The New York Herald Newspaper, December 9, 1859, Page 3

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} | eam, 736 foot hold ind rigged as a pik = Jeng, 88 feet beam, 30 for 3 ree Woske—ke ab respest earns) 96 r , Crees Ve | ee OO ve © oylinder, 4.200 sipke, Cor. 14.—gchomercactas, 27 tons, beilt 1) Cpartes fener ACo., New (rleans, of live Oak, &¢. intended pate cbe (pong es, trade, 108 feeb jong, 7 fect beam, 6 feet 7 ‘Mov. 2.—Mail bet Nettie Merrill, 100 1 ail} for the Hawaian yovernmet, of oak, o., 62% . 1g, Bl foot | BON SHIP BUILDIN\—aEDEN & CO. NPOINT. Garr. 11.~The irongide a ‘wheel st: ) Alabama, ‘Dalle for Caytain Jameay, Day, to gr gen New Or- Jeune and Mobile, Bho\s 790tn8, "0; jong, 82 feet Deam, 10 bet hold. Madjnery by". tron Works, | @omsiating {f ‘one low pregure bolle”, ‘|. cylinder, 10 fees stroke, Wheel 30 fofh in diame Het face. | nthe Stoch an ieee nat yet mam fy built for the ‘Froshing, Pointand New eamboat Com- y- by the Morgar'";, Works, She isto 260 tons. frame tobe rm. 4 Angle tron, 8x3 6-16, placed onan average of 2) h apart; every al ternate frame 4 oor has a ver‘), 12 inches deep, Hivetted to the kme, making @° . / thwartship gird- ers, which are y bound |... by six wrought iron fore and Ions, mak: |. yottom of the boat a thorough » The «plating consists of ‘sheot iron from % © § . sh. She is to have &@ wooden deck aii deck fri whinery to be one ‘vortieal beam cngie, 36 inc ¢, 10 feet stroke, one Jow pressure ftup ad tabub: ©. BM. DELAMAPAR, THIER: </') STREET, EAST RI- v \ ie Nov. 28.—Tlo ton sere Jer Matanzas, built for ‘Mora Brothers Navarro ¢ ar New York and Ma- tangas trade; 90 tons, 2.‘ : » deck, 29 feet beam, 20 feet 6-12 hold; propeller ' w Diadss, 14 feet in dia- moter. Macbipry conr ne direst acting condens- fmgengine 56 lphes i, .¢, 45 ich stroke. This ‘vesnel is the firs\iron + / built in lhe United States, and haa beon corptrac nformitywith the English Moyd’s rule fran AD >) umship. | \ © 500K. A schooner of abo ps is on th stocks, particu- Jara of which capn0 ortained. HOM} 0 JERSEY OFy. ‘Nothing is going dner place, exepting repairs to We learn that © ..46 for two stdmships for the Southern trade ¥ * wafirmed shortly the particulars che National Domoeratic APPOINTMENT ©: | )AY FOR HOLDINGTHE CHABLES- IN CONVENTION. ‘The Nations‘; »cratko Committee mo in Washington, ‘at Willard’s Ec: 9 Wednesday last, altwelve o'clock, Parmankte |’: owing noloe:— °: he Matlohl Denaoorait G y ted. A a SMALLEY, Chairman. The ( my AW : ‘0m arsembid at Cincinnati, June 12, 1956, ordered ‘mah metab of the Democratic National Commit {have to substitute for himself, for ‘the tim: ey to attend the meeting of ae or or to act it his stead specially or gene- ‘The ru djourned until seven o’¢lock the same evening, L.$ Dour the folowing gentlenen responded to call, thom wore substitutes for absentecs:— ba eet Ohio—Mr. Val t fermen Kentucky—Mr. Caldwell. —, ‘ioe ‘Tennessee—Mr. MoGarrack, @oane ‘rate, Thing =r er. New ¥« ‘Mr. tt. Delaw: eve i boc ‘eDowell. Jowa—Mr 8 Car's Ts cadale — Galtortie Alabare. #4; 2 Kedale. P Misaiet m5 na Laaiaeo : rh i vee aif considered the 16th of May as quit early ‘the Convention. he stated that it was im- Iie! from South Carolina to be present Dossib': ">. (m4) in viey of all Jogal. business, being then Before ‘aso thitseason of the yoar as the most — : of Kenticky, proposed an early day in April 0% Ponueylyania, suggested the 17th of May Mr. aw, a aaking forthe delegate from New York, * June, the 0th, holding that Charleston is ba ar ing the nonth of June. bay ‘nought the interests of tho party do- o- vominathn, suggesting that the demo- = by placing their candidates before the OFM oy day, ‘ ee ‘os concurred with the gentleman from “7 sired an cai 4 - xe n carly day. He thought no con permit a delay, believing that the sideratio = so¢ratic party will be more surely healed Drewobet > e0.5 of the delegates, aud an early choice. by ap ea) © i Pregnant with interest to the country. ‘The next 5 « whe Pec , o> S'ppi will not submit to a black repub: 2 ru a, also urged a meeting at an ear- Mr. Tao warm in advocating rH early day ly aay em de wanted br «mime to prepare for Goi ® the country has ever seon. for the gree!’ that evils would arise from a toe Mr. Acuw wd not the danger of bsttling early nomin: ‘wo candidates arise in this carly erin dot \e sugpysted a lator day. oan is © Sosy advocated as late a day as June tk, urged the choice of an earl Mr. Scuais, itkta Convention. He knew the ay, in Comeau. democrats, und hence thonght devotednessof New « ory would remove the objection the selecvor.of ar ‘ Inight be brought forward if to an al hel f, from fear of sickness. He the selection be: . uifigtage to the party. thought a long be } ampshire;#uggested that a con- won Saas 4 »shapa remove one of the deloga- Eons Ne if wo, he would. yote for @ lato ¥ ‘e would not act as delegate to % Lean all the Sjates were not repre- poe Ard . wait until such time as every State can bo oo) od, and whatever migut be the re- a there would always live in Mas- d men ready to sustain the South 8. Therefore he moved to select a modate all. jroud to listen to the patriotic re- ‘Mr. BaRxsp. sn from Massachusetts, Nor were marks/of the v to the constitution untimed, for, or Banks, or Seward be chosen United States upon a sectional and sippt would not submit to an abo- hosup platform «1 rather part company with many pay Pa " Nerth than submit to be trampled uaes, black re za, hoped ail those fears wero un- ot Key think black republican power to be jound a , ooubt another twolvemonth would ped mon gry of the soundness of democratic Principles. the selection of the day should ron “om non slayeholding States. +4 BRS 1 gentlemen to consider the im- rt) the Wuiwewne Of a proper time for holding tho R weution, no matter where it be, 80 it is in time &¢ eugute a democratic success. He eald a fow & ‘Worcs iw reftrenoe to-tho det8rmination of Ten- megloke joyal to tho domccratic party, and was will- ing, PY Way of ending, Watany day svould be cho « Vaitanpiuam, of Obio, referred to 1856, but for the elegion in September the democratic y iy Penneyivanis would havo been dafoated. . Bust did not want gentlemen to become nervous. was not going 10 & stump spect, He’ only + ld that if gutlemen wish nim they might Mr. Warp, of Ponnsyltania, did not Ik ion. ‘woult only ay thatlf the time noua: oscar Mvory abused State should dud the slow, sleepy State of Pennsylvania ready to Sonne ee r ¥ ee ‘Vanatet, of Now Jeriey, thought the Cor should aot be earlior than April, nor later than ia ‘when precisely he did wot think important, “ Mr, AstMonE, of South Carolina, moved that the 16th of May be namod for the holding of the Convention, ‘A voto wasthen taken upon the 15th of May and tho 93d of April, whenthe 284 of April was pelected as the proper day far holding the Convention at Charleston. ‘The Conuertion then adjourned, The Térrytowm Post Office Robbed. ‘Tarrytows, N. ¥., Dec. 8, 1859. Pho Post olce hero was cntored last night by a man gamed Willian Loungo, and robbed of sixty-six dollarz, Bo was arresté and committed to jail, “es . He itaplored the Lard to