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‘ 2 NEW YORK HERALD, TUBSDAY, JUNE 19, 1855. Weniets?—0 conlition whidh—did to-build | rhe Cnammstated that Mr. Rayner bad not arrived | —A'Vorea—P, wi} not tate much to choke them te | of his proudest and mest glorious jewels? a ena jealousy” and strife than aay yet, ond that the rash to the Chiet’s office was merely death, sm>208. yy Hern hoe ge yes). tm vo might wall which bas ever existed in JLCMER—' ‘be Mwullldeation eaicys the | OR acount of the srrest ef a pickpocket, He (tb | anew: 4 Cum ie, Tine Me tt with ae bat to Beeors Ska ‘high: pisces of im the South, | Ubair) bad appointed them—the audienee—tam’s po- Were folie and soc “Sam,” and moant amd ride aad Mr. old abolitio: Hicemen, and he wae coafident they would keep order, to thelr own nwt and prineiples Bat * glory to pe) a He thea introduced the Hon, Jonx Coxxincuan, of |, Got inthe highest, and ov sects ponen Sad oad will South Carolina, whe said — “(Qsm”’ was complete; the voteon Pletiorna.st20% 80 Frience and fellew-citizena of New York—Yot have | to 50. And where steod the gallant ef the city alvesy heard able epeakers in exposition of the piat- | 223 State of New York on that ion? stood om which the American Convention has given to the | that platform frm and fixed. They stood pht- ‘and people. My \s net to mane any ar 4 ne ee, of om wel lente ment about it, but to speak on men things. s . geyaney jurra. im Philadelphia had ung wan. wish to speak to you, young wen, Lar seeatipare dt Merenre Sore the South. traeant ft ae Beals wesiieaa "Ur cates oo inlet Jcomes bere #@ shake hands with the city of New | The asia Shere. They stood on it beeanwe he could not speak log or . He did met ad- | Dave ; ‘York, im this great cause, for Charleston w oa hand, | the coustitution is ice of the people of the United dress them as & Tenvessean to New Yorkers, | would be men, tried Sf api we bope to carry South Carolina oa the platiorm, | States. It ie thelr potential voice, It is the voice of seat nore dabenenay pope Bed upom tras | ase law a he ery, “Ameri sane shal rule Aerie The | af te bope that New York will earry the, Bew Forkers Petie’ in the voles of Ged” Capplourey “tere thee | march through the streets of the city, He then intre- | American principlee--priseiptee without which toe Union | mation Up ped well the cowutry to toe | Cunniograis). was cu the vlatform Comaites.” Mts: | Atood) ond, they siood as defiant opponsats of all who | duoed and the comstitution were mot safe. | The question sim. | O1.i54 oF @f democracy, would ai a wi Geeres ame, pecyiset ther bare tos petogs, ot ainet ~the New | saeer ws of | Col, WW, MeCatt, of Florida, who said:— Seeovatisnns hlotavors: Let pur motte then per erOar | sevzeeemmations bad bern made agains: "ta, No | the United Stetes, which God bas blease3, and which our » federal Union, it must and sball be preserved’’—"‘Ame- | felt that he could vindicate rieapa sbali Americs.”’ I thank A6t, 5ee Uecnes, for It pad been ‘paid that the New York ce.egation played “Yes,” ‘tyes.”) Slavery, as he thou; bad nothing to do with it. we ee uf f R: of Hi g i 2g | the yy bal i Councilever met in the United Statze— ig! ‘the donor you have conferred on me by the xecsption bh That is & mistake, given to my remerks. A . ii Fak acag ‘ace’ would have bea eomient. to have hieen months after ‘‘Sam’s’’ birth, there will stand ew ine singh "eo dacleas onde teal Judge Horus of Alabama, en being introduced, spoke | said mothing about slavery at all, Yo wonld the South | ecorded the names of Barker, of Lyon, of Squires, and Wil ‘When Masaschusetts was trae tothe Union | eitherbonse. ( a. 34; 2 id. 40, 182, and when the proposition wes made to avord all mention | of Mallory. They will be emslematized sa true pafriots cag ot yee Daniel Webstore Cerpleuse) = | Grey, '1; 10 Grey, 105; 2 Rushw. Sex Palm, 74; Hal: kee citi that on te toc fabio to | of fh it wae voted dows, aod mop igo be be? we eines aeeneie aise Ate esa! =A e. represent Der. I -will ‘mot, ald ir? compare Paypal sons inewaie save Palys 2 wagre' we izeDs, my voice 0 3, 4 bie cohorts came and id us it was % cheers for New York. ip, ip, barra | N Hi vs. Abbat, . Sea eercency ais Pees | Sacro csencane emis | peometenatinn hots meine ais uty mountain" te thse, opt ie grea’ party wi am ao bia, to pronibit slave ween te ant 01 Sam wi Rumble member, to enforce the rule and State, and fo exclageall pew Staten which might apgly | them. They come there to represant themuelves, not | vere,the men of New York. Barer, of New York, was for a¢wission into the Union under whore constitution recogaized noted by the of . 16 Of Massachusetts; and though some might soe Sobeeerent: Pash : I want you io underatand that I come fer the Dut | s'avery wae legalized. Now, if ‘Sam” were to be usod | thin ether mations are i was Jost when thoy left, is was not so. It vi seek bes wet been’ the’ Gass here. Leng nines vous oC | far ‘apy of these purposes, thin great Amerieam pariy | reminds mie of an anecdote told of a young ashe | of ErOReRsbAS sitens Reseny wlent oe de aBe® dirsies| Pelee dempe eit oeerirre ye the most patr otic and ssgacioun cftizene of thiy coeatry | would soon sink into annihilation. married a girl: She waas very iadustrioas girl, (laugh- | Cometrom Key West, » place where we have J ‘applause. P . ht ef either house t2 compel, wit sew that the imfluance exercise’ by foreign citizens wis A Voicy—He who thinks more of abolitionism thin be | €%,) 48 yOung married women generally are, it is yoo 4 Beni mang a routll ehesaniasioeaaianel PF J peseess to sppesr a8 ‘teatity before its coumittess, se great that the pepular sections favelved tbe elechon | dcos of fam,” et hime tread that narrow pats. (Caagh- | 7Ali, yeu know, that e new broom tweepr. l Fee eee ere cere un thera be Rate re Gy | ca tented wo tc here ta.cnie the fareral eas tai | to punish for Slnobedience, has been frequently eaferood. Deter Aay higher grade oven thts ot foreign | ME) Lape cath edie rang chm il at votelin Nessau, New Providence, aa well ea in Florida. I] con’t sce bim. Isaw him in Philadetphia on Saturday | (Proceedings of the New Yoak Howse of {| of the United States, was brought by this foreizn ir. CunyixonaM, continuing—Now, geatlemen, sach | Her busband was s man who septa: =, Sgelent the- wares wads rae ot loabiedly t0¢ | nse been the restriction, euch the distarbanss ami nace. | Jor’a hail Nehind the door with chat, have been, eaid be, s cemocret, amd maintained the eeemed lively enough.and I came here ty of mative citizens. Hence the formation ash be mgbt,end be, them, that whio! if be stil survived. (Voices—How do you like him !’ ‘he matter of the contempt of Moses Jaq) Pa sy among Jou: silows = fe to vote after they bave | —*Iep’t hea goo3 lookin feller?’’) He don’t reem D. jour. Ass , 1837, 262, 422, 486; Ass, Doo. Nos, 128, aa, 327, nee aad vi} 440) 340, ATT, rules of the New York House of Avscmbly it | er produced by thet same anti-slavery ele- | slong sweeping and-scrubbing sod wasl iD) arty. It is not ite object to deprive the foreign ee be heard i f the chatk marks, and out they went, a - Shien bf aby right he possesses but. tt in oar purpose rasta tate sbcsaees Ue vacate: came in by.and Uy, and whee he-caw hie accounts were tyea Mize Snpusehten: Deb bthen ret awar se Soaks, | cabs Sead eee eee ae ea je the éuty of standing com mitice te inquii Soagres herca‘var to volo for'uo foreign citizen for ofc. he. New York Celagation, ia the ony’: | Pabbed out he fall: Oh) Cea, you've rained mal | 70T0 00 tre ate ee nee a ee ee eeytaieOnaee im breed | ino the matter indicated by the tie ot tue 4 We will vote for no one, whether Protestant, Catholic, at if slavery were not astlonalized, itanouid | ‘How is thaty”’ seid she “why,” said he, “you have Demewe, sae eae amoog rofl itebronet = css ro so disitned the secres | 204 to report to the boute sny information which ¢ Jew, Gentile, or Mehomedan— ‘where the constitution Dad left it. Now | rubbed out all wy aocounts, and you have broken me y they ai corns ig) . wre “ot | committees may deem conducive to the public goo3. Ae OR eat a Ham, (Cheers.) My fate, up,” Bald ake, ‘Hav'at you got » goad memory, and aoa feget er a ae eapeesnaan 2, worl | feature of she party, and i am glad that it hes born And the right of eituer house to examine witmenses be: jo Horks is does no interfers cal you recollect eta again, and pat P 2 or fore a theorize usted right Tagres that by fhe constitution pre citien ef the Unita Bietent walled Shame” ime re eres went oo eid’ ber tid whee 7, ett 2 if you don’t like this country, you may leave it.”’ | well hnown, and] am Jore tha Ben, Sommmmitiee an ote Comer grea for persone anc 8, OF before @ person atuthorized b; aay one who is ‘bus naturaitzed acquires a right to vote | ftard erect om the platioraa we hove laid down. That | gan (0 work, and by and by sho ntid to bi Tasghter.).. Now, will we leave it Yor him? (No, we.) | ratify them Tam glad thet I ean go gask to Tennessee | Cdamities, or by either House, tovtaxe testimony, oa nd by ve you anaot be deprived; bat the coastitation | pattorm contemplates two great propositions. First, | sot them allright again?” “I don’t bnow,’? said he Watson ve Wet oe my ron pene et reward yout | and tell Colone) Gentry. (Three cheers for Gentry.) A Saeor wn ato; well as the power to punish for comtzmp: in case of to bim the right of eligibility to office. Apa Qs sie Tadebtert nid, ‘whether I have got as much down aa had before, but | BAtiomeltty? puts to | Ithank you fortum. He is now bearing the America | fi 0),23; me 1; tatate (1 R. m tho will of the majority of tue elec’ | protsction of thin Union; and hinds che crashing oat ot | Ihave got ihem oa better mtn!” (Roars of laughter.) [es Jeune segues smesreee- eee See: tant | ttamoard as ee Cre ta aaa Bo Part’, ths D8, title o, ee ated ys amt th precisely in acecroance with what has ie foul viper abclitioniam. ‘Sam’? proposes that ve | Now, li we cannot get back Henry Wilson, and that Lang to teem in Hho a Pe bad eee ee eben: yh o wee ree de ot ‘of ng oom 7 Dean dane by the two old pyrties. Do we not know that | shan herealter ave American statesmen; not | Fort of men, I assure you, my friends my fellow citi aldbough the democratic party has not formally resolved | tien pred und q 2 by_w the civilization of Murope, | zene, my brethron in this rant cause, that we have in | S00 208 may somes adel se Oe Ot Mater) Mr, PoLtocx, of Balt'more, followed, sad made » short neg! al, are apecided. IC it ts eee gon. You come in and ride with us, but we thint we | stands side by side with Maryland ic this great cause. ‘tha uld mot vote -) 1 wt for whigs, that tuey never do | but men having the advantages of those resources ps- | Massachusetts much better man. : : St: Htriligent exerciee of the office of eee tan domseeeitat Yer there bas bees an traplicé | suuer.to American ‘progres and Ameriosn cent, Vora three chevrs for. foreign Froteatant repob ee iataak aavaave lr coualey coer te seen Eeren ve apamntad Jeateaty Wats Baas wis Coa hat oselt of tae Ree Dewees sompetaing. the. La . ‘bo +0 well uneers' the institutions of « countr: Me . Th HM vote fi m, too. Pic ~ % the State should have this r: of inquiry, Understanding of that fact. How happens it that s eae | ayrhose educated under them? Who so well can eze- | telat dpa eres: hea gemb Seraver:, T-bilhove’ BS ie: Neuteh; | senha gairy, ‘The speaker restming—t am a Protestant, as you are | but be is ender the influence of a Kitchem Osbinet, who Picco ‘meeting, which was quite spirited, soon after | "em See boards of the Common Coupeil urs where cemocrats have & majority that » | cute laws or Jegislate as those who are imbugd with | gy, protustantirin has got nothing to do with Feligioa | would earry this cou try 0 the devil if they were let. whig is elected to office; and how also happens it that | the sentiments of the country from their birth? Wa - ji 4 at all; meither has Catholicity man Catholicism | Will you sct with y thren, or wil you sct with Gear eis an I baver ll, upon ibe Smplod "wn | [iMiatos"w wants mae flict ober helere.'” et | as néthing fo dg, wit, religion. ie Yormer is go- | your opgonentet, ren Jaton cannot bo had from for | png Cage of «flam” Against the Reteactory | ‘he cy, hey should have the seus oC cbiniiog ful Serstancing they ull have with each other | “4 Vorcr—No more kissing the Pops’s top, either, eee i aga emo, || aetna Sethe’ ei San ‘Witnesses. : and accurste jn‘craation respacting overy ie a that fe Ba . 