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NEW YORK HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1855. a cy rf gE i teal ie ey ; sheald to . ey then, an ‘te express the feelings of those tak: body, a Eek et Feocus veing Ne Bs contibaion, andi was do ny ta ‘The tvarih day out we pooshd the month of the sasate ‘their for ¥ aligion ta better taan no rel very much indisposcd, I am entirely unfit to makes ‘ought taken vp. On sbeing it, Parks moved | through which flow the hesd-waters of the Rio Graadé,, fice, in my Judgment and whenever they will | *s<ech but l am sp American, and 1 will say a few sooner the thanked ‘them with considerable | and where Colonel Fremont lost so many men and aa{- Heme al saris of allogv ssce’whstever to the foreign de, | weres to you. While Ihave beem sitting here I have Ether Canadian’ laws in Cauads cdotion, "He then eald, “tl have ne resent. apt fuinion of the Po: pp ye A ‘ot | been thinhivg what fe the most preposterous assertion citizens and foreigners are to Ibad Dr. Perry, ile eet arene mals, while attempting to discover a new pags to Cali- ite opines’ ‘and ter bj ‘that bas ever been made by our enemies. 1 do not know and for us Aaah csleates int resize Of paasentetcs veto my | fornia. ee awe dome whs.c ihe Method a ie ee eae ttes, | bow it ishere in your elty, but im the country where I wire wt Pas teducated ta the belt of the ee Nee come rank ine | live, and througheut the’ rural dictricts of the State, Sharchior ad, ‘ike my forefathers, I'leave the | tail of BaveP Calvin Mave done’ Arey. wil have tous ta 1836 | ‘ey callus the “oue erop party,” meaning that we are ts"peace wi all menting, "witbont_canvar bat other Xeligious bodies did sixty or seveaty years | * Pérty for but a day—perhape for one election, and that apy one. We cannot recall the past. Would to Goa tee. (Shears) Let it not them be said that we mete | ten we sball die out. Rew, do we look like aay such Jeould doso; but I know no such thing as fear. Iam | America, = che \dethahorenaion Neves ta | party? When I cast may ere ever assembly and eco misunderstood; hove had little or no education; have | road pace, amore pleas ire than to vee every Roman Carhe- | sV¢1y face init it wp and 8 firm de- tried te learn much by to the books which the | This Wisintan antag o0 iniab ned Gesmana. popelation ab rr Seated ee ort en wisest search, bave had mo ox Gnabeldge educs- | 1 jor our that pe oo Ear BR A org thet in the mest preposterous assertion that hee exer taaa’s | ground? ‘net living and breathing and existing only by the fiat of | been made. Why, gentlemen, it is s most propos yon for ico. Tee Watton bet holttog ail thet nights and” peivi- | ‘eroun idea to sy snes weep Amecienas, bere all that Tam | encamped Jegen under the autherity of am American go- | American sail, Se tg ‘the inesenan of). pope Tespoct, by thought or deed. “With | mbich Yersusest and an American constitution, (Cheers ) | through our velus that coursed through the veins Haine increase of pore’ | these words, I prepare t most my the “Fatey, thes, the imputation that any of us make war | OUF fathers of the Revolution— having organized our- ang Tag {ried thy | “One o'clock had arrived. He took a glass of wine; his | ¢ \mpon the Means Catholic religion. "Wo make war only | {elves into a body and gone forth te battle agatast ear Sihesen' tan anda and foot ware the rope adjanied by the | earth, Desebing, Davig been well cleased by a eae beg Pelee ot ae homer e Cate couragements it aay marae themeclves. We are ready to s ealy pony eat ee the see The day folowing we got out early, and feel em one. “aotitutions, that ought ‘never to exist wus, | Americans, we are engaged in an American csum, and | the arailel with | Jenay. Me borrowed « andherchiet to mate it with, | s7msea Kit Gurvon bea propbesied wa were to haves ght ‘See that ought’ prey: a: | with our hearts riebly imbued with the principles of a v Garments 96 4 | the cap was drawn over his bead, and about ten minutes | to-day, about ove or two o'clock. We pushed on te the ‘on Hee ne oe riewe: | the Am«rican party, and deveted to the interes's of eur tier some person, I | Siter ove, with the «iT ¢l¢-an innocent man,” he | pars ieading to Grand River and. Cali eS idey cio teaepenaeut taespors ly and apisitaally | country, there is 20 Canora rape oe mere ee wth ok denn instantaneously fol, Capt. Gunsison pesee) and was subseq in thie great surprised Indi cer Necta pores. 20 ) mayb iP no garth, mo combination, or Taaiom 9” patter, can | Inreiovshonid have bicbolt to taske ne pena ta, i 4 Vere heater perry ste | Bos ape of the | siop the coward mereb of thie great American movement. | ga4 uafounded a charge ‘Our people aad entho- m 2 9 Ln sation betieon, Sinem aad) thels eel ete tnGe re (Cheers.), To, say that we are but ome ceop,, that we | ritien as that mace in ‘bis ond the succeeding. para- may head, uppers, my accuation wien trunks three, and cessed to beat in eight minutes altecwards. for ved a have nothing whatever todo in our political actin, | Sali50 Desiing aun, in pertecty absord and fuse, | 7 stro, ne it bnown that I, the wadertgaed, do | 12 Semee Parks, the murderer.”” “But ft may all be tree | No,scticn of the heart yas perceptible at the expiration | hundred and fifty warriors about a mile distant, coming eg ed oe an en ER aioe yell might they attempt to damup Niagera, with a | requett by virtue'of lawful authority invested toma by'his | of Christ; but tt isa lie concerning me. - was taken cown, ‘She physicians present—Dre Strong | _xpédit‘on; tuey called out to us in v0 come.an.. Tie ike tres eshashe of Wt Bee Cea te er, to catch & sup thimble, or te crons | Bxotllency the Hresid.nt. of the United States of Aneolos, | ANOTHER ATTEMPT OF PARKS TO ComurT SUICIDE— | gnd Clenelant—examined him, and found the neck | The orcer was fo surround them, Dut the Indians seslagy protracted cheering.) I make no professions of bring ocean on 9 BE as to stop the onward | Oaciem of American vessels arriviog at this port docemp'y | SRVBPNG HIS SUAULAR VEIN—HIS Last Comuv- | broken by the fall. our foree, broke like sheep and ran for ibe mountains, Fitgiew this is tee the cocesion, nor the "hour | merch of this organization. (Cheers.) For our with the Act of Congress sbove alluded to, in order tbat they | NICATION. ‘ Mapy persons were unable to restrain their | Having bloo@y traik os they vanished. We had tuo for it; but I rooaived from my father aud from | ples aze to protect and to perpetuate, and hand down to | ray claim the legal protection of the lag of thelr country. teora at mapy ef the touching remarks of the prisoner, | men wounded, while the Indians lost two chiefs, amd yother a feeling of dev to the Bible, | posterity Ameriean institutions free and usiss; ragul of the United se eM a speaking of his wife and child, or while he was making | #x men killed, besides 8 good number wounded. ble.apd earliest instruction imparted | 224 te preserv Union from every encroachweat, are gye foi winbagene bl fe alae Dis last preparations for death. days after, “we” ovsrhauted them again, killed if m ‘The arrangements were respect complete, some, touk