The New York Herald Newspaper, September 26, 1856, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 7582, MORNING EDITION—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1856. PRICE TWO CENTS. —— eee = irswene prema <——— : ; tional devt of the British emytro, Git lias been wccumu- | mechwaical extablizhments, they will come to New York, | redolent ot them, Everywhere they are threatened, au | honor once attendant on the American flag end on tho | Melancholy Denth of George Steers, the Ship SPEAKER BANKS IN WALL STREET. | lating tor two centuries. (Apptwuse.) I need not analyze | they will frequent the quays, they wil.’ visit the counting | they all ng from the” aoe common origin of wrong | American government. Shall I be allowed, for a few Builder. this vast industrial product of tte 000,090, whicn | rooms, and examine our of d oing business, and | They from one fast. Thirty-five years ago South | moments, to look at the question of American commerce we Fi pernnnnnnnnnennnnnnnnnnne this year you create. Sixteen millions of 1@ come | see their superiority to the means a ‘opted by thei to | orn ‘Mr. Monroe, Mr. Calhoun, and a Soutt- | as connected with the government! In forminy the con fe are pained to announce the sudden death of Geerge Me: from those engaged in agriculture; fifteen hundre? mil- | accomplish the same great results in their own ‘m Cabinet, of their own volition and will, declared that | stitution of the United States it was the desire of the | Steers, the renowned ship and yacht builder, which ee- Speech from the Balcony of the Mer- | jus orit come from those of our follow eitizons wn are | section of confederacy: | Thon bey will uifd | S territory co rering some 500,000 square miles ehould be | American people to strengthen andenlarzs the covmmorce | eurred last night, at 10% o'clock, at his Ne. , engaged in manufacturing and mechanical industry. The } into the middle of the into the beautitul | deemed forever consecrated to the institutions of freedom | of the States; and it was the rofusa! of such citias o ae: fran Fesidenee, chants’ Exchange. seas that are whitened with the flags of- the commerc9'of } fields of tbe interior of Now York, erhaps—and | and liberty. [twas the act of Mr. Calhoun. It was tho | as the city of New York to treat’ with us cuder Cannon street. Mr. Steers met with @ molanckely New York—each Sigvalising ibe name, the character, ‘ue }. see these mea operatiag with mechapics 4 inventions, | get of Southern statesmen then holding executive power. | the articles of confederacy that justifed and en } and shocking death. Yesterday afternoon, about @ eee A aa oe ng oe oan0S OU¥. |) Lim Dick HCORCISER toe ba eae oe ae ceieto his coum | UZ,Calboun died in 1860, and Tam informed and bolleye | abled men im the Convention of 1787 to form %» | o'clock, ag he was driving his horse and wagoa %0 Lito q ‘contribute to de $00,000,003: NM the death of Mr. Calhoun, spoak- | constitution whic! now r ized throughout |. : MMMENSE ASSEMBLAGE OF THE PEOPLE, $1,d00,0c0,000 ag the anale of commeroe cate the | and his machine over wheat lands, over hay . elds, and | ing of the por te measures of 1820, and alae the world as the most perfect twetiuution of government | Netk, L. 1, for the purpose of bringing home his’ wits, &e., &e., ke, Sicha He sols eboumptiased tndoetial proses of fhe peo” fh waleuns ss ecesee ee Keee'vaward | a senting from the Principles on whioh that compromise that the mind.ef man eve” conceived or formed. What ta |) who had been boarding there durmg the summer eases, lo OF the Uni se geer 1866, the vast Gum f° reer of happy. industry, ‘ean e , ‘was founded, declared to bis friends that he would never, | American commerce now in contrast with American Teer Phave already epentian” We sré a confederacy of States, |; that is the song of Americau industry, (Loud a wd pro a8 God allowed bim to live, raise an arm or speak the Borse took fright near Calvary Comolery amrd rem- commerce then? American eommerce then was nothing more than the privateers which had just escaped from the conflicts of the revolutioaary war. American com- merce now—what is it? It surpasses that of the British Exapire. It surpasses the commeree of any uation on the face of the earth, and is progressing witu such accumu lated power and epecd as will soon raake the stars and stripes—the American fing-—wave over the greatest, and most extensive and successful commercial ge? 1 that tao rest of tine world bas seea or may see together. ( pplaase.) The British empire bas claimed to be the mis of the ocean. She once had accmmercial tonusge and a com- mercial marine which made her the mistress of the ocean. Now her star pales before even the infant com merce of the United States of America. J will state a sipgle fact. Six or seven years ago « intle vessel sailed out of your port ona voyage ef six or seven thousand miles, Coastwiee, 10 carry we fisg of the esunt y to the city of San Francisco, on the constof the Preciiic. This little bark, owned—or if not owned, freighted— by the geutleman who (s now the distinguished Mayor cf your city (some applause amd some laughter) proceeded on au ebierprise which never before man had conceived or the human mind creamed to be witbin the bonnds of possibility That was the begipning of the great commerce of the l’a- cific Ocean, Within those six or seven years grew up your magnifleent steam marige—that marine whicb has, by your energy aud power, addet so much to the glory of the American government az weil ur of the American people—a marine, let me say, which has bad but little aid from the government of the Uxited States, and which hea depended ior ald on the warm support and warm beart cf the American pcoplé, independent of the gov. erpment. The Arctic that went down in the depihs of the At! had no severer struggie—had not to struggle with more terrible and direfai energy against the enguiphing waves than the steam marine had to do for permission to exist, against the influence of the Ame rican government in the period of which I am speaking. Well, now, through interests like these the American ton- nage not only surpasees that of England and of other na tions, but it is fast trying to surpass the combined fleet of all commercial marines of the States of the world. 80 lo} wont for the eradication or removal of that line between the institutions of freedom and the institution of slavery If Mr. Calhoun were alive he would have spoken the game at the time of the wrong of the Nebraska ac as he did in the chamber of bis death. That is be belief. 1 am not egainst Southern men, or against Southern Presi deuts. 1 believe we are safer wih Southern men of honor ead character than we are with some mon— (Cheers, Durrag and laughter.) I see you know what I intended ‘say. I would, to-day, trust the institutions end liberties of this country tom man—filling the Presi- dentin! chaiz—to.a man from the Palmotto State. I would fay, In God’s name, give us palmetto always and forever, because where there is a palmeite there is a will; and! @ man hag a wil!, 2nd knows what is righ), he ts as good &seryunt as you can dave. But a man who has no will of bisown is as clay in the hands of the potter, to be moulded into vessels of honor or dishonor (as Webster said),and more readily into vessels of clshonor.CApplause.) Teay, therefore, & bave no objection to rulers from that section of the confederacy. But I cadl your attention to the great act of wrorg—ihe repeal of the Missouri Jom- promise act of 1826—endorsed as it was A the act of 1860, and sanctioned by thefpeople of the whole country, ip Congress and out of Congress, without the exception of a State or commanity. Th was sanctioned by every man in public and in private life a8 /ate as 1853. In December, 1858, fellow citizens, I say it without fear of contradic- tion or question, and ‘knowing tbat my words will go in those omnicient tones of your city press to every part of the continent—there was not a man of the 56000,000 people then living m the country who bad, spoke a loud word agalust the existence or continuance of the compro lipe of 1820. Not one—even Mr. Douglas. (A voice— Three groans for Douglas.) No, vever mind about him. Even Mr. Dovgias, in December, 1853, made a on 4 Dill which proposed to repeal the M ri ect 