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Apasian, Ovana.—The tull sunshine of success District ‘A meeting of “Democratic Republican voters, | Pe hich we can continued ” has already descended on the opera. Each repre- ares of the Sixth Congreasonal each cnn he this . a resolutions were then put, and carried by acclama’ | vention at Philadelphia sentation improves on the preceding, and the num- Versailles Sc. the 1th, 12th, 15th, 16th th wards, in poms Morass then rose, bers and brilliancy of the audiences increase pro- www oh bly delete? of choosing delegatesito the National Convention, sound of my. vo : Lo ar of ite nee x tho pI 5 mn pi ionably. The wind instruments keve been re-d 256, Rouen to Hare Were it Bank ot aud Avig. | to be held at Philadelphia, in July next, Dy dis- | the principles of p wat Neliieare coli, spoke o ep atly ebaee cations Meee veral improvements made, the company Marvell ee et curition have not beraqueted, Bank | ‘ics, Was held last evening, ut Vauxhall Garden, | Clay or to any, i Mr. Qhairman and fellow citi thes been said that | strong an advocate offrce trade as uny Of them, ‘Tamas | quit themselves with increased éclat,and altogeth- nee five pat cues 20 rime kates Bonds $Per | present at the opening of the sl pages aye al at triumph, (ha re eae ty tare apology. When a Nestea announced in the papers jealous for the liberties which that " Salskerney ‘will com. | the world, to felicitate inimself on the success thus : i ic i . The “Ty-| butto adhere to our principles. (Cheers, nd when | t yas one of those who would addreasthia meeting, I | promise as any man a i “a phot able. cnthnsiaam existed atnong them. . The ” TY- | i aeieeihe De broken the peuple will relly | had very litle expectation of being able ‘olde 20, But oF of mocepling G poner Coton thoes who give ie Tope OF is enterprize.. It only. wante.the infusion of ol ——— ler party” was well represented by Custom House | pound the flag and ‘of principles which we shall | tlemen, my heart is with you ; ki ‘and alled. a littl his th inresisti- W edies Mi "5 on, you; lam known to most me may by and bye wish to see rec Great chee! le more talent to make this the most irresisti N E YORK HERALD. incumbents; and among the friends of John C. Cal- | erect; then our cause will triumph. ‘ oy b ny paras me y my rer F wise are fon am ara ts seeing ev proceedin of this | bly popular company ever organized in any coun- — 5 A “ ; ane and have mon} en :ptior 5 sarees tae £ ‘ 4 houn we noticed John A. Morrill, Esq.,,Gen. Daft] The speaker them moved the following resolu- | YON Ss the editor of a democratic newsp: hes Revs’ basallople ‘that te kell some pope ila Oe yous net | try. As it is, it is a most admirable one, but with New York, wriday. February 9, 1844. === | Green, Lathrop 8. Eddy, Esq., and others; but we tions:— itofen ted that the course which the paper itself has it to result, but that it shall also be free from | De Begnis, Mrs. Sutton, and Madame Cito, it — . ‘ “’ a a Resolved, That as the Presidency of the United States | vi |, was calculated to defeat the ends and purposes | the reproaches which the . *y a - Tue Dae ign Nows. ‘ - observed no prominent frend of Col, Johnson OF | isthe highest office in the gift ofthe people, and is inv eed | of thedemocratic party.” I a iicaling Be ne ere Ean Pee Pr} en eg ed A would produce w tremendous excitement. Wee give in s. day's paper an ample resumé of] Gen. Cass, among the audience, ‘This is the be-| with great and even dangerous the President be- | [, ns an editor, feltit my duty to take, I would vindicate | this appointment five months before the time for holding | The Opera is now the whole talk in fashionable ing Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, and hav- | the proceedings whieh you yourselves have already adop- | the Convention.—(Cheers baat situation of things may | society. At balls, parties, masquerades—every i we, as late as the Mth ult., brought the foreign ne’ , tt hinge med ginning of a movement of much interest among : a ‘ ORB, ore ° it his disposal a patronage ali verwhelming in its | ted. This isamomentous question. It goes back to the | also change in the meant , to this port, sacpalacd yong by bai bi politicians, and considering it to be the first meet- fivenee, it "hecomee he pales pl dy of the peoreto very principles on which oat liberties as « people depend. tween myaelt and many members here may change; it is where—it is—“Have you seen Borghese?” “How i et hip oscius. apt. Ol- | j i % scrut ize the claims and qualifications of candidates for | In what do we ler from e monarchies TO} — } possi 00, that indivi jal Hi n> ” 7 nary fast-sailing packet ship » Cap ing, it was very respectably attended. that lugh station with the most jealous carp and vigilance, | What is the grand characteristic of our qovermentt it | lative we may differ. It is thecefare very desirable that Apyon likehert Dowie sts sltees besntifully The meeting was called to order by Joun A. Jins. Resolyed, ‘That the principles advocated by the Hon. J. | is that the people are capable of wise and efficient self} voters should know the sentiments of the candidate, and | “What finely eet head she has?” “What bright ‘This news is indeed very important. It gives us | Morrit1, Esq., who nominated J. L. 1H. MeCracx- ‘alhoun in his late able and masterl; ss to the | Zovernment. Itis that the people are capable, and not eyes!” In fact there are now only two excitements : ey Ny «| en for President, Mr. E. K. Collins who had been x only that they are capable, but have an inalienable right, lh “etek : vend the great fact that cottonin Liverpool had again | teh cted for that place being ubsent. Mr. Kppy people, pidepripedenyinkn nm greene aged “Te. | of selectin, ‘the rulers into whose hand th Comets here—the one isthe cotton excitement and the other advanced nearly one cent per pound, and the sales | then nominated Samver A. Lawaxnce and Gxo. | parturefrom those principles by any men of any set of | adm! m of the government in all its branches, and c is the opera excitement. soney is making in alt had been immense, making an addition to the Ww. Bune ee pS Ere aay, and George Fol- men, involves 8 surrender of tele ht Linge with alliits *} ravetiiggn Sie he ‘S v do, he forfeits our confidence. } directions, Business is prosperous. The merchants, value of American produce, full $2,500,000 on both | #070 and Tec es oi ner ore re aariee. aut great | craic purty. Therefore, the proposed convention to be | nounced in Toyolatious judi adopled’T eis that the forward ogein, Tall, u the fashionable people, the traders, every body be- aids ob the: Aalaee? aphlaute ai proceeded to uddfess the mecting ia rugpert| Held i8 Baltimoro of the personal partiaana of 2 single | HaeMDery, OT RAY, OM aoutein thevwelection af thes | question fehould have no hentation in being selected a | 81% f0 spend money cheerfully., The old timesin- This cheering intelligence we received yester- | oruseries ofresolutions, He suid, Mr. Chairman andGen- | candidate will be anti-democratic, and we por ar deligation here to-night. But how ean you, not | deed are returning—and the opera isthe only place th ‘ou have heard the call which Ihave read, upon | 82 its proceedings as binding on the party. Gftheir reivilege and right of choice is to be defeated, 1 ing ‘more, 4 “ling | tlemen, you have he w ve read, nae t! day, at 12 o'clock noon, by one of our {ast-sailing | Yinjch we have been assembled upon this occasion. You | Resolved, ‘Phat us the shajep by, dstricis of delegates Te Guise Aaoeampeys habe prove thet thal we show thas ESeewarkt dieu s olheaae ba Rl bad be brought | of amusement thought of. clippers, which had boarded the Roscius yesterday | will all of you recollect that at the great assembly in the | to the National Democratic poration te he pazem led in | the operation of party pine hes been sych os tacon- | submit this amendment