a number of horses, camp, Whatever the merits of this particulsr case in and Mr, Spangler and hie fsasistants. Ya the dlschaige of this Sense and some prisoners, One womaa teld us care ciuat it, Tt ia of Now England was celivered from | {10m every invader that may gome ageinat it, Its por. | | Wiis ls wot the time to dlecase them, for. the. toon ered yolame, For some reason or fectly impossible to check eur career or stop our aS teak ae 0a is great cause, I have often | charged with the assault which pi the death of ot a br 4 knew not why, it bas been driven from the free | fo york in, this gre ds ‘eho inful duty, have displayed great discretion, and stroyed her ownchild ands niece, and that he ‘States, and 1 cell for ite re-intro jought—and I say it here, because there | the man Conolly are in custody,awaitiog their trial— . ‘decorum’, order and % others did the same, to prevent out t pat aha Mu Speak nit es “4 engin es age are pertons int ‘from different portionsof the State | United States Consal never had, and never will have the @ latter spoke ina firm and emphatic tone ” eomapinees Our prisoners toll cs thle bend te ‘ently, ae reg ~~ power to extend, in this part of the Queen’s dominions, || |. 1h'# mortal man must die; you can’t save me now,” The Democratic Movement in England, 1n | °¢ must rtarve, as the snow is #0 deep thit any protection to the endjects of that mstion other than | $24 ‘mmediately give a blow with a knife into she right ipaewch Puing of Views ™.| not joim etzer portions of their tribe. Prebetiy fey aa cane ome Twill be vetelliouscuatil tne | of New York—I have often thought that if you would ‘the schoo! i) fifty Americans in an: em town in this State, . a Mpeneked cheers) Nowy fallow citiwens, 1 80 Food with otha fa ‘afentrtan tee = jrostishen bis pation Sip’ la weareme erent ior Jnchea long. “Tie blood fowed in profasion, "Calling out anslated from tho Parla Journal Ges Debate] Fill make peace, and ceaso murdering and 4 f . pt iad haul; po reper by pet hae§ Fe mage | discourage ue, when we have in this State 160,000 mercantile purpases, and 0 long as he keeps within the foe thine? tyler teumacintaly roe Le, | ar at a conmasg, thgee, hase seen eo “of doing that ha GH any voiecs—' ). they les | voters who are members of thisOrder? (Cheers.)” We = wr ee he tiempe oet et ke Mot pat aioe ins few minutes Dr. Rebert Strong was foued and thafte at white BG mEn must be held responsible for any principles thst Dave 180,000 native: ‘ett a Bi erent Hd ee ee ea fereiteseeT bak Bettas vive the iaterente of ties Order, etsd ot the prea ‘sever could understand ‘ome creed of’ the’ whig | American movemrnt. Why, gentlemen, with thi ‘which portion of that party are now abjur. | °f voters itis impossible for any thin, fosters . ‘Phey have raised heaven and earth to create s tariff | freee and our success. Our sucoeas, I think, ‘80; 40, or 60 per cent, and have almost revolu ionized | beyond ar | a arb There is no more doubt about there is about any thing Soar cat yet they arepoe to take, aio ou | im this world. But I will mot atiempt. to one to our | soke a speech upon this point, T intend to makes | officers ameng us in to be only, as it has been elsewhere, Peciahens-~ihe wornshope of Amerien foreign laborers, | Tepark simply int yeterence Mo him who we are called | for the purpose of creating diseensions, and maling pre: n 7 he bee b mule befure a ayer aw which fe reed the places eae taiees beds can “ TF, anc: how eas; are wounded. Lisut. lag: which Bae, jest been eld te | Col Be Vrain wo ia nthe olsest mountainear ie this eoun- tion, and to arrogate to himself s ‘above the laws miserable to which be, in common with’the catizene of tbe United ig ete er ite came Rim tefaink. wy States sojourting here, are alike amenable, there will be |’ 5.15 rem, Pag peti tse + Poy a summary termination put to the consulate. Wo are | 12 4 aie 13 sane Hg hall, Carica ; warned by the proceedings of American consuls in ether matle dent ieee exclaimed, dama your artaof the world, to oppose stringently the first infrac- | Miserable soul, let mo alone, ned raged a4 wiolenty on of national right; and if the establishment of there the surgeon to wie mes h ‘Hin ate et Mee LH etn of blood to, gush from, his weund’ and. be. fainted. was then raised into a chair, where be lay passively en We journeyed where no white man or Me: Lad 80 re as that which preceded the reform bill, and that which | been before, as we bad the old ing. heers. texts for extortion or the invasion of terri ‘the J ora. never, could understand that principle of the | Cctemen, Ihave been epgaged in thin work from iis | seoner'we are rid of them the more ikaldiond of pence | Tle tbe wound was examined, | The jugalar volo ea ee ee ree une Snare neh) leeks mata toe in: Canmoe eae eT vhs which goes ‘for the wh proposes. to | commencement, and am happy to say here thie evening | there will be between the tro countries, nearly if not quite tevering it, and had’ been | Jocistion ‘which haa. just’ been founded, ia not yet | description of xis travels, his visit to ths Taber by imponing Deary Suties, bat which proposes to | that this great American Order bas had its head from | ‘The man Conolly, lately deadfwhether a citizen of the | tary if zo: quite severing it, am by crag Abeyaicheser} tee aa the Lane ee oan ak States, and’ of bis Colonel Benton’s guest. Sedjpah ines competion with cuz ga amesizn | th commenciment nd that never bas many plane | Voted ats oral maser ot puck nturence | Guats ot Need, The Gola, hy ting tho Tony was | 1c" repeat" to uel tet sts nate ts ince | Kit bas ee fe Seat an Denil Weber and Med bo en ne Pee ne, Meret me mesa eagett | Sead. James W. Barker has’ ever boon its head. (Ap: | throat, ‘Thoog accused were arrested and gommtted for or he will Live tigough the night ia doubttul, | ministratrs reform’? bose not aan to themied. or to Plover snd suginecr living. Ho han boon ated ersery a » ho the foreigner per fe T make no odjiction. | plause.) We have found him with us inthe hour of | trial. The act was nots nttional one, the man was | ,.vhether he, will live through the night ie doubtful, | sink t in Paslioceen! bor to | Zaiselon in the army, ut. refused tt I wae greatly Taare ne prcvadice against im, whether he peaks | Zrial; we have found him with us in epite of all the | under the protection, not of the American, but of tue | *itbough the doctor was confiden} that if the prisonet | theeye se a sent in Parliament, an electoral bulletin, or | Tuceiom, in, {he Srmy, but refused. it, 1 was, greatly Eaglish, Irish, Dutsh, or any other foreign lan; | Tower of our enemies. Eloquence and wisdom could not | British flag. he was emenable, and his amsauiters are, to | Would keep quist that he w Oh t peers Spelt ine * codotermined Ghantcteritt “ats | bregacocio. On the contrary: he in modest and waas, QEy Maio. Car come, at must | Convert him; money conld not buy him, He has been | the laws of this Province Some daysafter the sftray, | fe tilltomorrow. | cisely the vague, elaatio, undete torus the mare | suming, dots not drink, and ts brave asalion, Some Se. saylam for foreign laborers rome coa- | Sith