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NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1856. 3 ‘upon newspapers to réfiGve the impreseions he that in the event of a war Letwoen the Buited States and ts wo danger of its sesioration. The democracy of transact: utatic 4 'y of the | Pitsburg, X. Galona and Chicago, La Croses and Mi. | noticed ahr Wn Smuts | Sey laa mene eas | samen, mre pr tty rt | wanna ear ad ok ad opment com | Subyr ePee ay, ca om me Umno th = . easily as ho | as we would a strange foe? And is it not paying « poor | will vot bave the weakners to rant it. They koow too | St yesterday's prices. There were very large saics of ox Me, Tre tr fra a ty CN ees % ; ae could have press allod complimen nt to the ab a German 1 popuaton ma, to Bup- | wed what they bave gaine aby repeal. Sul, you must | Cleveland and Toledo. At the olose of the market the bd. Te reveipts at the leves since Let Septamber sibility for 80 short sighted and inexcusable w piece of | breasts for te laed of wae at \dhooat” Why, there has | onthe eve ol Presigcotialelecton, that taoy wil use ih | (*RdC@C waa downward. Railroad bonds aud Sisto | pave been 166,319 hogsbeads seaiant 180,742 nagabesds on the @ve of & Presid a tis management, Tet take tho liberty of reading an | beoa ® good deal of excitement ere about the Gommaoa | to Ibe Nestadvestage, avd make al the caplal oui of it | MOcks have not been very active during {int Mf, OF & decrease of 4,488 bogsbeads. This shows 08 extract from @ letter written at the time to a gentioman | Halla baying made appropriations to all the ether volun- | they can. The: q . y do desire to rebuke the spirit that dis- | the present movement mark, tention to ti inc mete her's oy Mess teed | Some’ Tate sor atc ws mie | Sue tamin, to do sede C0! 09 | ol wocainstarng een acid snot eae) | MS inva veer vautgs ener 5 @ election more, WhO was also op- 5 tmcide of proceeding, gy follows, This letter is | these companics, and if all foreygners were as good as | posed to it; but they wili restore that Tine never, ta ro. | 6 leadiog railroad stocks, ‘Tho operations in Reatiog | way 10,00 begbents ‘tod this amount added ton December 2%, 1664:— jeeen thos are, I for one would have lesa objection to rd to the wilairs of Kansas, I must gay that @ state of | have, for some days past, been very large, but prices | —231,427 hogsheade—would make a supply of ptwyd wit you ask my opinion as to the propriety of holding « mad exercising the right of suffrage. But I put the ques- ivgs existe there that is disgracetul 0 this administra: | have not changed much. New York Central Railroad is | bOg:heads. The distributicn of this su y ie frarpeine. _,L think it absolutely tndispensable. tion impartially to those gentlemen that] esteem, that | tion, aid disgraceful to vs as a civilized and enlightened ¢ - 1m be ascertained, nas been as follows: Tinton iy Lobponitlon Lo the democratic candidates is useless, | regard, and that | would gerve in any way in my power, | people. A civil war ia reging im that Territory thay | bout the weakest among the higher class of stocks. | pisces out of the State, as shown by o unie: 0 " this bods partion unust bo captuited. TE. wathoeabdectamee ts | $84 to whem I would extend every reasonable privilege | nothing can excuse this administration for not ar- | Eric was freely ofered at the decline, Tho leading Wes- | ClaJdipg tho exports from Attakapar’ 62/408 anemeatas interral improvements, Sbo applies ta the geaeral gov- (A gh he Fe Say “We pay your pubic debi—tha: we no Fright to ub we ‘will wole you 20,000,000 acres of pablis let worth $1 25 un acre, for purpows of internal mae pep: Gk gene! you cap apply that tothe payment of your pubiic debt; or what will anewar tho Same purpors, it will enarle you to app.y all your ow: ‘Wiesns to the peyment of the dedt, and this you can ex- pend upon your lugal ratiroads.’’ (s this not suvstantially @souming (he debts of these Sta\es to whic. these appro- jations are mate?’ Nor is tow all: they declare that bas no power to commence ard garry on & gcveral system of interval improvements. The same de- tocracy goes back w Congress, and they pases bill mak- ‘dng appropriations to some trenty five or thirty works of ¢mprovement. Tne President interpores nis veto, upon ‘the ground that it ia a violation of democratic principles, | 4°)! that they could ask—but I ask them, if upon reflection | resting 1 i “ -@ violation of \he com titution, and # violziun of their so ight on its ofa hookwithout reference to the o‘her,both must be es care not for the detraction and mis- | tory Railroad stocks are in Cemand at full 4 consumption of the city and neigh! pas ae oe cone a goes | bealen, the whigs, then, hold @ convention and prosent a | ‘ey do not think that the very fact of theirbaviog an | representation of the public 1 have been argos. heads; taken for refining, in the city and other parts ‘deck to Congrees; each itm is enbraced ia 4 separate Will, ana 6ach one passes both houses of Coogross, oy a swote of two thirds in eacu, and thus becomes the law of ‘abe land, in ceflance of the constitution, ia the face of the platform, oat to spite of all their professions of demo- ‘racy, of purity, of unity aad con-isteacy. avd yet this ds the party tout says there is vo imposture too monstrous: ‘for their opponen’s to prac.se upon the popular «redutity. Mr. Toombs rants, Mr. Mason raves, and nike, “Have we @ constitution?’ and calls for ap explanatioa of the plat form Mr & own says — Mr President it seems to me that we of the democratic faith dhave got sadly astray on the subject of internal improvements. ‘We have either parsed resolutions which we do not understand, or having passed them we deliberately teaingle them under {00t, ‘At is high time, | think, that We strike these resolutions from. the book of our principles, or Tn 184, when our venerable fei the standard besrcr of the democratic parvy, ‘against a genesal sistem of internal improvements, : ‘whigs in my part ot the country charged precisely what w+ Bove betore us in the Senate today. They. sud, “You moan to have no general system of impro t, but’ you meant» itin det.” When Twas appeated to, I sala, with that ness whieh T think has always been anit always wil be, porto! my character.” We contemplate no sush'thing: we are incapable of declaiming ago'nst a general system, which shall bear equally iv ita burdens upon wil parts ot the couatry, and whieh shall dispense its biessings upon all parts of the ‘country, and thus go for a special system of lagiaiation which shall benefit one section at the expense ¢f anocher.”’ T believed then that my party was sincere in this question, and that ia declaring against a gerera) system, it declared against the sys tem in the aggregate and detail. ‘it seems, however, that I am to learn from the Renate new a different lesson. Sir, t must stop. You must either cease (0 pass these bills, or sirike the opposition io interoal improvements from the platform of Zour party. This kind of cheating and humbuggery on the ‘Country cannot be long tolerated. When you say that you can- improve rivers and harbors, that itis against the prinei- es of the party to do so, and then take up & harbor ia this te, and a river somewhere else, and go on scattering your improvements all over the mn taxing one man’s consti: tuents for the benefit of another's, you cannot expect the people (o believe that you are acting fairly. S chan idea may pass current heres but when you get out before the straightforward, the ho- pest heated, the wool hatied, and homerpun breeched farmers of ‘the country, they will not uaderstand it. ‘They will say that there {8 an attempt among the politicians (0 cheat them on ihis question. Sir. we have got to see upon this sul e have broken our rudder; we have lost our com pass; the pilot is overboard, and the suip is at the mercy of the ‘winds aud the waves. Even the Kt mond Enquirer protests against the action of the democratic party, and don’t you, yentlemen of the press. | tickge that will prove neceptable to the Know Nothing Order, | Irish voluntcer company, and a Germrn volunteer organi- | ¢o loug accustomed to it that 1 bave ceased to Fogard i At the second board the stock market wes a shade or ipeluding cistern bottoms, tes hem all be Kucw Nothings if you choose, but they must be | ation in thiscity, is of itelf caloulaed to prove that they | ard the public mud eball not ue kept ine state ol teas! two lower, and was not 80 active a previously, [linia poe quapuity” taken to fi jogs wrhigs of the seme time. ‘The whige ia the Know Nothing Gr. are pot suificiently Americanized to make good Amorican | rarce aa to what has occasioned thatcivi war, @0 far as | Contra) Ri iroad 1% better, Erie (ll off ment, 16 000 bogsheads; stock now on band in the State, ‘ey have ag imaenye tari and of course should have citizens! Why do they wish to keep up these distiac | Ian evlighten it. And without caring to express any vel Ballrosd was 1¢ better. Erie fll off per cent; | Site ies as 6,000 hogeheads; leaving as tne ea fe Tig pen at CLK Ree CT Hong im Face wad country? If they desire to keep up | opinion as to the merits of the case, 1 will simply state | Micbixan Southern, 4; Roading, *{; Illinois Central bonds | taxon for the West, 181,027 hogsheads ‘agaiust 142 968 outaide of the Order is already commitied. to the democratic Let A companies, why Bat join our own American vol- | that i appears by the report of the commistes appointed | lve tim. hogsheude last year, ‘or a decrease of 11,986 canal i. at i eld ever now ing vo#® in J vt 1650 distinc Congrert ry i M " Sine in the hollow of my hand. T would never coments for one, | ve organizations shows conclusively’ thet theyeare not | {21 1ote tbe tera ot coy enous hes ‘ne People) to | , THe steamship Arabia, at Halifax from Liverpool, brings ieee ret, 68 facheata ‘eeeronnt adamiee that the great conserv alive principles of the whig party should | tutticiently Americanized to trust them as Anserican cit! | tke testimony in Kaneas, that the Legislature of that | “Ve days later intelligence, but no news of importance. | 4 deorease of 82,630 hogsbeuds. : f q er vintipion of Woe ne oF fae eae ae CAs | zevg. Ard I say to them—those of them who are my | Tersitory was elected by several thousand Missourians, | Quotations for consols show a decline of 4 percent, The According to astatement annually made up by the New whilst the principles of tae whig party apply to toeasures of Iriends, and those who arenot my friends—I would reason | wbo went over with their Wagons, tents, provisions and | Quotations w OF 94% York Shipping and Uvmmercial Last tno total import of povernment, Tio initer care perbunentt the former mag oe | With them, and tell them calmly and deliberately, that iC 8, OL¢ (cok possession of the polls at ‘tha point of th ore S406 8 9456 Sor money. Cotton:wap dall, | (Os sear isto ine Delton Sietentor Ge peer Onde temporary wad ransient; and if ouce the whig party gives bad ihe power I would disband all such organizations, i¢ knife abd mouth of the revoiver; and taat that Le | ‘ithout any material change in prices, Breadstutte were | Tircomber “sl, 1865, was, 206,064 tons (equal to 362,188 He obmanizatoon, Mat is there left to fall buck upon: Ttadisor. | 1 weuld allow no such organization to exist in tue coun: | gislature passed a ect of iawa—a fuil copy of which Ihave | & little lower. The weather throughout Ragland bad | hogsheads ot 1,200 pounds each) against 1¢6 925 tons, if ‘The i ° vy : ™ pion " ivemand’sould be pee. | Pek, into military companies, to be designated ai | Imcun to le paralleled in ancient or modern history | 00 later report from the Bank of Hoglsnd, The money | {qc ee asags tooe in IBGh or a I ah een Ae netples of the whig party | * Northern Sharpshooters”’ aud New Eoglaud Kitlemen: | For cxample, uo man is permitted to practice law wuo | market was not active, but the rates :uled firm at 4% por per cent. ‘The tote! consumption of both foreign and eapetuaied. | Let itthen | and, on the y her Land, Southern mea living in the Norh | Cocs Lot Drst ewear to support and sustain the Kauses- | cert on the Stock Exchange, Both, the London and Paris | domestic cane suger in 13°5 was 879,197 tons, against Pipaaree Weotine ba dniegeliy. and Pr eat ‘a were to form similer organizations, and were deeigasted | Nebraska act and the Fugitive re law. 2d. Ail per Md 204 tons in 1654, or » decrease in the Loval consump, eae erent goto tenon ne Onder they will bein ye 9! | as the ** Virgima Ritle Corps” and “South Carolina Rao- | Fons are permitted to vote, and every vole presumed to | M&K? # for stocks were dull and duprossed. tion of nearly 1% por cent. Bealdes the above, it is ent Copels OF take ihe reapooelbility of electing Ate, Wise. gers,” and were to apply to the executive of the several | be good, un'e.s challenged; but if challenged, be sbal: ‘The Assistant Treasurer reports do-day as follows:— mated that there entered into the consumption about ‘bese wore my opinions at that day, this was the coun. | Sates for arms, whigh might, in the event of @ collision | swear to support apd sustain tbe same luws—(this was | Total receipta seeeeees $184,420 65 | 11,160 tena of augar made from foreign and domostis @o- sol that Polleere. sha It it had been careied out the taro | bo wimed szainst those by whom they were supsiied— | imended to let in the Missouri voters without Challeng. | Total pay ments 60 THL 19 | Tastes and about 14.560 of maple sugar, which, with the parttes would have been united, and we would have car- do you think they would be furnished? I douvt it—and | 1g). 3d. Nocne is capable of holding any ottice iu the | Tota! balance. tno -13,816.579 07 | consumption of California and Oregon, estimated at about Fad the State by tor 20000 to 26 000. But it was ruled | 1 Ai doubeit they ought to be And will it be pre- | Tersitory whodces mot take the same test oaths. 4ta. | qe warrants entered at the Treasury Departwont, | 5,560 tour, would give a grand total for. the consump 4om ither wine Ths Rekarcad wavagers yesolved thet there | {2ded that arms should be withheld from them, and yet | No person is capable of young for or against a convention "| cl the United States in the year 1856 of 410,357 aeeee ee nea ae ee toe panera in tang | ¢ i¥ered over to foreicn military organizations, whica | t form aconstitution who does not also take Wesbingthey en:the 11d inet.; wers'as’ fellows>— against 415,000 tons in 1854. ‘This amount is equal te Uap, Petersburg, Lyackbure, ai! perhate others: were | Bsbt iu the event of such @eoliision ag has arisen in| tstostbs. 6th. If For redemption of Texas debt, 9554 766,000 hogsheads of 1,200 pounds each. ced eetlact gi; Cummuer ations Dur the subject, “We | Lousville between the native and foreign poptation or maiutai, that sl For tho Treasury Department 35 We bave compiled from our records the annoxed state- wars'kad named Socknia Wabncoavee wile the a ‘eel turned against our own peopie? 