to the motion, and I wish to see it | _ It really would appear that the thing has been morning early, many miles ontside of the Hook. | Park some months since, und prior to the #yracise Con- | Philadelphia on the 4th of July next, who trol, and tI mi jefeat the will carried — (Cheers. done and that the opera is at last permanently # b: of the people, in o} to ) ; : “ ‘ vention, I there addressed those assembled upon that oc- of acandidate shall vote per capita, is the nearest approach “g fp f th “sg a i Our whole extensive establishment, from top to | vasion' I told you that my fears were thet ourrupresenta. | to a. papular expression of io, voice of ‘the democratic prove oe i sompll teatin Foe oot TO che dirt eats eee tink you must not have understood | established’ amongst us. Hereafter it will be as bottom, was immediately in motion. We sent | tives or servants, whom we were about sending to that | party, which wider present Shyapanancet can be ob- | what we differ from the mangrchieq of the ald warld? It | tion of the friends of the democratic _part ding the | fashionable in New York as it isin Parisand L eel rasivel: : ities of . dj. | Convention, or whom wy had already sent, would abuse | tained, and offers the only. rpoctic ije means of promoting isint at'he who administers ihe government is se- | Baltimore Convention now’ fixed. Sa a “Se i isin Parisand Lon- ex ly immense quantities of our evening edi-| the powers which we had placed ‘in their hunds, and | that harmony which is indispensable to the ¢ ection o the | tected hy the peaplo.. Here the ashe Memovernsent@ long sinco been appointed to that Convention’ and we | 4°2- Why, alreadyfpeople can hardly muster tion to all our agents, exchange correspondents | would take powers not del to them, and, for the sake | democratic candidate, we enrnostly entreat the delegates | a citentullye there the monarch,in whom the sove- | know that a cular man will thon be nominated, | courage to confess—“I have not yet been to the and subscribers, by the afternoon mails up to 5 strarngoanaes npeaiay ties for Laing of evans aoe ca ermaiciag pcata vekiey Pri | eae reignty of the country reste, derives hie 4 wer ant 2iz | Every means hay bean Tived to intimidate the friends opera.” To-night again- the ci of the play, : old dynasties, and of defeating 'your voice, would them- | tion, and urge e peop! several Co bv * aye aa : ae o’olock—and, after that time, we issued an Extra relvot send and instruct the ‘gato to the National Con- sional districts to elect @deleate te $h- 2, ot July Come | 7 zhctney, trade rey a che oes ecemiaeit we Se eee eee i i e mination of e ni ‘resident. (Loud ay vention, n * Heravo for the city, which went off to the news-| ventana ase ipers, Tasked you wint | Resolved, That the ohject of « National Convention | (Cieers), Hit, as has bucn vomarkell by tho gentleman | democratic party eek to tubscrie to the eaves tore, | _ANorwxn Duet.—Mu. Wann 1x Trovnrae.—We boys in extraordinary quantities. Hep should bo taken i cave they did misroprobont your | should he to consult laguter, that, bya comparison of | unt lg that tho couse we arodisposed to take may put | necersary for us fo act at once. (Cheers), Wo lave | anderstand that Mre. Parlin, the beautiful Rhode ae i " ings, and so assume the powerfrom your inion, lidates may be selected who can best unite * The whole mercantile interest was in a state of oawer was that you would yourreivertend the lege | thenippart and whoq section wil Dnt promote the pi | tsi af' eet magieate whose paneipay we donet | tubmsaion to the Rominalion of tet daltimore Conran. | 1land patriot, has taken offence at some, abuse deep excitement, on account of the highly favorable | and té your own convention. (Loud cheors.) This js | ciples of the democratic party. and as such aselection can | $0Clon ON Oe ie fact. In tho firat place, the proceed. | tion ; and if vor thia movement is allawed to rest, we | agaist her in the Courier, and thus writes to character of the news, and the great effects it was| the first movement fo!!owjng upon that answer—(cheers) | best be mado after duo deliberation and consultation, | )PPTCrE y edi ‘high the democratic par. | shall find that individuals will be intimidated or bought, calculated to produce on American commerce. | >" "aay 47 oy bye Ned lings of pure pe ome eee ce eainn eA, ath CR A hactnen gue niet Bee ae iy Organ tifoughout the pear have | or operated upon in tome manner to subscribe tothe Doon ui New Yonx, Feb. Sth, 1944. alone— (cheers) a wledge of the power you pot is | consider themselves com! e support of any can- . i ’ e h tad At the lowest calculation, we issued at least thirty ~icheets) by aint of settee to every pen Re- da thgoc ye ddwed of and our ele; te should, | ont Maeva chun neue aaa peaent pe nese Coneaatiaa seit BrPone PY sea enor Mant Coro: at Wiese, He copies ing, evening, and extra | minstions—(renowed cheers)—and to every attempt, to | therue, vole nt andidates who can Lest unite the | General Jackson, in 1924, was a candidate against the cau-| That will be after the nomination of the Baltimore Con- re thousand copies of the mornins, evening, ‘xtra | take the power from your hands—(immense applause,)—| support, and whose nomination will most promote ‘the | Cis nomination. "He was denounced by the ibany frgus | vention, and immediately after that nomination the spirit ted pertion bevns par nailed a eereaens pate editions of the New York Herald yesterday; thus far | That answer, I say, gentlemen. js followed up by this | principles of the party. and the Rickmond Enguirer, for permitting his name to be | ofit will go abroad throughout the whole country. ie my duty to demand from you, the authority byggnich vidual, i | saat movement_(cheers)-vand we are now about forming our |" Resolyed, ‘That we aro opposed to a National Bank, a ond ‘ jo ebeg exceeding the aggregate circulation of the whole | jelver'a contoderation that shall send delegates to acon: | high protective tarif and the distribution of the proceeds | Use! in opposition to caucus nomingtlons, at Washitg, | cores oF pats il Ae Dat MP excreasion of hig | Zounare taken upon yourself to make suc New York press combined. Yesterday was indeed | vention which shall nominate a President—who, if | of the sale ofthe public lands. The Jast ude of | unworthy to hold ‘the situation, and the Rick-| opinion, and party tyranny will te nu a exergise, and it will be und th @ have but fights baie and 3: gral oe " A eiected, shall be the President not over a clique | the country is due to Andrew Jackson for hjs veto of the . Thave never found it necessary. to chang ¢h q a field of Austerlitz or a battle of Waterloo in the |e" president, uot over a dynasty, Dut the | Bank Bill passed during his administration ; and the peo- | ™ond, Finguirer said that he was no more Mt to, be #) tt bd dy way a To fee ery orang tt ton gious principles in which 1 was brought up from chit. newspaper line. We beat the combined newspaper | President over the whole people of the United States.