us always, and to the end. (Loud cheers.) With | the wound having healthily healed, he became sick, and migtiinliss, tae 4.4 hands ama feet eovered |. dengeroes, Wha eestion threatened ie, | Mexicans billed s young squaw in a fight, her for- Seumging tn czornone inportation “of foreiguers; | tee remarks, Tgive place to others wito are more com- | died, the doctors say from congestion of the brain, and | Mouopss Ihe © compen, his hands amd foot eovered | dengerous, | When, in 1661, ingurrection threatened to | S'S an when Kid head or ie, he weate os bie ae rice wes of impocting hare the foreign pauperd hg anda ore OR setae sare hence ‘vbom they will Tetieg and not all Covered withthe blood shed by 8 murderer anda sui- years later tbe League eighed ban at against Par. | ond seid if be could seenee her to fife the would tive, of Kurope, 1 am aot desirous of importing here thefor- | Tee Camuan—Me. Whi'aey han got quite enough to |’ the flags the United States cam produce will’ change the | ie. toed a tn bis oot; at ph 7 O7ee, Knew up to | oan, A dog was Crownlog ai ons. of ear being sign jal birds of Europe | Tam not desirous of import, | go'to announce the npeakers of ‘Eveiening at now aspect of the cate, to convict f guilty, or to discharge et aca Ps apaapeepuay put cs. Titee | sovcedoiona whlch Sere Cominded of theme Wass tine, | apable to gekout of the river. Kit exeried 4 peer . _— le 5 ot Ii to . | if innocent t ; foolings, : ‘Wat fas greater number of foreigners than wo can ab- | “Oe “Ino NT, cones newvenied himeel ad suite ore. | Does ths Coorul. propote to take into his own hands puri Seward fore same, Tam quite r Jaded chats th was’ meonsaary Wo caplialade SUdy 0x8: | Cos toatl aight. 1 son otis poets ‘reaps rs sorWor Americanize every year: and they atthat amount, | sor americans: After the eloquent address you have | the protection of ‘Awerloan eitizens, of does be asdume foalings. 2 vorid crate and the conservatives who consummated the two | €@7ge 7 the mountains, My horse was carsfally ploking doreguis is ofthe fegnnrenand tine grote: | intents to tne enon, facet am, ut, Zamywoat | to mall the ght fo puro chat wat wn guint | (cbr sar dpuot Th ets ine great seforme, Po-day tf indataly more dimou | Sut Ms path over, the rocks —tenaath ran ¢ staat 0 @: i. nner . ic Hattea te ive ia the conte before youvotwa? com: | tion of the country which Thaye the honer p00 this | superior to our municipal or judicial authorities that he | you; speak the truth of or to det what the popular sentiment de- | WHO#® course wan dammed up now snd then by marde, It ie customary fo say thet reforms must be poe wd y inabliod s-e8 Mocpbergsond osca| tions ; J ‘the use of alee tines, and of “aty-zomng poreraments, theirfumes to hesver from tke opposite side ef and a role which, like every rule, bas its excep- yale eae tions. It is like seying that an amputation alwsys saves = ike Mele peg it, spe cere mieten T acaer opu recite commeae, i knawing: peter That of Newest > a jaal it cuts off a superfiuity or whetker it touches vital parts. ‘You Patt as wee from what'T have ‘wetted bine gob saberita sss anprection asewil wee be tose in | billing and fighting Incians, that phiieent Basing it le, pething Jenn than’ o: rising against aris- | treated; but were you here, and heard of the murders tocracy—against the clara which has up to the present | 224 depredations ‘they have committed on the i i : occasion to represent. I will, however, say to you that | can prevent the recurrence of conflicts which in the | fot blame or carte ‘The Cuar (with solemnity)—Only twenty-one yours. | the great Northwost—-tbat portion ef the countey which | best state af society. will arieo between wien of the class | peort; Jour, fet, ‘Mr. Brooxs— Only twenty one years: and yet the gen- | embraces the Stater of Leagan Indiana, Iilinois, Wis- | to which this unfortunate belonged ? If hie proclama- from Ber)in, Koenigsberg, Vienna, Tipperary, or | consin, lowa and Minnesota itory—will at all times | tion does rot mean that he assames the jurisdiction ork, come over here and claim # right to vote withia | be found true and steadfast in the cause of pure Ams- | over American citizens resident here, and the punish. five years, although you and J, who were born here, are | ricanism; and although we of that section of the coun- | ment ef outrages on them, what does it mean? Barly, to live here twenty-one years before wecan vote. | try are friends of t measure, whish is not viewed | it means that, or nothing. Teo T laim, then, that the foreigner be put upon an equality | throughout the ezuntry in a national light, and which | | We repeat, hess mistaken his position, and forma | 0/1 Heck Gena me, and that I be put upen an equ lity with tbe fo- | bas been mentioned here this evening—' at of internal stimate of his powers; in Canada heis no | cgn do cht for her. To God I commend my spirit., I'am reigner. (apaeeee “hil bil hi!) Igive him li- | improvements—and although the great mass of our | thing bat an agent of the American government for the | innocer of nus ler. bn and acts of a like | CurveLann, May 31, 1886. 4 EF S A F r RS to Judge Bliss, Wolcot tis, and Mr. Plea- vant, You did your duty for me; I am sure you told the truth—no more, no less. end my dear wife and child to all, male and female, God bless her, and all her bind. 1 Hl Dderty, which he hes not at home, ani I require of pulation are in their hearts true to tho sentiment of | authentication of mercantile ‘tan’ rou would thiek differently, These bands hin equality when he comes here’and settles with | free soll, they feel that the questions whian have besa | mature, and in no other. position will he be tolerated. | At three o'clock, with the afd of stimulants, ho re- Sima eolened she monepoly of the goverment and of all |. \yaches and Utabs have broken treaty after teaty,-and. me. (A volee derisively, ‘Good boy.”) Iknow very well | discussed here so ably this evening, and which are | If Americans do not consider our Jawa dufficient for | covered bis senses, snd was Jaid on a pallet in the hall. | +.4¢ sconer or laver a violent form.’or will it remain in | 20¥ bold in bondage Mexican women and ‘chilien, ‘Where are some foreigners who, within five years, or | known throughout the length and broadth of this | their protection, let them stay away; their presence | He called several around him and shook hands with able and legal waya? The fature will soon tell that; | Wbom they treat barbarourly. eve year, or ten years, may be able to exercise theelec | Union as American sentiments, are dearer to | bere is not compulsory; but if they to come into | them, aseerted his innocence, and expressed much ro- it one thing is certain, which is, that aristocratic inatl- five franchise aright; but 1 know very well, too, thatif | their hearts than apy local or soctional feel- | our territory, they must make up their minds to abide | gara for Whit ts ° ney, late d sheriff, Mr. Splangler, I were to place myself in Berlin, Vienna, Hamburg, Bre- | inge which they may entertain. Ican, | by our laws, to be subjest tosuch tribunals as the } and Mr. Seward, Sheriit of baat ebunty. ee