64 
Editorial Introduction. 
the right of drawing $15.00 from the treasury on their arri¬ 
val in the Island, unless furnished with the certificate of the 
Bureau of Boston. Those, also, who accept a free farm, 
will he expected to pay their passages; hut if unahle, for the 
moment, to do so, the necessary means will he provided for 
them, and abundant time he allowed them, after their arrival in 
the Island, to refund the advance. In order to prevent an 
emigration to Hayti of persons who would leave this country 
for the country’s good, it will also he demanded from applicants 
for a homestead, that, if from the Northern States or the 
Canadas, they shall produce the certificate of the Bureau of 
Boston. Of course, this rule will not he enforced in the case 
of emigrants from that harharous and hlood-stained section of 
the Union where hlack men are enslaved, and white men who 
sympathize with them so often suffer death at the hands of the 
moh, —even, as recently in Texas, the fearful torture of the 
stake. 
It is not the design of the Bureau of Boston to send emi¬ 
grants, except in peculiar cases, hy transient vessels; hut to 
charter ships expressly adapted for the purpose of conveying 
them comfortably and speedily. In these vessels, those who 
desire to pay their own expenses will he accommodated at the 
lowest rates, both as regards hoard and passage money; while 
the others will receive equal consideration and attention. All 
emigrants, unless special provision he made for large companies, 
will sail from the port of Boston. 