1 am willing to grant | Territory, spd that the people have no right to hoid | For the Interior Department . pet amiga ovina rt neh gg by hon pent i Rigel them ali neceszary privileges for their happiness and wel- | elavyes, Or shall imtroduce into the Territory, or | For the customs. wee a the matagers did nit heritate to say, they hed Tathor | {22 and for their personal and religious rights, and per | print,’ publish, write or circulate, or cause io be | War warrants received aud enterc lore the staie than co-operate with the whig party in ‘cot eecurity to their persons and property. But it must | wiroduced, written, printed, published or circulated | Un accountof the Navy.. value, per bogshead and total, the proportions takea by (ns form, for fear they might Dominate sone bnovnot | be Teectlceted that the right of sulfrage and eligivility to | in tbe Territory any book, paper, magazine, pamphlet or | From miscellaneous sources ...... - Altlantio ports and Western States, cad the date of the personally acceptable to them; aud thus we lost the state, | [0lWtcal olfice. constitute no necessary part of citizen. | ¢ rcular, containing auy dobial of the right of persoas to | The {ollowiag aro comparative statements of tolls col- | first receipt cf each crop. By tnig statement it will be tnd. they “are responsibie for it. (loud cheers} | (22, 8bd is well exempliaed in my own person, Tam | hold slaves in the Territory, he suail be deemed guil'y of ’ seen that the total products of Louisiana from 1834 to You may-recollect tu speech T made thom this otena | St, this time nelther a voter nor an office holder ; yet as | felony , and punirhed by imprisonment at hard labor for | ‘ected ou the Columbia Railroad for the mouths of August, | 7655, inclusive, @ period of tweaty two years, was tome twelve or ffuen months sgo, 2 waich 1 pointed | TUCh And as independont @ citizen as aay that treads | a term of uot lees than two years; and, finally, no pergon | 1869 and 1856, aud a'so for nino months of tho fiscal | 5,n98,240 hogeheads. valued at $198 993,868, andghat of out to you certain defects in the American orgauiz tion. Finite soil. Let them be patient, and be satisfied | who is covecientiously opposed to holding slaves, or who years of 1866 and 1866:— Ubis quantity the Atlantic ports took 1,316,033 hogsheads NESE Cid ty eg val 2 te aga geedage og at their American vorn children sha'l participate with | does not admit the right to hold slaves in the Territory, and the Western States 1,934,527 hogsheads. The c question with me was wheuher 1 should abandon tho oy | WiB aministering the affairs of America. But the do- | eball bo quantied to sit as a juror in the trial of any pro: | A™aust, 1866. ++935,592 49 | trom 1628 (which ia as far back as our estimates oxi funieation becatce of the defects, or whether | shoeta | eat of the American party in Virgivia, last year, was not | sccution for avy violation of the provisions of those laws. * 1664 ++ 15,237 94 | to 1885, summed up 281,000 hogsheads; which on Temaio in in it and endeavor to reform sud correct them, the oply por the harcest blow it has received. Tha; | Upon this I bavp but two remarks to make. The first is, make tbe toial product in @ period of twenty-six That] remained ia and endeavored to accomplish thie i | \f,8ovld bave recovered from, as we only lost in that | tat if the North propose to exclude the South trom tak Wocrente v.eseeer-- serrereeee 4,179,740 bogeheada, or 4,396,331,000 pounds. ar am bappy to say and it is now a soures of pleasure to | (iCU0D, what we failed to gain—the ascendency in this | ing their slaves into the Territory with them, the account | From Dec. 1, 1865, to Aug 31, 1856. article on eugar, which we published in our columns im papdtony 4 that tb. suggestions which T Pro bave: all commonwealth, which bad always been against uz. It | is pretty well balanced by the South refusing to the per- | For same period last year........... June last, it is stated that the estimated product of Loat- been adopied, (u pig A gy od ve Mook cic not affect us 80 seriously elsewhere. Tho craeland | sons of the North to teke their opinions aud free- —— —— | biava in 1816 was 10,000,000 pounds, or about 10,008 » . fatal stab it received, was at the hands of its friends ia | ccm of thought and speech into the Territory with | Increase .sssceeeeessessess oseeessee esse ++891,622 25 | hogeheads. In 1853, it will be seen by the ststemont bo- party ts reduced jato one feature only, as it |p bh etveshoenidenrens tmeeceen Ota pn A of | Pbtlaceiphia. It was that ill advised and ill fated 12m | them, ‘The next t#—suppose the authorilies ef The following statement shows the earnings for August, | !ow, the crop reached 449,324 hogsheads, estimated to Es ment of the sugar product of Lovisiana for the past twenty two years, showing the amount of each year’s crop in hogsheads'and pounds, with the gross average tcction that rent it asunder, and destro: this State i i i Gemorracy. (sink there must be something “rosen la americanismn, 6 ee, means of saving the Union. | aity of the party, by the teuetentie tr eens pare ting bs weajortag | rf ae ae, P 1886, on tho Catawissa Raiiroad:— bens SD sea we seein sigue 2 nee oar’ ee Denmark” when that paper, remarkable cortainly for its | (20¥ ee At the time of the formation of this | issues; the conscquences of which should have been | exemple, asa temperance law, or auy other 1 care not | From passenger 1,060 pounds taken as the average weight per hoget fidelity, not to way ite wervility to the party, protests | Party there was @ necessity for secresy. There would | foresecn by every man of the least sagacity or reflection, | Wwhat—and should then declare that no man should have | From treigbt « but for the crops since thet date we have taken the ‘against'apy thing its party can do? and yet they aot out | D4v® been no necessity for secrecy in @ conmnusity Uke | ror ali should have Known that the introduction of that | the privilege of voting, or holding office, who would not | Exprese and tail Oguresof Mr. P. A. Champomier, as we flad thom in hia with their bold, unblusting declaration’ in their Cinoin- | OUTS: an communities where the foreign popd- | question, ina Southirn aspect, would necessarily occasion | frst swear to sustain and support that’ jaw; and if any spnual statements. x Rati platform, that there is uo impostare too montrons for | lation canalled, or nearly equalled, and ia some inetances | cy,positicn and divirion, {f it dia not occasion its introduc. | man ebould dare to question the proprieiy of that law, or WADA Sy icarca cane peas sees ence yaenescaesasee Oe “ ‘Ital ‘Us to practise on the public credulity. (Loud and pro. | ¢Xcelled the native population, it was an indispensable | icy aud adoption in a Northern aspect; and, in either | the right to pass it, he should be subject toimprisonment | my, hi ealized gga = Rggllne F4 Tooged cheers) Of what material do thes consider their |*<oessity. (Cheors.) | But when the party became | event, it must have proved iatal. “Tdi my ‘duty iu en | et bara labor for bot, lee thes, tre semte bad duet he nie apt a orate) Ie ee ee ee ee own party as composed with such professions and such | ‘101g enough to dispense with the secrecy it did #0. | Loneat and carnest ellort to stave off the catastrophe, even | thould bave neither lawyer to defend, nor poreoa to try | '8d in any one month oe... oe ee ee oe prscteen daily set before them + Wha: of Mr. Filmore? (Cheers.) | And, now, what is the principle ot the Ame | st the bazara of all my own ambitious hopes. it was | bim, who would not also first take an oava to support and | ‘The earnings of the Hamilion and Bayton Railroad Co. oe ae ode 4 am very well prepared to plead the statute of limitation | [an Party’ One, aud one only; and that is, Americans | too late, ‘The deed was done. The poison bad been in- | sustain the very law that the offending party had opposed . 