pro- "The Great Union Demonstration | 771 *7zerrss rare. Te ‘mnores ue tan or oe NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1859—TRIPLE SHEET. — “ THE CONSERVATIVE MOVEMENT. ameps siwterweni eae 2 purer Tiree inflaence sp the family of nations? ted to put a pike or a rifle in the hands of twenty- | idly increa . used against their tel- hy ’ same wwo, inmates of ip the same boures; With an ulterior invention and pur pose of wrapping the whore community in a civil war of the deadliest and bicodient tyye iu waict @ man’s foes should be thore of bis own household; suppoee, I say, the person who pian peo an plovied this, ana with his own hand or that of bie assoetates acting by his command, bad taken the lives of several fellow beings should be extolind, can- nonized, placed on @ Jevel with the great beroes of hit manity, bay uerisnilated to the Savior of mankind; and all this pot the effect of asolitary Individual iwpulse, bat the ripe truitof 4 systematic ugitunon jerune 1m the South, | of i8 common glories, Sba)) we give up this? vbrebuxed for year#! What, Sir, ebould wo feel, think, | memory of our fathere—of those happy days when the ray under such a state of things? Should wa weigh every | men of the North end South stood u gether fur the coup phrase of iddignapt remonst/ance with eriical accuracy, | try, oo bard fought fields; when thy South sent her and divide our murmurs with vice discrimination amony ‘ashivgton to Massachusetts, and New Engiand sent her those whom we might believe, however unjustly, to bedi | Greene to Carolina—ia all tbis forgotten? ‘18 all the rectly or indireotly concerned in the murderousaggresanion? | counsel that we two have ahared;” all the joint laburs to Mr. ‘man, those who look upon the existing excite. | found this great republic—is this “all forgot?” and wilh ‘oreigu journal which | have read, ia comawotiug ry tbe event at Harper’s Ferry, dwells upon tt as soumthing that “will compel us to keep the peace with the Powors of Europe,’ and that means to take tho Jaw Jrom them jn our jpterDational relations, 1 meant to pat, M the wreck of that magnifident and n-itaally bene! commercial intercourse which now exists petween producing and manufact iriog States—oo the hostile tarifis iu time of peace and the habitually recurriog border dy mbteb i whl veeaminns, T meant to bave paid & the pavy of the United States; and the rich ioheritanoe Already they ure rejoicing in our divisions. Tho Jase ‘The Rev. Dr. Buscoxn, of the Old South church, offered of ali others to the tmpropricty of their course in at Boston. Farnviog conduct opposed 10 the blessed spirit of te Gospel of Christ, which does not seek to diffuse the prin- eigpaustirnen seve dicenineseminannet esas snes pine ment. Ho prayed also for tho welfare of Cradle of Liberty. gress, imploring the Almighty 10 conduet their delibera- follows:— nparaleled Enthusiasm and Excitement | eam eaaudainte: event be and ind ‘apon the | ment at tho ‘as factitious or extravagant, have, | | we permit this last great experiment of confederate re= U P Iled Fruow onal Ph ‘Drought from long retire- | #76t dawnin, of every attempt to any portien of | fear, formed a very inadequate idea of the nature of wench publicanism to become @ proverb and aby word to the Throughout the Old Bay State. ment, by a deep senee of tbe lmaportance of the occasion, | SOF ‘country from the eat, or to enfesblo the sacred tes | an aitempt as that which was made at Harper's Forry was | nations (Cries of “No, no, never.””) No, tellow citizens, tea by nen aad ember, of eect ate | ae a eee cate honeai init’ io want at seston ae the pins | eit rec egy of or ers, ab am now 5 wi r we lo sl own Yourselves, whose summens 1 ‘The Crammax—I Present to the audience one of our few ji ren,” (Loud go. } must ascribe the fact, that mer eves ‘man tn his right Most patriotic fellow citizens, wnose whole life has been and moral Generations unborn sball enjoy its privil as we have representatives of net feel ab Mbarty to disregard. Lam with you to : dove, and if we leave them poor in all besides we will ¢ The Descendants of the Pilgrim Fathors | pte i> Zou counsels, and o.oo y re re parposes of ‘of | devoted to the service of bis county, in the promotion of Pry apirwmey Maer prageryome aT ane wend Bry iv ¥. Pimps of | its and honor—the Hon. and sympa & (A D am Bure if a transmit to mm te 1. im Faneuil Hall Asvrncen Ste? pac ow aveton todos at | yee Loe nd lng npn, fowea by me | aman Wok. hme to sine, ax don | (oud appa, towed by tres shers) the founders of the republic, who, through bis groat ser- a ¥ the real nature of the undertaking) they | Immediately after the conclusion of the Hon. Eéward ‘vioes and the virtues of his life, was elevated to the chief | beers.) ‘would be themselves amazed that they had ever given i: | lane de i maxistracy of this Commonwealth and to the second office | yo, cy tun awn Fuaow Oninee in rang io address | and” those cd’ nit Spears from his own, sistemas | tendency to disenion ho eh sedatelig brcke for Speeches of Hdward Bverett, Caleb mag gl ay one ty tate, wo doyle, Unt ay to you yon, this important occasion, indulge me in a fow grapher, of hin wretched ites hat the nha raga passin: cad) vehement’ opgliane, Ya Oushing and Gov. Lincoln. She'good of big country. (Applause) Thus instructed | {py hing could oocur which would make me Ulak it my | Years” meditaicd. a” general isurression, ia the South. | Yocferous cheers were given for the honorable gontle- Jong life, bave largely sbared in the enjoyment of a ol pe ang ceenien.9 pel eased eyo he thought the time had now come | man, followed by the clapping of hands, waving of bat _ the richest bl » which country obaracter, and mocting mmerte 7. ete Hot : an ihe sieves payee reniy.ig 9 and the Won, | and bandkerchiefs, andevery demonstration that « sin cere ile could. of satisfaction and i When order bad been restored, deity! k, =8 g st gs* z is a nebate. 62 Aerigned. 19: rome, Say: Dares . should not have roe ‘When com by the ve leesings, LETTERS FROM DISTINGUISHED CITIZENS, wen (apne) low cate , that we have fallen upon troubled and | Prosiralion of my Nee tT dhen dled in the publ foe, | wild, but theronght vod ~ The Cuarmax came forward and sald that he would yg ne mp oe newts ote eee Se — a! need Db expectation, no wish, and 20 fat ofever | for those on whose rising Peeaieihes ot Harper’ Ferry: Dereshe boner lateod 2 meeting another of; the glory yy fnch hitherto have been our’ lot, ip the ‘scenes of public life. Ihave ac- | he seizes the national arsenal, where there was a su eho wes entitled rg rieggeiedl, gnnpeosey —= The Union and the Constitution Sustained | cvr"),s>¢ ~ nt iinecnsions, the | cordingly, with the restoration of my health, | of arms for a hundred thousand men, and ho intended, | Citinen of Maareoheactog alot ot oe we anor Of every ; fl apoyo dl nga tector egy ee Participation in politcal ao, } unable to maintain himself at once i ie open country to | sequence of the Prralbedigrdper pho sm id ten ‘ Against the Fanatical Abotitionists tre da ‘gendered amongat us We ave’ been aoc ge sige EE ae as Bl ag ok ger aig lo gg G neue the valten ah