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NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1855. 7 News “- Art, 7, No one shall take an old ship to pieces, axcey Senator Crittenden’s Reception m Phila- OFFICIAL Q Have you examined the evidence of Mrv. Connolly | geome that Recorder Smith enjoyed the waar Ween Ov eum mation in the pags inakated to hin, x that patpow,. Uy ‘delphi. CORRUPTION. on thie tral we reported inthe Masanny. osae- ” | prot of ing ene fr fase ot femme ne por ed warden of the nor sball ed w it 8 SBRENADE—HIs SPXBOB—HIS PLATFORM. oe dope jw . air. ton in this similar tothat «Mr. Genpell ie CoMMEnCE. prising him of it, nor make a fire in a ship, except in tho | The particular friends of ex-Governor Crit-eaden gave @ Does her evidence, a reported in the Hewat, cor- | 2" : seman moved for & postponement of the trial The'onty him the compliment of a serenade on Monday night, the onclusion the Trial judge Sid- respond with or differ from the evidence given before the on which a care can be ‘cored off ins criminal ie tte see |e oh eed ec Sitar tet ‘ppt Soran “vd spe WA Risge crowd "wad ausemblog in fttot of tee ney H. Stuart. delle, Gating, Argued upon the admissibility of the evi- | popement,he did to 0a the theory that he could erta ence he charac witnews, whore | 2Gemund simon absent witness, ‘and om Bis eppearanee he waa greeted with bearty veracity had been attache indisectly by tnatauatlon. | Sysenee ahdoe See Hall avail’ never tint bie wlmmoens +i the United States Cornet Band had discoursed Roosevelt could not admit evidence to rebut I rho: @ material , and in the very Une musics Hon Robert f Cored cosuatea | Speech of Mr, Stoughton, and Judge Boose | what faa not been put in evidence by the ther sce’ | hiean tho who were material» amd in consequenee of eat Faustin, Tho fey scernd of commerce is severely felt st all points. ‘tant changes have taken plece in the fo im, markets; Amer! ms are abundant. ‘The schooter Maria 1. Davis bad arrived at Cape Hay- tue sopealn oe tse ent tho in hi : Mr, Cutting excepted. Ceekan tanenuen ans codeat tallicar ey teen oe. Reet ee ae velt’s Charge to the Jury. Ar, Drady"now nha for the paper of Mr. Hall, to | OMe and fen monthe, Connolly, or Cosgrove, Rronty lniersenten es the lass Fellow-eitizens, Lam proud of the duty which baa been cross-examine the wituens on it. Todge Stuart, have returned to the elty Jusb as ites ae BE, creel te ths Baeelines dglien, in tba owe entrusted to me, of introducing to you a friend of out Mr. Cutting promised to produce it at the proper time. leaned, the prosecution would have been ut- ef October 13, we translate the following exposition of country, of coc slorgand of the gallant Heary | INTENSE EXCITEMENT OF THE AUDIENCE, | ys: Cutiigmi20% Will not prontuce it now r uty unable to Fave triad him Mr. Hall nays tape wee the state ‘empire, submitted by the Minielare of the Clay. (as troduce to you » noble son Mr. G : ped pt oe Ppl ° . Brady—Then, Mr. Hall, you may leave the stand. Gar Taspors so he bg tohner inthe connella ofthe Union. introduca t yoy fe, a a (F2 Me, Cadting) “Wut "you" admit the paper (meaning ties af Caagrovs tes eos Gs pot a aA REPORT FROM THB MINISTERS. fellow citizens, the glorious champion of Americanism, —a— note) to be in the handwriting of Mr. Hall? called up on the 19% of next term, when Ooa- Tamantepasenin ebetianes $0) the: orate of the bimeelf among the noblest sons of America, (Applause, Coust of Oyer and Terminer. Mr. Cutting—No, sir. I will admit nothing to let you | helly failed to appear. Subsequently one of the prinelpal constitution, we appear Ft, ecay Se te bar Your hearts ‘and. voloes declare his worth Gothic wel- OPE that paper, to Earope, and another to Californie; and of making an exposition of the state of the coun. come. (Renewed spplause, with three enthusiastic Before Judge Rowevelt. Mr, Brady—Then I will call one of the officers around | Mr, Hall says that one reason way he made the ey, ba a9 regards ts domestic and foreign rela cheers for the ex-Governor. SEVENTH DAY'S PROCREDINGS, Deete prove i, ment with Mrs. y that her husband was pat to fe are happy to de able to announce to you thit Ex-Governor then came forward and said | peysnay, Nov. 20.—The Court this morning, aa “yf 1 falied and examined by Mr. Brady—Hlave | tried was, because he could not be tried, Now. why farang ia g coggmabel oy aio ints Fellow Citizen—I know in what terms to address | | TUMDAY, Nov. 20.) avs wee 1 poen the handwriting of Mr. Hall, the District Attorney; | he not betried’ Because the cuterial witpenves, were ef the ewpire, and that the country is in the full tide on. I came here simply as a passenger, without ‘ap- | Usual, crowded with anxious and interested spectators | I should take that to be his handwriting. away, and could not be procured. Counsel args Mpeg Ohne oa Snipers taeaa anes e | rachel Tv | a AL arts fit he | Ss ew as . ? Jeane ive 10, tk a , could sirato that the workshop aystem—tho system of laborin | “Given in our Imperial Palace at Port au Prince, Sept. | bow to make my acknowledgments, I hope yen will be, | Out the day, and particularly when the care was drawing prereeating counsel, procured ingeniously from him (Mr. | ment, ant inasmuch a he was led” to believe thet tad ween wie we et no at fatima Yon: } 21, 1855, the fifty-second year of the inde, and | lieve and take tha assurance of a Kentackian, that { | t©& close, the corridors of the Court and the doors lead- aay), was the minutes of evidence taken before th: had determined to refi em} a this country does not always yield the re- | the seventh of our reign. FAUSTIN. | thank you fo- your hospitality and the regard which you | ing to it were besieged by hundreds of persons straining OT ee vekialh- tin ‘bene te uring of the nolle eayeciad, and Khas it Cimiaishes’ the inoouse of th are pleased to bestow upon me. (Applause) Fellow | their ears to catch what was being addrossed by counsel Mr. Hall, wee oe Preve: teh: te: not a crime, but rather creditable to bis bomane large ates, side of which, however, the re Camadian Affairs. cftizens—I am & Kentu ; | am more thane Ken- h stamsine Mx, dons, feelings. He alluded to the stories told by the sources of the smaller estates are developed. TO TRB RDITOR OF THE HERALD. tuckian; Iam an American citizen, (Applause) I an | tthejury. Still, by the intelligent, polite andofficer-lke | — Mr. Lrg: Mee) not choose to do ets he Feltorated | woman as to her new-born virtuous motives, those poten nein, hasta of all industry, alwers promien : such by iny principles and the sentiments of my heart. 