The New York Herald Newspaper, July 7, 1860, Page 4

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4 —————— ORATION OF HOH. EDWARD EVERETT. Is Popular Government a Failurc!—Re- ply to the Recent Charges Made in the British House of Lords. Tho Hon. E>waxp Evexerr pronounced the Fourth of July oration at Boston, before the manicipal authorities Of the city and an immense concourse, in the City Haib— Kighty-four years ago this day the Anglo-American | nies, acting by their de 6 to the Congress at P delphia, formally renounced their allegiance to the British Crown and declared their independence. re assem Died, fellow citizens, to commemorate Lio anaiversary that great ‘and the utterance of that momeatous declaration, The hand that penned its mighty sentences and the tongue which, with an eloquence that swept all Dofore it, sustained it on the floor of the Congress, coased from among the living at the oad of half a ceutary,on the same day, almost at the same hour, thirty-four The last survivor of the signers closed his er Years later; and of the genoration suilic in life to take a part ia public aifairs on th: tw hail Hus hoir work, Of July, 1778, not on, probably, surviy eighty-fourth anniversary. They are go " pr—ae dny Tt bas grown ia inverest with the lapse of years, ing already to add to its jatrinsic importaace those al w respect which ti ue confers oo goat events and memorablo eras, as it hangs its ivy and plants tte mosses on the solid structures of the past, and we have come together to bear our testimony tO the day, the deed and tho men, Woe have shut up our offices, our ware- houses, our workshop, ¥ Of Dusijiees, may 1 not aid fe party, from all that occupies, lebrete, tw jon in celebrating, the birthday of the nation with ove heart and with one voic ve have come for this year 1860, to do our part in fulfilling tho re- mackable prediction of that noble Bon of Massachuset tm John Adams—who, in the language of Jefler: was “the Colossus of independence, the -— - ite aupport ou poe floor of G "Although Declaratioa was not adopted A eal till the Fourth of July (which has ae ‘cordingly become the day of the anniveray), the resolu- tion on which it was founded passed ou the 21 instant ‘On the following day, accordingly, John Adams, ia letter to bis wife, says: — « Yesterday the greatest question was decided that was ever debated in America, snd greater perhaps never was Dor will be decided among men. A resolutina was, without one dissenting colony, that these United States are and of right ought to be free and independent States.”” Unable to restrain the fa'luess of his emotions, ta all that divides us, to another letter to his wife, but of the same date—saturally assuming that the day on which the resolution was pass ed would be the day Bereafter commen yrated—ho bursta out in this all but iaspired “The day is pasted, the memorable epock in tt ica. believe that it will be celebrated by suc tions a8 the great arniverrary festival commemorated a4 the day of deliverance by solemn acts of devotion to God Alinihty. It ought to be solomnizet with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bondres, aud illuminations, from oue end of this continent to the other, from this time forward for. evermore. You will think me transported with enthasi asin, but Iam not. Tam well aware of the toi! aud blood and treasure that it will cost to maintain this declaratton, and support and defend these States. Yet, through all the gloom, I can see the rays of ravighing light aud glory I can see that the end is more than worth all the means; that posterity will triumph in that day's traasaction, even although we should rue it—which I trust in God we shall pot.” The time which has elapsed since the great event took lace is 80 considerable; the nativial experience which ‘since accrued is so varied mad Significant; the changes in our condition at home avd Our relations abroat are so ‘vast, a8 to make it a needral and highly appropriate sub- tof inquiry, on ee recurrence of the auniversary, edo hope(al auguries with which our indepen dence was de have been fulfilled. flas “ the »Wwhie®, in the language of Adams, shrouded the pom 4 ec July, 1776, given way, on this Fourth of July, 1gpy,-" to those rays of light and glory” which he pre- gxted? Has ‘the end” as he fondly believes it would do, proved thus far to be more than, “worth all the means?” Most signally, as firas he tndividually was concerned. He lived himself to enjoy more than @ Ro: man triumph, in the result of that day's transaction; to sign with his brother envoys the treaty of peace, by which Great Brita’n ackvowledged the indep-ndence of her ancient Colonies; to #tand before the British throne, the first representative of the newly constituted republic; and after having filled its second ollice in counecticn with him who, whether in peace or in war, could never Mil any place but the first—in office as in the bearts of his countrymen—he lived to succeed to the great Chief, and closed his honored career as the elective chief Magistrate of those United States, whose independence he had doue 80 much to establish; with the rare additional felicity at the last of seeing bis'son elevated to the same station. 