70,000 70,600,000 69 04,200,000 upon Mr. Fillmore’s record, prior to tho time when he be- | thill Tule America. (loud cheers) And, before my Maker, | jeeed. The perty was denationalized, and we were « | —I usc, what would you do? Would you submit or resist? | 0” Aukust are— seine. oecaeeabiis ening Cama game the President of the United Siates, because he | 1 declare that] do uot believe tat there isan honest and | house divided egainat itself. I discbarged my diy frm’ | Tikave that question to be decided. by my {rionds Stearus | Ft0m freight... ite insane ao cee has pleaded the statute of limitation upon {t himself, | ‘2'elligent native born citizen of tue Univea Susse abe, 1y. and without sbrinkirg, from first t> last, and have | & Brummel, (extensive walskey manufacturers, siltin, Do. passengers. oe Dae 2. sae laughter.) He has bad the canior to tell you that he | Cemecrat or biack republican—wli0, apart {rom political | pcthipg to reproach myself with, But whero ia now the | mediately © betore him)—(excessive laughier aud | 1 Walls and express, een. queadene ah ao was origina'ly prejudiced against to0 iuetitation of lave: | hoe nd the operation of political causes, dve8 | yurhor of the twellth section’ Where iaour modern Kros. | cheere)—tor myself, as I am determined not to get ahead a ae fy; that while he was the reprosentative, of a portion of art (OF hearts ‘subscribe to this docirite, | tratus wbo st tire to the Ephesian temple, and went off | of public opinion again, if 1 can help it, 1 forbear to say | Tota)... sas... $14,053 49 ioe wae Se +e People of New York he represented the tatereats and | (chects)’ for those who do not. desire that Americans | by the light of the blaze he bad kindled?’ Playing sen. | what, under such circumstances, 1 would do, but leave it | Parmiugs ior Avg. 1866: + 98,876 77 aentae. aan akin anes) ae the principles of his district; but when he sugeeeded to | contd contre! must wish that foreigners should. And, | tinel, we are told, aud guarding the fortunes of our ad- | to those wno know me Ww guess.” But these are the laws - —— ? ayo 909, the Presldency—by the uniortunate death of General | It me tel! you: yentiemen of the demoorati; party, tO | versaries, He leit'us, and is supporting Mr. Buchanan | that, on motion of Mr, Geyer, of Missouri, wore re- | MCTeMre 1354 per cept... .....00 ++ +8 6181 72 TEARS ., AR Ree $5.00. 10.808,580 Taylor—I don't cnow whethor it was fortunate or unfor- | K¢t Your bouseboid in order, and prepare for the addi- | hecause the American party would not adhere to the 12th | pealed in the Seuate by a vote of torty to three. | ‘The earvings of the Cleveland and Columbus Road for « aajoeo 1ec,00gece 0) Seen eee tunate— . Papal Know Notbing intluence alter November thas will | secnon, Well, ae a matter of course, if it was of somuch | They then kicked the plank of squawer sovercignty | August, 1850, were:— Ba ee oo ‘There's a divinity that shapes our ends, oliow this election, for when the democrats > the South | importance that we should have it in our platform, it is | trom the Cwcipnati platform, afer baving urst | \"eth 18% 320,000 20,000 0 800, Rough hew them how we will— fee she thousands ard tens of thousands of German and | of ne Jees importance that we sbould have found it in | made Mr. Buchanan square bimself to it. Ihave one | freabts......... $46,840 49 ee ee a ae But when be succeeded tothe I'residency he became a | Ir's} Catholics that are Sockiug to the support of Fre- | theirs. But it is pot there. What, then, has he made by | word to eas in regard to the Brooks affair, and itis only | estcugers and mal 80,702 83 AR ile ape moe new man; he threw off all his prejudices; he was no — e | poeeeg by ey will Lap coy ay, cil, gon | the change? And when the demooratic press bas the | becavee I have referred to it before a Northern audience onapipnagend , erry 48:00 «(16/459 088 dongee 0 distriet representative; he was a national man, | {/\e, We ihiuk 4 om time to alter tho naturalizaion | mocesty to rebuke us for not adopting the 12th section, | that I choose now, inthe presence of a Souter Total... s---.. + $127,545 32 35 00 18'738'30 and he administered the government upon national | [0 * ¢ tana i a noreige: intuenoee coe eone | We have on'y to ak them why it was not adopted at Cin: | dience, fo repeat my entire and alsolule comdennation of | FOF Avgust, 1656 + 113,408 41 i200 is'emem rinciples whatever there might have been ob- ere is no —— an is foreign int menOS, even iD | cinnati, and they will point you to the Washington Union, the attack made upon the Senator from Massachusetts, “aan on 70 00 16,199,890 a in his previoes reoord—(lo0d stone) beleiptguaatnen tik I ero maar ose Long rod which said:— * | it atr, Brooks tad thought proper to” resent the language | Crease 12 per Cont... 2... .sese seers coors $14,184 OL 199, ‘and he was esteemed, and lauded and applauded, an: , oe ~ - It isno of Mr. Sumper by pulling bis pose, slapping his face, or fhe earnirgs of the Indiana Centra! and Dayton West- 3.508.740 4116831000 $195.008.808 Sulogized from ene end of tho couairy to ino oluer In | “isH<lve with the whole orgauization in the Stale of Vir- | oe tpnogdline eneuslon of Merery. Hie way lo thc oneee tng | seDding bim a challenge, 1 shovid never have fouad it | crn ratiroade for August, 1886, wore:— Total... 0,898,740 4,115,881,000 $196, 000,868 1852, when the cemocrate proclaimed the integrity of his | #:t'®, but we cannot dispense with it iu the Union: and a | Giver in the exercise of his rights as a.cilizen, and notolfeud | eceseary to express any opinion upon the sub- | . po ein —— to First Receigt Administration. (Loud and long coulinued cheers ) There | OFderto make it a rational party, it is mecoseary for us | against his democratic fealty. ject, whatever opinion if might have entertained; | )#*ergers... ++$26,047 70 Year. Atla’tic ts. West. States of beew muct couteation and dizpute between hit Excel- here & in enetonen: theoughont | the Union—bat pup” | —And this is what the author of the twelfth section gets | Wut’ J approve mewther ef the time, place, manner Freight .. 13,447 70 Hegsheads. Hogsheads. New lency Governor Wise and certain geutlemen in thie State, ater reddy | "What ot rte jut an oe of | in lew of it, im the democratic party, and is satisfled witn | ner circumstance attending tie assault. 1 bave no | ©*Press.. 600 + 45 500 44,500 October ‘as to whether his Excellency did speak of Mr. Filimore’s | PA ete oe ete fl non cam sae oe it, Bow fs it in regard to Fremont? He is an uutried | coubt at all, from what | bave beard from the friends * 1,500 23,500 Nov’ber 6. administration as a Washington like administration, I | 1 ths \cmocvatic paiy, oF auy oliver party. make lt We | and unknown adventurer in the political tied. If he | of bir. Brooks, that he is a ugh Total eae sc seee ee 26,000 95,000 Nov'ber 1. don't think it a matter of very grout importance, whether | ‘Pink Wwe see the danger when wy tg A gems Welt | has the first qualification of tesmen, it is no} kuown | in bis general preten bebe ig For August, 1860. 