The New York Herald Newspaper, January 24, 1853, Page 1

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‘THE NEW YORK HERALD. ——— WHOLE NO. 7389. MORNING EDITION---MONDAY, JANUARY 24, 1853. PRICE TWO CENTS. 5 d ; ; . f the Manchester Commercial i reeut rounded iedoing ia i population “alvancn and ie weal im | herpaly’ and commercial enterprise Tih we are | company separates few minutes blore twee otk. | Ron to hw exeloey mpeg bmp ote oy me mae eee es, for the pu ‘ ‘ rt, hat: 720, whose life is given to ‘ —— Ey. : THE DETAILS OF THE EUROPA’S NEWS, | 22t,i2¢ frst. as near as may be, the very first in the | world, had no moomment in Florence. But his monument | ‘The Dinner to the American Minister at Man- "or RECalgRmany axe" Manusan oasienreatant: | Tho bata tae Gp Sve abedetnes- arts thls Serves o chester. ab race, ens nan for exporting commerce. But, independent of | to the world, which all of us have read and admired. It (Frem the Manchester Guardia: Sr. J rage Coder alin ots pred ie Ganees Liverpool does herself great injustice if she dees | has been said by the cho lan. ie di whic Speen 8 lave Me, the Director i their mutual advantage, introducing wrth jew ‘The Liverpool and Manchester Bane | vei pride herself upon her domestic and internal arrange: (guage. A tie cancoarch hanno ea earths ey | the’ oe ie lea asain Semapoells | Wee: tne Dispense ecetaee 0 COPE aen ete [ee ren ie oceetibatlon, wince Sain tacaes Be quite 10 he tnerte ments. (Hear) The seaport is but the gate to a mag- | the social intercourse whieh we have, by facilities in the | United States at the’ Court of St-James, wes invited ng jour ea OF ons cordiah | duced originality talneal he aes ey ae Am wealth, and all the elegancies of polished life.” Your | the distance of place—by the frame of our governments 7 . i fe sheds Rr i Ae a nents, | place on Friday evening, Jwwuary 7th, in the large room | t ell as to tteraace to those fedtings of re. | ously, f ait ve ‘ m arehitgeture fs as ehaste as your publi¢ institutions aro | founded alike on constitutional freedor—one undivided | Of the Town Hall, which wae tastetully decorated for the | gurd'which we, as Bcltous, entertain towarde that grest. | thei2 ends proves tia undoubiray have accompli to nteresting Speeches by Mr. Ingersoll, | liber! and charitable, | (App use.) | Your docks, which | people. I trust, in sentiment and heart, we shall con- | oceasion. Over thg antrance doors of the room were ole- | coantry which you so worthily represent. their commerce, gud by the multiplestion of that com ave had the honor of visiting to-day under the best of | tinue so to the end of time; ana whenever circumstances nt trophies, of counlating, of the royal arms of the Rejoicing, ax we do at all tiines to honor, and to culti- | meree to the advantages sought for by: exch— "4 | conceived; but if I were to specify an object which | stances upon the ocean, at the savage banks of Congo— | over the other door a corved silver plume of the Prince of ming A a ve fe fonnded upoa ti ily Yhe Relative Positions of Hngland | struck ine this moming ax especially entitled to the | as we have seen them itlustrated wherever occasion call. | Wales, with his motto, “Lah, Dow tasted by the Britisty {‘ention in ane to cles: ieee tant. Sat. dae aad teachin toon eee es United State [{seapect, andl.sonsi eration of w stranger, it would be that | ed them forth—shall see them ilfustrated to the end of | flag and the “star spangled bannex” of the United States. | lowshiy to the representative of a country whose inter- | ciprocated on the other? But there is amother subject and the S, ublic library where young men are drawn off from tie | time—when you, I, and all, will rejoice in one flesh, one | Robert Barnes, Esq., Mayor of Manchester, presided. At | esta each succeeding year nore completely identifies | whica has been’ referred to also in the addgess which f DOUBLE SHEET. |i irmatniinnsn ae weet we | Hing mney scent rit tow means of | he hme, adh mnie ont ant | de, hi hd dh hay airs [le halen Joye nt world, (Applavse.) It is at present, I’believe, the | is composed in the literature which Roscoe gave Neon a annay Seer OF Anmeran re aNiPoTmrriaay | ture of the two races, comtinues, if twe they be—rather an Minister. nifeent town; itis the opening to the hospitality, and | course of business—by all who make aa the same, except } a mark of respect, during his visto Manchester. too Ea peepee colon ce haar ge HT 2 ad bees Riswiliicaas See ean ae gherad Lord Derby, and Others. bre smocgat tha. 108 wapaldcest rtteal Sie cote Leek greece oe come the amsitance bod anode ero alidandied anadio ene ee ee oh ee peared [ot rnd ra AT Tcl eg | poseible evil company by eeeugyag taste toad Sree | ne Ee en ante peewee e"Capnisnse.) | the Atoecenr Minicton iatioaeed rast ae hese Mil hogs of Gross Bitiatn, Siu rap noua Mae ADE || eats rane vent means the akon oe Bey By Gee — every sort of proper amusement andinstruction. (Ap- The Cuamman then proposed the health of the Earl of | John Bright, Esq., M. P.; TA y esi Banquet to the Ameriean Minister. plause.) A tribute of this kind is due for the someitctity Fefton, the Lord Hieutenaut of the county. : of tho Mandhatler Cbceiven ef Cameras tal red i. On Tuesday evening, Jannary 4th, the American Cham yveevived and the kindness manife A is Ss y ply, v‘ os Buk gRGorioneson cares esaanianinstataiant (Onts Tie paw hn 8 ifested; but it is not The Earl of Sxrron said, in reply, that he felt that po tures; James Heywood, Esq. J. R. Ingersoll. the American minister to this count compa amity, rivats only in peaveful progress; and that. the | one that has been cultivated here, under thes uspices of the Me a logis! yn of fatur ‘ars, on both sides of the Atlantic, | the Rigat Reverend meee who sits by my side, — je A 4 t P.; the yor of ‘igan; | may tend to cement that ion, by th dual devel universal acceptance on the part of those who fet! ie Penge Lek eee pee aa ae ae [a ae aaa aiiay: waees the obferd vaato |'dehn CheetEam, Eat, 22 yor of Warrington! Win ieht of commercial intercourse, untamed by fe | witout eduratom thir inductey wold Uo nh ted leat e yy s, that ; 3 : reat neighbors on th xander Henry, Esq.; the Mayor of Warrington: Win. | strictions. id their py ity be on e. You hue Ab the Adelphi Hotel, Liverpoal. Sicty.\gentiemen, sat ox gultvating that kind of good (geling already | other sie of the-water, (Hens, hvat.) He trusted that | sairbuirn, Bag. FRM the Mayor of Astton-unier-Lyne; | "fe xincereky trust your Excellency may long be soared Teenie niglas srcseanog alte ten teaat taee Secorated for the occasion. ‘The ‘ehair was taken by Eyre | chairman,” and sh ee ee Hey ager ri avtreertiecten dice (Heat) ataretas aitcetee MGone a o bens fay! peters ine, M.P.; Samu- | in the enjoyment of that high position isthe confidentoand | which are said toabound in most of our colleges and ot hee . 5 ri ayn airman, an ry i lice. - ul , Esq.; and Thomas Boothinan, Koq., Secretary | esteem of jour fellow. : rour d places of education in the United States: b . ™ aia Cobseal de Biahy belek meee epee Rin eek gad | tilaGiocal Mberty; Say call Us shseldag to atounton ta’ || oust Ghish ahould exist Ceteora hie peck nee: | of the Chien of Commerce. ‘To ie ic the Mayor | ment to your pressah office stords sofiomiatior a teeame | Of public insieuction which avounds ihtre: might peste: nd being next cht, A 3 r | were the ey. the op of Manel vil- va megs y be fami a 0 yi Hal of Sefton and Willian Brown, Eaq., M. P., sitting on | the defence of our common and equal rights—(loul'ap. | ca. But the rivalry and emulation between the eountrios | linm Browns Faq. NP; James A-"Thenery Ken. President. | Pou iC hare cela ea ee ae eter Oe coe ty Perhaps, without ae ite the chaigman. Le Stpendiary magistrate ‘sat | plause):—it is that the stranger coming from my native | shoukl be, which could show the best and greatest | of the Manchester Cominereial Asso the Mayor of | that 9f the most distinguished of your Excellency's pre~ | x0 far as most’ States go, by avery child of a poor Taam ‘8 soon as the cloth bad been withd and reaches firs er verpool; derives his first | scienee, which exhibited the greatest skill, which had the verpool; Joseph Brotherton, Esq., M.P. ; F. B. Ogden, | decessors. For and on behalf of the directors of the Mar» | that chooses to attend them, and an education sufficient awa, the Caam- | impree! ere; makes his first acquaintances here. | best manners, and which taught the best morals. (Cheers. ‘American (é i shes or, Wag. o i i ° fii XAx proposed the healths of the Queen, and of Prince | Helore}e