1820, in whicb he declared im explicit terms that the repeal of the Missouri compromiss would be a vio ation of the set- thong measures of 1960, and would open up again the great agitation which bad been eo happily settied by that measure, Shall I read to you # passage from his report : (Cries ot * Yer."’) He tays:— it were Yhe Hon. N. P. Banks, Jr., of Massachusetts, Speaker | summoned together as the people of one nation as and each representing the other as participants in Of the House of Representatives of the United States, ad ] 1h mot Tho tna gives ua the privileges, and i? dressed the commercial and otber ciasees of our citizens | ihe “power aud the tatelligence ie nocusalate, om the baleony of the Merchants’ | magnificent juct that more than equi ie accumu ccsriiaa lesecyen aati aca ie fy go Se eee Etan ie tee conmition, Bal while Exchange, Wall street, in comp! f we see that we aro parts of one confederacy, fellow citi } Sor that purpose, which we subjo 1: zene, we alto see that that confederacy is divided by a ew York, Sept. 19, 1966. } dim and shadowy and darkened line, t» which a portion How. N. P. BANxs, Jn—Dear sir: The undersigned, mer- | of the people of this conntry never permit us to close our chants and ciitzeus of the city of New York, have noticed with | eyes and which a portion of the statesmen of this coun- ee Sree ne me ry. ihst have governed and directed its energies for the the Tobse of Sopreesutaiives, and last fifty years, never allow us for a moment to loge sight ability which you have shown ficial position during | of, I allude to the line between the Northern and South Bese cxctng session cf Constess Io view of which, no | ern States—between the slavenolding and non-slayehold Oe, itsecrs to tis, 1s 80 Weil fied to address the conserval've | ing States. And you will pardon mo if I speak, as 1 must {And commercial classes of our c« i he prominent | peroree speak, of this invasion on the interes’s aud sea Politieal questions affecting the ecrumercial interes! of the coun- | Pena FT Neat mags of the people composing the ’ . jlore. e very grarifying to the [ ; dy as yourself. It would, therelore. 00 sett Rreitens yeue- | American 'States. Of this product of $4,500,000,000 rally away. ‘Mr, Steers immediately jumped ous of the wagon with @ view of stopping the animal, whem Ne was struck by th? wagon and injured severely about the head. He way thrown prostrate and senseless to the ground and lay i the middle of the road for some minutes. Soon after the occurrence of the accident, Covactimar- Boole, Mr. R. H. Bisbop and Bernard Melly, miimate triends of Mr Steers, who were riding in a carriage, came along, amd discovered the condition of the enffercr. Mr. Steers wos then insensible. He was instan%ty taken inte the coach, and the yetticle was driven rapidly-te the real- dence of the injured man, ia this city. Dr. Freeman, the fazyily phyeician, was tcumediately sent for, and om exartioiog the patient, gave it as bier opinion that the sufferer would not survive his injuries. Mr. Steers continued nsensible during the evening, and, although every attention aud care was bestowed upon bir, etill the doctor was unable to rally him. It soon became apparcat that the injured man’s days were numbered, and that one of the most useful and talented of our citizens was about to breath his last, The friends of Mr. Steors, including bis brother, Aldermam Jag. Steers, were soon made acquainted with the melam- choly occurrence, and the greatest anxiety was shown for his recevery. But no means that medica! skill could ap- ply was sufficient to remove their fours, for ab 105¢ o’clock the victim of this ead misfortune paid the last debt to nature. The report of Mr. Steers’ death soou epread abroad, amd scarce an bour had elapsed when the melancholy news © reached every nook and corner of the city, A sad gloom wes cast over Our midst in consequence, and deep waa longed applause.) ‘The Southern man will imm: Wiately say to himself, ‘ow is this done in the So uthern States’? By machinery? Never; but by slave labor. Aad what will he do but provide a substitute for that slave labor by the adoption of the mechanicat in- ventions that have disttguisbed the industry of the Eastern, Middie and Western Swius, Thus, by this single change, we will pave the way for w vast change in the history and: in th» inetitutions of this government, made by the people tat are interested, end never made Or influenced by us. With the institution of slavery we have nothing todo With te institutions the Southern States, local or traditional, we have nochiug to do; and I know that 1 speak the sentiments tnat ani- mate the hearts of all men here, when | say that we are determined to interfere in no way, at no time, and to no extent, with those sectional, loeal, and traditional rights which distinguish them. (Great epplause.) But if they choose for their own interest, and of their own volition, to make this change, ] trust that there iomo intelligent man here interested in the welfare and prosperity of New York, who would bave avything to say against that. Jt ig @ work for them, snd not fur us; aud I diemiss this matter,’ hy asserting that the declaration that we intend to interfere in teir atfairs is a boid ard baseless slander, animating no section of the people of the North, and representing the feelings and the intentions, and the purposes of no copsiderabie portion of iy State of the Northern portion of this confederacy. (Aapplause.) There is another thing I may be allowed to fay. and tat is, whetber in this change of the policy of the government it fs not possible that we may make an isoprovemeat io the government itself. That is a thing to be well considered by the people of the Northern States, and by the people of th's State and city as much as any, in determining what we will do im regard to the election now pending. If you were to ask who can build the best ship, or who can build the best house—who is best at ngriculture, or who is most successful tn mecbapit invention, manufacturing industry. why your answer, aud the anawer of all the world, and the answer of our Svuthern friends would be, ‘The people of the Northern Siates excel ali the world in these he intellt- iu Would consent to adress them at an early day. three-quarters of the whole is the product of t arms 060,000 that make ‘i {Here follow a number of Lames of commeretal men and ming ent 7 rabern sie, ; (to ehzers) 1 = 1 have nothing to say against people of the South. To this invitation Mr, Banks reve aa follows |_| ‘They have a right to take their own courte—they have a Grxrurwex—t nave the honontgackinwrcige te receiniat | Tet cor which wo ard United Uosether: as 088. Lappy Four letter. conveying (0 te a yhursdas. die 2th instant, upon | people—and we are to labor as far as we aro con- Seren eel imloreate of the country as affected by pending | cerned, Lave the same right for the udvancement of the diitiea! quesion&. It will give me prenstice to meet the mer- | majerial interests of the Northern portion of the Bhants cf the city of New York upon sich an cceasion, and T | American continent, which God in his bounty, grace, accept their uivitation, Very respectfully, I'am your opedien and mercy, tas gre re Us as our heritage Pid ts servant: . wer whole $4,500,000,000 of products for }, BO more than It was understood in the street that the President of the | twelve or thirteen hundred miljlons 1g the contribution Mexehants’ Exchange declined to aliow that building to | of the @fteen States of the Union that are distinguishea be fnade use of for the purpose, but that the directors, on Ji apeagg i cn a oom a pod i4 ‘on the matter being laid before them, overruled the de- $1,600,000,000 produced by agricul be teen Sout cision of the President. Be that «+ it may, certain it is | «rp States contribute 45 per cent alone. Of the $1,500,- that Mr. Banks bad the opportunity “of makiog nimself | © hye all Lay peed by en mpreerd <7 an por heard last afternoon from the sravite balcony of the Fx- | Grthat commerce which distinguirhes the American y k is the representative of change, to as immense an asscmbly as ever congregated | name, and of which New Yor im front of that Duilding, altbough this wag not the fret | Doth the Northern and Southern continents of Atnerica, the fiteen Southern States contribute less than 2) per | varied and important felds ot tadustry. Why, then, 4 i ‘There was, in 1855, a commercial marine througuout the | tho lament ehowa for the untimely cad of an w - time that it was used for public political purposes. yer cent of the whole aggregate. Gentlemen, the rouson | are they notjust ax ablo in the administration of a govera- |, Yous committee do sot feel themselves calied upon to enter aad Sven Sek eta dabe 1 con conn oieaemes a ane “a pepe: oll: Wall street, {vom the Custom House down tonear Pearl } <! this is apparent and palpable. 