large. Cheers) "His tuoogemea” Secenien of oponnn and eat 1 the ‘action and | more us oxbapation ia. raking, "io rally the | To ‘ale of hep and rifles ‘not being otended ince He hareiere Gh pleeaite mr ehekeng tee under which we live, and ite established institutions, but | *fections of my coun! 4 y ing to their attention. r reat which is left almost { The first act almost of the party was to down The . B PLURIBUS OO BE! | these steranees have principally been conte’ (o.suois | lobe of Al bo numerous Kindly asocitions which once | * ‘free colored ‘man, whom , they | were altempling eam: agninand agus: With tas meas s fem, 0 Be 1 ion. (Ap the differont sections of the country together (ap- | to impress, and who fled from them. Qno might | were rapturously checring the hon. gentlemen, he qui key Rory hee plaue. “Sy Recent deplorable events ina pied ‘State have | Plause); and also because, between the extromaea of opi- | a8 well say tbat the rifled ordnance of Louis } pathed bis temples with water. As soon ag he used only in case Aust ie 80 ak SPEECH OF HON. CA’ '. rest bis march. (Loud applause). No, sir, itwasanat- | yr, pussupens—I rejoice, srs i rejloo thee to you on tempt to doon a vast scale what was done in St. Domingo | this occasion all speech ia in the first instance to be ad- im 1791, where the colored population was about equa: to | dressed—to you the living re} ive of @ neue ever that of Virginia; and if any one would form a distinct | honored in councils of the Btate and of the United idea what such ‘an operation is, let bim see jt—not 8 J sates, and of a blood—sanotllied generation after genera- matter of vague conception—a crude project—in the } ion, both at home and abroad, by the red baptiem of the mind of a heated favatic, but as it should in the sober | pattie field. (Applause) To you who, called trom the pagan of history, that record the revolt in that island; the | retirement of years at the voice of your countrys peril mi nd passiong greatly intensified and expanded these feelings, and given itterness and alarming significance to their caress ‘The great Union meeting announced to be held at | avd now, we hear from large assemblies and con’ atiended’by men of respectable character, in| Fanewi) Hall, in the city of Boston, to give a decisive ex. | Sue ecancuae resolutions, denunciatory’ alike of the pression of popular opinion in regard to the seditious Unie 554 Cie SOUT UO ESA GATOR ENCE MEN clamorings of disaffected people in some parts of the coun- | ministration under compromises, upon w! alone tryin freon te boty and womaabn aaa | eer eamen octane ona, pa) upon.the integrity of Southern interests in Virginia, was } has ‘ound it necessary, or thought itt vo offe- au excuse ‘one of the most numerous and completely successful mani- | @ainst his o ance; to constitution, in the fetes eer el In tat acento nny | Se ghee an rr, na, re) part of the day the weather was of the most unpro- Vinanig Domes ees oo as enone Be soe. pro- pitious character. During the whole of the preced- } ceedings motives of Jobn Brown, or of the manly traits in bis character I have pothing to say here. ing night, up to the hour of the meeting next morn- J [M807 hs, Charseler | tre poe any! to img, there was a continual fall of snow and cologne he conduct of ae whore lie ‘has we rain, and the streets were eo full of mud, and the | Justly forfeited to offended law (vociferous cheering) by sidewalks so slippery, that it was wi'h the utmost diffi- Soest It See artes <sin Sieerweasa aaa de- culty that travellers could maintain the perpendicular. | ied that he was guilty of @ great crime. s wi The strength of the galleries of Faneuil Hall was terribly | claim for him s martyr’s fame, will not thank Soy ane for offering in his excuse a plea of insanit, (L iter. tested by the Growds of people who, from an hour long | 'tinariyr's crown is never won Dy an insaoe minds (A). preceding the time fixed for the meeting, contitiued to | plauge and t langhter.) No, fellow citizens, Jotun a Brown pour in to the large building in a never-failing stream, | Was not a madman, except as all men are mad w ¢ ‘in inst reason. (Applause, and cries of ‘ Good.” Faneuil Mall i allowed by those capable of judging} to be | fe dew well whai bé-kas about. Bo did ‘not reckod able to contain from five to six thousand people when | without his host. He looked for success and a con- alge sno. ervadegt Ee no middle usefulness, on which a friend of stand, I think I do a little good—I years, ib augmenting the funds of the charitable institu. vens, Senpenersne. aoe time mae, me eae besos dead and the great events of past days, and cl iu my humble ‘efforts to rescue from! desecration and the tudes of private property the home and the grave of Washington. (Applause.) These, sir,seem to one to De innocent abd appropriate occupations for the de- cline of hfe. 1 am more than contented with the fuvor with which these my humble labors are regarded by the great. majority of my countrymen; and knowing by experience bow unsatisfying in the enjoy- ment are the brightest prizes of political ambition, I ladly resign the pursuit of them 4o younger men. Sir, the North ‘and the South, including the Northwest and Southwest, have become flercaly, bitterly arrayed against each other. There is no place eft in public life for those who love them both. The war of words—of the press, of the platfofm, of the State Legislatures, and, must I add, the pulpit—bas been pushed toa point of exasperation which, on the slightest untoward accident, may rush to the bloody arbitrament of the sword. The great ancient master of political science (Aristotle) tells us, that though revolutions do not take place for small causes, they do from small causes. He moans, sir, that when the minde of the community have become hope- lessly embittered and exaspers by long continued night burnings, the wholesale massacres, the merci Fi Jes tortares, the abominations not to be named by Chris- | ied by years, gg Agee an wre cao Mek tian lips in the hearing of Christian ears—-some of which, } monumental {marble statue of the better days of too unutterably atrocious for the English language, are of } the Republic—you, the fit patriot to premde over necessity veiled ip the obscurity of the Latin.tongue. Al. | thie great assemblage of tie aroused’ and uprisan Jow me to read you a few sentences from the historian of } patriotism of Massachuset's. — (Loud — applause.) these events:— Oh! sir, that Webster and Choate were here In the town itself, the general belief or some time was, | Oh! that Webster were here to utter words of wisdom in that the revolt meee Fettiecrn Bari coenare Pe : oe thoge brave tones of his like the deep thuader voice of the len artial insurrectio a ! tion on the plain was that of Mons. Galleet, altanted ubout J SES. Oh! apenas ie Yancee pase tae a eight miles from the town, the negroes belonging to which had i at erettlaiee: | would be, to rebuke treason together--fo roll epa ts Seamiaed an aay edvaniagen Gath boone e peeverial ox #0. a . ore og the lower white poopie, in speaking of any | bead the binstng thunderboit ‘of their eloquence, of tbelr un