I,0n l Pweer. at Panama nulls iiQc u come, wnen a man can be elected from a sovereign State to a seat in Ihe LATER FROM CALIFORNIA. The steamer Illinois arrived at New York, on Friday lu-t, with the California mails to the oth inst. She brings $1,800,000 in treasure, and G60 passengers. It was rumored at San Francisco that a large party were going down on the steamer Golden Gate, with which the Illinois connected, to , revenge the late outrage on the American The Republicans had held a meeting at Sacramento, and appointed delegates to the rtrori- enough to concentrate a power that ; fary, is desirous of keeping the two coun- t i 'wth0 C ?0riCtU- ! J1"1? a ( -ting. Mr. Cramp- J. P. KENNEDY. '-IT Mr. Kendall, late Postmaster of New Orleans, has been tried and acquitted of the charge of robbing the Post Office. tou's withdrawal was asked exoresslv on the grouud of his connection with the enlistment business, which had rendered Him an unacceptable representative of Great Britain near this Government, and for the same reason the withdrawal of tho Consuls j which incites our foes to tenfold fury gainst us." CTTIUM.ini i : 1 here ws a time when Massachusetts was t--sr l iieie are 4o0 convicts in the Massn- ' . i A, , cbusetts state prison at this time, and Z T n " tbewSeUatC ?J? more than double the number out who ought Thinkofhim, to be m g luiuireiuai anu moral majesty, in mat great debate with Hayne, which r'niforl sit, O a. - - ii Ml , v. uulco oeuaie, capaoie ot RmmU... l'nnt;n .i.:u . emnlovint? hnmaM Jr. i . at i o T , uS I'Mladelphia on tke 17th Jane. In a fi'dit ..-cuoiui, tucu as was usep in Sum ner's late extraordinary outpouring of vul gar ribaldry and billingsgate. No wonder they proclaim abroad that the United States are a nation of ill-mannered and ill-tempered vulgarians, fast relapsing into barharianism. j with the Indians, Capt. Embree had been j killed. The particulars of the Panama j Railroad accident, show that 30 were killed anu 4 wcuuueit tour have died since the accident. Ex-Governor Bigler, of California, and Ex-Governor Bigler, of Pennsylvania, brothers, dined, with the Hon. James Buchanan, at his residence near Lancaster, Pa., on the 26th ult. X entire fresh assortment of t.-ishiuualilf Spring and Summer Dress Good. Con- swing of Bareges, Tissues, Muslins, GineimH, I. awns, Barege de Laines, and a large ussohnirni of Fast colored Prints from i t JjJ (.u uta Ak,t Jaconetts, Cambrics, Swiss Muslim, Lian, Bieaehed and Brown Domestics. A large msm i ment of Pantaloon tjtufl's. Also, hau'lseiuc Vot ings, &c, &c. Neat Styles of Mantillas from 2 to 12 50, new Bonnets and Ribbons. A large stock of Boots and Shoes, watse aud fine. Gents Cloth Gaiters, $ 1 7o. AdsoyoagRM Gaiters, and Opera Ties. A good assortment of Clothing, (offered kw,) Hats, Caps, Shirts, Cravats, Ties, .J.ewi lrv, kt. Just received ti5 boxes Glass-Wan-, which 1 offer very low. Also, on hand, and just receiving 50,000 Cigars, assorted Brands. Cash buyers would do well to give me a call, us I am a young beginner, and must ainl ufl sell cheap. All I ask is a trial. P. W. AHKKXS, Next to T. Trotter & Sou. May r, lf.'G f. Charlotte, 3NT. C) APRIL 26, lriGti. j AT a meeting of the Board of Commission of the Town of Charlotte, orth Carolina, at their Council Chamber this evening. Present, W. F. Davidson, IjitendHiit, W. T. Phifer, It. M. Jamison, and Was. Harty. It ii ordained by the Board, that the following Tax Ik assessed for the year 1858, at the following rat'i upon each different object of Taxation as follow, to wit : On each $100 value of Seal Estate, $00 SO Stock in Trade, 0 30 " White male Poll, f M Black Poll from 12 to 50 years, 5 W " Free Black Poll, Grocer and retailer of Spirtuous Liquors, Company ofCirrus sMersJSqacs man penormers anil all otaers tnb- j ct to pay a Stat.- Tax, a Tax of " Bach Concert per week, " Company of Ethiopian Serena- ders, arid all others snbject to pay a State Tax, to pav per week On each vender of Spirituous Liquor&, Dy tne quart, per ai:num. On each Itinerant .Merchant or Pedler, or Hawser ot goods, wares & Mer chandise, not the growth or Manu facture of Pi. C., except Books, s l ax ot, On each 8)00 worth of Interest, On eaeh Surgeo... Dentist, Practising Physician, Practising Lavvver mid all other person-, (except Minis terscf the Gospel, of every denom ination) w hose practice, salary or fees, or all of them together, shall yield an annual gross income of $5)0, shall pay the sum of 83, for the fir,t$500,iind 9 for every ad ditional $500, until such income shall exceed $1500, and $5 for every additional $500 above that amount. On all pedlers of Patent Soap, medicines for killing crows, chinches, and other vermin,or for the curing of head-ache, tooth-ache, or coins, and of all patent medicines, razors and razor trans. a Tax of On each Carriage of the value of $50, On each " H $100, and under $200, On each Carriage of the value of $200, and under ftJOO, On each Carriage of the value of $:J00, and under 400, Qn each Carriage of the vidue of $400 and umvurds, Bach Gold watch, " Silver watch, " Forte Piano, On cach$100 value of Gold or Sil vcr plate One per cent, Laeli Dog. " Bitch, Public Dray, 2 horse omnibus, 4 ( Livery Stable, Stud Borse standing in Town, Tavern, BdlLrd Table, W. F. DAVIDSON, Intemlant. Teste, J. B. Kerb, Town Clerk May 27, '56 fit. O Whig please copy. 2W 50 00 20 00 5W 5 00 2 5 00 25 00 2 6 . (( (( (( CC 500 05 21 300 1 2 10" 2 (fi 10 00 10 00 11 V 10 o 13 0 5 I 2j 0fl