1 | conduct of Harry Bedholt and the other attendants at the | what he offered by this note to prove. He offered that | her husband Connolly, and the fatlare of hte tenth. E He who devotes Yothis nob | Probably nothing more amuves one well acquainted | Go not desire to bea partisan, the Tong experience of » | Court, the proocedings were nov in the alightent degree | t2at Paper were put {nto his (Mr. Brady's) band, be | Taakyen: gonticnee tie snetisna ie lt Beal. ought to understand one truth; and that is, | with Canadian character than to see one of Canela’s sons | life me makes me ratber ambitions to ona are e Sean tribelbadasa id ba ** | would examine Mr. Hall about it. tives wuficlently strong to wecount for Judge Stuarts t there can be no commerce without cuplt . Let him | attempt to fan insult offered to bis country, or to | ® partivan, In the performance of that duty 1 desire 1» | disturbed. Mr. Cutting anawored that if his learned friend would «to Hee her husband relieved from ‘who cecapics himself with the cultivation of his land pees J do whatsosver I can to preserve the free institutions of | John Reid examined by Mr. Brady. I am connected cithor to examine Mr. Hall as to what did take @mploy day laborers; and as the earth always yields bluster for the superior advantages which it possesses, or a ; ¢ in the (rand Juty room, he should have the 4 bunéred-fold. the sod that is coniided toi, eo'be will | boast of ita Anglo-Saxon population. : fiesibent a = gears Mo id wa | vist the police department; have been, 90 since 1845, brit he saldhe would eh object to his (Mr. C's) examin’ = meas: | "Taon sntneed to abdresa pou a few lines on account of | the Declaration 7 iodepsadenes pros Yourgren: | Nelleve; Twas in the Chiet's oftee from 1848 til Deoem- | ing Mr Hall on his croas-examination, at to what. took government of as , fall of solicitude for all fagcacsaiae off Mende @ later seca’ “A. Cane- contributed to make that declaration, and t> | ber, 1854; | am uot aware that | know Margaret M. on" r’ “fre he would produse the paper. Bat, sald he, the country, believes that agricul ture eas paver pra ‘thle iter is “e oat » of ‘an apology,” or | cee ry the Sate wai h you now enjoy. a nolly except by reputation; I only knew one house that | five foot Lengel a purpose of making \. A 5 preserved. merican party. ree = ‘, depen ihre’ crane ercnnenh | “atic” orn somtng ti, omar wat | Ss Rs gigi fr tern ac, | nenlec Mar ese patee ea eka | Lee aa gatas an eb accept ail the ideas of developement and progress which | Jt was brought to life by your notice of M. Bartho’s work; | nd then three more for the U Mer adebent Bae ¥ tein deve ven Tansat: ter we ce ics aati Tkncs | "ould promise to ask Mr. Hall whether he had sent that Taz Da rapapeted fe It out this extsect, and as “A Canadian’? presumes to make wholevale state- | to pnrmue it without fear of consequences, from a solemu | Burtin, Moore, Fish and Mory; 1 know Jim Fgorton; the | Raper to the counsel for the defonce as minutes of evi- good map, eal ae rare eR etrenming with grost activity, | ments with regard to Canadian feeling on the question of | couvietion that it is my duty to my country to doe. I | last time I'saw bim wan in tila ‘ity some ties Inst sure, | 2*8¢@, and then be would claim to uae it om the trial to reform, and go inio the market. And we have in this i single it al; voice ii 5 ee Judge Roosevelt repeated that the proper way was to hat ? ‘old indictinent lyi ‘the reco have been repaired, and buildings are put up in the ali- | Sanexation, 1, as ‘Another Canndian,’? feel it my privi- eer tan chal oe aacee et cack nce ae met; Thave not seen Moore since I was in the Chie's | put ar. Hallon the stand; to ark bim whether he took | Sretorithnts 9 ano | inte wil oon dad voany 4 ferent paris! lege and duty to enter my judgment in opposition to his, | conviction of my heart that I owe it toa country that . What Mth ? A. Th of | Botes of the evidence of Mrs, Connolly in the Grand Jury oon golog to Judge Stuart before snd after he war a mre HERE’ {0 finances and to commerce, salutary mea: | and at ihe same time to ciaim a greater degree of intell. | ha bestowed on me honors and pewers fa: beyond. my | thieves es far as knows ieee oat of aay esata | room, and if there minntos are a correct version of het | Suuger nd, operated upon by influences, Juc 1m season by the government have pr-duced ! testimony; what he writes out in the other room is no | Stugrt eons edge he fo the country romarkabie atuliorationr, which are due | gence for Canadians generally than he exhibite in his | Seerving. 1 have no pretensions and uo aspirations | duty while in the Chie? oce to watch thovomuspectsi | more wridéute tha what ot ndght bite fall tien | siuate ams irentlemen, that yee@tay te pro ne in a great degree to the control of the custome, which the | views of the power of the United States to annex orad- | |’ mean to proserve the soversignty of this ‘great | a, Whet'was the ren ceeive nervice there. party in that reom, counrel declared with great appearanee of feeling government in its wisdom has confided to the disinterested | sort the Canadan. country to the people of this country. I fecl | kept? A- I heard it wan an assignation house; the only | c.f; Brady made a remark as to the annoyance of Judge | that this woman should not be, prevented feta Patrfotiam of the rea eetable citizens and even merchants | n.6 Conadians generally ake proud of thelr country, | "0 unkindness, no hostility to the foreigner what- | way I learned that waa when Tt tollowol Cosgeove ate rete eS DiGieant ae, Se trial of Sir Walter | Yeading «virtuous reformed Ife; and yet ports measure succeeded so well, gree . iJ 7 f — se | Ce “alite » ay (aed 0) that this branch of the public revenue is to-day the first | and perhaps as self-conceited as the Virginians. In fact, see eaetay iain Twn eiidbrna ite! fn cil Bry Rta Fae eee eta Macs sttenmers, on which | Julge Roorevelt—Tho sounsel is at liberty to catechise Saat Jade Mcoelt esd eas ontantod Wh ina Pliny 3 Snancial resource of the country. At home, as wells | there are many things in Canada and Virginia that com- | them with us.” Ifyou have been the chject of oppres | earned treme beater oiineer char th p house waa kept by | theBerch and to compare tho Dench—ar he haa done— | seted corruptly. Me ia perfectly willing. to cast Upo abroad, the government easily fufils its ol The sion tu a foreign land, come Here and be hee.’ VF learn ne Srotber oficer chat the house waa kept by | with Jefferies or Coke, but the Court does not think fit to Judge Stuart #1 o inninndtion that all tas tater medi foreign debt, as well as the indemnity and loan, are | Pare. The F. F.’s of Virginia are not unlike the old fami- | (, Meat Set tae acolo eee ose tat Mee ara the steno mnolly was her man; Conaolly | catesbive the counsel. for tao poupten ehigteetcice seh raat whi ket Tae punctually paid. And, notwithstanding the considerable | Mee of U. E. loyaliste of Canada, The only dittrence is c inour plenty. Our laws sball protect yous our | Morytes vith nite Tease aed ears about to rail. ent 1 “ur, Grady—Whenever I undertake to catechiae a parson | fornia ey hone peoeurik © Mel: prow. was from Sie sohorits of funds which it has been necessary to make, | that the U.K. 1. families are not so intelligent as the | laws will give you freedom, which you cannot enjoy | andl followed him; I'uerer heard that Connolly wast | 10014 {itch & manner as cannot be misunderstood. | I | Disisiet Attorney to use his own discretion as 10 & ole treaty of 1828 end the cuesgements resulting from the | rst families of Virginia, and, consequently, are more angbere nthe world beside. | But we reserve to our | the State privons I heard that Mory was; Tinow nothing | Srhcr nite Mtr Getting, 7 earnest frlend on the | pros, It is mere statement Liat he, the striat Aton: our finances has been such as to satisfy thd debe of all | haughty, and far greater sticklors for old hereditary sen- | \taure.) Leave, that to un ‘You seal Were aie fie | Rerenaliy of Fish; 1 only know him from information | ° Soaey1, Webuter examined by Mr. Brady. Mi Ball were arraianed ane pablic sdeer, ke