passes on tothegreen fields and fine pasturages, | He thought that wasa fair nivairy, andi they aid note | Wiliam teers ek ee Eh ee eeeesia uc yain mec ee Auld saecnsabs ow aster tieeel were tro years ago a Albert, and the royal family, which were drank with loud | and the robust Population, and the ability, and wisdom, | beyond that point, he thought the Almighty would exten he Mayor of Stockport: R. | His Excellency the Hon: Fetes he opening " b ‘millions of Indfyidas applause. and patriotism which he will find in the interior, he has | his protection to the peace which now existed betweem A a atari ee he had ee Sent Fopproncie | Last Or eee pea IR ee aL ohn ee Liver- the tre. Febuntsies, and which he trusted would long exist. ¢ toast which he was snre would have their uffrages— | pool; it is that at last, after paying his visit to this bliss- oud cheers.) —Mr. Alderman Neild, Alderman Sir E. Armitage, Alder jentleme are any di elphi: : i in 4 that was, the “President of the United States; the chief | ful and blessed. land, he returns to his own country | © The Caimstay then rose to propose the “Health of the | mer yierman Ned, Alderman Sir E; A Borcugh Trea: | eouroos af oosplizaen? Uy rhiae Lesa aa oa eee a tae, | eateatea ec tla whectent trite antier enals eithnet magistrate of a people with whom we aro allied by birth, | through the town of Liverpool, andearries with him those | Right Hon. the Earl of Derby,” a toast whicl was re: | surer, I were address myself totem all, separately anddistnet- | eosting their parents apenny, rmodt obi thenn tagt belog AIS and connecter iy, a affinity, of Jaws aud institutions. | last impressions, which are likely to be the strongest, to | ceived with immense applause. In proposing the toast, After the cloth had been drawn, and the new vocal | ly, I should occupy, [am sur to much of Your time, and | to pay for them one single farthing. We have also an inatt Syria ute.) We had annually an emigration of about. | his own country, to his own friends, to his own family, | the chairman alluded to the transcendent oratory of the | graco had been sung by the glee singers, the C! yet I should fail to give vent to that utteranee of the fecl- | sution there which has been oneo or twicoadverted to by a popraedy te t! perce) SE Olt Ie ators did not appreci- | and to his own people. (Applause.) Mr. President, it is | noble lord—to the high offices he had held in this coun- | gave the first toast, ‘Her Majesty the Queen,” w ings of my heart by which Iam more than oppressed at | distinguished man in conversation since I have been in: Ns ett ak ay: ovat ‘0 have its importance the clreumstances of forming associations such as that | try—and, also, to the fact, that Lord Derby had visited | was received with all the honors, followed by the na- | this moment. To all and each of them Ttetecs my eiost | Eueland, and which I think is worthy of being introduced: infused into them. | The last message of the President | to which I have alluded, and of giving them force and in. | the United States many years ago, in order to make him- | tional anthem. The next toast from the Chair was— | cordial thanks, and Iwillendeavor briefly, and with the |.to your consideration and notice, Aliberal individual, om was added to those valuable historical documents, which | fluence during our continuance in this country, which | Felf acquainted with the people and with the govornment | ‘Hix Royal Highness Prince Albert and the rest of the | simplicity that becomes imeeclt ead ue 1. | making his will, bequeathed a large f nd all the previous messages would be found to be hereafter give rise to the occasions whieh have taken place, some of | of that country. Lyng ee a easion; $0 @ Se ee Rene acai Maneanne hone ae phat A ao 7 Dt Royal Family:”’ in proposing which, the Mayor observed em i e ° ks whic! ith 4o the ‘historian who wishes to compile the history of | late, some of weeks, months, or years ago, which Iwill | The Earl of Derby, in responding, said—Gen- | that Prince “Aibert bret conten doe becee ror observed ee Line ae ae Ree eetitah a ehlage Rat eele te Daten eee ee America. And the last one, in every respect, for its mo- | call for a moment to the attention of all who listen | tlemen, perhaps I may be permitted to say | spect and esteem. ‘This toast was duly honored, and f i it re eh it : i d x | . |, and | to return you my most sincere a f f ; ° . Fae oa eee ct axnresned with respect to | fo me, which have Teen reciprooated, and with areal | afew, words upon, the aubject of that body | followed by the gle of «The forester's leis the ifefor | the honor You have been pleased: todo. my country | Little more money than oancnnaetettin ‘ » ¢ ch eM J re rgotten, c ma Dave nel me this evening, me. he Chairman next gavi he President he i : ‘in dl wil especi: 7 e princi i i ie) these us upen the subject of protection and freo trade, but | nicate them, On the 19th of June last, in the river | member, to say a few words upon that body, which is, I | was sure they would all offer, with every mark cf warmth | States. (Hear.) Whether you look to that excellent | from other countries, the most ‘magniieent. toimple, of sc TN Naps 4 oe rare sa eran net pee fe agaist a Geter eee eon brig ae pete pad ers Soppetens nt secre care o ve ee and xinoeiiiy, & ielints of respect to Be illustrious person | gentleman who now presides over the councils of the | modern times. I mean the Girard College in Philadeb- —had give : As al sive \ ‘ound; x A 3, who, wi c i is country. And Isay it rather, | who occupies the highest position in the gift of the citi- | country, or to that most excellent rho stands | phia, now in fulloperation, under the magnificent - merchandise—with confidence that it will be returned | their hideous yells, armed with’ muskets, sabres, and | because Fsay it in the presence of ‘an honorable gentle. | Jens and inhabitants of the United States—(applauss)—- | how ievolathon tavern it Sechiet DR ERE Tete. tion of Stephen G ee lucntion therefeve, te attended hereafter. (Laughter and applause.) He should not de- | bayonets, and’ fortified with ropes and ladders, were | man with whom I am proud to acknowledge the friendly | expressing to him their most earnest desire that we | cially return to you my cordial acknowledgments to, believe. with great advantage; and if any individuals tain them with any other observations upon the subject | about ascending the vessel, and when every individual | relations which subsist between ourselves; I hope I may | should enjoy a greater and more complete intercourse | are men, each or thems, of great simplicity of manne in our country are not able to perform the ordinary duties than to repeat the toast, the “health ofthe President of | on board would have been massacred, her Majesty's brig | ay, and [am sure I may say between our countries— | with great country. | The toast was received with full | great purity of feeling, and great integrity of cart. | of life, from want of education, it must be: the fault of the United States."” The toast was druuk with all due | Dolphin, commanded by Lieut. Wood, came first to the | with whose institutions that body would be highly in- | honors, the company rising and giving three times three | (He: I know them both; and I believe I can answer | their parents or of themselves. While Iam upon this honors. ( } rescue of this vessel. “He sent a cannonade on board, | congruous, and in whose institutions accordingly it finds | hearty cheers. The Farl of Mornington’s fine glee— | for both of them—both to their own country, to this | subject, tere is another sort of establishment, which E The Hon. J. R. Ixasrsou. rose to respond. He said-— | threw @ shell among the approaching savages. which | no place. And, yet, gentlemen, in that country, in that | + Here in cool grot,’’ followed. country, and to the world. (Applause.) Gentlemen. I | think does not precisely prevail in this country, but which Mr. President, my Lords and Gentlemen—I have merely to | burst and dispersed them. He was followed by the Fire- | great republic—in that rising and rapidly-increasing em- | The Mayor next rose, and expressed the gratification | thank you for the manner in whi f you have received the | might be introduced to your knowledzeas worthy of being thank you very sincerely for having brought into view of | fly, Commander Seymour, who are like aid, and with | pire as we may call it, but an empire without an empe- | and delight of the company at having present the repre- | toast, and for the toast itself, as it has been given. Vor | known, 1 mean those places