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THE NEW YORK HERALD.*« WHOLE NO. 7609. | MORNING EDITION-~SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1858. PRICE TWO CENTS. ay of the city of a i oesasio Oop, THE VAN BURENITES IN TAMMANY, | but for‘ grest cause which is tae ital prmsgie ot [ 206, tad they wanted tondjourn.. The democrats arw a- | fer of gach vilerss, took cnsaion torte at 4Qbeay, | bie and fir, 1 roraréed tt asa proot tha the amin. | | Mr, Comme, of Yatex that he wéall apt ee Oud leas principle of | ways good-natured, and we had no objection to let thi sane days ago, that there was ne violence inthe Cowvea- | tration that into felt — | ezgcretfrmert fit Stang tec | entities eee cy en bu | anti ce jane mem | aa a ace i Mech wh ee ep ey ag Ta ga we hope in the cause of democracy, The mere politician aug inter.) act noo - , but sent us word ¢ r ; 's é first democratic cenvention that assembled unani- [ move tor door.y Young as was he would Their Attempted Vindication of the | Mr hens it the cause of path ‘he ung 1 relator” they were tai thtrlien nu frne they wanted them hall. It may be deine necessary by several reutlem in | mously adopted it, and I betieved now ard then. that | tke to say a few things to them; (unmistakable disap; ‘ mm made'on my part, that there | there is no goed reas hy the subject of slavery should | on of the audience) ; the; heard too Administration. Belin‘ cunt Ba ea antcibeRmet | Bet amecpctdlc baron, We teh fnm as | Sebati ay veo Eby agen knor | foto b Aeaed ey er, 1 wea ine te | Signing ary ye tpn hw Be ge 2A OS a op mocraey wa Kound, and tant we cate | . - | know what good’ tho: agitation hi ' —the apeaker—atood in 1848.’ Hi — : man—vill never forget lier mission of “good will to- | rieq it hy two to oneover the adamnautinen,, They wanted 7a, Ward, of Wertalienter: van there: Dajor General Or- | earth.” Wht have, iy taemctiuheet:: Waet Eave.| Yam Buemctargen nite Genetel tom abd John Van Buren upon G'Conor, Bronson, and | “the mere politician, who has been warmed into fmpor. | #,{Uiveree. | The reason why they wero opposed to Marey in | } e wan there; Chazies Woodruf was there, with | Seward and Hale done? What has Tompkice done | rather a longer tiate than he promised, chiefly thir—there was a Staté treasury at Albany, and there w: twinty-nine bullies hired at Syracuse—hs swears he-was | but sct the Tal g . - t . ya ore Was © Tabernacle and resolutions. It | of M’. Marcy. Other Prominent. Democrats, Weuld nuke her temple the den af aves have akon | fit, auriety to gel the money out of Ik Ghore wana | hel Alnor. ors who fought's menser of Aum: | ne caused a vaat deal of wichie, but yum, may rdtez ete, tke chateman propo three cheat re ill to appropriate rive million of dollars for the enlarge- eof | 6 vain for any sub- st Vilttam H. A tee are their leave, and rome havent, warm hearieh democrats | ment ult scsalReery one sas i oe ok aaa ex- | AbMNY au, when Wha Hols was in vorscacie se | Senet, SAE sce zetia, or, muonry | for Wiliam Ht Mater, ‘The gall way roponded to | are straying from her fold; but the second sober thought Speeches of Mr. Grover and Others, | Ni brivy tie honest to hen rake er ee neUEME | largement of the canals; but there was a. constitution | thera; Lwin Cro-well was there, who fought a gentlemen | solve thet I have neglectet this greet: question aod | duced, and prosaised tomake short fpecch, bat he Lape ‘ ‘h was the emanation of the sovereign voices of the | i the streets of Albary—and if the Argus is to be relied | abandoned my principle: 1 i Me See iv ¢ a voice: iy principles. ‘celey sys thut slavery is | his promive just about as well as the Pa Neng Svaetiast uecorae pes distinguished politicians, | PCOp!e, #24 that constitut on declared that no dvbt ex- | pom) five had uot got. our fest in the grating we would | to be iatroduced into California, Welly there are Pury | preceded oo tho remark of both gestlanen "aay LETTERS FROM ISAAC A. VERPLANCK AND JOHN A, DIX oint those who in our jadgment may have erred to the | (°¢"i?8,one mil in of dollars could be con:racted by the Neen “J ee He was there. And how was Ito | and Weis, and hundreds of {good “men and true, there, | omitted 5 DIX, fon door for entrance to our honsehold, for it is unman, | "8: ‘There was a whig Governor in office, and all that | 2 abet | at there were no fighting mon at that | who will unite heart and hand in resisting the introduc Captain Rawpens was called for to close the reunion, am &e., doa as te bine ee eee eee’ Hag demas was wanted was the right kind of a lawyer. Whom did ‘onvention? It is charged that James Irwin was there ; | tion of sixvery into California. (Applause.) Then they | having responded to the call, he related one of his char . } Jy to Eumiliate those we would forgive they find? One Greene U. Bronson, who gave his opinion | #84 bo is James Irwin? A butcher in the Washington | say that it is to be introdneed into Nebraslia. Now what acteristic stories in a for a specch, 5 that the bill was constitational. But the Court of Ap- | %arket, who pays his own bills when he travels, and sella | nre these agitators doing? What is Hornee Greeley do- } The chairman then(about a quarter (0 eleven P.M.)pre 2 In common with those with whom Lacted—Mr. Cross- ‘ the best beet in’ th ve i ‘cane A meeting of the Van Buren or feo seil democrats was | well, Mr. Dickinson, and others not necessary to name—I | Pfals was consulted on the question, and they disposed | 1M bert bee! in, the clty of New York. He wad there— | ing? He edits a paper. What ia Hale doing? He is | posed the adjournment of the meeting, which J . Ny —| Rronson’: a ty ng, was held last night in Tammany Hall, in accordance with assented to the union of the party. In good faith 1 agreed | ¢f Eronon’x care much quicker than Guthrie disposed of | F208 pis orn Dill seelng to his own rights—a devoted, | making Speeches in the Senate. Pardon sy ignorance, | ried, and the remnant of the unterrifled, who had oom 5 the | ty forget aul forgive pust differences, thet union reeereg | Bronson bimeelf, He was a great canal man, and he dis- | ‘iiifuly and sincere democrat, and I woud like to know | but whereis Nebraska? (augbter.) Am Zara private | Snued up to that time, disappeared frome the all following call which appeared in the morning papers:— diva Hikta sadioetiin to alin demeamnac ed tak et pored ef his old stock of books to the State at three dol. | ¥ ia to stop him from going to the Convention. | citizen, to engage atic this business? Why, law is A IBMT a ANB SO ac ts The Pemecentio Republican Blectora of the city and coun- | Ishall never prove faithless. I hailed’ with delight the | 2788 volume, hich yripre Gang tee spetnl pray - {eat bp chee Wore PbENNE Mer omen we yA a apse A dbaker onan, Meeting of the Free Democracy. y of New York, friendly to the Goueral snd State adminis. " Maye . nt were po more wanted than a fifth wheel to a coach. ’ Bat er. Mr. Jeflerson wrote port. Suppese I should come upon the parish? "= aereneee Trak Ce beacon per rte as June of last year. | Judge Bronscn was a demoorat. Intelligent men have | ¥F in 1800, that tho election in the city of New | What would the Supersctentent of the Toor aay if | East night & meeting of the free democracy was hal lon Fai Meaty o'elooke ed to hp y setegraph io all parts of | vend “Hammond's Democracy.’ The writer says that | York would determine the Presidential election, Great | J was meanwhile, employed in looking afver the in- | ®t dheir headquarters, room No. 14 Stuyvesant Institate,, for the prong of raponitig 4 thaelty and county noming the Union. ‘hat sentiment was-— chosen tho aon of | ‘Ree are tirb kinds of crooks.” There is the natural crook | P*in8 were takon to make an Axsembly ticket which could | terests ‘of nezroes in’ Nebraska? (Great laughter.) | Join Jay, President, in the chai od William sak eet ona orang Eeutionien ave Bosh suvited, andare,| Tbe cordially: weited, democracy ion'and jestousy | £29 the steam bent, The natural erook will keep, butthe | Pe lected, s0 that the vote of tho State would be given to’ | Now I say that the democratic parts is pledged to resist | serwey! air, an 8. Kings Hon. Joh A. Dix, are hav ighedsfrom their ranks, theif carch is onward to fore | steam beat one will goback. (Laughter.) Since his opinion | }/™; déle:ton, George Clinton was on the Assenbly | the agitation of the #avery question, There may bs men A ame Tonge citron: was disposed of by the Ccurt of Appeals, and he was dis, | Hcket; Hormtio Gates was on it, too, and so was Liviog- | in that party who do notapproveof the compromisemeas- | THe CHAmMAN introduced the business of the moeting "the “cordially united ¢emocracy”'respondedto that sen | yosed of by theTresiéent, the adatuntings or fourth party, | #02. Great efforts were made by Colonel Burr and Gane. | urens there ls uo peolt expressed im the Baltimore | by stating that at a later period would timent in a majority of 80,600 votes for that son of Con- | are goingio make him nor. I protestaicainst this | 1! Hamilton to cwry the city of New York; but whilg | platform. Davis, of Mississippi, aud Johnson, of Georgia, (s . ee eee ee cord, Franklin Fierce. What has beea done tince June, | injustice. ‘There is one J.C. Mather, who has got the | ‘ty *puke Winship, the buteher, was the man who | do not approve of them, and there hre various men in Propene & set of ‘resolutions for adoption making iin 1852, to destroy this harmony, and bring disunion and | iiset claun. (Laughter. democsent i=} Mon. N. N. Champlain D. A ; Bronson has settled the price [lected the tekei” Whether he ‘wet to a Ounven He pewly Lenka ej oeit WO dy mee appeure a Ser eer ee ee ree A Sen: Jaros Nye, "JOHN A. BOGALT. Chulrman, pee sy to our zalbee a of books, and Mather hag settled the price of hem¥eck and bs jenny oes rg nerd sft Bay. Tae in paws allagreed that they shall not be distirbed He then read some passages from General Dix’s letter, em . R. Laerniox, Secretary. " am a national demoerat. The clamorous World cannot | spruce. (Laughter.) Bronsoa only made $18,000 out o/ | & ™ of | Property, an my friend Edwia | during the ad a of Jresident Pierce, and we i P ld SU mace $50,000 ont of hie | Crowell vill pry buck the money he took | have agreed al which he-animadverted, and then. drew attention tow ‘Abptf.an bour belose (e's pol . | point toa spot or a stain on my esoutcheon. Ihave | bis operati ‘I *ppointed time some enthu- | [ing many battles for democracy, never one against | i would say her, and in her cause J will ight on against the assaults | fovril par to resist the agitation of the slaver Wy fiecd Lenne:t that be will split the | {*™ fhe Canal Bank Jin Irwin can buy and sell bia | question in or out of Congress, “That ia tae Bal-imore | Jeter, that had appeared in a late number of the Himaus, ue undertakes to override Mather in favor | '%i-@ over, If @ distinguished Westchester adamantine | platform, My friends of the Evening Post occasionally | respecting slavery, with the boldness and audacity ef wiastic gentlemen amused themeelves by firing of abou fifty shots fom a cannon in front of Tammany Hall, to the | of open enemies and pretended friends. of Bronvon, (Lavghter.) have given you an account of | Wil! deduct from. bis estate the fmoney he won at cards | tread upon my corns ia thas respect; they undertake to | whi great gratification of a number of young Peel and the |, With rey cempery our side we must be right-with | the cause cf fe i athe desire of these mento get hold | Jim Irwiucan buy ther both. “Ibis raid Iwaac Austen was | teiline that platform is nonsense; that wre 01d. noe: nog [) oon Penns bewemiiely abvtekc” IY Wan! yaa ee tee ee u pins a tilp Seeman egeas Wan tele alt tiaras we conten ‘They have attacked A. C. Flagg and Go- | ‘bere. He was there, with Captain Castle's gua, the old | what we were coing at the time we adopted it, | the slaveholders of the South were taking strong grounder @nnoyance of those living in the vicinity. This nuisance, | victorious, wt, and Frenklin Pierce cid not exeape. At | democratic brass gun, which the democracy of the Unio | and thet there ix no tense init. L think there | im their midst. He then read extracts from a late artigler however, was somewhat moderated by the music of a | | With great respect, Tam, your obedient servant, ore we alopted.a platform; all agreed to it; andone | SA an Polk vetetamin when dni AGMY ap Betis ro | is senre in it, and that it is all-important to adhere to it. Se ere ee wate aan oe ie Saree band, which played at ixtorvale during the ings. k. A. VERPLAS » things agreed to was to cease agitating slavery, | Wuich they caw in 1848, when Cass wasnominated—which | ‘Ihe Hrering Post nobody can admire more than I do in s “ ye ‘At at tos We eect oe catiat oad - neon sierat eddie sheen TM that there should. be no. more disturbances, | they saw in Palthmore, 1a 1862 when Frauklin Pierce was | general for the ijterary shill and ability which distinguish observing thi the insolenee of the slave power in thele ing was called order by John A, . Nuw ¥ Oct. 28, 1853. ‘The democratic party in gond faith have stood up to the | BOwinated—which they Kaw at Syracuse, when Horatio | that paper; but it never claimed to be a party organ, Hii i feabecoibe aoaaten hadt = re, organization ef Bogart, who nominated lilijau I. Purdy as President. Geen y ive Hileleee oe nt sy to | eererment. But these adamantines have turned traitors, | Seymour was nominated. ‘It is the gan which fired there; | When the party was for a tariff, it was for free trae; and the free democratic party. To that party in Massachm- . yes, | S69! : the gan whi b ¥ x ttributed the success tha: awaited the and have not kept faith... There ia Iickins » | it is the gun which was at Syracuse when the ticket | now its editor has got so far ahead that the party’ can | fetts may be attrib and Hale onthe other, Every time a mogro wets Tons. | headed Isaac Verplanck wa: nominated.titis the gun which | never overtake him, It is of no use for bin to say. that | coming ri aay Paynes fate ang Aysch Gown South it isa godsend to both. One swears that bo | &id not fire wher George Clinton wax nominated, (Cheers | Foote and Sickles still agitate the question of slavery. It | wes certain that the (reo democratic party were prepared Ri fine for me to accopt your Navitation, 1 | Would eacrifice himself to catch the negro and send hin | #24 fleughter.) It isa bucktail gun. Itmever fired when. | is said that the party which sustaina General Pierce is a | {OF Action, if thitre was only a cert mach the i. operag in which you responded to my nomination ax President of | ond not aay that vo cree n be more deotous than evaett | tek; the other that he would immolate himself to soxd | * Clinteu was nominated. (Laughter.) It is a regular | disunion party; and as an evidence of it, it is also eaid | tors. Many of the democratie papers of the State. had tis meeting, I tender you the grateful thanks of my | tint the tate and local tickets pledwal to the ee eeecr | the fugitive to Canada, ‘These gentlemen, 1 sappoe, | gUR: It never bolts, You cannot make it fire for a | that Jetfen on isa disuniouist. Well, tho Union was once | Sdopted their principlos—the Fulton Patriot, the Palasiay heart; feel proud in being thus received at this time | the naticral nad State adininiticarions aan ee oa think that because the frost is out se early in the South | belting ticket, But I need not speak for the gun; the gun | in danger when Jackson was Prosident; then, a State Lemp, 3i lo: BORA iger. In the latter pa- when traitors have taken the Geld against the daunocratic | {Me mations! nad State administrations should be sus- | (hevteoote ura green there But they are’ ot so, They. | Hak Just been speaking for itself outside. But this is a exed to go ovt, and he declared, in the face of the | Per had appeared an advertisement from a gentle administration and the usnyes of the democratic party. | {a!ve? MSU palit al oe ae eater eticct | ate truce breakers, and all who make engagements that | BeW idea, that a man is not to atiend a eonyen- o Union inust and shall he preserved;” and | Sas the