Gate kinds. ‘iments and prejudices. benefit’ of what our free institutions afford. That is Muathed by Se; Ontiing--it to say tgataans 40 2 ont Witnons—Arreated on Thurwiay last a colored woman | on the Lith of Feb. 1886. permitted the antes of e met ‘The bonds which the public Treasury was obliged to is : i hi x the great boon whieh we offer. What other country in | all about these characters, as tar os fone abhg eon! | by the mame of Maria Marwhall or Elizabeth Hall: Laaw | yrog. where it ought not tsb, ond oupgere thaeoal: sue for the satisfaction ofthe creditors of the State, and | Ofcourse, any one acquainted with history Knows that | 10 © ota cters the same? None. Can 006 go tocany | tears eeet none Churactorn, as far ax Tamable; Tnover | her on the stand here last week; she is now ia the | 270% "here it ought not wo be tid outer the mak pros. @ fifths of coffee, are completely discharged; those is. | the United English Loyalists were those who adhered to | foreign jand and become inverted with the poor politien: | roade the inquiry; eho deny sted peal) evlog | ee A har Sir lying Qruak in the ateest, true, ft was m bad enno, But the acrased could nor be sued for urgent acquisitious, and which suffered great | the fortunes of the crown at the time of the Revolution, | privileges conceded to the poople of it? No. wot one | the stoner there wore mo pense piaken againes bins |, ore an ‘ever knew the woman | (ried, ag the witnerros were not to be found. And opera. depreciation in the market, are also dis ed; favored ‘a reward for their loyalty, were granted lauds in | Come here and take sveryittte but the right to govern | 1 followed hin merely for the purpove of obtaining tar’ | Petore ¢) never beard any com: | ted upon by the representations of this man’s wile, that by there circumstances, the government has been able to and the other British colonies at the concmusion | us, We must take care that we shall not be mae lions | ther information of him; that waa suartly previons. Plaint wade against her before, her ‘Ratpandcwanten $0: volvees -bensrove woat to the reduce, by souhelt the number of Treasury bills. They | of the war, These families have evor since haved the | in our own land, This Mberty {4 ours. Our blood ant | jearrest or be lary in the New York Hotel on the 6 The case closed here on bo'h aides, grave, where he was fast has'ealog by consumpiion, J are no longer issued, except for replacing the sums with- | people of the United States, From generation to genera- | that of our fathers have been shed for it. It ix ours by | ot April, 1863. 1 known of 1 aint agatast Mr. Drady stated that it had been arrango! between | dio consent to enter a nol. prow.’ If he made euch @ dete drawn from cizenlations and the sum total of these ts- | ton has this jealous hatred been handed dows. For | our right, and our title,and this land we intend to govern, | Margaret Connclly within five yours past, dave for sling | the counsel for the defonce that if the cate were ts tw | fence, who would kay. tor hin, «Me, Dimriet Atari sues represents hardly the fifth part of that of tho depre- | many years the U. &. loyalists of Canada were the fa- | and we will govern. Applause.) Wellow citizens, 1dii | and abetting in the escape of Hawkins from the police ou have acted wre Counsel dw ” upon this point ciated notes, which hive been consigned to the flames, vorites of the home government, and on tuem were be- | not intend to make a political speech, or to detain you | officer who had him in ovstody. summed up at all, it should be done by Mr. Stoughton cause when i war artiled, there was nothing felt birt You will observe that a very evident amelioration bi stowed all the offices of honor or emolument that were | long in your unpleasant position in ‘the cold night air Mr. Hrady called the names of several witnesses who | They propored, however, to hand this indictment tothe | this woman's peering A aoout the bribe of $600, taken place in the financial system. given to colonists. A miserable minority in the colony, | (Cries of “It isn’t unpleasant.” §'Go on.”) I believe, | had been subpemaed, None of them anawerot. fe then | jury, and without any summing up from the proseou- | Mr. Hall, the deputy Dis‘rict Attorney of Mr. Hint, his Wajesty—do not doubt it, gontlemen. their power exceeded that of the majorfty of the colo- } fellow citizens, that a change in the naturalization laws } offered in evidence a mortgage executed by Sydney H. | 4 : from the defe 4 without hs fi and 0 < pecenat Iiatrict Attorney, Mr. Hall, in the path upon which it has so resolute ¥ | nists, until disaffection became so strong that in 1837 4 | is necessary to the preservation and purity of our insti | Stuart and his wife on December 27, 1351, ia favor of | 222 OF fom Ret oe Vonen Sane, Sere sree Perron who would have known better thanany otner the Frovidence who cavers ns with his divine p-otection, | rebellion came very nigh being successful in robbing | tutions. Who ele can understand them but he who | Fernando Wood, Mayor, to. secure the payment of 82,000 | the Court, leave the whole matter to the Jury to decile | the criminals indicted, was the perwn to whou Jw to continue his favors to the country, and the task | England of her power over the colony. made them? Where else in the world have a people been | in 1855, which had been ient for one your, at 7 per cent | whether the prisoner at the bar ix to be lingraced and | Stuart applied in this case, Wo are to nssume, and the of withdrawing the paper money will be attempted. Sne2, since that time England has every year been more f found capable of making such institutions? And shall he | interest, f sent to the State prison, or whether be rhould now be | truth ia, that the District Attorney exercised’ a whole ee are the hopes which the polisy pursued by | Mberal to Canad. Aresponsiblegvernment, afree prev, | who made them trust them to hands not taught to do An officer was sent to ask the Mayor to come int) | discharged from the Court room and placed in possession | fote discretion in what be did in this case, and his com government perm! $ you to entertain, a policy which | and free discussion, have trought the peoplo rapidly | this work? No! we cannot safely trust them. We have | court in the meantime. of bia civic and judiclal functions. ploining of it though’, the inotive of which I leaves us the most consoling anticipation, _ | ahead. The power of the U. E. loyaliats has long | in our hands a great aud mighty trust for the whole Edgar DeWitt was placed on the stand and examined Mr. Cutting stated that nothing would give him greater | will disclose by and " rocoeled to read the ‘The finances leat us naturally to commerce, for one is | since departed, and the spread of Uberal views been on } humas race, to show that man is capable of } as to maki vortgage above referred to, pleasure than to comply with the suggsation of his | @vidence of Mr. Hall as convermation between hing the cousequence of the other. Oar commerce onjoys the | the increase. ‘The Cai sare fast learning the folly | self-government. We have had a long training Witness—8460 of that $3,000 was reserved to pay off | learned friend, and spare the timo of the Uourt and jury | aod Judge Stuart, aad — arly dwelt on the fact thet fuil protection of the government; and it was for therake | of alty to a foreign pow i the advantage