24,500 32,600 Nov'’ber 1. his Exceilevcy did say so or not, I have beard him say | |? ‘heir ey¢» nov ey matgviate the: ir own coun | or pretendéd by his warmest fupporters. We have had | pctucei 2,600 32509 October 11. of the question, ia Bethe po tee mM Ss pid wot oe the manufacture of Presidente, of | which Tue own better judgment will condemn as he 42,000 58,000 October 18, time, and I have y & great many things oa | tiem, ead wilting enone Te a alt the —— Inte years, Bone ¢f which bave ‘succeeded well. | grows older snd more reflective, that the compli just. thus speaks 38,500 46,500 Ootober 14, ‘the other side of the same question. (Loud langhter and | {ie goyermment, without the aid of forego infu: | wo fave’ bad men selected for an office not | ments he hay received from bis a hearted, enthost | of the progress of the Iroa Mountain"railroad:— 28,000 50,000 October 18, cheers.) But there isone man whose tesiimony ought to | fhee! Sianeli 1 bave we ueeg he Mt wat re bith, | omy requiring the highest order of abuity and Dut Injudicious friends in the South, aad ants 4 68,000 60,000 October 12, out’ , and will outweigh, w to wbigs aad democrats, | ¢! Thon ing te Rave Se & gned seen os re be ict, | the largest smount of experience, of known establish. ose heaped upon him at the Nort, have served to The work upon this road continues to go steadily for- 34,000 62,000 October 22. ‘ny opinioa that Governor Wise may ever have expressed | 3°11 Pare not tlie kame respect jor the bal man of baracter and principles—meu of firmness and | wewilver and misicad bis judgment ia much that has | Ward, and as speccily as can be « xpected in a uew coun- 101,000 70,009 October 3. upon this subject, because, wiatever other faalt may at- | (ECE! DID tae Die et ere ee boom able to Dring ‘of character, who could rely upon their owa | werspired since, as it was weil calculated to do. | '7¥ like this, The grading is fast approaching comple 79,000 75,000 October 4. tach to him, he bas been & persistent democrat all tho | “fatic American citieus. ]bave not been able to bring ledge and judgient of men aud things, taken some. | But let me say bere evce for all, that he knows little of | UM, and there is now no doubt of the road being ready 45,500 70,000 October 7. my tind to the tweling that a bad Farooean would make a good Ainerican: | (Checr.) Now, 1 would ‘like to kiow who it was that frst made war upou the Roman mst. "i "i Cathoiies of this country? II questioned upon the sup | {7,4 —— ton Ta betie, esee eae Sioune be ject, 1 would have auswored, the democratic party, i tue | jeuyg upon record, uowbar,” and ali such experi aemocratio ate of New Hampshire, where tag are pro- bave proved miserable abortions and failures, that scribed (0 this Gay aod not permitted to hold vilice uader only served to plunge the country into trouble itizen of Virginia, holding attachments | 1 complete the road very goou. It is confidently expect- the government. “Imight ask who next made war upoa | sc4'giniculty. But of ali the exporimenta yet made in y lana; bat when I got beyond the limits of | 4 that the whole road will be laid and reary for use them, and answer the democratic party; but that ques | hig I regard that of nominating Fremont as the | Virginia know no vilference betwoen the citizens of the | fer a8 Lake Superior Mountain, by Suge next. Hon now forms ne part of tne platform of the party to \d most insane yet attempted; ani toadd another | diticrent Staves; | wm equally interested in, and equally ‘The same paper furnishes the following statemont of mich Tbeleng. The Krow Nothing party hod uo ex: | insuperable objcetion to his election, i{ will be purely and | Fympatbize with all; and of one thing bo assured, that | receipts over the Irou Mountain Railroad, for the week ? | for the rail the present season. A construction train is yee) Dutwoon any Secthers | HOW burily engaged in dling im where the track has al qervemen, “Ceographicaly of poitieady | | Teady been laid, giving it permanence an durability aud rice between Me Reovks got Me Sumace. | providing «flectually against the ravages of winter storms, Jepolties! sympathy tor a Sosthora nui, | <B¢ company received 112 tons of trou ou Monday fast, jonist thau I have for a Northera abcli bosides spikes, &c., ard are expecting to receive sufficient time. I have wid you that! was ne eulogiet or devotee gue whos of Mr. Fillmore’s, but I regard him as a true, sound, sale, conservative, paioual man—(loud cheers )—oue who bas given us; and I have no doubt will agaia give us, (if you ve him the «pportnnity,) a sound, eafe, r tional aad na- tional administration of verument. (Cueers.) ‘That I cannot expect from either of the other caadisaies. Cheers.) Now, if | were an eulogist or glorifier of Fill- more, i might say, as bas been said by anotuer: — That be was sent by his Creator, (hut ho was sent by God himself, toute over the destinies of this cmuntry when ths ship times frem the camp, and rometimes from @ dounty court bar. We have bad men put up for this high oflice 22 83 BREE £883 £88 : 1 15$'0 &3 22S $ a ; ‘Stace was sinking in the tempert, (Loud and long continued simply of @ sectional character, yet not more so than | no nullifying receeding democrat, aud no democrat of any ‘The coming crop will doubtless be the shortest, in pro- i plea a mane shores of Virginia into the valleys, aed the | bad Ben's: Sree because? talk Haute likey ‘tre. | ciber concripton, cet be sllcwed to. make: en ives | ending Sept. 6:— portion Wo te extent of ground cultivated, that hus occur. T held in my hand a speech, delivered by a promincat | ovetains ip this State, and a es ee i will get as many Southern clectoral voles as | ior me that is to widen the breach between | Sharon Iron Company, gross tons Fed since 1845, when the yield was ontimatod at 30,009 Jeading democrat, that commands a Iai share x the iene . a sae 4g a i Boel mn will get in the North: but, chiefly, because te Novth ‘and mn th Nor will ms Pasrait Cleveland Iron Company, do. sngubents. Paarl Seek anne, eee fidenc: teem rty, and in whic! says ye i dete: Pucbapan ia the representative of a that w | the personal quarrels of anybody to rais nal ia: years past, from the sugar culture of cotton, = rene ye pp my | At | (everal Scott froma charge made against bin by the carry on the bettie exclusively ec Laines seme | eustriee oF ‘my own brother had actal at Mr. Brooks | Total we ‘ud by Mir. Champomier’s statements that while im (we say “Ayo, all of us’’) thas Mr. Fillmore was a real democratic pariy, that his prociivities were towards the issue, whilst Fremont is the reprosentative of a party taat | cud (im the dicharge cf @ solemn public duty, whateer Shipmenta during same time by Ci thi . mark yon, was in 165K), ee eee F@ | Catholic Cherch. and the evid they fornisbed 1852 there were 1,481 5: , Im 1855 the number vulking omisating Filimore:— ‘atholic and the evidence they Soran was | taves the ite side of that sectional issue. are, | might have been my personal feelings), I should have been reduced to 1, showing @ decrease in three tt po ie ph tg ety: iat wos sinking | tat he had a davgbter in the nunnery. And now they | therefore, Hoth cectionnl, and one as much so as the Toled for his expulsion, and, as ‘aid betore'l choose to | PRY — years of 182, We also know that there has been a further inlihe leupest, Alt therefore, look kindly ou Nr. Pillmoce, | Come with thel: Ly pocritical talk about the Roman Cs | orgy. and it doce appear to me to de impossible to sec | ty £0 bere, because i said soim the North before. North- | Per steamer Piavet, gross tons... eaadh materia! decrease this year, but the great off in the and we like to give him all thé consolation we can after the | (holies, whom they were the irst to war upon. (Cheers.) | tiougiize the South, as the democrats propose, without, | ern and Southern delegates in the National Council of the | Per schooner E. ©. Roberts, do crop is referable to the damage from the re: le com: treatment he received at Raitimore, because he was a | | will ask who were the first to war