18 POPULAR GOVRENMENT A FAILURE ? But the life of an individual isf>ut a span in the life of & nation; the fortunes of individuals, for good or for evil, are but as dust in the balance, compared with the growth and prosperity or the decline ‘and fall of that greatest of human personalities, a Commonwealth. It is, there. fore, a more momentous inquiry, whether the great do- sign of Providence, with relerence to our beloved coun try, of which we trace the indications in the recent dis covery of the con the manner of its settlement by the civilized races of arth, the col mial strags’ the establishment of independence, the formation of a co Btitutional republican goverumeat, and its administration in peace andjwar for seventy years—I say it is « far more important inquiry whether this great design of Providence is in @ course of steady and progressive faldluv marked only by the tluctuations eversviaibl-ia the march of human alfuirs, aud authorizing a well grounded hope of further developens with these auspicious Deginnings—or whother there is reason, on the ots hand to, fear that our sbort lived prosperity ts already (a8 misgivings at home and disparagement abroad have Sometimes whispered) on the wano—that we have reach. ed, that we have passed the meridian—and have now to look forward to an evening of degeneracy, and the closing in of @ rayless and hopeless night of political declive. ‘TUR DEMATE IN THLE HOUSE OF LONDS. You aro justly shock How citizens, at the bare statement of the ill-ovened alternative, and yet the in quiry seems forced on us, by opinious that have recently Deen advanced in high places abro Iu a debate in the House of Lords on the 19th of April, on a question rel tive to the extension of the elective franchise in England— the principle which certainly lies at the basis of popuiar government—the example of the Uuited States, instead Of being hold up for imitation as has generally been, the caso, with forms, Waa referred to as showing not the advantages but the evils of an enlarged suifrage. It was omphaticall; asserted or plainly intimated by the person wes ok the lead in the debate, (Farl Grey) whose family trati- cted to be strongly on the side of popular right, that, in the United § e Revo lutionary period and by the undue will be the moat Tam apt to xtension of the right of suffrage, our elections have become a mockery, oar Legislatures venal, our courts tainted with party spirit, our laws “cobwebs” whica the rich and poor alike break h, and the country and branches, given over to corr: . Fiolence and # geno- ral disregard of pablic morality. ‘If these opinions are weil founded, thea certainly we labor eat dela ® government ta all its under a ¢ Sion in celebrating the National Anniversary. [Instead of joyous chimes and merry peals, responding to the triumphant salvos whi b ushered in tho the Fourth of July ought rather to be commemorated by funeral 1 aad we, tostead bells, and minute guns of adscumbling in this other cn its happy rev found in sackcloth and astes we have th lutionary he om have beon swept f govecnment has as away, and our experiiaut of consequently become a f great desiga of Providencs in the dis litical independence and pational growth of the United haa beau premate arrested by our perversity; or whether, on the cv that design i not—with those vicissitudes, and drawbacks, and human (niemities Of character, and’ uncertainties of fortune which beset Alike the individual man and the societies of mon, ia the Old World and the New—in a train of satis eotory, hopeful, aay, tri overy, setilomont, actised in these diparaging ov Stituion, laws and administrati part of Brit fF two coun sot | mepon ir human affairs, tion) and consequently since, ‘rum the increase of pum- | softened by a few courtoous words of respect for the Ame- the new States of the West, consisting bers, wealth and natioual powcr, all the social forces of the country have, for good or evil, been tn action | two or than ever before, there bus beeu such marked degeneracy | ing only at present that the that we are now it to be helé up, not as a model to be | country, which I bave im imitated, but as au example to be shunned, not for the he astouishing growth, during the credit but for the discredit of iustitutions, then | the richest products material and in indeed the case must be admitted to be a strange phono. | maturing civilization, furni qi , it is true, in the | the genoral charge. Men do highest degre tO sy not reflecting credit on the race | figs of science, art, taste, wealth, om which we &r@ descended , nor holding out cacourage- t auywhere for the adoption of liberal principles of jhree of the most serious of these cl y thorns and thistles of lawlessn violence. These fair fruits grow ‘only in eroment. If there is any fecling in Englaud thatean | of public peace and industry, by the rapidiy muptiplying family of States wuich they bebeld in welcome the , that Bencrin I have degenerated, | law. In the outset let it 24 Png thou, that ‘inciple, prudeaco and commou sige break down be eden the further that is it the sous of Englishinen who | the assumed and ass' cause of the \- the eagerness to clutch at sudden wealth. In « of the Revolution—the sword of attack, the pano. have degenerated must chasten the sentiment. If there | ful and deplorable state of things alleged to oxist in the | | ig any eg Bd any place where this supposed state of | United States is as imaginary as the effects are e: rat- | controlling ‘ashington, it sustained our fathers under defeat, and things can readily believed to