which, resembling your this company our most excellent chict magistrate. As | the assistance of these two vessels 3,000 savages were | ror—(hear)—in that growing, thut immense republic, we | sentative of the United States in this country; (great ap- | the distinguished notice of myself and my country, by | houses of industry, are called in my country houses of the head ot a_ responsible government, his term will ersed, and, as the captain acknowledges, every one | find thatthe wisdom and the foresight of the great and | plause), a circumstance which was hailed by allin Man- mayor, who presides upon this occasion refuge; where the’ very young, exposed to’ the actual shortly close. You know, however, that the head of a | would have been destroyed; but for this timely assistance | illustrious founders of that constitution, (and greater and | chester as well calculated to promote that good under. ly cordial acknowledgments. For the notice | commission or linblg to temptation to crime, are with- responsible government may retire with dignity, and re- | she was able to resume her voyage. I have, s{aceI have | wiser mon have seldom appeared upon the public stage of sanding whiah should ever exist between two such coun- | taken by the representative of your Chamber of Commerce | drawn from evil example, and are placed where they are turn to private life with the highest honors of “his coun- | been in England, communicated these fucts to the Fo. | history.) found it incumbent, even in the first | triex as England and the United States, of the same blood, | and Manufactures, and equally for the notice taken by | partially instructed in some trade, and then secluded try. (Hear, and applause.) This President will close | reign Department, with the thanks of the President of | flush ‘of the triumph of pores feeling, to interpose | language and religicn, and although differing on some | the representative of the other distinguished commercial | from evil communication and bad morals; bound out im his term on the 4th of March next. He has, I believe, | the United States. This is one side of the picture; in | some barrier betweon immediate legislation and thedirect | minor details, beth prizing and promoting the eri of | beard, I also return my sincere acknowledgments. | the country to useful trades: and they thus become, . R. INGERSOLL thent rose, and | there must be more now—four millions of individuals sq. | when the cheers with which he was received had at | undergoing a course of instruction in the United States, ere | length subsided, he spoke to the following effect:—Mr. | I speak for my own particular place of residence, Phila- ‘4. * Esq; Thoinas B. Potter, ‘The Vice-Presidents at the foot of the five tables the affections of his own countrymen, and I will not | Liverpool you have recently been made acquainted with | reflection of the popular will. ‘True it is, they had not, | the human race. (Hear.) Let us hope that @ilst there | Words would be wanting to express them. separately | almost every instance, valuable membera of aocict: Aoubt that he has the vespest of yous. -(Appluse.) | anotiier, "As the American mail steamer, the Pacitie, | and if they had, {t would have been ‘wholly inconsistent | might-be generous vale), yet by the guidandMe Drace, | Varun dy Tene, fe ox Trcly, and fo ten. || Stele belte Uabie ts bescioaltta very arerme sineerely thank you for having bought him into notice | was making her voyage from New York 'to Liverpool, | with thelr institutions, an hereditary chamber; but they | denee there might exist ‘an alliance between the two | terms, express it : here; and I ought to add, that his successor, who will | she took a somewhat northern passage, and encountered | supplied in a different manner, wisely adapting it to their | countries, calculated to promote the good, the liappineas, take’ his place on the 4th ‘day of March next, isagen- | a vessel at sea, water-logged, quite helpless, loaded | own institutions and system, a barrier interposing be- | and the welfare of the rest of mankind. (Hear. hear.) tleman of the very highest respectability, not so well | with timber, and therefore in no danger of sinking, | tween the direct representative institution and the legis- | With these sentiments, he to propose, “His Ex known, perhaps, to this country as some of our states- | but in danger of going to pieces. The sea was so | lation of the country, founded upon the elective principle } celleney, the Hon. Joseph R. Ingersoll, the American | of those addresses, which I appreciate and receive in the | the full developement of which will, with anything like men kaye been, but a gentleman eminent for wealth, re- | rough that it was impossible, at the moment, | wisely adapted to their own institutions—founded, al- | Minister; and may the close and intimate relations now | kindest manner. While it is true that a portion of the | certainty, ‘end to the benefit of the world or of the two syectabillty—I'_ will add for talents, for integrity. | to send a bont to her, and it is likely those in- | though upon the clective principle, yet with « different | happily ‘existing between this country and the United | productions of our country is received by you withoutthe | countries in which it has sprung up, perhaps not ex- (Applause.) I am not certain whether T ought | dividuals would have perished—sixteen Britons—but | basis, and representing a different class of interests; and | States, be perpetuated.” The toast was received with | assessment of duties of any consequence, if at all, and | actly in full development at the same time. Whether, or ought ‘not to say a word in answer to my ex- | they were in the presence of Americans who stood near, | it is singular enough that the two great countries—now, | three times three cheers. while it is undoubtedly true that there remains a portion | whilst we endeavor to cultivate a better feeling with celient friend’s (the chairman) suggestion, in regard | if necessary, to sacrifice their lives inthe attempt at | I'may say, almost the only homes and refuge of liberty | ‘The Mayor then called upon Mr. Tuomas Baty, Presi- | of the productions of our country which is not only as- | each other, and these circumstances which produce and. to one portion of the President's message. witicit has | suecour. ‘They remained six hours in the neighborhood | throughout the world—these great countries under which, | dent of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce, who rose | sessed, but is heavily assessed, (hear, hear,) I have no | perpetuate this good fecling, it is really of very great heen much noticed in the papers here. (Hear.) But all | of the vessel; found it then possible to send a safety | with diversities of institutions and diversities of habits, | and said—That few had been the occasions when the mer- | complaint to make, no-appeal to introduce, no suggestion | consequence that we should, at almost the same time, Tcould say upon that subject would he this—that the | valve down; arrived at the James Stephens; she took on | there exists at the same time a great uniformity of prin- | chants and manufacturers of Manchester had assembled | even to offer, except that what you shall deem wise and | be producers of gold to probably an unlimited ex. rame subject viewed in different latitudes becomes a very | board the sixteen Britons who were on their voyage to ciple, and a great similarity and identity of laws as of lan- | to show hospitality to distinguished strangers, and he re- | proper I will deem wise and proper, and that any changes | tent, which has been of service to this extent; but different thing (langhter and applause); and that it is | Glasgow—and whom our fellow-citizens were delighted to | guage—that these two great countries should haveformed | joiced at this opportunity of welcoming to his fatherland | which may be made in the cour-c of the arrangements of | which, nevertheless, may, unless it be watched narrowly, possible, 1f my excellent friend, the President of the Ame- | assist—restored them all, and brought them in safety | their constitutions oes les precisely opposite points | the Hon. Mr. Ingersoll, the distinguished representative | legislation on the part of our country in which your | be productive of mischicf. In certain quarters of the rican Chamber of Commerce, looked at the whole of that | here. (Applause.) Now, it is very possible, these cir- | of view. In this country the rights of the people and the | of the United States, that mighty nation which was now | destinies were concerned, or your interests alone in. | world, sumptuary