upon the foreign po- | at the same time and in the came way, sectionalizing the | América party, while opposing the passage ofa resolu. | Por W. Ii. Steveus, do. tinuance of cold and wet wiather during the past winter, and yet did no harm to the couatr) polation? T answer the democratic party; the same party | North also. We to avoid both, and steer between | tion «fered bya committee Ce | expulsion by which the rattoons or stubbles were almost entirely For which of the democratic Presitents of latter days | #nd the same Legislature that passed the ook chem as we wou! ween ‘“Soylla’ and Charbydis,"’ | (Loud and long continued applause.) Twill indulge to | T0tMl......ccccecceccceeeeseeeeeeeseeeeeseeeeceeeTT® | ed, 8 well as much of the plant cane, before or can se much be said, as that he did no harm to the coun- | lutious of 06 aud ‘Oy. Who > Legislature | yng rally wpou the man, who represents the ational | Lo speculations as to who isto be elected, but judging | The propeller Mineral Rock and the schooner Willington | Siter planting. Under there circumstances some ary? Coo eee tonewingmccrats. oat did | party on grcat national issues. (Tremendious cheering.) | from the past, I should think this Siete would be most |. yw joading at the Sharon dock, but will not cloar up their fields and planted corn of or ‘And yet for the simple reason that be did no harm to his | ‘Mey do 7 pasned the Milowing vessiation s=- msn has net yet drawn bis breath, who if placed in | likely to vote for the man that is most cortain to impose s . and will have no cane, Others will perhaps make country—aye, because be has been a national Pres! and ‘That the General +Assembly nevertheless coucurring | the Presidential Chair, would dare to interfere with the | & cheat upon her, as sne bas always repudiated her | to ¢ay- There will not be two hundred tons of ore outhe | enough to replant for another crop, while some, Lan | Decause he has kept within the bounds of bis oificialoah— | In cpinion with the Legislature of Meswchuseis that | institution of slavery as it exists in the States; they all | own childrer—Clay, Harrison, Taylor and Soott— | dock aj the close of thie week, and it will all be taken as | light soil or well-drained lands, ‘hay pg been fa Mr. Fillmore has been repudiated by his party. Is not this Pig Fy oo wae oppore its extension, but none are for disturbing it where | for snch men as Van Baren, Potk, Cass and Pierce; oon as brought down from the mines. by seasonable showers, may — fair average. eo? vei caotted. That the eonsttiution shoula b ended, that | it exista—tt was but the other day, that in the Senate of | aud che has never failed to be cheated yet; but no matter | * a 2 These will bave an excess of cane beycnd their require- Well, who do you suj jo that was! ro foreigner Who shall not have acquired righus uncer the | the United States John P. Hale one of the King Dees in | who is to be elected, or who defeated, the path of duty is The receipts of flour and grain at Chicago, for the week | ments for replanting, but whether they will sell from A Vorre—' was ? constitution and laws at the time of making this amendment | the hive, said— 5 plein before me, and I shall pursue it, I shall support | cuding Sept, 6th, were as follows:— their excess, to those wantiog plants, instead of making Mr. Borms—Wel! you might ask who it was. Be as- | shall thereiore be eligible to the ollice of Senator or repre: | ano doctrine which hasbeen proclaimed by the men about | te Man that will represent my principles, and that ia Flour, sugar, and to what extent, we bave no means of estimat- ured, my gocd friends, 1 do not mean to let you leave | seotative in the Congress of the United States, nor to any ofl | yaoi, J kno .d in the anti-alat rise | my best jodgment wil! most advance genera! great ing. At all events the crop must be a short ono—doubt- here withort kaowing who it waa, It was Do less aman | !0 the Fxeculive or J adielary depariwen's or the North has: alway sheen that they disclaagi@ and denied | intercats of the entire country, and leave the respons: | ey cana eg thi than Stephon A. Douglas, who pronounced Filmore bore, and felt as early as 1180, ia it to be wondered at that we erry, the pury 3 — or the wee bility to thore who choose to cast their votes for either | oina RR. O14 from the stand from which I now speak, 'a 1862, 8 god’ | foo ihe mecoesity for carrying it further now, in 1864, | In'ihe first national ‘meeting they ever held esa convention, | °L we other candidates. One thing, howerwr, I will say, | Rock Thiand.... 9,900 fend” for the calming of the waters when the shin of | lien more foreiguers laud Iu the city of New York aloue | viterly disclaimed it ” | as as wep sees De Raven, We Cannes te Maree OFT IE Chaar, ‘B87 Sunde was sinking 1 ie to mond Beaminy, kot | | {ene mouth than there came wo the whole duited Sta No, sir; the only dapger to which slavery is exposed ere ts the teeaient threats of disunion, let —- years! In 1860, who made war (then th is {rom making its escapo into the free States; and that is | ine say the Union ts in no danger of a dissolution ‘There TotMhrsccs see 9481 11,865 83,790 ‘will not say of the Richmond Acaminer that it tells lies of any sort; but | am vory sure it dees not tell whig lies. I ‘wouldn't swear that it does not stretch ita bianket a good deal in telling stories upon the whigs; but it don't tell ‘whig lies by design. (Laughtor.) Yes, gentlemen, that was the opinion of the democratic party; and that is not all: the sentiment was received with applause by the democrats of Richmond. | am told by a gentioman who ‘was present &nd recollects the scene, that it was received soe ae cemulation ‘in the Convention cr Vicginin? ‘the | (cco avoided only by exoessive vigilance oa the part of | are bus two ways of dissolvin ‘The total of four and grain from Chicago d sor f ¢ ths Union: one ix by he export of four and grain from Chicago during yore pond on the rights saltvage, | ton aa kee Peweintee tae aes those who entice | revolution and farce, whic the Sirony arm of the «ene. | she season to Sept. Lat, 1866, was as follows:— after oes excluded them (a3 they have always bee guarded {n that respect as best you caa—as you guard ee eee cs tees put Cyr and the Plow, Wheat. Corn. er excluded) being qualified to Gii the chief executive | your otber property from a Northern burglar or incen- Flour, bbis.... — 13,360 lice of the State, they declared that no man should be | Siry—perther the general ment nor the Union is | cobstitution, and framed the government of their choice. | wheal pusl..1,239,292 906,089 403,027 2,649,908 A Ne editors and cross road politicians have no | ( ¢ F allowed to exercise the right of suffrage, pative or other, ponsible for it. Nor abusive and intemperat doe pn gy Corn,“ ,.6,668,759 1,796,809 673,985 7,964,955 who tad not been two. years within’ the limite of tho | larguage, or threats of separation from the North, prove pte bade pn a! Tot eh \ 'gagi462 "65,810 174,692 480,894 State. I thought that too long a period, and | moved to | a remedy f.r the evil. A burglar from t'¢ North enters | Monts of the co ay ow verve | = — ‘with immense applause and cheering all over the houre. 