exist, surely | ed or wholl, anfoundes in fact. The ‘checks ostablish. | the day. main current of private morality in KEug- jided them to victory. It gave us the alliance with it capnot be the parcut country; it cannot be in that | ed by Washington and bis associate, on an unbelanced | land probably flowed as deep and 61 as ever, both France, and her euxiliary arm! and navies. It gave us House of Commons where Burke uttered those goiden | democracy in general ya | before and the South Sea frauds, wheo Cubinet min- | the confederation sud the constitution. With successive swept away’’—pot one words:——""My hold of the colovies is in the close affection | alleged, “ which grows from common names, from kindred bivod, | constitutional cheok of this from similar privileges and equal protection.” It cannot | government is concerned, is the limitation of the be in that House of Peers where Chatham, conscious that [Maen of Congress; the colonies wore Oghting the battle not only of Amoeri- ‘and the organization of the Senate as. can but of English liberty, exclaimed, ‘I rejoice that America bas resisted.”” It must be in Venice, it must be NEW YORK HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 7, rican people. I shall in a moment select for examination condition of the tly sketched, and especial- t century, in tual of a rapidly | arisen in that country.’” ish a sufficient Er equnt Senlens not gather , Venality, fraud and the gardens government” have .¥ apis kind, as far ‘ag tho general ‘granted the reservation of the rights of the sentative. These constitutional provisions, little comme: hended abroad, which give to the amaliest States eqaal 1860.~TRIPLE SHEET. common fy | bribery of a considerable number of the mombers of the | with wise ant Legislature, by a corrupt distribution of railroad bonds, is quoted by Lord Grey ag a specimen of the corruption | which has infected the legis both of Congress and of the States, and us aeene “the state of things which bas it was a very discreditable oc- | currence certainly (if traly reported, and of that I know | nothing), illustrative, Thope, not of“ state of shings"? which arisen in America, but of the degree to which | large bodies of men, of whom better things might have becn expected, may sometimes become so infected, when the mania of speculation is epidemic, that Independence of the United , North and South, great anc small, Maseachusetts aad Virgiut ‘aod thea the largst; New York and Venasytvania, un: consoious As yer of their destined preponderance, ready holding the central balance; Jaware, raised by the Union to their powerful neighbors, joined Hes in the angust bh thoir Suter repub: after isters and court ladies and some of the highers persoa- ages in the realm ran mad after dishonest gains, and this mathe ther toasty ogblation, of Eagihed, Ia’ buon servi Be . in sach matters, was not go free from reproach as t> justify us in attributing the bribery in America y tothe fomo- cratic character of the government," and biographer strides of - progress it has crossed the Allegban the Ohio, the Mississippi, and the Missouri; has its living arms almost States; has unlocked the guiden treasures of the plereing jotic foresight into tae depths of to come, led by & divine counsel, they clang to- r with more thin elective affiaity, and declarod the the oldest | der a large , but Rhode {sland aud De. charation for themselves aut for the bubbie season the ordinary rules of morality lose their Py, of defence. Under the consummate guidance of the Arctic circle to the tspid waters of the Gulf; has belted the continent with rising modellcd upon hers, especlaily the tral by jury—a free | «i ch Bees, at fret inconsiderabie, but alllead- | ca.’ I wit! only add, that of the very great number o | glowing anticipations with which, im the se'fsamo instru | Ceremonies Inctdent to the Dr tad cheap, nad Gonseaseanty al por j peter and nf ' | Sedgos of our federal’ and State court frug 1 | ment, thetr independence was inaugurated, and thew the Hayes Arceie eaeere ae | Spovsibility of the ruler w the pe beral pro- ‘ hes salaries, short terms of office, and the elective tenure | Union Gret proclaimed. No formal act bad az yet bound Vision for popular education, and very general vol- wometitnes have called incompetent men to the bench. them together; uo plan of confederation hat even boon An occasion of deep interest untary aud bountiful expenditure for the support of is not within my recollection ¢hat a single individual bas |. A common allegiance embraced them as parts | aud of discovery religion. If, under these circumstances, the people ‘been suspected even of pecuniary corruption. of one metropulitan empire; but when that tio was | ing. Services wore of America, ‘spriuging from such a stock, and traiged repeat in detail, LEGISLATIVE CORRUPTION. sundered they became a group of insulated and feeble | of the little veasel Spring in such a Sohal, “have failed to work outa satisfac- | remains of this address, but implying in rsepogme { Next im importance to the integrity of the courts, in @ | communitics, not po itically councoted with each other, | Dr. L 1. Hayes. tory and a hopeful result; avd especially if, withim | the general cor: of the country, political, social,and well governed State, is the honesty of the Logisiature. | Bor knows as yet in the family of nations. Driven by a A large number of gentlemen. the