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2 own borees, followed. They were accompanied by four Large wagons, draped with red, white an biue calico, aad Dearing the flags of the rociety. One was— Te eamanatadamadiaaad “gammaniaits j PRAOR, LINERTY AND JUSTICE, PORTRAIT OF WASHINGTON. j PROTECTION TO ALL PODER DO LDLL DOLE DEDEDE DE DDBD DODD Me On the reverse side— OO ONE ION ADDON ONE DOLORES ‘THR PUBIC CARTMEN’S UB AND P, SOCIETY, (PAINTING OF CAKT AND LORS) OF THM CITY OF NRW YORN NOON ORAL LOR NE HEPES Anothar— ea eeeaeaaaeaadedodoaadeaseamadan CARTMEN'S UNITED PROTECTION SOCIKTY, PAINTING. 3 WH COMFORT THE SICK. 3] COOOL OARAI ROO LE NE DO RODE DAT DEEDES —With a large American ensiga. ‘Open carriages followed cootaiping the invite’ gacats | NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 17, 1858 ‘and the founder of the srciety, John MoSrath, Esq., Mr. Po Sullivan, &e. Joho C. Callanan, Grand Marshal; P. Gillen, First Aid; D Kelleher, Prestient; J. @acion, . The society was accompaniod by Monshan’s band Mayor courtcously returned the salute of the wociety, which to No. 76 Prince street.to par- take of a dinner and wind up the festivities of the day. ‘The Mayor, at the close of the review, congratulated ‘Major General Sandford on the appearaace of the regi ‘ments, and exprossed himeclt bighty pleased at tho pa rade and the orillirg of the wen. The military marched ‘up Broadway and then dispersed. COLLATION AT MAJOR GENERAL SANDFORD'S PRI- VATE KESIDBENCE. At the close of the parade a collation was given by Major General Sandford, at his private residence, East Twenty. gecond atreet, to the members of the stafl, generals, Wasb- ington Greys, &c., &c. A superb repast was prepared and the wines were liberally eee peind. Fall jastion having ‘Deen done to the edivies, ‘Gen. Sanprorp called upon the company to fill up for a wentiment. He then gave, ‘Tae day we apc i most most free He said that on this our fathers commenced a struggle, with three ‘milltons of , aguicst the greatest nation on the face of the earth. y ‘a wtruggie for the defence of their apd their liberties— which they desmed }, and Wberties which they were deter. mined to maintam. We were then confined to thirteen Of three millions, bat we thirty-four independent States, con- of thirty fovr millions of people conclusion, he would give them *“ Tae epirit : bs July, 1776, the era of civil and religious 8 was onthusiastically responded to ‘The sentiment ‘The next tonst was ‘‘ The boalth of General Hail,” which ‘was drank with all hon: General SarprorD, in responding, observed that Mrs Banaford bad for some time been confined to her room, ‘Dut that gave her greater p'casure than to have 8 portion of the First Division in ber honse. He was eure ‘that the hearty cheers which sho bad jest heard would do ber more ‘than all the prescriptions of tas surgesa of the First Division. (Laughter ) General Hart Lat ened “Phe health 0” Brigadier General Ewen,” which was ily responded to. General Ewan thanked the company for tho manuer it ‘which they had received bis pame, and remarked that they should not forget the memortes of the herose of the Revoluiion, He gave them, ‘The memories of the great statesmen and brave soldiers of the Revolution.’ ‘The sentiment was drank in sileuce. w then gave, “‘Bricadier General Spicer,”” who returned thanks in ap’ terms, avd conclu aks upon the part of the Misses Sandford, and proposed, “fhe Militia of the Oty of New York,” which was respon‘ed to by General Gates. Afver numerous toasts, the company separated. THE FIREWORKS. Immediately after the military parnde preparations be- gan be made for the pyrotechnic exhibition of the even ing. Chains wore ran along the front of the City Hall, so ‘as to prevent the spectators from passing over their Dounds, and Iadders having been erected, the various pieces were arranged in front of the building, and imme diately below the olock, ia very regular and artistic style. | i in all thIs world of promize, there was no human life save chat of the untamableand scattered wild menof the woots: it wes the all-bounieous work of the Creatot, but the im- perfect work, ag {t wera, of his apprestice baud—for the Adam and Eye of the vew crealioa were mot yet come to occupy that Eden of God. Tray once again— Divive Providence whi reservation, as it were, this se ot theNew World, not the eaylum on'y of the wronged, but id of fame also of the edventutous, of the the World, which, at tho ‘time of intevwest national and foteileciusl activity of Europe, unfeléed to ie people tbe tabula rasa On which to write fresh lessons of politi- od which, out of the downfell of dynasties, iozs of religious entbusiatm.and the fer: mentation of nations, evolved that greatest of the works of ia! orgapization yet devised by mao— tho constitutional goverament of the United States of Amorica. Thereupon commenced an event, a serise of events, unsurpassed in importance by any tm tho waole hia- tory cf the buman race—an event sti!l in p the early stages of which only are perceptible to us, and of which we ourselves do uot as yet unhesitalingly accept end acquiesce in the consequence ani resulte—I mean the exodus of Europe to America, Armed veually largely mace up were absont on this oocasioa, the gathering being composed of quiet, orderly, respectable looking citizens, although it was remarked that a large proportion of it cousisted of cflloo bolders or expectants. Asmall lorm, covere? with a dirty, worm out old piece of t, was fixed up at the northern end of the room—not at the Western, 6s formerly—aud forms were arranged so as 10 accommodate all with seats. The read. ing table was concesle¢—prebably to advantage—by « jarge uational flag, on the folda of which sat several patrists, and the front of the orchestra gallery was deco- rated in eimilar style, of course without the patriots. Along the wails wore buvg up emall flags, with the coats of arms of the thirteen criginal States; aud at the head of the room was hog the bapner of the Tammany Society or Columbian Order—an eagle, with outstretched wings, holding in bis talons the thunderbolts of Jore sad the olive branches of peace, and bearing on his breast the shield of tae republic, being the principal Sgure—with the legend aronnd the circle of it wonderful, was that prepared and beld in Fellow citizens—I do, most barertanamy& and emphati- le cally, deny that the United States bave derogated from the high standard of the heroic age of the Revolution. In the od higbto! the distance we see the mon aad the deeds of that day in their great outline; imperteciions are paded off to the eye; tt rests admiringly on the bright and fair traits of the scene, it willingly overlooks