consttiuensy Fin twenty four aifferoet pcos 1 #00 in this meeting the Oil Guard of Jackwoa, (applause) oun polit al opponents in Whe perpo- | they don't keep. ‘The democats have kept faith; sat | tia unlés# he wears white kid gloves, ruffled e did ko Jellerson Davis stood by nim ani sup- | Aatre ti cot et cea nacrent Places that never wavered, that rever faltered, “fax eke a fare waging agains geratic mea- | Ti Tingon has agitated the. subject even pre | shirta and stk stockings. What would become of the ation, aud was & well known | inthe county. Let them adopt the ssme means. They great Army of Oecupation that have never boon eon acved—— ae ee eee ceggand prin | than’ Hale. I see. that. there isa. doire | buttenders and the indomitable and unterritied demo hed ' palrlat. On a recent | ed vse ne the mecibent ot the ier, edo eae ihat never gave way. I find around me the young, the Fert pisch diastroue seaules bur tevin theca, | for re’orm in the city of « Now. York. But | Ciey? They could not get into a Indies" parlor at the ico, He distinguished himself | Pury. ameng the members of the Sar, McDermott ami enthanunticy ihe five-hearted Gomoarsey. “toe nace est such divastrous results but to give the ad- | PT, TSH, sou and to the demmeey ceetywheve, | Globe Hotel—how could they? Why, my’ friend Tom ding the liberties of his country. In he a | Bowman, among the merchants, Marshall, It had beam foe this; it pute me in ‘mind of the paimy days"ot Olt ne fede und ask what ts the use of stopping excessive expenditure | Adams, from the Seven,h ward, measured the ladies’ par- | dicunioxist? In the battle of Buena Vista, wherever | Proposed to raise the sum of $3,000 for the. organization Tammany. When tho timid and the faltering gave way | ¢°* SUPP" in corporations if you will not stud by aa heuest ad- | 10" and he tells mo that it is exactly forty two fest thres | biood and carunge wax most to be found, there were tho | Of thelr party, and one individual, whose namo be they stood firm, and stand firm now. The democratic | intarestedness and ene Ki , ministration when thivves aro grumbling against it and | inches deep, ond twenty-two feet four inches wide, filled | destructive rifles of the Mississippi regiment, ant at their Wawise resolved s leltcr froma, mwembwe ob ee administration has been assailed, Tt fa kearcely cig at | ee ee ee eee edt oe COR: | trying to break through and steal? Let us satisfy the | With sofas und chairs, end, as Toi Adams said, not half | head waved the gallant plume of their Colonel till he was | le bad likewise received a letter from & member of the months since our President was insiallet into the highest | {¢*t JOU may rely, pow aud ever, on my earnest co op country that we are going to sitstain the adwiuistration. | te size ef his engine house, How are you to get a great | carried from the battle field in an almost lifeless eondi- | j2% edvicie that a petition should be sent to the oihes in. the gift of the Amer ope: get Ne areas | tem: am, gentlemen, very truly, yours, z Every honest man will find that the ship will sail the vet, | DAtional democratic State Comunittee into ladies’ par | tion, Is that a man who would be a disunionist? Why, | 1*\v0re not toullow, af was the law in Massachusetts, Uae Attempted to be striven down without even the form of SOHN a DES gq | tee with being loaded down with alamantiaes. ‘Tho great | 102? aud what is to become of those of our triends who | J think the lead in his body would eause een the brass | “aye we Pemove i ua Purpence Of avery. trish | They assailed him, but he might say, “Strike, but | At the conclusion of these letters the Preawxvt realof | matter is to stop up the bunchole first, and the ttle | 4 not visit those places, ana who are accustomed to | in Dan Taylor's face to blush. (Laughter and applause.) | , ht minutes of the last meeting were then read, whem hear!” They have endeavored to overthrow his adminis- | the names of the candidates presented in the resolutions | spigots can be taken care of afterwards, Back: inthe | Tughing it? What ia to beccme of ry friend, siartin | Mr. . Croswell is the friend of George Lav, ond Cros. | & judiclary Uchot was agreed upon and also a report. tration; it is but a suminer’s cloud, and as quick a8 the | separately, each of which met with the approbation of the | countly, all. that gave us any donbt was New York,and | Crover, here, who changes his shict as often as one of his | weil got upthisticket. Why? Because in hiscounection | Sdopted respecting Judge Gricr's late decision, which sun of democracy rises in its pride and strength it will | “Parately, cach of which met with the approbation of the | th: 4,’ the reason why I came here this evening, | Opponents, and rather oftener than the other of hisop | with the Canal Bank he had beccme indebted to that insti- SN baeclan ot: ip-tavee feo tls Vanish and the sun will shine with redoubled vigor when | tecting. Hon, Maxmix Gnovis was then introduced by the | ‘The adamactines do not ray that they can do any. | PoReUts clianges his coat, but whose unswer ring integri- | tetion some $200,000, The bank burst, of course—(laugh | , Averies of by laws for the government of the bedg the democracy shall discover its strehgth. chairman, as candidate tor the office of Attorney General, | thing for themselves, but that they will bury us up 3000 | $Y, natural ability, and pure devotion to the democratic | ter)—of course—(renewed laoghter)—and when it burst | Were wmircuucd) wbieh, od motion of Mr. Stansbury - ra ih ne ; ; Tole denn See tener ek mae ne fourth | Petty, far exceed both of those pettifoggers. (Ap: | Croswell became & short boy, (iaughter,) he coulda't | Were laid upon the table for the inspection of members, When the President recumed his seat, Mr. A. R. Her- | emidst loud cheers, He said:— CP i maa hore ne welt ae fe other heaneta. they wint | Plause.) Fellow-eitizens, this doctrine of violence | pay. The assets of the bank pasted into the hands of a | Y¢,voted upon at rome future occasion ick read the following list of Vice Presidents, Mr. Vultee | Fiizow Cnuzins—You will accept my thanks for the cor- | Eot get as many votes as Hale. T askede aca whey was | 28 Ee Igitant oc Bice th. See thse ieee DP | ction White, Thurlow Wee's partner, |», iF. StaNsity moved that the report and preamble. @& reading the list of Secretaries, all of whom wore ap- | dial reception you have given me on the oceasion of this | taiing a canvass in Cortland county bow many they | te@Ccnvent‘on for other and for different reasons. They | and one of the proprietors of the Krening Journal, and | theconstitution be laid on the tusle, and took oscasiom f my first appearance in Tammany Hall, (Applause.) Al- | would get. Be eaid one hundred. I thi say they left us in consequence of the slavery qestion. proved of: Gece Phece eee paee Bee Lee ee woulé get, Ee eaid one hundred. I thinkdpat is too much, | Sif PSY err us 2p conned tinoe 8 ¢ never been here ti evening, every a8- | and that they will not get more than seventy-five. Che: | Why, they did not wait till we got to the slavery que Croswell parsed with the assets into the bands cf Thuz- | tO Ceny that, axa body. they wished the adolition of Ward 1—William Johuson, Fdward Walsh. sociation of mine from my earliest revollection—from my | mung is against them. In fuck as Col. Benton would say, | tion. We wero unanimous about everything— Mr, Puxvy, om taking the chair, addressed the meeting as | attend and sddiess the m follows :— city, to be beld this evening fe Re en cL regret that my engagements, official and private,rendor of the democracy of this ¢ upheld wit! ul conside low Weed. It became important, after he came into | ‘#very at the South, Whatever might be their individual were | Weed’s possession, to put him to service, in 1848, to | Pinions, 2—William B, Storer, Thomas J. Rogers. credle—has been identiied with the history of the democ. ng ia axel “3 . peaceful about everything. Let me read to you what Mr. | to break cown the democratic party. In order to do that, The statement of the Finance Committee was