of living | it. We think that we are capable of it, and wo in- | ju’gmentof Joesph 1. White, waich Judgment was alien | ond his own labor, but that the remarkab! Judge Stuart told Mr. 1! that the person in¢teted had Of favoring its interests that you were occupied with the tothemselves. olong as England can continue to | tend to assert our right to it. Let none interfere | on the property of Mr. Stuart. There were a pumber uf | of the case tothe public required that the termined to lead an honest life. And what, he con- project of a law in regard to the customs, which youn | increase her favors, 60 long will the Canadians be satis- | with usin this great work, Our adopted fellow-citizen judgments which it way necessary t> have cancelled in | counre! should discharge his whole duty to tinned, does Hall dot He does not inquire what the im your wisdom did not delay to pass. fied to be loyal. disgrace of being dependents will | received under the «anction of our laws, ara bound as | order to perfect the loun. nity. He would, therclere, place before the jury the | dictment was for; whether it was for marder or for tar- The contraband trade is attacked by the administration | be forgotten while they are the recipients of favors. But | much as we are to assist in this great work. “When thou. Cross-examined by Mr. Cu‘ting~I do not know how 8 proper ease? of the customs, Commerce, which was agitatsd by this | the question ariser, how long can England afford to in- | sands and hundreds of thousands aro pouring into the many such Je re his anen? aod Ww which he took of the evidence in the case, ten minutes pass 12 o'clock, ents there were, one waa for as la This being so, the Court, k iownas, be gw measure, now recognises ite good effects, for where geue- | uige {he Canadians / country from tho overflowing population of forelgn lands | fum’as $000; according to the bes! uf my recollactiontihe | took a recesn til halt part 12 note. Now, what {s these in that going to yal interests are guarantoed, private interests feel theer- In 1848, immediately on the complete and triumphant | we must guard this right. The mot ebvious polic rest were for small suma, After the recess Mr. Edwin F. Stoughton commenced | show that Judge Stuart practised any deception oo Hr, feeta, in thus reacting tho one upon the other. Wi dom, | *Heretsae Weed, Mager of the City of New York, ex: | hla Hall? Ob, bat—ray the provecution—bhe gave fal re- | suecess of the Mberal or republican party in Canada, the | mands it at our bande. We mus? do it, and we will — aoe —— in this place that the true security | tory party—or rather, ‘the party made up trom the | (Applause, and cries of we will.) This geet princkple | amined by Mr. Brady.—This mortgage (presented to wit. SUMMING UP POR THE DEFENCE. See ae in he equity gt kings, and that the dest | U. E loyalists—were found banding themselves toge- | will go on. It may be reviled. “Those who main'aim it | nes) was given to wr; 1 lent. dodge Stunct $3,000; 1 | Ie said—Miey it weace your Hounr, tevtiemen of the beri Of justions Se © his subjests is a proper dis- | ther in secret clubs, with the avowed intention of con- | may be revilel; but the waciple which Is so congenial | ihink 3 reserved about $400 to pay the judgwont of | Jury: newt hardly say t0 you that the eounsel engaged summating an annexation with the United States. No | toan American heart, cate itself, andit will b> | Joseph L. White; I paid that eat iE at of the: | bee ihe dodenes in thin came have taken 0 Gouy tntbctetin | 2 1 "i The Council of Ministers hereby gives you the assu- | sensible Hbeval aecused them of being honest in this de- | triumphaut. (Applause,) I do not doubt this ‘at all. | iworiyage Lal Pex hemneh paid ta) the Sheriff, 1 | it, inammach ae every earthly hope of the detadsat ia ia. | dlctn ent Againet a man ofthat name” Weald be nol save Tanoe that the government of his majesty is much occu. | size, But the tories were chagrined at their de‘eat, and | Only fet us be true to ourselves. Let no reproaches be | think the lawyer paid the taxes, dr reserved somo aums | yo ved in the prosecution. | peed hardly say to you, that | S™ppered that there would be sore laquiry inte the sins pied i Daphgnl He destres that it may be areal sevu- | were willing to do anything, even to the cutting cff of | cast upon us by disappointed parties or partisans, or dis | for the purpose; this wa money loanel on bond anil | Jet it terminate as it may, it has inticted » blow on him paid pig the stony se nae trend of Menten from ‘the faa flies, let society, therefore, be ressenred. their own heads, which they would have completely done | appointed demagogues turn us aside from this great work. | mor gege on Mr. Stuart’s houses. and on those dear to him, from whieh he can never re- t is abeard and el oh. Now, let me par if they could have su in their plansof annexation | Persevere, and success is inevitable, It ina feelagin the | Cross exatnined by Mr. Catting —Mr. Start, when he | cover. Ne verdict of yours can wipe away the fact that | atiention to another jact on thie point! Judge ‘The upright rwagistrete, fulfilling a mission so noblo— | for their Stuart taker this note and gives it to the clerk to bout a ir power must forever have departed if thé yi | beart of every American citizea. }t will reach him every wade th pplication to me ft joney, statol that he | be bad been indicted for iniaconduct as a jud ad i ee Bhat of deciding upon the honor, upon, the life and the | been put under a republican government. ‘Their zyaity | where; and [avuin will parties, im vain will (action tc. | 72° ery Saoth eaibareseed, % Go not’ remeniber the, | hones the cruelty of thet ant, it ik was enjestaatie. Tue | Se cn tadiohnan guint conte, De you tolok that tanae of perebire-sait enjoy the esteem of the | drove them to burn up tho Parliament buildings, and to ot: 2 Spaions it, cast reproaches on it. It isa principle | details ot the conversation; be was very pressing in hiv Prrsooua n undertakes to drag down a jadge from a | Judge Stuart woul! have waited for five or ten winuee of patriot ment and the consideration of the public. But i | feragreat indignity to the noblest representative of the iso. It ig the feeling of Americanism. iti | application. b critinal bench, and by what neana doce tt seek to | in the offies, while the clerk wax hanting for an tn bree as he sbouid prove a betrayer of his | British Queen thatever was sent to Canada, Thequestion | human nature expin out. Itts the volee of patriotian op gt Cornell sworn, but nob examined, Mr. Brady poh him? hy the ieatieoeay of a person Whose charac eae) whan ‘be new bay J welt there bee pth arm iteelf with bis worl to smaite him | of annexation was egivated for about a year, and moresin- | sceaking aloud In favor of the luman race, and it intimating that the facts which he could temlify to were | ter you pertectly well understan You know it to nah to¢letment? The idee that Ja fge *uart. io By = pe 1 3 cere friends of the movewent really existed in the reform | will prevail, despite the wiles and tricks of dema- | alrendy in evidence be infinitely worse than buman language can ade- | Using that note, intended to commit any frau! way Ue Pe eertan gy Scatlemen, that the magistrate should } or liberal party than in the tory party; so that ic the | gogues. (Applause.) 