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THE NEW YORK HERALD. | WHOLE NO. 6878, MORNING EDITION—TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1855. PRICE TWO OENTS. ‘ manufacture or not, you must juige with great cireum- | py ¢ . Setuffs, nor | ter.) He thought, after all, thet this law wouldconsticute | the . \tizens agatnst the law, he thought there would be | dation was 80! —and, fa creveutetion AMPORTANT TEMPERANCE MOVEMENTS. epee ded teeth tenes cauegton tans oe eh ind wasted to octane te ere Nes fh cate | 22 exception to the general rule. He thought {t would | no cen wastration ia opposition torte If ore they tried referable’ rate gee ak ae * empt. apd bappy reeidence for him and bis children, ani to | b€ Ubeyed. Ho thought that the citizens of New York | to eno; % it, which be thought they would not do, as A error in this regard may lay you Hable to severe | secure peace amd order and ind istry in every. ¢hi,978Pd t be diviced into two grest classer—those who ap | all the pa Wic functionaries were opposed to it, Those THE NEW LIQUOR LAW, personel rer ponai bility—i ih as yor are hereby x- | and factory aud work shop; respect of maa for'n.425 re of the Fugitive Slave law, aud those who did not. | who made 1% law did not intend to have it enforced, presely enjomed to se ‘such liquors, an dlevation of the weabest and poorest cat nner ae ‘Ore who insisted that that law should be obeyed, be- | and therefore Purposely made it defective. It was a0 ce PSS ae a Your principal duties arise under the 12¥b section. | bared, to respectability and usefuluess, and of thou- ane la et ree Toreeee Bee Tome © Wreaths ee i 5 v ‘The dutses under other sections are merely to sery#pro- | gands of families, now im want, to plenty, ‘peace and i that this temperance law should be | thereby to cbta.‘o the votes of the temperense men. Mayor Wood's Proclamation to the Peo- costes of muagiatratee, The 12th estion requires ated Ay ” » = ied, because it see lew; and be should oxen ex. | contd nat be dens“ that {ities were caused by the Exceptions were mide to the decision ant motel, A ‘rst, To arrest apy person seen in the violation noth: . m8) md, I 01 ALD, | 0 wor; ther *ore he a6 no duties be im- | when the District Attorney mo. t the defe mda: ple of the Metropolis. let section. . sent mie, Hes ry ny her ea cee universal compliance with its requiremsut. | posed on ted liquors. “The promineat liquor | be arraigned to plead, TOV? that the defendaat 1) we it eee tha sutbority than that of the Logislature, ad should, there‘cre, decide that the supervisors acted .og'ally 0 ausocinte judges, aud that the court existed nam COPE tent court of criminal jurisdiction, y Second, To seize all liquors kept in violation of the Ist | gna # ” aad © | Th, ‘ex, of course, whose editor's name suggested | dealers, he eaid, do no * view the law in « proper way. Mr. Hadden, counsel for defendant, stated “TIRI section, at the time ‘ane place of the commission of the Tsien ot lay ae and oe ARS 01 ing very diferent from whiskey puaches, will | They desire to mono} Kid the traiic. Ho reiterated | bad more objections to ‘and ‘moved Ms Sad INSTRUCTIONS TO THE POLICE. cflence. binivg to array public pg wir in hostility tothe law, | f€cum ? the advice of the HeraLp man, and the News will | his idea of repealing th. ¢utics on imported spir.te, | dictment be set aside for the follo. jag réasoas: lit— ie ‘Third, When on arrest or seizure is mace, to make a | gna Threat: ning pe in its execution | comes Vin the same way. They would ali insist cuat | which elicited much applai 3. The Grand Jury whish fount these indictments wre ae $i 8s compisint before a proper magistrace under the act. whilst, @ Pbonibitory Liquor law remained on thestatute | | Several propositions were .W2e presented, but finally books. t: ¢y should reader taci: obedience to the law. | it was agreed to adjourn til Thursday evening, and in There was Only another ciass of citizens—those who did | the meantime azcortain what the Mayor proposes in ngaged tb a ‘Deas Fousth. To arrest euy intosieated person. ina siore, | Wit! 9 leas of pa Ja thelr basinoss and with Toy ied . oneke not drawa entirely from the Graad Jury laste re h jury in their persous anc ty, it Decomes all ti * MEETING OF FRENCH CITIZENS, | »«tel, pubic place, or disturbing the peace, aud take | iricade of law ard oraew to stand’ Gat prominently a quired by Jaw to be filed in the Glerk’s office of this Court im October i but were eummonca him before a trate, " . pot swear b ¥ the Fugitive Stave law. And they were nine | bis proclamation of intructions % the police, which it | by the Shenff by ord. a ; as The first and second stems, thus, referred to to this.| {chy iehtl riouter Mbecallyy we tana ee cemacine Yoasther | tr xine tox be hundeed temperance mes. CAppia.ss.) | was said would be published toda’ A’muflelent uumber ol appearing, eo orden tne laccod . “4 section are of vital importance, and require to be ex | hereby pledge ourselves, ae cltizens and working men, ‘be law, the: ¥, Will be obeyed, und bring blesaings in it —— tequiring three more, which were ‘likewise got (rave jiquor Men at the Senet reat judament., They require the arrest | without fear of any threate of violence or injury, of Sy tere $a copesice., but the etaca: | The Adopted Citizens and vhe Temperance from the lite, 3d—The liste of the Grand Jury frow of peréone an seizure of property, ia the visi bs ti fons) influence ¢ law spread an rome uai- We ql r iret drawis ade, was compared ¢«- * Tabernacte, Violation of the act. You will therefore, be cai Tiolator und every offocr that neglects te do kis tach | versel. Ho conc €uded with tals prediction, asasely, thet [From the Courrier des Etats Unis.} clusively of individuate who are tatabvtamte af the frei that whea an arrest or seizure is to be made on Resolved, were the Jaw probiott, 0g the sale of iatoxivating drinks will | A certain ni 3 Sacesth aie ll os —that is—merely as the result of your own comspehen) ‘neous Few Wie Say (for He will Tork ont ite Jogi tumste, teodeaciee in unpeopling the ose interes temperance law is li.wly direotly to tion—that it must be such a violation as th coment ‘at Blackwell's Peep be rid of their | POThouses und pr. ‘sons, in reducing taxes, in uplifting | affect, have thought it expedient to holds meeting to ‘Whe Adopted Citizens and the Prohibitory | can Cully disclose, and carnot embrace offeu present character of tenants, and we sail be sble to ia. | depraved buroanity, Aad thus become a.worker together | cecice upon a line of common coaduct in View of tne inet Gis the whole of the offence coos not fall under your own | vite our honorable Legislature to see them filled with o with Ged and be ahe 'Fald of thatgreater and better Ory eventualties preparing for us by the date—nw wafortu- > x of Our compatriots, am those | tleven wards of the olf city of Hrooklyn, ant werd caa- ently not drawn from the body of the city of Brook - ‘a2 ROW constituted. 