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THE NEW YORK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 6870. MORNING EDITION—MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1855. PRICE TWO CENTS are dead; ite ous Bi ay now to ses that thi Gecent abd Chistian burial (Goo) Tama witt use) This was all he as! but he would jed with nothing less. (Cheers again, we be confined ladel- -) ¥ ; GRAND KNOW NOTHING DEMONSTRATION | pitt Saa"Kew "work "bat the. comtinasd: agree. | solves’ Whererer"thernoct® strane? cccatea cs | Fety Teak toenties eral falton!, Coen, ge) #0 PHILADELPHIA, sions which have the fow years | ensiavement of bis imtellect follows, for if you trus: | Wé must have a part of these this or we must live | they profer it, as they a ve auch strong attach- Messre. Stoxes of Tennessce, Lirrixs: ‘orth Care- st mapa = have started thie American patrictiom like wild- | the keeping ef your soul to a given widoal, he is very » and in order to live together, womust bepesce: | ment in that’ direction, Ast Archbishop Haghee shall | lima, Rony of Mississippi, and otbers, also addreased thie ire over the country, till it has entered every hamlet | apt to command your person, But I advance from this wad respect{ul toeach other and maintain the that imterestivg O°casion (A volce—‘‘ And | branch of the meeting, which adjourned at tem o’elook, MASS MEETING IN INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, and town, county and State in our glorious Unien. | topic. Im that of which we are 4) ing, is | tutiom “ at all bwsards, and to the last extremity’? We funeral termo %.”’) Give them » rough | with nine rousing cheers for “Sam.” A pause, but not the faintest of a cheer.) | one matter about there is great ce of | of the south know your character, Pennsylvanian: i ding sheet, dig for them a deep grave, to Another meeting, compesed mainly of small boys, was ene @ causes which we have lal under have beew | opinion. IWis that which that the agitation | You have stood as’ oy Se Union In times pas tom of which no mag.tifying telescope would | organised at the southern extremity of the square, ever FETE OF THE COLORED LANTERNS. sufficient to hold us steadfast in the position which we | on the swbject of slavery shall cease, and t the | we bave. Your hi bear inspection and exa' reach, and then sing for them th'¢ song, whic! which W. C. bey Esq., presided. and speeches were aecumed twelve years ago. The character of these | existing legisintion on the subject aball’ be maintained | mation. We like your oonear: We are in intimate re- Rattle bis bonce, mace by Mesers. Wilmer of tar Nand, Stewart of Als. ee causes has scarcely to tb: hap Age ‘understood in the | for the purposes of peace. lations of trade wit® you. We are tributary to your bt the stones— bema, McCall of Texas, Bolder of Virginia, others; | The Platform and Catholic Disabilities. | “ze* Petts of our nation. It has been my glorious | | (Hore another Council advanced with music, laa- | merchants and maniVacturers—te your workshops aud Whi Seeks, {Langhter.) but as two orators held forth'tromjthis at the same 5 vilege, within the last ten weeks, to have paaied | terns, and a Denner surmounted by & Fez cap | mechanics. We sympathize with all your industrial | Fellow: citizens— 1 must not detain you, Iregret that | time, it was quite imporsible to make aay record of = ip crowds of our American sountrymen and addronis’ | nubjeor Tai aet agony t ask you to ay that slavery | forthe Tatars” Med irre hess noe nee HeeeEA | Lcannot be heard by thoes who stow ‘an aaxiety to | ‘elf eloquence, 2 2 am . THE ELEMENTS DECIDEDLY UNPROPITIOUS, | them on this subject; and nave gemerally found whore- | isa good Inmttution tn the abstract, Far trom 607% | coated tnt tad sec felts OF TES ween thls couse: | ear what I aay. (Fheve persons ai gouve off long far (rom it. I | crated spot, and under t Ve folde of the stars and atr - . “y- peel ever | have the original cause of American aa- | am a going to leave you to your own opinions on {t— | tat we wil conquer in tit erent and mabister | of%s(2,conesaueneeet the ral (on chee Reg Pomona t ARRIVAL OF THE CAHAWBA. own glorious c sociations bas not been and sufficien’ ood. | you have a right to them. But it is an institution h in the effort, (Ch.vers and cries of * Agreed.’’) ee See ERSTE Speeches of Messrs. Broome, of Pa; Brown, of | ‘The tyrannical scenes of Reowngten wore ontirely un: | which has always existed in some Stuten of thie Union, | {ft isto it,in it, carton waight | Sut, 00 seine 208 injaation, and that I should net be Tenn.; Mallory, of N.Y. ; Bowling, of Ya, ry, ee indignities to tho star-spangiod | It has oom down te tbem from antiquity It imate: [:aeeed try to turn inca oat Errore doing myselt justize, ‘tt attempted to prolong th we re- | Two Days Later from Havana—Interesting ” ’ je Bey , " ippl'upstreaur ss tocheck | marks, But one thisg I must say im regard to th: reso banner on that cecasion, and the death of Shiffler, of | come, whether er this current of American feeling. American feol ptt wwoulne, that | C™BAn Correspondence—The Latest Com= a PAR Pos Wright, Cox, Bamsey ‘oa tant cocuston, wore | apitekicn, whieh fe dasee anion. just thiok of it, “Tell it to veur wives: telit to yee | ution reed in your hearin Te eee esa ius.w in | Merelal Intelligence. matters of re to thousands of our countrymen, who, ther in ewer thearts— (laughter) your boys—that | every line, r+ | ailable, and letter, Will you not do it’ Tre steamship Cahawba, Captain R. W. Shufelit, from the moment they heard of it, and the source from whence these interruptions in the path of American free- men hed sprung, immediately disrupted the ties which bound them to parties, and rallied, like soms of the soil —wortby sons of noble sires—around their glorious ban- ner, to stand for the liberties of their country, its consti- that owe lancet» om " . E youreountry: that yon intend to-stama faite on Fe ee eer ae Te ier aaah: | Havana to report. tutlon ana ita union forever, | (A faint cheer ) I have yo i aye shail db ‘whether docige suger martot active preagrs me 1e4 = ara ideation Pewee eo eri re pence, pence. For ’@ sake | cheers.) governed by wana you to say” you wil it The was at high ‘bet —tell it to noble young guard, Moo: when we have passed tho , vit 7 Hay.eC all 'earth, arto ake” ourplaess att advocats | (Fihererasiudrn, in Merion bane tae oatn we | Nev Oreaas June 7 sad Havane 12, arzived yesterday country’s cause. Pitch indo this mighty curre h We will”) What are these reso | ™°FPing. Her dates from the latter place are twe days aed Pry it in its pure waters: Proclstm every- | lutions? What is the spirit of the whole of them? Itis { later then received by the steamer Isabel at Charlesten. ona a dag a up tiiat yowsre an