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2 NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 14, 1858. Died thousands here to night bearing thelr testimony to | pewed laughter and ) Tt matters not with me| Speech of Hon. Jefferson Davis, in Portland, cotiaigunas, wily of iatwet, end win ee cous GE oie yore en ones The cecision ef tho highest tribuval known to the ovaeut. The Hon. Jefferson Davis having been serenaded South, the my pe ieee dod Speech of Senator Dongias on the Occasion | the right of the of eaoh State and of each Territory, tion of the tmust be final uptil it hasbeen reversed | by the citizens of Portland, Me., last Tuesday even- J (pada a ondipead tove the | Zhe Spas—The Beach—The People on of bis Public Reception at North or South, to ‘the question for themselves, an equally high authority. (Cries of “bravo,” and ap- the 4 " poten have slavery oF not, just aa they chose; and my opposition | pleuse,) Eieooe Taam opposed to this doctrine of Mr. Lis- ing, acknowledged the compliment in the following pie rertorm in thes rent Meg it is the Wing—The Virginia vs. Friday Evening 1858, to the Leoopton Cuatiation was, Dok ‘upon , by which he proposes to take an appeal from terms :— . ire a railroad States 5 nite the ground ett ware pre-siavery conan, (oboe) decition Of the. Supreme Court. of "ihe ated Sass | ““Fxziow | Counrmrsam—A my sincere | of the Pacific for tuses; the time no doubt New York Springs, ee nor would my action bave been auforeak bad, 1 =. questions to 9 repaptices | thonks for this manifestation kindness. rill ome when we shail have need of two or threo, ve aa (Frote Neago Times, July 11.] Deen a irce sol! constitution. My eae to” country. (A voice— Vanity does not lead me so far to ive your | it may be more. Because of the desert character de., i Mr. CxaikmaN ap FRu.ow Crrmmss—I oan flad no tan- | compti a {and was made on the 9th December, while the ," and cheers.) Yes, or to any other caucus ortowa | 1.12. as to appropriate the demonstration to the interior country the work will be difficult and gunge which cam evequetely express my profund grat. | vote: thc slavery clause in Wat coasuiutioa sas ves | Meeting, whether it be republican, american or demo. | Purpose ts to APPIOET AA Lt | Meee nO SMS | el iensive, It will require the efforta of an united Wace for the maguificent weicome ou have ex: | tuken uctt! the lat of the same month, neariy two weeks | oratic. (Cheers ) I respect the decisions of that august | °) att Nf hich, Maine tenders ‘The bickerings of little politicians, the jea- | © OUR SARATOGA CORRESPONDENCE. tended to me on this occasion. This vast ea of human | efter, [ nade my speech thet Leconpioa mous } tribunal; Isball always bow in deference to ‘hem. I| the medium through WI te an ex- eee cco oe vy ae ee faces indicates how ‘an interest is felt by our peopie | trosity sole: ‘on he that it was a viviation of (oe | am a law abiding man. I will sustain the conatitution of | pression of sepa to her sister, Mississippi. It is, ‘the ye ‘the ot Unirep Srates Horgu, im the great {questions which agitate the public mind, and | fundaments ‘es of free goveramest ; 0 \or | my country as our fathers have made it. I wiil yield | moreover, with feelings of profound that poe snd set Sr common good. ol Sanaroga, July 10, 1858. which underite the foundations of our free institutions. | groun thes it was not the ect aud deed of the people o' | obedience to the laws, whether I like them or not,es I] | witness this indication ui that nat sentiment obstructed by contention and division as to| 7. prathen—A ‘rip to the Lake—Odd Charac- A recep ton like this, eo great in numbers that no human | Kansas; tiat it did not embody their will; that thoy wore | Gnd them on thostatule book. I will sustain the juaicisl | und fraternity which made us, and which alone can whether the route to be selected shall be . oe voice can be beard to its countless thousande—so enthu- the Congress tribunals and constituted authorities in all matiers within | {oon us one people. Ata period but as yesterday | northern, southern or central, the handwri- | ters—A Visionary Speculator—#nglish Caprtal- Siastic that mo one indivigual oan be the object of suoh the pale of thelr jurisdiction, a8 defined by the conatita | hon compared With the lite of nations, these States | ting is on the wall, and it requires little skill | ists—French Social Critics— Musical Matinées— tion, (appluuse.) But I am equally free to say that the Tite, and in some respects opposing colo- | to see that failure is the interpretation of the inscrip- ’ : reason ‘by Mr. Liocoln for resisting the decision | Were separate, “aoek lo- dom | You nee bs tical ani ay auc’ low Local Improvements—Influx of Visiters, §¢., &c. of wwe Supreme Court in the Dred Sant case dose not in | Dies; their only relation ta von ra we reat ‘ier | is that contest to he at iy taking the question | The weather has, with the exception of one day, people. itself meet my approbat because common allegian thing pt a peop’ Seolsion declares that a negro dessended from African pa- | tain, So separate, indeed almost hostile, was their | out of the hands of politicians sane . Yet the been quite enjoyable since my arrival here, the mean “Good, g004 great rents who were brought here and sold as slaves, is not, | attitude, that when General Stark, of me- | government give such aid as proper to average of the thermometer during the weck being the right of every community to judge and decide for | and cannot be a citizen of the United States. He says itis | mory, was captured by savages on the waters | render to the company which shall the most \steaiilt G0 dogs ion the Oty Pe a but itself whether a thing is right or wrong, whether it would | wrong, because it deprives the negro of the benciks | of ihe Kennebec, he was subsequently taken b; feasible and advantageous plan; then leave to capi- | 9 B+; OD rose 88 deg., good or evil for them to adopt it; ead ther gi: | of that clause of the constitution which says thet | 110, to Albany, where they went to sell furs, and | tulists with judgment sharpened by interest, the se- | towards night the oppressiveness of the atmosphere free action, the right of free thought, the right of free | citizens of one State sball enjoy all the privileges en led y> tin without interference lection of the route, and the difficulties will diminish | lieved freshing bi judgment upon tbe question is dearer to every true | and immunities of citizens of the several Staves; in | Sgain led away a captive, “* an @id thoee which you overcame when coms Mee by a refreshing breeze. Knericad ta aby other under free government. | otber worde, he thinks it wrong because it deprives tue | on the part of the inhabitants of that neighboring rie’ harbor with the Canadian Provinces. It '| Yesterday I drove down with a party to the lake, Sod in the whole fature will be, devoted. (Immense | hy objection to the Sees contrivance Was suai | Dekro of the privileges, immunities, and rights of citizen- | colony to demand or obtain his release. United as = your Kindness and to violate and hada most agreeable day of it. We bad some cheering ) If there is apy one principle dearer ani more | uncertook to put a const ou the people of Kansas | ship, whic pertaw, adcording to ‘that decision, omly to | we now are, were a citizen of the United States, as | pated han yen casas yn a es eae os phe Tar caccieall roprieties occasion, character 5 ally secred than all others in free ments, it ia that | sgainet their will, in opposition to their wishes, and thus pe Dit Tam free to say to you that i inion of i i whitemar. I am aad any to y ja my opinion | an act of ‘hostility