— | ple will award to John Tyler their grateful acknowledg- } president notwithstanding the opposition of the Albany | as it ought to be fought. (Cheers) 1, therefore, am in| As 'to advocating Gov. T. W. Dorr, I have done so be- press of New York twice in one day. In the morn- | (More enthusiastic applause.) It is a cme movement, | ments for his firmness and patriotism in vetoing, in imme- | (7/14, and the Richmond rer. The candidate nomi- | favor of moving at once. (Cheers.) I seo in this assem- | cauge I obeyed the feelings of a woman, finding my hus- ? % : entlemen, whieh we are now accomplishing. (Cheers.) | diate succession, two bills of like character. ated by the Congressional caucus, proved to be incom- | bly good democrats and spirited individuals, and a ball bean loathsome prison on accot ing we published exclusively the news brought to els oneof th most serious evils of our government and |” “These rezolutiona were received with immense | petent ¢ discharge the duty if ho had been elected. ‘The | willbe set thie night in motion, ant you will tee the 6th | bolitival principles and soar hora rerouting: the deo f istrict will have the honor of | fookupon it ay the happiest moment of my life, when I Boston by the ship Republic. This was done by | of the elective franchise which we now enjoy; so that, | 4,5) didate of the Congressional caucus was the candidate | Congressional : 5 ursuing as we are, our various daily &vocatjons, attend- | #PPlause. canes Bren ‘ 1 many an overland Express from Boston. In the| fnyto os pecuniary interests, and to those matters which | . Jon 4, Monnii1,, Esq. then, in obedience to the call of ehoilon seekeass Whe wisted (0 cute, nents Tics ret fe eee ee tie gations tb and rescued him and restored him to the bosom of his own evening we again beat them in publishing the news} daily call upon us for our attention, barry mig Bemenae cee support the resolutions. tye was || tobethe instrument in the hands of those by whom he | the democracy of the whole Union (chopra) nd itshall | T connot conclude without remarking, that. I sincerely brought by the Rosciua, which was effected by an] Shi cine sufling business of party.”? (Cheers) And we | certainly cannot refuse to reepond to your eall, and offer | W8# nominated. The resolutions which yon have adopted } have made the packed Convention of next pal in Balti. et your contract ‘with the Governor of this State; ocean express that reached many miles out to sea, | know not the extent of the operation of this evil; we know | some remarks in support of the great principles, embodied berm ger eet that ce aren ety beer pay pestentire pec | w He fo, atthe yolca, of the pepe they se you were differently situated, might prove to ‘ ‘ A ; not the rights and the power ‘ken f mus, until finally, | in the resolutions just read—principles which I regard as tari nd why, 80? Because the principle of our Go- | are attempting to misrepresent—(cheers.) We have no | you that I hadnot entirely forgotten the use of a pistol, braving the snow, rain, winds and tides in all di- perhaps, we see them carried away to ay extent that we | entirely identified with the creed of the democratic party. vernment is that we should pay no more money into the Bp Ae in this matter. a! resident here, t= prea that would enable me to teach you a lesson how to speak rections. The whole country, south and west, is} San bear no longer. ‘Then, gentlemen, we rise in our | (Applause.) I admire those resolutions because they are | public Caer Lema ’ easy ae the pro ae < ee ppoegie dl caantoeny : rea thie bald ciate of of allady. Tam, sir, &e. ANN PARLIN. indebted to our modest and calm enterprise, for | might—(applause)—then, gentlomen,we'riee in our might | couched in the right Lp agli Be ae upright, | eeiple of the Government is, that those to wh ma | battle—(Cheers) ‘Thom, { is cia oti eturan to: ne ting them i ion of i ie] | en Weare now rising—(cheure)—and’ destroy tho cliques | manly, fronk and honest spirit of John C. Callioun.— | EiNelblG cs De Conor eoveramant shall wo administer it, | this hongr, 1 hope your resolution will not pass, but that General Sessions. ut! them in possession of important commercial! — ; i ines 7 I 5 be Beoci tine cape Scanahiin ras lacie racers ee ees aranentt ten Cae) Sinn eet ee acti e oP the Temsttution, And | that the sum. which you pay in shall be suificient | the resolution by ify: Morrill will pass unanimously in | Before Recorder Tellmadge, and Aldermen Briggs and information, ani us ic P ly A tle he jon ef the Fede- | where can we fird a literal constructionist than | to defray the expenses of the goveramen}. Now who are this meeting. I tell you, sir, there is no danger af. what ‘Waterman, chants, and farmers to escape the snares and trape| rat Cousiitytion, that thi tince the adoption of the Fede- | wohn ©. Calhoun of thar Constitution, which was carried | the parties who are taking the most actiye part in the | you have expressed in reference tq yquy action in that | Jonas B, Purttars, Esq. Acting District Attorney. i t ¥ | inrough by the intellect and patriotisin of an Adams, and | selection of a candidate according to the old party ma- | Convention, I know that, a5 4 democrat, you are afriend | Jan. 7.—vArrest of Henry F. Schaffer—Mr. Phillips sta. laid for them by the mere speculators of New York | taken upon the part of the people. (Loud cheers) igh by it and patriotism of i i Y: For inatance, witha the momory of us all, General Jack-| the genius, sagacity, and fidelity of a Washington?— beets & to which you aro opposed 7 Are they not the | to our institutions, and I know the pore se es ‘athe | ted that a bench warrant had been issued fr the appre- and Boston. ton himself has once walked likes 9 Von over the patriotic | (Cheers,) And, sir, the work of guarding the Constitu- a ene ae ino oa) oF pao expest to ara oes oF | persons to dictate va “2 ee thet ir delegates, on all oc- henson of Henry F. Set affer, who had ead Indicte A - ‘ ‘i + who are to be benefitted in some shape ar a! e se) representatives are sta ods under false pretences, and placed in the In the whole of these fextensive and ample ar-| course and trampled down all the meshes sud all the traps | tion and advocating its literal construction {8 not @ now | ‘tection ofthe candidate whom they Mut in nominstion ?| bound to obpy theso Instrutions, | Now, lot medraw your | hands of ofhcer Bowyer, who had found the accused in the Be ent laid by political machinery. (Much cheering.) Again, | one to Mr. oun. ere, I would ask, was 5 n hands rangements, only one link was broken—and that | laid by political machinery. (Much ehwering.) | Again, | ‘hen Jobson and Cass, and other great men were fight: | And whatis the reason that they are so unwilling that | attentien to the resolutions which this meeting has adopt- | Eldridge street prison. ‘The officer had proceeded to the was to Philadelphia. The conductor of the New on ue political ‘machinery again ieoominig ote liewted, ing the battles of our country ? We sir, was at his post, | the people should have a voice in theselection of a candi- J od, You will threejfind, if you accept of our election rison to arrest him, and the keeper had refused to deliver York and Philadelphi il and agaiu becoming perfect, and the rights and the voice | He was defending and Securing the interests of his coun. | date? Ix it not the apprehension that if the people be | aight, that you sre instricted hy us, that when you | him up. ork and Philadelphia Railroad refused to take | and agate heed Peominy a (cheers) ander that | try, not by the sword on the battle-Geld,“out in the coun. | Consulted, the candidate chosen will not be the man who | get to the Convention at Philadelphia you shall then | The Iteconpen stated that the Keeper was bound to eur: extras containing the latest news, yesterday after-| ‘machinery, Genoral 1 U(Cheors) tinder that | cls of thenation His patriotism, his statcemanship, his | Will distribute office amongst them? This, then, is a act, as you vhall deem most conducive to the interests of F render him at once, and they should see that he obeyed cdmivas 6 giclaek, eddvanied' the Whals'he ike « low-(cheete)—an Sagecity, all his talents-and energies were engaged ix the | question in which we are all deeply and directly con- | vour constituents and the people of the United States— | the autharity of this court, ky hole newspa- | like a Ik So ee ener ad eee or cr eee eral wel. | cerned, and which involves the principles adopted ia | (Lond cheers.) Now, under that instruction and that | Officer Bowyer returned, and the accused was immedi- per press of Philadelphia. The impertinence of ing) rinciples of the part ined him, in the Reo cove country. Andthat honorablo’ and useful post | Your resolutions. And, hence, it becomes necessary that | resolution, | am very glad and willing to place the power } ately surrendered, and lodged in the City Prison on crimi- this conduct could not but ith Fine es ork that T ould, not subscribe to them; | had now been deserted by Mr. Calhoun. Now, then, | You should, in the language of Mr. Jefferson, recur to | in your handsf; and in oper toonable us to do 40, I move | nal process. is conduct could not injure us, but it has prevent- ftp Gee Lacwe/ai erath tue avay.