laws bad been introduced, for the pur- subject from the other side of the Atlntic—from the | cumstances, friendly, a3 they are—brotherly, as they | liberties of the people have been of slow and tardy growth. | only dayning, in the infancy of progress, in the horizon | yolved, Tem sue that I can adswer for them, not only | pose of undoing the works of nature, which she has hid- city of Washington instead of the borough of Liverpool, | undoubtedly are—may be aided most materially by | We started from the other end of the scale, with almost | of the ew world. Between the people on this and the | with sincerity, but with a certainty of their being lis- | den beneath the surface of the eurth. Whether that he bee perhaps, if not absolutely modify, at least di- | circumstances of intervening interest which undoubtedly ited monarchical power, and aristocraticand feudal | other side of the Atlantic, there Saulanoe and ought not | tened to, and without any hesitation or doubt as to their | would have been. the case if Australia or California had mainish the extent of the warmth of his opinions. (Hear.) exist between the two countries; and it is proper, there- | power of boundless extent. By slow degrees the rights | to be any difference, and he trusted that for ages toge- | being approved. admitted, and acted upon. (Hear.) But | been in the midst of one of the old Atlantic States, I-can- i thank you again for having noticed the President of the | fore, that these ciicumstances of interest w hich exist | of the people, as the enlightenment of the co: try pro- | ther they should be bound together in the same sympa- | we also know (hat there are two sides to every question, | not undertake to say; but certain it is the fact that, aa i€ United States. He will know that notice has been | between brothers und friends, more than strangers, | ceeded, have risen their way, and acquired their due pre- | thies which now united them. With kindred blood in our | and that whatever may be the view (ukon of that impor- | Providence intended to show in everything a resemblance taken of him in this place, and by this enlightened as- | should also be noticed. It ix within the recolloction of | ponderance, and they have attained in this country that | yeins, with the same language, and laws, and institu- | tant question—a question which, having been sub- | between us, we have quantities of what sometimes is sembly; and Iam sure he will be gratitted, both as a | some individuals now living that the first parcel of cotton | state in which I will venture to state that, not exceptthe | tions of kindred origin, with objects alike of progress | mitted lately (as has becn referred to) to your great | considered a blessing and at others a curse to nations, as public magistrate and a gentleman. i from America was brought, I believe, into this port. It | great republic of the United States, there is mo country | for the improvement and the benefit of mankind, these | council of the nation. to your high impartial court, to | some of them have from the moment of the discovery of The next toasts were—": The Bishop of tha Diocess and | took some time before the people believed that it had | in which a larger measure of rational liberty is enjoyed | confederated countries must become the teachers of | that tribunal which for ages and ages has been filled with | it, ceased to prosper, till they became the least imporiant the Clergy,” and “The Army and Navy,”—to the lat- | been grown in America. That little parcel has since | thun that of which Thave the honor of being a native. | the human race. In one important respect he believed | men of tl abilities, and | mations of the carth. By industry, your education and der of which Colonel de Rinzy responded | grown to three million bales a year, Euglund receives | (Applause.) We have reduced, in this country, the | the old country had now the advantage. We had pur- | with respect to which I virtue, your prosperity, your absence of idlenegs, you The Cuainman then rose to propose the toast of the two-thirds of this quantity, or two million bales, and our | power of the crown and the power of the nobles to | sued a liberal policy connected with our commercial | listened to and felt ing the little time that I have | eve expelled’everything like individuals that deserve the pening, which was, ‘The health of the Hon. Joseph R. | cwn country consumes the rest. This is one bond of union | anamount which deprives the one and the other of all | intercourse, which (without reflecting on the policy | been in England i ourselyes in the | character of dvones; and this leads me forward for & Ingersoll, Minister of the United States of America to the | (Applause.) We have 19,000 vessels engaged in the | offensive power, of all offensive privilege, (hear!) and | of the United States, bud been “wise. just. and bend. | borong!s of Manche. ter have disting yourselves not | moment to the history of some chosen individuals in this Court of St. James’s.”” (Loud cheers.) ‘The mere-fact of | tratie between the two countries, amounting to about | leaves them only much influence as to steady and | ficial.” (Applause.) That policy had bestowed lasting | less by other qualifications than those referred to, and | part ot England. (Hear.) What is to prevent an indi- being a. representative at the court of this great empire | 5,000,000 of tonnage—by which vessels, which are the | balance the machine of the constitution, and prevent | benefits upon this community; and though we did not tl to yourselves and res to | viduel now educated and sustained and working im ‘Was quite significant of the high standing of Mr. Ingersoll | transporters of covery species of commerce between the | the rapid and constant fluctuations that might arise from | presume to dictate to any other country, we would affirm i ions of what you ought todo, | one of your manvfactories here, from pursuing hie in his own country, where he was known to be one of the | one country and the other, a bridge ix almost built be- | the unchecked exercise of the immediate popular will. | that this policy might be pursued with advantage in | than hy sending to the ps Fepresentation of | course of education and industry under auspices such most distingnishéd, able, and patriotic legistator:, an | tween one country and the other, and we are as near as | (Applause.) Now, starting from the other and opposite | every other country in the world. We received cotton, | this great place the ablest ps ‘our men r, | as prev until he finds himself growing up into re- eminent lawyer, a clever writer, aud an accomplished | it is possible io be, notwithstanding that the Atlantic | point, let us look to the great example of the republic | and corn, and calicoes, free as the winds of heaven. May | hear.) Ihave only to thank you for a silent monitor to | spectability in mature youth, if not absolute: man- scholar. (Applause.) When national affairs were con- | rolls en us. (Applause.) But there are other | of the United States, Injustice—I don’t hesitate to use | our policy be reciprocated; and in the bonds of mutual | us all. which by any one seated where I have been to-day | hood. and then wending his way from mere private Aucted on both sides by men of integrity, of talent, of | sources of interested intercourse. You are capitalists, | the word—led to resistance; resistance led to revolution; | interest, but Jn bonds much dearer than those of mere | could not have escaped notice—I mean the union on tie | ife and pursuits, into that great body which is acquizements, and of knowledge, the happiest results | we men of interprise.