indignation and their wrath— (great applause )—-to proclaim abl; | trampet-tongued to earth and to heaven the raaseym- pathy of the brave old Commonwealth of Massachusetis, for the brave old colony, of Virginia (Cheers.) Alaa?’ alas! they are gone! but in you, sir, their companion—their companion and their friend—their mantle has nobly F weror’s triumph. The last hour of bis life fupmishes an } irritation, the slightest occurrence will bring on He scended—(cheers)—and most nobly do you wear it. filled to ite utmost capacity. Yesterday there was no pe tho ee seeming mystery of his extraordinary | the he. In fact, itseems to me that we have ingly, Duton appre the eateig, be surorise, be | this day. (Applause.) Nobly do you wear it, as in such chanee of speaking of capacity at all. The placé was so } rashness. In the parting interview with his comrade | Teached a state of things which requires all good men and | found | BETS See Soe te od | thoughts and words of transcendant’ eloquenes aa you crammed that it was fairly impossible to accommodate | (Cook) he reproached him with deception and trea- | 00d patriots to forego for a time all mere party projects | Witch they bad recently in} 'o0 8 eiake.” Br. alone of living men command. have spoken here im body. las beyond the portals ef the hall. Those | Chery, in falscly representing to him that the slaves | #d calculations, and to abandon all ordinary political } savanced too far to creat wered and bon besod'a | favor of tho peace and honor ot Massachusetia. "(Loud sai atta leat abby cbay Se! sia i aetna arc of Virginia were ripe for insurrection, and would rush } ieues; which calls, in a word, upon all who love the | friend w! panied him, with most of the soldiers; | cheers.) For me, what remains !—a humbler part oo this persons in New York who were present at the recent f 1o bis standard. And this was the encouragement | cOuntry and cherish the Union, and desire the continu. | were killed without mercy. Two or iaree only of the patrol } great occosion. And now, fellow citizens, Jet me turn to overflowing demonstration at the Cooper Institute infavor | to the work upon which he entered—an aasn- } duce of thoso blessings which wo have till lately enjoyed abit te on —_ i Zod, and Defore addressing to you those redestions which of the election of Fernando Wood as Mayor of thiscity, may | Trttis Seuants he invaded, witha hostile force, the poses. | tnd which I regard as the noblest work of political wis: | ,,b2,te ame Alor moto the wise persons mpoted wee | ioe to ofter a. word of personal prefkce, Tet me aouure form an adequate idea of the immense number of per- | ful village of Harper's Ferry, seed upon the public ar- | dom ever achieved, to meet as one man and take counsel | seek their safety in the exchanged the sword for | you most solemnly that I stand here with no” possihip 4 for its preservation. Applause.) It is this feeling that | the torch, "the buildlage and oanctields were everymbere set ¥ Yorsenet Mt [acy ages eb sons present yesterday at the Boston meeting. There } senal, from which to distribute deadly weapons 10 an iene’ | has brought mo here to-day. It will probably bo said, | on fire; and the io which ‘were too, Rernonad: ones enere eee eee ae were several ladies smiling down on the proceedingsfrom J jo" fury, by « sence of oppression and the promis’ ot | sir, that thoeo who entertain views like these exaggerate | town ins ibousens: aeicent quartete, furatsied » peoenest utter worthy thoughts in, bebalf of the tarnished hosor the galleries. emancipation; with armed men, in the w: at ties {i ne Ravan OC she cries. 2 vm 1 coakt Rink fe. = Bad I veintor tas pemersof man-aenoribe. apie jueette, For that, and that alone, I stood: At precisely eleven o’clock the committee, consisting of } night, forced an entrance into private dwellings, and bore afer ‘oceans ce on anand oar Bi ree | Such, sir, asa matter of history, is a servile insurrec- ~~ — — Cio a ee Lomnanrcees, one from their very beds peaceful and respectable citizens as ion. Now let us take @ glance at thestate of things in pl Fepal Gov. Lincoln, Edward Everett, Rey. Dr. Blagden, and a | irisoners of war, to hia military fortress; shot down those | Will be, fatally—underrate the ominous signs of | tion. Now 8 . lie—the glory of modern civilization—that this great re- number of other gentlemen, were announced and endea- | who him, and caused consternaiion and unspeak: | the times. I fear, sir, that they are greatly mis- | the Southern sie, co meters as HOY Mounider over | Public, amid the crim ation ‘of Nortb Tere oth om, as pil nmi | Sc dare tear and ts | yet ule ss | wns asi cepa tg | Sh ame rain, re ee id lable, it in the "1 get up to the platform until the janitors had frequently ap- | the law fal ‘such @ , in the very press exclusively for their impressions, and that they are Tenaes Sy re toate, le, ut nthe | Ife seemed to be on the point: of committing ‘wai. pealed tothe thickening masses to clear a way for them. bea ee Be Bry ae we to gg After some vigorous pushing and crushing, those gentle- ce in the itutions government by wi men arrived on the platform amid the deafening cheers of | $tBers,, the quiet . ind the rotor eee the multitude. any government in the vais wend at like Among the crowd we observed several old whitehaired | 9cts, Jobn Brown, or any * man John citizens of Boston, who were in the front ranks among the | Tan body ofurmed mem, whether Yow oe mang stra Joyal bearts assembied there that day to bear testimony | gers here, from a‘distant community,! care not with . } what motives or for whatever objects, invade the territo- to their love and affection for their brethren in the South; ry of Mi asétta; the pares for dis. dangerously ignorant of the state of epinion and feeling | veful calamity which turned St. Domingo into a heap of sport of national Doody ashes in 1791. There are between three and four | t© how how a handful of talent:d but misguided men in Maseachusetta, animated by a monomania of fanatival de-" « votion to one single ides, poisoned the consciences: and corrupted the judgment of too many of our (fellow fear that the mass of the community, accus- Gomed to treat all alarm for tbe stability of the Clon as | kcal oil feszed anxiety for its preservation as jpsincere, or, if sincere, tne result of gervous timidity, ae united pegpereriad {to rrngye ae by @ urgenc) 2 danger. own - iy eaves pg St fl ities of per- sonal observation, other parts of the country, (though I carry on none of a # the fife; the latter amounting in the aggregate to tor nine iilions, if I rightly recollect the numbers. U ha oes Fine ‘composed, i was. the Ld tn Macsachueetio—that all political iofluence i thie and tohave witnessed the enthusiasm and devotion of | {Zao among the ignoramt and the dissolute’ capture 4 Political nature,) that we are on the very verge of a con- ® | or our fellow citizens thete survivors of some of the most glorious days | and mako prisonora peaceable citizens, shoot down thoso Yolsion whicki will shake So: fleet pen ae a ornee Cuonld have stood aloue inthe { plause, mingled with considerable hissing.) 