-owa prieialiee undet | how do we stand? Bo uri Baas has this meeting firet principles as the means of carrying out your will } that your resolution lie upon the table. :, A nolle pragequi waa entered in the caseof James Rt. ere: pon my princip! Feed wha preceded me | inthe operations of the government. thy to recurto the} *A Gentieman asked the speaker if he belonged to this | Hughes, indicted for false pretences, in collecting moneys charge that ‘we ate aboyt to defedt the democrat. | listrict, so as to entitle him to speak an the motion ? due the office of “The Churchman.” Mr. Sparks, the ed the commercial interests of Philadelphia from | (ievvtie which then existed, I-male my. own efforts to | been convened? Asmy worthy getting the benefit of important news, for nearly a| break down those evils, and in now rising against them | properly and truly remarked, we come here from a regard | f0aK Fant WE GUE RlGHT A clei “Ward; and, 's m ‘ : 5 proposition, | Mr. Eppy.—Yes sir. I helong to the} 17th an , appeared and solicited his discharge. whole business day—a most important delay in the | Pf another conte | have no longer the tt eg | lamented Governor oS orwe po tee macine oat that ite "manifot that unlows the democratic party | tuerefore, I havo right to oppear and speak here— es of’ Guilty Henry. Gaton, indicted for an ™ “] ii ‘isi: is e: H * s ‘ v » 4 can be unanimous In the su) a candidate, the ci shee! sault ant ery on im W. on the ol prea‘nt commercial crisis. For this extraordinary | upon them! (Cheers) And if this party machinery—if| men.” We came not here to declare our preference for oer oe acta All thee 3 per therefore it that ‘all who | The Coaraatan then put the question, when the amend- | November, iar aylonctigullty, and pawl Hates and insolent conduct, we trust that the merchants | this car of the political Juggernaut, ‘which ¢rushea the | any particular candidate. Wecome to signify our adhe} Tit Dok vine the nomination fat Baltimore, shall | ment of Mr. MoCracken was ordered to lie upon the table. | sentence on Friday of next week. voice of the people all for the support and for the power | rence to certain great cardinal principles of the democra- | Insist upon making the nomination tt Daltfnore, shah | ret ee anne that gentleman delegate was then | ““itison New Year's Dey--Theinas Cochrane, Patrick of Philadelphia, and the newspaper press there, | of party, be again d be il tic faith, Not t rt arty or po- rs ‘ . W party, be again drawn over our bodies, it will be our | tic faitt, Nat to commence or promote any party therefore the support. of the. democratic party. | carried unanimously, and Mr. E. K. Collins was elected | Rogers, Robert Roach, John Merry, James Riley and Tho- will make a searching representation to the Rail-| own tall, and we cannot gramble at it. (Much applause) | lideal uggtety, but ty grnounce ous fem, Seterminatlon Now, the proposition wos first made that the nominaiing | the substitute. mas; Doyle, bays, wore tried for riotous conduct in Ca- road Company, po dius what reparation is ne=| followal up, and thet ihe apivit which, ia this night, t0 nign at the very foundation of tho Very we enjoy— aiid ear erere Pall, cibat wee. weepees TC ayyaniy: aletroel dete, thn rags hee a eomeantan rPeRk cessary to prevent the perpetrati fa simi tart forth will spread over tho lo American le— | (Cheers.) We are here to vindicate reat maxim o! . lid Pa veae gf 3 7 ‘ e s SO, Ge rage In Fore nn et OF 8 Similar out ering)~and iat he wholongeen of epuchepoina|Fepublicen government, which ins alyeye found in Mr | PORTS" esua(r were wien Yo, and Mee Calnona Pecvaroner et cement] notttods ttettad wee! tion yesesdag oats Charge ot tion, and of party machinery, by which our deqrest rights } Calhoun a strenuous and consistent advocate and expo eves ihe ron. he replied that he ‘willing to yield Aunany, Feb. 6th, 1844. arsault and baltery committed on the person of Mri. Ca- In allother respects, with that single exception, | have been t led upon, will again be crushed tothe} nent, “the greatest good of the greatest number. H Ci i - 4 our efforts to benefit the whole funnels re A earth “(tremendous “ ecting)—and. that the. candidate (Cheers) “1 Hints thalScvery honed and pent vee ai hei Sauteed ead property. eorantned™ The lodge grea eee rene te —— Jepoey. Logger ey vetrgumnstanioaYGullck ap. that shell je selocted at the'Philadalphia Convention upon | server of the present gapect of affairs musi niall that all | ATA on was on the sole‘condition that the democratic | itors—Appointments—Survey of Candidates— } ret odin qgurt attended by his counsel, Horace ¥. Clark, of the United States, succeeded to a charm. Thus] the 4th July nex. i i inciph d the in- ; 3 a 5 y next—o most apt and proper occasion—will | the genuine friends of democratic principles an: * Vhie b taleo r a¢ * wre quiahbalbeowhio canigo faktetor darert the dik alk over the soure. with thet, lion might and | teguty of the constitution, are now called on totake a | Party would thus ,grmunize thaConrentiga, Yecanse that | F7hig Governor and Whiskey Toddy. tnd Harris Wilson, sgs ad Col. Horaeo i Hudson, his reugth, sustained by you, by whieh Andrew Jackson | bol idand decisive stand against the agita fons and distur- | "a8 the anly condition on which dymony wus to be fe} Dean Smn— security. Mrs, Peck testified ‘that Gul lek camo to her imi bing inf hich ace and prosperit; y : The Recent Rejections by the United States (oe ee ear rn i eecttittia “cesr| of the country, “We Pe eablanet ara pte what Mr. Cathoun’s views wore? He hat sxid, taat_he The very Old Boy seems to have got into the } without knocking. He immediately seieel her by th Senate. ing.) We, the United States, are now composed of six | in one part ofthe country—the tariff in another—free trade | Pow' bad recognize the ——— i Weft epi Poy sid mails and expresses ; not a copy of vour widely | arm while she had her infant, chi her arms, and held The devel . i and twenty free and independent States,and Rhode Island, | in another, agitating the people. We see all the evils him, and why? Because he has demonstrated,as yon have | it tor J, 1 had b ived here up to | her until the cartmen that he brought with him removela > The development of the causes and motives | ee eer eae eee gs upon’ tho map. she | which a despotie organizition af perty, by arlique, neces- | already declared, thatfit was not “fairly constituted and | SOUBHE‘OF Journa’ had been tecellon P tO} Hiren containing her clothing, and several other arti- which produced the recent rejections in the secret| may appear, had, when she «me into our | sarily inflicts, at prevent threatentng fie pniav interests. | Properly organized,” and therefore it, will not command } Sunday morning of a later date than Tuesday.— } cles, whieh he had levied upon for payment of a militia session of the United States Senate, is beginning | Confederated ‘geversment, tho same power end. rights | And in such a crisis what do wo find. Me Calhoun doing tho condones othe Harty, anemaive put to-adopt the | What is the matter, and who is to blame? ‘The | fine. Her testimony Was contig Oy ervercigeae me il in oftant of mind wu iy * . , . 