to our ponsiry, mprianned, Ot | wa teheiares wists aleate buees mmo jtnyientet \auiuas pt Keiseacaptichien, Oar ar eeictaoes ing on the discussion of controverted tepics, or by further indulgence in the expression of such'reflec- New York apeculator, who is always running over tions as circumstances may suggest. I came to | with impracticable projects—acted as bear leader to your ob fo ot of healit ane Fecal Fon Li a couple of heavy looking men, whom, in a whisper pore Though cape nebo to us he dignified with the title of “ English capital- t ught me to an pate good rather than evil trom ists.” Whether the voluble little Gothamite had my fellow man, it had not prepared me to expect really succeeded in gulling the Englishmen, uch unremitting attention as has here been be- the in di hi a ti towed. I have been joct asked in relationtomy | Englishmen uping him and getting coming here, whether I had secured a guaranty for him to pay the expenses of their initiation ba ar wig ome I a Ring i. ty i the | into Saratoga society, I am unable to say. mee 0 of my fellow citizens. But, my | From the sharp glances exchanged between them 1 neither distrusting, rehensive, oreeich wr bave areal in the fact that brought | 4nd the sly but humorous remarks which they oc- gL me the a of pone a ac) — casionally levelled at him, it seemed to me that the citude—my wife and my children; they have shared | Wall street operator ding with me cull hospitality, and will iy remain your ae ry Wade earn — his fing 9nd bie debtors. ° If at some future time, when I am mingled v wah 7 with the dust, and the arm of my infant son has been A chatty little French woman, who was one of which aseerts the exclusive right of a tree people to form | viclated the principle upon which all our iusiitu. | this founded on the white basis. uartel whether on laad ano adopt their own pevied a] law, and to menoge and | tions rest. 1% is no aaswer to thisargament to sry that | (Greatappiaure.) It was mace by the white man, for the apa eed josva fg pod foc pdet. State of the reguwate their own internal affairs and domestic iastitu- | slavery is aneviland hence should not ve tolerated. | denefitof the white mun, to be aiministered by white Unio » with one heart and with one voice, would de- tone Sm ‘When [ found aa effort being mate | You mus’ allow the people to decide for themselves | men, in euch mauser as they should determine. ‘Onoers ) ‘D yates vy te og u ats during the recent session of Congress to force ® constita- | whether itis a good or anevii. You allow them todecize | {t is also true that ® negro, an Indian, or any other man | mandredress; and wo him against whom a von upon the people of Kansas against their will, aud to | for themse!vea wheiher they derire a Maiue liquor law | of an inferior race to a white man, shou'd be permitted to brother's blood cried to us from the ground. Sach force that State into the Union witn a constitution which | cr not. You allow them to decide for thxmselves what | enjoy, anv humanity requires tha\ he shold bave ali the | is the frait of the wisdom and the justice with ber people had rejected by more than 10,000, I felt bouad, | kind of common echools they will have; what syatem | rights, privileges aud twmavitics which be is ee of | which our fathers bound contending colonies into 8 & man ot honor and # representative of Huiaois, voand | of banking they wilt adopt, or whether they will | exercisirg consieteut with the safety of society T would | confederation, and blended different habits and rival by every cousiserat on of duty, of fidelity and of patriot | adopt apy atall; you allow them to decide for them- | give bim every rigtt aud every privilege which biscape- | jntercsta into @ harmonious whole, sothat, shoulder ism, to restst to the utmost re? power the consumma. | ge'yes the relations ostwen huaband and wite. parent and | Cty wou'd enable im to enjoy, conatont with the good to shoulder, they entered on the eee the Revolu- ton of that fraud, (Obeers ) With others I did resist | child, and guardian and ward: in ‘avs, you allow them to | of thercciety in whieh he tived. (“ Bravo.”’) But you tio “ H with ste its thorny paths until it, apé reeisted it sucg@efully until the attempt was | decide for themeeives all other queations, And why not | may ask me what are these righ's «ud these privi- On, win he aeth hel ee a ‘de, abapconed. (Grest appiause ) Wo torcea them to reer | upon this question? (Cheors.) Waoenever you pute limi- | leges. My anewer ix that each State must decide baw? reached the height of national independence Ubat consrituidon back to the people of Keusas, to be o- | tation upon tho rightof any people to decide what lawn ihey | for itself the nature and exteot of these rights. | a founded the coustivutienal representative liberty, cepied or rejected as they shail decide aj an e.ection, | wut, you have destroyed :he fundamental oriacipie of self « Sear, bear,” apd appiauso.t Iinoie bas decided | which is our birthright. Wnen the mother country which is Gxed for the first Monday of August next. It is | goverament. (Cheers.] in convection with this subject, | for herself. We bave cecited that tae negro sbail | entered upon her career of oppression, in disregard true tbat the moge of reference aad the form of the sub- | perbape it will not be improper for me on this occasioa to | Dob be aleve, end we bavest the eeine time decidedtaet | of chartered and constitutional rights, our fore- mission was not such as I cou!d sanction with my vote, for | a:lude to the position of thoee who have chosen to arraign | be sball not vote, or serve on jaries, or enjoy polit‘eal | fathers did not stop to measure the exact weight of the resson tbat it discriminated betweea free States aad | my conduct on ibis same t. 1 eovsarvei from | privilegee. I am content with that system of pslicy | te burden, or to ask whether the pressure bore # ave S.ates, providing that if Kansas comented to come | the public prints that bul days ago the repudlican | which we bave atonted for ouresives. (Cheers.) Ideay t PP « Meet pagina Ly ram 34 in under the Lecomptoa constitution it shoald be received 7 of the Siate of Llincis assembled io coavention | tbo r ght o! ay other Site t> complain of our policy in | MO*t upon this colony or eet eatin daniel of with ® population of $6,000; bas thet if she demanded | at springtels,ard vot ovly laid down their platiorm, bat | thai resvect, or to ivtertere with i, or to atiampito | the infraction of a great principle—the den! a government of another copstitation, more consistent with the sentimsats inated a cand: 3 change .. On the otber hand, the state of Maine has di common right, in detence of which they made com- ‘of ber people gud their feolings, thet it should not be. To. peeeenens § coacecared is ‘ides that in that State @ negro may vote on ay porn mon cause—Massachusetts, Virginia and South Caro- nerved for deeds of manhood, the storm of war | our party, amused us greatly by her comments on. ceived into the Uniow until abe bad 93,420 inhabitants. | that | bave kuown, pergouaily snd intimstely, woh tue white wan The sovereign o>wer of Maigedad | lina vieing with each other as to who should be fore- | should burst upon your city, I feel that relying upon | American manners. Ini the freedom of her observa- : pepo a ene wineries tions she seemed to be quite unconscious of their sabe as eo dervace nye oreo 7% questionable kena This, with the majority of us n a EAag She DONOE constella- | who were cosmopolitans, only gave greater piquancy pos get bd es poked 2 raat vane vy to herremarks. She could not understand, she said— and will, 1 trast, forever fly as free as the breeze | and there was