1 am proud to soe betore me such | racein ty Cutcing, conusel for the prosecution, pat | quately portray. You have heard of yico written in | Sitmined, and dfamiswed for the inet Mme Ane her Mod bie'characacn Smanner conformable .o his position | question had then been deci {by a vote, ant the tory | am e and such a witness of the truth of these sen | upon the stand, and examined by Mr. Bend ucvels kad exhibited in common life, but you lave pot | point. Mr. Hull har sworn heve povttively, thet he oid ish will ieove donde ot genta, «ill be Presented to | party held to the position they had taken, « majority of | timents, You are Americans. You have great righ's t GQ. Tid you recrive from tae on lost Frilay a paper ia | the eapaclly to understand thoroughly the deep dagrada- | Bot consider {ot to be an entry of » molle pu 4 pas Ad by ve for its object the increase of the sa- | ope fourth the freehold population would have been | assert. Do it in & manner gin of the cause. Eley | the ban ‘writtog of A. Oakey Hall? A. I éid. tion of the witness on whose testiiouy this prosecution | th, becnure he had made ne motion for euch entry, sod the magistrate and other fusctionaries of tae | found in favor of anzexation. And why would teis have | what are we likely to see if this government goes to Q. Where is it? A. In my possession. What is the character of the proseen. | had ne sented for such ap entry umtll the 20U 4, Sptieial order: zu will also be occupied with the ques- | been eo? The liberal party of Canada {s made upof x | wreek/ Where elte on the tase of the earth ace we to @ Bae it been in the possession of Mr. ticn #11 fs the prosecution of a judge for alleged crime | ‘id the L trrict Attorney beileve, ben he conseu'e next om e mmoaien ion of the code, 7. free and _liberty-lovi —— They sre business | expect to sees similar one arise? If these foreign ele- | received A. J think not; after I re by indictment, and it is the fart time within my know. | day to ed hy tl a rc noite prosmyut, thst Mt wae a pros The k: 3 at + 2 men, and are not blind to the advantages, in a pecuniary | mente shail disturb these t institutions of ours, and | hipited it to Mr. Hall; he may possibly have bad it ia | ledge,jor within any knowledge derived from anything of | Pet co*¢ for the entry of « nolle proeyus’ AMIE be id overnment knows all that thers is to do for rell- | point of view, which would aecrue to them by annexation. | demtrey the hopes of freelom which exist here, they can hie bond. what history tells us, that » judge has been indicted and ot, what was his duty? To make ® motion for the par- gion and the institution of a national clergy; and if its | A great proportion of the Hberal party of Cavada ia made | be recreated ia no other part of the world rding to There is nobody to cross examine me, a0 r co iu bin Juiietl capacity, Ordinarily rrecting the minules. And be tells you, on bie efforts to #itain this noble end aro not yet crowned with up of people from the United States, who have heen in- | an: i c' § ; a y human foresight that we can have on the subject success, it _~ not despair. Fall of solicitude, the $9 | duced to seitlo there from the advantages offered in dif | And »ho Is ever to destrey thit country’ How proud [ wae his Maje:ty subordinates the realization of | ferent trading and manufacturing purruita. It would be | onght to feel that | am a plain kentacklan—o m me to the will of God, which so visibly protec: | folly for any ome to say that any considerable portion of | in the far West, and raised there—to ytand be nj, in this State, teled by the He- ination, that be knew be could have ihe miauted : Ne before magi. | corrected at any ime, immediately on bie applestien. ‘ompiaint had been | Now. I want te know, if you wieh to diamine from yous fast Judge Stuart, for bribery, | mis about thet brite whether you have nt high Pp must crot-examine myse payer that you speak of was 9 paper which I call upon yor to give ‘me, e« being the property of Mr, Hal! which he loaned to you. ¥ this class of Canadians would op; annexatisn, and share the honor of addrewing yon as fellow ci tr. Prady—That is all right. | now avk Mr. Cutting to been on the cross-examination | #0 correct motives exhibited all trough this tm of amine now to the Ministry of the departmentaof War, | The Canadians, as T have Sis, Velie, are 0 talb tees | cheesey cages bo Mead trpet od Leto an Feameyiremee na Be Se me . onnolls) dlacharged. Nomagistrate | both oficials, ar well we Mr MAD? ee aed nicl He 6 Relations, wowill say to you | cetted people. They would not place themselves in a po- | | would in my own native woods. (Applause.) The uli Me. Cutting—| «hall not do shall not allow any. committed any tan, however mean, on that | forther! We hay postacte of eet Gee fae aye od oy oo ponetually observed in the | pition to be humiliated. The press of Canada is underthe | mate end of ail our exertions is to maintain the Union body's writing, not signed by Mr nolly, nor read by Why was not Judge #tu mith coming a boat hin inter- = chef 4 ts cari ix noble, is grave. | control of young men, mostly Canadians by birth, which vow binds us together, (Applause.) Itisfor thie | Mrs, Connolly, to be used for a, purpose which I deem , Inetead of his being thi view with J interested. Fhe faba as pos gat cf our independence, is always | \s their atudy to treat with comtempt and i!ly-cn that we preserve & pure Americanism among us. Io | ijegn) 4 Jury? Wan It feared spomenst ‘hes © i Arvotion and patriotism; the marine 5% on a res- | sidiculesvery argument tn favor of anceration thet consists the greatest socurity for car Union, | Mr ttrady applied to. the Co rturity to meet this wen, oF ie abou ; United States. But to every four sheets issued from the | and who dare raise his band against it? it | The relations of the government cf his Majesty with the | Canadian provs, one from American press is distribu- Proud thing for any one of you to say, represented in Hayti are always ina good | ted Canadians, which, with the natural obi; | ‘1 am a Penpsyivanian—1 am ‘@ citizen w fore » committing magistrate, would have fled’ It not, why this extraordinary proceeding by indictment with- om, lie sald, yas © paper hoa 4. Connolly bebibe the'Gi aa i Scceng Jc ao, ae BS ral ob 4 re merivanian 3. os sired that that per shoul be han Alnary proceeding by 8 complaint before ation fel* to maintain a local press, tells sometl ofa | the great State whieh s! js in the centre of thi Court to Ao intelligently whether or not he (Mr Y Perhaps the proseeation cen explain the r " He comported with the dignity of the empire to be re. | Story of the true s/ate of Catadlan fooling to-day. a Great Union, and which in lixe « rib of irou to bio’ | jyedy) ad's right to mabe cow of te Kegaiees whe, Litiok Lean’ We know how todictmente ore pro ft next stagger! ‘an ee Foc urope; which main- | The Canadians, I believe, will never bog for annexa- | It together. It is a proad thiog for any uns to say, “| Mr, Cutting-—AL. :hese statements of my learned friend, | cared Lefore Grand Juries; and if Mr. Hell, the Dintriet ago | ene apron oer of a Fank, euch & } tion, but if the time ever comes for an honorable annexa- | am a citizen cf the great commonwealih of Pennaylva- | gra athe ‘argoments ond insinuations put outim ths | Attorney, had taxcn the pains to tell this Grand Jary of a thie SS ‘affaires, and consals gene: whose political | tiom—one