4 it was @ protest against the strong arm of Se potor in Florida bribery, who was deferded a ‘Shak they ‘will not vote for those who belong, to a citter- | Mr. Conszxcnam—I will come to that by snd dye. We | deninst cemtralining national Catholic power w United States Senator, who im his adcreas to the er COMMON PLEAS—BPROIAL TEEM. rietly monteipal ebsracter relating to the ats ot 4 Satisn of the rogogement. wo enter upon ng? to vate tor | Ant g™z tore, ,begn and bred om hts Area cuntincDy | States and iree cities of Germany, and the proven: whish | stated that the change was got up bys, band of ‘native Before Hon. Judge Daly. the gtr. The Dat ip, examine witaesene as a part of ‘er for office. comes before the electors | great artizar interest of this country. All who have to netted mica asclacing latory ot ithe postion sons Prine pe tat be pyre arsibasts: BRIGGS INDOMITABLE—SW@E WITNESSES COMPELLED | seem to follow as incident to the right to leg! fer ion in regard to his claims. | five by the sweat of their brow or the ekill of their ry TO ANSWER, it would be an inconsistent result of the power to natnralization Iaws of Congress | hands, do they wish to be inundated by paupers, skilled es & Habs te alewe, stati eet aptly a Ie yg prec aapmede et Cotaoae, Meued | Jonm18.—In the Matter of Ald. Sam. Briggs vs, Mac- | late conferred uyox them to bold that they may, under it would be an sbandoment of | in that particular line of labor? (Cries of ** No.””) No; | ‘ations. (Cheers.)” That is, Protestantigm. ‘The Pro. | hnow foreigners who will protect the birthright of their | jellar, Websier and McCann.—Jadge Daly rendered the | ‘he charters, exercise the power, snd yet may net do Be cance. + it Congress will not exercise the power eon: | jet American laborers have the profit, aa they have the | jeytest'religion ciftere aa much from goversmaat ac too | children against the pamgers and criminals of Europe, 9 : what i ¢ientia! to ensvle them to exezcive ferred by the constitution, the States will do It for them. | merit of having developed the resources of the country. | Water in the giaas before me differs from the glass which | I believe native Americaniam is stuck fe ene of | ‘lowing elaborate decision in this case:— It was urged on the argument that the po: sary Siate woudl grorelve the Doser for tae nad tne | We 40mot wavt to neo, an ms felend inthe crowd says, | Noigy it, Yon may break tho giats, ba; the water ia not | there gallant New Yorkers before me, and Tthink 1 ean | By, the proofs submitted in thie caso, it appears that | room witnesses and to compel them to, stify ia invest gach late would exercise the power for itseif, and the | any more kissing the toe of the Pope; wedon’t want acy | Gesizoyed if you ave got a better vessel to patit in. | touch chord of sympathy in their hearts. I believe | the of Aldermen, on the Sth of Fi rs ed in each house of the ‘ture, in virtue of ita 80 wale of naturalization woald no longer be uniform, but | wore Papal interference in this land: we do not ptriv (Loughter.) The Rewan Ostholic establishmeat, as a | that every man horn im the Catholic Cuarch dees owe | Pat igecting the Chief of Police to re | reign authority; bat Ia nd, is not ‘would ¢iffer in every Siate of the Baion. Let the - | religious belief, but we strike ata Papal Chursh under fitical engine, i6, in my opinion, a broken cistern | allegiance to the Popeof Rome; and if you allow these Irishmen, | case. The sovereign authority of the Siste is prim sia Sentvoncontiins; pet requice & longer reece: the guidance of a Jesuitical and crafty priesthood who | Poriemy (gine, Ms of MY eter) It hus come | Komen Catholics to come amoug you, tisy will swallow | Scotcbmen, Germans, Frenchmen, Englishmen, and | rily in the people, andthe manifestation or exercise ‘twenty-ene years, for instance—before he becomes enti: } try for the advancement of the Catholic church over | Tere to be reinfured imto humanity, Ite apie you, and brig you to the luqaiition. .I bave the | other na were im the Police Department; how many | that sovereignty is ia three bpp rery. neskg everything else, Catholics band their forces togethor by | fie” sont, ite fey ita vitality, were destroset | Sameobjection foFretestantiom when tt ie allied with | of the poLoemen had been in prison in thie cr | tke two houses and the executive—the joint con- A Vorce—‘‘Nine handred and ninety-nine years.” drilling their proselytes; but Protestantiam mevery | in the reformation, under Martin Luther, Teanpot boast of the actions of my forefathers in the | ®Dy country; how many were naturalized; how | currence of which, or a vote of two-thirds in Juson Horarws—He then will acquire eligibility to | mamto bis own conscience Tho grext element of Pro- | america the operations oo that & battlefields of the Revolution, but Dean boast of having Taaag hed bees in the country less than five years, and | each Racy oh when 38 Gensre dpea net gomnant, Je effiea, which 1 hope will never be supported by any | ‘estantinm is to leave every man to the guidance of his | +i) jt bas got myrelf fought in the fields of Mexice, (Good.) othe | by w Rea eran ony ian. comm atteboatd ef bameeageiy American party. I have no doubt that this feeling of | OW conscience, Siatinctions. ttent tional interests, | fereigners present 1 would say, this is not a sectional inted. been Nalkee inde to what fa aye ehetyr oe to foreigners has been greatiy increased and 4 Verce—Tho priests tell them how to vote at the con- | We were attending to a bank of the Umited States, toa | party, buts mations! American and you ought te wing, be mth Viaoe bh rp : iene oe —_ ote parlia- ened by what has been the policy and the prac | fersional box, too. tariff, to protesticn, and to all these motters, and we | support it, so as to protest the li s of your children. |; 8) of face nie ia sparen ee ta tatiek reste bom the prevent administration. They have appotot- Mr. CunninauaM.—Exactly so, butI am merely gener- | forgot the great strive which aucient Rome was making | I am opposed to the bolding ef office by foreigaers. Look and Hoffmire, to be tee, woe lis ee nate rain bd om oa Barer 4 four or five of the ambassadors and ministersto other | alizing. We wish to develope the principle of Protaat- | upon us to grapple at the neck of our liberties and to | back at Greece; there, where @ foreigner aspired to of- japonse.’ where’ ori Com. ra bs ey pore + —_ Abeer sised eeuntries* from the foreign population. Foreigners | antism as against the actions, not the principles, of Ca- chote them to death. We bave suspended sll these fice, be was exeenved—! guillotined—ho was bung passage of this a Se eae eat tk eae coenty ee athe have obtained the reference for these high offices, to | tholocism. i eftorts, We have come together aa brethren. We forget | up hey pees "thee i | oor sed wbat in fogiand is te pv fod, Leche @e the work which the United States required, tothe | A Voice. Good again, olf boy. (sat we have ever differed, Westand upon a natioaat | A Vorcr-—Will you do that now? panned, wering Teongniend, what 10 ogra. puned ef specenlgeeemen of exelusion of native born workmen who were equally | Mr,Ccnxivcmax.