tilt ‘Cheers. . men, or any of the cities of Europe, and claimaright | therefore, gentlemen, safely wiedg ‘net? section | country affords, and to atend before them in every | doubtful whether he will survive till to morrow. tutions are the very foundation of English society, and | Beauties of the Post Office-a Chapter of that the day when they shall no longer rule in England Facts, there will be a¢complished, no matter by what means, a | [From the Rockville ree ‘dao Conn ) Gazette, y al. Se within five or six ser . poe be scouted out | of comnts lay cee all sectional oe and a aout im the same —— eo bapags eee se, Gabi’, pent was an ordinary Acpeareted veritable revolution. all Germany, France ani ly for reposterous- | upon a broad and national platform, unt) Americans | without any reliance on the American flag or consular jw he obtained it is still a mystery. The only re ‘We know well that the citizens who composed the ‘We gave cor readers, » week or two since, a few facts mess and audacity of suchaclaim It 1s but right, it | shall mot only in mame rule America, but uutilevery. | protection. to-day allowed-to see him were his wife and a clergy- s 4 is but abe aapeee Os principle can be maintained a that | thing, trom the fountain head at Washirgton down Canada has never shown desire to attract rogues to pedng ither of whom had any opportunity to give Ne meeting of the city are not revolationists in the sense | concerning the lors of certain letters enwasted to the Zound.—that every foreigner who comes here shoald stsy | the smallest county, town or hamlet within our vast | her soil, not to protect them when they are here. | This | {o him. fore he has a right to vote just as long as every Amer: | domain, sha!l be governed by nothing but full-blooded | week she has surrendered an American criminal to jas- This was the second atte Park made to destroy fean-born citizen stays here; and the promulgation of | mative Americans ‘to the manor born.”? (Vehement | tice without s moment’: hesitation or delay, white our | himself, he befose having taten poisou. It was also this principle by the country cannot be resiated by Tam- | cheering.) Allusions have been made to our friend Mr. | seighbors lore no opportunity to throw impediments in | dircuveied, some days since, that he was concosting a msvy Hali and the foreigners who are the spokesmen of | Barker, who bas held the position of President of the | tbe way of the extradition treaty, and have made it,#o | plan to blow up the jail with gunpowder. at. And now, fellow cit diam | Order in this Union. I will say that weef the West fully | far as the reclaiming of escapes from justice there, a THB EXECUTION AND HIS SPEBOH. @one. Lobdjest to the establishment of these military | appreciate the porition which he has so nobly and fu'ly | complete dead letter. [From the Cleveland Facts, June 1} organizations, (ap) }) these military leagues; when | maintained, anc are willing to pay a just tribute to his Conadian citizens of the United Sta‘es conform them- At ten minutes before noon he was conducted upon geing about our ets, I sometimes do not know | worth and merit. I can assure you, gentlemen, that it | selves to its laws, and claim no rights other than those | ine scaffold by Mr. Seward, the Sheriff, and Marshal bardly where I am, from the multiplisity of tongues | affords me much pleasure to meet you and himon this | of the people among whom they are temporarily residing. | itch. He walked feebly, but without any emotion in Which Ibear and from the orga of regiments; von, and I trust that our Order and our organiza. | Americans can claim no greater privileges bere; it | his countensnee. a chair provided for him, and [have fancied myself at tintes in Frankfort, Berlin, } tion may always have as its head a man that will make | they ere foolish enough to do so, they will find that | grant a portion of a glase of wine, and held the glacs in ‘ez somewhere on the Rhine—such is the appearance of | as good a Barker. (Paint laughter and cheers ) they will not get them—no! not even though we should | his hard while be ‘Prepared to speak. He was quite pa yg aid Thave sometimes imagined my- The next spesker was the Hon Joun H. Riopws, of | be threatened with that awful infliction held in terrorem | pete, but hie whole air was remarkably firm and clear self in or I/merick. (Laughter.) If the forel; Kings county. He said—Gentlemen: I had not expected | ever the heads of petty Powers—the striking of the | minded. A desfand dumb person, an acquaintance of 40a sensible man when he jands here. he witl f to be called upon to address you, bi is an occasion | consular fiag, and the armed intervention of a six gan | his, kissed bis band te him, and be returned the seen as possible, all his foreign conceptions about militery | when we may all he tos yw words. We ny 3 with apparent satisfaction at the friendly token. He ition which be brought here, and immediately | are assembled together to it a testimonial to our ‘e want to live in peace and fellowship with all | commenced some remarks in s strong aud clear voice, Awericanize himself, and associate himself with Amari- | friend and brother, Jas. W. Barker, who has been at the | the world, and particularly with the United States, | the substance of which we will attempt to give. Ho ean military organizations just as quick as possible. | helm and bas guided for us our ship through storms and Feople are bound to us by the ties of a common | gai ‘Yu the case of riot here, what is tobe done? When you | dangers, so that we are afloat and A number one with | origin, like aympethies and allied intereste. The best ‘Well, gentlemen, there are but eomparativel call out an Irish regiment here, if it wers to shoo: dowz | the insurance. (Applause and laughter ) In eonclu- | way in which this end can be promoted is by each re | present, and my words will be but few. I shall detain aK regiment or sees of Germuas, you would fed sion, gcationen, 1 ro you—s' Kings County—The ban- | specting the national rights of the other, and attempt- zs but asbort time. IfI wished to say more, I have jermany wou! @ in arms against the Irish, | ner county for the American ticket. Cheers. . I see among some of m: and civil war would ensue in the heart of oar own | The Cuainmax—At the request of overs gentlemsn Hag gs eplrdue var on et; which we generally attach to that word. were all | care of Un.le Sam’s cfilciale, which letters, after travel- traders, merchants, rich people, having themselves | ling rome underground mail roate, were fished out from made their own fortunes, and not having slightest | @ pile of waste paper purcbassd at the Boston Post Office. Gepire for dividing it. They did not assemble in open | We have since learned = few more interes! air, to wake @ procession through the streets, like the | which will be psrticularly interest artiste 4 Mayor had given them the Guild. | to send money or articles of value hall, the old Gothic palace of the city, aad | We would remark. in the outset, that statement: all those who were there bad, no doubt, figured | which we here make is true in every pestionles, and we as ial