1 need not ask you why | ment’ We say that there is something in the race— | I‘ (ie discussion oft eee eat the aniston’ Go 000; and the other nations of | munity. 7 4 In the South there is one man down. aud another | something in the origin of the people of the Sout : . watch produced the agitas struggle Of 1950. arope—had the balance of less street, was jammed with en impenetrable, swaying, than 5,000,000 tons. The commercial marine of Great Mr. Steers was, it is well ‘own, the most successtt that South there is one portion | gives them peculiar power, and eillcacy and skill in man — him down. Iu tl le med it wise and prudent to retrain from deciding shipbuilder on this continent. In‘ i853 the celebrated heaving mass of humanity, The approaches tothe Mer- | crthe people doing nothing, aud another portion of the | managing the affairs of politics and government. But ers in controversy then, either by | ailirming | Britain bas in each term of ten years, for the last thirty yack America, bullt by hh, proceeded to England, amd chants? Exchange were, some time before the hour ‘ixed | same people, helptog them to do nothing. | (Loud cheers why should we not try our sili wth our friends in thts ling the Mexican Taws. ov by an act declaratory | yeure, suereased 28 per cent; that of the United States | ihere won tue ‘prize awarded to the fastest yacht of all >. M. larly blockaded. There | a0 laughter.) It 1a this that contributes to the deficit | department, as well as in uber spheres where we have | Of the Wwe inent of the constitution, and to the extent | hus inereswed, for the same period, 63 per cent. | nations. for tho meeting (34 P. M.), regularly ‘ which the American peopte of fifeen American States | distinguiched ourselves? Now, let us ask ourselves | 0! ‘be protection afforded uy it to slave property in the | 1/ we jook forward to the year 1840 or 1886, we will have territories; so your committee are not prepared now to recommend a ceparture from the course pursued oa that me- merable occasion, either by affirming or repealing the eighth section of the Missouri act.or by any act declaratory of the meaning of the constitution in respect to the legal points in dispute. ‘That is the report ot Mr. Douglas, made in January, Ist4: und not made by Mr. Dovglas, of Illiao!s, alone; but mace by bim as chairman of a committee of South: orn ork in and Southern principles, to which had been re- ferred the questions of the Territories of the United States in tbe Senate of the United States. it was received ta murmur by the entire Southern portion of the Senate ol the United States, aud even Mr. Atchison—the only mau who since then has ied ou the war in the Ter- riery of Kansat—had enid in the year 1859, the year previously, that be was himsolf perfectly ccuteat that an orga! vern nent should be established from the Ter- ritory of Kansas, without apy reference whatever “ince then the yacht Julia was constructed under his supervision, and tp every regatta where she entered she carried off the prize A tumber of pilot boats and other fast sailing vsesele were subsequently built for partics in this city, and else- where, with great success Bat the greatest triumph of Mr. Steers’ life haa yet te take place. The steamehip Adriatic, of the Collins Kms, constrected by bim and jauuched last summer, ia now mab ing preparations for ber trial trip. Jo the construction of the Adriatic Mr. Steers expected to obtau the acme of his fame, but the inscrutable waye of Providence forbade him witnessing that ro umph of genius aud art. However, the A ht proudest piece of workmanship, will serve as a lasting monument to the fame of one who had no equal, either a America or Europe, in matters of shipbuilding. ‘was no getting in or out. The portiones of the Bank of | Dake jm regard to tue’ mum totals of homan in: |, America, of the Mutual Iasurance Company butiding, aud | custry ip eech ot the yours that go over our heads. of all the other buildings in the vicinity, the windows, = Ree bs oo ype Pd 5 = doors and roofs, were all taken poseossion of. The sight | / explain the whole fact aud maystery of this grand accu: ‘was one that will be remembered. The street is narrow, | invlative product, when | say that of that $3,200,000 000, $1,060,060,000 is paid every year in wages to the men— but between Nassau street on the one side, and Pearlonthe | ‘7 mechanice, the artizane, and those who participate in other, there could not haye been lese than fifteen thousand | the ac umulution of this grcat industrial product, (Loud persons. applavee.) Twenty-five per cent of ail this vast accumu- te lation of $2,2(0,000.(00 which we make as our portion Mr. Banks was conducted to the position selected wd of the earth’s gains for the preseht year, le paid away to him, on the granite platform, outsi¢e the guarding rail, | ine men who inbor pou the canals, on the railroads, in about twenty minutes to do’clock P, M. The meeting | your warehouses; and you are, 80 to speak. relying on wasthen organized by Mr. Dexsinc Dvxr proposing as | every heart, — hing mind, a every fran agar ee ? ee Ue greawwess which characterises us as le. p- President Mr. R. H. McCurdy, and the following persons plause ) Who build your magnificent streets? Who as Vice Presidents and Secreta) ies of the meeting, viz.:— | send up and down your magniticent bays aud uoble it we could improve what has beea dove in the last four years. Four years ago Génerat Pierce was elected to the Presidency of the United States by almost m concurrent vote of the entire confederacy. He found the government and the people entirely and everywhere at peace. Ia bis inaugural ad dress upon ‘be steps of the Capitol, his lips yet warm with the official oath which he had taken to discharge his high duties as cbief Executive magistrate of the American people, be declared that there was entire, and absolut aud perfect peace reigning throughout the entire Ameri- an confederacy. Aud not only had be recognized this fact, but he declared also solemnly that Le would main- tain that peace, In December, 1553, be repeated the same declaration, and made the same pledges; and Low, three years having parsed over the nation since these inaugural declarations and pledges were mado, what is the condition ot the country that we see a commercial marine whose tonnage will outweigh, out measure and outsail the combined fleets of the commer- ciul navy of the world (Loud applause.) What mea- sures are necessary to extend this commerce—acom merce to day of only one portion of the continent, and (hut the North? Let us leek at where we stand. Here js Wail street. On the spot to which we now direct our eyes weare twenty days’ journey from the populous cities of Hindostaa, of China und of Asia—the deposito riew of the world’s wealth for hundreds and for thou rands and for tens of thourands of years—a wealth which js fabulous in its origin, fabulous in its extent, and is the accumulated wealth of 700,000,000 of people: 4 wealth which it has been tue object of nations in every period of the world to gather, anu which has eariched whatever pation of human wdustry bas had even the slightest control over tt. England has now in cperation three overland mat! routes for the purpose of controlling Immense Fraud In France. . DENTS. rivers a fleet of vessels composed of all kinds of naval | today’ One entire section of the confederacy is arrayed | ( the :epeal of the Missouri com promise act. Now, in | this trade. The Britsh empire is contemplating, threo ™ Pelaiiah Peirit, Edmund H. Miler,” Charles E. Bit, trecturen, from ihe. litle ‘tender to the wagaiseeat | ip policy ang purpose, and as Yepresented by its candi | {Ls act of democratic Seuntors, on the