4th—a aumber of these grané ra Were not quslitied to #it ay each by law. Intimations were thrown out that mors objections eye: as thus, « sale of liquor in your presence not in | hs, ‘the knowledge of the shail cover the earth | nate one this time—of the 4th of July. would be raised when thee points were setitea. shy of the excepted places, or by one Of the Licensed | Taney pomulation, engaged in every hint of manufas: waters do the el wonels of the earth,” ‘The HxnaLp comments with its bed faith and ite ta. | | The District Attormey not being prepared 10 aus wor &e., &e., &e. perrons, and not dutiable, is an absolute violation of | Resolved, That those presses which labor to misrepre. | The Cxammay then » nounced that the hat would be | bitual perfiéy om this atriotly legitimate procesdiag, It | these objections, the hearing of counsel was postpenet the law, calling for arrest of the person, seizure of the | sent the law and cast dust inthe eyes of the prople, | %t round; and that yrbile the collection was being | affects to seo imit a menaeo of open reviniance om tha ) watil Monday afternoon, at Po’clock. very Nquor and complaint to the magistrate, But keepiog | and which do little but stir up the people to-a spirht of | made, a rong would be su. 26 by Mr. Brower, part of the Fremch Toren of New York, against the Yesterday the motion made by comesel for the lin ine HOBSERVANCE OF THE LAW IN THE METROPOLIS, | With intent to sell or give away is not an offence fu'ly | resistance and rebellion, deverve the ‘and coatempt The hat was according) ¥ sent round, and Mr. Brower | putting in force of the Prohibition law, and evokes Gealers to net aside the indictment against the deiend t * | within the scope of the eye: ‘ecying is, but the | of every virtuous citizen; and that those presses which | tested the audience to a delectable fomperance 4 paste of # foreign inaurrection.ia the streets of enta, was denied bg, Joes Cuiver, alter argument ow emai laces intent is matter of which the loae i not, and | tuke the side of law and order, and labor to enlighten the | S@t to the tune of ‘The Kia,¢ of the Cannibal Talands)? | tmperial city. dosh siden. The defendant (Baliwin} was thereapem MAYOR WOOD TO THE PEOPLE OF | cannot be asufficient judge. You cannot see the vio- ‘ople and show the goed oj ‘of the law in other | Which received much ‘a@, and was encored to A calumny or a false assertion, the more o7 the less, fh | required to eppear this ay to the imdic: Ww Yo lation of this for an intent cannot be seen; it | Btates of the Union, should have our united thanks sed | tune of © All Round My flat.’ too ordinary a thing im the columns of Mr. Bennett’; |, mem found against him for ge quer without NE RK, in only to be made out from many circumstances which | ,uppert- Rey, Mr, Conny next address the meeting. He said— | journal to be worth, ina general way, the trouble of || Hoen.s# Mayor’s Orrick, New Yorx, June 25, 1855. the judgment, and not to the sight. Ricolvea ‘That we hail the coming Fourth of July as | 4 century since the Court oi” Rogland for its | dwelling a single instant upen it. Under extetiag cir. +::fibladaa:eeamhanteaemetn On the 16th April, immediately after the adjournment fore, do not come within this wec- | the most glorious day for our elty and country since the | Preacher the ablest man in Britaie; but, in an evil hour, | cumstances, however, it is eaportamt not to allow an City Intelligence, ‘ to compel you to arrest or seize with- | 4th of July, 1776; that the: “ ¢ committed forgery, and was condemned to be hung. | error of any kind to odtain lit whieh may serve the Mors Avour tax Wer—Tus Ervecr or raw Raa of the Legislature, I declared, in an address to the pudlic, pel y as oa a pea = Te proclaimed enaanotpe- | re King demanded nat the soatence should be re. | antegonisnee, and pasaions of the momeat. What- im Counmny.—Yesterday the earth in oar Aconp ebed the obligation resting upon every administrative officer a to the Sap item, Ua Papal Ca ree bo first | out representation, burdened us with standing armics, rag jutthe a which ms pmeerey was, ‘It - re Fad we pencoteette its impoteng ae a pi pes she hbtahighewen betty, wht ae y 0 ys + and second. It is important followed up, ane ted give thie man yy, we mustalzoina one give iY, now Nothi lone immense throu! delig » which, consider- to execute the laws, and the prople to obsy them; and pO wasted our substance, and prevented our growth and p hat might | jury, and hes cast emongst the mass ef pure aanert. | ingibe suttzy condition ef the atmerphere, wae aot at : the conviction under the complaint is essential for your ity; im y . | lMberty to the meanest of your subjests.’” that with reference to the act just passed, known as Pp 7 rea pot eee yecspwmechonn. ge acing raguterea | We be applied to the prosent stato of things, They | caé germs ef deflance which it will sedate trae to | sat cmplessaut to take. Wemay all theak eur stare fee own protection. al tyranny, which bas beggared t these rains that are now sweeping over the ; # already required of you by the law and by hall wel: | | (the Fugitive Slave Isw,) and the public mind | less to deny it--foreigners form # sort of caste apart, ping coum: ad regulations Of the’ Police Deparvamnt; an | cearen Matinee Te PTT Pt | haa demed whether itah low, skola’ ba cieed, | pe aeebes ane special ideas and interesta little aym' | try, for they come to us laden with health and far ax the street concer But it was the law of the land; and we were told thot if | pathetic, if mot eompletely hostile, to the institutions incale: ¥ T cannot too seriously im upon youth discreat | The resolutions (with the exception of the 24,) were | we questioned the righteousness of that law, it. was not | And geniuy ofthe eenater, all sae may tend toon: | noaloalable benefits, Directly and indirectly, the exercise of your duties, this law. Ths power of | uranimously adopted. our place to go and fight it fin the public mapt, but that | courage this manner of viewing thiogs is, therefore, the | Wi! ‘‘ put money imto the purse’”’ of all, and bread inte “An Act for the prevention of [atemperance, Pauper- ‘The fourth tiem, as to the arrest of intoxicated per- | fathers and sons, end corrupted the morals of the people; | bad Istely a law which affected the whole coenty, | eradicate. For many of that party—it would beuse- ism and Crime,” aboat which the pubdiic mind was greatly agitated, I used this language:— m seizing property at will, arresting persona by no in the halls of legislation we might right ourselves, | wore cangerous, from the fact that @ prejudiced mind | the mowths of hungry thousands. Tne truth ef thie -Seive counsel as to my dutivs onder it, and withoatkaowing | other wathorite thaw sous eyanieniaes ie nahi A separate vote was taken upon'the second resolution, | They had now another law: Mr. Vasser, a large brewry | always welcomes with deplerable facility, whatorer | aasertion ean bo Proven without difficulty. We see by whether I am cailed upon aa e power as Mayor, totske | has heretofore never been conferred on police officers, | Which was carried nem. con., amid great applause. of bis part of the country, had remarked the other day, |, answers to his preconceived notions, and nothing would our tel phic despatches and sxchan; that Flat cok Gah a et and should be carsfully guarded, 60 as to avoid oppres- The Cuarman.