the un- seemly ones; and thus we respect and revere, without reserve, the times of our fathers. Be that so. It is well that it sbould. I would not have ®othorwiae. Moean- while, let us be just to ourselves, to our canse, and to our duties and responsibilities as the iiving men of America. What! Is it nothing that we of the post-revolutionsry one have made of the experimert of republican and con- slitutiova! government a sublime consummated fact? It is much easier than many ecem to suppose to writea ecnatiluiion of government sixty years, has produced a dozen of trem; each one the assumed perfec- tion of buman reason. So the Mexican republic along- side of us makes a new constitution every year or two, and suepends it the next op: ‘That is pot self-govern- ment, but the incapacity self-goverament. Qeecrcccesrsocersseeseeoe ss scovocooserccsssrere~ere® | em gration’ of nomadic nations have pecurred far '@, the WASHINGTON, THE FATHER OF OUR COUNTRY. beck beyond the dete of autheatic history in | people of the United States, bave not occupied ourselves 7» Bap ener nty indi Pane Asia avd Evrope; similar events appear at the | with the school boy folly of uprooting aad replanting Shelton’s brass band was stationed on the balcony, | dewn of modern, Distory in the countries « tha seasthetieans por {s ours pepor wisdom CF theore- ay , ‘ere, to drown the music of other bands | Mediterranean; and at m yet more recent period of time | tical constitution monger, but the practical wisdom of cont te oe hee 7 the movements end countermovements of fe astions of | Senate and the prison, cf the market place and the work- place sbop, of the engineer and the architect, srhich to the passing through the strects and the noise of guns and pis- ee pacity of devising end planning adds the not less indis- me @ and Asia produced 06 ied the dissolul tols and fire crackers that were incessantly being is- | o1 ibe vr ee a of tbe empires of Rome and Constantinople. But themove- charged. ment o! Europe towards Ameriea has been ¢f individua's | pensable and equaliy high capacity of executing, of ad- , mere than of nations; sometimes aided or fayored by go- | ministering and of preserving that which has been well A littie afier one o'clock the sachems and wise mon | TT% "nr hot quie'as ofen checked and opstructed by | and wisely devieed and planned, Tt is, the sud wiskinskies, and other high dignitaries of the Tam- | them, snd depending for its action on private,not national, ‘These end squares would be setin motion. In the meantime, however, there was no lack of the means of eojoyment ‘Tho verders of fruits cakes, ices, confectiovery, segars,snd ‘all the Gelicacies that liberated jours’ and apprentices £0 desperately thirst afer, were iu profuse supply; wie those who feit an itchmg "to eheke bands with Bacchus, ad) Lume to time to the pu vic houges fn the vici- nity whieb stood inviting!y open, aud swalicwed poveat Li- ‘Dations to the health of the rosy god, and to the happisess of the of natious! freedom. As for the urchine— what we say?—for the time would fail us to tell of the pranks of which they were the perpe trators, in the exuberance of their youthful patriotic joy. ‘The old gentioman who, as he was leisurely sauntering along the Park, in the quiet exjoymous of bis “lighted ar,’ waa star.iod {rem bis tranquillity by the expiosion 6 of fire crackers in his coat pocket; the old 0, while enjoying ber otium cum at Park gates, munching peauuts and watcding as they dashed along—the gay plumes borees’ heads—was suddenly earrounded Feat i ber arms acd ammuuitioa, con- sisting of peaputs and a stick, to the enomy ; as well as the ‘Chinaman who bad his ricketty segar depository tumble1 over by some ingenious contrivance tied to its leg—would $¥'Ve © more wouch:ng recital of the freaks of the “ young terpized: an¢ as ruch 8 of aniversal good does not come but once a year, the wero determine: to thia they did in real earncat. gree of jocund! that he or sale huge blocks) of & nondescript article, composed of suger and water, and bearing @ strong reser. Diance to —which he baptized by tho rathor eupho- nious name of The real West India Pineapple Rock.'’ A tieman present, who had some knowiedge of the Weer fice regarded the article as a rare phenomenon, for in all bis throug? the West be bed never seen nor a ancient lawgivers exporionced, and as jall ‘history, more tt—to stops, the Burrs, aud the Kings of y republic meu without wills of their owa? Were the Olin tons, the Tompkins, the Van Burens, the Wrights and the iater only } their time and turn in the high places of the Union, and ruled by the intellectual right divine atamped ou their im- mortal brows, aod ruled as men of the North, in their re occu Proper fh © Sout persons—not only this, but thet history is now pied with the question whether they did no! also in fact rule when the titular places of power were held by ‘th th ¢ The South dominate over the North, with New Yogk in it, and holding, by er population, ber wealty an’ power, the hegemon sumes in the fenich ever to ancy of the North! her New York, wno as. of her arms that she isever to be uppermost, just as Charles of Spain inscribed “Farther yet” on the plilars of Hercules. Oh, most absurd, most from the aut 8, most ridiculous of all the fooiish imaginations entered into the head of wayward maa. Why, the South, like the North, struggles and struggies in vain ¥, aud to shake off the ascend- In tho Orst place, God gave to you this unequalled seat of power. It was no deliberate lation of relations and consequences, jcuiation of relations and juences which brought hither the men of the of civil and religion: in* modera times, to which charter of the Duke of York northward and wesward to many Order, entered the room in a sort of procession, | inducements and influences. Even Columbus had but por- | ancient and modern shows, & beaded by Isasc V. Fowlor, Grand Sachem, who had | ™2s!ou to discover Americz; and neither Cortes nor | frame constitution than it is to maint the lakes. It was no deliberate caiculation, [ say. of y ~ ‘- J Pizarro bad even permirsion to undertake the colonization the breath of vij life into the marble statue and consequences, which broaght the Goliander given his arm to Mr. Cushing, and marshalled by an | of Mexico and Peru. And thus it was yet mare emphati- | of power,—to impart to the silent words of the dry parch- | and the Englishman hero, where tho waters of the [ast official carrying @ wand surmounted by the cap of Liberty. tw the cage of the foundation of tne United States. | ment the eloquence of truth and of suthority,—to make | and the North rivers meet the ocean, to invite the navies In this proccesion we also noticed