1 showed of the republic, would have moved the hearts, | WHOM the tay tie eine Meares orate peoples ie ting || the ‘direction im which afhirs havo moved for | history of the world. (Applause.) And these eight or | CHE nae tnumecta, a Ordey, vant te, Common weaita of the most stolid and. abdurete. Aathe eloquent Everett |. cars2. seas, Twins may tat the praeeding won nt few years past, will bring us, to the, catastrophe. }j hine mlllicns, ar vaattied wills to the ‘protection 4° Of husetis sbould resume her proper place ae the + ~<ste-meient cuahi0g POUFO forth their imonasioned J be more formal and the trial lees hurriet, but this Tixnow J 1 pave (heard it urged on formes cocaslons of publio ). OF Oat Conct of government, Which ‘eoortizss thelr | Buide to the United. States 4a patriouan. i ‘and earnestly eloquent appeals to the patriotism and ho- the Ombaneen ppg ome awed would so) tet ete On &s Usual, nud the theatres areopen and ap. | relation to the colored race—a compact which every pr {eben seonrer Se ; nor of thelr countrymen, the smouldering embers of the | borne in mind that Po gg on ge ge the time | Sir, these appearances all be dolusive. ‘The great | sworn officer of tho Union ov of the Statex is bound by | Byte te Bene The tectons we ioe oe of dea fires of other days were oncb more fanned into a the citi fa free. State, family and social moves with 2 momentum that cannot bo | hie oath to support. Among them, sir, is a fair propor. | Of “ 1 Going | the cite ots vgn — Bre, | suddenly . The ordinary operations of business | tion of men and women of education and cuiture—ot | Ponden ‘Why am siroggling in vain? Why eee os siveniesh ovtinat oes gone mon; antag | Perty tinder, the i eare State, while } went on in France, in the revolution of 1789, tll the anni- | moral 08 rotigiows ives and charactors —virtaous fathers, frag IS A ag RNS Sate’ tess . passed the per fo when they could p ang = hilation of the ci dium. put 4 8, 80D 8, persons who would adorn, 7 pe f population and the soil of slave of Vir- thing thet e eed tae jum Laide! kg 28 any station of ay, ny ntry—men who read the | ¢Vil? What are time tide to me? I can play the manifest their thoughts in words and deeds, they gave | gipia. Fellow citizens, I trust 1 need not say, in tbis }, they gar i ey YF, La " sence, that Jam no vent to their emotion in copious floods of toars. One fortpat exit @ by iar we tom, a Hi li venerable old man was 60 powerfully affected when the | sirict slavery to its narrowest legalized mits — ‘and | ‘er than than tuey did in Paris on the Zist of February, blessings of the Union, and the attempts to endanger ita | #pplause)—and do whatever was in my sores toremove | 1848. On the ath Philippe was re which our -—Wash- perpen and ruin—if these things shall be, sale bein; rtrayed, that had be not itfrom the whole land, whenever and as soon as in the | “lying in di from his capital; the Tuileries were | ington, Jefferson, Madison, ‘These | then God rouse pox me te uty, Ihave to perform, lety were being po A e not firmly | Poodneas and mercy of God it could be done wits yet , and the oldest monarchy in Europe ‘had | are the men, the women, for whose eg | and the head and the hand to do and to suffer, according grisped the iron railing in front of the platform, he must | snd safety. (Loud and continued cheering aud applause.) haye fallen into the arms of those who surrounded him, | We are all lovers of liberty. There 1s not a single pro- E i H 8 E f g g i plause. Se ype ea shown to | nt | Pesolved to try an experiment, to age ifthe heart of Massa ‘Ths was one of the most noticeable, and at the same time | */2V¢ry man, in the opprobrious sense of that term, in all waitm, ity to the: - | chusetts was sound. Three of my fellow citizens were in- this vast assembly; ot one. aitng only an ty to use them. (Ap. on) of tho most interesting, events of the occasion. i the ‘crowd cried out, cc Who: is Neveueh adesser? ap) ad ne et a oA we are ab. peepne ans re on te or fein perc ocesone considered a duty, albongl the bet wos macbebetomerine 4mong the most prominent gentlemen present we no- | Which was received with laughter.) Iam not insensible they can do to avert the crisis, and bring about a | and Southwestern States, withthe exception of Arkansas | Constitution, law and opinign of the State of ut ticed Messrs. William Appleton, Nathan Appleton, Rev. N, | ‘at irritating and opprobrious language and defiant re- ams, Hon. Henry J. Gardner, Hon. Franklin Haven, } country. The South has uttered many undeserved re- George Ticknor, John T. Heard, Rev. George W. Blagden, | proaches, and committed many grievous and unjust aggressions upon the feelings and rights of the Peter Harvey, J. W. Paige, A. A. Lawrence, 8. A. Rllot, Sen. Mae umes Wee eee ‘Win. W. Swan, A. W. Austin (Collector), T. P. Rich, Hon. | and recriminations, ungil mutual respect and con- Marshal P. Wilder, Hoa. George Lunt, Col. Ashboth of } fidence between the different sections have come to he Now York, and a number of other distinguished persons, | £teatly Impaired. Hence the danger of entiro alienation and enmity, to the certain subversion of our civil > ‘The meeting was called to order by William Appleton, | tions. The times eminently demand calmness and. conch. ., Who read the following list of Presidents and Vice | “eration, a better spirit, and mutual conciliation. We pet th < ‘have yet'a country both toserve and to love—(applanse)— ~_ a great, a glorious, & prosperous, and, despite of our poli- and Alabama. I have enjoyed the hospitality of the city Tat the Privilege before crowded and favoring audiences, tohold up the character of the father of his country, and to inculcate the blessings of the Union, in the same precise terms in which 1 have cone it here, at home, and in the other portions of the land. I have been admitted to the confidence of the domestic cir- cle, and Lhave seen there touching manifestations of ine Kindest feelings, ive which that circle, in all its members, high and jow, master and servant, can be bound together; and when I contemplate the horrors that would have ensued had the tragedy on which the cur- tain rose at Harper’s Ferry been acted out, through all commonwealth was sound to tbe core—(vehement cheer- ing)—that men need oniy be reasoned with frankly, un- dirguisedly , in order to dispel from their minds de- fusions, and the one idea of fanaticism, which seen (o- be hurrying the commonwealth, if not hurrying the na- tion, into the unfalthomable abyss of destruction. Now, ag Tetand here and see the representation of intelligence, - wiedom and virtue, the strong hearts and hands of Masaa- chusetts, hope and confidence return to my heart. (Loud cheers.) All is not lost! No, nothing is lost, with sae part of that, and ft has contributed inaterially 10 bring abut our present perilous condition. In ail countries where speech and press are free, especially those countries which by controlling natural causes fall into two great sections, each inde} ut local Legisiatures and centres of opinion and influence, there will in the Jay of time unavoidably be action and reaction of word and deed. Violence of speech or of act, on