—Now.gentlemen I bave told my young | platform, and ceclare oui party of men who will | Mr. McCaLL—No, we will mot go so faras that. Do | tee to investigate (‘all frauds and corruptions in every steele of deing it. Agaiast that polcy we filed Azietioun frl9n0e whatbees p ropoaes for usin the Yasue: think for themselves, who will govern themselves—men | they give office to foreigners in France? No, sir, Ordo | branch of the Yolice Department, and also the manner nee, Chanatoxes 4 part ba abeolate bisbheine ow A Lowe we will endeavor to prevent the exercise of ithere. | politieal Nberty, industria, fiverty, and religious l>er:y. | who are yereovally ‘retpoosible to themestves, to God | they give cflee to foreigners in Bagiand? Not at all | in which the same is and has been conducted.” In pur- | es peuseal, te ieen eeeren ive tee te atter, by Mringing into power no man who will puriue | (Oheers.) Such bar been the action of the tro old gar: | snd to man, At to forelgntra, I do not with forwgners. | State governments. 1 glory to God in the knowledge | *uante of thia resolution severe! persons were subpc | cempelling witnesres to appear before i: ur, before ita auch a course. (Applause) You have all heard of | ties that they bave net only broken themselves dowa, | (A voice—No, rir; Igo in for Protestant foreiguers.’’) | that there are so many outsiders who don’t belong to | used committee, anse it is necessary to ena coe ‘what hae been called the splitin the Grand Nations | but have seattered through the Eouth the principi-a of | l agree that we shail have here an asylam forevery 0, either one or the other of them; that. are able to lier, Wevster and Me- | optrate apd perform its pari in the onty of legislation. Gouncil at Philadelphia. It is true that come of the | divonion and coubdt. Yet the "Sozth 1s willing oy come preined man. Jf he comes bere, aud os hoe ry, want manage them both. Canghter.) ‘We witl keep them | Cat The respondents appeared in obedience to the BS exist for fhe mine zenoop fap) — jax power ae leaders of the prerent cominaut party in Massachusetts | up and say to the great middle States, to New Yor« and | io feed him; if nabed, f want to clothe him. it sick and | both cut if we cam; but, in the mame of God, let us keep pena, on the 2d of May, and were sworm as witmerses; | in mes jostice, Me Sake yA mt efi terry o> and other New England States, did sesede, because the | Pensytvania, ‘Concur with u3 in patting a stop to this | in prison, 1 want to visit Bat I do not want him | at the R-— C. bove all! I have one word to say | but twoof them, Webster and McCann, refused to answer Faroctrinpe 'y = br i x a r har te ely oad most vitra op'nions were advanced by {nem and tae | aboliticn agitation, and we will come up and aid you to | to come lite the frogsin Egypt, and craw] through our | to the foreigners who are present—I am the som ofa | several interrogations that were put to them, and | istence ee Pee oye: ita nae a rye Convention would not give its assent. Not only these | protect this great Jand. dongh-trovghs. Let the Qutch—for the Datos, you | Scotchman born, who emigrated here when he was four- generally refused to answer an questions, the respon. we coy eae te cane tation ( Cpe 5 politicisna in Massachusetts who pretend to lead the A Voice.—Three cheers for South Carolina, (Reapond- | huow, have taken Holland (a Jaugh)—Jet them govern | teen years of age. He never heki or would hel an of- ent. MeOsnn, denying the it of the committee to ve he 8 cour’ Sava ty Meer rad itmesses. peeple. but I caw there some fiom whom I dissented, | ed to.) Holland. To the French belongs France—let taem | fice except the office of Dean in the Presbyterian Charch | interrogate him. The responden' Mar, had —_ pepe stisiaa’ toak Oe ——- and whe avowed their intention to carry out their ob- Mr. Consixcuam—We of South Carolina teli you that | geverp France. To the British pelopg Emgiand, Wales | Are we not entitled to ray that we will protest our | previously before toe committee, ite natural 286 legitimate functions. at the trike «blow in defence of our | and Scotian. tit the | nationality anc that no foreigner shail come here and | ‘veral questions, but upon this day he refused toan- | Cou indepentent of the statate noier which their you or against anybody else, pepo laws? Whoshalleay us pay? Mr. Jeffer- | swer certain questions propounded to him. The prosent proceedings have been instituted, a2 manicipal corpo- ike with you against all princi. nai I , God speed them! | son said that he wished to God, that am ocean ef fire | application is made for an attachment against theso | ration clothed with He tire powers, bai the right, la- setta declared that it was hia purpose as soon as pogsi- | ples inimical to the safety and Brogpeetty of the Repud- and goverm them. bet country and ‘Rurope. Afterwards, he | wi pr gent an act paseed by the berent in either Board, of invoetigas municipal mi ble to abolish slavery in the District of Colambis, ani | ic. The South bas found out that Sam is safe, and iling to see them do that— elscted President of the United States, and fa grati- | Jest see entitled “an act to the Common | ters in thd ordinary legislative mode, conprrygeen” the that he would never vote for the admission of a Stave | now she is ready to wed with him. (Applause ) Mon | And if they are willing to come here and live, they shall oreig PI he lessened | Council of the city of New York to take testimony in Re ot axmnening Eicnseses. 