Jucge Hilton, General | Vueinis, New York, Massachusetts, the Caroiinas, | cut of charter a state, to perpetuate the peaceful | of the world to enter and to harbor; inthe State of anager igs < gr Marylaod, Pennsylvania, each and all of them, though | and healthful action of republican government New York, where alone along the whole {ine of the coast, Walbridge, Jobn Van Buren, Mayor Tiemann, ex-Governor | colonized by the nominal authority of tions or Is it nothing, I ask agata, that we bave dove this—that | the Alleghanies are cloven down to their base, and Price of New Jeraey, & proprietary grantees in Europe, yet were not colo- | we have bad ‘the fortitude, the virtue, tho self-denial, the | i apataratchaanel from beyond the mountains to the ‘The proceedings wore opened by the presentation tothe | yized by governments; and each of the great colosies | wisdom, and the courage to establish the Cunatitution— | sea; here, where the great levol extends for hundreds of society of a new cap of Liverty, prepared dy one of the | assumed to itself, almost at once, and by revolution. | no} in words only but in acts? Is it ‘that wehave | miles fur into the interior land, as if created for the con brotherbood, and presented om his bebaif by the Mon. | gry act, the functions of local government, half severing | replenished the old thirteen States with po; , wealth, | struction of canals apd raliways; here, where the wates of Wm. McMurray, who said:— ‘ai tbe very ontset their colonial deponience onthe mother | iatelligevce, education, religion, arts, cultivation. com | Ontario and Erie, as they lave your shores, asaure to you MR. M’MUARAY'S SPEC. country. ‘It is the inspiration of individual is merce, manufactures, ships, steamboats, roads, rail ys equal command of Sa the outland seas of our edifices, cities—in a word, witn all which the beginning to this cay, it is the idea of inde; adorns the highest civilization of Christendom? it is the democratic Graxp Sicuem, Scum aup Baoruxns—I have the honor © present to our society, in beualfof bir. Hoary end soit government, is it : ; : Liebenan, an oid and valued bi , Whose life has been | *4 !t am @ the infent colcnies, so it prompted nothing thatfrom the exuberance of our vitality wo of the | throne of Amorica. tbat, I say, was the work of ‘one of consistent devotion to the usages and principles of | Revolutio War, evtablishes the Union, andhas never _ original thirteen States have created and peopled eleven | Almighty God, and cannot be undone by men, ekber men the democatic republican party, a “Cap of Liborty,” most paaed to jaform, direct and impel, énward the people of | other great States withia the [ omoy re) territory of the | of the North or men of the South. beautifully and artistically executed dy bis own baaas, | the Urited States in their march of colonization avd of | Union’ Is it pothing thet wo have acquired the vast ad- Nobly, most nobiy, sowever, has mau secooded this, designed to re) tbe one now fn usage. The semi | COnqurst from the Ailantic w the Pacific shores of Amo- | ditional domain of Louisiana, Florida, Osiltornia, Now | the work of God. | can re nembrr that towards the close ‘oval part is of rich sik; the vase of blue velvet; from the | 118 Mexico, Oregon, and upheaved with our surplus moral | of his lite W. was occupied with though: of the top is a tassel, and onthe borcer are Fellow cltizers,1 have thas unrolled before you the force the whole coatinent of america, like a giant Eace- | future rise of the grand exnporiam of the Uvited States on ihirteen stars, in silver, designating the Old confederation of tbe terriverial. greatwess of the United Sates, 1 | iadue beneath the mess of Mina? le it nothiog that the walers of the Chooayeake by reason of their actual States. The cap, as a symbol of Liberty, is of very | D&ve reminded jou of the cardinal facts in the origin of | bere, in the Now World we stretch oar mighty | nearness tothe great interior world of the West [lis date. From immemorial sudesw entering | Wve Repubiic. 1 have ioviled you to do honor to the men | bulk from ocean to ocean, ‘ith all imagiaabdle bt was a reasonable ose Bul he reckooes without colleges and uffiversities bave had givea them a cap, de who founces the government and established the Cansti- recources, territorial, mineral, agricultural, com- | theSiate of New Yore So, also, it was when, at «later hoting that they bad passed from under the rod of | ‘u\ion of the Union. These are among the meoossary | mercial, within ourselves, and with such timit- | day, schemes of isternal improvement by ine foloral ‘schoo! master, anc were invested with the | pics of the cecasion, whicn to pass over entirely woul lese capability ot population, that, of necessity, | government, based oa the same thought, had the saas end (bilities of liberty. The custom | D4ve reemed to be wanting to the historic memortos now and her: jr, whatevor they may do or desire, the ye departure; and theo rose upthe men of New wes derived from the ceremony im usage among the | the »ation’s vatal day. But they are topics of the history, Powers of Europe Inust count with the colossal power of ‘ork, with De Witt Clioton at their head, and while Cm- ancient Romens (serves ad pileum vooare); where & cap | Ot of the actuality, of cur couatry, they are the dead th» United States gress debated they constructed the Erie caaai, and there was placed with solemn cer-mony poo the bea of tue | Pest, not the living Present. Let us now summon the | Hereafter, aye, in the long hereafer ! for who pre | was imagization po more of the supremacy of the waiers manxmitied slave, in tokea of his emancipation and eleva- | Preeeat before us, that we may see and feel “the very | ‘end that we have reached :ue zealth of our power? We | of the Chesapeake And with ail the wealth of America Licn to the dignity of citizensbip. The pileus was a felt | boss and pressure of the Time "' | bave not derogaved. Phat is teen; tno worltis witness | centering here—with this forest of masts all around us— bat or cap, made to fit closo to the bead, and shaped lik Fighty two years have clapsed sinc> the day, when, | of our onwara and upwerd progress thus far. Bat bare | with whole navies of steamships to connect the Uuited h courageous fallh in the justice of their cause, strong (nly ip that, the Congreas of the Thirteen Colonies uttered their {Declaration of Now, feeble insurgent Colonies no longer, ve grown t> be popu jous, wealthy and powerful Sistes. With numbers, | riches and force, there may have come =a faction, | corrup‘ion and presumption. As our debility had its in- conveniences, 80 may Our strength have, and tho frugal virwe of the fatbors may have