in which parties could meet half way—in my | nia.” But is it not a greater thing to way, “iamaciti- | waiter set ue the starcente at my learned friend | that he was about to introduce inte their room a eo = a in cee pricy Mae) Ut ni a most | opimion the Canadians would be found at the half-way | zen—an American citizen—a citizen of the United States alone, {have too m confidense ia the intelli. | men prostitate, a woman that has been the paramour of i 13 out despatched te Tatdon and Paria aie eens of America’ (Applause.) That we can ail now s gence of the Jury to Imagine that twy exn be imposit | « succersion of thieves, who is now the asworia:e of thieves | berating about? They are deliberating * ly aileron rane haw Pon ma 1 ill not follow up my fellow countryman’s exposition | What is the prospect of this Union’ Did the world ever | Spon by such arte, | have subpaneed a large number of | and the wi'e ofa thiet, and raid to them, “I wish you to M4 be sat free sf are yo bh tome be, esr gy Mag om Peete 3 og mys of the ideas entertained of Canade abroad. If he bes | before afford to any people upon the face of the earth the | the memners of the Grand Jury to attend here, and | | scrutinize her testimony most elyely'—if, 1 may, this Il be vet free, w the Recor w Mette { pdt atid when i. oa have united | :TAvelled abroad, he has had decidedly the advantage of | prospect it affords to you? What was Rome with all ber | have insroctet them. to exainioe minutely the | had been ral) by the isrict Attorney to the Grand Jury rdney fryer doe 7-H By Bn hed (Bayti to France and Enelan: ing time have un: zoe. Al hough my journeyings in a straight line woul | conquesta—what was all her legions in comparison 1 | evidence given by Connolly on the stand andtex | do you think that thts indictment would ever 4 + hity a tee BD oma 4 ot th Noy thes ‘a ntlemen, isthe faithfal tion of the | D&T, taken me twice around the givbe, I have never | the power of this mighty empirer There ix in the lives | their memo. y to Ond out whether there wae salstantial- | have been found’ That Grand Jury would at | when! oh my wnat a og Bo Baneetine pa og Phage hg, wake “| Beard from foreign lips such frightful stories of Canad | of thir people—it is in their hands to wield a scop'rs | jy any differcuce between ihe evidence given before t once hove determined to tind no bill om | man: but ret LNA - ee now be: hay which woe saan ie A. Ay wee anhe cites as an eeidones of the universal ignorance a! | greater than Rome in her greatest majesty ever held—o | (° 4 Jury ae tuatgiven hero. Mr. Hail, the District | any euch evidence, If my learned friend, in opening the hat be a4 Proposition the Reales asuecies Aneta neat @hne ony the rest of the world. As for the success which would ive law, tree please, to the world, nly keop united. | Ationney, wiro is alvo fa Court, Iv a competent witness | case, bed eaid that he intendot to ptove the prinelpal is the prope : i continue without doubt; for God, who has marked out Seine ep Ks Sues 92. the vs aited ates, 1 That fo a that Ja, demanded of oe, Freerve what you | and may ‘he put upon the stand «nd exaimlced as to ub cts charged upon the Aetendant, by & woman who hat | follows? A promlee be wi en—aed wrltiew ja with bis finger the goal which wo are to reach, will al- | were tried | What was doneut Vera Cruz "would be nation of mas gaaeet surpass le convepiion the eapite | Stimence wbsch Mrs, Connolly pave betore the Grand Sary Pee eg aban i teadeth unto dseth thet open | 10 be browght om. And how le the Distriela J ss a ot ‘ in question is « po . er God, and whore path leadeth unto death thet open i rney ways continue to us his diving and brllsat prctecttm. | Yo Feduce Kington or Montreal, and the'same blood we ate te penete and ‘to tele,” (Appieses,) Free tts Oe eK oe eae, cok teiaed tees inezmnadh bythe yedoentiog: aieeemngy Sehtaa wad ease | cyerated upon? Why, the Tietitet Atormey ta wade fo pau-P , tt Sth September, in meta swept through fire and up the sides of % not wort preserving? Is St not worth | },, a frt Mr. Eu ih comps te, 1 Ma far and wide, and bas heen read by every one why slinve—probably on the story of this woman, oF eb Ub FEAT Lf the independence, and the 7th of the reiga of his | Me lino cel Rey, would not long lay uneuccersfal before x | etanding together 4 Anwrieam citigens tor?’ You ee rtp kod chia aster thal! certainly cednew, | reads the Engiiah langusge in this countey, soul have | Pecorder, and we do not know which—that Stuart hae Neri ch Wars oti city like Queérec. But it would mot be right thus t | have only to outertain the ordinary pride of citizens | to enntigdint that statement. fallen harmlersly. Iaek you if that ix right, and if iti» | ald thet be (Hall shared in the bribe; and Hail te in ie of War, Mariage and of Foreign Affairs, wpead, |i ovr cities were defended by Canadian bloc: —the pride of your ations! the pride of coun Mr, Cutting proceeded to argue that even though thi | a way to ecnduct pecation in « Chilatian land) | | Clanant, ondoubtediy, that euch » suggestion shoalt be Misict ms L, DUFRENE. but they are not, and in my heart I hope they never w ty. No reasoning is nevessary to prove his, In | memorandum of Mr. Hall's were taken from the lips of | ask you if it in not the duty of the District Attorney, | made, and he is willing to jvin in that bunt, that Stuart ter of the Interior and Agriculture, ‘ be against an American army. stinct will prompt you vo it aa the best courw tha | the witaess, still (t wouldmot he evidence for the parpose | when he opens a case to you, tostate by what tostra | might uldmately be Indicted and wrought ts trial. That Wintete sot 5: 3 D. HYPPOLITE, Canadians are not Englishmen, but Americans—an’ | wisdom dictates. Be true 0 yourselves, and you cannot | of ignvenching her. ments und ineans be bopes Zr ectablish the charges? That | | the ease, gentlemen, Hal! believed that Judge Stuart, he at Tone renee find Commerce, charged with the | still not Americens, as the name goes. Then what 's | then be false to anyboay, Only be true tw yourselye Mr.* Brady ridicule! the vapid and meaninglows har. | {4 the merciful nnd fair course, ant it le to be regretted | bie filend, ‘charged him with being willing to accept & porttolio of Justice, of Pablic Instraction and of Worship, | Canadian? Why, he is a colonial: and if « etrange: | and kesp the country which Gol has assigned you. Te | auguacof tie lonnen gentisnien in aneeer teat yh that tis prosecution was not'eouducted by the public | Uribe. Connsel proceeded UW argue on the otter tanpre. preci g SALOMON, Jr. asks from what colony, or whose colony, be mus: | serve your Union s¢ the great plilar which sustains your | Guestion whether he would or would not let the t | officer of the = intend of being committed to one | bability of the story of Mry. Counclly, from (he fart that After resaing the eddrews, the President ana runred tl er, from the Province of Canada, British Posses- | liberties, and which will make you the grestes: ant | see the paper in yvestion. To eonteadiet the + | who goes into the ‘ashe wouldi | tn the rummer of J€°5 Jusge Mouart emt ber to tha Tile receipt of a proposal from Mr. Hyacynth Caitxte, one of | sions, North America. recollect once having been com- | mighties: peuple upom the face of the earth. Tniv is ont | that this paper Was @ inere medoranduin taken frow