2 ‘ . now to make its appearance piece by piece, bit. by | soured £0, her_in ralation to, her ibortion wud institu | NY comes Dolaly forward, denounces. that dexpotic party | caudidate which may be nominated by this Convention, | Surrogates having been nearly all appeinted, and | jnred by.one of the brutal cartmen, who accompanied (iu- Dit, and little taper-lightby little taper-light. Hitherto | It becomes us, gentlemen, in all our political mevements | organization, and proposck the eniy ramedy the free, {ulready condemned.) or to vote for the whig candidate | wach teat of the treasury having been supplied with | lick. ‘This closed the testimony for prosecution. ‘ Mi to preserve to Rhode Island the samo individuality, and | spontaneous, uncontrolled expreation of the popular mind |! Whove principles we ore opposing. Now, what th, the offi ke Ken thely dl ‘Tho defence called Horace R. Huvsox, looking glass those secret movements have been a mystery, but} jdentity, and power in our government that the empire | and will, by the eleetion of delegates on the district do you? Vo you come forward and that you | a mouth, the office seekers have taken their depar- | maker, of 149 Fulton street, who testified that ke wax whether a mystery of bliss and heaven, or a mys-| State of Now York possesses ; (cheers and applayso ;) but | tem,—(Loud chgers.) And it is to act upon this alvice will vote for Clay, becauso you disapprove of the organi- | parture, and a man can pass through the hall of the | President of the Court Martial of the 45th Brigade, and : fats ; it is the object of the ia Gamblers ittparty machi. | that we assemble hore tonight; and, heyrt gud soul, I, for | zation of this Convention? Certainly not. You say to} |: ; , that he had issued the warrant for the appolntment of tery of sin and gts te the public have fre- | ree rail occasions, fo recure the aid of two or three | one, am roady to act in the full spirit of that advice. i]t a oN Seoaties thom af femearas, eltiongh you Read iva fs ide ers meee a -Jamer Gulic; the, prigoner atthe bar, gx the 22d of No- . i >| ners . 3 . ae { el t : fi B > ! ber, before thig agsoult i quently been at a loss to ascertain. We, who pos-] of the more large and wealthy States, whose voice, in | care not for the consequences—I care only for the genera danger the success of the domocratic party. You say | port a man he never saw before. — ae ag ey regen per LA cemeitien. A : i "| the vortex of management, may swallyw up that of all the | welfare of the country; and no party organization—no in- sess as long a nose as most persons to pry into se-| SM Ter states and all their inclinations with regayd to the | uence on earth can induce me to shrink from the duty I cret chambers, and look forward into futurity,smel- | federal government. (Cheers) | This is the ganie which | owo my country f in way in e irecti re “ is now being attempted to be played ; and the candidate | was before tho covutry, as a can is) ling our way in every direction, we sometimes | ron oe sustained. by the delegates from this State to | honors in its gift, 1 Was'an humble hut zealous soldier in have been in great difficulty, and in somewhat of a the Baltimore Convention, well kaow the importance of i. } his ranks. I fought hand for Mie AAlhough young, and juandary to ascertain w! is mi P, Mark the distinction—these men, I say, well knew it was | possessed of little influence, yet T yiel fo none in the py Ae pater hhat all this mist, haze, sleet, | MTT vortant for him to have the empire State of New | strength of my attachment, und the vigor of my efforts in shower and humbug meant. York, within which to swallow up the v of the minor | his cause. But when General Jackson, in my humble you are unwilling to put the interests of that ay or the} Mr. Van Buren did not succeed in causing the | dence of the prisoner, nor did he know whether hejresided welfare of the country itself at hazard ; and invoke them | oil and water of the Argus and Atlas to commingle, } in this city or in this State. The defence then called to iunite with you inj the effort to secure the confidence | and it is now currently reported thay # change is to | a cartman, who said his name was Bailey Van Vel and support of the party. And what do you do? You} take place in the affaity of the Atlas. Mr. French, } sor, but his testimony being irrelevant, he was with- ive them timo. You call upon them to make no nomina- } ‘oung gentleman of wealth, and possessed of | drawn. Tho next witness was Samuel Yun Velsor, tion at Baltimore, but unite with you in Convention on | * ¥ Metabo eatene, ok eat ‘i'rana for | Who stated that he had long been quo of Gulick’s ass: the Fourth of Juiy, that you may on that spot, where considerable talent,who ownsthe Atlas and rans for | “ates, or aasistants in removin goods levied far mulitia “ be Seat | enema feces mes Sah ca | neectieit pena Srorey or clamnteentseed | Stator po es ocean a Se a a We now begin to see the light ; and smaller States; and therefore the gurangement was | opinion, acted wrong, although then in the plenitude ot a shi ceive neide D * 2 of Mrs. Peck, but that Gul not commit any violence Keep; “} alist KS he light ; and we have | and, smaller Staton ain our honesty and dapiicity, met | htepower, [did not Iesitateto expreat my disapprobation, Jour tnited support, and thusbe elected. (Cheers.) Now | Mr. Cassiday, a very capable, but indolent writer, | upon any baly. Stephon Underwood, caetiercarinsn, every reason to believe, from what we see, that ther infour various wards and countics and sent our | | went for Van Buren when he was in difficulty, because [| you were taking ground with the other party, they | is equally tired of editing gratis, and the twain are } was called. He was a very particular assistant of Gulick, Captain John Tyler, the plain, straightforward, sin- les to Syracuse, we supposed we sent men there to ] regarded his principles as thoge of the groat democratic et charge you with being disorganizers. But dis-} about to sell and dispose of the Atlas to Messrs. } and was alsa one of the that entered the house of care minded President of the U. States by. ihe act hyj thelr combined wisdom uvon the manner in | party. And now T odptond far the district #y siem,becanse | ‘inion is already in the ranks. Already you have seen | ryant & Co. of the Evening Past. In the event of | Mr. d,as.a matter of course, confirmed the te: m . Shas cater heey wa we were to send delegates to Baltimore. But the | | regard it as consistent with the dactrines I have express- we Buchs nin the feld—nes houn—and Thold | sich an arrangement going into effect, Mr. Van | mony of the previous cartmen. Philip C. Van Valen wa God, has been made the sport of profound, intellec- | voice had gone forth, unknown to us, from the political | ed. I define my position fully and clearly. lask no fa- | letter in my pocket m General which warrants | fyi f; ly of the Ai d perhaps Mr. God- | "ext placed on the stand. He was also a cartman, and Jong ‘ 2 4 me in saying, that if nominated by the Fourth of July | Dyke, formerly of the Argus, and perlaps Mr. Co tual giants, and great ex lers of the Constitu- | managers at Richmond and Albany—<hat they should be | vors. I never held an office—I do not think it in good taste | 7 ying, ¢ Fourth of July | yee oe tie edi M for it, such an | Deen one of Gulick’s employees—ho sew nobody strike 1 ual giants, and great expounders of the Constitu-} Tatictca when at Syracuse to send delegstes, and not | to speak much about myselt—but you will pardon mofif 1 | Convention, you will have w candidate. (Cheers.) Now | wins wi be the eaitors. My word Tt tt, EAB AA | plow except Mra. Peck, and when she struck Gullck sho tion, all for their own purposes. So far as we sce | leaveto us the election. (Chears.) ‘They did send dele- | say one word onthat subject—I ask no office 1 go for the | ! am gratified that in your resolutions you have not tied | arrangement will not improve the matters ot Mr. | had one hand hold of thedoor -knob and the other arm at thismoment, but we expect to see furtherta-mor- | gates ; and when I told yeu from my inf n I feared | Sixth Congre: District to} elect