- Your capital, the accumulation | revolution led to the full enjoyment and full success of | mercenary motives, let the two countries go on tozether | otlier side the room of thove two flugs, whiich I hope m the test of merit and the stepping-stone to honor— might be looked for to the security of continual peace be. metimes of generations of herediiary wealth, some- | the popular principle and pepul r rights; and yet in the | ina happy career of improvement. When it was inti- | long continue united together, as they are st thismo- | 1 mean the House of Commons—which is both an tween tie two countries. The existence of that mutual; times of prudent economy, sometimes of labored in- | very flush of triumph and success, when some excesses | mated that Mr. Ingersoll would visit Manchester, the | mont, in peace and amity—(arcat applause)—and that | arena and a ladder—where everybody almost’ in advantage in commerce between the two countries was a | dustry, secks investment on the other side of the Atlan- | might have been pardoned, in indulging @ spirit so con- | Mayor kindly communicated to the two commercial | they may be cherished in their present, aud that an un. | Fngland, has been at one time or the other, for the pur- thing to be desired, as no limit could be well imagined | tic; cur enterprise seeks capital here, and the one and | genial to the feelings of the country, and which had | associations, that he thought it might be desirable, and | altered, condition. until the end of . pose of serving an apprenticeship, or performing a vigor- to it until the estuary of the Mersey beeame inadequate are thus @ mutual assistance and advantage, | acquired so great a triumph, the far-seeing statesmen of | only an actof justice, to present addresses or resolutions | Reference lias been made to ous duty. ven he who is so much lamented in this to its accommodation. (Hear, hear.) Who could | h tends to foster the best of good will. These | that day foresaw it would be necessary, to a certain ex- | of congratulation, ‘The Chamber of Commerce had una: | this great communi i country, although he afterwards pursued a different is my heartfelt gratitude for each | am additional circumstance, as Ihave ‘aid, in which we and all those considerations. (Applause.) Nevertheless, | have some resemblance to ae There is another prin- J ought, perhaps, to saya word in rezard to the particular | ciple which rather is to be looked on as a phenomenon. of circumstances which haye been adverted to inone or both | @ curious and extraordinary character, rather than one contemplate without wondering ‘the almost woudertul c of the eircumstances which couple us together; | tent, to check the predominance of that purely popular | nimously adopted the following resolution s:— so prominent in_ the vie course—I mean the great Duke of Wellington—he who anticipations and results of the annual increase of the © are other circumstances—more important | influence, and to interpose—not, indeed, that they bor- | EXTRACT FROM THK WINUTIS OF THE CHAMMER oF Comauece | (Mir. Turner), who read the address—its industry, wi sounded all the depths and shoals of knowledge, passed population. of Anglo-America, who we aking the rowed from the mother country—but interpose some AND MANUFACTURES AT MANCHESTER, OTH JAN., 1853. a stranger cannot fail to have heard of, and which 1 that House of Commons. What is to prevent same language, haying the same lite v ication that | during the Heh, space of a few hours that I have been dual to whom Phave alluded, from thence find- and being within eight or ten Cays sail of each other. And cannot, will not be undone. and as a counterpoise and equivalent to the House of | the Honourable J. R, Ingersoll, the representati in Manchester to-day, a stranger could not fail to wit way to that higher, if it may be so called, but at <Hear, tear.) Each country might be expected to re- | Our daughters are married to your sons—our sons are | Lords in the mother country, as far as such an equivalent | United States of North America, was ut to ¥ ness with the greatest possible pleasure. There is but | least more aristecratic, portion of the Parliament of ciprocate good feeling, to act upox each other, and to | married to your daughters. A ‘constant communication | can counterpoise. Gentlemen, much, no doubt, may be | chester, it was unanimously resolyed—That this chamber | one cireumstance that evn. produce mutual improvement and advancement by this | between these countries, of affection, blood, and marriage | said against the doctrine of hereditary succession, and | tender to his Fxcellency, on his arrival, its sincere con Action. (Hear, Hear.) But the | subsists, and thus the ties are endered almost sacred, | more expecially hereditary legislation. Yet, let me be | gratulations: with an expression of fervent hope that tue tutions and accompanying education proved, however, | (applause); to break them would be like introducing | permitted to observe in reference to a word or two which | amity so long existing between his country and our own these countries held their miraculous prosperity. To | commotien, disturbance, and civil war—the worst of wars | fell from the president on this occasion. He has quoted | may be rendered perpetual, through the practical a ¥ngland the United States was indebted for ground- | —into either of our countries, on the one side or the other | ene instance in which the example of the father is not | tion by the governments of each, of that sy work of her prosperity. England gaye to her foreign | of the Atlantic. Now, with all these inducements and | wholly lost on the son; and some seven or eight and | national exehange which would at once diffu hy possibility, create a | Great Britain, and others surrounded not only by heredi- 5 ester has been called “a | tary nobility, but by a great number of different iudivid- ove, that while in the ordinary un. | uals, who by merit have achieved honors which are fa- at term, in the little community of busy | uilliar to you all—such as the Scotts, who became eat live. ia Manchester 1 believe | Eldon on the one hand anda better than an. Eldon per- . (Hear and langhter.) Industry must | hapson the other—the late Lord Chancellor of England, I the parent of virtue, of good conduct, of wealth, and | mean Lord St. Leonardr—Sir Edward Sugden, a man of ure ax England, | ; Which round the heart are wound, cheek which would tend as a balance to the constitution, This board having heard with great gra | | | the great possessions free institutions and self-government, and | rearons for harmony and good will, is it possible that | twenty years ago I was led—a much younger man—to | est amount of Lappiness, and form the strongest bond of | the comforts and enjoyments of lite—speakii a | obscure birth—the pera ti of the great Mr. Canni her children had done» it tu their parentage. (Hear, | there should subsist anything but that sort af good feel- | visit that republic which he has likened to an infant | lasting friend:hip and peace. human sense. As the reverse of industry, idleness is the | Limself, ane many individuals who have been connec! hear, and cheers.) ey 1 tuken the principles of | ing between us? We are derived from the same race, and | Hercules; so my son, inheriting his father’s desire, has That this charber *further avails itself of this oppor. | parent of vice. and has been put forth by one of the poets h the army. What is to prevent individnals ahe mother coun r pied them to the peculiar | speak the same language—our ancestors are not pre- | visited that matured republic—there seen the rapidity of | tunity of requesting his Excellency to convey to the | of your own country as the prolitie parent of all imagi ending to that House of Peers by the force of their ix circumstancer of ide! nz eountvies in which | cisely the same, but the individuals who framed our form | the growth of the institutions, and the moral and mate- | government of the United States its grateful acknowledg deeds and bad ings—beginning with glut dustry and talent, and so becoming supporters of tae dhey had been ‘ ‘oe) There was much | of government, who framed the constitution of the United | rial prosperity of the country, and been able to estimate | ments for the promptitude with which its suggestion for | a ing with what cannot much be worse throne: or what is to preyent their so continuing to do to be admire? in the etree the United States. | States, as it has stood from that hour to this without | how rapid and great the growth of a country whose in- | the establishment of a United States consulship in Man- | respects, our country does not otherwise much than re end of time. (Hear! hear!) I believe thet Tt had not beer ieit ‘0 bance. ft was made general, | alteration, were at one time British subjects, and became | stitutions are deeply interwoven in the hearts and affec- | chester bas been accorded. semble yours. We are also an industriou Se continue to prevail between our two countr and was one ol tbe oo ne of the social system of | only by the separation of two great countries citizens of | tious of the people of that country. (Loud applause.) | That these resolutions be communicated to his Ex | haps, ao place even in our great coun because I believe there is an interest of commuafon av America. (ie heax.) In 1850 found that tour | another empire. They gave to our constitution and laws | I hope you will alloy me, upon my own part, upon the | cellency he President of the Chamber.’ it is in many respects, and T allude to it, not in any ot! of fecling: (hear, hear;) and that it may be so, in kis. millions of eb idren in the United | a system, an order derived from Great Britain, which had | part of the government to which’ I have lately had the He was’ reluctant to obtrude opimfons perhaps not wel- | sense than except in the ma; at scenery with which | Ress and good will, is not only the wish which we ni States, which wa. covaliomne if) of the gross popu- | grown up in Great Britain during the course of centuries, | honor of belonging, and also, I will venture to say, upon | come across the Atlantic, among distinguished aud pa- | it abounds—and it would, indeed. e extiaore ¢ | of us will exchange, but it is a sentiment founded lation of the free peoyl) of Awerca : and, deducting | which had its force and has now its permanence from the | the part of the present government, and of every govern- | triotic men, But on that platform. in the midst of the | there no rapid prog: had been made in the upon reason, as well as upon truth; because there ndults and infants. he fovud ‘hat cry ehild in the coun- | stability it acquired here. (Applause.) If there were | ment which can exist in this country, to express how | very ‘‘school’’ that had taught the nation as to princi- | ment of our population and out resources—y never was, I believe, from the beginning of tae worid try must beedueate: (\pplaise.) One result of this | advantages when a united government, there came other | strongly I feel, and how strongly I’ am sure they | ples which our hereditary legislators were now struggling | rivers flowing for two thou (ogether—with the | {o this time, a man connected with war, who did not as education was, that tlie ine demagogue would es as independent governmentsafterwards, inthe | will all feel, ‘satisfaction at that friendly fecling | who should give effect to, he might be sapposed to be sur- | extent of country rolliug over GP uaienen Cikelaw he would: am ‘an illiterate peo- | immense government which subsists in trade, and the | which upon this and upon every occasion Law beet rendering the position they now occupy. if he had not | ductivenes. ‘rom eac! . | manifested and proved to exist’ between this great | briefly, but in plain terms, ° n+ of forgotten lan, country and the hardly less country, the re sincerely hoped that on'each side of the Atlantic, that | your own writrrs, the very v Mississippi itself 1 obsolete our brethren of the Uni States. (Cheers.) Sir, it af- ii . the Christian guiding star, alike of nations and | produce: ies of Indian corn, suficient to teed the thua be able to check the demazoy The | preserved, and sometimes phrases which you th fords me particular pleasure to have this opportunity of | of i of doing to others as we would be done | who Adam. Nature, iu the midst of alt these great intercourse between the two countries would pre- | extraordinary at first, bot were rwards kind enough | testifying, under the presidency of one to whom the com- | unto, might triumph; and with t) ntiment he would | great attributes, would blush for man if man did not en- serve both the races, who were one in inidentity, | to adopt—(loughter)—thus mutually to reciprocate | merce of Liverpool is greatly indebted for the efforts he | conclude his imperfect remarks. deavor, ¢! least, to go on andimprove. [know of no part and in creed. The government of Amor sly conferred | kindnesses of all sorts, even in those respects which per- | has made to increase its accommodation and facilities— | Mr. J. A. TURNER, President of the Manchester Com- | of that ntry which in the regu local government upon © localities, this | t expected from the other side of the At- | (hear) to meet upon this occasion the distinguished rep- Association, said he availed himself of the oppor- | progte thas cultivated not without advante means they attached the peo) local positions and | | But, it bas been expected, upon | resentative of the United States (applause) with the rep- | tunity to offer to Mr. Ingersoll a cordial weleome, on the | and success, haa transcended the adv ni the s principles. ‘The general government was not responsible me little allusion should be made, | presentatiye of that great country, with whom we have so | cecasion of this his first visit to Manchester; and, at the | cess with whi i local abuses of any kind, and would, therefore, never | and I know I can, withont imp y t ny ties. of laws, of language, and of liberty, with | same time, to present an address, unanimously 2 ‘become unpopular on that account; so that affairs might | which transpired, in which a ona wa. which it is of the utmost importance to the interests of | by the Commercial Association, over whom he had the | Mane! as J under o wrong in Ohio, New York, or a without | from that good will which has so long subsisted, and | the whole world that we should maintain the friendly | happiness and honor to pre: (Applause.) It was | stand from all sources, would put to the blush af. | the government being endangerest There was | which, I trust, may subsist for ever. (Applause.) Iam | relations which happily subsist at this moment, and to | a pleasing and gratifying circumstance to the merchants | vance of almost any other place upon the face of the snother fallacy abroad as to the United Siates. It had going to discuss that isor may beat | have an opportunity of assuring him that whatever | and manufacturers ‘of Manchester, that his Excellency, | globe. Indeed, had the predictions of some of your polit. | SP! deen laid down that the Northern and Southern States between the two Tknow of no iss that | ministry may hold the reins of government, they, unless | so soon after his arriyai in this country, should have | ieal writers of a century and a balf ago becn at all veri. | bea’ were dinerent in interest, becawee they had a different | can he between these two countries thatean lead tootier- | wholly blind to the interest of their own country, as well | accepted an inyitation to a banquet in their Town Hall; | fied, and other parts of this great kingdom lad gone ou | Jou have climate, and that their products were different; on the | wise than the most pacific and honorable result. (Loud | as the world at large, ean have no other object than cul all in th fo of progress contrary, he considered that this was a bond of umon We lave seen, on both sides of the At- | tivating the friendship of the United States. (Applause.) which has distinguished Manchester etween them. They hel an interchange to make with taken of some litile matters of dispute | My honorable friend, if { may so be ed to call him, would have with popn ar me, has adyerted to some differences and dales; with a pro eryenily utter bis sentiments in favor of peace, as hat perhaps has seldom bei own inthe | the mildest of all Possible principles in education, poken on this sub He | history of man; and which, as was recently said by one of never had anything to do with war or its ma H You are all perfectly aware of the sentiments ow of ihe Duke of Wellington, who, although hig campaigns led toa state of things whick ' & number of years, in the nature of peace, t iaions with regard to war were just as familiar: arse of the | lyand frequently expressed as upon other sujecta, and by e | th kept his country from running into it. Even the exptain of the French, Napoleon Bonaparte, after ¢ down his honors at home, and becoming a prisoner ». frequently expressed to Montholon, before he ended ‘t. Helena, his horrorat the system of warfare, that the true glory of nations consisted in m of peace and ainity. (Hear, hear.) I have © you, from the inmost recesses of wy ive with the greatest gratitude the kindness hown me, and expressed for my country; and I country and vours may long continue, im every r spest oowipattble wits the nature of things, with the actual separation by the Atlantic, with this litle dif- ple. For whoever so appealed \o tie American people, | mutual improvements which we derive would be met by thousands as ambitious as himself, | in even the occasional interposit Inspired ‘by a spitit equally 1 who would } among you, which you consider this place dopted | where w eigh borhood ench other. They were not rivals, and, as anevidence | which did ocenr a few months since—we hay the min would not be to contain ali its population notwithstanding our resemblance in language, of this, he would refer to the enormous eoasting trade | ii noticed in the House of Peers of Great Bi which © arisen between us, and some points which x that time. others supposed that ten m and laws ; notwithstanding our devotion to of America, and a more