Ameri: | ai! concentrated in this familiar expression which you The Cahawba has nothing of » political nature from ‘The grand finale of the proceedings of the National ly mow, or whether you will decide it by the | fr vights falling. There American through our vast ard extensive country, There is no | peace on uestion. (Applause and | Ex-Governor Brown then retired, 2ad Mr. Rayner was j when onvte: ty? ee om feodign Giticulty to be apprehended. “We have but one object | cheers.) Ts that asking eo a loudly eslled for. bs gor of “Gathollcint sual Revs Tetoaead weviar | mew of war in the harbor, in view, and that object free from all isms of every | “No,””), Then if you hear it sald this is a prowlnvery | | Dr. Gro. G. Weer came forwsrd abd announcod that | Tough shod over the liberties of the country. Ti\e health of New Orleans and Havana continues re- kind, It is to show ourselves worthy of the high cond Platform, Ideny it On comstivutional grounds, and on | Mr. Reyner had not yet arrived, but wes expe:ted to be [lore am olf maggoty best tongue was thrown. up to | mark wbly good for the ressea of the dence reposed in us by the fathers of this country, with Tite pré-alarety im the course of the evening, othen read the | the speaker, from some person im the audience, with the , Lege revolutionary rages and heroes, who established the ilber- Ei It fo @ national plat- cmp) ror We and reeolutions, which were nmani- | expisnation that that was Wise’s lousy tongue | The C. had a very pleasant pasmge, and brings 168 ties of this country, and handed them down to us in institution, whether | movaly = ie. Mattony—ttis decidedly slong tongue, buy tome it | passengers. Our thanks are due the purser for files of trust, to be handed down to our posterity. Thatis the only rafted on the Southern States. Leave Whi does not look like s very wise tongue; and as Wise has | Havana papers and other favors iting area ax tas hay ate So be aad mi Pome hates pegieametienrens aan a= om it by Henry A. Wise, of Virginia, who has te, and inevery State of inet, commend itself to all | Pom thet whieh I Lave peter ae net eee @UR HAVANA 001 ce. AMERICAN MASS MEETING been the most noisy in his wholesale abuse of American | thie glorious Union. Union belongs to oes it tinotly ‘onnet ocd ohonld sects | beemsaid, You have seen already much discussion in Havana, Jume 10, 1956. te St and has turned his back upon the instita bean pe Me | Kes o%, and every foot of its soil in the American citizens who havo to-night | the journals of the country in respect to the platform | Eyfecis of the Siege-Baising Proclamation—Our War FREEDOM’S BIRTHPLAC ‘the country \which gave him birth: who can | racred. This Union was founded om compromise and | as: in mass meeting, inasmuch as tho: Monee adopted by the great Ameriean party of these United T i Tux Faienbe ov Crit axp Retiarovs Linenry countrymen rallying around, thelr Ibertieg for | conciliation; otherwise it never could have been | sovereignty of the Torritories, and a determiantion to vus- | States, That platierm, ag I have sald, and the resolu. | "etselt and Treaty Sipulations—The Late Nationa’ ou in the aleine of the Stato and uation will wee OM | the eake of their posterity without Tevognising that | adopted The institution of | slavery existed at | tain he union of the States and our glorious comstivutign | tions which I lave, hoard, read, Tensorve. to the fattest | nsulls—Cuds’s Past and Future—What the U. ‘ASSEMBLE IN Mass Meeting their motives were patriotic, whatever may be the er- | the time; it was recognized ‘ben it hes | *"Rerolved, That we heartily of the platform made | @xtemt. I can say here with my brother and friend from Government Wanis. ATINDEPENDE rors of the head: and who would tize ani | continued to exist till this day, amd I tell you, | ty the deleg to the Al ati Convention; | Tennessee (Governor Brown) that I am no apologist of 1 ive by tHe Hxray of the 24 is On Sarunpay Ev: ‘ume 16, silof us, my friends, by the, beautiful epithets of | ass Southern man, that it has from year to year Bat we will give ite princ ‘sadunanimous sup: | slavery. Iwas not nurtured in a school whove tendencies | _ J Perceive by tHe Hxnaty o} natant tint seer For the purpot ot eeele. barred 01 : | Jousy,”” ‘*Joathsome,’? ‘‘filthy,’? ‘* Godiesa,’’ | meliorated in ita chavacter. “1 speak what! do know.’’ pert because the doctrines they assert are republican im | would be to make me have a very favorable idea of that | attentive correspondent ‘D,,” under date of May 22, has Pas Masonry hy hm Keo agate J chnstloss, tnd “immoral.” (A laugh.) | When | I'sm no ultra man, I never made a sproch om the sub- | their character, and in accordance with the spirit of the Con: | ingtitution, and of the relations of master and slave as | advised you of the fact that ‘‘wo are quiet by preclema- dudertay Geaae ane American statermen resort to such wholesale abuse of | ject of slavery, and never listened to one am hour. I | stitullenet the United Stale oe ats in fifteen of the States of the Union. But thet | tion, and are going to work #0 pay, up for the indulgence ™ the men of this lani, who have, ave always ‘felt that it wasa dangerous subject for my Sel Bry Coed the question now before us. There ts ot an in- p ¥,UP American Procress. bosom, [suiting the action tothe word and smiting | this¢ountry to agitate, and therefore it has been with Altered as to require of ail foreigners | telligent men now before me who will pretend that we | of ® state of war enjoyed without persoral danger or the Addresses will be delivered by himself oa the breact,) the moral courage to stand up | me forbidden fruit. years betore they are per- | bave amy control over slavery in the States of this | show of an enemy.’’ This is a greatly to be desired B. Bartlet Ke like men to uphold the glorious fabric of our freedom— | Here the epeaker was interrupted for some moments i franchise ; but we distinotly | Union. It is a local institution—one for which the Ro when such men as these, I shall rije into power the arrival upon the ground,of the ‘‘Americana’’ of | declare that it is not our desire to ioterfere with the vested state of affairs, and we certainly have great cause of re- on the popular voice, there is ai odorwhich admonishes Sixth wares with Ubscers, Taualc, transparencies and | THbts of any citisen, ox throw any obstruction in the way of | Stow’ tuner: What’ sitecous tne ta gia ‘fae | ‘oicing that the supreme authority has ofially pro. us that, unless corrected, these institutions cannot | so forth. The devices and mottoes on these banners and | f0relmners. who desire to obtain s livelihood er acquire pro- | Shor tlarery What orlect it the refer tothe | claimed ‘that the atate of siege is raised in all the ter- ty in this country. ¢ much lopger