paased away, with no compensating quality to take its place in the character of weculmmated? Is the sge of our glory gowe? Is that light of cur power, which rose so brightly, to blaze wita superlative splendor tor « brief time only 0 high, and to go down, ieaving but a memorial ray bebiod it to mars its ance beyond “the mountain tops of deain ”"” I most pot and cannot be. I do, iudeed, sometimes hear mem talk of tho dissolu- Hon of the Union. A eet of nolay aod aif crazy agitators here in the North tel that the Union ought to be dis rolyed, because they the constitution of th. tet the half of an egg, aud very nearly resembled the ove Low presented you. No symbol of Liberty is so ancient por bas been a0 generally acoptod as the cap. The arms of the Swiss Cantons have a hat or cap for a crest, and tne symbol bas played ao important part in the struggles that brave peopie In Engiand & blue cap with a hi border, and the inscription ‘‘Liberty”’ ia letters of gold, is the incicia of constitutional liberty. So the bonne rouge waa used in France at tue beginving of the French revol jen ip 171 ently beoame the badge of mem- A ys =e cap is aiso pnp ted any of | the Sone. In a word, bi not wo of succeeding gono- States is a Covenant with death and an agreement with br for 1s Rome it Was likewise conferred on success. | 7A'iCns dorogated from the bigh standard of the founders | bell; and thereupon tho echo of their quveries occasionally iators. On aucient medals, as also upon our on- | of ‘be republ returns to us in @ declaration from the Soath that the ‘coins, the cap of Liverty is upheld by the hand of a I know that is frequent!y asserted; it is a common Union must be dissolved because of the fact that se many of these wild theorists of negropbilism and free jove, and woman's rights, aod irrel \, and sociaiiem, aad pine geetion, if not * common beilef. Ii is not my bel tabie «piritaatiem, are allowed t» go at 'arge in the North. #9 great @ boon conferred by God a oe a iA Srhitat with plous reverence I reader ail dae honor to the woman, signifying on favored people should be exercised in the spirit of tifarious ucts of every country those ial magezine!—with ai! climes aud regious— (ransalavt sas ing their intelligence into the fine! destituve of any foundatl that New York and the North Beene simple hearted person may say, is there no- port—witn the mul- of the earth filling this cry of slave power? Is it mere taction and from beg'nnin, to fect, t ead? | thing ft Is otters Thad long and dili- jentiy sought, in tho proper quarters, for its pretended ation, aod it is but recently that I havo discovered tin = much applauded speech of one of the Seasturs the Sate ot New York. That eminent person, if subject; Point eee oe Seat een ee ad force, the gre it | ‘iri wee bas bean perpetrated emaater that daring Slakore, ho “onnkors oe cal world's . ‘have not Ou each eide of this centre were had time, whe the posestel series of our Presidents has Sp empapar, formed accolce thrust themeaivo on (bo volving centres, the whole presen! ; ‘been going on with the regularity of the solar system, | public ‘Mon, subscribed agitation funds, perverted le- ovttines, fect hign by Bull one great clime, in full and free , Germany, Sweden, Italy, Spain, Portugal, have | gielation in the several States, and as far as they and te’ with id flights of colored fires, ex ‘Yet rears ber creat, unconquered and sublime, their kings and princes torn from their thrones, tight, the voice of Oongrees, a order, Possible, to im- | plosiop of mines, bom! ts, Elling the air foe covers Above the far dees inte ams, eee ignentaionsty avin Se pose opinions acd their intruded Lew og Ay Sno Bag rong ey heyhey piece, whe sand played ap | Ay¢rand notabove the far AtlentieY alone, but Bow, | time, in France, revolution after revolution’ has rua tts | clade them from thelr commoa share of the iaheritance priate eational oles. sles, eave ate voume She is the ‘‘vestal”’ of unrival- | career of mainess and of blood. Remember the millions | and of the pub)ic rights of the Union. These acts of ag- With the * Triumph of Arrerioa’’ the exhibition of dependence always, and atill Seeened by ee Ses,” of men who, during that time, have perished in the bat jon on the part of some Northern States as against fireworks at th Gall Drought to a close, and | but with foot ad \owards thet utior Weet, whioh la | {le'neics of buropes Remember that, during that tume, | {hose of the South, have been perpetrated under the |: feswnens atthe Gig wore broug ‘erineir | she ciroiing earth joins the orien\ Kast. Behold her,1ssy, | tvere is not ef coutthomtal Barone where tes | shelter of : temp! | vast ocean of beads soon after melted away te eed we ‘the ‘of a oe ‘and the ere o connten 8 a rope our common government, when they would Bowes, The whole afair was creditable 19, Amorics Mt | ‘mage of viowry In tho other, she stands, hor loins girs | BUEDendman Bes TGs, 10, 600 ie eae ieee. | vertmene; and | Americane on this eighly ecoons asaiverse:y Ohad aa fees | WHR the azure and white bands of whe sky, and Ber bead | jeg," with death and" havoo in thelr train. Re- | some States and tod ‘unepackiog. befags, wi ho tuptro of €30 amor pa Senger’ win the. comeleinne sits of ene Faas 2 member the domestic wars which — have, | of their blind zeal, Ene etabiton bogus at eight o'olook and concluded at Uimee—bat on this day expecially to ve inceased with | fivssS,ytuly" ine Nethorlonds, "Franca, Spain, Porte: | only for Up osee ot — ft does not come within our know- of adoration and of devotion by the untver- fand’ that oven England has not been without her | if by the sense | eee Pt rae emo nay, that Cuore was any distur. | Sel adclaim of all who bear, or deserve t2 bear, the name ite tiruggle a Irland. Remember all ti, and thea of the South recurs to Danoe in te Fare vammany Hall were not dehindhand, | _ Woodertul, most wonderful is the of God! coon Joa Gare, boseuse of some petty cleapion, ret pant Toe good folks of ami py achive discharges of rockets | “enerations after generations of men had lived and died, | Gr municipal outbreak in this or that the Uniouror | teeny tela. in or wat Sila ee the erne enee century after century, in Asia, Afrioa, and Kurope, great some not loss petty ac's of opposition to the governmeat, | brow the domication pout A empires bad risen up and flourished, and eway; | or wordy threats of opposition, among frontier mentn the ‘Does the South dominate over the ignorance end wisdom, barbarism and and sor- | 4; ‘wilds of Kanaas and Utah. tise THE CELEBRATION | TAMMANY. row, love ane bate, tad wort ine anaiaeiety ocer- ‘Shame oa such complaints! When tested by the touch. | the North, have, for tes au