—I have now great pleasure in intro. | ‘‘I am prepering to close my brewery on the 3d of July, |" more advance the intrigues of the temperance tamatice | Or elearey pe Mcgee ty tier igor A ny cae Dublic With the samecandor that prompts this commuaiga. | Sion of the citizen ducing to you one of the oldest and most enthustastic | 2nd! tm very glad that we have todo so, for brewing, | than the veport of a foreign cowlition againal their int- | tenged all over tho Union.” We hear of thon uve the Hon. Tt ia ono ot the dearest rights of American oltizens to shou after all, 19 a mean business.” (Laughter’) That story | quitgua work, pnt arth ktm pty ig OF thems Free vee On the 27th of April, in anotbor address, I stated that | be fecure in person and property. Neither should he | friends of the temperance cause that has ever stood up- | showed ‘how even their opponents in the country felt. ‘The French residing in the United States have al: — oe pomp ion prong ‘pam se Thad obtained these Opinions, aud declared what they | touched without the strongest and most conclusive | on this platform—the Rey. Mr. Chambers, of Philadel | They had here, in this city, to meet the he psec of sted inthe exercia rights and over this extent of territory at this time when th: om We k Proof that the act in fully warranted, andintheexer- | pnts, (Cheers.) the law—not Americans, but foreigners. If any Intge | servance of thelr duties, a loyalty whish only the most |, Sys ripening, theve Taine will give ‘am inceleuiebia ter To that of the District Attorney, (Mr. Hall,) applying | ise of this important discretion, too much cauttion and 7 hotel keeper here refueed to obey the lav, he mast bea | flagrant injustice amd the most deeply rooted prejudice crease to the yield. The potatoes, the wheat ‘the exclusively to the law previous to the Fourth of Jaly | Ju¢ament cannot be adopted. 1 sball hold you to severe ‘The Rey. Mr. Campers spoke as follows:— Frenchman, not an American. (Laughter.) He bad | can refuse torecognise, Amongst all the Earopoan na- | C1¢% poo scan bet eget os ire. next, it is not now necessary to refer; that o’ Mr. Dit- | AccountabLity, and trust that while the law is faithfal- | When Jehovah, the great author of the universs, | been told to-day ina large hotel, that they would not | tiouslities sheltered by the hospitable flag of the lInion, ' , a: PORE tances, ‘ oubdled by the copious iivods which lave fallen wi-him : ‘ ly executed. eustained and cerried out on the one hant, | ccmpleted this magnificent world, in which it is our | close their bar, or pay any attention to the law; and yet | there is not one which practices to. higher degree thaa ee ta ae ae ee ie ‘cts, om ‘the other, wil be perpetrated | honcr and our privilege to. livo, he pronounced himeelt, | be shoud have. thought that if the propeletol of that | ours, respect for the lagm political. reckeee, cel wba parkins a mntlicg Be wenite tal wees mace Ae en pai kkataeen ia. xok emihensladité hetesnhad Waccate rights of the citizeas. in the performance of | that all was very good. Man was in the midst of | house had walked into certain rooms, and sven the | nence from intrigue. Menaced at present in one of the : sad substantial capital of the couutry by thee enc the duties which are thus devolved upon you. most magnificent and auspicious circumstances. Imme- | evidences of drunkenness there, he would not have | vital branches of its commercial interests, it may seek 1 : NOON, SAS Ce are ae cE ESe aay Buco ite FERNANDD WOOD, Mayor, | Siately, Sowover, upon the completion of saatwork--ito | spoken so, There le nothing’ in this law ‘no moe, | to avert a common pullty cosmnen action, but itia a | T™aDH sa tsteteer eae ae ann rigs Pe Tee aay other duty undsr the act than to require ovliceme: creation of man and the placing of him in circumstances | rible and fearful as that of ram vending. Go down | wiliul and unworthy calumny to impute to it icoas of | fF J only one thing to be cuarded against, or feared, Im perform the duties evjoined upon them; nut that in hi the irable—the Infinite Kuler of the universe | to the Tombs to-night—said he—and ask Baker, and | violence and of armed resista’ pry Ree iene te the pol ge he must eastion them, against any ia | THE LIQUOR PROHIBITIONISTS AT THE TABERNACLE. }* passe id prokibitory law; and there and then com. | other murcerers, what brought them there and they will |. In spite of the rumors und slatms which certain jour Seas se eORnNY, Sie Desveelt are uew sm, tion o| n of the Inw whic declares st shel he sing | tell you they did the feartul deed when they wore drunk, | nals endeavor to spread fcr different objects, we paraist | ind the wheat es rng vik he palit oe Ht s onatary | 1 thinking that the, tarparunce Jury io destined Sickie Housed, he may possibly by these ‘rains lose his whole a who ra | itself under the weight o rant unconatitu ) "Were. | and of its exorbitant tyranny, But should {t unfortu- | STOP: We have known instances of the most laxutiour harvests of wheat having been lost by beiog cat it Femember | nately prove otherwise—if the blind obstimacy of secta- | the rain in the shock, and sproutiog Before it one te ‘ > 17 to liquors the right to sell which inthis State ws meverec tg menced the idea of prohibition, (Cheers.) 