determined to ueceed. and to secar trict Attorney's offire ail on Mr, all te the representatives, that henceforth, at each opening of | peiled to give this lengthy answer to a traveller whom | destiny——car rightful dew How stoall, how minut» | coljeetion, he (Mr. Brady) would read the note of Mr. Hull | could. Thetnterest which was felt at the op Mf thix | shendo: Tomecu' Vn a wand. War it tobe the legislative body, the bureau in which the Emperor | [met in Brazil. do the quertions appear wh! I ese sow made to = agitate | to bilan, ac ying tlds paper case has been fairly eapplanted by r-=the | believed, Le teked, that Judge Hioart would send her oa mat should be decorated with « carpet, wich the national ly countryman is inclined to eponk disparsgingly and distract this Union, How mall do they appear whes fect to your rending that note; itcan. | Meling that it is on outrage on humanity as well | feeb en errand knowing thar i hee nt We ad colors woven in, to correspond to the dignity and ele- antrymen in Lower Canada, especially the Catholic || compared to the miguty destiny and proxpoct of th E as on the individual to attempt to convict » | paid gart cr all of the bribe Hali, snd ieww. x his magnificent portrait. ei x tion, @ circumstance which lends me ‘o*umpect be owe. | grent empire, They appear as eothing at all. And yet trady—t insist that I shall read {tfor my ovn jar | judge by euch means e# thre resorted to in thie cane, | ing thet when Hall woult refuse ber requert, the shoald ei geele ol Teferred te a committee of five to re- | chis peculiar notions to a rather one-«ided education al) | there are men in this country et one ond talking aboot tification. Mr. Hall writes to me, on sending tf Now Judge Stowrt? i mever had not upbreld bim with the fact of bis having receiwet her Qoccgh inate chosen: 1k pe Regina sy “ through. He talks in such dignified manner of the | eecersion, and at the other abovt dissolution. One insis'~ | payer "| private minutes rot tout I have wun bin long. He | memey ig ay ——. There was anther phase of (he oo ’ emadedd < « ce of ad " jor or oll af pe o e bat each ‘ t nrrounted b a! o temp’ it had ne q ate Se nepaee teal F and toon tas ven Mma gripe An with Canada,” and ‘‘traditions the sbolition of slavery; te o'ner replies thateach | Grand Jur tto be tolerated has been } svrrounded with all the t St had been stated that after the new jndictsmont &cc., that I slapped myself twice asad an ee Hane bo See what institations it pies Mone of that po itfon. was Police Magueten' epainet Comgrove, Judge Ptuart had tampergt with the wit- it the proporition a me gnificent fauteull, decorated with the | on the breast in the vain endeavor to arouse iny patric” i out | f h a « ast e rot y patric’ under the constitution. Shall we fall out about this . ff 0 rounded with all ome of that port. | nesses apd undertakén to have them sent outof the wey, ‘anperial arms, for the use of hia Majesty on similar ozea- | ism, but it was no go. 804 1am forced to the conclusion | We are united upeo s principle of freedomesree!procal name Gan Tee ses eperesion: Jou ever bene’ o word aguiast bam la eller of tase se he sal, undertakes to onnvinee you thet rN NR A ys | (Bat the eh tog is antouched, anf that A Gar | |: freedoms perfect iulependeter ‘one ‘of ‘anther on Salle anty bacenen beder obs cert to ities? Hise he wot tom among us, ant of us? fies | rier operate om wikanaans f port . ‘ dian,” although a very cleve , don’t underst tbat our Union, our brotherly and affectionate Upton ‘i es " they | i her and she believed, that he after the foliowing yetition was received by the Asem- | Canadian sentiment at all, aoe farthernene tellewe, 5S ee ee Suey ou ta net intend + at Soe Sok cubieetn’ Mines te ater Se ‘yew | vente Beiwha ¢ depends, Fellow citizens, 1 did pot intend to make « eee bay from M. Panayoty and M. Toussaint, both reprasenta- | i the opportunity were offered for Canada to come ints | vpeech, 1 rather iatondel 0 mace my asknowleig. | Pioweullon tives, and one the chairman of the commities who re- the Union, he would be one of the first to adlwocate an. Juents, ond offer my thenke to you for this kind ved none of that $00 which she aye she gure unsel for | litieal « unsel for you, gentlemen, to dlapae of the tame of Mr. Hall, loaned iidate of one party sabjecta himself to by the party? Has any one ever wuggerted | Awritany Hi Q ev . Brady vy Mr. L Bal ‘* Main upon him? ‘1 ow to look opom | down to th (t beeotives necoweary to comesder PES Srey — aM. Ley pag mpered og | 2tmation. ANOTHER CANADIAN. evidence of your eel, tne t; Rees fe make » Sedge Melee fd pe sapemeal te nh there fact» nk youre Ive ‘ ech oman te be | iy vinw ed thie charge sowght to be proved om thie ; bp “ political speech on this occasion, 1 bog you t exenwe | p.- issible in this esse. From the evidence given. | Atiuck dow ia prospenta bilgt 4 . = (aan eo Nea toe a fate 3 Mx, Sraviten H. Branom.— We perceived by the Jie; ! thank you for your attentions, I thank you for thie | 475." owe atten be’ore the Grand Sar. ape ne all thie been | Seenees by ie 1 bemantty in dang whet be pace. Ween he ae aes y Ar] New York Timea of yoaterday that the paternity and na- | evicence of your regard beyond my deserving. Fellow | taxen-down in wri ing. to her knowledge, not rea lor 20" ‘ upright man with | a bat he Od it in «@ fair aod open wey If ne dia as possitle, worthy of their destication. ne - tats | iy: of Mr. Stephen H. Branch, the gentleman who han | ordizens of Venasyivania, upon yon, let me say, a great ened Y her. Now [t in sought that @ paper written by | onme! You know who she ts We find the MMetret At- | from corrupt motives, be nly Vk goed ate to make favor, wo have the honor to salute you. ke. been so perseveripgly engaged in hucting up alieas who « You are a mighty Stet». You are called | vy. fall should be produced io evilence. That caane: | torney on the stand ase witness, and unnecesarily a. | ‘he mort abunden! evidence sgzinet himaett He wrote This proposal, ne one opposing, wee adopted, and the hold office, have become mubjects of controversy. An! « one State You bind sagetber tis great Union. | be depo. Mr. Hall may be put upon the stand aod ex Why, I don't know. Lonly know it was unoecermry to | thie A to Mire Cowmoliy, two Bouse adjourned. “i pred, doubt is hazarded as to the itimacy of ix origional | With y: erful influence moe! complished. | srined, and this paper may be handed to him to refresh | call on him to state © harraless conversation ageinet bhi | days re ebe m thon te Hall for the melle The follewing ordinance in relatioe-to the fore trade | Wmigiliation, As an act of justice and of duty, You haves mighty trast. Fulfil it as you have beret | jis memory, bat paper itself is not admissivle io | end Judge Stusrt. Mr. Hall had only to etate to the | prowgui, and two daye Fall of the expire ot Hayti bas been promulgated, ant pasted | wae H. Brunch waa born in ship stree’ fore done. Be the champions, be the wivocates of the | vwitence. cuunsel Jor the dateyee that Judge Stuart bed had such | woul) eorsent to th to att publi: places concerned with ity vd dence, ben pe Uth day of July, 181 Uaien. Tet that he the word. end all wil! be well, A Mr. Paty—Your Honor wil be good eaough w note | ® ccmverrn! with him, and the sobstanes of thet con | eaht ve ORDINANCE, may Mngt mag ‘ieephen eenths ianey emon, Justice of