30. appeey am teniity, T ‘unless she consented to abolish it. He said the Fugitive | of New York, stand by your delegates and stand by | have an opportuvity to make money, and may work and | their term of probation to five years, Mr. aid, | matter referred for tion and inquiry, or for | have mot the slightest doubt; and if there en oa: Blavo. law would bs nullified in Msssachusetts, and | Sam; and if you do, fifteen Southern States will wheel | get fat, aha and get thamaetnn with have | beware of foreign influence, as you would of s Greek | such other remedy 4 conforma! ae a RoEnS before, it is Pkg ini by the ‘act referred to, ject, which they did not hesitate to acknowledge was to | while we are ready to ‘deytroy the power of those provisions upon which the | I:berties, either spsin ¢eompromise was based. Tho Senator from Massachu- | we sre aleo ready to at elaimed for every citizen, native or naturalized, whit | into line and stand by you. chilpyen and Jet them to twenty-one, apd serve | hore. ‘be proper, under the By this act of the ¢ provisions. of which, cleazly re-,| the President of the United Staton bas not the power to The apeaker in Fates was greeted with three cheers, fant But do not let them Game hace ant ‘tane the reins A Voice,—Cut it short—we want to set eat on the pro- | Common Council, cr his deputy, is authorized to iseue mizes the a vet ta ht. it = Lea mtb de, You all know that according to the constitution, if os " oA * | of government out of our hands, andsay that foreignars | ctesion, subpanas, to compel the atrendance of witnesses before. | ti ‘An act to «nadie xon Counell to take the President should veto an act of Congress upon the | the band striking up ‘Hail Columbia.’ she'l control America, and not Americans. The great lar. McCAL1—One word im regard to the union of | a committee of either Board of the Common Ovuncii; | testimony in matters 2¢/exz0d for, inygstigation and in- express grovind that it was » violation of the oonstita- ‘The CHAIRMAN next introduced to the audience the rinciple is that Americans shall rule America. Why | th glorious States. I came noc here with a seces- the chairman of such committee is empowered to ad. quiry. gi aman e title forms bo part of te tien, yet if two-thirds of Congress should pass that | Hon. Mr. Burwell, of Virginia, a gentleman, he eaid, who ito? It is our b'rtbeight. That is the reason you | pionist or abolitionist epirtt. General Wilson, and | minister oaths to the witnerses appear: act, and rn oe ag: geteralty; in the same bill in opposition to the veto, it must become the ey cashes, y should rule America. rachaian rulea because of | those who co operated with bim, entertained differect pommalthe, and may require them to testity in respoct | ear! or Dacia Of legiclation the title was usually affixed law of the , and the Preridemt must carry it shared in the late wreck of that State. L's birthright; the Foghsbman ri besause of hia i I thought that he axd the New Kagland | toany matter pending before it; and upon proof of ti bythe rk, after the bill bad passed in the house Ma into eifect, Yet this power, denied to the chief oificer | x. Bunwer1 then came forward and anid:— birthright; and if be chooee io give away his birthright A Would have voted with th nervice of 7 mheen andof the failure of the witness | where inated, and consequent!y formed mo part of the Republic, is claimed by General Wilson for every Fellow citizenr—But that I appear oa this occasion as | to kings and priests, in th of God let him da it .miched when they seceded; to attend, or if the witness attends, upon proof of nis re- or aaa by ge = main Poutters’ care, 33, eftizen of Massachusetts who says that they hava | the humble representative of a great State, [should not | But as for us and our house, and Sam's hoase, we will jeved when I heard they were gone to fusal to take the oath or to answer any ipl gro 685.) ob ougl practice is now different, the a right to rosist the law till tho Sapreme Court of Massa- | ave attempted to raiva wy voice against thia Nisgara | not do sny such thing. (Applause.) Now, I pay, Sam’s | join the Keow Nothings. (Laughter, it is made the duty of a judge of this court, or of a jus- | reascm of the rule continues from the changes amal- ebusetts decices that it is constitutional—that is, that | of tue people. But I desmit my duty to say here that | boys do not want to proscribe ov. No such thing! | with Union principles. I was afrsid that South Caro. | tice of the Supreme Court, to require the witness to | ‘erations which bilis undergo in the coures of their pas- the operation of the Jaw murt be suspended to wait for | Virginia will plant herself on that platform which her | I 30 not proscribe tpy human lenly exert ipa would have gone over the traces; but I found that | *how cause why he should not be attached, and to adopt | rage, changes not always consonant with the title, aad ‘the decision of the court, As they did not uaderstend | delegation bas co robly assisted in mating and main- | tight of cLoice, which ‘right todo; and | her delegates were Union men and supported the | other and further measures to compel the witness to | tometimes entirely inconsistent with But by the our langusge in the same sense that we did, wo found it | tainirg. And I will also ray, that were it not forthe | if ore would not vote for a man because it might be mata in. Ani | appear and » and to punish disobedience, a3 if the | State constitution of 1816 it is declazea that no local or, was necessary to explain in our platform the conatitu- | noole efforts of the delegates for New York and Pennsyl- | auid he was proscribing him, ‘would never vote at all. | when you have conquered, I ask zou yt, matter were legelly pending in court. The cause shown gme ‘Dill eball embrace more than one eubject, and ples tbat were necessary to vania, that platferm could have bad no existence what- | (Laugbter.) But he makes bis choice —he prescribes a rant eae, Freeman and Van Ciief, of Pennay?v im the present case amounts to 2 denial of the right of at that subject sball be exprensed in its title. (Art. 3, the national ; and inthe mame of | the Board of Aldermen to institute any such investiga- | sec. 16,) The act in question is a local act, being tlepal prin preserve the Geion. It was this that induced these patriots in Was- | ever. Virginia asked Oars ieee vecause it is just. | Tule to himeelf. There is a ditlerence bet eon prescribe saehusetts to secede from the convention, and Iam | it ia the only platform which could have been ted | and preacnbe. 