its delegates, on the | (awn your delegate to any particular candidato— | Van Dyke is not more capable than Mr. Cassiday, | holding her little infant! The dofence here closed, and tho h . * . | sach would be the case, I said you would nullify their} only trae democtatic principye, tho free expression of the (Tremendous cheering) —that the will fof the peonle and neither possess the shrewdness and tact of | prosecution called Jacob #. Dickenson, Eaq., one of the row, we have the strongest reason for believing} acts. (Cheors.) And now let them be nullified ! (Great | popular voice. (Cheers, IPhat is the onky moge of elec | ‘hall be fairly expressed. You send him {with in-] Croswell. The Argus has, however, of late, been | clerks of police, wha testified that when Gulick was ar- ‘niagd by our constitution. it is the only | *tructions which will tend to harmonize the par-| left too much to the management of an assistant | rested on this charge, ‘at the police, he stated that he was ‘i ru! that the rejection of Mr. Porter, Mr. Henshaw end] cheering) It has heen said to me, and no doubt to others | tion rea; ; i ‘ of ® that in th edi bi i defensible on thase les of justice and liberty |tyY. You send’ him with instructions which will | .qj i a resident of New Brunswick, New Jersey, where his fa- Mr. Spencer, has been mainly produced by the in- Daten oeny 3 we have ek told that if that toetion oh on eiach that constitution Was frame |. }do not, on this throw upon the other mémbers ‘of the party who refuse gee wags well enough, bat ‘ary ral baer mily resided. Officer Bowyer was alao exiled, who tost fluence of the friends of Mr. Webster, set in mo | the democracy with whom we act, wero to sever them- | occasion, desire to enter on any discussion of the princi: bespearg eyts nt LE el mi eee of disunion. | rust be conducted with some especial aim and,end | fied that Gulick selzed his brothet-in law’s goods in a sim- tion by Mr. Webster, and all for the purpose of dri-|flveyom th party proper, atthe euuiderthamgelres, | peso policy of ie ra ul videncos tha tes | fromite of euccom. ‘And may we nothope that ore | iNvieWs Te ob nih : gree rite Hider gel yoink gis 7 ren, who say that without union with us they mustne-| The Judgeship of the Third Circuit is still in | “Mr. Putusrs here read the bond taken before the police, ving the President from his supposed democratic} th am no expediency democrat! (Cheers, | trade notions are not unpopular amongst the intelligent : u © eae aE 6 . : 4 " ily be defeated, will remember that union is strength. | », and it is whispered about that General | j direction, 0 the hands of the whigs during the Eeieaertarien otee spiel of the A lorie nepel 4 not gen alts rr unsgcystomet to aliens pula as Gentlomen, hryriad I ee my hs fi — to =< al sed geoemecdnte this city, now first Judge of einen merenee: New server: oe next contest for the Presi ‘i ¢ a ? 4 fact. I am gratified that your resolutions have oper le 1G H ‘ine. G. Mr. Crarx, for defence, ontest for the Presidency. About a year ago | fromthe course they are always ready to pursue,that that | sembtages of the democracy of New Kar, gnd Tean say, | ora that Sou are the advocates of free trade. (cheers) pecs ree tower the orneiae Te i hesele ne, saute ‘easing ‘ed eee cemeane>. that hould be r Mr. Spencer, the ni 4 arty alone will triumph, and haye continued success, | with the greatest truth, that I have seldom on any occa: ia nat Aoi Sar io ik nicht i betray i Which carries every thing by their voice with all honesty, | sion witnessed more respectable assemblage than, that 1 | know tal nes Lees changed and I euppose every gen: | much respected, and a good lawyer, but more than | lect militia tines should be residents of this State, f 1g give ademocratic di-| and never attempts to trample upon or use chieaner now address. We have here assembled this evening an gold in my pocket—(A laugh)—-that? am here as the rep- all, in theleye of the Goyeryor, he 3s busch. Tcannot Fehr aecahalles isper— No, they ought to be re- rection to the administration, had the influence to | ®S@insttheir rights. 1am one who would go for principle | amount of talent, worth, and respectability, the real bone ad oh tan’ Metin iy that did it h I . in spi 5 r i ti-Corn. Twill gi arn certainly that he isa eandidate, but it he is, help in assisting the ejection of Mr. Webster from | pea aay call Sepueney: AG ty EE ah nip border ath hiny be aptiped a Font in the epiit moqulfes you an ennodotecn that paint, atigh es faon wit eS will wager a suit of clothes, that he “is appointed; Se eee iz eabehoda be ror the State Department. Mr. Webster, by his ope- | {wo yeacs by one ofonr own mombers, or representatives | sd this evening, and with such elements of success wocan- | *# Nart of the proceedings at angof the elections in Eng- | \1e has been Senator Gh lpn cota 8 pebby, dents of the State ; of thelr acts wre in violation of law, rations, has returned the compliment three fold, | °! the,temoeracy (as he was called) inthe Senate of the | not fail ofaccomplishing our ends. (Choers.) Lot us remem- sere Samuaiverae Wee eae apveruee et te urged by the ex-President, and men- | and those who apy le as they were pliment three fold, | {raited States. (Chaers,) Weare all, I take it, free trade | her that it haa been sterling honesty,manly candor,and un J ‘here were three or four young menof no very great note | tioned heretofore, has received the go by, for this | in all casea of tresp Pedic tie es e Count dec: at such was the spirit of We ate ready to go all lengths in. sup- | wavering filelity to right principle, united with great sim- ime, in Manchester, who conceived the idea of | session, and a convention will not be proposed this be A gt r +] ty Shich have F. forming a leagde for the purpose of overthrowing the Bri-| sossion. In the interim, guid muncs are looking | and admitted the testimony as and proper in every tish corn law. | That little meeting there, like the grain of | 1b out for a candidate for Governor, Amonget the | fespect. No exceptions were taken by counsel for de- and his friends and interest, in and out of the Sen men, ate, have accomplished these very deeds of the guil-} Port ofthe principles of free trade. (Much cheering.) | plicity and sincerity, which have sustained John C. Cal- . ; ‘e consider it a cardinal point of democracy, (Renewed | oun, May we emulate those virtues! (Cheers) With lotine which we have recently seen perpetrated at | cheers) And there is no more {ear of eu opponent of free | ‘hat iilustrious stat , You have never seen any thing | mustard sced, has risen up into a power which now con- trened: tha ee, which t meets | fence to the decisions of the Court, Washington. trade getting our votes than there is of Henry Glay him | like chicanery, or political management, or intrigue, or | Vilses the government of England itself, and shows you ps mentioned, t ad won “ar Jiu bh pt Justice Merritt and Jacoh Hays were then callel to self becoming the friend of Martin Van Buren, (Loud | mananvre, fle has been open und abovebourd When | What perseverance, industry, and intelligence, in aright | with no opposition, a ich seerng fo sitike every T prove that Gulick, the prisoner at the bar, was a resident This much forto-day. We shall proceed at our] cheers and langht i canse,can uccomplish, it shonld be an encouragement | one as peculiarly appropiate; that is, Chief Justice i ‘i ' ay. We sha chee ghter.) No,gentlemen, we have our own | asked for his opinion on way subject, he haa given it " peculiarly appropiate; , of New Jerwey, aocording to his own confession. leisure to-morrow, and the next day, and the day | ptinelples—these are they—and itis for their support that | frankly and ‘explicitly, without evasion or paltry quib- | 0 Eg ore grow because; béing on the rig! Renee a the Supreme Bourt. He is an honest, | One of theJurors enquired where Gulick voted, Which tie)‘ 0 ‘nitold the persian eave. Wwe are now come hore together. (Applanse) “itis occa: | bling. He has never refused to define his position. When eee in taken et teiaen ee ote talented, high minded man; has beon) for 15 years | question created great laughter in the Court. » to unfold the perplexities, and intricacies, | sionally in our power, gentlemen, to drive the enemy to | asked a question, he has at once given a straightforward | TOW [oe poi spre of being on the side af the Anti- | removed from the turmoil of party, and has in no| The case was summed up with force on the Bt and labyrinths of those intrigues during the last two | the wall, and then, when driven to the wall there to hold | answer, with southern frankness and southern boldness, | Corn Law League by repeating the fact which ocurred | way been mixed up with the measures of either sec- | of the prosecution by Mr. illips, who carried the cb. ein; ter which te ; f him, (Loud laughter.) And there to let him have no-| That’stheman for me. (Loud cheers) Other men there | When I was in England. It was this: in the case of @va-} ‘ion of the party, having sedulously refrained from | ings of the whole audience with him. Me that Ta ae, the reputation of the President] thing or to give’ us the principles end the ‘measures | arc, too, in the democratic ranks, whose talents, patriot- | Cency on one of the Cathedral (Durham) cities that had } "V0" (tte Dans Talis Son A Ou y Tet eo 'the | all the cartmen who were with him were equally gilt of the United States has been trifled with by the| which we demand. (Loud applause) Fortunately, as | ism and statesmanship command our highest regard, | ‘rom time immemorial been represented by a Tory, this} hoy tt jd that there is nota man in the | ° this brutal gosaylt upon a ledy and her Fvant, great men of the nation, merely to subserve their] “°, 1, supposed, we had the onemy in the United | General Cass isn manot the loftiest character—a soldier Anti-Corn Law League determined to canvass the city | Qench. EOS OSS Sere, We BOTS Ee while hee husband wai absent from ho: : a y to subserve their] Stites Senate, sodriven tothe wall when this black tarid | —a statenman-a true. lover of his country. (Cheers) | with a free trade candidate, | It was charged upon others } State, against whom so liltle that is injurious can } ang that they could be equally punt own ends, and for their own purposes, and for their| which has rotted so many of our ships, which has en- | andtheres Colonel Wvigk Johnson-—(Loud cheers)—no | that they were a foreign influence, invading and inter- | be said, and for whom so much can be urged. Gulick, the prisoner at the bar, had in the capacity own special interests. Inthe meantime, we think | Tiched so many of our manufactures at’ the expense of | one needs loyse lus hanesty and patriotism. He has | ‘ering with the rights of the people of that particular city. | Horace Greeley's nominati n of Willis Hall, ex- he had been appointed by Colonel Horace R. Hudson, that acrisis has now come which places Mr. Tyler, | (vet 2ther_taurest in the country—t ¥ fought and bled for us, and he has not been allowed to go | They said that gs sutjects of the empire, they were deeply | cites no_sinall’ amusement in this quarter, and I } Looking.Giass maker, af 149 Fulton. street, without le- 1e which places Mr. Tyler, | black tariff eame up into the Senate we all :rejoic unrowarded. (Renewed cheers) Aye, and principle will | interested in every ‘election which took: place in the | imaging Horace will find that he is not the whig | gel authority, and therefore that ll his acts were acts of as far as regards the public opinions and public sene| (Cheers.) But, lo, to our ytter surprise,our representative, canry Sea rons » Jf Calhoun himself agnnot be elect? igdom , ca privileg n® T oarty. John A. Collier, the opponant, in the con- | trespass, for which he as well as his it were guilty. . A : { the Empire $tate, Silas Wright him: hnson Lond chee! nd | ratherthink | heard because a Member of Parliament had to legislate for 4 14 ‘ ¢ Rucoxnen briefly charged the jury,in the course of timents of this country, precisely in the couse] seit, o a dew @e yhks upon cat hack | cast have {ust mi tha tea men who will eventually | the interest of the whole, and especisily an particular | vention, ft fidy. Hradish, is still iu ‘the field, and | ich he alluded to he onerous character of the militia which he was when he first went to Washington pon Bon Cees anere | triumph with glory oneircling thelr brows, and all too | questions on which they were disposed to ndvisa them. | from his high order of talents and his personal cha- | jaw of this Stato—a law which not only empowered its 4 Seaton was ani vif Silas Wright had stood firm to4 without any of tery wirewook ufling party | But, upon the day ofelection, the Antl-Corn Law League | racter, it will be hard to nominate any one over ts to remove the cradle from the sleeping infant—the after the death of Harrison. If he now comes for | fi" Peeclgles, end fomelned true 1 thie people ip. as Robivaaaer pA fsandl saat Maher cnearane th ra pet (| not only came represented by these gentlemen, but they | him. Seward will not be a candidate, but Bradish bel trom the dying mother, but also Por oe the vpint ward with the moral courage which he then ought fout ther to represent, he had the enemy tainty driven to and the ysjnciples which he advocates. the Reeth ates nares eas vuvat side by aide with | and Weed will be. of every other State law, Capen me for a debs terous politicians from before him like chaff before | (Ch As a matter of course thet was out of the | intend to detain you with any extended remarka on the ; vt thet it was invading them under a} 1, he vastly select, but th ; Wouble here is, as | would alter it the public woul!’ be Dupe with its evils. the wind. Kaowitg the motives and causes whick 4 e we should] other great and important questions set forth In the hd answer to the charge was jhis, “Yee, | '0.be vastly select, but the great tro iS, 08 | Hothen reviewed the testimony of the oase, and decided, , ra oA gerne’ fovoluthags., Indeo! the principles thus declared nre of | that flag isan emblem of cheap tread ; and we distinctly | 't is in New York, that a large: portie asthe court had before, that under the testimony if the produced these rejections, Jet him plant his foot 1 intelligible, that 1am spared the | ™dersta fe oe make it the isene—you shall not tax the | focracy have a tdushroom origin ahd mdmitted | itty believed that Gulick, the prisoner ot the bar was not boldly down, and re-nominate to the very same | that forthe benefit of party, and for the support of the i thing ip tigir eypport. Let me read and the poor man’s meat. ‘That flag re. | the managers, but two would have been admitted | yp ident of the State, the offence of assault and battery, Senate Mr. P Mr. Hensh d Mr. J. ©. | Principles of democracy, and indeed all those arguments y day forcing themselves | Ptesents the American people, who are ourchilidren, and | a few years since; these are Gen. Cooper and Mr | if proved, was still more aggravated, b r. Porter, Mr. Henshaw, and Mr. J.C.) dre urged which are egmmon upon such foceasions, we | more and more on the great mass of the people. ‘The | We wish to break down the lat which provent them | Temple—but wealth will break dawn even social | ° ‘The Jury had agreed upon a’ verdict withont leavin; rom using our manufactires, ahd prevent them from re- | harriers, and exel ness is all gammon. We. | th ‘but some were anxious to make the additiona Spencer for its rejection—and let the Senate dare oa yh engi ts the pepe Convention — iapeligess in ependiat poron of the Leet nies oriving the products of out labor In egchange for (heh ee Pel ill abare ln the fest a ren, theres oe ae in i Sheers, ve been tol itor of one press, 0 constitute al the really influential tion of | ° rl i abe = aschange for their it Congress Hall, will share in the fest vi and they, therefore, ré . res Teject them asecond time if they choose. very strong and powerful in the ranks, that if wo would | ‘he party, for without independence there. can He no in- | manufactures.” (Cheers.) It is thus that the battle of ee nae will mont likely give yon a sketch of mat- y, and rendered a verdict of aazantt only upon this occasion subscribe to the Baltimore Con- | fluence—are all over the country rising in their might in | free trade is fighting upon the other side of the water. | 40. and things. Av Revo, — | 4 battery, but if the“ trespars” could legally have been Josern Goticx Convictep.