some justice in the observation—why which unfolds it. A stranger to you, the salubrity | the Americans, who were a republican people, should of your location and the beauty of its scenery were | exhibit in their social intercourse such a marked re- not wholly unknown to me, nor were there wantin, - rind a which busy memor¥ connected with serve towards each other. She had not interchang- your Reais. eS wat “Patel me ed ee n ed three words with any one since she had been in one wi genius shed a lustre upon all it touched, | Saratoga (the present party, of course, excepted), and whens Guslinies Oe AP i rate OF although she bad made numberless efforts to do. so. of Portland, lived from youth to middle age in the | Abroad on the Continent such a state of thiags waa Peta of my gener: and ie geavecens wench, not possible. People of all classes enjoyed life just ave been made show me that the youth €X- | in proportion tothe facility of their manners. The cited the interest which the atness of the man_ justified, and that his maetangy thus re- | Dobility were just as accessible and socially (Cries of “Heer, hear,” and choers) I did mot consi¢er | a quarter of a century, the worthy geatieman who has | the rgbtto preserve thar rule for herself iiimols bas | most in the struggle, where the penalty of failure that mode of submission fair, for the reason tha’ any | been nomieated for my place. (A voice, “He will never | Ho rigotto complsin of Maine for conferring the rigot | would bea dishonorable grave. Tempered by the election is a mockery whict is aot free—tbat avy elec | got it,” aod cheers.) And [ will eay that I regard hic as | Of negro auft age. ror has Maine any ri,bt to interfere | t1i,i¢ and sacrifices of the Revolution, dignified by tion is a fraud upon the rights of the people whish | a kind,am’able aod intelligent geatlemsn, a good citizen | #i\2, orcomplain ois bscaurs sho das depted negro its noble pur elevated by ita brilliant triumphs helde out inducemen's for sffirmative votes and threat: | aud sn honorable opponent; aud whatevar issue I may | svllrage. (“+ Tow "and cheers.) Tne State of New | its noble purposed, clavate Oy et lorio jen, ens penalties for negative ones. (Hear, hear) Bat | bave with bim will br of pridciple, and not involving per. | York has decides by ber cunstivution that a acgro may | endeared to each of - glo eee po whilst I waa not satieflied with the mode of su»: sovalities. (Cheers) Mr Lincola made a speech befors te, provic ec that be owne $750 worth of proparty, but | they abandoned the confederacy, not ly apart sion, whilst I resisted it to the last, demandiog thet Republican Convention which ucxnimourly nomi ciberwiae. the rich negrocao vow. but tae poor ove | when the outward pressure of hostile fleets and free mode of submiseion; still, wnen nated bim for the Senate—a speech evident'y wall pre | carrot. (Laughier.) Althovgh that distinction does not | armies were removed, but to draw closer their em- parsed placing it within the power ‘of the people of Kaa | pared avd careful.y written ~in which be states the basis | “Twmend itecif tomy judgment, yet I srsert thatthe sove- | brace in the formation of a more perfect union. By fas at that election to reject the Lecompton covatitution, | upon which he propoees to carry oa the campaign during | ‘¢'gh power of New York bad right to orescrioe toatform | guch men, thus trained and ennobled, our constitu- and then make anether io harmony wita their principles | this summer. In it he lays down two distiact | of the elective fravchire. Kentucky, Virginia, and viber tion was formed. It stands a monument of principle, aod their opmions—(Brave and applause)—I did not be- positions which I eal! notics, and ugon whisk | Steies bave provided that oegroes, or Aceriain clars of f forecast, and above all, of that liberalit; which lieve thai either the pensities on the one hand, or the ia shall take @ cirect und bola issue with him, | them ip thore States de staves, baving neitner civil | Of {01 Aden aepioeal daniel nf indivi ducements on the other, would foree that peopie to accept (oe of good,” “good,”” and great applause.) | Or political rights, Without endorsing the wisdom ot tbat | made each willing to sacrifice grep eR agate} & coustitution to which they ere irreconcilably opposed. | His frst ‘main proposition —{ will give ia his | Cecision, I assert that Virgivia bas the sane power by | dual prejudice or temporary good to the general (Cries af ‘Gloriout”’ and renewed applause ) All [ can | own las, scripture qaotation and all (Laughtor.) 1 sof her sovercignty to protect slavery withia her | welfare, and the perpetuity of the republican insti- Bay ts, that if their votes cax be controlled by such coa- | give Lis exuct Janguage— ‘A house divided against itself ag Iuinois bas io bapian it forever from oar own | tutions which they had passed through fire and blood siderations, all the sympathy which has been expended | cappotstaud’ I oeleve this government cauuot encure, rs. (* Hear, and appisuse.) I assert the | to secure. The grants were as broad as were neces- upen them has been mispisced, and ali the efforts that maceatly, haif slave ad naif free I do not exvect the | ‘abt of each to decise for resif oa all these ques- sary for the functions of the general agent, and the bave been made in defence of their right to seif-govern Poton to be dissolved I do not expect the a cnr, and 1 do not _snbscribelto the doctrine of my friend, | mtual concessions were twice blessed—bleasing both ment have been in an unworthy cause. (Cheers) | but i do expect it to ceane to be divider. It Mr. Lincoln, that uvl‘ormity 1s ether desirable or possi- rH i Hexce, wy friendl I regard the Lecompton battie | all cue thing or allthe atuer,”” I otuer words, bie. 10 not ackaowieage that ho Stator must all betres | im who gave and him who received. Whatever | Tt OM unto connect your home with mine. A | inclined as the Courgeoisie, and this freedom of in- as having beop fought aad the victory won, because | asserte as a fundamental ;rinciple of tris government, | (F wuet all De slave 1d not ackaow!oage shat the usgro | Was necessary for domestic government, requi- aay vee, Gaal iecaati vee tae On é t the arrogant demand for tho admission of Kaonas | thet there must be uniormity in the local laws and do. | Wisi bave civil aud polities! rights everywhere or no- | site in the Social organization of each commu- | PXmury . pavead Cie thy | Sercourse $$ was that imparted euch’ s charm. te under Lecompton constitution uaconditioaatly, | mestic institutions of each aud all the States cf the Ucion; | here. Ido not acknowledge that toe Chigese must have | nity, was retained by the States and the people former occasions, eased me wil @ great | French apd German society. whether ber people wapied it oF not, bas been | and he therefore invites all the con-slsvenoldiug states i | the rae right» {a Califorsia that we w-ald coafer upon | thereof ; and these it was made the duty of all to | advantages of your , its easy entrance, its| J need not tell you that it was difficult to make the depth and its extensive accommodations for ship- | Jively little lady comprehend what foreigners gene- ing. But its advantages and its facilities, as they | rally are slow Dh anntecats Sut it is the idl gr we been developed by closer inspection, have | sence of recognized social distinctions which makes grown upon me until I realise that it is no boast, but | onr people so reserved in their inanners towards each the language of sober truth, which in the present | other. Where all ranks are confounded by the poli- state of commerce pronounces them unequalled in | tical institutions of a