1 Eiven by any law or treaty of the United Staten and wolek | A mass mesting or coavention of the friends of the | Dimtellto his intelligent creature, that he had made in | It isgood from this platform to look back bi ‘are exempt from seizure, for the scliing of which there is no his own image, he told him that everything around him, | —it 1s geod to look upon the face of that penalty. and that pol.cemen will not be warranted in ecig- | Probibitory Liquor law was called last evening at the | everything beneath andeverything above him, thatcould | ported the bill to the Legislature. (appl ih i h the vesrels in whieh ih = rex ibut ai I; indirectly to hi. t, member when the first mind concsived it-—' ined, ‘Tho Counsel ‘more parcicularly descrivos, thers | TberBacle, by the following notice: $e hin peat ha onl Bayete t! riaus’ should bring about in Liquors ae being those which aro pormitted to he imported by | _ There will be a m Sek hheteg of Aes) fri eth the Hadieg, cy pee gi he Peng ‘ef Ay ows py pa ment elles thes Menvensdaent venture to predict that eur com ti Letty ar peltapeneraary Ke toate oar ee Sitihet are imported.” He tice thivks tha: she wayer tas | prcbititory law, a the Broadway Tabernacle, this eve: | deciared wan not to be touched—the law that bo pawed | was ensbrined in our statute book, which makes ft « cri- fo maintain their rights without incurring the reprosoh | farmers throughent the land will exercise this caution, Deen appropriately advised by the District Attorney on | the Prohititory fawin phie cite, The Rev’ Jobe Onawe, | W&# am absolute one, and a prohibitory one, A very | minality to sell ram. (Applause) Now, who willop- | of baving conspired against @ public tranquillity, Next year will be # sesson when there will be s demand ‘Other branches of the law abore retorred to. bers, of Philadelphia, Wim. Hl” Burle'gh, the Rev. 8 4, | SbORt period after that the prince of darkness, the | pose thislaw? First, we bad moral suasion. But there (From the Progrés.] for every grain that can be gleaned from the flelds Subsequently, I have examined this taw with groat | Corey, Robert Mettingn, the Rev. Thosey Anmit ad | fatber of lies, the instigator of all evil, persuaded our | 1s x0 use in that. We bave had also indefinite enact- In # republican country the law can never be over- | War, with its ravages, is shaking the continent e¢ core, | ing sincerely desirous of arriving at correct con: | the Key. Mr Robinson, are announced at the 1? a common mother to set at maught God, and to disregard | ments on this cet ‘but they hadno bearing. Now we | come. Whoever should attempt to violate it by forse of Europe, and that continent must be fed by somebod: clusions as to my whole duty under it, 7 ¢ the principles by which her own interests were to be | bave a law that will not.be opposed by the well wishers | arms would lose more than his property; he would risk, | Now, here is a chance for American hugbandmen to os Itis undeniable that the executive officer must as- At the appointed hour there were some 800 persons iguantea’ Fad Protected. From that hour to this the | of society—that will not be opposed by the drunkard | in the effort, his life, Ima republic legality is the pss- | something for the benefit of their pocket boos. Let Sume every act of the Legislature to be valid. this as. | present (afterwards increased to some 1,600), two-thirds | devil, Lucifer, the fallen son of the morning, in conjumc- | himself. Then we say, ‘ All nail to that booming can- | sion of the citizen, although frequently a restraint, as | them be prudent and judicious, and they may make thee sumption, however, in the pretent case, must be adopted | of them being, as usual, composed of ladies and children: | tioa with all the incarnations of wictedness that the | non which shall usher in the glorious Fourth |’ in am army disci is the passion of the soldier, a!- | wallets as (at as they desire; in fact, make them ‘‘atick: ‘3th some reference to the doubts expressed ua to some A Rs world has ever sern, has been in strenuous, desperate, | bave been used to honor and celebrate that day. We | though often a yoke. As ina military revolt, the sound right out’’ with the ready. These reins are coming te Hfanches of this law. In assuming the luw valid, I am | T¢ Platform was occup’ed by come two score of serious | wicked, devilish, hellish opposition to prohibitory laws | have been accustomed to think of Warren and of Stark; | cf the dram would brip, back the soldier to the ranks | their assiatance. Every. cep) thet falis from the clouds < not to give up the duty of administering it sscorting to | looking’gentlemen, The meeting was called to order by | when such laws are to do good to man. (Cheers.) Iam | but now, associated with this will be the glorious thought | to assist im compelling mutineers to retura to their | hag in it # value that will sprout up from the ground, . those views concerning its practical execution whi " 5 not surprised at the opposition which meets us hore, | that that day’s sun will be suggestive of a day when it | duty, so it would be in an armed resistance against the | and be felt throughout the length aad breadth of our have concladed have the highest lesal autnority, | Mt. ese ong Prenident, who briefly expressed the | for che devil knows periectly well that it, the Empire pon & dramshop, or law of temperance, or any other. The three-fourths of | Union. Let no one grumble at the present wet weather. ‘Whilst azsuming an act valid, it 1s also imperative upoa | ects of the call, and introduced agentleman who read | state carries out—as may God gent it may, and I be- , during which the speaker resumed his seat ) | the citizens of the United States hate it, aud yet, if, legal Revour oy Tai CrPuiaws—A Row ox BiécKwaie’e the public officer to ascertain what is really required of | the following list of officers of the mesting:— Lieve it wil jaw prohibiting the manufactut e Mr, ARMITAGE wi resistance once exhaustad, there should be some who eet: L ai ais “him, and in case of doubt as to any particular provision PRESIDENT. of all intoxicating Huors asa beverage, he —We experiente to-night the charms of the word ‘“‘Jadi- | would be disposed to xesist ite epplication by force, the wo.—Last Sunday @ very serious disturbance o¢- —the enforcing of which will incur personai responsi. ISAAO J. OLIVER. the language of Shakspere, kee.”’ Like the old Jewish jubilee, this is fraught with it, of order would prevail with the | curred on Blackweil’s Island, among the dissolute womem: ““pility, by the infliction of injuries upon tbe persons an’ F ‘The devil’s oc the richest blessings. Ihe Jewish jubilee was charac- 'y other consileration, and the agg ASSISTANT PRESIDEN’ J recently sent from the city, who are now confined in the pert; + Sand ii a ‘ terized by two things—the extinction of debt and tne h, the victims of a mistake as to the y! “Yor wnatot | a: Acie hive m right Mcoaiger c ay eS Oe seater —(Lavghter and cheers.) Where would be found in- | declaration of personal liberty. There was someting means of emai ‘a right in a republican country. Workhouse. It appears that there has been much com~- officer to enforce the laws, they have no right to require Jeremiah T. Brooks. cendiaries? where would be found burglars? where | analogous to itin this jubilee here to-night. It woul If there were another route traced by principle, we grid lately as to the