eee 4 Chine, indy Avaya, Feypt, Persia, Greece, Rome, atta then belek aon ae eke Sisaews hour of rural i a a a u on, scarce a ORATION OF HON. CALEB CUSHING. | tejsestntei.cr ete itt neat ataer Repu male after dior deur o repaint, | grou tron aad wih the “| woare startled shadows our own - | sea to into mulated thoughts and arts, some rained temples, Were one Gatetenads cfeer bis Rave undertaken to buvestigate. WS ONSLAUGHT ON NORTHERN NEGROPHRISTS. | salscn and maul, grmé only eho fam shadow of ¢ | ‘°Dii wo, he pople he Uaod Rms, when we em. | ‘Sy Winds, you know we naira lmost necomaiy, ~~ . barked on Sime anvemare. of Senay, ‘we | regard things from ia Pr fale ¢ men, these empires, bad Key om fone, like | expect to sail forever along the surface of 5 summer | first instaxce. Tewhoretore, te reficctip, oy Pneetnnd H ‘erentation of a New Liberty Cap—Reads | sures ons aia Sarhibesre, ‘with earth tts | seas, with smiling skies over head, and favoring breezes | question, begen’in this way, that ‘s, the polat of ing the Declaration of independence— Pre they (Mame her universe its spectators. | to fii our canvase—with no reefs or ehoais in our course, | view of my own of Massachusetts. It rather soemed. 5S» was it in the one nor cven 8 drifting cloud on high to warn us of the emer- | to me, on ‘back, that Massachusetts hed hada Singing of an Ode—Raush to the Re- ee Ete Seer bh peng aot ency of some porsible act of manhood? If we did so, if protiy fair run of the, power, of this Ualon. Two Preai- | freshment Room—Attack on the the pepdentined este of 8 \ pend such be the temper of the people of the United States }, two Vice Presidents, place ou tbe bench of the Su- wators of the broad Atlantic daily, hourly, moment: | then wo are indeed unfit to rule; and let us, the mon of Court for sixty stx ont of nine years of the | Sandwichesa nd Cold Panch— f Bont meng woolen Pemee 9 rn grec Jet us he avi for sixty-seven | 7 i State, Treasury, of Toasts and Speeches— siong the rcck-bound coust of Massachusotts, by the | ict us desist to handle the musket or ‘point, the ‘cannon | War, of Nevy, of Justice, most of them agdin end agel Hloguence Lost to merrowe © Ce Ne eee | lat ul cones to bold tn rapt the listen and ‘ope or another almost tiwaye; ResSaasion without of tbe Unesapake, or the sands of Pamlico and Alatamabs, ors baeeaie rie the tamuituous applause numbor, and a half monopoly of the most important one, the World, Mighty rivers, like the Mississippi, the Alabama, the Jar assomblice—and let us turn over the earth's em- of Bt, James, and a 1 ly F be th popul thas ET pg voice always in the ae. ha. ao. pmeped ae «jammer Dolaware, the Hudson, the | Fire to the aistaffs of our country, and eee if they will councils of tho and of the voice, " ed serene enpebec. the Pen in- | more ‘and bravely govern the Union. which, when it did not rule by the sales ot simon? = jand reas of Su; . », durop, Brie, Ontario— | No, Not did people of the United | yet werned by the highest authority gealus, of virius ‘The day was celebrated withia the walls of Old Tamma- | PCured their usoless tribute into the treasure deeps of the | states ive of government, They knew that rel commen and never spoke bul to pene- oceap. Snow crowned m: ther everlasting | with power must bo perils and cares. They fore- | trate, as with an electric flash, to the uttermost ny, aa it always bas been celebrated in times past, by @P- | aa:ch over the silent valleys of the Katahdin, Winn! | saw that, in the changes of time, troubles, commo. | bounds of the wide Union, Is % not sof When propriute exercises undor the management of the Tamma- bwint na Che geries cry yp — tiops, insurrections, foreign wars, civil wars, one | was thero a thet an Adams, an Ames, ny Society or Columbian Order, Tho Hon. Caleb Cushing, | U0 Uy onee ore ner ta Wabash, the ientacly other ‘Us, a8 upon wl other govern- & Quincy Adame, » febster, an a did not the United States Auorney General under Mr. Pierce’s ad- | und the Tennessee—by the fertile prairies Of tne Missouri, ney Same lene samen ef ot aoe * ee sen peed adhered at nulnistration, bad accepted an invitation to deliver an ora- | tbe Illinois, the lowa and the Minnesota—aiong the sunny nae ‘Gene? We é notwithsi ving the altractions of evory kind | CEDEF of the Catambs, the Santee, the Coosa, the Appala: that Masencliusote did tot, from’ We exuberance of Wice, and, notwithstanding ry i008 and the Arkautes— in all thess richest an! loveliest fn ox poe gy ee aged hop pay od elsewhere, the ball was pretty well crowded with per- | regions of the habitable globe, conetitating Re neeeneed sod kenessa seth tote et ie Empire sons aextous to see and beer him. The noisy, ill con- ——Nature’s whole wealtd, yea more— York? And yet in the face of all this, and ducted elements with which Tammany audiences aro A heaven on earth— toaid me beard of cariosisy; but as it was the “glorious li d good will to mea. Ia conclusion, { pi: fethers, I deny the \mputed degeneracy of the sons any one, may be presumed to uncerstan1 the 4 Pein, teat wast os ipa creme sta Sanne | = Four bane the cap of Liber. seaag, | 8 Sree sera %y ehenacty “gesurtit | rales Erman sohegy “ta ay se et Sen; den: | Soha thn Orestes oes adaoe oot hese Through which be sought to manifest bis hilarity. The preeeat was accepted, on the part of the society, | i. the time at our fathers. Ican easily find, ia their day, } tionalized ‘men, unworthy even 10 be women. They, ais0, | time afterward, there was. but one free labor State in the By an hour and more before the time fixed for the dis- | by Isanc V. Fowler, the (irand Sachem, who said: — lucidente of official (ofirmity in this reepect, to paral¢l | will assemble somewhere to.cay, not as 4 Union ; a/l the reet were slave Iabor States. And #o the play, the Park aod all the pathways leading to it were |- MR. FOWLER'S SPESC! aey euch in oor dsy Has presumptuous ambition, Das | as lineders and vitaperators of Americans—t> cosecrae | giave power got the upper band, and hes hold it ‘almost Crammed to suffocation. The houses, walle, win-| cas Grang Sachem of tue Tammany Society, andia | ‘temperate #truggle for place, bas the spirit of faction, | some veurrable church, or dele some sylvaa shate—to | uninterruptecly’ ever since. notwithstanding subsequeat dows, balconies and available piece that | 4. nehaif, 1 accept your beautiful gift. The brother by caret in our day? So lad they im the time of | say how much vbey love all viack men, and how much | changes in the relative number of the free la vor aud sinye commanded a view of the were in active omand: | viom tnis cap of Liberty is preseuted to our order rs Nay, when I returo, with calm cuntempla | they detest ell white ooes—and io the profaced name of | labor States. That is, Now York acd Pooaryivanie hay aud after all these places were se g was | recognizes by Us ae & true und faithful coo of Tammany, | tien. to the men of the Revoiution—when | read, as all | L-berty to prociaim their unappossadle onmity to the “still they come.’ There were a ver Of per- | Fer the kind remembrance and sincere affection which has | tay how do, their characters volumipoas corre- | Usiew, t) the conetituuup, to the Bbie, to their country. cea as a cc taneurt "ener vaperior sagecny ts | Trompied sia git T wader our hearveis thanks. For | secndenes and Orginal meme Sua'wellsawerana'et | ie hearien wel asin name, preserve. the akegrhy ot . ,t0 4 te i! i f bo ve iv ie thank you for your eioquent that they ‘were men as well an we, and bed | ic heart as we'l as in ame, bo preeer er monypolise all the moet ef ee ee ee orl omg Jar common nature. 1do net perceive | the Ualun in epite of al) these ravings of waloosed [Bod Tris ‘encampment rettien tae orig ona tions) stuns ember linen wtuae | @ rated. To #ce this, would be to de- | lam? Aye, ten, twenty, thirty millions of such devoted day ; #0 that those persons who arrived at » late hour bad | yo. neve imparted 10 us spur of my coustry and 1, om the contrary, bave un- | americans, devoted to tho Union, aod #ho, ifnecd wore, scarcely any chance of anything bat the sky- Fellow citizens—We have assembied together ia this aken faib in ite Vitality, its persistency, ie brilliant | could aed would, occasion requiring, devour and swal- cot cle -aatimaantonpe gamete npentomaed time honored bail to celebrate the birthday of our coun- | Cestiny, culties dtitinis to te wes ee cA - Uatea a ! T aver thet the present , ot leus than the as the ing whirl over ad , for bey clambered up the tail trees in tbe Teena veces cay ts remombrance, me | 1077 of the Ution, serves to prove ite pre eminent mucoess | tho alight skiff of seme intoxicated Indian. | Yes, welcome bal ll co pe ~ e with men and boys; and the balustrades and towers of | lls curcelves ou Weis, iin tye ei Pf waited and | '' foi compare the United States, oi with the other | impotent foes of the mon. I say tolerate and to pity the Cy Hall were as fall se they eould Pomtbt OF joing | feuoe buried (Loud uurrane.) The lateness of tne | Tocublics of America, ut with the great Staten of | thom; for when I witness thelr ebullitions of wild wrath, Comentiios appointed by Wwe Common Coocel, Adkiay’ | BOGr and the desite of you ally ie which I | Fa PS a participate, to lst to the orator of the day They say we possess no adequate military orgaaization. ie So" - Saas cae detore the beginning a Pee “to retrain from indulging im somo | It teue, we do not support Immense standiagacmics, | ‘oughte’” of the fallen spirit. Eacnone of them, as he sacrous ipatr: sup- Sachem pogeh petriotie ‘music | remarks which | bad intended to mane, | shall therefore | bet, for Thet very conse, we retain the larger reserved a emeeamn ie Sy ide introduce to you our brother, Joha ler, who wili | capacity of military exec in the bour of need. To pond forbid should tation a ee ee ee er: | gual 508 Mal charser of eur’ liberty, then Lieslanation of | cor nothing of ons having encountered, with glory uncur © thou, that with surpanting glory crowned, inaugurated by the men who had mate the Revolation. rere ae ince ouch wa cadteety filled wit revel. ; Independence, which, eighiy-two years ago, was sigued | paseod ‘chances of & foreign war om the plains of Looksi rom thy sole dominjoa like tbe vod Be loag a0 their greet leader in peace and war, the typical ermal ot “lets ot colored tame. toc | onthe anniversary of this day. After that daty has been | Mexico, we bave twice challenged to arms thet proud ote Boe ee woe LE ehe ae nome, man of the Revolution, Washington, lived, party divisions ving fal in ihe extreme and showed no { {ulflled, you will have the pleasure of listening to Ni Englacd whose child we are. Alexander would take se ae 9g 5 Ae Were of secondary socoust the government of the } me} pd of auill ta the Prrewctous wee ad - land's gifted son, (cheers,) who has generously left | part in the Olympic games if he might obtain kings for Ie {t mot so? Is not that a true picture? Well, let them United States. he died—when the work of eons ae! GEE cus teicwes by a plese exten tas “Ones ‘home t0 participate with us in our festivities, aud to | Competitors. Woe certainly bave had Earopean antago | pave and rave. They are, indeed, to us in the North, and setting in motion the machinery of the Beal of Mela,” which wee indescribabiy splendid | B04 10 the pleasures #e, should Gertve from our ousebra bisie worthy of the repubiie. Ta the first war wih Fog- | where they bold their aunual convention orgies, the | Union bene gone—thea we people of the United tiov of the day—the eloquent and accompli 0 | inv? we achieved our independence on the land; in the | drunk: folie of the commonwealth—useful to show | [#8 began to discuss divide uw) ee ee eet rn prose etsere, Ty netaid tern | coshing. (Applaare.) fetond unr independence om the sea. We plucked fram | forth the ugliness of inddelity and of treason, for the edia. | aémialatrative policy : ia other words, to form {ato poli- Tastrows battery of crimson, green, blus and yellow fires, | READING THE DECLARATION OF INDEPSNDRNCE. | ‘he Panu’ of ‘hyading aration Mis, lauren unmualel | cation and admonition of the Ingenuous youth Of oar Lace ee ieee bt ~4 by = ; on them by « bu vi 7 conq! we com | di Nort! i. whi woe saa woe meas etn acre | fhe fuera of Indopntence wan then read win | urs of rape asa apa or ie'w axe ave rth | “Yai she Calon Oy ech name? tava | fos aarly, enema mop. on rao trillent, more f ner good effect by the Hon. Jobn Wheeler, formerly momber | armies surreccerce, ami the triumphs of Saratoga, of very idea. It ie oqually Abourd in the mouths ot those contro! administration government ee re, ees Se ertmten and gota Seen won | of Congress from thle city ; aher which Mr Cushing was Yorktown, apd of une Thames, boar wince thatthe blond wwho threaten It as the amesbe of sgureesion, of the North Gad eee ees cman each cael aah. tes “4 “ f our faiber Nand, S ot! and Ire! red administrations, changed to the cascade, the water being represented a | ictroduced to the audience, who recsived him with flat. | ("snus of then uenosndaes in Amerie jaed runs re ceeeete, and of thane whe tren aon aoe ooo ot tae Saversary ‘opposed in their inception, t) soqitlesce in Talling rapidly over rocks of diatn nd ‘ancowork. Seat conting ‘and to if not to Tos piece Gated "Shield of our Union” wes warmiy | tering deinonstrations of respect, whea he procesded to | rvun it wT know, ibat our comntry in aot bristied over | Hub then, it ls aid, if each men do not imperil our in aa , Att, A aoqrere rece orowd pent cheers again aod . with the bayonets or etantivg armies, and our land oo. atitutione, y: ere jarger aime disorerter . | them Tomem! great . Trvegan win 0 si of wor —- ORATION vored with otade's, like France, Austria, Proee'a, Rassin, | UOvanees, who use thom te distard the popwar mind, do; | % Policy, oF domestic, which hed any differeat ori began & Drillient wheel negated RATION. 