country, it is not, of course, avy harbor of our country. And surely no place | eacy to make those artificial shades of difference could be more inviting to an invalid whosought a | which family pretensions, hereditary possessions or refuge from the heat of a Southern summer. Here professional position have created elsewhere A waving elms offer him shaded walks, and maguiti- | general reserve, therefore, supplies with us the place cent residences surrounded by flowers fill the mind | of those titular distinctions, which abroad teach each with ideas of comfort and of rest. If weary of cou- | class the measure of respect and deterence that is stant contact with his fellow men, he seeks a deeper | due to those above it, whilst, at the same time, it seclusion, there in the background of this grand | defines the extent to which the latter can push their poe eit po lie the eternal mountains, frowning | condescension. with brow of rock and cap of snow upon the smiling | | give these remarks less for their novelty than to fields beneath, and there in its recesses may be | note the disagreeable fact which is daily foreing it- found as much of wildness, and as much of soli: | self upon one's attention, that the manners of our tude as the pilgrim weary of the cares of life can | people in their public associations are becoming more desire. If he turn to front, your capacious | and more churlish and reserved. ‘here is such harbor, studded with nm islands of ever-| an apprehension of compromising some real or varying | and shade, and enlivened by | fancied position on the part of all, that the result all’ the sti evidences of commercial ac. | js a taciturnity and restraint which cannot fail to tivity, offer him the mingled charms of busy life and | strike forcibly the minds of strangers. It is a pity nature’s calm repose. A few miles further, and he | that the ina who are the most inatramental ia may sit upon the quiet shore to listen to the mur- | pushing to such an absurd extreme the natural dis- muring wave until the troubled spirit sinks to rest, | tinctions of society, have not an opportunity by com- and in the little sail that vanishes on the illimitable parison with the French, and Peeed with conti- sea we may find the type of the voyage which he isso | nental manners generally, of judging of the large soon to take, when, his ephemeral existence closed, he | amount of amusement an enjoyment by which they embarks for that better state which lies beyond the | thereby deprive themselves. They have to learn grave. Richly endowed as you are by nature in all | that people of refinement and good breeding can be which contributes to pleasure and to usefulness, the | courteous, affable, nay, even familiar with all, with- stranger cannot pass without paying a tribute to the | out forfeiting any of ‘the advantages of their posi- much which your energy has achieved for your: | tion, selves. Where elee will one find a more happy union Reverting, however, to the point from which this of magnificence and comfort—where better arrange: | digression carried me, I have to tell you, what ments to facilitate commerce? Where so much the majority of the who make a short trip to dastry, with so little noise and bustle? Where, in a se Trobably 0 not know—that nowhere can phrase, so much effected in ion to the means | 9 day be more pleasantly and Selighttalty spent than Sart We hear the puff of the engine, the roll | on fine lake in its neighbor Stretch- of the wheel, the ring of the axe and the saw, but | ing away about nine miles in the dis- the stormy, passionate exclamations so often | tance, its shores beautifully diversified and mingled with the sounds are nowhere heard. Yet | presenting a striking contrast to the flat scenery neither these nor other things which I have mea- | which immediately surrounds the village, one caa attractive thongh they be, have been to me | pass hours in the enjoyment of the cool breezes the chief eharm which I have found among yon. | which are continually playing over the surface of I do vot arknowledgs that the cooley im- | defend and maintain. Such, in very general terms, necessarily be pot upen | is the rich political legacy our fathers bequeathed to Tao not acknowletge | us, Shall we preserve and transmit it to posterity? ues of oujermity ia che. lecat | yes, yes, the heart responds; and the judgment an- abandoned, and the priacipie which recognizes the right | band together, organize as body, aod make war uy: Of the prople to decide for themseives bas been substituted | slavery in Keutucky, upon slavery to Virgiaie oo in its place, (Immense applaure.) Feliow citizons—While | ery in the Carolinas, upon in slave tbe sia re hoiding eevee wie cieentien et ny om geeiny. —— be Sonne thie bi gg persew a vay P vad apd! it e. an yall exterminated. le then vuotifies the slave Whilst tbe result bas been such a wil enabie tbe people | States to stand together as unit aud make aa agree ) Thus you see, my | Swers, the arate | unt wi mauebont odin of Kansas to come into the Union with such a constitution | sive wer upon the free States of tais Union, with « thet the iesuee between iar, | that each should a * tefprt ngeeminnoner as they desire, yet the credit of this great moral victory | view of establishing siavery in thom ali: of forcing | Lincoln ard myself, as respective | candidates him, and on which alone he has rightfal power to is to be civided among a large number of men of varioas | it upon Mlinois, of furcing 1! upen New York, upon | for the United States Senate, as mate up, are | decide and to act; that each should adhere to the and different political creeds. (Prolonged applause) | New England, ‘end u;oo every other free Stat, aad Ave ; terms of a written compact, and that all should co- was rejoiced when I found ip this great contest the repub- | that they shall keep up the war‘ars uatil it kas | ‘Ormity pour domertc operate for that which interest, duty and honor de- Mean vary COBMR Sp Senta sud apunint in ,arinet, | been formally, established in these ail In other words, Fa oo ee eal ge faovued: igo for the | mand. For the general affairs of our country, both E people of eact Territory, ir. Lincoln advocates boldly aud oleariy a war of seo: | great principle of the Kan be, ey nen © i domestic od pg a ae Scere | ants tae enemies ant FS tthe slave Statca—a war of ext:rmiaation-- | was here interrupted by the wilcert applsuse; cheer a! Vimita, (A voice, “Hope they will stick to it,” aud great | to be continued relenilessly until the ome or tne vtner | cdcer rect the s! ba natora are chosen by di ae eae cheering.) I have seen the time when thm pricciple was | sball be eubsued and all tbe states sali either become | rockets and pieces of Sreworks D.z01 their acts affect the whole country, and their obliga- coptroverted. 