constables in the radical manifestation of | chsllenge a contradiction, Jet it come hat 1848. They would represent to us rather the descend- | itmay. We might, ii it was necessary, ante of those burgesses of the miadle who foanded | and places more fully; but as they are a matter of com- the commors and the mepelpelits who became | paratively little consequence, we have, through special later “the third estate” Tiers In their tarn | request, suppressed them, they put the celebrated ques' “What is it? Nothing. There are in this town two establishments fer the. What dees it wish to be? Something” It is, therefore; | manufacture of paper, and like all other paper milla, “ the third estate,” in black cloth, which comes to re- | purchase from time to time, bales of waste to be. claim its part, not only ip the eernty, but im the | converted into pu'p for the manufacture of Tadir goods. fairs. It only a part: | One of there miils—and for sapht we know, both—fre- and, wiser than it was in another country, it does not | quently obtain their material at the post wish to be everything. " Offices, where large masses necessarily 5 and Let one read the speeches wh'ch have been pronounced | among this rubbish are found many letters of impor- in the London Tavern and in ths Guildhall, aud the reso- | tance am‘ much yvslue. Some idea of the number of lations that have teen there voted, and he will see dia- | letters thus cisposed of by our careful (7 Postmasters, avowed every intention of excluding the aristocracy | may be obtained from the fact that more ‘two thou- ser Soe te sand letters of various descriptions have been thus re~ “We re,” say the resolutions, “that the true rem- ane at ore of our mille during theast two ' int more ing 80 sesumptions of authority it would not itself sub- it to. We trust we shall bave no more consular pro- | jurors, ve no reftecttons to make upon the verdict; eountry between these foreigners. Aud ifan Jrieh regt- resent, Wr Holder will favor us with the song of the | clemationt of this kind :— a d minist man: meri . xee at ni 4 ORT OF MONTRFA! > Ma horror y "5 i Zeuld not answer for the life of aa Irishawn for tw ‘Tho Cuamaan—It will not be forgotten that we have Bal pry impos d. Stay Tastes of angen ee. rept ab rerolates by, caine my life 8 eons Secuatens aapeciense aud of praction Mill’ We Seelace Mo mencntt et cee she, wes eaicaae eaten four une: 7 8 port ‘consequence oF not eomply- . rmithar trgaaiztion bar boon hares "foe atic shag | {e'ayproschlogs snd 'tt"terhart soko Tauceshens | Beg iuiny veritas at anc at Gocterel the Uatun | Mend nauaot fr sy on Donel, bat forth mks of | thatthe apatom nhich exalades fom pulp fundtoas may! fe wrong from beginning to end. ‘This foreign pore apitite with ungne desire to resch Lome belene Seeaas | Stites of Ameries, parsed on the 26th of February, 180 vn 1 pa pe . ew _~ = Be aged men possessing the necessary qualities té direct the | Among these letters, are a great many written by bu- organization of soldiery, with foreign arms in han4, iv a | morning, it in propored that we now adjourn, the band | feethwelteds arrival at a foreign port euall | vem? sy child end relations from. the reproach watch, | fneie nseoigioes acd crtenera neal ae ensaltato | ainede men, and of much consequance te their proper ‘Wing which would be tolerated in no other country what- | saluting us with the ‘Star Spangled Banner,’ and 5 Ri ith Consul, jer's penalty of five | this to them. I knew I was not a murderer, | declare th: >a hile td ‘ieavowin, ‘esire ‘to fs quite sincimber ‘matled it Calif ral and oramsics ever, Suppose [ wereto organize an American regimsnt | ‘Auld Lang Syne.” y hundred dollars fine.” serious injury has siready arieen, | and bad a right to dispose of my existence as much as | clude the atistoeratit classes from partici tho | letters, On 8 Iai crity Of these Istisre the here, or you, Mr. Chairman, and you were to show your A Voice—Three cheers for ‘Sam’? before we whieh will probably result in the death of an Amerionn soa, | $10 191 pdr ores rl ee Thea not di @ axistoerat from participation in the ‘ ‘& large maj ese letters Postage seit ia the streets of Dublin as Major General Whitacy | Lustily reeposded te : Bs a ny aga ucoene tether Amerisam abipping and’) Oot ut to break the laws or oflend society. I have wot rh iy CT a am pole copy deme ce ughter), with a regiment of five hundred or 8 thou- | ANoTHsR Voice—Three more. Serore bee’ Laww 5 an ® odnaeidal baer tenets tor isepneceines aceite |:o Ser one ee ae veer; timetable Eno onty jnvested laas by His | Wier Beaton fail’ tad kid nimeelf ty teas, Tram | MOzalty ‘o monopolice the functions of administration.” | nation is at cnoe shown to be inoorrest hy she startling ~—~sllowed to exist in Vienna cr Berlin or Frankfort at the | The company then retired, and the band procesded to | Excellevey the Prorident of the United Statos of Americ, | xo murderer in any way. I aight’ say 90 much, | {neat thecione er Ley eat the formation of | Weave said that among there letters were some of Bead of the rame? Why, you would be all snot down | Mr. Barker's residence, in Monroe street, where they | uy ratified by Her Brits commend. myself te God, and stop ‘here. Iti |. 406 ‘ation, In fact, the men of the ttird ch value, Now, in support of this aseertion, we | Wie dogs. The whole force of that part of the world | serenaded him 4 , maaters of American ves iv i dasetelshs do daamap tev eieanteneer or | Foe Stab atten on ot Mee in Pi ret es et with the act of Co ‘above all to, in ord t said that have had two impartial trisls—that | tate wish to realize the consequences of the Reform bill, | would state a few particular cases, Ai a lotofpa-. SS be 5 Ra —— cory one vas ten vert Ski Siokcace hid eI ‘on awe wepseiie a may claim leg} prevection of the flag of their country. at s at 4 ctasinaiys, aes gentlemen, | and pier having conquered their sony into the ¢ 4 setnnnes isi i) ri New York City reas Office, was one Frenc! ‘FmAD, 4 ie er ai be I ir! ected; human a) roaches take a a “SSStz, tan parade un’ pro. our trot, with are nrc ABlew Orleans, Consnl of she United Staves of Ameticn. | to truth ate bat disieu tat noeriin Teregree tunel | dione sony 2 Uke to She pase Us the wisiaiee | a New Fore, “nbigh contained a check for one hen: ia tl hands, in m! organiz v4 agains: From the N, . a cee ae eae am not understood—that- mt of. an 'e see that up to th sent, dred and five dollars. mil the citizens of the Unites Staten of Imerios. Nothiag e 0 0 pete At wi) Lecture by Mr, Patterson, of the Parkvil!s | scope of my understanding are mslsunderstond. I never hf pray hes ‘neler pies events: Get 206° rewailed the letter to the Por miaster at New York, has come from it, but something may come from it. The cirenmstance that the grand jury founda truo bill uminary. dreamed of murder; my conscience weuld never have | tionists, nor ES revolutioniste: they are rather pso- | requesting bim to be careful th not to lose it agein, Your civic authorities at au times, in cdse of cistur- | against me yesterday, not with reference to the charge Mr. Wm. J. Patterson, late editor of the Parkville | dared to