5 jin. Tmean the ul imperfect of the Crimson and yellow rensties, changing to a grant centre | Frizow Crnzexa—An rise 00 thie oocasion to addrens | Det let no vale thought of our bemg militarily weak enter | otherg, who talk of Freedom when they moan power; whe | or og pp yn yoy a iancework, in which the — “Union"’ | you, ianumerabie thick coming fancies and throngiag » anwepe or Laseteer Wo tee every roe mnie —— re 4 oo —— the | Central America, and thet hae never been anything Dota. park golden fires, each letter artistically enclosed | thoughts of pavionaiity avd of patriotism crowd on the | 4v¥",'» Furope em 0; Ue ever bas U oe sectional ftumbting bloox and an offence in the path of the Union. the shield of America, of i ot Upited Stated Ne, every city ia a clade! of brave nations, and whore avowed are the wa vagunate Eee a ee eee ee laa rym ncaa eal telgens tberty ta berepe eroming | mos, every rursivome i fortrems of the unit of an ar. of « sectional adminiatration of the cunati- | Al! the elenel steps nine progress Ot siloraia, the acces, Three other beautital but pieces were ¥ a 7 ry my, ready to be combined in @ moment for the defence of | tation. a Gred; ator hich come “Tee Pix * @ | the sens to found other empires of thelr owa, by the | Thy Wie mniitia i the inexhaustible rerource of | Well, these 1 adweit are dangerous mon, who, not by | som of Texas, the vindication of oar rights on the tite of red; bes 8 lakes, jee, 9 Ua i a v 0 a Of pyrotechay which can seiiom be’ excelled. pd Br oo ea Prarie eben | miliary strength. their dwn strength, but by the disonsioas of the true | Grose ae koomnite aaa ao] meonced with a superb ecroll wheel, around which flashed | world, with ila populous ctite—with {te agriculture, iim neaped, thie day, the parade of the militia of the | friends of the joa, have aitained but too mach in- Tyntem of tbe government, tne determination of the proper we flame, onan two various emdlema of | commerce and its arta—with ita institutions of keowledge mew Vere, co teey aan tie ae pom et ad pews alae entoaten tommai relation of the Territories ‘to the Blates and the Union; all Sous, toveman, trempets ana ether sesightoeatin of tes ee Oras one te och ene on pot meme fen tillery, my heart throbbed wih | of Cousisteney to control their acta; because their only | Reve are the work of the same demooraite sad ioe ce were seen on the sides, all in borh a titanic progeny, out of the Yeeaing loins of the | (x¥/tation aod pride. i have Assisted, egain and axain, | creed is what has been called the duty oi success; and See the United States. presides , verminating with grand shower of coisred fires | Oid World I perceive the long procession of the grest | ** Lee x C } -- ee xe the old | because acute paeaman an mee ab tein 0 20 00 009 erdhe vary ree maroon explosions states morarchios of Europe and Ame. declare that never, | sectional ization govern Is tae coh pase te emportanse wes “ Liberwy ood duse.| ae ae Bee eh remain T witneas the wivent of im. | evee. a the rapke of veteran armics, did 1 sce a betior | Mts oavonallty, would be the de facto dissolution of the fon tat a naional; for the reason the time honored toe,” in the centre of which was « pyramid of crimeon | inl State after imperial State, as heralded by the olo | *Ppointed body of troops, more exact in drill, more perfect Union. ; of to be sectional —refuses ‘and yellow eo balance and cap of Liberty, vyence of Senates and the tamult of popular emotion they jecegpetents Pst soldierly iv ‘ec oL oe Their fa wg A b-4 4 apn os od LT a wo ion encircled by © delicate wreath of emerald lancowork ixroh up, one after the other, ant wheel into the lines of | thie day passed before my eyes. I could not forbear to | chance, maguifioon oy rights The “Star of America’? and the representations of ‘array of the American Union. omy to myeeif,a® the Count de Boucicanit said of such a | domain of the Union, such adaition be for the de tonee moamors were worthy of the highest praise WeEieh, of al these dazzing objects, these reminis- | spectacle on one ooseaion—these are men who, i the sky | sire and benefit Raa oF The last piece exhibited was the most exquisitely beauti | cenoes and premonitions of glory, aa they aiong the | Should fail, would bedr it up on the povuts of their swords whole “ fol of all, and could amen ae ri fail to draw forth | \Sc-d chambers of the intellectual vision—whish shall the aed, Dayonele a Yet here Yes tee = of but & poem hI Anh ~ y, tee A etentorian ousands eat tor | 0 ety, the country Hl ne iniatration more accuratel; people oon - Sin unten | Wilof the orator call forkD. if ne may, aad arroat for | SOO SN, Oe equale of une miltia of Now York ia mili: the North are tivhed to make © sevead adert ws fenpose, together. It combined patriotic seatiment with artistic | oresent contem! which shall be endeavor to em ho, if not quia of the m' mil ¥!, and was abundantly and deservedly successful. | | jay in enc worda to wake anew to-day the echoes of wy datiptinn, Sons 7iste. Se thee 5a eparnee, 0 Pe: bp yh yy & sectional administrat on wes Tammany Hall? riotiam, im eget ly ey ty et. Sates. THR TRIUMPH OF AMERICA What Femen lipe, indeed. a6 worthy of the #uvHmity | bonor call them, and to shed their blood to the Iasi drop lanten A eon I Go ont peeve It commenced with « besatifni and novel wheel of Mal- | of suctra theme’ It ia our country which on thie day | !9 defence of the Union. Have not we of this generation poids in te a x +}: the ene reyonsast sad jeosamiae fren, oith maguiiicent | jgome ap jo thought before ue, wiih all the infinite ideas | seen it im the Selde of quecaston and of New ‘Olea e- oan. 2 ee Ay 7 a a a contre of colored lancework ; ot of vuture " nated, ax it | have we seen it on the pl and to mountain y ends Genius of America holding in one raat eakel fetave Glee? Ieee emnonti ts | passeeef Meniee? South, ‘and assumes tho bur other on stretched to receive the scroll of | the Peetster Ae’ figure. Oar a ow Al J sig het Toon, they aay that jar commotion, or other den of nationality, in defiance of local peuiheat Muse of History, ins kneeling pout to bright post i tbe 6 Knot Cans, | abosee of pablic of of