1 have seen the time when all parties d'a | free or become slave. Now, my friends, I muat say to | shvsissm was so intense anc uoiveras! tbat it was some | tions are to the whole le. He who, holding not reoc guise the right of a people to havesiavery or free- | you frankly, that I take bold, usquaiied issue with nim | time before order couls be rrstored and Mr. Douglas re- | ejther seat, would confine his invest tions to the dom, to tolerste or prohibit savery, ue they deemed best; | upon that principle 1 assert that it # ovither desiravie | #ume. The rcene at th's period was glorious beyond de- | mere interests of his immediate constituents would Dut claimed that power for the ‘ees of the United | tor poesibie that there should be uniivemisy in the iocal | scription) On. the other potot, Mr. Lincoln goos for® | be derelict to his plain duty; and he who would States, regardiess of the wishes of the people to be affect- | institutions apd domestic regulstions of tne ciffereut | 4! Upon tbe Sopreme Coort ef tbe United States, be | Vecisiute in host ity to any section would be ed by ti, and when I found upon the Criitenden-Mont, | States of this Union. Tbe framers of our government | cause of their judicial decision in the Dred Scott case. ie fit fer the station, and surely an gomery ‘olli the repubiicans and Americans of the North: | never coctemplated uni'orwily ia. ite interns! concerus oe to the decisions of that Court—to tbe final | morwly. Um f-neb @ teekchereus guardian ad I may say, too, some glorious Americens aad old line | The iathers of the Revolution and the of the highest jovictal trivunal known to oor | unsafe depositary, if nol ® blessed. whige from the Soutn (cheers), like Crittenden and his | the conrtiutioa He objects to ihe Dred S:ott decision becanse | of the inheritance with which we canite : Painiolis associates, joined ® portion of the demo- | tis istitucons wDich would sult the grauite bills of New | ‘tors uot pot the negro in the oogsession of the rights of | No one, more than myself, recog we cracy to carry out and vindicate the right of the people to | Hampshire wo totally untit for the rice plantations | ¢ilizeselip on an equell'y with the whitemsn. Iam | pinding force of the allegiance which the citizen decide whether slavery should or should not exist within | of South Carolia; (cheers) they well understooa that | oppose! to negro equality, (Immense applause.) | owes to the State of his cil hip; but that State the limits of Kansas, I was rejoiced within my secret soul, | the laws which would enii the agricultural dis | repeat that the nation is a white people—s people | being a party to our compact, a member of our Snd saw an indication that the American people, when | tricts of Perpaylvania and New York would be to- Gescendants—a people toast | 14) .n, fealty to the federal constitution is not in op- they come to understand the principle, would give it their | tally unfit for the large miping regions of the Paci- ition to, but flows from the allegiance due to one cordiaisupport. (Cheers.) The Crittenden Moatgomery | citic,or the lumber regions of Maine. (Bravo.) They | /<*terity } Prtbe United States. Washington. was not less a Dill was as fairand as perfect an exposition of the do)- | well’ understcod that the grea: varieties of soil, of pro orine blood, but the purity of ths government | Of + nded at Boston; nor did trine of popular sovereignty as could be carried out by | duction and of interests, in & repa slic as Marge as this, re- ‘sny mixture OF ama'gamatioo wh inferior races. | Virginian when be comma: al mi nor ary bul that man ever devised. It proposed to refer | quired different local aad domestic reguistions in cach | (Reucwsd applause ) I have seen the effects of this mix. | Gates, or Greene weaken the bonds which bound ae Lecompton coustitution back to the people of | local: ‘wants and interests of cach sepa. | (ure of superior and inferior races—this amalgamation of | them to their several States by their campa! him here (senator Douglas | onda national legislature. Representatives and Se- 3 5 3 g i 3 3 = z 3 2 f ty, adapted to the ‘and give them the right to accept or reject it | rate Siate—(Ories of bravo” apd ‘ gocd”")—and for white men snd Indians acd wegroes; ws bave seen it in | ¢} th. In proportion as a citizen loves his own an pleased at a fair election, held im parsaance | reason it me provided in the senerel tion that the Mexico, in Central America, ta Sout America, and in all | Biteeill he strive to honor by ‘ing her name of law, apd im the event of their rejecting it and | thirteen original States should rewein sovereign and gu- | tbe Spavish American Stater, and its result has been de- 424 Jor fart! free from the tarni-l oP having failed forming aoother in its stead, to permit them to come toto | preme within their own limite io regard to all that was | Reberstiod, cemoralization aBd degradation below the ca: | 1 oorve Ler obligations, and to fulfil her duties to the Union on ac equal footing with the origipat Sixiox It | Iocal, apd internal, and dimesuc, wnile the teteral co, | PaCty for self goversment (True, trus.”") T am op- her sister States. Each’ of our hi is Was tair aod just in all of wus provisions. Igav> it my | vernmest sbould Bave certain specified powers which | Pscd to taking a stop that reongaiaee tbe wogro man | int Suir Doaknl oe FOS ike ents of those Cordial svpport, and was rejoiced when I founa that it | were general apd national, and could be exercised only | OF the Indian as the equal of the white men, [amop | i ral ry ‘and dixcl the parses tbe Bouse of Representatives, and at ons time I | by the federal authority. (Gaeers.) The framers of ne | otd to giving Dit a voice tw the administration of the | who have well understood <r entertained bigt hope that it would pass che Senate (Ap: | constitution well understood that each locatty, having | government. ‘would extend to the negro and the Indian, | obligation. Have we so degenerated that we can plause ) I regard tbe great principle of pooular sove- | reparate and distinct interests, required separate aud dig- | #0d to all dependent races every right. every privilege po longer emulate their virtues? pg gid mode triamphant | tinct laws, domestic ivstitutions, and police reguiations | 80 every immunity consistent with the safety aed wel- for which our Union was formed lost their value? iu tie 'nnd ag & permanent ruie of public policy in ine | adapted to its own wants aud its owa condition; nd they {are of the while races—(bravo)— bat equality they never | Fins patriotism ceased to be # virtue, and is narrow and mat. | should have, eitber political or woeial, or 1a way other re- Poe ae longer to be counted a crime? Id De a8 diversified and as dissimilar as the | 8pect Whatever. (Orie of “Gooc,” “Good,” and protracted Shall the North not thet the in | States would be numerous, and that no two would be pre- | cheers.) My frien te, you see thar the ineuce sre distinctly “é in oatieue ted cone after tho passage of the Compromise moasaros of | cisaly alike, because the interests of no two would be pre. | drawn. I stand by the same platform that [have so often | gress of agriculture ‘¢ , wher I returned there was great ‘came. ones, ft , peopl Itnois beretofore. trolling influence of the com- | For above all these I the gentle kindness, the | jts waters. Returning to the Lake House, a charm- Gissadafaction ‘expressed at maf Course. ta suppsrucg nme. Hance, 1 svat nat tbe groat Lande, | Prcielnet itdatvtrac;" and appiawe) Tiana by too | ferce of the wee Gand pat mauufvcturing nations | cordial Welcome, the hearty grasp, which msde me ing little hotel, surrounded by tastefully laid out those measures, (Shame) I appeared before the peo ‘governments, contemp ated aiversity ead | Gemocratic orgenzation, yield ‘becenoe to ite useees, | undgr bond to,’ Keep the peare | with the paceper oy thera 3 be beg nn by hy grounds and water tanks fall of fish, the Visiter will ple of Chicago At & mass meoting, and vindicated | dissimilarity in the local ineututions aud domeatic aaireot | 824 eupport ite reqlar nominetions. (Iatense eatbu: | {piteq States? Shall the South not exalt in thefact | Was still at home. gods, er ind there as good a dinner and as choive wines as each and every one of those measures; end by rofer- | each amd every Stale then ia the Vaion, or thareafier to | #iasm ) I enécrse apd anprove the Cincianell pladferm— | that the industry and persevering intelligence of additional mani of your good will. are to be had in any of the larger establishments of ence (0 my speech on that occasion, which was the confederacy. I therefore conceive ed applause) —sad I achere to aad lavend to verry | the North has placed her mechanical slsili in the the springs. With those who have carriages of their ow “ine time, you wn flad that oo ons 3. Sioetartep wale sinneraee ’ Ne Fe ee alae an pee ia | front rank of the civilized world—that our mother Mupste and the Drama, own or fave money enough to command them, & there aid that howe ‘moasures wero all founded upon ine To loge, and domeatie aitaire would be desiruc. | each stale wid Territory to pdecide tor, themselves, thelr country, wbone ihaaghty Minister, soxae ey Acapyuy or Mvero.