1 prescribe o rule of conduct for my- | 0d, if you have any to bestow, bestow them | tion as that embraced in the resolutions referred to; an | fp its operaticn to tae city of New York, and ite titles. Deartily fia, they ¢id so, for they cannot now any iy rtieeta ett upon, That Ba eg be self—TI band with you here, my fellow citizens—we = upon Fesaryireaia ‘and New York. In cpnctasion, I | objection which makes it necessary that I should deter- | therefore, must be taken as expressive of its sahigck longer 4 t the party, Weare all united now for | not affirm the opinions of Massachusetts or of Virginia | scribe ruies for ourselves, and we do not there- : New York, the hospitable Kumpire City. | mine whether the Board of Aldermen, ia cirecting this | matter. Not only kad the Common Cougsil the right to the secomplizhment of one pnrpore, and all will be satis- | on the subject of slavery, but Ivaves that | fore proscribe others. will not say @ word Mr, Ouver was again pene and infermed the witnesses, but it was within toeir Sed, 1 hope, with the platform that has boen adopted. | institution where the law has left it, [| about slavery. {hat has been talked sboat here that they were about to form s procession, to | By thi Grplause. T suppose this great man of Massachusetts | kave only come Lere togive the adhesion of Virginia | before. Nen intervention is the The Nebraska | march from the Park up Chatham street to Kast Broad. | by the more ext ought he was under the spit of Prophoay. He seid | to that platform which, if it had been adopted two | and other measures are morelp administrative measure, | way and niger, then to Monroe street, where aay: mery in 1730, the Common that curses would be brought 2 country; but | months ago, Virginia, instead of kneeling down, mana- | The great principle at stake is self government. Let us | woold salute Mr. Barser’s house; then through Grand, peo ho as respects pshment of his purposes would be. He did not expressly How citizens, why shculd Virginia cesive | went is the great beacon Jigtt in America forthe world | again; 10 expected to see that procession the great- | The body which then compored tte Common Council, upon ti govern- greater curses could not ‘barcomectred then the wovom- oled a8 eke ie, would have now atood erect as yoursel’, | Karn that ani understena our rights—for self govern- | the Bowery, Bond street and Broadway to the Park of the city of a very comprehensive character. lam the spirit of prophesy, but he spoke with e of the Kantas Nebraska bill to disturb | (Appisuse.) Let us blow out the igutot self govern. | ext that bad ever been witeessod here. Ho also mos. | oF the major part of the members com; xt, were in tholi confidence, an if he was acting unter tho influence ef | the compromices of the constitution? She can askno- | ment in America, and we are gon time will come | tbat they would give old Tammany Hall the stroagest | general terme authorized from time to time to mate, or- etic spirit. Now, [have no more confidence in | thing in the untrodden wilderaess of Nebraska. She | when barbarism, when Roman will come | pull, next fall, that it ever got in the Bay tate, dat and establieh auch Jaws, statutes or ordinances as said Ihave’ in tho infalhbilityyf the Pope | has siounta‘ns teeming with mineral ore, and valleys | again. will strut ts colosss) form over no contiveat, Another, with three aeae for Mz. Barker, three | might seem to them useful or necessary for the cood ralo or the purity of Mormonism, and [don’t believe that | ricb and fertile. There are no motaphysivians or abstrac- | Will blow ont ail our lights, break dowa our monuments | for the whole American threo for the platform, | OF government of the city; and though under the various Providence will ever permit anch curses to fall upon the | tionista in her councils; and she dia not and destroy all the evidences of oor civilization. Let us | thre Mr. Ullman, the meeting was dig | acts of the amendatory of those charters, and, Mony of you may remember that there were nu- | turh compromises; Vir, prevent that, Now, fellow citizens, there is - | mlssed, end the procesate: boon after formed, and | changes and alterations have been made in revi mercos Haltan republics, all independoat; but {t was not | together before. Her destinies are youra—her friend- | tion] have to the foreigners, and I want, to tell you it, | with music and ers took the rou: ve laid down. | Many matters of which the Commons Council before had Seng hatore ore ambitlous,esiguing men brought war | ships are yours: and if you stand by the platiorm of | Thy sever go into the country, In times padt they | — Seefuatre conpiegnce, fs pematel power of, Passing 0 ym. Those ars were continaed till those wh.se | th i vist on the fande sna cultivated’ them: but the; and crdinances with! ie applicntion "| selGab ambition led the people into them claimed dic-a Bates Wil stad und Yon? san with el epee come to our cifes and vie ‘ith ou in ‘air the postive PROCEEDINGS ELSEWHERE. bag Arad subsequent statutes or charters, re. | shall be eat dopt oa to-compel the torial power and sieced it, Smaller States were con- | yoo may bid cetiance to ali abslitioniate and enemee of | ments of life. They drive the hard and enterprising mea | In addition to the proceedings at the grand stand, maa ie two hotles, Hisralers,. Whies Soy. coast soy chee ee ‘eould nd. - tl quered by the greater, ani ulilmately all beeame sub- | the Uni a 4 i- | who will not work for l to the wilderness. (A ‘Common Council, founded as they are upon the | en Seated to one man, and knew no low bat bie will. If the he od . ri ape ae pea inate Peskin ortey for snek Toe TORE toto } thy make yee seemed = A, | there were speeches from three other polatsin the Park. iple of popular representations, assemble for the | does not indicate ony measure which tho Su ‘Sieselution of thio Union should occur, aad the States | sx constitutional principles laid down in that plat- | Nebraska and Minzesote and Cellforain, Jhnd al distant Nearer to Broadway a stand waserected upoma wagon, | cbject for which they were created, the nature of the | sdopt, as itis a matter which could not bo be divided and oe mpeg of each other, the fate of | form, Fellow citizens, nk you, possession of the towna and tae | which was surmounted with the American fisg. Some | Power conferred and of the duties imposed upon them, | ing ia court, ond because the matter is not de- ies Sea ee pane ee qhell | Mr. Burwell thon withdrew, andthe bend struck up *, Reefs whe seaaes Tne inde ai? | thousand people or so congregated here, avd were ad aba the dee nad couse ef satee promeat fogged ey tny Fy on 3 mt ies he i maiely despotism will, spread over our _ land, | snother a'r, amid cries for'Rayner, Pike, &e., and with | made their homes, then they would be usefal: but when | 4r¢e80d by Mr. Wilmot, of Maryland; Mr. John Bullock, | loginlative bodies. | The creation of & ming At tenes. | Butch Sawa aaeres yori” wea at been defined z vy ' x which is now covered by romped happy States, | three cheers for old Virginia. they come bere and thke the bread out of our people’s | of New York; Mr. Squires, of Chenavgo; and Mr. Lyon, ratici - ple of a place with tha local government thereot.’’ Visi | tempt. Therets “ye in this objection, The statute Wond. 344; and Gentlemen, wo are quarreling. Our quarrel nas this ox mouths, and reduce our women end ta Port tent—in relation to the Kaoras and Nebraska bill,no | _ The CHamuan next presented to the assembly Gen. Wat | Toa'gertitntion, 1 think we have a right toexsiaiaes > | © rort Jervis. | Mr. Squires touched upon the slavery | Sho, (Gorp.) a 2, People vs. 3 in sufiiciently plain to incicate what wan intenaed by mote, The minority platform proposed the repeal ot | & Puctnr, of Ky., who was recoived with thres cheers | “"4 Voice—Yes, and they lave got astle Garion now | ‘iWestion, and caldthatit was.an institution which could @ two branches of the Corpora’ the Legulature, xd it points out, with the eae sti nie’ ote Gergen | fr Kenta,” Be ald ep epirae act bosnatalned ty ameria tooment be i woo te | Soerates oe, Seeman PS ee Pa es | Gece caeh a wan ‘leeesenna teehee a ne 1 exven~ Fellow citizens of the State and City of New York—Tho Mr. Pricuxr—I claim to know my own rights, and cognized by the constitution, we, as members of the ® sion romiee li ; r 5 HO) hould be regarded and treated as legislative bod lect or contumacy cf a witnese—as, where comp: 0 line to the Pasific ; while the | arst emotion of the human heart is that one whica | spect them; ard clam to know the rghts of othe Union, must take {t, {n consideration of the benefits wo | Ike. preat toe muntcipel compose at power ‘oie: rudpeened to appear and give evidenoe apoa . rst ae sainority report regaired the repeal of the Nebrasks, | yearng to its father, to ite mother, to ite brother, to its | aud respect them. I want to seo the constitath and in the event, a fhe failure of Congress. to repent, Wite, to home, wad to countey. Kvery man feels proud | syected; and co power, whether it derive auvuor-ty gither | °PS°Y im common with the South. Mr. Squires, when- tislate 40 compredensive and general at that granted to | glects to appear, cr anpeasing, refuses to answer a quse- Guvé bolting State. Now. altlongh aeltber Karmen of tls native ae Fg Ng pd ted eter octet tl Atv yagi re ea GAM innate dre Silay et gy pect 10 carcy With ft Whaterés wed cooeatial to ibe fall | court, in the fret care, may oider-that en attaghinent wor Nobraske had any agency in passing this law, they | Amerisanh ny Uirenright, Ame tenan fe Totes ae: | Sallomceleie re, Se eer dary to, tak constitution. to have the question settled as a finality, and it was o | end effielent exercise of the power. If they are to enact | isaue directing the Sheriff to bring the wituess before ly 2 in feoliog, Ame- | fellow-citizens, the Pennsylvania delegation was divided eaaeee gore Bie gee iy perpen aft Se atny | Ticens in principle, Americave im object, Americans ia | on thie plottorm, kome Tvoted “fe settled. hy the plattoras fa:the-prosmaies:ton of "88 Gyo “| ieve ve pale ores right in the prelimias f eee nit yy dy ae ban niecateann "etchant estat thistecn States Phe ee eexereneaey | cesign. Fellow-clilcens, Reretofore our’ country has nst tt, Tattended the Fourtes council of | trixe, tbat Congress ought not to legislate apon the sub- | jet tustion, to adopt or make all of the formas, masges | ihe purpore of ihe statate, the Judge is clothed with all that in terrivory of thie sort they have & right to deen divided by parties, These parties have been the | the city of Philadelphia. 1 madethema speech. There | ject. He would object to slavery in New York, but he on modes of procedure which ex has. point the power which a court would ‘posi ja th. of pote ‘all their pr iuto it, and that every territory representatives of s policy of leisure. They have repre- | were some 500 men present. I never saw fo grave an | wa, willing to give the people of each State or Territor: out to be ureful, convenient or to enab-y | the neglect or of the contumacy of a witnors; and hse 8 right to receive colored people who ere slaven, a4 std tea piles ol inemee mie a sara Teet to! pened Forshee’ eae there. the 4 nan hearts | tne right to say whether they wou'd or wouli not peed legislative bodies toact advisably and conduc’ their de- | the purpere of compelling attendance of well Sh Gem, beeante both, eae meee Lave settled all the great questions which arise morely | put to that audience, Do aftires {t, The Philadelphia Grand Conneil would not say that | }iberations with order and method; and no it will assist | » bo Nay FR ger p eer Nero Mme = wen Out of lelaure; and thore partien have failed to be louger | ncopted by your de'egutes ia the National Gosvocticer? | Comgzers had no right to legislate on the subjest of Fo eee tthe eee eae ie eee | sen ta a cae lee ee deny that, and say that if’we acquired It we = . fe i Tepreveniasives Of American principles, or of the | and they cried out with ‘voice, ‘unaai! slavery—that left to Congress itself; Z be Hekt te bring slaves there. Lat the question be de | ‘Awerican heart. Tue peopie have turned there attention | cry, “We do, we ce.” At tne’ Sweeting which took | bat 12 Gd say’ in effeot that the Staten thould ast: | Houent, a4, & consequence of the authority cont out precedent. Many. fave stetod that the repeal cf the Netsuke Grit analy | twhat in dus to thameetves, to thatr native Innd;and | pleco lest Saturday night, although the rain poured | tl all such matters for themselves, in precisely | "Pon them to make jaws and ordinances for the govern. | Powers are conferred upon a Sudge sitting oat court, leave tbe Lersitory in Just the wes (tha Frans, | BOW these two old perties havel become abolished, and oa | down in torrents, and where the speakers wore crowiieg | the same way that the father of » famil “has a right to | ment ofa city, I shall comsider iy which, before the statutes conferring tnem, leas fog slavery had never beca tenevicd “rou | their ruins hes raem up anew party, a new ocgawiea- | each other on tho stand, and men, women and chiidren | Settle his affairs. Mr. Squires thonght thet waa] of thors oes exercised only by a court. Im "7 know the his! of the ‘Kausse and Ne Ra tae law. Tr | 40M) which has for ite object the advaocement of Ame- | drenched with rain, stood inthe public square in acres, | founded Josie, and that the State of New | sls ive botiee, ce of law, and by which orises & me net from the Gouth, Dut the North, Bourhers principlss, self governta free thought, aud | in old Independence square, the