conclusive argament, of the | m ft notieed in the House of Commons | have led to controversy and remark. I will not, of | in manufacturing establishments, which could be lions were considered as muchas could subsist up I liberty, whieh is, I believe, equally strong we have & of Great Dritain—we have seen it referred to in the | course, upon such an occasion as this, enter upon a dis- | within the British isles, all, or for the most part, island of Great Brit esiage of the President—and all with feelings of that | cussion of the merits of the question,* but of which [feel | ly or indirectly, engaged in the most important of the | number has whieh cannot possibly lead to anything but the most | convinced that the best mode of settling the differences | vegetable products of the United States. (Hear, hear.) | wards trebl and harmonious result. But why should it | which may arise between thisfcountry and the United | But it was not alone or chiefly because untaxed Ameriean | pro sen for a moment that there shoul e beon | Slates especially—but I will say, also, this and any other | cottons and breadstufts were so lary i claimed ground have been cither of ill-will, or even something worse than ill. | country, is a frank a moderate communication of mode- | district, that he considered his Excellency’s visit to Man- | devoted to the uses of the po dencies to hostility—between us? It consisted | rate views and claims, teinperately put forward and | chester as important, He trusted that his Excellency | extend to such « degree as identity of interests between the hern States they could not have. After euloyizing the Ameri inister, and acknowledging the honor he had in being present, Mr. Evans proposed t toast before him, namely, Px ney the He Joseph RK. Ingersoll, Minister of the United States of America to the Court of St. James."’ The toast was iihsianding these little differen- so far as requisite for indi- ¢ in val to do, subject to these cireumstan = of unre id indivisible. (Cheers.) The hon. gentleman of being | then resumed his seat. ev shall the Cuarmtay next proposed “The bishop and clergy of n All team | the dtc and yet it has beon se en doubled. all require the drunk with loud applause. uin colonial assertions and rights, those riguts et | stendily enforced, upon the part of the representatives of | would find something in the enterpr r | sayisthis, my frien when the time shall come Lord Bishop of Maxcumsrrr, in responding to: the ‘The Hon. Mr. INGERSOLT. in responding to the toast, | one-time being in common between the two countries, | those nations. (Applause.) And Iam sure of this, that | manufacturers—something in the inventive genius of our | predicted by the political writers of the day. to which L | toast. which he understood to be a recognition of religion spoke nearly as follows :—Mr. President, my Lords, and | and being precisely the same as were secured by the | while « tame concession of any important rights never | mechanists—something in the liberality with which | jaye referred, that your isiand shall in the course of | and ol! its ministers, said that, though we might lament Gontlemen—A {public comptiment in Kngland is alto- | treaty of 1783, and continued till war broke out between | affords real satisfaction to either of the parties, even that | charitable and educational institutions were founded and | things be overgrown with population, and that it shall | that the American government had not adopted a system gether welcome. It is especially so in Liverpool, be- | the two coun Then # treaty took place; and it was | to whom itis made or that which makes it, «oon the other | supported—and, above all, something in the determined | find discomfort in that multitude and in the closeness of | of commercial policy similar to eur own, yot as one-who cause it sounds like home, and comes near to the | only in after years that these ditliculties occurred, which | hand the friendship of nations is best maintained byacalm | staud which the men of Manchester were always accus- + their habitations, why, then. hospitable | had read history, he knew that un ich restrictions as heart of an American. (Hear, hear.) I secept it with | T trust will , because on all oceasions when | and temperate assertion of that which they believe to be | tomed to take against wrong, injustice, and oppression— | welcome among the hundr acres that | existed in that country, many countries, may even our the utmost gratitude—I receive it on behalf of my | th ibjects have been alluded to, other subjects h could not fail to at- | obound upon the other sid e thot n, had rise, and he was prepared to believe that that ve | their rights, and on the other hand by a moderate and | (Hear, hear, and applause) —wh -eountry, and [ return it cordially in behalf of that n introduced, which will make it one of mutual bene- | liberal view of those which axe the rights and privileges | tract the notice of the ambassador from a people the surplus population is not calculated t : country and of my very humble self, We are in the in the result. Whatis the reason that when we are | of others. And let me mention, more especially with re. | selves #0 enterprising, energetic, inventive, charitable, | the slightest degree with them that remain in midat of Liverpool, O&¢ hosts are the American Cham. | settling thie matter of a. mere fishery, a much broader | gard to the United States, there is on their part all that | and above all, determined lovers of freedom. (Applause.) | at home: when they shall migrate amongst us and bor of Commerce of Liverpool; their guests are distin- | view cannot be taken of the whole subject than has been | plain, straightforward habit, honesty and fair dealing, | Ho was sure it would be gratifying whenever an oppor | find, in reality, neighbors and brothers as well as | friendly guished noblemen, officers, military and civil, and other and and American? Why should nota commereial | derived, I will venture to say, from their English ances: | tunity occurred for the interchange of kindly feeling and | friends, among the dwellers in that vast tra Snlightened gentlemen, Hoth are reprosentatives of a s0- | treaty be founded upon it w cial, a political, and a commercial priticiple—they grow | both countries, and. espec out of the clone intercourse of two great nations. (Lowl ) might be xafelr carried on ina matured country might not perhaps as safe gone. Yet he hoped, in the kindliest and most anner, that the day might not be far distant { of coun ica would fect, through all the length and h should be beneficial to | tors, which will never induce them to think the worse of | good will between the inhabitants of Amoricaand Eng- | try. (Applause.) I have referred, im passing, inci: | breadth of her vast territories, that she was so strong, ly those colonies more im- | a British minister who steadily maintains that which he | land. He trusted that none of us would forget that we | dentally as they occurred to me. to one or | and therefore so rich and so prosperous, that she might liately interested in regard to the fisheries? (Ap. | conceives to be the interest of his country; and atthe | were members of the same great family, whose peculiar ers of this country; but there is another, tate the commercial policy of this country.—(Ap- applause.) Wherever Liverpool hay led the way towards | plause.) Besides, it is all but impossible to suppose | same time does not desire to push those interests beyond | mission it had been, and might still more be, to uphold, rervation flashes upon my mind at this mo- | plauee.) the existence of a general feeling, which, I must say,1 | that these colonies will not be greatly the gainers by a | what the limits of friendship and good feeling between the | support and defend the standard of constitutional liberty, | ment, to this efeet—that the prosperity of the United ‘The \ ice CHAIRMAN proj aye had the happiness to meet in this country whéxg- | commercial intercourse in which they will participate | two conntries mutually demands. Gentlemen, I have no | on thie fair earth. It was true t the head of this | States and of Manchoster is especially dependent upon | who, he hoped, would n: ever I have had the happiness to be, of kindness and good | more Inrgely than anybody clse,—not having in them- | fear of avy question, of any differences, arising between | great family was, some eighty years ago, guilty of injudi- } one another. We are in this respect the producers: | would assimilate our laws and institutions to the progress will towards my country, (and Liverpool hay aright to | selves the materials of manufacture, grain, breadstuffs, | the United States and this country. We have too many | ous and arbitrary c: nduct—tliat he endeavoured to ex | you are the manufacturers; and while we can send cotton | of societ Jead in almost everything)—(hear)—itis equally to be re- | on the one hand, while they have the timber, the coal, | tiea to bind us together. We have the ties of common | act toe implicit obedience on the part of an eller | in great abundance to Manchester, and Manchester can The Honorable J. R. TNGKRsON, proposed’ “The Mayor joiced at, forthe cause nud effect. If, ever, it. has | andthe fish, if you please, ‘on the other. But why 1s it, | language—the ties of common laws in many respects—we | son. who naturally concluded that he had arrived at | manufacture out of that cotton the exeelient goods it does, | and Corporationef Manchester.’’ The Mayor was a geu- that the sentiment throughout the country | when these fisheries are in themselves multiplied to an | bave the ties of common liborty—we have the ties of ra- | years of discretion, when he was cntitled to some voice | an’ send them back to the Unite States, each is a | tleman of the utinost worth, amd,as they alfknew, the sentiment in Liverpool are each but the echo of | extent almost to infinitude, for I think we are told by | pidly extending and increasing commerce—we have also | in the adjustment of family aflwirs, a+ affecting lis own | gainer, and the prosperity of the ane would be interfered | creat kindness and efficiency. the other, itamounts to the same thing, and both are | writers many years ago, and still there are sometimes | ties, Iam sure, of personal feeling to bind us - | interest. (Hear. he: ‘he consequence was a family | with by the adversity in this respeet of the other. And ‘The Mayor, in responding, expreseed his satisfaction wolcome, Liverpool might be celled, if it would not be | millions of acres of fish below the surface of the waters, | ther; and my firm belief is, thatif questions arise in which | quarrel, always lamentable, and attended with unploasant | when on the one hand. you have auch an individual a8 | 64.4 since he had been connected with the Coxporation, doing injustice to the other places which might put im | ready to be taken by those near them, whether near to | differences of opinion may exist, friendly communication | effects. But all angry feelmg on that subject, he trusted, | Sir Richard Arkwrighs, who was a vative ef Laueashire. | }.¢ hid received so much kindsess fromm alk its members, claima for it, the Queen of the Ocean, enti to wear the | the land or distant from it. It is well known thata | will not only remove those difficulties, but will alo tend | had long passed away—(hear, hear:) and he feltassured | though not exactly of the aeichborhoed in which we and from the inhabitants of thin town. erowa, entitled to wield the trident of Neptune, notas | single fish of a W ig tie? breed, the female cod, lays | tomake the fact of those differences having arisen ex- | that the oldest son stil! looked with affection to the pa. stand, whe have latroduced into the manwfseture to Mr. W. EXTWI8Lé proposed “The members of the south - the |sceptre of war, but ay an emblem and instrument | between three and four millions of its offspring at the tend into a system of rest peost advantage and the greater | rental roof and heartistone: and he hoped that his de- } which feefer the greatest of all possible improvements, | ory division of the county of Lancashire," and cougratu- pt marine power, of peace, and harmony. The great | sme time. There wasn period when our writers dealt | extension of commercial intercourse between the two | scendanta would for ages take pleasure in visiting the } and hage made it ty that introduction work of facility | Sered the company upon the fact that this division of the motropalis of this country, which for ages has stood | largely upon this subject, some thirty-eight years ago, | countries. (Applause.) And Iam satisfied of this, that | scones of ently assoctations,—bestowing aii reeeiving ail | and of universal benefit, how exactly, im the view taken | cccnty was well represented by the gentlemen who satin anrivalled in her relations, might put in hor claims. | when the fisheries were considered more important | we can have no representative more fitting to maintain | and encouragement in the furtherance of everything noble | of it, by Mr. MGulloch, he confers'a benefit both apon | 41.6 House of Coramons ue ita members. Our ewn city of New York, which stands with her | round the island of Great Britain than the colonies. | these views and keep up that frieudly communication | and good. (Loud applause.) It had been his privilege | the gountry where he istredaces the improvement, and Mr. WintaMt Brows, M. P., im responding, expressed his Jong ‘arma stretched out to reach towards Liverpool, | Both, however, are important, and both, I trust, will | which was carried on, Tam ect ad say,,by his imme- | to welcone in Manchester three of his excelleney’s dis: | v pon our country from which the original commodity | conviction that the adoption of 8 systom of unrestricted might 6le0 advance some elaim'to s similar postion. But | finds result in harmony, peace and good will, such as | diate predecessor, than one who will unite with the frank, | tinguished predesessors—Mr. Kverett, Mr. Bancroft, and } wax dorived. Now, while three millings and upwards | Sompetition by this country had been productive of most ‘Livery has done much towards such a result. Hore | subsists between the two countri I don't intend to Thera. and cordial spirit which actuated him, Ja firm de- | Mr. Lawrence. After is iiertple well fulfilling their duties '¢ of bales of cotton are produced per anaum (for tO | joneagial results, oth. w its internal condition and the stands upon the very edge of English ground, with | cecupy more of your time, havi oken more than T | votion to the liberties of his country, at the same time | at the Hritish court, they retired to their homes in the, | tat extent it has risen), and while of that three | ronite relations with other countries. her magnificent docks pushed into the very waters of (he | ought, perhaps, already—(no, no!)—but I recollect that | that he respects the rights and claims of thoso who, on | enjoyment of the good will, good wishes, and respect of | jnillions you receive twolhirds and we aro able ‘After. ©: Tho ladies of the old worki and the now” had ocean, ready to send out her feeights, with the course of | Liverpool was the abode of one who has done as much | the part of this country,can put forward matters to him : | theit friends on both sides of the Atlantic. Me tro stod present to retain (he other; and wisile there is | ney pp vowed by the cheirman, and reaj ‘to by Mr. every \ercending «un, to the now not distant land, and | for the elevation of the public miad, by his introduction | and 1am sure we can have no one wore fitting to dis | that when his exeellency had similarly fuldliad his yi no great danger, at least for a century or two Foxe yh ios j Brn Sesk the ‘procecdinga then toe 40 Feoove appropriate returns. But Liverpool is not | to us of the commercial men of other countries, as any | charge those duties than him whom you have honored, | he would retire, to be classed by th to come, that either India or Kgypt will rivat os, inated. iu , roercly a place from which commerce departs and to | wan who ever lived—William Roscoo—who, by giving | and who has honored us, your guest this’ evening, (Ap: | British isles as one of the American worthic either in the actual prv of long staple or in your } aa ich commerco returns. Hor inhabitants ave iu the | you the lives of such men aa Lorenzo di Medici, made | planse.) His lordship, again aggaowlodging the toast, | be would ats hence enjoy a care sense of the arivantage and superiority of articles you shall f the political, maritime, and com, Dit of calling her a seaport wii! great modesty. as if | you acquainted, made us acquainted, (for Tangtish litera. | resamed his seat amid enthuasigatic applause 4 own country, while ae lustre | derive from the United States—wihtile thia state of things BF The detuils of the political, J . the coaport wero the great oharacteristic that belonged 1 ure is just as familiar in the United States as iu Grogs The subsequent toasty were, “The Mayor of Liverpool,” (App a9) Ty Woo | now cot tho ad bogies, | Jo aot believe, ik (ae good teoling whieh Yas deen & Wergial cews will be found on the cighth page

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