quality of bread and meat served him to seize property and’arrest persons, Wines kaa CHAPLAINS. would be found murderers, if such @ law were | sound from one end of the land to the other:— would place ourselves in the foremost ranks of those tho inmates in that institution. The women have. ‘well founded doubt ne to the subveqaen? mainesonese nt Rev. Dr. Mareb, nor Jehu Osaetents adopted? Noman ia this assembly needs to b» informed ‘Oh coed: Su Miglh tangent Se wtade, astye Hye who felt disposed to act upon it; but out of the legal | complained that the broad has been mouldy and the this authority by the courts. It would not do to teli PRESIDENTS that intoxicating liquors have been the csuse of mora Gh, bear it, ye waves, as yo rol! path we see only pitfails. We have felt it to be our | meat tainted and utterly unfit to be eaten. Fi Sf ad bord aber Souris bad decided that his proper. | sable 7, ap ever ony fats ovumtry,< tuocmnste tod ete artent extremes of the gurlloige oa chase "aha: tn curate alacsa, aie. bet oo | to reuel, whion they noeerdiagt ath net Gasdep nt ngs - ee ae person illegally iss. : of thousands have been smitten down by this fell curse, F ay ‘ J ae not only £eC0sed, taSGk: bub arenananced Crartt Kinotised order 's antiet Obs Ph gl yeti Pome at the bar, in the senate, and in the pescofal pursuits pitfalls wi fie pyle’ nag eecey nating: Tks = ‘tables, on washing the crockery. the Seven oder bed bias a ni OF Be of merchandise. The Prince of Dartness knows fall cold blcoded historian, towum up their results after ir. | matrons interfered, when o general fight commenced, be i tion is that the officer arsumes no illegal G.H-Rusher, Step! well that if this law is carrled fully and fairly out in reperable catastrophes. The course to be pursued by the | and for a time the place was a scene of the wildest com: bi. F, Webes heise cuistul to avoid the ex ersine of seh Hon.JacobS Miller, Jam New York, then this favored and God-baptized nation le of the.lest two months and | Citizen of this country is too clearly trarod for bhimte | fusions Heats wee broken, cloves torn, hair pulled, SR Genet tas ce eee ae John 8 "Sam P. iant and throw for ever from its ahoal- with its Fesults. He was deviate from it: with regard to foreigners, but moro es | ands free ght indulged im generally. Governor Tapiat TUG tncet petvoenl Labilty. No’ pablo oftene Henry Charle accursed traffic. (Cheers.) The powers of it to @ severe test, and he would ially republican Frenchmen—thove who are in exile | was present, and was in some way mixed up im the af. Gwar age ees eta" Satan ei |G Wroeirea, Bila parte, | ubm Met ua Bae tema Gace | SGI ta atte ta, eoattate | [etavine canes anni” casey” dn | Ry?" gt, tong ie aap Se } : f 5 . at has not its eve w t - | have too mue this their | ri inns >; 3 Pane ee 8 ee cele ay eee pened Ne Blom rer rorya oe eg Boa in pot a philuntbropist in th @ plo; Adop lac abtIsee ote Opals to dictate fie repose by taking | peslof numbars.. The lesters ware trikes aod echoed te. « Sree aT edie cee ee ee ee | i a reeks oat malice,” nn, Heckuan, upon this State. There is not a philanthropist on God's + suey had only to weigh one side of the evideace, | part in acts of violence against the laws, But if right | cells, and the rest in some way pacified. If the fuste axe evident, therefare, that whilst itis my daty | F- ah Worrall, Dev 8... Townsond, | globe who is not looking to you for an exemple worthy t bound to give the other side. and duty sbould ever cause them to descend into the | ea represented, the conduct of the ‘in food i tanoale Shir ees tan Nie pecan ehareciey aan. | OS } Siackibtin, ‘Thor. S Shepherd, Waa. Budd, of bis imitation. (Loud cheers.) Fellow citizens, our Ferries phenyl crm tape nape streets, it would not be to perish there ‘like dogs,” as a | these unfortunate people with Touldy and fanted feed e , ? , 'e » JW. s eople bave been down trodden enough. @ talk break neck journal of this city elegantly expr. in | is most reprehensible, ana calle for the loudest censure. Seibel ea te comntitatocat'ly, Sestiine sos th nivioe | Temectaeteel, Oe Mens, Seana Mout 1ivecabout British oppreson-—we talk about | country mey legislate on that rl slew lines toriny of the agveeaite opicit ef Cansegeacy | onthe pert or tue pellie. Weta te be ite temas | Waa Weleve ts ba ts neon bontetie ehl rete ks Reese Lewis, =| Wim. M. Baxtor, feration without Cur comsent-—put what were the | sioral auction Nad been, sottlea fOrcer Nese: | but to combat there, conquer there, or die like men, rill eome up for action at the meeting of the Board te- |> Female awaveres rit. or Gogh David miata, FE GBagin | with ie Inpos teed pon arty tho ram trae | standing te maniy eanert appeal ofthe Mayor the | pp, {TO the New Yorker Sans Zeltang) | ee awe PouionMacomanaa—the ony |. F. Wi By ma. ett. bit . | “ing orter to the police as declaring what that construc | Simaapyccn, me ser the dog tal aot. fo damiuried at certain periods of ite bad every Sunday slace then 6,000 Fum sho ia fal oie red republicans hold mastings at thelr headquarters ts Lagiaata, vat ite last pepe oom 8 commties Fe 4 a i 14 year. Shall we not protect the ions of our ie in A. peech * “om se nae ae ee igate the manner in w! just is dispent Te Will be seen that thie order applies exclasively to | BpeeB, Eilery, Gf. Halsted, — eens Purdy. sagh, | saneer of being ruled by this terriblecalamity? ff you. | Hall, some weeks ago, in which there was the old postie is patie rena trea toed | ous pases Co Tleged that lst fhose duties put upon the polica by the act, ia whic “ S _ Il the shops closed, there will be terribleian- | €xpression of sitting ‘under the vine and fig treo, and sony, Hi , being. there aes a. are ed with the power of seizing pro- | Rev; OJ; Warren, George leonard, R. J. Hinton, fa rng i eg ange TT pleated | commented on it. it-was the newest thing ost, he anid; | the Germans also are organized and drilled for the same | corruption practised b; magistrates and officers. ‘ant arresting persons merely upon their own | ¥\C- Andrus, | Henry Moore, Jr., eee ee eeigs tnt bloated | sed the newest thing about it wee ite eadect piety: | Prrpote. To this intelligence the Hxxatp adda a recom: | The committee, of which Mr. Stuyvesant, of this elty, ie m without warrants or complaint. It does not | The Rev. Mr. Mansu offered up prayer. calves! thosnioaenae Gags bleating thereforma-a! | tht irvine end fig tee!” Did you ever heatof suck a | mendation to the Germans and the French to lay down | chairman, will meet next Wednesday, and then edjourm, interfere’ with their duty in'the serviag of process or | Mr, I. J. OuiveR then presented himself, and said:— | (Lavghter.) These creatures are to be pitied. Opinions | | 7 td nd cast from their minds all idea