the one side, will unavoidably produce vio- lence of speech and of act on the other. Each new FOR PRESIDENT, tical strifes and contenti . | grievance is alternately cause and effect; and if, | its econes of fireand sword, of lust and murder, of ra- | ®entiments and with such feeling as are 'y EX-GOVERNOR LEVI LINCOLN, ause.) ‘There myer mig eee elas fore resorting to healing counsels, we are determined to Pipoand desolation, to the ‘Gnal catastrophe, Iam filled | ¢xbibited in Faneuil Hall. (Cheers.) And now, gen- sit aa Grin, wif may nt be bet dea wih tbe Calon | rat svar te dary cg, to aoe wan magnons o | whemctaeownich no words can dfunds, There cout Y Comes o own, Mant ak Yalow ‘Giseay Fx-Gov. Morton, Taunton, Sami. A. Eliot, Camb than Gut of it. Division can removo no'eanse of diffe | who bas been most to DiAme, we engage in a controrersy | of course be Dut one result) and thal well deserving the } ta.00 at ue bead of other eiizens, on a cortaln Lord's in which there is no arbiter, and of w! there can beno solution. But without reviving the angry or sorrowful memories of the past, let me, in all friendliness, Ask the Gov. tafield. £. D Beach, Springtield, ” rence—disunion restore no barmony to intercourse. We Peer GUNEY, Nibodiord, George Peabody, Bolom?” | are here to rebuke the spirit of diesension and discord — Pn day—on that day of holy rest—entered, Ex-Gov. Gardner, Boston. Wm. G. ‘Bates, Weatheld, here in this temple of liberty to renew our vows—(ap- think that the welfare of the colored race could by any | fay—on that day eee ‘eason—entered, armed, I say, into the ‘houses of possibility be promoted by the success of such a move- , : Virginia; burst open the citi- ¥ ywton. jlause)—and whatever else qoestion—What has either section to gain by a dissolution | ment, and who are willing to purchase that result by so J State ef i Nulan-Appleton, Boston,’ Ben Pierce Catabrides a ay tay OF" taay Wy 90 decare for curecives Salome of the Union, with reference tothat terrible question which costly aescrife. | The colored population of Gt Domingo J SR; ee es ee ee eee In, Boston. - ¥ 1 i af reatens to-destroy it? I ask patriotic men in both sec- | amounted to le million, while the a unarmed citizens: be er cp ammo good aby erase Mand by the Union. " (Laod avnk apauny and | tions torun over In their minds the causes of complaint | whites amounted to only thirty thousand. ‘The white | ‘vied to establish a revolutionary government; propoted ‘ Which they have, or think they ave, in the existing state population of the Southern Slates alone, in the § % kindle the flames of @ civil cad mer ereacenns of things, and’ then ask themsclyes dispassionately aggregate, outoumbers the colored race in the { bring upon the community and upon f z William Sturgis, Boston, —_C. C. Felton, Cambridge, Gxorae Lost, Esq., read the following resolations:— George Ticknor, Boston. Edw. Dickinson, Amherst. au m , bg ils Me A ieee r ‘THE RESOLUTIONS. whether anything is to be ed, anything to be | ratio of two to one; in the Union at large in massacre, jo ame coh my see ett Assembled at Faneuil Hall in the city of Boston, on J hoped. by pushing the prescut. aliesation to that fatal | the ratio of seven to one, and if (which Heaven avert) | Sd were peo lr i HL Tene. Cartwright, Boston. Geo. Marsa, Barnsiable, Tf this 8th day of December, 1869, in oonsideration of recent rng, from which, as from death, there is uo retura? | they abould be brought ito conflict, it could end only in f 10 tale ot ih aac eerie. wate -{ AUDR): Brederis Melon ens HW Einee tomers? events which have so ‘istorbed the public mind, and | Will the South gain any greater stability for her social | the extermination of the latter after scenes of woe, for J $0 cneaged, he was arrested in the very act of Dlvad, red James W, Sever, Boston, BL. Crocker; Ssunton which have given just occasion for the expression of pa- | system, any larger entrance into the vacant publicterrito- | which language is too faint, and for which the liveliest ed 2 tt ner tena doe + Be wae Charles Wells, Boston. -—»—-M. P. Wilder, Dorchester, triotic sentiments becoming our principles and obligations: | ries? Will the North have effected any one object, which | fancy has no adequate images of horror. Sach being the J £0 @" me = 'y b= justice Com- James W. Palge, Boston. Lorengo Sabine, Roxbary, it “by men of any shade of opionion, extreme or moderate, | cage,some one may ask, why does not the South fortify | monwenith of) givin, oo liberately carried be- a Dr. Deo. Hayward, Boston. L. V. Bell, Chatlestown.” Resolved, That as citizens of the commonwealth of | is deemed desirable; on the contrary, will not every evil | herself against the possible occurrence of such a catastro- oso mee mine es ava due 0 pg pre Beg] * M-Davenport,Newburyport, | Massachusetts, forgetting none of the common trials, sac || she desires to remedy be confirmed and aggravated? If | phe, by doing away with the one great source from which Slo wae pie pein ~ ind jury county. e Thos. MoleyDedhawe | Tiflces, and efforts by which our national independence | this view of the subject be correct, what can be more un- | alone itean spring? This is a question easily asked, and edpeminye ee a before, E.T, Ensiga, ShefMeld’ Was secured, and our national compact established, we { wise—what more suicidal than to ‘allow these deplorable | 1am not aware that it is our duty at the North to answer J the couris of the Stale, Before those coorts. be reoeived » B. F. Butler. Lowell,’ desire to seive this opportunity fto renew and to repeat | dissensions to result in a revolution, which will leave two | it; but it may be observed that great and radical changes J Hot on ly J hy ager only beg ot ‘A. M. Lawrence, Brookline, J te feclings and duties which bind us to our sister States sections of the country in a worse condition than it | in the framework of society, involving the relations of ee ot a ited : peg oan BK. Hough, Gloucestor, -” 884 to to the Federal Union. ds thom with referetice to the very objects for which | twelve millions of men, will not wait on the bidding of } Yon of justice, js aecords ners fa thie, Comssen- ' JD. Growhy Onmnbeien Resolved, That the people of Massachusetts, however | they allow themselves to be impelled to tho dreadful con- | an impatient philanthropy. ‘They can only be brought | Ths hea thea couneal_penicned Je fies See Nath o. bape, ——— many ofthem have been misled into extravagant opinions [ summation. (Applause.) But I ehall be told perhaps { about in the of time, by the steady opera- ase hi Rg rrre ged, 4 fal red T. F. Plunkett) Pittsfield, and action, are nevertheless well disposed in general to | that all this is imaginary—that the alarm at the South is | tion of physical, economical, and moral causes. | COMDm shel rye tsoiemten ern ly tried, Galed Stetaon, Braintree’, bey the Inws, to maintain order and good government, to | factitious, or rather a groundless panic, for which there | Have those, who ‘rebuke the’ South for tle cou J and upon thet fll ane deliberate Teta! he wae convicted. A.Hobart,Jr./K. Bridgew'r, | TefPect matual rights and obligations, and