endure. Therefore, the noble work of | transparencies exbibited more originality and drotlery | *} a thi Amaricens is to redeem-—{intesrupted by. sky Tookste, | than wore manifested on Anase treviocely daccrived, | roe’ esa hance tela thas all the oMtaes under the | latory of the Tea ey bea See tere ee varias Chinese crackers, and other feux d’ artifice|—to re- | ne banner bore a likeness of We mn, another that | native hora cilizens, and that none otner ought to be por- | agitation has resulted in nothing but wrong. wrong con. | TAY? a# also the blockade of its coast amd shore deem the character of our country from what must be | of a red veated, highly colored indivic who bore the bre eseectieg teseed an) way Participate ta sdminister. toually, to the master and to the slave. The situation waters, decreed in my (his) proctamation of the 12th ef ecotuon nh 1 ast het ont Feansprann wil | gioeinarie Yanks wiht prea braamed wuts | gic aeararaarorese yaations, cmcand, | theca Mors voy nat an hes Ae ag | Perunry ofthis yur.” " wor of the large t wi lave as wellas | ritory of the Island of Cuba, its inlets and adjacent berty ot opinion upon | tiom commenced twenty or twenty-five years forever matt years ago, Bat, be the first—as you were the first in this glorious move- | bat, long coat, striped pants, and tremendous watch- yus topics, and that we ain in- | fellow Americans, if I were a resid sh ot That proclamation raised the very devil on the istaad ment—in tho glorious work to redeom the character of | ribton: while ‘scoompanying theee was au allegorical re. | +1 Goobrine shat all men Maryland or of the State of Svinemtnr ore th Stats or | end Geowheré.’ Te pevatzated busseancat, dertemehall the American sseociations throughout cenens eee entation of Columbia, pointing to the stars above her right to worship their Cros Tennessee, I might appeal to my feilow eitizens, and use | confidence—it prostrated all energy, and produced ew that the rest of the States of our Union may foliow in and exclaiming:— C arguments in their heartog which might induce them it 1 your wake. (Faint cheers.) those are my jewels. to act in regard fo this matter, they heviog the power | Sundance of alarm. Elsowhere it rained a devil of @ coins four vice: pepsidents were then rd pa Then there was still another portrait of a h pennies and the right to do so, But would it not 5 wi of | dander. It mace Jonathan mad, because it implied am At this stage of proceedings their sol ity was | Yankee, with pants six inches too short for him, and words for me to stand before them, Northern asI am, | intenfion to search vessels legally ‘sailing’? on the high seas on any of the coasts of Cuba, In fact, it was dome— first, by cracking away at the steamer El Dorado, aad is. | next at the brig Hichborn. Both of these acts wore. m0) nt lightened by the advent of the “‘Amerisans of the Ninth | holding’ by the throat with triumphant gesture, a roos- edience to his farewa ition, will ‘indig- i md and Tenth wards,” who ‘marched into the square with | ter in ene hand and e racoon in the other: and another, | rantly frown upon the frst dawning of every attempt fo | SEG Ceilver a speech for the purpote of persuading them the usual accompaniments of music, flags, banners and | wherein the same hg comme eae of Yankeedom appear: | siienste any portion of our country from the rott. of to | saves? Whatiwould all that avail? You are Penasyl lanterns, and amidst the circharge of fire rockets, Chi- of Griving scar of liberty at amost tremendous pace, | Sargip the sacred ties which now bind together the various | Dit’ sot or you reside in the city of Philadelp! be : y the motto: rae . nese crackers, squibs, and every sposies of saltpetre eon td Dotendto Mata (Kbirstna: conetolyed Thee, ss, Fmt Faveon 4 hee cone I reside in the city of New York. We have ft gommon | dagrant outrages against the United States, and positive - | invention. The scene became at once extremely pictur- inte ren of the South; and is it part ‘ tn tie evening huge comnfbuses Glled with maal- | invention, The axmne became at cate of ly pistor, | These earicavures caused great fun. t law—that we. will (preervo it at a ha | of wice men to get op quarrels io oot ong fault’ nan, | violations of treaty stipulations. Bians, and gayly§ decked out with flags, banners and b’boys, the illumination under the ‘old trees, the ‘The Sevemth ward had o barrel-shaped transparency, circumstances, believing that its w turb the d harmony of this Union, and try ti As f le, and icularly some : with the mottoes obey 6 at 6p Deac people, and parti mevy devices, passed through the strests, attracting con- | duicbnige of rockets, the grotonque appearance of ith the mOttoen i going, Te area etee ctoatins AUS Of | Gleraptithe ties of thls coafederscy, whereby if wo | oficers, hold the deoteme that a. vessel. of wes has than siderable attention, and inviting, by means of announce- | transparencies, and waying to and fro of some six And ev. Sf, 9G ardian of the rights of each individual citizen triumphed that triumph would be an inglorious one? ht 1 a0 bh ive au extake’ fbae oe ‘hich sents painted on large strips of canvas, the Americans | OF #even thousand epectators, all *F made UP & | Public education the only aafoguard of republican liberty, | #8 °f the sovereign States composing the American Union. | There are many things would like to say €0 you on this right, I will here give an ex m the treaty, w! OC such and euch ® ward to meet at such and sach 0 | Srundtaviesex. | The banner bore by the Teath ward, Fourte bore s tranrparency exhibiting | Mr. S. V.P.Matuony, of New York, was then intro- | occasion, but I must leave you; and I have this consola. | is before me, vis: ‘Article 18th, Treaty of 1796— fourteenth war and placed upon the principal platform, was that which | she coleful history of “the three wise men who went to | duced, and received with applause. Ho ssid: Friends | tion in cutting short my remarks without concluding | 1¢ the shipsof the anid subjects, place for the purpose of marching tg Independence | bad Sgur Sansom Street fall at the national ban- | sea in a bowl.” 7 and fellow Americans, before (aacrmettihedd address you | one-balf that I intended to have said—namely, that the | of oitber ot the partie: tol Hall. The organ of the party, the Datly Morning Times, quet, & few ae before, representing the po perety bip ‘When order was restored, Governor Browx continued | in regard to the resolutions that have beon read in your People of America are awake to this subject, and that | along the coasts or om the high seas, by any ship of war ” | Shiffier wrapping bimself in the stars and stripes, and | his speech. Iwas submitting, he said, a few remarks | hearing, I wish to ask you a question. Iask it for in- 'y