of an | to the Court of Sessions, at which place the complaint. ‘ their ari had b DB, not gratuitously he presumed either, by | thing ass rumselier’s vine amd fig tree? They must be ‘We think that tak us | will be entered, and the charges investigated. in executing warrants based upon tne complaint je fhed bs jurrection, We at we can take upon , rges gat iti The object of thie mee’ is simply to make prepara- | some distingui men of the bar. Very well. What | ¢3 iy % > GES alk Obs to Leteeae the rere eetntin? | tio fer the trod fiction of the proniitory ibyuor ew ta | is the amount ofall Why, that you will got be allowed | though it may be the vine of Gilgal, celebrased in’ the Nn Care obey | Ee cry id sas Dax —The mnt, boom nad oil , . | theeity of k om the coming Fourth o! a ‘e Be. omestic liquors, but that you mey sell foreign ; OF per! relat a belon, sail }, that \psized om Bun- ee iy Beker ogy Rem pay ee hate ban) ight to show our fellow pln that | liquors. I would say to my Sout Eo wil you allowa | which bad aworm at the root, Why did not the gentle- | whcee special interests were threatened by this abs he by ty a bas and it this d Rhat judioial deciaio 4 we rejoice in the prospect of introducing that law here, | sot of men to paes laws in your Legislature, and aliow | ™an amplify a little, and tell us what this vine is—how thet bert oeat cell seein Dacionern tee: ms oe Guanine, Lem? ins oct Deere sae 40 dispel all doubis, and ascertain fully whether every | @pd we mest forthe purpose of ahowing the rumecllers | your lawyers to decide that the Koglish and the French, | gnarly and Anotty 16 is whet cl it Deara—its foll- | Ty oat tho Germans have too mack camaos sense vo | Tue maker's name on’ the sail is P. Meare, 000 Week apparsat condition’ ahall be carried out. ‘It is scarcely | cf the eity of New fone hat we are not scared nor | and the Germans are to be allowed to send over thelr | #ke dropping with blood—of the sephyra earns te teaus, thas bastityintoony sash sioveaenis tie ree | seek 4 frighte: but we believe good ican dos- iferous stu! poison the people? Fellow-citizens, ine—1 tree « Which Tbave consideraa it my duty toadope, 'eballear, | tripe of obedience to all the laws of the land. (Cheers,) | there are other yentlemen to follow me. ‘My hoart 1s | under which the rumsellera aro to sit? Last yoar, the | Mts of which could not but be premature and detrimen Marine Affairs. tal. The most excited amongst the persons to whom we F. The Dutch rumeeliers may get her, and may pass | fufl,"end my soul ison fire, becease I believe it is one of | rvmsellers told them that the passage of a temperance ¥ —Mr. ‘ 4 son- ill be sustained. . on ya have ands mn, the of reat repub- a + a " bat Beam a that ao far as this olty 1s con. | Tiayor who will sustain the law. { called pon ave | Ne And may the paley of death reach thererm ence | willruin the whole buricess.”” (Caughter,) "He now Sao Hated are entisdy techn aiden the Geren | Yery superior clipper schooner, of about 275 tons regie- been adopted for the suppression of intemperance, No | Mayor to-day. Inever saw him before, although { had | stall be stretched out to touch the sacred arm of | hada word to say to the ladies, He knew, when he had press will do its duty in trying to recall to better f ter, to be called the Blackfish. Her ownersare J. Big- eet awe cae moro somman veges | Ginn Ge at ba phied's feieh | Sed tet tacos eT adem | eatyts pus tree VM iac mie tae | Toe eat and proto aia of | ier, Haq. of Newbury, Van Brant & Sght, of set, a than myself. I look upon intoxication, and the | the law— not make it, I am 0, $0 it, bu nd now fellow. ns w York, ask you i | German po; it has always done, and will al habitual "asa of tatoaionting Iquor, as a vico more de. | Will execute the law.” I then asked nim: “Suppose the | resolve and give your best exerti ns to have this iand re- {gives = a ‘chong age ear ie —_ — id ways 60, POR g the warning of the Heraty, | 804 others. Sho is designed for the South: Americam structive iv ta effects, aud more debasing in its charac- | courte decide the Iaw to be perfectly constitutional, | deemed and disenthralied from that curse of using in- Weck otlier "iitine S84. Sa theese to be’ taven’ cake Bt. [From the New Yorker Demokrat ] trade prinetpally, and will be commanded by Captaim “Wey Bins Sny other attins th Atis comaanalty. Mg ome, |. UL EaE ee Ae ciery hasasd 7 Coheice): aU T gent | See Erman hte, Oneea) leave manda nosso, vecysttnej| Tosbdes thede ender web 'tha’ veuusclices Sovtss| | The Nuw Tomx-Bhatto: py 0 youterday’s issue | Jobn Reeves, of Long Lsland. eck i peecopts ave al itag Sr aeneeee ok to see the Mayor wader preulon, T expected so. good | pertinent remarks, directed to" the reporters: but thia | Lat. them "Go ‘their duty, then, “in this regard, | the startling intelligence that the Germans and French | Quick Passacz.—The clipper Ocean To ograph, Captaise ¥ things, from what se resist the enforcement ard of him. BatIcameaway | gentleman is ro prone on all public occasions to already established | Willis, of Boston, arrived yesterday morning from Oal- He referred to the act of certain women of Cincinnati, | of New York are preparing make an to r Feet eee Clow intes Gouin’ Baie ea e that ke has the will and | unmitigated donkey of himself, that it was rather to be | who and h ened. Jately paid a visit to some rum shops and broke all | of the temperance law, five and determined in thas treating 1t Butas public | feat by spre ment. ‘Lst us thea aot contema the | wondeled st that reine simbety of the press tronghe ie | the decanters, Ho would not ilke ta, se the indlen of | Cepote of tems for tals purpo what those arms }.Ja0, having made the shortest passage on record. Ske ‘Olver, T cannes act upon the theory of ethics. The Mayor too fast, but let ua follow Davy Crockett’s prin | worth while to resent his impudence, aa they did, by | New York head a mob or break the decanters, although | consist, whether muskets, pistols, or revolvers, or Fagiled from Callao on ril, thus making the must be my guide, tobe construed according to the ciple, and when we are right let usgo ahead. I do not | leaving the meeting. that Cincinnati mob never made him Jone his sleep. But | whether they are of ier calibre, such as cantions, | a5 in geiy eight days, i tila ta sions Mince y lights. FERNANDO WOOD. hes BURLEIGH next addressed the He | let men and women, those who love the law, come up | culverins, and mortars, our contemporary, the MIRRALD, : intend to make a speech to you at all, but if you have Mr, Wa. H. Boru ext ac meeting. He y ) the dark, Hoe ii kind | twelve days shorter than was ever viously accem- INSTRUCTIONS TO POLICEMEN. any hard work to co, just tell me what it is, ‘and I will | said they stood on the verge of anew era. It was to be | shoulder to shoulder, heart to heart, and hand to hand, | leaves us quite in t somaieiston’ thormen tavenaed ith Maror’s Orrice, New York, June bd 1865. help youto do it. fore we could hardly pass | fraught with unspeakable blessings or mischiefs. Hi | nd sound this trump of jubilee and reap ita rich re- | enough to hd Mas aad gone ptr tone ¢ | Pushed. Herewith is furnished a copy of an act entitled through our streets on Sunday without see.ng tne boly’ therto they had bad the influence of law against that of | wa:d. (appl 88. advice that t beeen rent Jems 4 heared ‘Tux NEWFOUNDLAND TELEGRAPH.