to diapprove | is no substantial cause—fit subject for ridicule rather than } tinuance of slavery, considered that neither the rtd pore eg we ro Pier and HG. Gray, Marbichord” '’ | Whatever influences lead in a contrary direction; and we | gerious anxiety. But Isee no signs of panic in Virginia, sent generation nor the preceding one 18 responsible | UPoR (hat conviction De was, sentan upon that Georee B. Upton, Boston, HG. Gray, Marbiehond, "| Fezret that the main body of our etizena,too much through | except for a few hours at Harper's Ferry, when in the con- | for ia existence? ‘Tho African slavo trade was prohibited | Seteuce “he was excouted by the, authorities of the Francis Skinner, Boston. W. G. Bates, Westfield,” the neglect of their political duties, havo been. often false- | fusionof the first surprise, and in profound ignorance ofthe | by act of Congress fifty-one years ago, and many years | State of Virginia, (applause): And he was executed, Ben}. F. Hallett, Boston. —_H. W. Clapp, Greenfield ly exhibited in the eyes of the nation, by those whose | extent of the danger, the community'was fora short time | earlier by the separate Southern The entire f 8s having justly fortelk teat and to J. Then, Sieveusin, ‘bemoan. 8B. Phinney, Earns councils and conduct do not command the gencral appro- | paralyzed. Iam net eure that a town of four or five hun- | colored population, with the exception, perhaps, of afew f the laws of oe 3 -. of thie Osmyn Brewster, Boston, Nath. Wood-Fitehburg, bation. Gred families in this region, invaded at midnight by a | hundreds surreptitiously introduced, i native fo the eoil, J he enjoye teeta Sores argument, of fact and: Gin Perce Besta,» Ohne, A. Welsh, Waltean, Regolved, That wo look with indignation and abhor- | resolute band of twenty men, entering tho houees of in- | Their ancestors were conveyed from Africa in the ships | Of investigation of law, 10 see if there were any defect John P. Bigelow, Boston, W. Olney, Oxford, * J rence upon’the recent Invasion of the commonwealth of } fluential citizens, and burrying them from their beds toa | of Old England and New England. (Loud applause.) J 12 apr ee all such ‘of Nathaniel Thayer, Boston, R. Newton, Worcester, Virginia; that however narrow, or however comprehen- | stronghold previously occupied, and there holding them } They now number between three and four millions. Has | /#™ as his counsel found to t—able and learn- ‘Thos. B. Curtis, Boston, » Henr, Tacen Hingham sive was the clandestine and (iniquitous scheme, in ita in- [| a8 hostages—I am not sure, sir, that an equal panic would | any person, of any or opinion, proposed, in sober ¢ incre ih sate iy b cpheyrel of law were carried to Geo. 8. Hillard? id EP. "nleston. bere “9 struments or its execution, it was an undisguised assault | not be created till the extent of the danger was measured. } earnest, a practical me! of wholesale emancipation? e hig! a pobre aves of Common wealth of Vir- : T. Curtis, f C Thom ¥ poo al upon the peace and welfare of the whole country ; that we § Besides, sir, if the panic had been much more extensive | I believe most persons, in all parts of the country, ate of | fimia an: 4 portly ra va i iow, I say cr that upon Sohn H. Thoradike, Boston, R.Spotitrd, Jr. Newb 1 | deeply sympathise with the people of Virginia in the try- | than it was, the panics of and brave communities | opinion, that free labor is steadily gaining ground. It — fac' Brown. july and law! , COn- Sota P- Healy, Boston Chae, Kimball "i hadi kad ing scenes which they have been called to pass through: | are notrifies. Burke said he could not frame an indict- | would in my judgment have already prevailed in the | victed, sentenced and executod-—(applause)—that he = EW. Pike, Bee D ‘Alex, Baxter, ‘ter nstable, and proffer them and their civil authorities, and those of | ment against a whole people; it seems to me equally in | two northern tiers of the slaveholding States, had its — is i forfeited life to the jr of the Spate of <i Chas. Emerson, Boston, Robt. Sherman, Pawtucket, | te federal fran our unfailing countenance and | bad taste at least to try to point asnoer ata State like | advances not been ly retarded by the irritating —, eee it rere the fact—for no ier pease W. W. Groenough, Boston, M. Williams, West Roxbury’ } S*pport in the maintenance of the laws of the land and | Virginia. ‘The French are reputed a gallant and warlike | agitations of the day. a) But has any thes n of law could etand in the way—u! meu an Fhonezer Johnson’ Boston, Moses Tarr, Gloucester, 2” | Public pence. people; but. the letters from the late seat of war tell us, | person, whose opinion is ontitiba to the slightest ro. | thatthe State of Virginia had not Jaristiction of all ne ‘Wer Amioegi Dean AheePhaines Ween nad, Resolved,” That generous love of country is the noblest | tat even after the great victory of Solferino, a handful of | spect, ever undertaken to-aketch ott the dcialls of w | Oflences committed. If the tate of Virginia had larie; 3, Hodges, Doswe, Pottery tes agreed ion which can animate the soul of a cit'#en in a free Austrians, straggling into a village, put _a Corps of the | plan for effecting the change at once, by aay iegistative | diction, then ber determination of that quettion Mae ne Bon). E. Bates, Boston W.E. Parmenter, W. Cara. ; and that the opposite sentiment, go zealously propa- | French army—thousands strong—to fight. Ahundredand | measure that could be adopted? Consider only, I pray | 6nd unsppealablo on this earth. That % Of FT Huson Warten, Boston, FW. Lincoln Canton.” | gated of jate by the tanatical ministors of a false philan- | fifty men overturned the French monarchy,on the occasion | you, that it would be to ask the South to give up one | land; that is the iaw of the Stato, a Se ies Chas. L. Woodbury, Boston, R. 8. Rogers, Salem, ” thropy, is fatal to the public peace, honor aud welfare, | to which Ihave already alluded, in 1848.’ When the cir- | thousand millions of property, which ehe holds by atitle | There are many | gentlemen geo & Peurdcver Duma, |W. Doeinen Dercbenée, and deserves the suverest reprobation of every true | cumstances of the cage are taken into consideration I sus- to herself, as the first step. Then estimate } Will well remember how, whens Preee was cop. Tucker, Jr’, Boston A.W, Austin, W. Roxbury, | American. it will be ‘that any other community im the | the cost of an adequate outfit for the self support of the | ‘Ally convicted im the Siato of Massuchvsts, “4 David Seats, JF., Boston D. Fisher, Edgartown >? | Resolved, That the advantages and priviloges, through country similarly situated would have deer affected in the | emancipated millions; then reflect on the derangement of | {tial before ber courts, nertain lawyers re — ina i kactiuch, Boston, ER Mosdiy, “Newburyport, | the blessing of Divine Providence, enjoyed by the people | kame way. (Applause.) A conflict of such an unprece- } the entire industrial system of the South, and all tho | Massachusetts was thal, comin Muyo Son oe rane J Parker! Boston, Pr Willerd, Wost Hosiee.? | of this country, aro unparaticlod in’the