are looking to matters which concern them very | of the ether, or by any privateer, the sald ship of war Pxhiblted in front of its office @ large transparency re- | exhibiting on unusual amount of anxiety for the pro- | on the subject of slavery, not‘for the purpose of argu, | formation, and I believe that each of you can give an | much, and over which they have control—after matters | Of ue ether, or by any ing of any disorder, shall re- presenting the city coat of arms in a somewhat modified Pesan the Bible. On some of their transparencies | ing it elaborately, but merely to pay my respecte to it er toit. I bave been often present cn occasions | which come home to themselves and their firesid out’of. cannoa shot, and send thelr boats shape, with a Continental solifer on the right, having | Were tBe following mottoes:. in passivg. Tsay that in the present state of the public | similar to this, but never before in my life have I wit- | round which they see the serpents entwining themselves. | aboard the’ mercbant ship which they shall so meet the date ‘1776 over his head, and on the other sidean | 6 °° °° 9999 999099090009000000 @ | mind it bas become a subject of mere agitation, and I | nessed auch a scene as I now behold, and the question I | (A voice, ‘They cannot.”) They see their prisons, their | with, and may enter her the number of two or three eople, or inhabit hall be ot with, elther pared | } | | 2 . ‘THE TRNTH NEVER SURRENDERS. ‘© | Would to God that this agitation could be buried so | wish to put to you is simply this—is this “Sam?” Penitentiaries, their almshouses filled with foreigners | men only, to whom the master or commander of such llegorical figure intended to represent the mighty | ° FREE SCHOOLS AND YOUNG AMERICA, © | deep that the hand of resurrection could never reach it, (Tre jous shouts of “yes, yes.’’) and Roman Catholics, which your money and my money | ship or vessel shall exhibit his passports, concerning “Sam,” surmounted by the date 1855.” A muscular | 9 NO FUSION EXCEPT WITH AMRRICANS. 5 y tains. These are sent here, criminels and paupers 88 | the p y of the ship, made out according to the form (Cries of ‘Good, good.’’) I wish to appeal to the A Voicze—"‘No, it am Jim.” ( bea, Med one them, are pee im favor hand emerging from @ dack cloud in the background, | 90000000 ecco oe cco CCC CeO CS | Feople now assem ot keeping up or aiding in this everlasting agitation or holding » tight grip of a writhing serpent, completed | ,, The, Chairman, then introduced to the meeting Mr | cot? (“Nor ao.”) ‘there ate, 1 know, in the extreme ‘the pieture. nessee, who, in the midst of a drenching rain, and with | Portions of this Union some who live But about five e’clock the gathering and blackening | the Chairman holding am umbrella over him, addressed | Who mate it the sole creed of their polit If it is, he is certainly a very nu- | » because they are not worthy of a place under | inserted in this present treaty; and the ship, when ughter), and for one ~ young, he | the monarchies of the Old World. I now leave thismat- | shall bave owe such peaspats, shall be free, and very intelligent boy. I see, gentlemen, | ter with you. tis not necessary for me to ask you to | liberty to pursue her voyage, so as it shall net that you have the true spirit of Amorisans in your | come to the rescue, because when! look around and see | jawful to molest or give her chase ia any maneer, hearts; [know it is unpleasant both for speakers and | this bost of American citizens—I cannot count or num- | force her to quit her intended course.” age! Pes to know what will Pennsylvavians gain by throwing | bearers to be standing here in this drenching rain, but, | ber them only by acres, and ! suppose there are sixteen | From this extract you perceive the authority of Cubs, cloud gave portentous indications of an approsching | the meeting as follows — |) | themeclven, into” am agitetion like “het, and avout | for ove, American asi am, Idecicedly preter thie rain | or seventeen ‘acres here to-nigut. (Applause.) You by waking this provamation and giving to the gtorm, Shortly after, thunder began to roll, the cloud | whole Pecile on ibe State of the Union. Iknow not | What? Why, as to whether the Missouri compro. | to the of Roman Catholicism in this country. | are coming, fellow Americans, with a tremendous power | naval commanders to coincide with such a emitting vivid Mashes of Ughtaing and » most copious | how I shall perform the part assigned me, to address you | mise line aball be restored. Sirs, if we were to | (Cheers) I, asan American citizen, prefer this rain or | and force: jou are coming— has in the two instances mentioned posit viola under such’ circumstances. There is an eloquence in | begin that work to-day, it would take five yours to ac. | sny other rain in this country to the reign of foregniam. | As the winds coms when torosts are ronded, treaty. Ihave no doubt it would have continued supply of rain. The storm, however, soom passed over, | fiter svat cubly, in the manifestation of itsentuan, | complish it. In the precent condition of the Senate, (Henewed cheers.) Igo for America first, last and always; | You are come as the waves come when navies are stranded. | not the United States goverament made the little heatile though it was quite apparent ite cessation was bu | so in these banners, these devices—these high tones | Measure for that purpose would be rejected. And what 0 for America first and ‘‘Sam’’ next. (Serpe And I tell you you wiil hear their voices when they | demonstration it has, in sending out the Sen Jaciate, temporary. With the usual mysterlousness of th | of deep tontimest—much higher than Ican ‘anpire to, | would you even if you could restore that lime | laughter.) I have been going for yearanda hal(pastfor | have the privilege of speaking at the ballot-box—a voice | Princeton, Fulton, and Jamestown, with such orders as ‘What means this vast movement—this outpouring of | Nothing. Kaneas and Nebraska will be free Statesac | fam first, last srgalwaye; and Iesk him now, ashe las | which comes down were given to their commanders. 'Thia little fleet has Petes, sce wan 50, hor same’, for Se PeemeRO et Tuer ae ESGidsbint Kee Bais. Oot te bsee cording to the laws of nature, (Faint cheers.) Bu | throttled both the old parties, and has them in his deen often laughed at in consequence of its meagreness, Commence. It might have been at 6 o’clock, at 8, ora: | Dincinies of this great American movement discussed | they ssy tbat when those 7 knock for admis. | clutches, to stand back and let America speak for a time. Wh but those ‘who la yh should remember that it has oftem 10, fer all the information that could be obtained there | before you. And what means this great American | *i0n into the Union, they will refuse to admit them if | (Cheers.) 