—A new and quite attmetive fst ae ix, he oot of Bl a is one of ‘eat ineiple every people 4 LO possess: ‘State State reignt - | a tho tpatitations. cheers. years ayo declared vat show -ogram} been arrau sd a Signe As ‘orm and regulate their own “Jameailc hasveations Goonies Bony seq *Tatfonsaay in| " Suaniat olber words, if the Tecolagien hry shall arise again, you dor in the colonies, which ate now the United pm the pte Pataiease ny told you that there were no musical concert this evening. The list comprises many choice | _ 1n my last pieces that will be finely rendesed by the large or- entertainments in prospect. Since thea I learn that 7 arrangements bave been made for matinées oa Ghestra, under the direction of Mesers. Musard and | To ¢th and 19th, in which Miss Abby B. Nino's Ganpaw.—Mr. John Brougham’s peculiar- pi Silgron § ~~ the Sociast gees! bn ea ly instructiys, irresistibly amusing aud unprecedent- | heljeve, the sole performers. ‘The ball room of the in their own way, and that that right betng possessed by | despotiem the world over, not only in politics, but in reli- | Lave ouly to turn back and see whore youhave found me | States, was brought some four years ago to recog: the ie of the States, | saw no reason why the seme | gion. Wherever the doctrine of Scala at peed aimed | Curing tre inet vix montho, and then rest assured that you | yj. oar pre-eminence by sending a commission be that all the States mutt be {ree or all slave, that ail i8bor = ei nha vintwating tien Cet tor ae eiain® | examine our workshops and our machinary, to per- must be w! tack, tizeos i. | principh i State a few months afterwards for members of the Legis- Spek tase tea bles GS come oeviamnte tn oer. quarter it may come, 80 long as [have the power to fect their own manufacture of the arms requisite do ore eee, for th lefence? Do not our whole ple, inte- lature, pending which all these questions were thorough. | ea by the same reguiations, you have destroyed the great | '* ) Fellow citt:ses, you now have before you | 10m tants CO ieard, North, South, Bast acd West, ly canvassed and discussed, and tne nominees of the aif | est safeguarc which our institutions have thrown around | | men of the propositions woich { iatend to . edly popular compound of rhyme and whimsicality ferent parties instructed io regard to the wisnes of toei: ith “ cs belore tke people of lito auring the alike feel proud of the hardihood, the enterprise, ‘ary > ” + | United States was again thrown open last nigot, Cansthvents open thems. Waen hat etecttea won over, | Beer tecle tam ustiormiy be soshapived if i'men ae | comselss.. | Have spokem. witbout preparation the chill, and the courage of the Yankee sailor, who | called “‘Coluaabus el Fillibustero,” is to be preceded | and dancing was carried on in a much more spirited to-night by the comedietta of “Popping the Ques | manner than on the first evening. The regular hops tion. will not, however, commence until Tuesday next, Watwack’s Tasatar.—Those who have not en- | and on the following Friday there will be a grand dered the wholesale fun produced by Mr. and Mrs. | ball. These nights will be similarly observed during Florence in the Protean piecé styled “ Working the | the remainder of the season. Oracle” should go and see them this evening. Mr. In the meanwhile dancing is vigorously kept ap Florence wit afterwards play Tim Moore in the | in the parlors of the leading hotels. The music in “ Trish Lion.” = of them is ome —— or eeceemn pe merit Asenicas Mvsevm.—The heterogeneous conglo- perfection of ensemble the preference must be meration of animals denominated the “ happy femal. wen to that ofthe United States. The fine band of ly,” and the numerous finny inhabitants of the | U is establishment plays as usual in the grounds for “aquaria,” continue exceedingly popular, and most | 80 hour or two after dinner, and, combined with the deservedly so, for they certainly afford much food | beantiful prospect and the cool shade which they for reflection as well as amusement. Wyman, the | fford,1 know no more luxurious manner of indulging wizard, is to perform this afternoon and evening. in the dolce far niente than in listening to its strains. apd te Legisiature arsombled, they proceeded to con | sirable and porsibie’ There is but one mi ‘a very desultory marser, and may haveomitted | jas borne our flag far as the ocean bears its foam, rier tne trite of those compromise speaseres nad tas | Mitate seeeaukl’'be oblsised, ‘sad 'taat’ Suse. ts | sxe pouis wbich T decid to discuss, and way here | sn cansed the name and the character of the Uni princip.c® upon whieh there were preticated. Aud what | by abolishing the Stale Legislatares, blotting out Slate it On others than I could have wished. | 1.4 States to be known and respected wherever was the result of thetr action? fney passed reso'ations, | sovereignty, merging the rights eud sovereignty of mind wo aporal to the people against | +0. is wealth enough to woo commerce, and intel- first revealing the Wilmot proviso instructions, aod in tied | tbe Staten ‘in one consolidated empire, aod vesting Hon bas been 1000 eninge oes | ligence enough to honor merit? So long as we pre- Acopied another resolution, in whicn they de- eo wae 4 . serve and appreciate the achievements of Jefferson clared the great princi which esserts the at ‘y, lance, with @ portion “ pf fy py sinus fetera: ofice houders. I istesd te | and Adams, of Franklin and Madison, of Hamilton, h thou Own institutions. fhat resolution is as fol- urmy wherever | meet them Cheers.) | of Hancock, and of Ratledge, men who labored for lows:— be free. then negroes will yore I hey ceny the alliance #bile avoloing the common | the whole country, and lived for mankind, we can- ed, That our liberty and independence are based | OT Dowhere; then you will bere ® Mawe porpire: Dol yee these men #Roare trying wo divide the | not sink to the petty strife which woul! sap the Tiget of ths peop'e to form fcr tbemenives such a | every State or none, then you wi!i have uniformity in wil | OFReCTalic party for the purpose of oleoting « repablicas | fonndations and destroy the political fabric our fa- Exrremrss oe they may choose; tha: this great prinsivie. the | things local apa comedic, by the authority of toe jederal | Senater in my pl ich the agents, the | 4)... erected and bequeathed as an inheritance toour the bleed of oe eslora® ought to re siiea'ea vy fours | covermment But, whew you attain that uailormity you | Vols the Nubia Mi eued tox tone | posterity forever. Since the: formation of the consti- ioe ourbt tobe applied to this pow: | Will hawe converted these thirty-two sovereign, inde- | Brews: when the rep power. (Sriea | tation, & vast extension of territory, and tho varied sean rays deal witb these | relations arising therefrom, have presented problems ny Terriory of th« United States of | peddend states inte one consolidated emoire, Jor &l goverr Ment or Btste constiiation, provided | formily of despotism retgoin, tru: “That's tru ‘ a