them “Charles Fletcher,’ Thomas Monte. Taey of this Slate in Tammany Fall, da 1852, atthe | aug besutivulls lose: they, al Teooehae cian dias | Rudteld, your candidate for Collector, says; and. let me | ho tried toleep the party civided,, but unsuccessfully, | 720; from which it appears that they are not in a very tein Robbins,” Abraham Ison, glote of the Presidential campaign, it is known how | tickat and vote for the witigs, for they are Janustus any | tell you who Mr. Redfield is. He was ‘a Cass eleotor in | the party got united, notwithstanding his deaunciations | Prosperous conditicn, | §—0. V.'B. Ostrander, 1) man Candee. that democracy achieved eno of the most brilliant | jiow. ‘There is no doubt cf the success of the democracy | 188—he was the Cass nomineo for delegate to the Balti- | of prominent men, and in 1800 we got the State. Cros. | «A letter waa then read by Mr Stansbury from 6—George W. Odell,’ George NeKinloy. Victories, ever won by any party. ‘The great. city of | and of the administration, for there is a. Little Hickory et | Bf platform in 1852. Me was a Bucktail when Groons | well was fold afterwards to George Lav, (laughter,) and | Simuel Lewis, of Cincinnati, expressing his accordance Wilson Small, Themas W. Adains. New York, nearly every county in the Siate, and all the | their head. Heshows that there is a genuine spring of Old | ©- Bronson was a Clintonian, He says :— wo called it a cheap sale, (Renewed Iaughter.) ‘Then a | Wit the free dum cracy and in abuse of South Caroling, a ane bg an oe peace) ae Union mah iene ran Coie tap an | Hickory in the White Hoare, (Laughter ) Wheu ho wrote,to | I have attended several Stato conventions, ard I havo Roses Org bag etd ae ary cae to | jutions fatrodsningedboc wise speech in nbich the Ouse G-—jacob 8 Miller,’ — Lic i: overwhelming majority. (Applause.) With an almost ; Now York inust hava | Dever been present at any where there was a less appearance | he contracted out for the State, for the building of ipa encom 10—Charles Francit, Monmouth IT. Underhill. equal majority and equal unanimity, the democracy of Pierre imdeerimegs yA Aa at vie must havo | or uiscrder tnd personal feeling than on this occasions ‘The | the Frie canal. Under. the law for the raising of | tit, Garden Committee were characterized as a set of dig- Ti—-Jawes C. Willett, Abraham Valentine, the State voted for Horatio seymour as Governor. (Ap- | he follows that intimation up vith a taste of his quality, | ¢eleeates at tho convention of 1814 assembled with feclings of | thix ‘amount, which Judge Bronson gave his opinion | Rifed rufians] who wished to make black appear white. zh Megus, Garret Dychouan ninuse.) Ho the superficial obeorrer it would certainly | When‘ saw tne letter of Gusirie addressed to ate Heo | grenarencement, nthe ‘nmoriy nek tp auige uy | Kas.ccuatitutlonal—for although ‘he old, his books | Chav atthough thinly attended, was the mucleun of ae ogc 13—George H. Covert, J. . appear is ould bo a brilliant chapter in the great ; aig pee cea eerie arr Ventre tite ate Bige by | to the State, he gave away his opinion. Well, it was pro- i f q or 1i—William Rainor,” John Mebonald. unwritten history cf the great democratic party | Sour stenaidship, “The ides thet Greene Lrensee we a | vention Was everened by rowdlee 1 Venture tocay, feast | posed to hima that the contracts slouli be divided in this | gQbizstion that would hereatter control the state ot New 16—C. V. 8. Roosevelt, sonathan I. Coddington. of the nation, But this was mot so with the | great man is a great mistake. Mather will bea: hiscyes | believed bys single man in tho State who has any know- | way—five millions to the democrats, and four millions to | YQ 1. de rath 1 16—Fdmund H, Miller, James Bogian old salts, who found that difficulties were to some. | it’ Tehould like to ave the’ totate nt the eblic diners | ledge ofit. J. B, Skinner is the last man to preside ina | {hewhigs; three million: to'George Law, two millions to | _,Mt- BowsAn maderather a long address, and confess 1i—-George H. Ross,’ William Gou.ter, These men had presented thomselves ‘at the Hal: | to be cite telinatel Recae ral at the public dinners | conventicn overawed ly rowdien But was this ation | Gur State ofiieers, and four milliocs tothe whig state om, | ¢@ himself a convert to, abolition principles from the 38-Tobn R. Briggs) Amoa F. Hatfield. timore Convention, of which I had the honor of bel Regge hay » | divided hy elavory: We bad screed in noarly everything | cers. | said if tiey would take my advice they would get | Tading of Mre. Stowe’s book. Now was the time to steiie joLfobn Egan, Then Mare, Wedlngates They trio; th expels tlbistlie tree aoe Temman ; they Attack the State administration; they uearimoutly. | We had appointed officers unanimously; We | Cutis « fh ty as ast as they contd, Iuctent of do. | the death blow cf slavery, when the two parties were se 20-—Solowon Kipp, ‘Thomas W. Ohusted.. after they were beaten, and the name of Franblin Pierce | tended: auewhen Looe tho force cl the demoeriee L thas | sad oh thesulject of aaveryey ns bovone Word had been | Tico, hor ever, they tried to get rid of it by interdiction, | ivided. Fer his part he could never discover any dif- ee ee Serer pene in Now Hampshirs for the roundness of its demoeracy, the | 4 man in his sober senses would as socn attempt to stop | Thhave not the least idea that there is anythieg tn the | tite contracts to Story. Benjamin Harwood, und various | berswae te ahvantage of the free democracy, that it sxciucraRies. Purity of its principles, and the integrity of its favorite | 4 locomotive with his fist as to break downthe democracy | curiect of slavery to divide tho democrats of this city, | other prominent poli ‘These contrasts were let so | Pent or then gave Pandy, a pail by pratsing toe Chats ~Jobn Bliss, Malachi Ryan. Fon, we, the majority of tho delezntes of the State of Now | by toring nu adamantiae party. We were diviced in 1818—wo were divided in 1849, but ta | a8 to injure the Sta extent, for example—a con- | speaker Maen gave farty ¢, Bud by praising the Chst 1m Thompson, James Watson, York, were ready with one acco.d to give our adhesion. 180 we'varried the entire State with the excep. | act was let to George law, to the ameunt of $347,495, | Letting parts of th if etbele Tee eee oe Socharles Henry’ PG. Malony There was rome hesitancy on the part of the minority; | The speaker then retired, amid much applause, avd the | tion Of one county, and. in 1852. wo swept ft | Which a responsible bi offered to take’ for | Solis" meraver, beotning very areal fetoss Gane &-Tismost Sharia’, Ralph Alcala, Te Sreipineedett Re But ba uaaiet sepy ences Chafrman thon came forward ané stated he had the great | entire in triumph.’ What was said then upoa | $154,005. iat feiena Charl ek had a Saniaae for femed pe Mg xy isuuealy bomedils: Need” epee eae econ ieee: ‘liana Tooper. apathise em, were found to’ be eold in 7 * : i very? Notl $63,480, which Bonton and others, responsible men, - ip rait * 6—Michael Holley, Patrick Nealis. that brilliant campaign, You heard no speoches trom | 1easure of introducing to the meeting, Jobn Van Buren, | he Hatem Sf SeTTE. opMny ten A re at agreed to take fer $31,000. ‘The consequence was that the | {*ble and went olf as comfortably to sleep as if hearing a T_Willinm Gayte’ Joun J. Rilley, | Dickinsen or any of the adamautines. Fellow eitizens, | the Prince of Good Fellows. (Choers snd laughter.) thould not be agitated, No good inhabitant of the State | sum of $086,000 was lost to the State upon the contracts. | long winced sermon. The speaker, on bse 8—Jobn R.Lydecker, Peter Crawford. | what the difficulty was at the Convention was then un Mr. Vax Boren come forward and spoke as foliowa:— | of New York haw ever-agitatec that qneation for the last | The object of this was to take dowa the democratic and | PPPiandvd, but the applause did not wake up the %—Gilbert J. Bogart, David Kennedy. known it required close scrutiny to find it out; but time Farid W Grnieeetkelee wie +h ddresa | t¥elve months but for his own selfish purposes, with a | letin the whigs, Then Seward must go to the Senate, as | YF, Scale wit ie résotts hich ai 10—Benj. H. Willis, ‘Asa H. Boga could reveal it. As soon a@ Franklin Pierce was elected, | te nat You aco called, oe enter atest | view to political aévancement. 