1 do not know that I ought to speak of whig- As lightning does the will deen said that Spain was a weak goverament, and the . > tot the nd movement? Is it the work of ‘tactics ?—ia it the | they bave s clause in their constitution aliowixg | gery orcemc now, for I have taught that it Mr. Boutina, of Va., was next introiuced, and in | United States were alwa: ing at her on account of pf. At 7} e’clock our reporters were on the grou: production of party demagogues, for the purpose of | ‘Very. Suppore those people in Kansas—those | not eae unkindly of the departed. We should | despite of the torrents of rain, whish thinned the assem- | Cuba; it was, therefore, [have no doubt advise and found then assembled some fifty curious spectators. Faising a platform to reach power and office in this great | brave and \y. pioneers of the West—should | tread lightl; all times on the ashes of the dead. Now bigge avd blurred the reporter's notes, said: ble to send a small force sgainst such a weak government corey choose to put such a clause into their conatita | if there isanything in the ides you have presented on iy Brethren—Speaking on this occasion {a well nigh | hence the few ahi me Seah: ae Fey erncapeeles cippenaesirarm tember mitre: og Ee ag ot party Ine Gre presented itself steniter | tom, 004, under (hone circumstances, should come up- | your banners (pointing to one of the transparencies | vain. It is the rst time in my life that have fuldlled | Spain end'her silfes say ct feat thisie val, te the handsome square, the principal ing rig’ Ie ite outline 6 that called tha American arty. You | ‘‘clad in the weecs of the wilderness,’ and knock att of the Sixth ward described above) one oie young and | an invitation to speak to my brethren in another State. | some of them very heavy. ‘the ship that fired at the HA Be Cho veer of | edepnadenee: EMD) (Re wineey ee 1 le ae | your old , Our whig and your demo- qeslasting SON eae Gee COL tine alae tat rotrent | Leattrcettees ore it aaa Se iiaughter.) The Sank borniphay eat | rtd por deat oop ka aa nents tana | inet nee e oul lke to have toon the tral. men, women 4 jar at they could not live alone and confron ell you they are aers, ughter. -night, and I sa; a one-half was never either; but iy. I should like to have seen. a Ri) HEN cope met ny ey and children, | cratic parties; and cee are saecit, ZBOy | sho savages and the beasts of the forest; would 1¢ not | isa powerful boy, ami, be seems to ‘have got one of | me, ‘I donot come ere, my brethren, to praise one | really think that the little Fultoa wonld have hammered hané dene Daxiogs fo. witnons the, procoedings. pt aap Aas Crete hd ggigeee! boar ther mont unkind response to say to them, ‘Go back | them in oi ‘and the other in the other. I see | section of my country and to blame another. I come | her up so completely that by the time she mee The platforms were all decorated with the usual dis- | Posseenion of toe Witte tae pet te me has come | to the forest and the wilderness, go back among the | you represent the old parties by the emblems by which | here to suggest a thought, if I can, that may fall like | butting her—ae she would have done—you would ast play of bunting. In front of the chief platform there | frepments lie every State of this Union, from the At- | *®¥#g¢#; we never cam receive you while you have such | they were known some fifty years ago. I see that he | seed by the wayside, and grow in days tocome. I | bave been able to tell whether ahe was a fi ora formed a sort of bow of temporary jets, with lente to the Pacific; the time has come, when aliena- | & clause in your constitution,’? The constitution of | bas one of them there inthe form of an animal. I | come here to tell you think who you are, | jackass, However, the trial was not made; therefore ites ws =e pe nee tion of feel.ng, growing out of agitation North and | the United States only requires that a State shall have | recollect seeing, about 1840, a coon. Sam has got him | where ycu are, and what you are; and in order | ‘We will rot beast of what would have been done, a star in the centre, and all the stands seemed to be | oon” called “upom eve ‘triot to ground his arms, | ® Tepublican form of government. Has Tennessee a re- | by the nape of the neck, and he is in his dying sgonies. | to understand this, you must cast your back But as this part of the play is over, let us ponnected by a line of lights. Everything was done for | and’ come and kesemble on one commen theatre itis | Publican form of government? Whowilldeny it? And | In the city of Philacelphia, I know he depar is life | over many centuries, when men were staggering | and reflectingly look at what has been’ done, and sex Gisplay, but little for secommodation, there having been | the impulse of this great throbbing American heart, that | Jtt she bas s slavery clause in her constitution. | Yong time ago, but in some parts of the count: under cppression and despotism ani ecclesiastical domi- | who has been wrong. For my own part, I bot . ” native bern, bellowed testing, which bas boanted 00 cdess t that has nothing to do with the question, AllCon- | he has been nirigal ng on, with a sickly existence—haif | vation. There wai , Bo hope from | governments, have been most outrageously wro: no arrangements whatever made for the press, untU, om | fin) Sots in the hour of eibulation. ‘What do we | gters bas to do ts to see that the State applying for ad- | lite, balf death; but now it seems to me he ia a “‘goner,”’ | heaven, but all mei down-trodden, | one in giving insults and imdignities, and the other im Bn appeal to the chairman of the managing committee) | mean by the platform of which you have heard? We | mission bass republican form of Crier rage Loney if it | for fem bas got him by the neck. the slaves of kings and nd potentates. [A voice | not acting promptly and effectively at the time. If the ® small table was at length procured. Eight o’closk won thse Americans shall Tule Amerion, (Cheers.) has, then Congress is bound to admit it. Yet these A Voicr—We buried him long ago. —‘That’s so,” and cheers.) Why, my brethren, there | treaty between the two governments means anything, it mm y eatlemen say that no more Alave States shall be ad- Mr. M.