—The bark Sarah L. - Act for the Prevention of epee eee a Sabbath violated right and left, and it seemed as though | righteousness. Tne consequence was that what they Brother Brower then came forward and sung another | such an opposition to the law, if they do not want Bryant, of Boston, bas been chartered in London, te :Orime,’’ paseed April 9th, 1866. £ your attention | we could get no redress from the proper authorities; but | bad tried todo by moral suasion they had practically | temperance song, to the old tune of — be shot te pevecte aacer an to | convey to North Cape, Cape Breton, 360 tons wire ca~ ~enpecially to the Ist, 7th and 12th sections, which more | Mayor Wood said to me, ‘Mr. Oliver, ff you see one man | undone by statutory law; and thus the whele eforts of And out of her bosom there grew a red rose, ‘os eng A ee Le some bn date 2g | ble, for the pi jegraph between Newfoundland rdirectly refer to such duties as are imposed upon you by | grunk on the Sabbath or upon any other day, just touch | the temperance people had been little more than the ‘And out of his bosom a briar, s briar, er ce poche hase tarne ie Pape pba and Ireland. its ions. The first section declares that intoxicat- | the first policeman on the shoulder and tell him to ar- | work ot Sysiphus, They hsd become tired of th's fruit- And then&{ter the usual benediction the congregation fas lay: ‘denon poms AGAxA, GuAM, Lapnows Istanps, March, 1855, -ing liquors, except as are hereinafter provided, Fest that man, and if he fails to do it, report him to | less toll, After the greatest as-taking, they | dispersed. culvering those large pieces of ordnance and mortars’ | We, the undersigned, masters of American w! Shall bad with aha 2 to besold, | me.’? (Cheers Then, fellow citizens, let us help the | bad found that the 20,000 grog ot this State Will the Hxxatp be so kind as to indicate to us those | anchored in the other person, in an fi Mayor in this , and if fee & mi & woman | bave been to make drunkard: wer, than they * citer, drunk in the street, le! ‘as snaainon’ a’polionman, could redeem them; and when the; inquired how this MEETING OF ANTI-MAINE LAW FRENCHMEN, and if he refuses ta do bis duty, lot us report him to | was, the answer had come back to’ them, “Look ~~ the beth (Co 2 4 a not ytd oe far- | to the Iay—there is se coats 4 rat to A very large meeting of our French citizens asrembled | ¢, kep' ther remarks, but mts luce you ve The tru’ en, ere is nO lucat uence in Marth, who will read you the resolutions which hi our countiy more potent than that of law, It extends | yesterday, at No. 72 Leonard street, to consult sbout | awake by the firing of muskets, or the thundering of . But one ti we ‘tell the Hraaup: no been prepared. ‘beyond the province of the pulpit and he schoolmaster. | the measures to be taken in view of the enforcement of | cannons. : The Rev. Mr. Mansn then read tho following resolu. | It educates he people into the ethics of society, +o that’ | tke prohibitory liquor law. ean ams tnniys otioen ted, there Soeid then inined ba oF p - | tions, which wl received with great applause :— wen have gal conscitioss. Rasigns eliquor | ye. Delescture took the chair, aud was assisted by Mr. | » question of powder end shot, and then tho HERA i $9 6 ebaroh OF § ; PPI dealer, and what do you gain by it? He did not like to MA peobattl be convinced, thet shooting down like fenl, or medicinal art, reqniring ¢! of Whereas, the citizens and workingmen of the | denounce severely his fellow citizens ed in that | Vogeli as cecretary, both having acted in such capacity bp ty Bp Bemep breng Mew Brey fared on aera regular branch of busiue C City of New York, have, for s long course of years, | trate, He abhorred the liquor traffic. Bathodid not | gt the meeting which took place om Friday last. Mr. | 2088! uld in that case also see showers of balis frem one place to snothur, oF been burcened and oppressed with from six to ten thou: | forget that{these liquor dealers were engaged in a traffic a ‘the by reeing and ox- ne to 8 DELESCLURE opened proceedings proceed! quarter from which only a few balls footion anall not apply te liguer, tho right coral wnioh | A400 licensed and unlicensed grog-shops, producing bab- | over which they, the people, threw the sa ot the | piaining the following letter, received from the Committee | are now expected to come. The temperance mea of this in this State is given by any Inw or treaty of the United | it# of idleness, intemperance, waste of time and money | Jaw, However. they trusted tow to have an easier task iJ atria lace had better not entertain the Impression that they * States. and industry; creating a vast amount of mand | than formerly they had, They had at length been ems- | ot the National Democrats:— -to deal with s crowd of Portland boys. We feel € ‘The seventh section declares the duty of the officer | Misery, and exciting to the dally com: mn of the | bled to array the lawon the side of morality and ab- To THX CHAIRMAN OF THE FRexcn DaMOCRATIO MEETING TO ver, that matters will not proceed to such ‘after tho seizure of the apr pershamt to the 12th sec- | mont ore erimes; imposing upon us an unendurable | stract right, and theugh Uquor dealers may feel hard | "S410 Yous geen, 1m Ovrostnion 10 te Maine Law. | sete Lay crpecre te gers ht d on Guan to: “tlom, with reference to givizg’ notice to the owner, &e., | mount of taxation for the erection of vast j and ainet yet they would ultimately recognize thet Lean SiR—As the session of the Select Committoo held | gether with the violent sentiments which it utters -&e. Ime houses, and the support of paupers and criminals; | ¢! are temperance faa great this day, for the purpose of the pi at the G have suggested th fow a a The 12th section declares that— a whereas, the Legislature of this State has given us eae ee pg AB asked us, “Bat | creat mass mecting of nat ‘onal demcerats of ‘new Yorn 7 a ee sheri, andor sberid, depat: am by which all there, fountains of patution, erime | have you a right to thisr” He on moticn, it was unanimously The Question of Jurisdiction in the City sheriff, constabl Poltcortans