1 have already taken o¢- | e wont in before, by diviston among the democrat faalpl’s:feeke lutions which were-adopted =. li—feabury Simmons, Hagh Crumbie. | all at once these sluggards were put in motion by. eee hn ta womtaa toner the’ ene ty ticket, in which | cation to say something about our union in 1819, How | 2nd when there he will voto for more steamship appro Resolved, That tho time has arrived for a systematic amd 2—David P, Samus, ohn C. Covert. t y wanted to dictate to him who ro Oo , tats the party invite ¥ down the democratic party, and bring in a whig board; voiced heoushon’ ed " W—Wnn, P. Powers,’ John A Blackledge. should go into the Cabinet. They agitated every dis- | noun tp us—personally, most of them acquaintances of comtice aud nent Ie vor tor ommotinte eon aaa | but it will full—the poople of thin State are opposed to | gifte’ sy ertateeectd Sete cee oes FoR dh» ie thebelias i Wcioaway. Wes AE caeee, trict, and penetraied even to where I live, to get up peti. | Mine, Trecogeize aincngst thom uniform and faithful | Veo ore that eommittes? ‘There was Llisworth, and | stealing. (Applause.) Judgo Bronson supports the | irs consequent waparaiieled channels of access and faducnes 1enJobe F Ropes MES tions to General Pierce to take Dickinson lato the Cabinet, | Jemocratr, urright mea, andemopetent officers. Tt gives | WhO formed that committes* There was {ilsworth, and et headed Clinton, and he has got turned out— | toll parteof the country, and its especial relations to tee 17—Benj. I. Pentz Arthur Wood. Wherefore did they tako all this interest in the matter? | ™° stext P! ecie therefore, to unite with. you in ratify. | pit adey and William G, smith. Of thet committes {(nughiter)-ho belongs to the short boys, for he is a head | most powerful commonwealth of the confedoracy, is 18—Francis W. Fomonda, Oliver 8. Hibbard. Down fo that time it was understood by the people that a | siete bomination, Perhaps it may hot be amis for me | samuel Peardsley is candidate for Judge of the Superior | Mhorter. (Renewed laughter.) Judge Ltonson received | cially indieated as the proper headuartors of the fee 19—Cooper Wood uif, Johin'Ls Beoea: man who was declared fit to bo l'resident by the voice of | 0B {his occasich to refer somew bg Aid sey: Tedivided, | Court, and Cotting a member of Congress. Aud what did | letter from Mr. (Guthrie, telling him the views of the | ™Rerolvd, That the idea so constantly iterated and. roites 20—Joneph Ontwell. fr., ‘Willlax: Simpson, Use nation, was capable of sclocting his constitutional ad- | ONS avert to somo of the moaeations which hace | these ventlouen do? They wrote as it there was nodoubt | President of the Urited Stutes and his whole cabinet wa to | rated, from p-oss, pripit and rostrum, from’ Castle Gardem 21—Chas, H. Haswell, John 0. .Devereaux, visers, without any dictation from any quarter. Down | {D2 ee hr oni 1. ee gto od With vou in | the Norih is against the exteaston of slavery in the terri- | the course he ought to take, and the manner in which | committees and political eaucus rooms, that the people of pas aia Oars to that’ time such a. proceeding “was: never hoard | Deen made in respect tomyselt, I united with you in he rhould distribute his patronage. In return for that | this city are unanimous believors in the divine aproin of. There was another distingvished man in the | 1&9 in the election of the State ticket. That union was | ttles now free. They sent this resolution Judge Bronson sils down to write him one of his charwe: | of Maveentching, or in m tsime submission” to” wi The following resolutions were also read by Mr. Herrick, | Siate—a man will inal. its. civi i continued in 1860, in 1951, and in 1852, Tn 1852 the Stat Resolved, That we beliove the le of the North objo: ‘ in “hi ever demands it may please lavehol di State " nov ry 1 “ a 4 51, and in . Tn 0 State , bel people of the North object | torjm i % ve i 7 pl elaveholting arise and adopted — affarona" "man" well huomn tothe” county" af lange, | Of New York ervey Pranin Plezce a waosityofnmarly | fpskasniscauelnr siyvery 1s bro toraiorte aad: | yeyuteed gut eo olen, ino eaten, But moauek re: | acid yetthiighen lett slander, mak, hag Resoleed, That the omens ofthe times are suerieions of the | That wan was William I. Marcy. | (Prol.nged applause ) | Ching thenssne, vines, dt which tae cy ren ee ‘Wel, wo were desirous of hucwing what thetr real sen- | (est WAS wiade to him, I took occasion early ta the day | aun est that they tignity their diivent. from ‘that c Aree by. continuing triumph of democratic principles, aud ofthe rtill | When he was selected as constitutional adviser of the | @* Naat Pees yee ‘ : i i ¢ * | to assist in presenting him with one hundred and twenty | vniting with the freo demo:racy in securing tho ascendancy growing epularity of a democratie administration. While | Presideat, no scouor was the ennouacewent made tha | elevated Franklin Pierce is uow in some degree divided, | tinents were. They said something like this:— names for lus patrouage, and’ of these more. than oug | cla party which shall be democra‘te withovt, sconslecouage sho Uniou democracy ad oa final engagement with | the tow niutterings of the storm that afterwards broke | 9d it becomes proper that I should briefly look at the Wa can act with democrats, whatever their ideas may | handred voted for Cass. But I nover regarded the division | ®%d liheral without itgense. cia with federal fucs, they are | ont were heard. ‘I will tell you why Marey was opposed, | Causes of that division; and it is peculiarly proper that I | be with regard to slavery, if in other respects sound.” a ee feo \ 5 among the Cass and Van Baren men in sucha case, or re- vate with t aie by the ick ies of dhe Union democracy tacts: | Ch Mtce—iecausa. He wes always ¢ goad illow.sret wi | should speak to. you hero, Loendgo ithas been Geomod | Iwas rot a member of that committes witch nogoit. | meng fe Cas and Van Boren men in suche case, or re | qiected t'commaiats with thi fe demosnacy ofthis aaa h "i 1 fi - tof aot 7 hio C 1 7 wh ; “tian”! | important in this campaign’to single me out as an object | ated with these gentlemen, but I was one of the Rome ? “ Pome " “ n Parclesion wath gent cuuhdenceer that it shalt rank New | sell you the mursof the opposiuon to him. Wiliam 1. | or assault, I attended tho Demoeratie Convention ths | contention. Flading telt sentimente to be thee, rin. | {em There wore many contests before in our ranks, | amopy he fiende of bert shrongene the Union, and te Resolved, That we appleud, a4 worthy of the superior and | York, and Thurlow Weed discovered by an examination of | fallas @ delegate from the Vifteenth ward, prepared to | troduced this resolution :— tended on one side or the other—of those who voted for Van | ‘arters in this city. @eserved by his subor: ‘the removal of Greene C. Bro the accounts of the Comptroller, Azariah Flage, that Mr. | 'V@ one vote, when the proper time arrived, (or the Resolved, That this convention proposes to th Buren or against him? AllI wanted from Bronson was The following resolution was then proposed by MB. son from the postof Collector for the port of New Yor! fu ji ¥ nomination of officers. After the nomination was made | assembled in tho Presbyterian clurch, to form a Le 01 = i — Although we aro aware of an assumed loyalty that hedged Marcy, asa judge, had beon appointed to go West to try | 7 returned to this oliy'~ Alauseting ay eallediiiere, Matlon inthe State, aed: recommends atest cen’ enEn” f to turn out whigsand put in living and acting democrats. | Dawson : tc 1 durlate Collector froin common approacie yet Nowre Inge: | the Morgan conspirators. Mis pantaloons were injured ia 1 ’ ad phd zt : ket. | Now, Judge Bronson says this union was adisgracetul | Resolved, That the free democracy, believing, Fant that his official character was too suered tobe vinited for | Some way. He got them repaired. ‘The cost was fi'ty | this nomination was ratil I did not ationd ‘that | grid le transact such other busiaess as may come Lefors | oo and yet he saya he wns trying to preserve it himself. | their fellow-citizens, thatthe Juticial other wat Geo we pee Official misconduct. hoseapplicn: | cents, and this item found {ts way by some ‘sceident | Meeting, being engaged in the trial of a cause at Whito = If ik is disgraceful, why did ho doit? Iwant to tell you, | tant a character to bo made the reward of political pactie tions,j disappearing at Lis aheard fromonly | into the account of his expenses. All they coull find | Plains, which commenced on Thurstay, and continued | _ With this proposition they did not see fit to clow. Mr. | in Confdeson here my opinion of Judge Broneon, He is | #nship, proposo to show their faith by their works, by da- by the continuance of whics in'offlee, bear witness to the | against him was that he hadcharged the seato itty coats | till long after your mecting adjourned, on Saturday mora- | Cutting introduced a resolation signifying that they | (Pconadence, here my opinion of Jadgo ronson. Le is | civingts make party nominations {oF Jjudgom and’ recome Said and comfort” extended by a deinoeratic oficial to the | Py mending his pantsloons, (creat laughter Y “tue | ing. Notwithstanding the humble part which I bore in | could not snecced in forming 2 union, and calied upon | * Tan Of 8 high! sending is tila, Pian’ th mending the support of such persons as each individual es ‘ z byterian Church— oRenoired, That the issue upon which the lata Collector | men who designed to make an onslaught upon the | that transaction, itwas decmed fmaportant thon, ax well | the democrats of the State to send to the next conren- | (ayetter)—a man never convicted of ary crime, “When | ‘Hal! doom most worthy of hisonfidence, courted ts not to b int tion of indivi. | treasury knew if he was there that lank 14 be as before, to assail me personally. linay ask your atten- | tion men who would unite upon the principles of the fice, re presented: to ‘him for 68tes Mr. McDerworr moved an amendment, that the State Gual appointments; it iuvolven svch a hreash of the policy of | atarted: ‘Therefore they wanted a differest man, 1 de | tion for some moments to those assaults, with a view to | Rome convention, What were they? Way, resolutions | 20 came into ofice, mnen wore prosintall to hilt nay Lean. | Heket have the names of the parties of the Judiciary the ational democracy a; demanded and received the | not wish to say anything against that man, but Iknow | ‘bow you that, whatever may come of this campaign I | that they were opposed to the extension of slavery being | ot appoint that man, he sella liquor. He bays and | ticket, who were at first nominated by the Executive unishment of treason. ‘The underlying principle of the | that he took Minelrumtine mileage from ‘Washington to | m not the ageressor. Mr. Brady, the admantine candi- | rec dasa test. They adjourned in the latter part drinks i uv “3 Committee, printed thereon for the convenience of those Acyl ; the ns part iquor himself, however, and supports the ticket rated the diginisteatinn dh tho wencset of thetphciste: | Binghampton and back, whereas my {riend, John A. Dix, | (Ate for Attorney General, deemed it important to divide | of August. Op the Gth of September, the regular | headed Geonge Clinton; but that don't trouble him any. | ¥2owish to vote it. The object was inaet gahied t mt the supp ‘ BEE eatin Wine ; his time equally between assaults on this noble old hall | democratic convention assembled. Mr. Cutting was Pre ' ~ County ticket would be with the State tick colloter’s refusal to amend and age, not inform us why there isa fourth, or adamantine | materially affected by the demonstration, nor am I con- | lutions calling upon us to nominate half a ticket, The grocer himself he ‘would appoint him—s man who was #0 subsequently withdrawn, and the original resolution car- ata to office was no worse conrzo of dismissal | Durty, in the State? Disatiection spread’ on every side, | Scious that it has produced any great’ eflvct on me, | Syracuse Convention nominated half a ticket, and Mr. | FIPSt tum that yeu couldaap kim anywhore, Peruapshe | M4 it he bad violated tae principles of the party by | At tongth Tammany Hall was denounced. They strayed | (Cheers and laughter.) Mr. Cooley, a candidate for | Cutting called upon us to nominate four State officers. | gicnt know; but he could not help smelling it, notwith. | _ THe meeting then proceeded to hear rend the report Memblvods That the Union democracy of tho city and coun- | olf to some hole anil corner place—Siuyvesant’s Institute | Comptrolicr, thought it necessary to make me an object | ‘These were the Treasurer, and State Engineer, the Secre- | Standing ho had a bad cold. (Laughter.) I kpew he had | 824 preamble of the constitution, which was of too pra~ ty of Now York rogaed with Incroasiog admirction the per- | I believe itis. We had no apprebension im the country | of ® Vindictive assault in the Senate of the State, when | tary of Stato and Judge of the Supreme Court. These | 4 taq cold, for whem I calles upon him to appoint a good | Sx and tedious a nature to need repetition from us, and, sonal charactor and the official acts of tho President, | about all this. We knew that Tammany Fall would | the party was nominally united. Ho spent about half his nominations wore made. Now does it become these Messrs. | Gemocrat he would be seized with a fit of coughing, and after the transaction of some further business of no par+ mklin Pierce, and express the confidence with which Iié | vindicate itself. But we found that these men were mak- | time inan claborate argument which he made in the | Cutting ana O’Conor to turn around and charge us with | pover could get over it till I went. (Iaughter.)’ For | “cular moment, adjourned. ergy and wisdom have ingpired them in ths continuing | ing inroads mto the country, and were attacking the | Senate of thia State in attacking me; and among otiier | tn eee ome eat aie Gage | Keveral waeks I never went to reo the Jude, because I PrRepolved, That we arain take occasion to express our pride | €€mocracy of the interior. Active committees were ap- | things he said in regard to me was the following:=— Mhe bolted from the ticket; but Mr, O’Conor and Mr. Cut | thought it aggravated his couch. (Renewed laughter.) | Greene C. Bromson’s Reply to Secretary i . e ting were not of them. In 1850 we had a meeting at | * in the la oi the ‘ld, by the ional authori- inted to carry the war into Africa, and make prepara I might q/ ote copiously from the atump eloquencs of thess oa r “ % Well, sometimes] would go to see him, and ask him to Davis. 4), of the rightoct Americus citizens overyniere and our | tions for the Srracuse Convention, “The convention aet,-| candidates theuseiven, “and frou, tho weoat ompey varnels | Costle Garden to rave the Union, at which Messrs, O'Conor | appoint a man, and he Sroutd aay he keeps © woman, Below will be found thi 1 security under the protection of the Bower wiich has ea- | In looking over the New York Huratn, the great organ | Bead epocch of John Van Buren, ke. and Cutting attended. An ollort was then made to break | (Tove laughter), although he migut have in his intimate low wi found the very tart letter of Mr. Bronsom forced those rights in the person of Martin Koszta. Our | of the fourth party, and the Albany ‘Aryus, which waa | Ta speaking of Mr. Van Duren, the father, to whom he | Gown the cemocrntic party; but it failed, as it did tu | Confidence aman whom a woman kept, That wasa dis- | in reply to the chgrge made against him by Joffersem aesurance is strong of the catholic sympathy of our govern: | Ov cw « democratiopa x t s “ieht’s 1849, In 1851 there was a partial reunion of the party < a ; re y er, it appeared that it was doubtful | alludes—he took occasion to say that Silas Wright's great- 7 “ ; | tinction without a difference; that didn’t prevail in our | Davis that he had been an advoc te of free soilism, and caigh to the degyetising wach eppresnity oo’ S41 | Whether they would have a majority in the State Couven- | est fault was in following the tusise in'rigagg councel | 972 iu 1852 a gradual Feunion wat commenced On | cuxeh—the old Dutch Reformed. laughter) Thave | had advanced fre aol wectiaiants ti: 0-tetbed“GAQOaeaD ed, That the constan j with which, Jama Guthrio | tion or not. For my part, Thad to doubt. Lnever knew | of the ex-President, the Philosopher of Kint@hook. Br. | this spot. 1800, and also in “IS52, and. to make | Spoken freely about Judge Bronson apon this ocea- rs he tronsury of the ropublic entwines the purity of | a demoermtic convention in which the demecratic party | Van Buren quoted the remarks of Mr, Cooley, and pro- | YerHor in 1850, and also in. 1852, and, to make | ion because he saya, “in these times of dou- j t?