— Yes, he was buried here, and now | never was one solitary ray of liberty from God’s heaven | certainly takes all power for ships of war to fire at srrived, and there was as yet no organization, and but | And why should Siitted. What do they moan by It? They mean tokeep | we ate going to bury bim, not only’ in Philadel. | that fell on man until {t fell from the front door of the “A visa uaiiee, ony, acta very fow persons on the ground; but the rain was co- | oftspring of those men who mad up this agitation for political capital. mean to | phia and io Pennsylvanis, batin New York and | building right back of me. (Bip. hip, hip, hurrah!) | * either sailing al the coasts or on the high seas;’ netting, new coming down alittle, now holding up. | Are you a palive of Philacelphia:and is there any other | Humbug and bamboozle the people of the North, and ex- | im every other State in the Union. I see he | Your fathersand my father, on the fourth day of July, | snd yet some maintain that. this alludes to a state of 9 ,. 5 syoton this green earth which you wouldexchangeforit? | cite their prejadices agaipat the prople of the South. | bas snother animal in his gripe, This two logged | 1770, caught am inspiration from God, and sald | war.’ Admit the fact; does not the treaty aay the vessel Little, and altogether acting with great eccentricity, | (ROE Oe a eTtinon) Ie not the place above all others | Every step they travel toalleniate the affections of | animal (the cock) which looks as though it wereina | that men should then be free. (Cheers.} I under- | of war ‘‘ghall remain out of gua shot,’ whilst her Quarter of an hour after, the strains of a brass band | {OSirch, omble or exalted, you would profer so, iny. | one eection cr igock cedar? vie, taeor aaeas ams | yocss one heecing of tm teoviar ta tatisans and bee | Seoe from tbe very spot wharel now stead, ifonl Gat | CboaA™ine tetteheat taeeel Eeoabely Srseea eae ce re ears ago hearing of him crowin, iné w : rd’? the merchant vesi ly canni ‘rere heard in the square, playing some foreiga ais, sad | your hones when that hour of death comes upom you— | POAT Sits nothiog to say against them; Ireapect | Chapwen used to crow for him whea he oould aot crow | lahould put ff oy shoes for I am oa holy ground. | a state of war; beccuse, iim war ots te Cemeagee ! Boon the lodge of the Fifth ward marched in with ban- On tome little lonely spot, under some modest, grove, by | 2'tcnact opinion on any subject But if thelr tuten- | himeelf——(laughter)—and I tell you, if I understand the | (Cheers.) We, the children of those moa, come here to: | no such treaty could ‘exist, If Spain and the Unit per an sparencies. The banner was placed on the | ‘e.same stream on whose banks you sported in in endo? | tion is to reads platform Te hich they can ride into | nature of hivkisdof animal, “any? bas got him foul— | night rejoicing in that glorious liberty, to bless their t war with another, the flag designates the stand, on it was inscribed the novel legend:— in ead ‘childhood? You Doala not like to ae the last | ffice, they deserve the anathamas of the whole Union. | (fowl). Now, brothers, friends, and Americans, I | memories. Their wisdom and patriotism wen it for us, of course she is permitted to oye No, COSC COC COO CC EOC CO OE BOC CCOS tle which belongs to us all in a fc 1 refer | 4 man who will do that recklessly and regardless of | tave a word or two to say to you ona subject with | and shall we be so unwise and unpatriotic as to lose it! sir; it was nothing more nor less than Spanish insolence, 8 © | to there affectioutiand influences an tke foundation et | consequences, deserves to be epguiplied in a lake of fire. | which you sre much more familiar than 1 am, yet Icam- | Seventy-eight or a hundred years hence shall some | oft repeated, as in the cares of the Crescent City, Okie, 3 VA See ed . Which is manifested | (Cries of ‘hear bim.”’) Yes, sirs, the man who will | not allow the opportunity to pass without mingling my | streggering pilgrim from Victoria’s despotism come here ter, Falcon and Lam , with the others 3 ans kee wet ch ® meet ow, think that | Zecklessly beep up an ogitation for the purpote of poli- | congratulations with yours—mingling the congratala- | to mourn amid the ruins of the olty of liberty, and to ¢ weakness of Spain, her weak- 4 borage ity af goat ° | the for ‘Bot free y ; for bis none! 7 | tical promotion, at the expense of the peace and har- | tions of American freemen of the Stateof New York with | curre us for our folly and madness? No, it | nei her from s just and Pe ceccecec ccc e0c e000 ecco 00° cage manaie wie Oak oot replanted mony of his country, deserves the curses of all time. | thore of the freemen and Americans of the State of | cannot, it will not, by God, it shall ‘not chartisement for such direct, and palpable viola of bs NO NORTH—NO SOUTH— ° lie bamotat his father? (A voice in the rich Tk (Chetrs.) Such a man ought to haveno friends, Such | Pennsylvania. It is something over thirteen yoars,I j be. (Tremendous chering-) No, in after years, when | treaty And national discourtesies. United States 4 ‘NO RAST—NO West. A Does ke tere this country like yy | ®& man deserves all the curses of the book of Job. | believe, since an effort was made in our State, under thé | we are sleeping under [the clod of the valley, yourde- | bas become led im the eyes of her own 8 ° Y Can he do it? same mnawet) I (Tavghter and cries of ‘‘ hit him again.’’) And for auch | direction and control of Archbishop Baghee, to banish | ecendants and mine sball comeup here as the Turk itis as we as every int bie Sy 0 OO ew ee CO CSCC COCO CS! | MEE athe Siena ae Oe See forcigoers | * #8 I would im precate, without profanity, that the Bible from the common schools of the country. | to Mecca, cr as the Mehometan goes to the city of his | for thus submitting to and inten! But the appearance of the Firth ward people was ut- | Tho very often show themsel¥ei vengeance of God may pursue him ever, ‘That same effort was made at the same time in the State | Proj they shall come here to your beautiful city, | insults, Had action been taken in the former case terly eclipsed in the display made by the Kighth ward. yal to this country. And the undying worm desert him nover. (bneere. of Pennsylvania, and especially in the city of Philadel- | still growing and increasing, with freemen’s hearts be ‘ retaliatory course, there would have been no ‘These came along accompanied by a band, and bearing . te, it must be acknowled, Such men, with false hearts and ambitiou: hia. I remember there waa then Y ia. found i midet, freemen’s hands, to love, tect awd save it, and ion. Had Lieut. Watson, who commanded the F' eg seen ty sd, on rsa, fea aot ont fat | tay nt po aieons nat san wcut pl | Cares aia angen ee an wines | SLM ath, gr OY Ketone ns | nt dat nt a heer at Hae hn unoum! peper lanterns or - a tra ‘to that demand the Po fi cere at are we ve ja where | maz was fred at when was no 44 among our native born citizens | down our ‘very temple of worabip, ‘You, they would | ree Ametica, 1 bush tart say i beets caer Paci | Geeta, and mber wo aces Weiaco to the cradle of | ie ane ran Gued af when there was Be gies, The latter were in all colors—red, green, bluc, yel- 4 Yow and white—and as they were