conceive it. That I murdered Beatsow tor his pind would be found ito them. If, therefore, | but forward it to its proper owner. from @ quan- would never dare to resort to these foreign regi. | recently examined into, but one quite different and of | Luminary, whose press was thrown into the Missour: | money is absurd. He was but AF age with less | the reform were to be limited to the accession to the | tity of paper pes ‘at the Post Office at ‘ments in orier to put down riots or disturbanzes. They | more recent date, justifies me in asking a pension of | river by # mob, délivered a lecture in Boston on tie ist | money thanI, He was not rich, his friehds have | management of business of some new mex, and to the | Mavs., was a letter containing sixteen dollars in have always resorted to those companies which are sup- | Public opinion until it can be “really” Investigated, ana | inst. The speaker was introduced to the audience by | never made themseives known, it is bute short | division among them of certain number of portfolios, 8. The peracn by whom it was was notified, poved to te most American, and mide up of most Ameri- : seating in the meheulaheve het Ob Janation of the | Deacon Grant, who, ina few preiatory remarks, stated journey from England to Ohio. had no malignity | it is not that which could derange the old aristocratis | and he replied by return of mail, giving = correct descrip- an soldiers. (applanse.) It is wrong in principle thata | facty as they have occurred si that the gentleman did not appear before them as iden. | towards him, and feel none towards any human ne‘ng. | domination in fngland, But there is something more | tion of the letter and its contents, and a check was seus — janization should exist which cannot be In Pebrusx 1854, S. N Hite, at Texas, ie saldtohave | tified with any party or sect, but merely to give a true | Ileave s dear wife, who has, in my loag confinement, | dangeroui ore menacing than the new sesociation, | bim for the amonnt. Out of seven or sacks from trasted in of riot and in times of disturbance. | mailed » letter containing @ $500 Citizens’ Bank note to | sccount of the late outrages committed in s Ter: | been an angel in her solicitude and eare of me, I had | and that is tate of public opinion which has pro- | thePost Office, Providence, Rhode Island, about balf a ‘The whole of it cannot be trusted to put down riots ex- | hs partner here, Mr. WeW. Mitchell, It ie said that | Fitory, with which all were familiar, and the causes | never known her virtues, had it not been for my sad | voked and engendered it, Although Englishmen say, | bushel of letters were found, and among them one con- t by running great danger, and where these classes Hiterwrote ‘across the face o? the note, S. N. Hite, Gal- which Jed to it. . misfortunes. I leave a dear infant, wao bas b:en | end often with reason, that foreigners always exaggers' tainiog money and insurance papers of valine. A let wil not acquiesce when thay are thus put down. Now, | veston, Texas, Sth February, 1854,” so as to deface the ‘The lecturer then stated how, ‘as the editor of an inde. | taught to clasp itsarme around my,neck, and whom I | the drift of their public manifestations, yet there is mo | paper from the Hartford Post Office contained, among gentlemen may talk at any length on principles of this | 4i1), and that he mailed it iM the presenes of the Post. tees press, in the 19th century, his Property had | Jove dearly. I leave Se now near eighty | perron there today who dees not confess that there | others, a letter mailed at Pittefteld, Mass., directed to a sert; but they are my iples, have been my princi- | master at Galveston, Texrs. m detpeiled by & lawless mob, and’ he and his family | years old, from whose kind hearts I bad ho; to | reigns in the bosom of the masres of their country a | firm ‘n Hartford, which contained a check for thirty pies Yer twenty yearn, and in all’ probability will be my “A letter addressed ‘to Mitchell arrived at about | left to their fury—how to save his lifo he had been Ecep the ‘snd news of the ignominious fate of thelr profound dircontent, an irritation full of bitterness. | doMare. for drenty Years to come. And presume | the time such m letter should have arrived, and was | Obliged to fice the Territory, ‘bag and baggage.” It | son, (Here his voice faltered, and he burst imto | Popviar sentiment is not now exbibited in publis de- And we might in this manner mention other are in the main your les. But I hoid no | piaced im the valuable delivery. The usual notice, in | Wa# not done, he eard, because the editors were freesoil- | tears.) It was for the sake ef all these that I | monstrations It is, on the contrery, = of dum» | similar cases; but ecough ia here told to arouse the in- man responsible for tiem. J tell you, if you were to go | The form of a receipt, was lanced to the person named in | FS, Dut because they would not sustain Senator Atshi- | attempted yesterday to shorten my life a day. I feel | wrath which has yet to seek its formal expression, dignationef sny sane person. It is but justice to the before le with the promulgation of these pria- | the superseription, but the person who directed the let and his followers in their du ful endeavors to | that I cid right, and I hope that tone who report for affairs go wrong the people naturally accus> entlemapl; retor of the mill in questionto atate . PE A aOR ES hasan (ae cous by exrr) Wricrent02 Carondelet; | (aad ould nok renuen. the outrages aommatted by thess | lover pure toem if poautle Foes foe pals af aeoing may | Sepals NG Repel, teoroodne Tan erlsteteene i SEK Lag be nd could not jze the outrages com: ve, F them mm; TO} in land. acouse the a1 racy. It ances where mone, i pol a | Ladencecataened the lottes netlon «Sot ecea ince | in thetr attempta to fasten the cares of slavery aa, vue | nome ceupled, witnat ef mardenGr T. have setiere®: | inteetote the searleciarm ohiehna! cals ceseeet la wedi. | berm forwacted to tte, rightial. ommets bes tn omwe ment of napkins)—if you leave all these effete roies to | jetter-notice was then sent, as is customary, to the people there. much, mentally and bodily, ty, my confinement; cir- ible for the disasters which have stricken the En- | cases his endeavors to return the pro; have from the ¢ speaker gave the audience s history of the politicy | eumstances have had muc! in making me impro- eS with the promulgation of these principles, | jented at the valuable delivery’window, the letter iteeif | of the new Territory, commencing with the attempt ly understood. No innosent man put upon trial can me fusionists, no democrat delivered, and the receipt signed “ W. W. Mitcheli ’ | made by Senator Atchison im Congress to cause a slavery Be cortain of acquittal, He labors under great disad. mo whigs, can break down, sueh principles; but {bey wit all be obliged | ‘the name of the person to whom the Ietter had been ad- | clause to be engrafted in the Nebraske bill, wad ciosing Tantoges | & thoussnd from mg pres oo ocd cfemigerg Money hh Oho ig . Nothing hes equalled the bitter humMiation | various causes, proved inkfsctual. fl Seated at