to verve ‘ail pre, fo Ro be, Closed od on the acaing Fours ¢ | two answers to to that question, Ia the first | “Resolved, That the Chairman and Secretaries of this pt + cornoa'to be f this aot, ‘to arrost orious day of our National Independence), it | place, they thozght they had, else they would not have | committee’ be requested. {0 to the mecting of Court of Brooklyn. «son see actually engaged in ‘oom that we, the citizens and working- tioned the State Legislature to enact it and that | by/och democrats ted to be this evening, in Judge Culver rendered bis decision on Saturday, in of in violation of the first seotion of thi: men of New York, should assemble and express oar joy | Legislatnre would not have enacted it. In the second invitation to ‘the Po liquors kept in violation of said sooti hapkegiving at the before us; with our | place, hi that he could not conceive of opposition to the Maine jaw, an invite: Li the case of the People against Ezekiel Baldwin, one time and place of the commission of such omfeme and thankegiviag 5 Prospect us; _with our | place, be replied TP Stent | great national democratic mass meeting on Wednesday | Or'oastendante indicted for pr wig Ma with the verte in whioh tho same is contained entire and mont Dearly tprovarion of the lems cut be | goverament which did. pot * ight | cvening, the 27th instant, at the Metropolitan theatre, herr with to convey such person before any ito of lief in its constitutionality and om; and our deter- | to protect its citizens from all deadly influences, If at vas 9 resolutions fn 0 ition to free soilism, Maine | to law, on which a plea was raised by the liqnor dealera’ phi ‘oame or town, dealt with pogoraing 6 iow, mination, ass law loving and law abiding People, to | bad aright to take measures to shut out # plague, lawiem and Know Not! will be proposed. counsel as to the jurisdiction of the Court in the trans- e She tlauoe and vessels 80 seized in ‘con’ give it our undivided support. surely they had a right to take measures to shut ou! Tu conveying the above resolution t0 the mecting over William ¥ he be dispoend of os. aoe fhe Wy Rerolved, That the liquor business of our great com- | that greater evil of drunkenness. It was not necessary | , |1,. By ran geveide, be kind ‘enough, sir, tov state | Section of criminal business. The objections raised were, | ose Tri ; "bd mado under iid otction, to makesomplalat as, | Mefeial metropolis, while it has enriched & few. hae sent |} for him to consider the question of constitutional right. | T.¢"sa2uta this famitution be nceeptod and your meet, | that the Supervisors, altting as Associate Judges on the | Ausear il? oath, tne, perien of, ted, and to tase Se arapetiien A.J L- ee ened Ly may be, Perhaps, ier ovens neuaoteeiret tae “¥ ing determine to Yat ours ins boay, the semaine ave walt bench of the City Court, had no authority by the consti- Bemsy sary E A, 12 acemen' 1 rd in readiness to rece! ou rooms 4 ‘officer whi loan ot property, whether by fires, by shipwreck, by | that the peopfe have a right to self-protection. Ho , tution to act im that ity, and that the Legislature toxies store ‘ho commercial embgirassment, oF by lswawhicl tnterpore | would renaind thelr opponenta that the people of this | {et and after six 0 TORT RGIS | hed no right to invest them with judicial authority. It | Wheston Cole ‘the public posce sn: ter the of the community from some great | State bave alla voice in the matter, and are in pri oe RE, LE. street, | Wa# alto urged that there was e lack of uniformity < Ge ae evil wi AWA, an does the worm of the still, at the | earnest about the matter. Suj the Courts adjudi- Bc.Gagee kr cones barsronen between this Court and the Court of Oswego, which was root of human prosperity, we can but rejoice, and we | cated the act unconstitu such an adjudication a sted /4 the model or patterm court, and on these grounds it will rejoice at the downfall of this traffic, and | does not make it unconstitu tional any the more. We ‘The CHarRMAN moved that the invitation be accepted. | was argued, that the court, as a court of competent the expulsion from our ‘and State of the entire sa- NT ee ee gar ene vee fome remarks were made, and the proposition was final- Se Red te aan io At at ae loon, Lived, Tintin Cee perm Bick, Your | ty carried. ‘and remedy the de- ‘Mr. Voor then addressed the meeting. He stated peep A id rapt Beinn | them as 8 | that, altbough respecting the law, he would disobey | inve with Bente canon, were b pmake part he believed tat recel named in the constitat bai humanit was above constitutions, and that God yo in continuing his basiness.. If ho ved summons direct from the ture, and yet it waa not question- parties, plastnis ea puarsemn i parents Se ee uegsimDy teamt to nay that | Be woul obey it, and then Sad ecourt which would de | of trt tay acted gully.” By viewed the eotionaf | Dn ve ie i. ‘orders, I feel it incumbent upon me to state what is the Treus tat ere have bungled, let rote! por Van red ee Magda sl hee phased bo of local courts, and wed that Tour “courts of Ant) interpretation pat upon this law, so far as it im- error. Lat us ebow to the world that we are worthy of | *>*' aren, Joegue, | similar jurisdiction had been established previous to the | four pores any duties pon you, snd what ate the limits of war government, and that we donot warp plac at who, under pretence of enforcing the iaw, will come and | Grart of rego, which could not, therefore bo akan ir powers under because 1e thers. before ourts decided the mod con: ition juired w 7*You will ot be authorized to sine any foreign liquors tell you we nave cur hands Om tho Vseatof thls Gevti | {iy seputitoconenty The. speaks Coa sraee eeieed | bathe ear and be gugtes thay clio, city courte ia vat ioceot ws tampetins tangirtants unto tertuiee Nal Corea eee fe | Alcohol. sas Cen it ; See Yay ree hi. (Ap- | that am address should be cent to the Mayor to ask for | the Sti hats abet before or after the Beook. ad Dea gout own, Whoiter liquows exhibited in | Resolved, That we hail the Probibitory law as empha- “he would wonder if is was. ant, During his resi- Piste, DAY, president of the American Democratic So- Kay) vrindiction, only different in minor details, As te -= JOur presence, either for sale or otherwise, are intoxi- | tically the Iaw of the aaee to tave | dence here he bad noticed that ‘there was no law of God | ciety, was infroduced to the meeting, and anid ‘that, | the City Court of the Legislature had substi- a. ‘onting Uquors (as designated ip agetion 22) or of forgia | him a heavy amount of taxation new levied upon him | op man which was not resisted in New York, (Laugh: ' qlthough a strong split of Opporijion qxistyd pmcng tuted supervisors for when theggt of gparoli: 228, 267 J