individual freedom distur our Judioes— nich a:one proteases @ constitutional presenting to ber ‘Tus drapery of these thal repplondent an ggat i the pathway of nor (xine, | Treat cities, and sometimes the publi posse erecd, and follows a conatitational theory of action— of white lance work one, Gast hte Phone duet ie gota. jo ovF frontier settlements ow on ances —fron- sedeieen Page vn te Fake Sa thorpence tah when 6 international o ‘Hood the (Goddess m. Aad pavement sary” tier commotion—forsooth! What is al com more wanton abuse cimorgencies, and which le conetitationally ow on the brow of America. Tt ehould be the irumper vuioe of a God to pro pared with the desolating wars, the #0 Never Amore AdoMInAble attem yt to | conrervative, because It is democratic my Dited in a culrass, Wich a helmet on her head, holding ia | glories from pinoaele to answering rectiovs, oonGaeations, exile and the ai bition at the expense of @ country’s | thas together the rights of the Slates ‘and th one band & spear, emblematic of power, and sapported ov | firmament of ber power, as ‘leaps tbe daily [i sseges of Enroper Remember that, io | welfare and peace. Slave power! [tis the ory of “too | rights of the universal peopie, I 800, on ra a ‘each side by the Ageree of Justice standing on beratiful | summit to summit along Me otherial heiguts of the moun ton, since the cloge of the great conflict of | thief om the part of the burgiar fleeing from the pursuit | » political amociation, hich is not, indeed en associstion Me of the of enriched pedestals drawn in perepective, composed of | tains. the Revolntion — 7 boca now of nearly seventy Bal nf nap hed sy oan but a loore conglomerate only rf lancework, the whole encircled by an arc com Behold her, where she stands, in all the majesty and eare of constitutional ex! Bo man has lost his life We at the Ni have boen addicted, more or less, now | from other associations, which has no fingree 4 LA jesty y 5 Of shidids, ongies, stare and other embieme of our strength of ber colossal proportions, thy imporsvantiva of — Ou the scaffold for polifionl agt#,00 maw bas guilored exfo, for the space of some twenty yoars, to porsistgnt attack doctrines, and fleats at random on the tide of public poli- 1 iF a 5 Z a 5 z | fi 53 HE i FE i : BE ef i 5 ae hal i us, aud elevate us to & just perception of our duties and responribilities to our country. [a every quar- ter of the wide @: of the Union this day, .rom Mim Floris, toe uoddy in Wwe farther Eest, to the Colorado in the farthest West, fromthe Atiaa- tic to the Pacts, thera is one muiversal and spontancous jubilee of gratulation and joy In every distant sea, wherever an American ship floats, the national banner will be upiuries tothe breez» in henor of the indopoa dence of the Amorican repaviic, The boom of csnnoa will eound ia triumph from city to city along the sheres ef tbe Atlsntic and the Pacific, i+ will roil through the bread valiey of the Missouri aud the Mississippl, over foresws aud tavannab, from Lake Itasca to the i ot Mexico—it will startle tbe wild Indian s¢ be chases (I boffaio on the flanks of the Rocky Mouutains. From th: Ips of tbirty auiilious of men will go up the voice of pawictic emotion to fil the vault of heaven. Aoi 80 may it be forever and ever—unit! time ehall ba no more, apd the last trumpet shali round to aummon the quick aad ths dead aiko to the jadgment seat of God. Acoursed be be, tba, American, if such there be, in ‘woee torpid bosom the emotions of patriotism do not well Bpovtspeously up iis day as from the bosom of a perem nial fountain Accureed be he, to be ariven ont like a re- creat taken from the lists, with the brand of “nidering’” Slamped upon bis brow, Bo more to know the travspor: of & Wowas’s love, Or to wa'k erect in the estimation of mon. We at jeast, bere, within the wails of Tammany Hail, and now, While tho roar of cannon and the ringing of beils aud Ube burrabs of our countrymen are sounding over carte xulungly raise our voices to choral anibem of a nation’s joy, and to ewell of @ wation’s prociawsetion of prise to G that be gave to our fathers this fs 1 for their taheri tance, that he inspired into them the spirit of nationality and independ+nce, that be lift d up the thirtees colonies into sovere'gu States, '.at be made of us ous poopie, and that, ee by cis creative oaod He resred, so by his «!- mighty wil be preserves, the saperb work of this ever gloricus constituticns: Union. At tbe wielusion of the oration Mr Cushing was rap- tureus!y a, piauded. Euan F PuRpY made himself neard Amic the cproar, and 6aid— lvive tw propose @ resotution, which I know will be I move 8 vote of thanks to your rea ron New fugland, for remarké he bes meade. Ho ex pressed the sentiments vot oviy of Cammeany dail, but of New York, and, 1 beiieve, of the Union, aad deserves the thanks pot only x Tammany, but of the Ame- rican people, I ask him to furniso @ copy of hi orstion for pubjicavion, in order to show to the poopls that Tammeny Hall, ai least, is mgbi vn the great question of ry. ‘Tho vote of thanks was carried unan'monsly, The sacbems and scribes, and witkinket end mores and what note, th pon to sing to tne air of “Hail Columbia,” played by the band, an ode, ia which the wbole assembiage joined, with great effect. 6 Colebrate—Reverenced by freemen Jyreate iaronghen tthe is fail a, roveet the sscred legacy they bequeathed tof Masaschupetta.) janhtr, the Soldier. the Patriot and the @tviesmen —Hus services imveriebably identified with the lidert, of the peuple. (Mr. Daniel ol Wa Ber. ano prosperity ‘The Pr sigent of and pbiened patri stiem wal {'reress’ Gomesue "rebelicn ‘or foveige aggression “Mr. Joba Van Karen ) The Consuintion Faithful ¥ » respected by the various Staten apd honestly Interpreted b, al tet tt fanpot fal to negure itinte the Uhion and auvcses: perp: foily presarve the wer " ltt; oj inens of section of our country. ( N ypders ) Saas ape The American | enterprising and intal. tdrguah the oun a the spirit of freedo: a9! breadth of our land, affordiug the best ‘of tree lastitutions, bi for tis and bows ant The of peses ano civilized n. .) The Guy of Now York— Fivalled in enterprise and populsivon aa eadfaa: to’ demo walle ora'ic ‘ples. te i} ivivane eigour Liberty—the Inestimadle inheritance from the Amerisan Kevolntion guarastied under our cost tution and laws to every citizen, without reference to creed or "The ‘Freedom of the “eas—Our national honor and com lsterent demand the snsethy aad protection of ihe OD every sen an 4 inestimad) mast. hazard and against every maton, ve vindiosted and a : i Toa Le : 3 5. b i i 53 i Ht i! Hit Ii : 5 Li i Hl 3 : z 4 & : i i F z . 2 5, | apf { rt i 7 Fe 2 ttl ij i 3 i & g i a z !