the raleable delivery" wtadcv, the letter ire Thien te, English people’ us expericuced from the | have now in ovr’ porcession letter written by W. See dear tel gies edeni | ersatz tab goat, Sash hy eats e Trance, Li and the decay of its own, administration’ ‘The Soar Sivgite, Mrs. D. L. Ripenbary, Danville, Warren tions which have epraeg, from the Committee of me N.Y. This have come to cap irritation, and it is very doubtful | the mill among a quantity of waste from the New to-day whether a simple administrative reform will suf | York Post Office, Mr. R. was written in relation to Momlar, sepsetment: might teotea ont. some: | {500 as Win’ or fneescmssother onus) v0 euaiet” Beet or rome o a he urbe tele = ¥ 7 rate noth Tuas beon heard frou hina. is them hem down, But ith b: iption of the doings of the Mi thiough the world in the publi iste. ia hie ro, But you | dressed, with a grapbic descripti ie ol asourl | sprea wor! public prints. ave suffered from one Virginia map, (Mr. Wise) | “Several days afterwards, S. H. Hite called for the | mob st Parkville, with which the public have been made call, shat ou achance to meet the unfavorable ou gone on the promulgation of those | yalnable let ‘Of course, no one engaged in the mul- | !amfliar—the threats of the same mob to’ tear down the | suspicions with the antido‘e, he is borne down by the: inciplen there—for Virginians hold to everything | tifsrious duties of the office could remember anything | Union Hotel on the 1dth of April, because a large num. | prejudices which have taken on of the pal guar, tte for the Preven deny .) pf the A eoncerning it, but or refe: ring to the seceipts for valua- | ber Seen sen etene Sees (oad _ — — a Sat tie oe “ed ret panpnicn, Se is @ ane. now their sorte .) wrence AD a ie yo reof to vi he ee] we ismaa’” and all sorte of principles have been imputed to | Ve a Pa for this letter was found filed in | HPon ant fore}: Jae Tentroyed By the Jenene Se on eo your there, and a winded, bold, bh ‘With regard to the d th of Mr. MoOres at the hands ced it by fhe ccerent We vomptent he ireveat rae ‘The Jover'a mivaivee, y which so much care , blus 7 ‘ leath of Mr. a ronoun mes monster, ene, 0 curren’ @ univ ex] Zee tan boon allowed to-go through, the State aun d al suture appended to the foscipt was tot wehisa by Lig, | of theRey ir, Clark, he seid there was no doubt but | Rrordererblack, blacker, bckest ef the guilty’ | Dhich accompanied the fell of the last udministretion, | and pains have been expended, ate here foond among the the mountains and valleys, without any body arter him. | a4 he averred that some one had forged hie name, ” | it was s homicide committed in self-defence. What right had they te say what I intended | it was a general rout (sauve qui peut), One man, Lord | cast-off rubbish received from the Post Offi I tell you, now, whenever the devil is about you must To this it was amawered that no one im the office knew The excuse given for the lawless acts committed by the | to gain by killi ‘teon? = Man’s mind and }, was borne into power by & sort of a have an angel after him. Jee one Sam is a very | either his identity or his signature, and that it was im. | MOD, was that the editors of the paper were abolition- | intent are 9 man cen know them, ‘est hope in him; he Was sur- it fellow: heis » very mighty myth, but he is only a possible in an office to whic! the whole world had secess | ists. This he denied. It was because they could not Alter speaking twenty minutes he took a sip of wine ani popularity; he had the repu- and does not speak: he has not a tongue: he cau- | to verify the signature of every applicant for a letter, | control the centiment of the paper—because their inde- | rested little, and asked the Sheriff if he was too long , mach initiative skill, = the stump: he is a greac spirit, & noble spirit: | vajnable or not, or to know the identity of each a pendent course stood ‘betwixt the wind and Atchison’s | for his patience, and being assured that he was not, aD ad ugh arrived at hie se- but he unembodied spirit. You want a spirit . | nobility.”’ Because they would not ‘bend ths pregnant | went on: venty second year, he was looked as the represeu- which has a tongue—which oan embody words and | Svery Perea who migheapely for 4 letter. | It was pro- | Moves cf the knee that thriit, might follow faratee'— | “Thad hoped tobare spared you this deplorab‘e scene, 4 England. It was betieved that he would thoughts and actions, And if your prinsiples were aoe Powe t, in the hepe that the depredator, by ap- | for thrift was promised their reward if they would bend. | Next to the regret that I cannot spare my wife and has nothing. It was be- | are y fore proclaimed before all the people of the plying pres ) might be caught. t So bard did they try to fill ail aon with men who | child this shame, is that! leave them in a Jand of stran- ig resolutely to give the final stroke LM nited States, South and North, the people of the | ? to {his plan Le ‘but onthe next day be pre- | Would be faithful to their cause, that all whichgwas re- | gers, destitute and almost friendless. I should be gid of monopoly and ef routine; and they were in 5 sorth will make nigger of you if they cam, and in the | sented at Tae wndvalle window the identical reseipt tras | quired of a candidate for « teachor of one of the schools | to unfold to you the feeling that aman entertains on the | under his wegin the 014 abuses have flourished and ‘have | were packed off to our reoeptadie for waste * Gouth they will white-wash {gu ABd make you all white, | prepared, and the strength of it, demanded his there, wan that he should be able to parse the following | threccold of death: but Lam not master of words to ex: | blecued mete than ever. He in wow 6 lows up” maa | which is in trath a dead letter office on no small scale. — white, and ghost-like white—paigg than a | jetter with 3500 RR, threatening to bring suit for the | #entence—'Perk’s and Patterson’s press was thrown | press them. At 1 copfess that I have felt hu- | (un homme fini), His was an {illusion of which we, for Those letters contsiving money are seemingly ef more @hoat. (Laughter.) “In some parts of coantry | ameunt if it were not forthcoming, which threat he put | into the river on Saturday.” miliated and depressed; at o' ) bitter and vindioative; | our part, have never been the dupe; but it was méeces- | consequence than the others, but in fact they are of less. x gust be ‘an internal improvement man; | into effect, by commensing ctvil proce ainst me ‘The speaker was particularly severe upon Senator | soured, Ad long and oppressive imprisonment, toward | rary for bim to have the lest [, and now it is afl over | reel value than the numerous ‘home letters’’ ae saetraker tke, country they hold all that | im the honorable the Third Dis ont ‘New Or. | Atchison, and to his influence attributed all the out. 1d, Phace atter phase of one’s life appears im | with him. by anxious resatives and friends, communicating intelli- Ps goes ‘ and so on. Now, lot them talk of | jeans, His suit, though brought more than s year ago, | Tageous doings which bad been committed. He