moved around ‘they and to preserve the mighty alone CA tint cheer} Sentroy Its Riter and extingaish the lights’blestog'epes. | 22,5 dish ef Ewertienn Govk Gara eaceee ant | ieeiiiderts. Now het erence! (tenor tea” aed jeer would seer he Pullen go t0 ii & Fi hi E f destroy its altar and extinguish the lights blazing Americas to fro ¢ffort of ‘that liberty. Now, what are we? (Cries of “Sam” and | —viz Cardenas imparted to the scene an appearance not unlike that ie Cringe m9 Seay ‘tuhspeistaiiee on said to | it. Rect less of Cele Cog og gratify their lust ater kind which could be made by the Executive of our State. | laughter. tf ‘Are we bigots or paroosatent? Are we trai- | and ascertain the full particulars, and then cruise after which might be presented at a Chineve feast of lanterns. sais, y square e day | office, they bave ceized upon Combustible,question of | You who remember anything of the history of this mat. | tors? No, but we want to prevent the sly despots of the | the insulter and force an spology or punish his inso- or two . An Irishman went up to s negro in slavery—one that addresses itselr to the sensi of | terk 14 We th civil and religiou con: as it would y pow full well that an effort was made there, to take | ( forld, bo' from quering lence’ ould not have repeated. ‘These transparencies were ipscribed with » curious mis- | Square, and says he, “And, faith, will yo plase tll a | every good man in tre country; and this movement has | from the Common School Fund jon of itana devote | without ‘arms in our is, after we have | ‘The subject of Cuba is one of deep interest to the hese | ellany of devices and mottoes Every variety of ex- | man wl they issue naturalization papers?” | in jmp ation the «1 it to the education of Roman Catholice—to place it, not | whipped them with arms in their hands. (Cheers | American people, and that interest is increasing. Ite | pression that Sam’ could suggest was used on this | Se7# the negro, “'We Americans laughter have deter. | go not call upon you, in the hands of the common school teachers, but | aud confusion ) brethren, to. speak here tion, its government—the diMlouities which have . . fen Bot to issue any more. We have determined that | your opinions, but on! to cevote great part of it to the Roman | is all in vain. (The rain was down etotore existed—the in feelings, in by <4 Senpoetant, crcaston ;.s08 that maytbleal persconte was | you lsimmen snes be bern pre, —laughter—leaving | sou love the Union of Catholic priests, or in the language of Governor Seward, | in torrents, and there were loud cries of ‘‘Adjourn.””) | im action that it has producel ou, the present and put through his moods and tenses in a most curious and the Irishman the hard pi to solve, how he mere miserable and contemptibleagitation upcn an ab- | «to allow them to teach their own children in their own | let no dems, 8 persuade you to do anything that |{ future, demands a serious consideration by the pee- smusing manner, He appeared in all the following pos- | was to be born over again. Now, 1 will not detain you | stract question. (Cheers.) Iam saying this merely as | way and in their own language.” (A volse—“They did | would injure stability of our wane, or weaken | ple of the United States, divested of all wishes for the dures — on this problem; but sometimes {t is that itis | s matter of explanation. of get it, though.”) They afd net get 1t, and never will | the bonds of our Union—the only bope of liberty. Tel | Extension of territory, or value of the acquisition. Te ©00000800000000000000000900 rs hardship om foreigners to deprive of suffrage. a large trensparensy on the platform, belonging to the | get it in New York. The plan was to take from this | them, as Jesus Christ told the devil on the mountain, | should be viewed as s national wabject, as uw = SAMUEL IS ALL RIGHT. ° have any claim upon these be oa where they inth Ward Council, took fire at this point, and was the | common fund—which ought to be regarded as sacred, | ‘Get thou bebind me, Saten.”” (Cheers.) Support mo | hereafter asa nation. Our difficulties have for * SAMUKL 18 WIDE AWAKE. © | came trom? Pid at bome? We have given of considerable e: but the flames were | devoted to the education of the youth of our land in the | msn—vote for no man for office who is not of pure heart | » long time, and there is no doubt that is on both > SAMUEL, STAND UP. © | them an asylum, a home, a ; gentlemen, | English language and in the common schools of our | andclean hands. I know the silk stosxing, kid gloved | sides; but it is now involved in such a web, that for oar 2 SAMUEL I8 GOING TO STAND UP. © | our Jaws and constitution; and we y. ‘continued the was restored), | State, where sectarianism is never allowed to be taught, | gentry want to rule every body; but who was it grai ‘and future the should 4 SAMUEL HAS STOOD UP. © | shall not vote, that they cannot hold office, that we but it cannot be con- | cither by Protestant or Papiat— it was proposed, Isay, to | ¢d the lightning in the heavens, and taught it to be your she statesmen and the people. isa 3 SAMUEL IS STANDING UP. els b ty a, a6 an American | take van sacred fund, thus consecrated’ to the | messenger—who, but a practical operative printer? iy iba that is so closely connected with the +4 SAMUEL MEANS TO STAND UP. © | we are a'l riding in agreat omei ‘one who loves this | cause of education, and give it iato the hands of the | Zhey say we are the mob party, and that we are people | interests of the United States that renders s mationad poceceecodcceccocoeceee boos | mi Americans; they wn dear State—as one | Roman Catholic priests, (The rain was now descending | without leaders. I tell you that in the vast assemblage | action upon it necessary. 18 should be settled, os Ht aria ' Dut we choose to hold the reins, ho would to ensure the | in very torrents, and the speaker received whispered in- | I see before me, there are hearts brave enough, and | be as great a barrier to the Gulf of Mexico and Gulf of The striking originality of idees expressed in these | take fright and rum away. Now, the honest foreigner | harmony ed I8j to you, | structions to cut it short, but he continued notwith- | minds large enough, to rule this country. (The rain | lorida as Gibraltar is to the Mediterranean—~verbwm ont ee pithy sentences caused s good deal of fun. Ought to sympathize wi mo people of this give s firmand | standing.) Teat effort failed in our State. It failed coming down harder than ever, and the cenfu- | sapicnis. But the mottoes were not oe aes to ‘‘Sa- | adopted country, and he obo a5 unqualified ‘tors on this ques- | here, too; but I regret that the triumph was not #0 easy | * comneq’ great; it was almost 1 - jotwithstanding Clarendon’s denial, or rather qauel.”” There