2 eagnend in their daily svoon- Ry €, on pol er tae aumnnerelie lot me ask | reduce the term of two years to one year, and the yote bbor’s dwelling aud carries off his jewelry and | tiony wt Ay field, ia the factories and | Barley, “ .. - - 462 462 aT ae a pe it wan 23088. ‘he objet avdwed was to exclude “You do tet charge It upes the ealire Northern | cus i the workshop, im ube (eld, ia tbe factories and | Us. sane Price Current of the lat inst. gives vidence’ Ido not ea; cont big. Thin ie not my | 0nd So remiss er aco cake Rita te Fonte Gr revioen | Pages, tnd held them respensiene fe See larceny, | of “Twolft wolf?” with which their care have become f& | he annexed review of the sugar trade of that port for the enguage: but you telleve in Judge Docglas; and if you eee ee ar vinaield, tm order ve exelade the Tortneae, | pncwerenten to, dissolve the Union because bis property | miierised, bet who will, when occasion calle for it, 1 @ | yo. caging the date, and remarks relative to the my Delieve. as be says, that Fillmore was a pou! y 4 cecnotamen reigner, | js not found and restored; all you can demand is, that up in tbeir mighty strength and trampic under foot these | Dg A 3000 300 national, troe to the country, and that set tear which T did not thon, and donotnow perscine, | wren the rogue is detected you shall have the property | soisy, miscbievous malcontents, who make ‘tight bide. | growing crop:— 2000 $00 of Gtate when it was si cesehy fee. whieh 1 4d ast then, and do not now porvsive. the selliy party punished. Fr, WhO | ons?’ with their yell of disumion; and lot me tell thom | The season opened upon uniayorable prospects for the | 5000 200 +, it you admit that yechiap erigiuaky © naive. cf, Vege, moving beck ventions ny fave to accompany | that when they attempt it for ‘no bettor case than | sucar crop, and it was generally estimated, at quite an | $000 +4 ~ per iguealy n,t Vinge, ‘moving immed & hue and cry Is | it has yet been threatomed, I for one, will meet them at | carly date, that the deficiency, as compared with the pre- | 5600 fd ap from Kentucky, Texas or fornia into ‘Virginia, and oned ire Northern population, ®ad | «ppinippi,”” and om that field they will find me kneeling , 635 ) | 18e00 1000 the having to reside bere two years before being entitled to a a our ears until | at no altar than the altar of the Union, worahipia, 14000 expect vote, and a foreigner from Bassin or Frusta or Beoten | Gy . 1 have | at no other shrine than the shrine of the constitution, an: 5¢00 bn remamning five years in the country, and then acquiring fighting under no other ‘lag than the stars and stripes of 1000 ‘and enjoy ing that right? fa eed oe ee the United States. 7 she I — een d.ven tbe aezive bora Amerionn citisen fe required 09 be (Loud, yooiferous and protracted cheers, amid which Ef abolition candidate? (Cheers ) Can, you ve made. to peeereaeee See nee ee ee Mr. Botts took bis seat.) 10 Metrep Bank Delieve that Mr. Van Buren, who was but a ‘ew monthe | voles. No man thinies ita the law was tee eee Tree cheers werethien heartily given tr the speaker, 5 Shoe & Lea are, Unrovhout the whole South, 6 rued as the «Prince ery bet nn 6 SS and the meeting adjourned about 12 o clock estimate of 3 per cent on the product of brown Sant Mr. Fillmore? (Loud cheers.) 1 thick better of the de. | OF Upon the coniines of the city, yet, identified with it, as ‘ sw = . pn mnths | 50 Canton Co. thocratic party; 1 think the masses mean to do right, | | have been, registering my name wherover I go as & citi- Genera ker and his Assailants. CUE; poten of 3.008 houses, agninat 1,924 the | #2 Fenn Coal think very badly of the politicians of the party; I wink TO THE EDITOR OF THE HERALD. jcar belore: and of these 68 use steam, and 961 use eA very of the politicians of my own pariy, 1 think Sew Yous, Sept. 10, 1866. horses as their motive power, This do- of =U thine th New York, Sept. 10, 600 Cum Coal very of the poliicians of all parties: ey ficiency im the crop has been productive of a higher all cheat im general whenever they get an op In one of the city papers appears « long article abusive | aoe of prices than we remember to have been attained feny T have some reason to think that were the Valker's government, and signed Argus, who claims | ¢\.. tho remarkably short crop of 1836, and thus the 3 entitied to vote for the next twelve montha, | moved | been im Nicaragua. Now, sir, I will make two | fregate grees relarne ave meee ode crop | 900 the convention an amendment to the constitution, to tl qvotations from it, which, if you will give this letter space | 7) 1st hopehead of the new 4 wee rod hero | 100 bonest. ie ae worebtpaer, sat | 60 pn | Ge senatorial te anssner "prs a aren] in your columns, (I know the paper in question will not) | om the 10uh October, veing oniy six days lator than the | 20 ase “otolligent I wish they wore Pindre #0, yet | think | CistFict, ehould lore bis qualification as & voter by virine SRS Fee Nae Se eee eee See oe asia ort the Neal Seiwapeaien af ton crop, | 200 have intelligence enough to r ‘and control | of such comer and further provided that in amy gen: i$ ment does not look very like the lucubrations of a pes ‘bich was understood to be unusually backward, render: 400 ‘own affairs, if they would apply themselves to it. | Fal election he should not lose his vote by removing from | with proper caution and vigilance, is your only wliner, “The details ot the execution of Chamorro, Wig the grinding season late and precarious. And this | 2? ‘Thetr error, their faalt, and what is leading this country | ove part of the ge gay geo all of which the | dissolve the Union, and there woul! be fifty cases for one | says Argus, “ have been published to the world.’’ Now, proved to be the fact, for it was not until the close of Octo- 350 cd to the point of destruction, is, that they do not take « Cemocrats voted ell, the fp) lemocracis went to | now under the constitution. But it is said the election of | Mr. Rditor, you know as well as I can tell you that these | OOo there wore an ‘supplier, and sales suilicient to con- 00 ibd [proper interest in regulating their own affairs; they leave | Waehinston, and voted for a giving to the foretgaer jet groun’! for a dissolution of the Uaion; | cetails never were rt to the world before, be. etitate an opening of the market. The early receipts, too, Mw vi them to a despicable set of selfish, heartless, wirework- ht to vote upon his entering upon the Territory in | ane it bae been charged that Mr. Fillmore haseaid, in one | cavse Chamorro dicd in his bed, that nobody before ouausually low range of quality, the canc not | 10° 1M ing politicians, who look alone to their own iaterests, jas, and declaring his intention to become a citizen; | of his speeches, that ‘‘h ia election would not and ou Argus was ignorant or mendacious enough to assert that | PTT ti mated ent Ge casateantty ‘warm wea. | 202 ie disregarding the general welfare of their country. T can ni they shed their crocodile tears for the poor | not to be submitted to b they Seuto."