history of nations; | dented character, in which twelve or fourteen persons on | branches of commerce aiid manafnctures that depend on | Journals in tho States of NOW fon ne ‘of the Fravcis J. Parker, Boston, — P, Willard, West Roxbury, 1 tua we can be deprived of thom only by purown want of | the two sides are shot down in the course of afew hours, | its great staples; then the necessity of couforring equal | Who prowumed insolent!y to, question the Regabty of the Chas, P. Curtis, Boston, Hi. H. @hilds, Pittaleld, | @ duo Sense of their value; and that intestine dissension, | appears to me an event at which levity ought to stand re: | political privileges on the emancijated race, who boing | %ts of the courts of Maseach piety ‘4 on Terael Whiting,’ Boston,” G. Babson, Glow “ £0 often the bane of ancient and modern States, can alone | buked, and a solema chill to fall upon every right think- | tree would be content with nothing less, If anything less J termino, those cititene Hit ene anion oe may. aa . Lewis W. Tappan, Boston, J. H. Carlton, Haverhilt expose ns to the danger of losing possestionseo inestimable. | ing man. I fear, sir, from the tone of some of the public | were consistent with our political system: then the conse: J the fundamontal penetra Cas Geo Me Browne, Boston,’ J. R. Brackett, Quincy, ” solved, That the unchangeable union of these Stated | Journals, that we have not made this case our own. Sup- | quent organization of two great political partios on the | (Ur own wuimpelne Ort mee Eu oe Set otc Ewin ©, Bailey, Boston; © Wr. Mixter, Hardw.- is indispensable to the prosperity and glory of each and of | (pose a party of desperate, misguided men, under a re- } dasis of color, and the eternal feud which would rage ve- } 12 the trial me ouvir pee Me ao in Hid, Boston * John Kenrick, Orleans.” ail, and even to our continned existence as a clvilzed and } solved and fearless leader, had been organized in Vir. | tween them; and finally, the overflow into the free { UPD oN CNT tC » (Chloe. it happened to me, whom soty banter, Ji, Bowon, sprees enijghtened nation; and that, in league with our patriotic | ginia to come and establish themselves by stealth in | States of a vast multitude of needy and helplessemigrants, | Hcting jurialiction,’ | Renter, heppeedl ta ane nam ‘A. W. Thaxter, Jr., , brethren throughout the Union, we solemnly pledgo our- | Springficld,@@ this State, intending there, after possessing | who, being excluded from many of them (and among | Séminisicrne uy hh oe ae of exclusive. SECRETARIES. bi selves to uphold it with: “our ives, our fortunes and our | themselves at the ‘ded hour of ‘midnight of the | others from Kansas)—(boisterous laughter)—would prove J CMRI" O'or the United States, and not any part of the Finry Colt, Pittefield, Wn. C. Endicott, Salem, sacred honor’? National ‘Armory, to take advantage of some local cause | doubly burdensome, where they are adfnitted. Should finiedietion of the State of Virginia. That opinion was T. E. Chickering, Boston, Wm, ©. Williamson, Boston, Rerolved, That we profoundly honor and cherish the | of disaffectio the foud between Protestants and | we, sir, with all our sympathy for the colored race, give J trie, Tknow it, I know itas well-as I know the multi- Joseph P. Gardner, Boston, B. F, King, Concord. Constitution of the United States for the consummate wis- | Catholics (which Ted to a very deplorable occurrence in | a very cordial reception to two or three hundred thou- { 1) cation table, or that the equare of the hypothenuse of Ex-Governor Lixconx, of Worcester, Mass. was then in- | 40m and liberality of its just and salutary provisions; that | this vicinity few years ago), to stir up a social revolu- | sand destitute emancipated slaves? Docs not every can- J 2’). angiod triangle is equal to the squares of tho two 4 . wd wo are resolved to maintain that great charter of our | tion; that pikes and rifles to arm twenty-five hundred | did man sce, that every onc of these steps presents di sides. (Laughter.) I know of an absolute knowledge troduced to the audience by Mr. Appleton, and was re. | Iibertien and safety by all honorable moans, and faithfully | men bad been procured by funds raised by extensive | culties of the most formidable character—limowliies for | Stee . that Harper's Ferry Armory is within the juried! the United States. Now, then, at the opening of of John Brown, the counsel of John Brown 81 this opinion was incompatale with the trial, inksmuch as John Brown must be courts of the United States, and’not in the courts givia, and to this point of law, founded opinion, the counsel of the Commonwealth rep! providently, inconsiderately and unwisely, that ‘nion was not good law—(laughter and Hause) might be good law in Massachusetts, but hat {CONTINUED ON TENTH PAGR) : ceived with a genuine burst of popular applause. Tho a ey ony out all its obligations and re- quirements. Venerable gentleman; in @ voice tremulous with ago and } " Resoived, That it is the bounden and highest duty of emotion, warmly returned his heartfelt thanks to the | all the citizens of this country to discotintenance what- meeting for the generous and friendly reception which J ever may tend to produos alienation of Koen Aad }woen the several an ie been given to him, From his very heart be thanked | soaiously to cultivate and promote every. influence likely che Ki’ occasion on which they had met was, he said, | to bey | be mainte, Rd sauces relations ® roost important one, and under those circumstances he } Smong the whole peopl @ Uni tes, Resolved, That wo hereby aenounce, as worthy of the thought it right that they should open their proceedings } mnogt unqualified ecetenasocr eres Geomiration and dy invoking the Diyine aiq and blessing. He would, A gygry expression of sentiment, wheter public or private, subscriptions throughout the South—that at the dead of a Sunday night the work of destruction had begun by shooting down an unarmed man, who had refused to join the invading force; that citizens of the first standing were seized and imprisoned, three or four others killed, and when, on the entire failure of the conspiracy, its leader had been tried, ably defended by counsel from his own part of the country, convicted and executed, that through- ‘ut Virginia which sent him forth on his fatal errand, and the South generally, funeral bells should be tolled, moet- ings of sympathy held, as at the death of some great bepefactor, avd the person who had plot . which, as far as I know, no man and no party has pro- = asolution? And is it, sir, for the attaiment of ob- z § i SFEEEE so manifestly impracticable, pursued, too, by the that we will al pathways of treason and murder, ‘stupendous evil which now threal ae yy u we permit this y rcted boay pol fo, the nicest adjostmont of umn wis. fom, to Ko to pictes? «(Cries of “No, no." Will we Dinst this beautiful symmetric form; paralyze tis powor- fal arm. of public strength; smite’ with imbecility this great national intellect? Where, sir, O where, wilt De the flag of the United States! Where our rap- zg i) ilege Z H

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