® Van Buren meeting in 1648 :— ys character with Rowan firmness. In times whea intrigue | had not the majority. (Saughter.) There were ninety- | ceeded These were the remarks which Mr. Cooley | 9@nds, Le sapported Sr. Seymonr im 1852; and ; yrange sekae Pe-dealing it is necewary to speak plainly, without | To mm Eorrons or mm Wastuxorox Bot sland, alone iy shcis Pathe yeh dee co eeat siete tee | four uncontested rents, New York was contested. An | thought it necessary to make in recpect toa democrat | {hore Ix a very strong suspicion that he voted for him | goy'iniention of givirg oltence.”” Now, Me. O'onor has | ‘The Hon, Jefferson Davis recently published two letters country that modern degencracy haa not reached him. Tho | Objection was raised against the admission of Tam- | who had been for many years a private citizen, who th apart of ind ivi duals is rather new. in 1857 ite inde: taken Judge Bronron’s part. Guthrie did not write to | in the Washington Sentinel relating to New York matters, united democracy of New York thank him for bis action, and | many Hall, Out of the ninety-four uncontested | was born and bred up in the stete of New York, commend hia fearieggners and his faith, seats some sixty-eight were democrats, and only | avd who now had reached the dent treasury was propored. The merchants of this of seventy years, and it iva | takes to nssume that gad Bronson, ts a a and few years ago the advocate of fee sol my and ‘pl ought net to be removed—that this Union is disgraceful— | to a letter which I wrote in July, ‘a Van Burenoe that when they want any political business done | 7X 'rcon ought not to be appointed to office who were | {ree soil meeting in this eity. Tho General very eaee ae este of the fact Tdom'c kung but | free soilers, Well, he bad but one man to appoint—a | ly adds, that he is willing in this, as in other cases, Laulth take Goes, (fie hen with one chicken—and he was a red hot barnburner | drop the inquiry into by-gone opinions and associations,” While I : We tadingad tor Pasko a ee ior naka | Dee A reat twany people havo told me yr. Q'Gonor | ani to “adhere tothe compact of 1882.” s : a rer A’ | soust resign. We him, but he bas written a letter to the people, and under- | in one of which he spoke of me as “ having been a soilism, a Resolved Tha iwi Tepeae entice confidence in the Prosi’ | sce twenty-eight were adamentines. ‘The eonvention | who, whatever may be his merits and demerits, Famed city tock it into their heads to oppose this, and f continue a Aent’s cabinet advisers. a: d_ proffer to them Support. The storm +f invective with which th individually aud collective y aseailed by a subs Dut reecmmicids them ths mero strongly to our hold the President strengthened by those whom he stituted his constitutional coune fa was to proceed, as we supposed, to transact business | fora gentleman at home, and, at the time Mr. Cooley in the usual way. But wo found at helf past ton o'clock, | was speaking, was treated as the same abroad. Mr, Brady that one Minor C. Story, Chairman of the State Com: | followed this upat Albany in a yery lengthy assault on mittee, was about to cai! the Convention at some other | me, in which he took decasion to among othe than the sual place, for Market Hall was as much the | things, that Itook great pains, in case of danger, to keep i & Tdon't think he will, They told me | appreciate the intended kindness, I have no oecasion Resolved, That we approve, and recommond to the nndi- coat & fn ew ¥" v ‘ ‘on ward Sanford appeared in opposition to the independent 4 ia for Judge of the Supreme “ourt; Robert Emmott, Arciivaid | all frightened—not at short boys or long boys. But I | should now belong to the terrified instead of the unterri- | tad other (Lavehter.) yet. I have seen some persons whose mouths would | f ‘free soillem.’’ Although I did not in the Hilton, and Lucius Robinson, for Justices of tle Superior | Was rent to represent tho domoeratic party from my | fied democracy of the State of New York. Mr. Georga Mr. Vax Bunex—Iu 1840 I think Charles U'Conor voted | sateal very loud, and not let go the teat. Here Mr. Van | strife of politics while cocupying & high i station, Court;'of Charles P. Daty for Judge of the Court fCom: | county, and I thonght there was some danger I might | Sickles, the father of Dan, (ianghter,) in a speech which 4 Ted eo toate tte oper 7044 | Buren made an asrault upon Daniel 8. Dickinson, who, he | it is well known in this State badly in some mon Pleas; of Chauncey Shaffer, for District Attorney; and | have to report when I returned home that Minor C. Story | he made at Syracuse, took occasion to ask the forgive- for Harrison. Edward Sanford witoubtedly did, and was | ra" contd not be elected President became the North | others, that I was a firm supporter of Cass in 1848, Of Dante! F. Tlemann, for Governor of the Abinsliowse Wie | had got the whole of the democracy in his breeches | ness of God that he had ever voted for any Van Buren. | */pointed a Judie! the Marine Court, | hon entlemen, | Vould not supporthim. He is a broken down politician, said | and decidedly opposed to Mr. Van Buren and the Slestion of this ticket will secure to the city ¢ We were at Market Hall | Mr. Croswell has made me the object of continued as- | However, cot back to the democratic party, and were at | fo cikor, and wouldn't bring more in t ‘and honest officers, and to the Union democracy a great tri- ik ind 1 could not find it pocket ath than oliticians who joined him in his revolt. Ihave never i . * C stle Garden in 1850, The legal centlemon followed the i i efore eight o'clock next morning, and we were deter- | savlt. Mr. O'Conor, on various occasions, has referred to Cas 6 " he would fetch here, Whatever a live nigger may bring, ut one opinion, nor acted in more than one in re ved, That the demooratio party agnin record thelr | mined to find it, unless the Mayor of Syracuse | me asa political ingrate, and ay an abolitionist of the | Merchants where ‘ley went. Vruen the ht gall stoned white man ‘will bring nothing. | (Langhter.) i lation to the avery question. “rr vor towards the enlargement of our ganals byevery imme- | had issued a search ‘warrant and found it bofore us. | deepest dye, The gentlemen who drew the State ad- | Carden to divilo the party the lawyer, went with them, | 1. ve said to you that we cannot be beaten in thiscon- | The let'er which has been mentioned proves that I de- Title notion that shall bo sanctioned by the constitution; aud | We eaw placards posted up, jnst wet from the printing | dress have taken occasion to refer to me as one who was | 82° whim they went back the others followed suit, They | svt" “Wi.at {fs the proposition ’ Tt is to put down Frank- | clined free soil ‘‘associations,”” and was 0 to free Purpose, we urecate unconstitutional ects, even for such ® | office, intimating that the Convention would be held at | bent on the Prospect of sbolitionising the democratic return ‘abeut oad’ wheel abort wad jump Jim 1 lim Pierce. How does he stand this day? Twenty-seven | soil “opinions.)’ Ms. Van Buren and his followers were p Market Hall at 10 o'clock. It did moet. The unterrified | party. Ihave stated to yon that 1 did not attend the bey t by — ates voted for him in 1852; ever claims to be | then insisting that Con should enact the “ sislat Operative of an tamadinte kod. ehective application of the | did not fear. ‘There was talk of fighting. I saw none, | meeting held; but this failure to attend did not Pyotest enlargement policy, and of honesty in condast ing it. There was talk of this kind:—‘You raseally adamantines, | ine from asrault, and when 1} omitted to atten| the Resolved, That we call upon the democratic electors of our | you wanted to steal away the Convention; and now we | meeting the Rev. Chauncey C. Burr, editor of the Na- ha > ‘ ni the mere question whether A or B should have an office, iterference of Congress to authorize themn city to engage their exertions at the coming olection in the | have you, and you must stand it.’ That ‘was just the | tional Democrat, took occasion to of me thas that matter of saving the Union. Ido not | he "ie putdowa?’ Why does the States of Tennessee | to carry their slaves into free territory, 1 declared form of the municipal abuses to which we have been 6 | king of talk. Th ized ‘th rt ‘ iy believe the Uaion has been in any danger. During Phy al jority of democrats? And e self opposed to action of Congross Jong and shamefully wutjected, and for tho.nocomplishment | Terres and John B: ekincor, « rious doneos wore Pg GR A es *t) Gnight of thebarnburner | this whove time I aever saw a man who thonght thoro | Sm MeMtuehy &Te, NEV OWS have already a democratic | either by way of prohibiting or autboris weilareer Sharter [icbets numntosted sostsr tebe rth erie of Faeent | pated cdleess. Both took tive slaod, Puvas non eel yerinps be waa tights oe aly Wut | was any danger. 1 believe that the peo) le of this coun ‘not alrea "Bin would ¥ Buney--Now, [have av attention to the re of the demberatic party, and L bave a word to freat Taughter ands sfied with the pete upon which he was elected exclude 51 from the new (agen | provis tnd the prineiptes he profe sed; and do you suppose upon | territories, “hey also said that the slave States Thy are devoted to tho Unione (Apmouse.) Tbelicva ie | Speaker, and shall have a democratic Governor; and Tam | territory where it did dy exist. the purity and coonoiagrareraretge anton, of tnen devoted Yo | Hero the speaker was interrupted by the ‘entrance of a mnecencing that language to lay terms, T presume it was | ivanehored in their hearts, and t it the storms of fac- berm eee Coats ian thin Union ° Yoglatature in en aeelite tee ee i fi intended to be a charge by Mr. Burr that | was drunk on | tion wii 0 y t | eeesion, Every 8 01 formed. rene our declaration of eonaverce £4 the Sober muty te | Procession into the hall with a band of music and the | {hat occasion. Having talled your attention to theve | goriving ia siccee wy Sone aay Cae iietetitt | supports the dp inistration—not only supports it, but | On the mere constitutional fl tration, and 6f our attachment to tho principles and action | fllowing bauners:— of Hordtio Seymour: Though assailed by the malignancy of | oe CSS SCC CE SSO SECO OSD COCEC EG An envenomed opposition, and condemnod by nparti 5 4 Ee % Forde the Governor and his advisors enjoy the weeane orate | ° PIERCE, SEYMOUR AND GUTHRIE United demoorncy of tho State. ° Wil be sustained by the Resolved, That we cordially approve and commend the ac Sf Vroris. tion of the Canal Board in removing thoso of its subordinates | 0 from office who have refused to support the remulatly noml: | 0c eeoeeeeezeeecooececoscess® = : nestion, the - anything in regard to negro slavery can ever disturd its ‘ Goctues nee a ogee 4 nents, | auppoxe you will readily admit that I do not ot te man’s Unioi the majorities are increased, Pennsylvania, that gave | expressed that sla’ could not exist wi was ax here voluatariiy. I do not oles these renarks by | fe" Christendom oan's shake te Cokers apnlause )” Me, | 1%000 Majority, gives now 40,000; Ohio, that gave him | authorized by law, and, consequeatiy, that the masta. way of complaint. Inever complain of the nsswulls ot | Wood presided af the Castle Gardgu iseecirg, ani ke his | $000.07 10,000,” comes to ua with a majority o 80,000. | removed with his slaves into a free State, or territory, tg copponer ts upon me; I never complain to my frienis, ox to | been nominated for the office of Judge of the Court of Ap- | How thon will you break him Jown? Whatever New York | slaves would be free. | Whether thet 80 far ao ree the public, to a petit jury, or tomgrand jury; | leave these | peuts: but Chazlés 1, Rogclos will relieve him cf the trou. | ™AY do, he may be handed ofer to yeeulation and plun. | lates to the territories of the United States was well fow sdeg resorts to Edwin Oroswell, John C, Mather, Nathaniel P. le of dische rging “tte duties. There are men in this | “er and dis, ce herrcli—may wallow in the pt of ph eg which may at some time te ; Willis, and Charles O'Condr; the courts are open to them, | <tate—in the sounties of Schohire, Melawars, Creene, | Sewardism, but the administration of Franklin Pieroo is | courts of justice, and by their decision T shall aby’ ¢; uated candidates and the regular organization of tho party: and whatever others—suitors, or judges, or jorors—mey | and other c-whe will Hae eae tt while | impregnable. The speaker next pronounced a eulogy yet I hw change Branded vy us vot interonta of the 0 We Have Sit U0: |g Oe emmyt ue protanan, bids tem, enter! Y mention thie | it is good policy “ur some, men to emutt ‘him, | upon Sir. Armstrong, the proprstor of the, Washingtss | rule a aa vac aay Lo , 7 . a © | merely to show that in this controversy I am not the Soe -eome hate § | Enion, and read some extracts from a life of jack. | com vance, FIRST WARD UNTERRIFTED DEMOCRACY. © ly y and put him {below some othtr candilates on the phn age Veet pomgeeg ergo pte ns coco Whe: +B, 4 aggresror. L appaar here for the simple purpose | 4; i “7 : ® the foregoing resclations were adopted, Mr. FT. | 64 6 eceacoccocoscescooe ssc co O69 | Oo fe rastaining tl i administration of Tranklin Tiare, oe Stain tecetens wie Ces 8 tt os Eriol ‘He was in favor of Franklin Vierce, and his nf New Yorx, October 26, 1853, ‘Vultee read the following letters, which were repeatedly | ‘Thery wore three other banners, with the names of the | S94 cfending myselt. (Applause.) Now, etlow-oit: | in'ine couse ef our conversation ke said to aé-=Tnege | Was the organ of the administration. To thea ctosed w > applauded :— « ivena, there is s division im the democratic party. | compromise measures are ing to pasa.” Said I, “Do | another attack upon the prominent demoorats whom he SLave Sramreps.—Tho saves, Lavhaiy whon Tadao as vienwhaae. soft shell candidates inscribed upon them. The delegates | An election is approaching, and 1 desire to know what is | you Poulere this Une tobe in jeopardy?” “Certalnly 1 | had before assailed, ‘Tho brilliant Brady, the ferocious | are eooming migratory in their habits Burrato, Ost. 26, 1953, remained together for two tours, In this two hours’ war | the reason that + re who supported Franklin | Yo, he ans tended Pierce wered. I crossed over to the other side of O’Conor, the cool Cooley, Pinned Bede Fyn fortnight, eight have made their escay, rt the regular democrati . © | said he, ‘will York tha erent nade roman Gh tb sans sisting vt toca hae i bestos kia, vite Woatt pon ticket? Tt ha ean coarged ‘hat violence was used at anion Toon Bars ae catoseer De at body of their trother Bronson, and whis} to each Hall tomorrow, but I shall not be able to do | ont of bed that would p toned al any: | the State Convention at Hrintmall’s Hotel, and it has been | more ‘platform was constructed 1 gov upon it here aa soon | other, fnd shouting to the exiled Cutt from #0, Tt would give me gieat plensure to address the de- } thing that transpired, They found wo were two te Giots | charged that one of them bad left that convention for | Seif whe done, (Applauso.) I sald it was just, honor. ' retarm, Garde Ot. 16.