ment so established bail be m pubiicaa and Dreadth of the laud altied foroer just as ‘ats Gealt with the silies | which could not have been foreseen. It is just cause -oop" P ‘The proprietors of the Congress spring are making F win ihe oonsteaton of tee Untied banes "| wet’ usa great apsiome ) from we tae Sebaat | het “bey fred a | for admiration, even wonder, that, the OF op oe eect ‘of thelr natmons toni, | 22 improvement which promises to add greatly to declaring the great priaciple of self. © drives irresistibiy to tae ondside et the common enemy. di . stop in- | the fundamental law should have been found so fully Me Fox, Backworth, White, © bell and other the ng og and comfort of the spring house. yom bie to the Territories and now 2 ae 5 ity, variety in ali ou cure rit bit a Freccloman, aa Englishmen or ® | siecnate to all the wants of government, new in its jenn af meds int in the 0} naar aueenee and | They have removed the brick flooring at the of Representatives of this wetitutions, is the great sateguard oar | TUFK: BOF will T stoD—(\80E Mer an ete a eee ha | oTsanization, and new in many of the principles on | 44,4 whole will close with the toe I ic farce of A, | Tear of the latter, and are laying down a marble tes- vote of eixiy one inthe affirmative to or vm, mad that the framers of our jastiistions | PF sball I slop to inquire wheher my bows hit | V1.1 was founded. Whatever fears may have | jvc "Wk Wir gunn s ia te is a ba selated pavement in place oi’ It they would negstive Tous you Gnd thas ao expr sine, sagasious and patrivde ben they made | ti? pa saree | eT ca erdin tu Caneert Mite the mE | cuce existed as to the consequence of territorial ex- ‘Trip on the Hudson. cover the latter by an extension of the eatin Sant ccollen lop the repuvataonsnecs ot : wit Orage fer comes ox RB. | Be] caratic party and its nomi- | pansion must give way before the evidence which self, or even by an awning, they would render it « B ibis qu y - " ; gooey ““bravo ”) Ido not ioctude | the past affords. The general government, strictly | Saran Litrirs at Stxo Siwo.—The Sheriff and | pleasantly cool and commodious place of reunion for approsebes bearer to cosnimity than bh legieletwre twe power to make afl local aad domes cbialced Ob @ny COBtoVerted quest ic ibetitationa to suis the people i represented, without eve in this remark. Such of dto its delegated functions, and the States wes entered on the journal of tue Leg interferenoe irom any other State or from the geaerai | '0¢™ as are Semocrats and saw their demoorasy Dy re- in the undisturbed exercise of all else, we have it has remaiced there from that day | Congress of the Union, If we expect to mainigin cur | "TNX inside of the cemouraie organization Sed UP | » theory and practice which fits our government for party who attended Sarah Littles to Sing Sing have water drinkers. Another addition is also mach returned to this city, and report that she hasassumed | wanting to complete the approaches to this spring, the attire of a convict and begun her labor for the | and that is a covered way from the grounds of the ig instruction to her Senators and & re- | liberties we murt preserve the rights and sever of | Dertng ite worsiuese I recogaim as demoorria, bubthoee | iinmeasurable domain, and might, under a raillen- | State. The fact has alrendy been alluded to by one | Congress Hall to the spring house. When the sun - who having Deco “efeateo lageie of the organization, go y representatives in Ovagrest to cary out hes | the Staieg—ne, mak malataln and Garry out RALETOR | Soc cna terayt 0 diviao and deatroy the perky m | Ditm of nations, embrace mankind. From the slope | ofthe papers, that ahe was attended to the depot et | is at ite helght the efvrt to cram oven this short die leaders, have coased to ve | Of the Atlantic, our population with ceaseless tide, | the time of her departure by certain persons, among them Ann Mack, a female who has figured in our | be courts as the keeper of a house of ill repute. We ‘The visiters are pouring in here very fast: and to- are told that this woman took a lively interest in the | day being Saturday we are likely to have an uonsual- — the protection of an umbrella is not to it of. which stepped werd | Concert sith the + pu%eas d cocauem appeabte amelevarp ences, aren asel, emphamenily embocied ee) ae nel oe to the eiliet army whove avowed | bar poured into the wide and fertile valle np siike by Wigs aod democrats, in which i | the Kansas Nebraska bil, and vinoiepte: year by, the wee! the repnblienn-veeet by dividing end de. | Mississippi. Ite eddying whirl has passed to was ccared to be the wist of our people that thereafter | refusal % bring Katees into the Uj ‘att Cemocratic party (Cheers.) My friends, | vast of the Pacific. From the West and the Bast, tides are rashing towards each other—and the ple ol itories should be lef porteetly f Gistaatefal to her people. (! oT ave extavated mypeit, (erten of ‘don"t atop yet,””) case of Mrs. Littles and the Stout family when the; large secession to our nuinbers. The United the pruple o the Seer ter ee cease tasnitacions’ te tna | Woe emonseet. vy lar” Lindoid' te nie ipseik somo oad, 1 certain y bave fatigued Yon, (m0, 90." end “lee | ioind is carried to the day when all the caltivable | Were first arrested, and Sextus tanses ne sent ten averages an addition of ‘(ty a day, and. the ‘own #8), sod that no limitation abould be placed upon | crusade ogainsts the Sup o v 00.”) in the long and desaktory rem) i 7? | jond will be inhabited, and the American people will | ed to their wants and su some of their neceasi- | other hoe in proportion. Already the namber of that righ! (o any form (Tremesdous applause.) Henos, | on account of the Dred Sobtt male. (660 OR OD EET: we rt et Toe eek t | Sigh for more wildgrnesses to conquer. But there is } ties, Ann has ¢ upwards of fifty dollars ly exceeds that of last year. Amongst wha\ war my duty, in 1864, when it became necessary to ho fs vow two ratte since | beve been bh rh hone @ hysico-political roblem presented for ourso- | wince last fall for ‘clothing and other purposes, in last abvivale ot ale eotablichenste axe the Mane. Dring forward » bill tor the organization of the Territories sue Dave 6 right too Ile oneh (Gomerwuen nave oe oppor. | lution. Were lt purely hysical, your past triamphs | existing Mrs. Littles, who was, we understand, a | ©. M. Conrad, Frank Granger and Judge Kent. Mr. of Keseet oe tiunau puabeem te vous pebemey ialiees stranger to her before the arrest. What the motives | Guthrie, of the treasury, is stopping at the Union. are for this course we know not—perhaps it is be- Atte al ey fee ee Mra. ee Sanatooa, July 11, 1858. loned in a few months, and may repay four- | Raitroad Accommodation at East Albany— Trip fe id the kindness she has received. When Sarah Titties was taken to the cats on Tuesday night, to go | Tm Springfield to Saratoga—Arrwal at the to Sing Sing, Ann Mack and some of her associates Union Hotel—No Clergymen and Good Cooks— from the Corahil subarea appeared, Soro. A man | Poittica Dull end Pigols Active—A Pop of Bre m ny, who ap; an old acqiaintance 7 ‘, ‘i slo. Ws FO aay red a tottle of champagne, took itinte | sidential and Gubernatorial Fossils— Village , , ong you face jd ml t little doubt of your capacity to sol wo tbe [llinol® platform, to your standing iasteuc- | (bravo)—cither o» soovunt of ianity o meeting you face to feoe and addressing you oo | would leave ba’ . june your Senmtore, pee with almost entire Se ‘which teey bave proncacced irom that bench, | More than one oorasion defore the ag pon ne ope it. A community, which, wen bons ee = seen A unanimity, to incorporate in that bill