believed | different and chang! ts; and the peculiar eondition If it were only the fall of man, evil would not ord of great importance, and in many instances re- hogar’ Cog ings. Ihave laid out a chart of what! | hes never been ‘brought toa trial; yet no one connected | thatif the people of Missouri were called upon to ex. | of being shut out of ht of day, the free air and | te great; but fo him who bas ibis to follow the | ferring fo sickness and other misfortunes. Who can ss = Principles. Those professions and | with it will say that I have interposed the smaflest ob- 8 their unbiassed views with regard to these men | the copversation of the world, has its unnatural and | progress of events it is clear that Parliament | estimate in collars and cents the trouble, ond Lap agate A ve been discussed for | Heetion to a trisl, as can be scen by reterence t0 the ey vould emphatically denounce thelr ¢ou ree, warping influence upon the thonghts. I have studied | {sas ‘mea up’ as the Prime , There is @ | ditsppcintment which have thus beem caused by the tty years, And are likely to be disoussed ior fifty years | Iecords of the court, sident Pierce wae censured ‘for not acting in the | my th , created my own hy, striven after | striking similarity between the Honse of Commons of ne coreleseness (not to use a stronger term) of oar Fee +4 ‘ne Just wi = on’, Ko all After the “Hanson” affair, this was commenesd; m —, and Fan : vGeisunaieotie cen fe * trath; but } ad iene § Ci faten i Pa not un- | this ao our bag nee ime wy! of my Gane Office officlals ? things iticians, yar Am*- fect ute jo uble. continued a eerstood. ionest man will Aa: wi rou mot, | cluse of its career, w already Ansera! w' sous potmbiptoe., (h.votes-—Uhan in Fight.”"5 5S aan ng | Stroes open the forex Raving tenes proce cn Ape see, some Tenet fon the apathy of the President in relation | if Besston fell aud killed himeelf 46 the bridges go tm: | oeese replace it wanmamed by the oountry. Neither | Voy.on OVER Tam Panis or Sr, Many ON A is abolitionist-— never have beea—I never cin be; { haye | #24 that upon the latter upon the 7 . | to ot, and closed by exh the people of | meciately and tell of it?’ Ab, thereiswhere the circum | the government nor the parliament have ay it | Drevce —The Lake Superior Jowrnal of the 24th ult. 0 respoch whaterar toe theit principles or organisation; | finn the whole prommedinne wasted tate carlos ae te. | New So'emigrate v0 tho Kansus farsitzcy; toca: | nianers “Ghat, euvirosed inet my’ Siete nena to | eee nba cue ee ell’ the: Kinsley ace and sound upon ‘principles, aud pienat Skt | fore'the members of the Grand Jury im as the | towns there, and centralize It was the only way to | priron, my Biackened character, flashed scross form or ich; it te true they have « very aristooratic Anue srincipien T Un ete 'tes ren fe cay law requires, and where my presence fs forbidden, eeoue the gountry from the, dominion of slaveholders, A, determined in what I did I se of Com- Iandy—the gout. On the other side, the per baok gout. Ife who were fant flocking in and making their towns power- | # ith of duty, » | mons hardly sits, and tor some time contents iteelf himself before I took © man as owndidate who came fron a cans potlie te sa ir Toe Bete ee oetinies. | ful tu election on pyeaks of in that good proverb, ‘‘a good mame? °. ‘ ‘ite sessions only to adjoura, because they Tammany Hall, halt born, half naturalized, half organizes, | \* to ad He alla stron f ” with cpesing ‘ute ' , ig terme of praise to the New jood mame is better than riches.’’ Ah, how true! So | have rots quorum. 4nd movement ars withdrawn Bienen ete eerie ini: Gaa't SP. | tail and partial hearing of both siden. s”** “" | iond Emigrant Aid octety, and advised the pecpie to | fovg os your geod name ts yours, {t willbe a rook of de- | from it; it feels {tnelf near ‘ dirsolut'on and afords the nautnn to tok ave tee Réeras er eo conn W. G@. KENDA‘, rally to ite support. With reference to a statement | fence egainst @ thousand assailants, and without it a | spectacle thercof iu advance. Ail of its members who history atthe 1 bave hi ‘pelaeed 4 wold for enone meade in one of the papers that he had ‘‘come to invade | single man shall put you to flight, tlemen, Iagsnre | ore still endowed with any animation are Fy bo a man beeatse he wes an abolitionist; but if ho wii Supreme Court=General Term. went masse tavertignte ato sho wuiscre ef tie Ree Ainponit\ enue cae Wubee hiv tatteme hoe preslattony: fapain te Up bones fs eee er anes ae Siena en 5 0 ch, Chief Jaa c.ty was a e 8 8} 01 one whose life from eruel acta. wu 5 say, over thotr heads 61 agree to keep bolitionitm just where he Keeps his | On the bench, Chie Justice ee Campbell, | England Emigrant ety, whieh he bad found very | camnot help exprersing my heartfelt a tion of ail | out of ibe wincows, so that chats’ words may fall on the national repre- internal improvements—(a broad grin, followed by ge- Borworth, slosson and 1 £ landable ones, and to collect funds sufficient to purchase pon hae ier}. whore oe leet Ge ane THE SCHUYLER FRAUDS. the materiais for a new paper which be intended 'o pub- al with me, To my co Me. Gos, 1 “ his tenn Jone 2—The argument in the case of the New York | Jish in — #0 that he might again ‘‘carry the war | murt award Specie heart, which is soeoenet? i " t aad New Haven Railroad Company against some two or My chin win vbcinaieh and for Mr. Griswold I must say that his splen ha applauded at different | in my defence, cool, uent joal, astonished me, three hundred holders of alleged fraudulently Issued | points in bis address, and sat Gown amid the most un- | by showing how masterly he Sod cepenant my festings the kindness } have ex, nced at the country—so much do they feel that pe ee ise pre represents the m. very TEsog eH, f,and avoat to q fore, e let go; Om aus went, careering sad fra may bo nl Gro cddiee'and fonm, tl she cosched ee nee ‘cossary to save the form of jvernment | below, S0t.n mene, Rineing, foes, Mie pelloes penttiae stock, was continued by Mr. George Wood oa the part of | bounded enthusiasm.” A vote of thanks was unanimous. | snd inten . I have received much kindness from | which haa, up to this time, endothe howor’ the glory til they gaincd o int of my Tt was a re the Company, who con' that wore not liable; | ly accorded him by the audience. many men of every land. There nites laying his | and the fortune of fois grove country, and which is st | quiring some nerve poop md it @ thousand times = that the issue was made the bounds of the power President of the New England Emigrant | hand on Seward’s shoulder, who, during the thirteen | this mement threatened to be swallowed up in the decay | more pee im, and js the Irteh laborers fine. a Mr. Pomeroy. eae Ter oominen that the agent alone is Ald Society, im answer tos loud call, addressed the audi- Py ies pent in the. pra) have ee on if ry ete |, the impotence of the cance of 6 ever the noted ustive of Court reserved ite decision. ence at soibe length, and the meeting ad; le Teas onable request fomily | {ter) and the destepitwde of coveriens nny PS | ee pian.” voyagers tier, and the