question was atked them | York wo ify it. His remarks were reoeived without | ‘heir proceedings ar be igor and governed. Ia the Soaiaeak bo yu lnaneatden toa oudanieeatne tone al responsibility, ‘hee are the great de- | if they ratified and confirmed what their delegate hai | ®DY signs of dissént or of approbation. moment A = Mn rw a yey cept the offer mde. Constitutional. power Coes not do. nis which ‘hie "party, against which we | dope; and ove universal shout wont up, “We do, wo do | On the east side of the Park there was another wagon, | each Rr og ag OT derived, Penis’ Gaatared than ciarecs aoe set ner nee a | ease uenwcives and. for portersy. Only eighteen | to.) Atree more: (Ai ia. (Responded | and more epeaking by'Mr. 8 V. R. Mallory, of New York; | earliest known records, xed and settled rt pooh BO remain Nee ead not exist north of | months sgo he received his birth, perhaps in this very ‘Word more, and I am | Mr. Houghton, of North Carolina, and others. Mr. Msl- | :owrse of procedure, (1 Bl. Tee ee tan hh Bote) thes 36 degrees 00 minutes Now, who can pretend that this | city of New York. he was ® sucking tafaat. ia had s’ divided delegation and she | Jory made a very long speech, defending the principles | ',c0ch house has y ee and Laughter.) In your own Scate he was a native bora orm with an enthusiasm that made determined for itee! A Vorcn-—Lat the niggers look out for themselves, and laid dowm in the Philadelphia platform, seriatim. He not divide the pi Avorumn Voics— That is #0. ere 3ou nursed him. Here he received his ewaddling | the heart glow with o new excitement. And T ask clothes, and Tam proad to be informed that one of his of New York, de you stead by ‘your delegates ‘was cocasionally very severe upon the prelates of ths nursing fathers (pointing to tha chairman) now estaade forma? shoa Mr. Hornixs continaed—Gentlemen, I go for non-in- | PrrmreS on Une chen for Barker thip, Dion bur. | docemd three chetre for at. How citizens, t well, " y low, fellow.ctt ——e ed wah vote aes Oy tne abject. Tie rab.) He ‘outeed thst boy. He rocked tue We | retring trom beteee 76a, 200 Si gay, ‘that T thea you ve epeerenre me have the sett wertion | sight ring to him the eld song— from the bottom of my heart. Kentucky is the gunoct te it ‘we are asked why the Soutt! eesopted the-repoal of tn O®, tock: the erate, Teun. fhe bonds ‘of Union aus tiga Sime kad ote teen oar Missouri compromise it they did not cate for it, we au | And he will not sey toyou in reeponse:— fesetber:. (augur, wal tafe tumerie: Kenowey vas, Ain, le A why did they who od I will not rock; I emamot rock: She has beem the great peacemaker—the great pacifiea- iy. ds ¢ faoetten of re et enr eee But he will say, tor. Her pious voice has rung out a4 loudly and as make member that Dintasny was ; tg by the Union ‘Tho child is all my own.—(Laughter and cheers.) ‘Merry a6 & marriage bell. with in the year 1702, and was admitted without | Sirs, about eighteen months ago, as I said to you, he | Whenever there were dangers. to be avolded she has Say ateoton, Bo was Tosnoane, ‘The Teritning | was an infent im bieceadie, Dat avon im his intaury be | made herself heard of oa and herculean in bis . Pther ih pot ia the hails of Congress Missouri had, also, acts of Com Ho “grew mighty oni Dut on the floor of the Senate by the voles of one formed BSo5 i torial governments ‘over them, ai- »* and even when he only the arrest of an intericated individual by the ‘and had slavory. There wae no objection the ants ef whiggery Fhe opplanes of stoning Sonston't0 commend, apeaker soon after dropped the wabyeot, Altogether. be, or ataoegh, anid he, I admit that whieh they were | . To soatter plenty over a mmiligg land C here were much too and the aadi aid. le the cession of Alabama to the goverament on lo in whieh he mst them And write his history ins a tonne, off gradually, until very fow were lett, whi community for w) Wend, 381, And it is Jaws a5, or ordinances | EF not be interfered with death. jaltusus applause Kentucky gave to the Unton Henry by Fesace came to-as @orying in bis eer kune comes to ed ire andthe Srent slavery ceeded ifcator—the J ® Tomans of the with Froneh Ja1 tathorsitg ver the whole o conte ‘and has extended arm from one end ther ef tt jet stem aa he called it—tne grea’ a New, thengh there may oe Se wii. | of the continent to the other, from§ North to South, father of the com siae. FI qreat Vetter of 2S FE Iation in the act of that slavery should never be | from Fast to Wost, and has called his broshren, his (ellow | the compromise of 1832—the great father ‘com it Lave te Kivurbea ase it wae understood that | countrymen—the ‘great American Par repes age ‘a promine mr i860. bari @ “ee r altaee fequire fem 0 to py card ve penteetes ta ane ies roperty oom Tebreventative coupell, in the elt el taco Three cheers fcr the memory of. Henry Clay.) io bis the t it may be necessory, for ne ™ * const fon was | Coaneh closed ite eanicn on Friday last, ery’ State, . Prcum—Kenta you greeting. went of the sity, Sormed io Lourie admitting slavery, aud with that | (i ‘Terr tory ja the United States was thors | tecky will stand by you. raf com ode woe 5 with EN paa in Council. (Cries of ‘Good.’’) There | from Virginia ‘of the Hho ti sean ch | Sat earn aes eters | 8M Mwy, = Peebacaeet cs Union, should these questions have been raised? All man— (Dip, hip, hurreh}—and we hope and trast that | the of : Buthority of that law aver by Fa can ag~o en was the understanding of | We meet besrt aud hand, with hands united, and when kept far anit is pple 9 i sessions of cenerves: Zot with hearts one, in the feat bonds of unity, harmony, adle, Sam cond been universally acknowledged, In mere = —: ir, the Missouri ion | brotherly love, union—Native American union. Me ve wise, the course of legislative procedure, was Lar that the question why we ac- | Plause.) Elements of disraption, however, made uah—hash—b as it is, well & or capable of the 3 thet eons tan is answered 4 rr Fars. Doan sutictaeny not sufictentl; a ig would be invotved in the Greatert ui gzpee. vin conta! oy ket ne hope eas fest fea fet fo tie. am ban, omer, it the ‘two old | The auodged coon - Spc ite care om | Eke oe ber cea ia ect ak pears) r a hay Pace rind an pn, Toe at | as iy ny ae rea rian (ol + this tine a rush made to thie Chlet’s ofteo, and there | siHttte harder, w llttlo harer stil sod then thes die ‘recta, Wel pen hove: ; fe On im w*te alee loud exien for Rayner, i over witb eo qualification, for