the groet prin | (Good, govd,” and enthuniastic soprause ) Tho | (Crive ut“ We hope so” ) — y Loe a thousand, conceived the grand project of crossing ciple self. government, declaring ther Mt was | Conmituiion «f the United states has provites | ' yeu—jurtice to my o negs demands t—net mY | the White Mountains, ‘and, ‘inaited, save by the «the tree intent aod mesning of act not to le- | that the powers of governmons (td the cometia. | Fretinae for the welcome you have extended w me 09 | stimulus which jeers and prophesies of failure gave, gisiate sinvery into aby State or Territory, or to ex | tion of osch sale has the sama provision) # thin ovcasino knows no boaads, sed con rived by | successfully executed the herculean work, might clade ft therefrom, but to leave the people there- | divided into them departmente—executive, logis! no largonge « own commend, (Cries of fe aid Weil be impatient, if it were su ‘a that & physi- ‘of perfectly free to form sod roguiate their domes: | jodwial. The right ana the province of expow our duiy.” and cheer) I see that Tem teraity a} | Will be im pivas before ua t00 ee pny? pon tie (netitutions in thelr own subject only to the con- | Constitution ard countraivg tho iw is vested 9 jo- | HOmMs when emovg my eowtituenta, (Ories a Weicrme : al pi mr aT can coche Onn ae wieuuon of the United Biates?””' (Orie of Von,’ «Yee, | diolary established by the constitution. Ana lawyor, 1 | heme,” “Yor have cone your cuty .”" “Goel.” Ne) This | tery. The history o pac’ 8) cheers.) 1 did incorporate that principle io the | feel at liberty to appear before the Court and controvert | welcome haa amply repaid me for o' ‘ory offuri that f heve | taiis and wide deserts have resisted the permanent 4 ~ i Pree “ ~~ *e ih the punite service during nearly twenty fir xfens ire, and have formed the immuta Lit h ents A Canadian Sermon — The Kaneus Nebr Dil an perbape Ici Aa much an aay | aay principle lan while tbe qaosion s peadig vetore | Ts tu ave pend mies at pour bade. (Ovoer’ | Sic'toundaries of fates. From time to time, under | tex pledged thelr mutaal health. “When the cars | Springse-Financial Discomforts—A Hint to the eines eotala the dootrine in the public policy of ty | opal ton, your opinion, all other opiaions must yield to the | ® Voice, “Vou wilt hold it longer.” It mot only com: | sme able leader, have the hordes of the upper plains | j ft f aiped on board and attended Sarsh Springs— onnr, (Ories of “Good,”’ and renewed appliance.) t aayeaty-of tbat ‘Authoritative edjudication. (Uries of “4 | Peeates me for tho past, but it farnishes an inducement | | ‘Ania swept over ‘the adjacent country and rolled Sing ing. and phd mj — o long vs Jaa Bankers, §¢. then defended that principle ageimst mmuiis (rom one | is right,” “good, good,” and cheors ) I wish you to bear | *P4 incentive for future effort which ne man, mo matter ‘tted to do #0. We believe this state. | A one o'clock train leaves Springfield for Albany jaring 0 i si thern Baroy pectin v i tpl bow patriotic, can fee, who has not witnessed the mag. | their conquering columns over Sou! pe my amy onglodicate i pony apenas fro the ber \ catrvlarand ear iors 00 pre ‘wacae hiftoent reception you have extended to me to night on ay 3-4 Walon S, we few Lo yp eee ow = y ¥ cal law to wi referred, has assert section of the Union. (Cheers) I vindicated it boldiy | What security have you for your property, for your repa | ™9 retern emacs, od the boundaries of ptedy TS people of Cater bei tation Joreenal nd fearlensly , 00 tee Oe er i'Yes,’” Yea” aod | epaotinee thus uepiemen dy ‘ies ooee Orm'y | Font Cownt or 1858.—A teleacopic comet has [ittle now from those which obtained three thousand wae oem fe correct, and it is here made because there | daily,from which the passenger step out at Kast has been considerable talk aboot the afair, and a | aibany at about 5 P.M.; and when they do, they ‘ion of the public desire to know what did tak Pisce nt the time of her departure, ‘Sundry ‘re. | ind themselves in the hottest, dirtiest hole ever when ‘assailed by freesoil tr ad defended | rendered by the tribunal known to the constitu. | been discovered at Perth Amboy, New Jersey, by | years ago. Rome flew her conquering eagics over | epectable citizens, including married men, had beon | called a depot. Tt is a disgrace to the companies tt ae boldly and when it was attempied to be | tion? (Cheers.) Ido not chome, therefore, to go into way | Mr. Henry M. Parkhurst. His observations of it, | the then known world, and has now subsided into conane with furpishing that bottle of wine, and | and the age. Wiolaied by the almost united South (immense ap- | argument with Mr. Lincoln in reviewing the various do | communicated to the National Observatory, are as | the little territory on which her t city was origi | with other indiscretions, some of which they may be from & ld is quite interesti plea.) myself bo you on every amp im Tilt | cisions Which the Sapreme Conrt bas made, eisher | follows:— nally built. ‘The Alps and. the Pyrences have been | Zuilty of; but we believe the wine waa purchased | _, "he Toute ean ; ia Seren, Nort eer Eiicweree'! cpeut—ant | po ime ef sgeuies Son tan imme of tas mm HAT Teac | table to restrain imperial Franco; but her expan- by a Albony man-—Rochester Union, July 13. — be. gebboaren Salen a jn tho Unitet Gtatos Sena " every | Bupreme | Court upon a consuitntonsl question | June 20a 9 o 9 88 42 oF oA S ooked with, bisod, nd thors mountela Vins ovegh many valleys flanked dy wooded hills pA . 9 | Tam aware that « ; im ae a ae Z M | Havee are the reestablished ‘Iimits of her empire. | | A Frwaue Casantanca.— Among the Seo end lin hendeed fest high. or 0 qrent part of }--—d mo more, said fF Oy Oat On isorvedl by Me Pergisen at the | Shall the Rocky Mountains proven dividing barrier to } lost on the ill fated Penneyivanis was an old indy | tive and tx Mien ty 5 © o | Perfect jutioal 6 National Obeervato the tof the 9th. The | 8? Were ours a central consolidated government, who, after seeing her husband and children instantly | the way we entirely escaped the dust. At Albany ee, excepninn, — , instead of a Union of sovereign States, our fate | hilled refused to be reseued from the wreck. She | we changed cars, and curved along the river side on - by cireutmpention, of by aoy | aa apes! from the dec'sians 0” the Sa sty allow | M1. Wash —=R A—~ — -—aeDogpan—| might be learned from the history ¢ Ce Fe es a yee — Arve 1 end the | a micorable track, in a dusty, ricketty eat. At Troy Steer means, ia my power to provent It. (4. hae ‘toes baer Uawo Jusicen of the “se Hoe to oe Fe) hh os een Re ben oerenm Pach Sate having fame fato that hod ‘befallen her family. She had | we wore transferred to another train, in a magnifi- ) Lee gabe to you, my feo CO a of | Lincoln, re ste beara’ mo, reston we un (et: M” | “Tho comet ts incrensingdts right asconsion and | sole change ofits local interests and domestic afars, | been blinded by the fying fragment, 40, ros Any | cent depot 200 feet long, lofty and wide, and after Ihave Fer,” and three tremendous cheers) Yor, my | sition Was malo whon | war aJ moving northward in deciination It has a bright | the problem gg —_ bes, besa meri to Siting SUT Oe, 708 OES wreak on perished backing and filing and stopping and fussing for 1 it oo4 fal ai » Ub tw D HO baIBK Laat fect adds | nacleus,and blesa nel e ele’ 19 is ms , safe and exsy commun , Trib , ” we . srende, | are rates tion te my w oo ae ay om greew ewe mA on aah w yw the segue hs (ae pene tng sii ea cada tion for mad the Atlantic and the Pacific, will g in the flames. —New Albany (Ind.) Tri . shout twelve miles, received the Albany passengers ieee