pes Met tis idem’ © ure pm) or or iok feet SLM Cail et nie eae | covte aes. Clete 4 L 4% +. age al ~ a ; it Mr, Hall het to pve thie - fe 5 a Jantioe of an ues ey! HOG Sh mi; the ver te Court, that the Court might rule « feet mt om it there is some ruppeer the nd Fuustin Fiest, by the greee of Ged andthe constitution } the Court of Common Pleas, for the county of Proviieoce, | opibiens on this subject, but I bag ou to vosept the full it, deetdne tefenes te Go pogo ti tull ioe ieee uae “Sena cad aeeenth. in thie Gane. o Lere eee) Jedee Moart have been theo? imperor Ft, to ail present aud to | Rhode Island; bis mother wee originally Mist Lucretia | ersurunce of o plain Keatuck am, t 1 appreciate 4 | net pound to do #0, and that | except. This District Attorney presents himerlf nos only ——— * ‘ * Loomis, nauve of Comnectieut, and a most beautiful | themk from the bo'tom of my hea: for this unm Mr. Biendy offered to prove that a paper which he helt | a+ a witness, but presents lilmeel! ae sceretly arranging emeant rhe wea bP te, ie a definitive women she was. Doctor Pardon Bowen officiated at the | pected zpark of your kindocse regard. (Applause bis bond war @ correct copy of the paper in Mr. Hall's | with the Recorder, another Judge of the sume Court, 1 he eA ‘manner. hemi police rept porta of the | accouchement of Mrs. Branch, when Stephen was born, Three cheers were given for, theex-dovernor, and then | po ncwiiting. Procute this intinetment of » brother Judge, ands wupe | threw papers frou the |neteiet wp or wo ordained and we do herehy ordain that | and we ee, are we -were young atthe | (bree aore for the American party. ‘ Mr. Catting objected—if th origina) could not be given | rier offirer, Lat us bak wt thee tacts, and we if they | were dated) amt suppome it ~~ ow ‘ time, oftearing “Doctor aed,” as waa caller Mayor Conrad wag loudly called for, Fis came forward | ip of, the copy cull pot. are not, to my the least, er War there anything | minutes, there would have been the tueet senple comtrs- Rud foreign commerce, the | raying toour mother, whilst he mopped his old enliy at | and excuved himeel! frow addressing thove paseutle! (0 The Comet we bald, wed Mr. Pirady took en exception. to prevent Mr. Hell going ts Judge Mtunrt, aod telling | Citlon om that wutject Thiv changing of the dete ine of the 18th Nuvember, | our door, that Mrs. Branch bed get a noble fat boy, an) | ecouumt ¢f the lateness of the hour Me. Brady then offered to prov: that thiy paser whieh | hisn this rtrange story he heard again:' him, so | mew re, ant be got op for the purge of proving you 1854, Sting ap 0: it.'” Theze.mae more wuric, and the crow! thon di«pervet Mr Cutting refases to produce, was hesdet Tertimuny | asking hina to explain tt? No. But was there anything | thet be (*uart) meet have teen pom wren bye Seas “we our ows ~ —-——-- {Mee Conmoiy vetore the Gram dary,” and tuat i war | like that enggreted to Judge Stuart! Not one word wi | meet omworthy motive. te ba E ele Pho The Veterans of 1952. entte he aomneet Sr tee Georass, 07 the TAstrles At " | ee om referred Ad on 6) THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. lerney, an the sntnutes of evidence | tA Conentiy on thie pr meer manner pilot ve always seapec' become 5 tifected As hrne rertifiestes wore Se taips.t sae bine he port, and pilot them out 4.40, we latend, sephy hiv wead Saver Sore. we your paper of Saturday, 17th instant, wm article (ny puapaeetadinoeoaay ee etal arly ent olaer | Yom, J Gemert tt saescnier pee wee Poe Oba og orders to is eect from the g dewetetwoastomas Bext te | “posared ama report of the proseedingy of the Fewran }0) pores on irealevant. . by tow he her—(rom habitasw = r Fes erniees tweet, Wteeis tha - ie iy Nonna Bg poet fgg Corps of 1812, which states that an «fer wae mele on George W. Narts, coptain of polies, ce-alled sad ex at ne any one cine The om ef the goverment, any sounding on the consis of the | tbe of Stephen, and uplertake togsake bimout x | Mba af tho,padice of the Tenth yatrut district toxsor: | «mina hy Me CMNting. jualated with Wiha aaser, ee, We. monghane bay ob eh Leo Britisher, will find that they have gota wolf sy the | the Vetecon Canys toe ball, to be gives wa Brooklyn on tr. Inne Th Ronith, formerly an Al lermaa of this oly! (0A egret with the vtatement, wag “Sy fae ong or ship of-wer, which ) a ey he ae tf ey t get rid ot him. Stephen i | ine 26h dantant. Ho also stater the! the offer was le Witners—I want to anderstand whether Jar brought oleh « letter wee . writes shall ae pe Ree Md wi shall rertha jence as x sy pry A Whiltt | Cignantly Ghratea over, with other marks of contemp:. | here hy the prossemtion or by the defence. a belt, LS fod v- vane ‘eanaco shots, st ialervals cf'a quater of an how’, Tears, after we were transterted to that locailey Lom the | ieeebOrtee mast biare recstved a very eeoneous in |” wr. Cusuing—Vou ~ an vo hy! poriyge—derdes en ope q at howd, ae by | yeti, ate we wore anaiiesed & L, com presion fram the pracesdings, for the trath |., there defence for roung fae dire: er of f cor ifieaton | tog of Mes. eet tet tite: hissing a0. } aw mated pie e peg rhe ‘Four | no formal after on the part of the police, not there | this howre, for marly ire. Deval. 1 now entioue ber tevimemy tn re? her Gret Bes, © Siny she, Sos we to Og oon) eer eee reap coe | he Onark Mvan'ains, ny invitation to the <orpe to attend a bail iw Brvokly Avcursis, be waite bet heart of 6 wunam het hedinds that any part of its sntee I" stected with x | played Dearie aid hinge oth hae and we iban | nt we regret dou" anp inter sacomplieetary the A or heard ct tee wt Oa not CA] contagious “ posed a) once raw m0 an vomentioneteo ce, made tedviae " ° moti the said ship. tn ne cpen porta & place Sbull beset | a his bsdp, beonuce he woul te cracuens ta ee agincy | Belen, mle bya Maoge, fhe heck ion thet the “ ot that nome te tet: A. | oF pent ck 0 proper yee Py ie he hie orindle heifer.—Sunday Mercury, Nov. 18. corps have many ef Med, courteous ani | Not thet? sceotect ob avkée thie ides © |. i is rigidly Grbidden eae ie — Seated gentlemanly treatenant, reomwed {rom the police, a+ pr G. Dit you ever toart with her atany tine’ A. Ne Swart to have te ame porte Mf aye age Ae Pe ag AK. tee lle, United States District Court. Yate citizens and poblic officers, for which they are en- | sir Teever warded. excep’ at home with mn chewld net bere dome. Tocks on rest Cy cel Beep Before Hon. Judge Betts. Nked to, and have our thanks and gecers) | Q fad yoo not place Maris Set), im 164 Tt. it yemained antel Whe enter ved v4, phe: J jat> THE JOSEPH WALKER CASE respect, COL. HL RAYMOND, Chairman, wos house ane boarder? 4. No. eit: ger year end ten month: that indictene: or weet: 2 econ the board This fruitfol source of litigation, acrimony avd alleged in behalf of the Yeteran Corps of 18). | boore haere woman 0 board any cart off their tallest there. ot itbe wreck of the sunken ship’ for bicctaga” (on su bn Custing—f'one, respat inthe Gtsel’ Jeary vom wot of |: ase . Con ait og—! w ‘ ‘ sate the onsrined eiat vervaaion frow che Gover. | gPbrared fo the, defence and “given. It was | The paper hangieg manufactory of J. & Van Meier | the tune when re. Connolly wae erainined Yehore then sae ot commendest. pA r, yy ny the sale of the vows! would aa. +7 fire on the 28eb inet 1 hind ‘het oo (be eee! wer ale cot Ore &e mie place . ane 4 “*