were, among others, the following equal- | Americans are ae as to tion of slavery. Your representatives in the Counell | with'you, for I temember, that bldod and american | sible Tor the reporters to take moles. ‘There were loud | cation’ Fngland has her eye on Cubs, es, she om Jy original and instructive ones :— ernment than be is. ought to to agi- | blood—was shed im your streets. I remember that so | calis for an adjournment, and the crowd began to dis- | Gibraltar. Her course di the excitement here 08 29S0SSCSOC DDC DC 000000 DEF Oy seitien to cine aha: Bits, whe Rave 0 2g t e it in our | comineering were the Roman Catholics, that peaceable | perse rapidly.) It is imporsible, said Mr. B, for me to | shows it. By what right did lavelve heessit aie . WILL Favene ang SUE AMERICA. © | itpeotected and fortited by’ the eet intetocta, aad tue | Pater jo Bg hd Page gra Or eet Ey “ « . us all remem! cal © —"OURCOUNTAT AND OUR Cova Goose. | Host conquering will ofthe great native American people. | 0, “You are appealed by every consideration of pa: fore the ponple- for the speee ot comasten sate, | thet whether wo hall ros; Poausyivanta or Virgials, or | ‘hou the preveriontion of om ingpradums stattoesa, whee es ‘WE KNOW HOMMNG Dot nee © | We say, ee aa eh as te triotiem, by and by all the proud pon Nl os em regard to it—were here by | Connecticut or Georgia, when we tread u Tessin eke, had committeo a blunder in expressing comments Bae o UNION FOR sven °|| a aera Hg Mon peernees Gaeaat hopes of the interests, | regamuffins from Europe—by foreign Catholics. I re. | it is the stars and stripes that give us importance by, the nation but net intended to be abtered? a BIBLE igion. roten inst ol itizen honor. e want of energetic national action on part : seanitiesinn ‘1s Sten Comoe ON, © | interference with the consciences men—whatever | mere come up ye meno coseqcuene ot retiee fue ate eotiaice As bey oan continued to pour down with unabated | the United States ultimately involve her << © COMMON SCHOOLS, THE SAFEGUARD OF Tuk Warne, |. | their religion may be—by any superior power. (Slight | Old the past, come up | fcreigners and native born citizens of this State, But | vigor, it was suggested by the Chairman that the meet- | « omnections in such a labarynth she will have to © Tum YRER VaR OF THR BIBLE WITHOUT NOTE OM Concer, spplause, Look back at the Seer, of the world. | squacron after these demagogues | history has recorded, it has gone forth to the world, | ing should adjourn to the Market House, anda motion | brough streams of blood to extricate herself. ' commnsr. o | 4 n was it that this feeling first had its or‘gin’ In the | and close my remarks. y | having been made to that effect, it wan carried by ac- PINTO. © PLACE NONE BUT AMERICANS ON GUARD TO-niGH) my that no assemblege of American citi ly © GOD AND OUR COUNTRY. % © | days of Martin Lather, whose mighty thunder shook the | Others are to { Americans—was ever bie for any mob thet ever | clamation, and the vast crowd’ moved rapidly out of e a 2 | papal re and whose echoes are still heard ¢ are a, Independence square. Havana, June 11, 1856. ° oo | slong down the track of ages; and wherever it is be: On reaching the Market Hall a few minutes after. | Movemenis of War Vesscle—Departure and Services of Fallon; wbleh bes bully up great and fee people, and eee ee ect howeter comparen | the U. 8. Steamer Fullon—Ofieial Alarm—How the , 5 7 free altars in land where it is known and resog- with the anthering on Independence square. Speeches Ladies Like the Massachusdts Negroes— George Law's were deli from five or six different stands, and the Biography in Cuba. cute or 8. 1am discass! tes of did not terminate till a late hour. mae, Morn poe etd dh oo Racy ag tember gy As ng ced Proceedings did no bone The failure ot the Granada to appear in our watershaw wy Mr. Perpes | the t religion of any Btate, 1m; nestion would have been long ago, C settled. PROCEEDINGS AT THE OTHER STANDS. caused @ geod deal of confusion with our commercial meeting. He tan We ie Ee el ave wy eee noo would like to stand b: ne voles tthe : spoken ugh the ot box ‘The Hon. Lawims ©. Luvin, presided at the central | folks, especially those who have therein firstand seconde 5 hair, 1 am | Dataia, the only other free government in b ‘and in many States of this Union, Etats n2d | vatferm. ‘The first speaker at this portion of the mest- | of exchange on board of the steamer Isabel—the sacha ‘edhe te ound those who were willing for, the sake of ob- | ing was General Wut. 8. PiLowen, of Kentucky, who was Ie New Rai arte op ber the delinquent seamen, place power to pander to fos. % ving been forwar: 5 setae ~~] to come fer it mour midst; and now Tan bra atten yea pon = Mae tral on te | the U.8. steamer Fulton, Mitahell, commander, loft fitation, the! Unies | ; ‘citizens, t0 organize here as Americans under tho | Councils from the different wards, with their bands of | for Key Wert, with correspondence for the ba we Mead i the apeker Was interrupted by the arrival of | MOM® rendered whet he sald almost inaudible. He oo Seana! ela oes Capeain sn relieved own. ? fo1 ’ Laughter.) | ba the Eighteenth ward, amid the usual demonstra'ions of | gave ® brief bisiory of the proceedings of the Conven- > et arrived on the ground. Ani Saves by Pings Ee bo yfs 7. ot, 2a, i o lowed by, the great np, pane by our fa trewe , Ko, ; bore & banner on wi was ine tion hie oc to hog ey oe ttorm—declaring im mepton Lene cm meaunn cae Hot Roma an meparat Pennsylyaaia musi my siRa t that ‘there were | with coals, which ashore weet ontrs nt - van = poe pl Papal A gp lh nant hon pi = = ‘Bhpenets ivan half of Lot. ares Hall. (A ‘omg put} i 8 oy of American freedor terpenes anand 7 ps State and ‘acute of the harbor, and towed her ito pene 7 setae: to preserve its pa Of Catholic France, and reseated on hia throne, | Duck of ity) and innen ‘ “4 net : jo onat Bae 9 co wt fatal to her, onpecisidy if & ee, ee ae ec wore | Rome, once distinguished, s now Cegraded an 5 ascend to the God of all natare and of all | tien who have deem Inkremental if ereatiag ol weer. | thocra the aame rigny to: tho ‘peoplt of otuar coun. The diftoulty at thie id bowed spiritual despotism. Wherever that religion 008, ing his blessing upon eur distracted countr. citement in the ‘because I inten here 5 r—| intend that they | tries. ‘The French ma: ro France, the Dateh Hi in ite present form, man bas withers’ | fry. ighter, and falat cheers’) Will you diveoive. th eball 6] ‘he rerponalvility which svtnchas to the | Incd, the Trish Ireland and Fog ad too, if they cam, om an died; aad if {t wore established ia this | Tyion on such a condition aa that? (Crissel “No, no.) state of hinge pave dite ty fay. These old parties "but Amecicans must and shall rule Ameriog, (Tremen-