Comuttee of Ter- | more overland mai routes, end ono by railway, io car. | PMBB22LEMANT OF THKEY MILLIONS OF FKANCS pres bas. H. Marsiall, J. F, Butterworth, Jobn J. Herrick, steamer that hag astonished the world with tts prowess, | Cate, agains: another section—the tairest and the most | ritories, in the deciaration of Mr. Douglas, in the deciara- | ry she ecmmerce of the Esrt to tbe British empire. This os TES. John Jay Phelps,’ ©. V.8. Roosevelt, Wm. K. Strong, end walks the waves as if it were a thing of | beautiful portion of the territorial possessions of aie | tion of Mr. Atchieon, in the declaration of General Cass, | ra:lroad extends over a length of 6,500 miles, and will re- FAULTERS TO TBE UNITED STATES. Adam ae. Soares Y; Abe... Po gta ngtow, | beauty and of life’ It ia mot the merchants; | goverment, reddened w gs bicos, sf Amecioan os : ete te eae tne ya it quire soartae Years ios (onal on . what ous Letters from Paris announce that the clerk in charge of wink, an A hg agg eR ™ Tt: js not tbe governors: it i6 not apy one c zens, ttricken down by the hands of cach other in | theee i ; e of | ix dong at is WI cnglan jone. Where is Chem: 1 Sean, GyrasOurie’ Hove Fie Bey. Of men. Bat there we hot a, haman bemmg bloody and terrible contest and civil war. We seo the | iPiscentederacy—you have the avowed sssarance that | New York Where are the United States’ Are they who | *2¢ Securities of the Chemin de fer du Nord, Charles G——=, SECRETARIES ever saw It, or ever bape og : a hed 8 P B,J. P. Creakhite, net entitled to some of the credit. There is not a tibre, ar Lt i cele meta eae from the bul to the fag at the masthoad, of which some pm man bas not contributed something, aud in the advantage ‘The meeting ratified the appointment of those officers. ] Oi) io "he ban pot. to greater oF less extent, shared. Mr, McCcxpy, the President, adcressed the mecting. | this ts the secret of our prosperity. But there is another He eaid:— scoret that accounts ha difference in the two — sage d of the confederacy, We bavé a government: and the Fau0w hy ae pment lh par pinto wt | coveroment of the American poopie is a pretty Important cot iOg tc intelligence, enterprise, patriotism and moral | Matter. Itebapes the destitics of the future, so tar, at ihsé lipe was to steud But the compromise has been re- peaied, and its repea! has given to the world scenes of in- fymy und wrong of which we bave not yet seen the end ando! which vo mah can predict the result. Now, for ibis we bave a remed: It te not that we shail lezisiate against abe South on the subcct of slavery. Itis not that ‘We ehall raise the qvestiougwhether in future Territories skavery bad be permitier or Lot. We lay asideali tuece qucstion?, and stand distinctly and simply on the prop tien tbat ‘thai which gaye peace t> the country in 18u¢, people of a Siate passin: over a peaceful river that bas pitberto separsted the American citizens from the savage, and entering terrilory peepied by men of the Eastern, Western, and Middle States, and there assuming the rights of territorial citizens: and, with threats of yio- lence snd death. vsurplng the rigntaof the rightful citi zens of (bat Territory, and dviviog them from its bor ders with their famivier, their wives, end their chibtren. You see in this Territory of Kansas the domestic hearth of the settler, rvte thougn dear to bin. given to and also a young man named C——, the cashier of the seme administ) ation, have disappeared {rom Paris, leaving @ considerable deficit in the money accounts of that com- pany. The deficiency is estimated at about three milliens of francs, aud \t is said that the guilty parties have takes passage at Havre for the United States. ‘The following is from the Paris correspondence of Le Nords— ve ov Bumbered, outweighed and outsailed the commer cial marine of every other bation ou the face of the earth to deg wow, whea we are on the iureshoid of this new age avd of this new conimerce, coming to us from the compact milions of people who populate China, Eastern Asia and Western Europe : Soe, a :roge the continent, the eye of Thomar JeQorson marking the stops, counting the bours, aviicipating the results of the line of travel and scross the American continent, to bring people soto communication with the shores jeast, 08 tho Western continent is concerned, and it det the ‘lames of the focendiarr, and its pet thet which conscmmated the peace of the country ia 1800, | of the Pacific, ¥ Low floats tue stars and stripes ia ‘The financial has end P worth of ‘ie commercial emporium o! our countey—a city | Otte, nat ehall be the inttuence of the thirty milion aod frightened ‘inhabitants Zec'ug Loan tele hemes, with | obebtto be mate goed by. the governtreat ul the Uaited | {he harbor of San Trarcieco, See, treading over afer sme. ree aS ee ere ae ee ee ae camer at whew ‘the distinguished cha. | Amgio Saxons on whom rests the power here of the rille-oF pistol jevelled a: their beads, You .#9@ that | Stats apd with the consent of the American people, (applazse.) ‘That is all. No more, no ieas—no betier, Jl we @Bk—that the acts of 1820 and good, in the place of coutlarration, ler. and civil war for the year 1866—by te ce of the American psople—-South, let me say, as well as North. (Applause.) Now, ‘odo that is required. It is not weeessary that the hal should be opened again to agitation. We di won Of a man to ibe idency of the Catted States, of simple views aud of cetermined will—a man who wil! ex- ert 1he influence of this government iu that portion of the serritory of the United States, t0 a8 to aliow its peopie to eettle the question for themrelves there, We ask no more thau thet; and wheo we succeed tn the Presitentin! clection before ur—as in the grace of God we shall and euceeed—(lond buzzae)—when Fremont {s proclaim ed Presifent, then Kansas will be again restored to freedem, withovt legisiative act, or without tne iater- ferenc anybody muen, gentlemen, for the re- medy ip regard to Kensas. It is simple, and fear bie,” and a statesmanlike proposition, and reeds only the concurrent action of your State, with the the Clrecting ¢) @ of Jefferson, the feeble traces of Lewis d Clarko's expedition opening the proots to the wor! and verity (pg the anterpation of Jellersen, even by th imperiect cispiay. And (forty-one years’ after, look at the pathiinder of empire! (Applause.) Look at the young eagle of the mountains surveying—uot after the tec bie steps of Lewis apd Cla k--not after the direetiag oye ot Jetlerron, bul ior himeelf, the line seeking pathways aud passes through the snowy rauges and mountains, and crossing up und down the Pacitlc coast from north so south, Follow'ng the steps of the pathdader of empi e, we are in poreesaion of these ten jesguos of territory on the Pacific coast. Tbe count.y is ours. The flag of our vad is there. fornia is the child of the c »mpromico of 1869. The pathOr der of empjre, the man who track cd the first line of raliway to the Paciie coast, and who thiewed ihe passes of the mountains, preeeats himself « idate for the first oflice in the gift of the t applause and cheers for Fremoat ) dim conception and anticipation of cu, ip 1802 and this gallant accumalation ot success in the course of the pathfinder, Colonel Fremont, (oud cheers) in 1847, and not see the hand of Got these same men wo thus invaded the Territory, passed f ps ent, and the future. Now, I the govern- . Facier of the gentleman who has cousented to address | epreeent, an se a strlen of Iaws—a code {1 Infamous provistoas end mect ia the United States of thirty millions of American are Kite eeocteciserannn, “woe eet te ee curchersd | people is an important matior. Litme say what is just of ‘that the spot upon which we stand has been consecrated } uF sellow eitizens of the Southern setion of thecoutede : the eloquence of Davie! Webster and | ‘¥. They lack no energy— cot” Subs Wega 4 dignity of my position ts vastly enbance ack. no copecity—thay want pp ability waich we posses Follow citizens, you are doubtlers aware that we are as. | —they have ail that wo have, and they manifest. one gem! igs hea! ational Gn ‘nent statesman, who | ¥'th another, as much power as we. But the power oe tO eer the most howorabie and responsible sta. | that they manifest is directed diilerently from the power ae le oe oe mond has discbarged ite delizate aud | bat we exhibit, and it ts im that direction taat we will Sineon Guttes with buch absiity, such en ‘such inde. | find ihe solution of the digeremes 13 the indus «meg fe tiality, and’ withal such wisdom and | *hich the Southern people give to the world, compared Prodanon on te osoure the approdation of all parties, and | ¥ith what we give. For one hundre! aud fifty years A Trentitic him tothe thauke, But only of our whole coun- | PAst, Or one bundred and seventy-five year try, but of the friends of freedom throughout the world, | ict me say, bey nha ve gh this weg 4 wh Follow cit:zens, 1 bave now the pleasure to introduce to | the hands and under the direcdon, an ad its the meeting the Hon. N. P. Banks, Speaker of the House | polloy +ha ped by Southern statesmen. We have been Of Representatives of the United states. beay in éelence, in literature, in the mechanic arts, in tm sap a 4 the f proving agriculture, whils!’ we have given less atteu- For some moments the applause which greeted the for- | tion to the affairs of government than we otherwite mal ‘ntroduction of Mr. Banks continved. When theta ought, or than we otherwise might have doae—certaiuly mult subsided, be spoke as follows — jess than we ought to bavye done. Oa the contrary, the ‘Ibe ews of the embezzlement committed by agente ef the Northern fallroad Company is confirmed. ‘Tue com- pany has sent to the newspapers to axk them not to speat of this affair, but ali have not yieided to the request. ‘The amount stolen is vot exactly, ‘kuown even the company, because their accountants have wit! acertain amount of bonds depositet by ‘snarehi ors; therefore, a long an minute examination will be ne- cessary to enable them to ascertala the amount of sted with which the defaulters have disappeared. The latter have aot been arrested, ‘The same journal publishes the following additional de- tas — The daring theft committed by two young casaiers of the Northern Railroad Company, has owed. a lively sensation amongst the whole personnel of the lima, aud forms the common topic of conversation. The ad- ministrators are a littie disappointed to find thoir vigh lance ba‘tied by their empioyes, who have been able te dispose of considerable sams; and M. de Rothschild te- particularly displeased to flod himself robbed of a sum of about world Jy code of Drac> had no comparison with the scar dalons cede of inhuman legislation enacted Within the last three years ‘n thy Territory of Kansas by men who went over there from a neighboring stxte, and vbo hed no territorial or iadividual rights there—(ap plause)—the United stater looking on meanwhile in cold blood on these trengactions, making no e‘fort to perce, and unwilling to make any do claration of privilege of principle that shad give peace to that courtry On the contrary, by their army, and uow by their Exocutive in’ their ugeals, those laws declared int mous, fiagitous, upboly and un ied, are to be obsery- ed and obeyed until ibeir rep A repeal by whom? By the men who made them! Never. By the men who are driven out of the Territory’ Never. No, they are to be obeyed uDti! the laws themselves shall give place to some other institutions of which we yet know uothing ag to their character, or whet may be ibeir origin. Now, g : , © milliovs, by means so simple. men of the South, abandoning agriculture for the time | [ think that such recession as this that | have described, | other States of our own section of the con- | ccupling the acts and directing the energies of these two A theft tike tu: pt fhe under the eyes of the ad- MR. BANKS’ SPEECH. being, having no literature of its own, li in three years cauvot be paralleled certainly: in our po. | ‘ederacy, to give it Life and betrg. This will re- | great men cf the Western world’ (Loud apptause.) I | mynistration, m: se Fruow Crzexs—I look on New York now for the rat | of \1s'own, hav ng no mechapical and m: time. (A voice—Not the last.) | am always impressed | juciry of its own, having but little or no commercaor its ‘with the consciousness of the high position which it holds | own,’ and baving no joventive power—no inventive a8 ove of the moving powers of the North American Coa- | means—vo resvits or prodnets of those combinations or tinent. When a youth I dreamed of its maguilicence, of | eiements of power that distingulsh our civilization—they rer of the extent of 1s comimerce, of the intelli. | have given their whole attention to the governmeat of gence its great men, as the young menof Rome | ihe country. Now, we propose to divide this little mat might bave been supposed to have dreamt of the gran- | tur of the government with them. (Cont a use.) Io deur of the imperial city in days long ago past. (AP. | some places they call it treason; but I think after the plause ) But | havo nover telt that which i feel to day ‘a | olecticn of November shall have passed over, they will Casting wy eyes trom one side to the Oiner Of this vast | ho willing to coneedo, not that It ts treason, Dut that Bea of upturned faces, turaing intelligert glances from | \: js patriotism®and’ not treason, (Loud cheers.) ‘one to the other, and ail wito bearts animated ahke by | wo propose to divide the iofluence and power and re one spirit—the love of counwy aud the desire of main- spousiblitty of this government of the American Uaton taining and perpetuating the free institutions transmitted | with the ten millioos of people of the Southern Stater, to us by our fathers. (Fi oma ) Lam heroas 20 Hut the result to which J wist to call your attention, and ave Very disayreeable consequences for the futureinterests of the company, and, in & mora. point of -view, of the perornnel ‘There is ro positive information as to the whereabouts. of = gully partie. All that ls known is that they have selt France. ‘The following will complete our account of the affair of the Nortbera Railroad. — As soon as C had odtained leave of absence to get warried, his father, an employ 6 in the oifices of the com- pany, hastened to write to Lisieoa, to announce to hig pew family the fixed departure of bia son, Two di pacted away without C appea: ing in Lisiena: the immed) gave notice of the fact to lis father, express ing their astonishment aad app ‘ Alter receiving tule letter, the litical history. It can be paral bation, civilized or barbarow (Appiause.) | ask you, fellow-cltiz "ps, without reference to perty distinctions, is it not possible for ue to make a government that shall equal tha ® And if your fellow citize ve suflred wrong from the lawa that bave becn enacted, may we Rot justly try our band ia giving ihe. ubstitute that shail improve their position aoa strengthen the material weal/h and interests of the country. (Aprlause.) Why we are told by our Southern frionds that All this history, unhappily too true now, is still the result of acts and mor: ments in Our own part of the country that Indicates ap ineipiert, an initiative wrong on the part of ihe people of the Northern States, Weare pointed to the emigration of the people of New England, New York and Pennsylvania, to the terriiory of Kansas as move ail ques'ons of agitation—will give the country ogain the peace and domestic quiet which it bad $52, and which bas been broken forever, unless wit shall come about as I have predict®™ by the course of the people. Det 1 would do wrong to our cause and to the cause of the Northern States if I failed to say that there are other questions to be determtped in th contest. We ask that the dead weight of human wrong ball be lifted up trom the continent again—that 4 may rire, a8 [t was rising before those acts of wrong were done. We ask of you, fellow cit'zens—ol you of the State cf New York—foor years’ peace and quiet, thatwe may again proceed t» develope the material joterosts cf that part of. the continent which we oo copy. (Cricae of “ You witl have it’) We ask that commerce may again thrive, that manufac- tory of no m the face of the earth. me here, however, not for the purpose of casting lan. gtege of com pliment or adulation at the feet of any man or men. What I bave to say | stall say, notwithstandin; tbe presence or absence of any man or men. But appeal to you, as citizens of New York, bavi tore Fou the chart, seeing the tracings of plans, Lis conceptions, and the