—This militia fine | vention, thay would, upon another occasion give us allwe| defenco of the rights and liberties of tho people. No | (Cheers) Ttell you, T come among you to fight the battle : rendered in the verdict, or even the alfence of burg: i ig peo collecto " , . »C want, Itake noi their fromises—(Cheers.) 1 yield not | clique however powerful—no tyrannical and unjust party | 0 free trade upon this side in the same spirit. (Cheers.) z collector was convicted yesterday in the Court of | toon a single x thet Promises (Cheers) 1 yield not} clique however powerful no tyrannien a mt tads. | tell you T do not come here with British gold, te! Too ovr FoR your Siaxs.—The Corporation Sessions, on acharge of assault and battery, of an] That wrong should not be dguo ggain—(renewed cheers,) | pendent utterance of the voice of the peepla—gon steress. ere proud that Lam a descendent from the British | Ariorney is commencing suits agninst all persons aggravated chargeter, on a lady. The report will I let them not cut my right hand Upon & peamise that upon | fally contend against this awakened public opinion } on! 9 tetl you that we have one and the same interest, jomney x ’ rot plause by thi be found in another col { ¥ the next opportunity they will not cul it gain; for if] which has expressed Itself herd ta-night, and which is {1nd that I hops to see the day soon arrive when our in whose signs projecton the street. So look out, a8 | hy the officers her column, they do obtain the opportunity | know not how thay will | beginning to be heart all over the Union, “Chars. | fete will bo so united that hhomonapolists can persuade Ms | ve have warned you in time, Galick will be tried next week on another most aggra ‘ ———— cut, and I will give them no chance of cutting it mpon the | | have detained yon, Mr. Chairman and fellow'citicons, | | B8t Our Interest to he united. (Cheers) | Thope A Andretti ee vated case of astault gad battery on ® German wom City Intelligence. second oceasion—-(cheers.) This, indeed, is precisely the | longer than | intended—(cries of “go on. ” soon to seethe day wiiéi the ships, which we are told are » A amed Frances Puillips, who was assaulted by him while Pollee.—Thursda ocension. The district system of representation {* the | { really could not refrain trom giving some expremion, | ‘tting, siall be again called forth ; when your carmen Atarama . Faesurt.—-We had a conversation h state of pregnancy, and wost shamefully treated an‘ Feb 8 siaiil was the arrest of a fellow named faker ec ieg ot interest cilaline Brown, | true demoeratical representation, 40 much prized by the | aows?et feeble, to my sentiments on the very important | ‘Dall find constant employment in foking the products of | yesterday with a gentleman from Alabama, in relos {misused by officers Low and Rutherfo ulently obtain’ | democratic party, No system can be defended in opposi | subjects whicu have brought you here this evening he rich valley of the West to the ships, and in conveying n to the great freshet by which our communicatio: Warrants were immediately issued ‘for the three cxrt- ing a silver wal y ick, by ave sping | tion to it—(cheers.) Task you, then, whether we are not | Besile: fg quite fashionable now-adays to define | he products of England to your homes, thus giving hay~ North have been so seriously interrupted. He | men who assisted Guliok at the time he committed the as- © pocket book containing notes of en banks et ng | called npon us men, as democrats, and as patriots to sns- | » n, (a laugh) T wl to lot it be known ex. | piness, and joy, and comfort to our people. (Cheers) | It | represents the country on the Warrior, Noxubee and Big- it on Mra. Peck, and suits of trespass will also be im. value, which pocket book ho represe 4 tain itin spite of the attempts of expediency to overthrow |. Now, although not a very old sol. | i for you, the freemen of the United States, to come for | hee rivers as lying vier a very datuge of water when he | mediately commenced againat him and Colanel Horace ind, the contents of which he believel it | it in favor of any other xystem—(choers ) If we send our ranks, yot Lhave fought pretty hard for Mr, | Ward at this time and at this moment, and give it to be} icf it, somefout days since. | The face of the country was | |Tudson, looking-glasa maker of 149 Fulton street, by nu- McCormick delegates to the Baltimore covention upon this district re- T have traversed the country, and have | "derstood by Congress that all that is wanting is for | ne sheet of water, enveloped in a covering of unpic! nerons persons who have been compelled to pay militia watch, and examinin, i c presentation, the twill be that your voice will be di- | “epeechified,” to use the vulgar expression, for hin; but | them to reduce your tariff, to coerce the British govern: . Everything was afloat. Even cotton in the bale had | ines to thie agent of the Court Martial of the 4th Brigade M ly represented ; it will not be carried from this ward to | | new find that Mr. Van Buren cannot be elected,and asthe | " ; so that the artificial m res which be laden ipon pessiagieicemntonts by floating ittothem | of this city, ‘ ‘Tammany Halland from Syracnse to Baltimore, #0 that | snecess of the domocratic party, and the best interests of | !@¥e separated two people, who ought to he one in inter} cross the flelda. Chickens and other fowls were as ill All persons who have been thua imposed upon, will at Walti 1 are represented by persons you have | the country, ara rathor more valuable in my eyes than | °t and feeling, shall no longer exist. (Great applanse he first dove Noah sent forth trom the ark--the trees | servethe eauto of justice by leaving their names with of- An examination of the boily o bably of whom you have | the personal triumph of any individual, however merito- |, Mr. Monnsu. then rose and moved that Mr. M'Crac vere their only refuge. Fences have been carried | ‘cers Mckibbon or Brown of the Lower Police Oflice. In averdict of death by drowning will be represented, from | rious he may he, 1 choose to go for the democratic party ag the delegate to the Convention at Philade ay gullies cut through cotton fivds, carn incribs | Aysault and Battery George Gillet, a vietual MWental or not wee unknown, ‘The mo. imnited on that man who will have the greatest chaneos | ia, on the fourth of July next, the anniversary of Ame} vashed off, and in every variety of mote hief has | ‘ried ona charge of axsanlt and battery on a young man ey he had on his vervon when he was misao: 4 found 1 who, if hedo not answer | ofsuccess, (Cheers) ‘Thus | define my position, so that | ‘2 Independence, wen done. ‘The amount of loss‘t is impossible to estimate, | named William W. Purdy who had been in his employ, in his pockets, " ions and instructions which you shall give him | | may not by any possibility he misunderstood; and, be- | ‘The motion having been reconded— vat it is undoubtedly immen: ‘The sufferers have all F and acquitted. i sive immediately the) eflects Lof your wrath for | sides, Tam conscious that | am right, and when you haye | Mr. M’Crackxw rose and said, I have requested Mr, But- § our sympathies.—N. Orleans Picayune, Jan, 20, . The Court then adjourned to thit morning at 11 o'clock