? T must do be had been executed. o wher, curit ‘onsiderable portion of the grinding sea. | © 8 Dot quit this stand without eaying something about the | foreigner, who we ¢o pot want to vote becomes | Fillmore the justice tosay that Ido not understand him | Further, Argus twaddles about ‘war to the knife, "e., | tom sequent injury by frort, contribnied to | 20 wie American party to which I belong, an! whiv hb has been fem\iarized with our institutions and laws, id Tshould | to have enid any euch thing; and I must do myself the | end saya, ‘ This will shortly be the case if Walker docs } the entire crop ap unusually low ave: . Ua 10 s fo venementy, aseailod—a party which aboat | bke to know which of the gentlemen have shed a tear | justice to say, that if he had uttered a sentiment co re | not leave the country before the beginning of the rainy v these cucumstances, the first receipte of the new | 1°? bi fifteen months ago swopt like a hurricave across thisqoun- | Over me? Notone, I do not esteem ita very great hard- | jn prant to the constitution and the Union, and tocvery | season Argue Rae 4 thinks that the rainy season - isporod of with difficulty, a8 they were not 20 i ery, carry ing victory wherever it wont, meeting no chock ehip to be deprived of my vote. I do not care anything | principle of conservatiem, and submissive to the | wil shortly commence, whereas it is at the date o” his y <oflictently well drained for shipment or for | 100 GO. 6. DB * wad se Tepeee, ‘unui it came hore, within the borders of | about it. Tthould tike to baye a chanos to vote for Fille | popuiar will, when constitutionally and lawfully | etter a good deni more than half through, and there can ccers” purpes 4 at the deginning of November the | 12 Har RR pre! Me Virginia, where it received its first heavy biow. It hae | more, sgeiust Hechanan , but as to the gencral run of can- | expresse that 1 would not now occupy | be no beginning of & rainy season till the present rainy | fo) Oo prices was as follows 8BCO! AD. 41 bope it may not, prove mortal even in this | didates they put up now, it gives me ittle concern whe- | thi» stand in support of his elestion. (Cheers.) What! | sraron has ceased, (uext Novyember,) and a dry season Inferior bragere 96000 TC RRD#.b00 G1 — Tabs Con RR... 118 State, but it has not recovered from it yet. { cannot be | ther} vete or not, (Cheer: Weil, in 1964, there was ]| understend Mr. Filumore as 1p OF: was this: That if | bas succeeded it, ANTI HUMBU 4 Comeeth..... 260 cba Frie RR...03 61%, 20 Cley & Tol RR Iso absurd as to dispute that it received robuffirom | # cther charge brovgbt against Seott, which waa, tat he by Mr. Fremont or the re a Pair to fully fair... nO do el a b it has not recovered in Virginia. 1 say it wae oo: | Wee too fond of foreigners, and for which he wae ridi poblean party, eluding every Southern man from Naval Intelligence, ‘. Pr ing Rit, 260 it of the Americans, but tho managars of the party | Caled and rebuked by the whole democratic proes party. | heaving any participation in government, if the same rule The United States swore ship Release, Lieut. Commanier | (| &NIRR, in this State, and city in particular, in permitting Wwe, | lo you recoliect how they abused him, from one end of | was to be observed fn the intment of his Cabioet | James il. North, arrived at Norfolk Navy Yard on Friday Giariecdss “ seen enees si who is @ tree thinker, anda bollepeaker, and quite im the country to the other, beonuse be alindet to the “rich | Connell, foreign ministers, judges and administrative ofl inst, twenty-five days from New York. List of oMfsors ‘ Sen ceca ee es 7 . hd ing n¢ an actor onthe public stage; Aman of no well | Iriel brogue,”’ and the “* sweet German accent: And | cere, that the South ought not to submit, (Creat cheer- | attached to the Relea: james H. ” x command ia The course of the market throughout the season ie (oa! defined principles or fixed opinions, Who says whatever | when he suggested an amendment to the constituiion of | ing) Now 1 do not mean to say that Mr. Fremont, i | George Young, First Lieutenant; J. H. Otis, Surgeon, | cated by the following table, which exhibits the highest sailed a uppermost in his mind; to give stich a mon ag | the United States, to the effect that if a foreigner spont | ciected, will do nothing to cause or justify a dissolu | Charles Hawley, Acting Lieutenant; B, Boyd, Jr., Aciing | aod lowest potnte in each month for fair to fully fair CITY COMMERCIAL REPORT, Wise, who lias the reputation, sod a woll deserved ropa- | twelve tnonthe in actual service, in the army or navy, | tion of the Union; ut what 1 do say d, that hie dlection by | Lieutenant. sugar on the levee, and giso the average price in cach SATURDAY, . 19—2 P.M. too, of being one of the’ best popular apeakers in | he should be entitled to the rights of @ citizen, he was | the perple, lawfully and constitutionally expressed, fur- month, for the same qualitics, It will be seen that the The market opened firm for breadetef, and at an ad- till more abused and denounced by this party, who now | mushes no grownd for a dissolu e ‘uetuctions bave been slight, the general course of the | vance for both flour and grain, at which sales were ailect to be to much concerned about the rights of the | consemplaics any such 1h FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL, | market having been upward, and the lowest and highest | pretty frecly made, but at the close the Arabia's poor foreigner. (Loud cheers.) I have no prejudice | pay it furnishes no just ground of complaint 19 the de- Ba pointe being, the former in November and the latter ia | nown received at Halifax transpired, which ca against a joreigner, but! say it it to interest of the | mocracy, as they first de the issue by the repens: of ™ i them to close dull at the ad forcigners—the honest, industrious and law-abiding | the Missouri compromiae, and have ever since pressed MONEY MARKET. Highest Lowest. Average. | Tho sales embraced about 7,000 a 8, foreigners fa this countty—that they would mute with us ] the imgue by their aitempis to keep every other question SaruRDay, Sopt. Lia P.M. conte porib.tige 8 eu eeie IN including commcn, to, good Sate (new), at 96 908 #8 the hordes of mm convicts, that are | than that of siavery out of the canvass, and by their con ‘* ‘a " and e: o i with other foreigners by the bait mitiion's P stant and dally eorts to sectionalize the cate south on | SThe stock market shows signs of weaknens. There is year, obtaining @ control or a controlling inflaence | thi« sectional issue; and if they start the game, and no failing off in operations: but on the contrary rather ‘over the councils of the country, (Cheers.) Why, is | benton at it, what right have they to complain an increase in sates, the bulk of which is on time, buyer's there a man in the world, baving the spirit of a man, | complain, and hold them responsible for it, as we should; ‘At the first board today fitinols ¢ who does not fee! an atiachment to his own home’ | but their lips will be sealed. They should have known | orton day Titinois Central Suppose we A wae. b more : —— 4 trength ay bg oaks 7 ‘and defied | bonds advanced 44 per cent, Reading Railroad, + land, do you think we woul ave no ing at- ir adversaries to the com! wi thoy will, in Central, %. New York Central Railroad de- and to have no one (0 snewor him, to refute hie | tachinent to the Uld Dominion’ Do you think that we | all likelihood, be badly whipped; and they will wichly ag pea, Brie, 1%; Iaichignn Southern, 5 , to deny bis promises and d the party, | would not recur to the home of our birth, and the graves | deserve it, if they are. One word as to the restoration « wate 1 Bie | - h ‘sims, ‘ends and principles, and to depend qlone | of our ancostors and our children? And do you of the Missouri + Lot me assure you that hore | Panama, Xj Iilinols Qeutral Ballroad, 1; Cleveland gud State; aman who seldom makes « sprooh that lias ‘8 great deal of old woman's twaddic in it, tt is tras, yet never faila to make some strong tolling points bofore lathe people, to suffer him to have the freedom of the State the freedom of speech to make & six months triam- 1 march from county to county, and from section to nection, denouncing the party az an usconstitutional, revo- tion and de- man who kvew nothing, aod coald know nothing be got from some stolen biue book, without the aid of the dark Iautern to guide his steps rough the culvert he was attempting to oxpiore wise); to allow him to address, in bis owa liar style and ou te om hundred thousand por-