consummation of alt through the inspiration and energy of Colone’ Fremout—I wi the people of New York atrike the great men of past time to com. iete the result whieh they foreshadowed © (App } ror the #pot where we stand, we aro seven by railroad acroes the continent to the bay of San Fran clveo. From the bay of San Franclico we are, by the ticem marine and fisg of the United States, within eleven or twelve days «ail of the over populous nations of West . at the cfflee of the company in m slate of the deepest tionalist, I hereto advocate no extravagant opinions | the result upon the future, let me rather say, of this «i. | if it were a new thing in the history the | toring industry may again proceed ta its coward carder, | ern Burope, of Fastern and Western Asin. and of Chia | anxiety, apd prepared to make @ public inquiry into the ls to day, in the litte timo which you allow me, | vicion of the political power between the ten millioas of | American States, and were of particular and scandalous | thet indastry may no longer be withdrawn and shut olf | We are thus within twenty days’ travel of the sccumu- | motives of bis absence. G., baving learned the cause of fe whole county—(good)—for alt its imterests, for | the southern people and the seveateen or eiguteen mil rpose ard tatent. ut | remembor, | ovt of the study and counting roora, but thateverywhere | j,1ed wealth of 6,000 years and 7(0,000,000 inhabitants, his despair, told bia that he was well acquainted with the matter—that he knew where his sou Charles waa, and that tt was not worth whic to make a noise, or to be anxious about the matter. fils son wished, he said, to bid a ast ferewell to his \fe, aad to dnieh by an indiseretion his existence as a bachelor; “You know,” be continued to the father, “the paine we had to break up his acquaintance with a person who, al 7 ade bim miss a first marriage; he was urable to r his desire to see her opce more. Both are now at Trou- ville. Write to him, and be will fortowith arrive at. character, aad ty when a boy in the litte vilisge where I live, beari smwong the Gret things that I can remember, the soogs of the young men of that day starting tor the yet_unoeopled ‘but beautifu) felds of Ohio; and I look over the records that come to us from the five great States of the Wi the far West—the granary of the world. And what do so but that of the 5,600,090 people in those flue States ore than 200,000 of them went over from Massachuseits cod the other live New England Siates. (Cheers.) I seo same 5,000,C00 of people in those Western all its rights, for the future ae weil as for the pi it and | jong of the Northern people is jast this:—They are now Of the past. I mean to speak #0 well asi am able to do | \mmersed in the methods of obtaining oitlces of honor, of for that which is fair, and right, and just and expedient | smolumentand of trast from the federal governm int; for ail sections of the country, for a!! classes Of the peo- | they are in the army; they. are in the navy; there is not Pile, and for those principles whish aro necessary, not | yny place which is distinguished by commission, of prot ‘Only to mairtain the rights which we enjoy, but equally | or where they are not. With all this they tell us necessary and indispeneable to maintain the fabric of | that the noxt year they joing to have nothing to do Bberty sustained by the Union of tarstates, the geandost | With these things, Bot we have over wee. that period ge and glory that has ever been conferred upoa | of time yet, and we wait with considerable inte- family of man by avy parties participiting io tals | rege til thet period ehall come about. (Lout rnment—(applause)—the Cajon of the Stat be free piay, free sweep given to that tatellt gent and energetic mind which has thus far in our céreer Ceveloped the rerources aud directed the energies of the American people. Look to another question. Look at the mean and scandalous policy declared in the Ostend Conference, that policy reaffirmed blinély ant darkly in the Cinciunati platform, which |s to the extent, and gora tin the direction that it i right for the peop.e If ent a territory to steal it if they canhot get it in ror better way. Weare agalast that poliay— ashing tba; the enterpriee and energy of the great people of the American States should come to them for what they ceo give to us, and tbat we may carry to them the sur. plos of what we produce Wiil you do it’ (Cries of “We will.’’) Will you shake hands with those of us who wast to substitote pesce and commercial prosperity fir these ferce contests between Northern and Scuthirn sections? (Cries of “We will’) If 20, before another y ts past after this election, the ques- tion between the North and South will not be one of tas | uppinuse.) A fow days ago I went to Washington and re more than 800,000 men there to-day of territory that | yory, but it will be a question of the Pacifo railway Liriena; but no, this will not. do, [myself am going t it may be in the imagination of some theorist, bat jas a little grieved with the idea, repeated to very for the good of the country, past, which was necessary to | this trade of seven hundred miilions of people. (Loud | mediavely to Trouville, and I shail coon return to Paris.’” ‘Union of the States as it 1s—(ioud applause)—‘he Union | vay, that if the policy of past Southern statesmen as to ali sections, but still and which has contributed to the | burrss.) We bave now the contro! of the cotton market The upbappy faber, encouraged, consented to do nothing until the next day; G. went away, and as Trouville ie nesr Havre, and ilayre is the route for America amd England, he no doubt continued bis journey. A sogulag compeidence ts, that the brother of G. lev the United Btate Sago, Tho caab safe which G. had to man- ‘age, is in or: and pone of !ts content missing, thes containing the shares shows @ considerable deficit. But the verification, although vigorously pushed om, is pre- but slowly, and & will require more than « gresal couple of weeks for four experienced ployes to com- Of the ftates as it has beon—the Union of the Statesas, | | poptesented in the state of the country has been success 3 will be bereatter, forever, so long as t3¢ | fui, no man of the ton millions of Southern people would irmamect shall ourn with their fires. (Ap- | take office, either in the Cabinet or in the suburdicate Plause.) I am, a8 you may suppose, no little impressed | positions of the government. It happened, bowever, ‘Wich the responsibility which attends me here. | ss0ak in | inat before I entered the eity, before | had shaken the the piace where great men, catrustet with the confidence, | cust of the awful ard sectional free States from my feet, Bot only of your immediate re.ion of the country, bat | | was accosted by # friend whom I knew and whom | ‘wish fe confidence ant love of the people throughout | joyed, who eald to me, “My dear friend, I am delighted ibe entire confederacy of States, have stool and spokea. | to see you. I believe Fremunt is going to do elect Imean to speak, 80 fag as lam able to do, and go far as ou se.) “And if he be elected,” be contin at them, in elimioation of exactly the samo | {ie yea you must a ing fo at tue to the privcip es of our fathers aud tooar Inst.tations. been made heretofore; Of those five miijions more than eight hundred thou rand were crowded in the city of New York, and in the States of New York, Pennsylvania and New Jer sey—three of the middle States (Grent cleerin.) is baa been going on for the last half century. The: was a family of Saxon or Norman origin that d one time or another, use all the power that b longed to it tostyengthen an‘\ populate a section 0” its own country or of somo adjoining one. Cut of the five millions of people now living in Ohio, Indiata, Wisconsin, Illinois ol the world: we are about baying control of the woollen market of the world. In every State, with one single ex crpticn, there is iron enough to supply the American contirent. Ten yeare will not have elapsed before we bave the contro! of the iron marbet of the world. Allwe ark {8 that the raw material which enters into the con- sumpticn of ovr manufactures, and which interferes with nothing that we produce, may be admitted free of duty. ‘They are to admitted iu France, England and other States of Batope. England, under the ,olicy of Sir Robert eel, Yaced on the free fet 430 articles of raw ma- ods of the Southern sea We went nothing of them #0 long a3 they re main in the hands of nations at peace wita us. ‘They add to our intercate as they are. if toe Sandwich | wre or the islands of the South Sea, excepting alone the ieland ef Cuba, were porseesed by the peopie of the United States, they would be held etther by the consent id them only as uld be dependent on the sup: must do sometbiug for me better than I . ip ten years plete it. sand a8 they themselves herctofore aud | have got now.’ (Laugbter.) “This living in Washing | and Jowa, more than a milion of them were born in the jons, otherwise you would have to send | t rial ertering largely into her manufactories, and though The ent of the Preeurseur d’ Anvere writes am. you, always bave declarod—and not only such «+ | ten, at $2,600 0 year, is all a devilish humbug, av you | Northeast; and of the throe Middle States named, twenty ne for thelr protection, and at any mo | it struck some $5,000,000 from ber revenue, it str follows, under date of the 6th instant-—. they have deciared, bat such as have been alw know portectly well.’ (Renewed laughter) Well, I | percent of the whole ri tour fathers, or brothers or of diffeulty Or doabt im reference to the reiations | oi her commerce, and increased her trade more than The embeaziement committed by two cashiers of the ‘and are now ready to receive, (Loud applause.) fa told him we would do it, and I say now that | children. What they do, wedo. Their history, great hem and other parts of the confederacy; 42 per cent; Me po icy would increase our trade | Ch min de fer du Nord is etill tho common topic of com- Gressing the poopie of New York, I recognize the moviog | we will; and I call wpon you as witnesses | and glorious ay it witl be, will be our history, and | you would be always obliged to maintain anaval power in | oc per cent, and in regard to cotton more than that. | versation. The names of the guilty parties are Glement of power which bas distinguishet the elyiliza- % Sian of toe republic tor the lat (iy years Of humas pro. | © Wu compact between the South and the North, aad as gress, lsee me the men who hay ts material to our history as it is to theirs and those stands auch as this country bas never contemplated, to the country, (Cheors.) How, fellow-citizens! ts ppd which could not exist without danger to our institutions, Give ue four Fears of peace, four years of domestic peace, apd the amount stolen i* sald to be three millions four years of peace with foreign nations, and we will an assent to the decliration that a Southern maa, living {rones. It # asserted that the two defwulters have taken, given an im wpon $2,500 0 year in the city of Washington, under an | it criminal ‘'n New York, Peunsylyaaia, or | What we want is not to steal territory from other ations. | open ail the av nues of wealth; and the voice of industry, -‘asenge for America, aod that thero is listle hope of their mortal fame tothe steam marine of the United States adminisiration of the free States, is and shai! always be a | in New Bi nd to do for Kansas and for Nebraska that We bave at present as much territory a8 we want; but | of commerce, of mechanics and manufactures, public jpg arrested. All kints of Claqueting reports are otr- pplause ) Ieee before me the mon who have sent | humbug, (Applauee.) But this is not what! propored | which they did for Ohio, Indiava, llitnois, Wisconsin and | we have the right, and it is the duty of our people, tocul- | and priva‘e, will arive trom every mountain from ly €xaggerated, but there is un- the whitened shoot over every sea.laden with | to ¢nli your attention to, It is to the fact, what will the | Jowa. It Is not a crime; it is an act of justice overilow- je relations with the people of those islands, | e.ery fle irom the cities of every State, and will Tt ie astonish- the products United States of the American repub- | people of the South really do if th tion be given to | ing from ovr excess of activity and physical energy. 4 with the people of the ether portions of the South | jc a in the song of the evening and the morning etars. railroad Lie, carrying, with its flag, to ail nationa and to the men | the people of the Northern States, ai h of our So of nil nations, a knowledge of the Peggy gga erp friends as choose to join wiith us—and there are and great, which we have reoeived from our fathers. I | piemty of them who will do it. What will they do, I ask, am conscious that lam here speaking to you as rep when they be despoiled of their offices of honor and trust Tesentatives of the Astors and the Coopers, who bave giat- | and emoiument in the army, tbe navy, and the federal dened the hearts of the people of all uations with their | povernment? I will tell you whay ¢ HA will do. They munificent grants for the erlargement, intelligence and | will look abroad to see where they will be. They will et ning of the love of liberty (pplense), and of | recognise the truth of the statements that the glorious institutions which you enjoy,and which so | jade to you, that they have no lit Giatinguish your life. But i pass to the immediate ques. | tore, no sitence, little or mo commerce, littl» tion presented to us in the Presitential canvass now im- | cr no agriculture, or mechanical industr: They will see dir g, more important and more momeatous perhaps | that even their agricultural industry is falltny off, Wh: y that have jed it. I musterave your in- | jet me recite to you a single fact Of the two thousand dulgence If { speak freedom, if I speak with sinoerity, | patente iseued from the bureau of inventions at Washing pone Magi which I i} say will fail om intelli. | ton for the Inst year, lees than 126 were iseued to nds, to do no harm if it be erroneous living in the fifteen Southern sinveholding States; and of certain only to strengthen = Presen\ determ| the 125, doubtless very many of thom were the produc. American continent. From these amicable reiatious may ‘pring other evidences of that commercial prosperity which bas placed your city before all the cities of the American conti . Look at the ieland of Cuba. It within 130 miles of the commercial porw of our country. No man can estimate the extent of the commerce which well directed and intelligent in dustry may develope in the island of Ciba. end yet with the growing commerce of the Island of Caba —lying within the Gulf of Mexico, and only 130 miloa from Florida, and at po considerable distance from New Oricans and the mouths of the Mississippi, it senda to the ‘more than twenty-five per cent of ite and sends the otver three-quarters to and to Great Britain, And why? Bo ‘med the people and the government So tong a# God designs to open these territories to the welfare of the human race, eo long will he put it into the hearte of our people to go there and see what can be done for their own good and for the good of other people. (Applacse.) 1 have thus rapidly sketebed tats brief history. Bat now to tarn for a single moment to other scenes connected with this—from the scenes of violence, civil war aud murder that have stained every portion of the ficide of Kaasas— to anctber rection of the confeieracy, where the same epirit is represetfied. I go into the hail of Congress an eco there the representative of a sovereign State, by th hand of bretal violence, stricken down and brought to the verge of death—i\t not to death, to worse than death. (Groans for Brooks.) There is no wrong in Kansas, murder, no conilict, nO assassination which can equal the ‘and fil: the vast concave with one grand aweiling peal of eclestial harmony end jobilaion over the tpcreased pros rity and baspiness of a pecple eo deserving and 20 howered as the people of the American States, (Loud and continued applause, in the midst of which Mr. retired on moors of Mr. Deke, the thanks of the merchants and citizens of New York were tendered to Mr. Banks for his able and eloquent address. delivery of this address the audience ehould remain silent aud refrain from putting a stop to exaggerated comments by publisuing the trath. It is but right to state that the board a‘lirm that $f teagan an aspetng The books asd'w aro in exam! counts of the defwulters. Personal Intelligence. ‘The health of Sceretary Dobbie, of the Navy Dopart. ment, has improved singe his return to North Carolina, Mr. Howe, the republican Mayor of St, Louis, and ex- Gov. Boutwe'l, Secretary of the of Education, were jo Springfeld, Mass., on the 244 inst, ARRIVALS, a Jistance up the street as not to interfere with the de- presaible wrong be. Island by threats of descent and annexation. ft the aed ita being datinotly heard. Peron Qeont de bartgep, reach Minintr itor; Conant te Ce infamous, the inex, ible wi ted by taat of the isiand by of deace Li livery of the address, or . Minister, Count h, tion M it shall bo a eory. = ~~ in iq tions of stray Yankees, gone from thelr homes in the | same epirit of Se. in the eine the United pet wr A he gy A ph roqmavenss pod pinta epton ‘of fegation; te 7x3 see te f one cl or one cn ol e confe. Factern and Middle States to aid theie friends and breth: States, on one e ‘nators & sovereign State fern 4 : jand, Amon is Lay! wen relerenes (0 the residential election now | ren in the devolo semen of snatertal interests in the South. | (Three cheers for Sumner.) The mind ef man cannot | States. What do we see in South America’ A terri Brooklyn City News. Loy Ae) Ne bad 1 the arrivals at the inet another ol the confed- | ern portion of confederacy. Ihave heard a great | comprehend thar wrong. The individual is nothing. If ] tory tem Umes as large as that of the United States, Scppes Deatt —A young woman, who gave her name ‘M the Brerett Hoyse—Iton, 0. . racy, principles which it declares and in the | deai sald, when in Washington, about the benedcent ia. | Mr. Summer passes away, as other mon have passed | x covutry more fertile, than any of the United i ai ed @e | palin de ts AW Min get a nm a candidates for lar sullrages waich it presents, | fiuences of the cotton crop, which the South gives to the | a’ a their places in our streets and balls of logisia | States. While we give $4,500,000, 0/ ually of acon ov a 'y MeCaslerty, applied Superi Ui, New York . Fields, a Micha ieee ey. for the institutions and the oe Vy American Union a@ite share of our whole induat . aod schools of philosophy ind high art are lated eer, — Ten fies, — tendeate of the Poor y: soo a bape We. BG: Hi Simone Boston: Ju Wa ow ve been transmitted to us by Washington, by Je! oduct for each year—a magnificent accumulation de vacant, as wi ‘our Webster, Clay an 7, @ See St nee iesiom to the County Hospital, stating she was sick. + , Brition, N.8 ; Mr. Bon, by Madison, ty densa, by Polk and by Taylor— of toda try and Or weallhe Bet. I remem bem, Calhoun, stil the world would move on then try. She bas 20,000,000 of population, and 16,000,. | of Sm 7 i, Parson, Georgia; Thomas J, Borden, Fail River; Dr. J. W. Stone, hoxton. ‘ail Of them distinguished citizens and statesmen of tho | when I am at home that it neighbors on the Congressional Southern aes Shortly after receiving her permit, and whole waiting for ‘otion of the confederacy. In whatI have to | district that gave birth and being to the distinguished conveyan he was struck with apoplexy and died afterwards. as now, unknow even the loss of its illustrious mon. the act by which he is detached fr his teliow ‘eg amicadle retations with country, we can obtain Fon Landon, in ship Bhine—K MeDermoli and indy, @ A rigs toh Sen AF Bones es SA ‘eal ‘homas to you | mean on great facta, above allques- | but humble man who invented the cotton gin, that bay ‘by which he is made to wander ioto the whole of that trade, vast as itis, and vastasit may } about ten minutes . ¥rom Porto Cabello, in brig B Watson—B Sigon. Sieh an to tele rath kd ete which, If admitted, re. | croated the cotton crop of the Soutn. Well, now, our | dark receasts of private life—if that act, by which the | bereaiter - ithout injuring to the slightest poesible Sknovs AccIDENT.<A man named Jobo Dooner, a stone DEPARTURES. move all questions as to the policy by which we should | Southern brethren, seeing themsclves that they have no | sovereignty of a State ts despolted of ite representative, | extent anything produced in this country; aud wo can ‘ed on fmaith’s now buildings, on Fultea ave- For Liverpoo!, in. steamship be directed in the impending great controve: between | inventions, no commerce, no literature, vory little manu bo hailed with acolamation or tolerated with indterence, ive to them in retorn ing produced here, | cutter employed on @eolt brow Ma wite, Alfred twenty-seven millions of free mon, for the chief officers of | facturing Industry, and in agricultural skill far behind | them every man must feel in his heart of hearts that there , too, with Central America. So, too, with the countr nue, between Smith and Hoyt stroete, was seriously in | Coin Mie ai A Beaman their republic, 1 tee before me, represented by you, and | what they see in the Eastern and Western will | is no longer a future for the institutions or the liberties of | North. We have tried it with Canada. We havo tried jured yesterday afternoon by the giving way ofa der. | Jobn Coughton, a a ip imagioation, & pation of twenty-seven millions of | turn their attention to the increase of the material inter. | the American oe IR ms 3) In your streets we | with the British possessions; and certainly no human ex fractured, and he was carried to the Fail river; Jos o hardly tevonty-Ayo years of age, thet in this briet | osts and wealth of their own section ef the confederacy. | #ce the same hand of violence, ‘Today your papers are | periment bas ever proved more cragd and successful’ | rick. His skull was Damien, Nia’ oo tee Sekai 0 te pes and wee, ro) , Of three quarters of a century, has produced results | They are out of the g:vernment, according to their own | filled with accounts of an infamous outrage and wrong | than the reelprocity treaty between the United States and | City Hospital, NS caaaren. > tr ry wend GF x " such as the world nover beforo nas'witnessed, and such | stavoment, They must doysomething, and that necessity | done in the State of Indiana, on pespie, men and wo. | Canada, parsed in the year 1862-3. Now wo propose, if | has a wife and five Werthhorel ae A ot Gi ; as the mind of no intelligent man has herefore been able | for action will ture them immediately to the increase of where they had | our people of the North should conreive and taugurate a a Day, and 2 Brown, of Ohio; the Minwes Cn and to conceive. Let me state a fact, asthe product of | the material woalth of their own re of the country, bled to consider great political subjects, presented | policy of their Cay substitute ‘his doctrine of ae Opie " ners, of O tena, ot AS: " e 5 tence wil me. Peogle of the United States, | thing is done, is, after all, about inl the thing ttaelf. | Which they lve. we eal in reeks jenstm erritory, whic! i land, Pa fn the yoat 1856, will give to the world as thelr por: The way in which the Southern men will do this thing | another, a minister of So Geapet, Set, with women and | bas made the of America and of American go. | Roston on Monday, a ence of Dr. Beep Wess OF Havtand forts, . i, and Fe tion of the industrial products of the human raco, | isa great deal more important to us, because wo share 94,500,000,000. The people of the United States atono, | with them their prosperity, thelr honors, thelr wealth by thelr bands and their minds well directod, wi! nod thetr happiness, as they share with we in all that te give to the accummlated wealth of nations a sum | good that comes to us, ty $a. come North, they will Broater by an eighth part (han tho entire aggrogate na. | go into the manufacturing districts, they will go into the P children, to a neigaboring house protection, and ice. ‘Por ing, was hewn down with the axe of the aseatein, and bis limbe and boy were mangled so that his friends and relatives could hardly ish tl: ping, at the ter of the Inte Hon. caret Fuller, the noted ¥ sccomplithments, and wag wide circle of friends, verbment A sci throughout the nations of the earth We might extend the same — of reciprocity to Japan and the other ‘ations of the Kastern hem!aphern, whenever thoy ®all choose to change their national Eyory whore acts.of violence are reported, All places aro ' policy. We might thus recuperate and reyivily the

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