last sixty yeare (for that is, the distinet moral, The severity of these reproaches is not materially A remarkable instance of wholesaic o ruption, in ous of | Common necersity, yearmiug lwards each other with « | most eminent inen in the of the alleged sympathy of trial and of danger, as in the mercantile and The her » | for ses. Ow: < the had in Naples, or wherever else ov the face of the carth libe- | weight with the largest, in one branch of the Legislature, | «{ George Stephenson facts which abaudantly | continent, the power of the Union bas conveyed our com ral principles are scoffed at, aud conatitational freodom 1s | impose a very efficient check on the power of a numeri- | confirm the truth of thie remax. After describing the | merce over the broadest oceans to the furthorest isles known to exist ouly as her crashed and mangi«t form is | cal ‘ity; and neither in this ror in any other provi- | extra t length to which preray deems was car- | has opened the gates of the Morning to our friendly ia- seen to twitch and quiver under thp dark pall of arbitrary | eion of the conatitution bearing on the subject has tho | ried in country tm 1644-1845, Mr. Smiles proceeda:— | tercourse; and—sight unse:n before in human history— power. Before admitting the trath of such a supposition, | slightest change ever been . Not only so, but the “Parliament,whose previous conduct in connection with | has, f-om that peeners Ch , the original object of itself so para ‘oxical, in its moral aspects so myurafe prevalent p ley since 1800 has been tn favor of tho | railway legislation was #o open to repreheasion, intor- | the expedition of bus, brought their awarthy princes in its natural induence on the progress of liberal ide: reserved rights of the States, and im consequent dero- iene eck, attemptet no remedy. On che contrary, | om friendly embassage to the western sheres of the 80 discouraging, let us for a few moments look at facts. gation of the hail of the general In | it helped to intensify the evil arising from this unacemly LO agg ng Meantime, the it Frenchmen PROURESB OF TUM UNITED fact, when the Reform bill was ul in i state of Many of its members were themselves | who fought battle of liberty on this continent The first lathe order of ereutsratter the dis. | by tho conservative statesmen of that count involved in the mania, and as rauch interested ia its con- | carried back, the generous contagion to their own covery of America, was, of course, i suttiemeat by civ. | Hzed as “a revolution,” it was admitted that the United | tinuance as even the vulgar herd of money grubbers. ir land. Would they could have carried with lized man, It was not an caay talk—a mighty ocean | States poeressed in their written constitation aud In the | The railway prospectuses now issued, unlike the Liverpool | it the moderation and the wisdom that tempered our separates the continent from the elder world—a savage | difficulty of procuring ameadments to it, a conservative and Manchester and London and Birmingham schemes, | Revolution. The great idea of constitutional reform Wilderness covered most of the country—its barbarous inciple unkno wp to the Engtish government. In truta, | were beaded . baroneta, landed proprietors and | England, © brighter jewel im her crown than that of ‘and warlike inhabi ants resisted from the trst ail coales. | if by “an unbalanced democracy” is meant such a go- | strings of M. P's. ‘Thus it was found in 1846 that not | which our fathers bereft it, is coeval with the successfal ence with the new comers. To suodue this waste-—to | ¥erbment as that of Athens, or republican Romo, or the ; fewer than onc hundred and fifty seven members of Par- issue of the American st le. ‘The first appeal of revo- Punt cornfields ju tre primeval forest—to transfer the | Italian republics, or the Engiish Commonwealth, of revo- | lisment were on the list of now companies as subsori- lutionary Greece, an a) not in vain, was for | England, and at the same Intionary France, there not only never was, but never | bers for sums ranging from two hundred and ninety one Sis sympathy aid aid. ‘golden viceroyaltica | to American enterprise and daring will belong the civilization of Purope to the new world, aud to make sate and sufficient arravgements, for the growih of free prin¢iples—was tho great problem der political institutions, can be sucha thing inthe Usited States. The very fact that the great mass of the population is broken up into | half of dollars) downwards. thousand pounds sterling (not far from a million and a Th? proprietors of new vious training in the sc ‘Spain on this continent assorted their independence in imitation of our example, though sadly dedcient in pre- ‘ool of regulated liberty; and honor of achieving the highest gtory in the plored r a the ‘Nonih. He daid. he. Sou speak as he wished he could of the expeditious of Dr. unex. ho could aot tw be solved. It was no boiiday eno feparate Slates, now thirty-three in number and rapidl, lines even came to boast of their parliamvatary st: be Be Riak te sraskatio empaanee” Verein eames multiplying, edrh with ius ial tateress and d rapidly | Unt’ the umber of votes they could command ia | now, at length, the fair “Niobe of Nations,” accepting a | Kane, of is discoveries, of his heroic fortitude, tent, weary toil and danger, That it has beca upon the | Political intluence, is tell a very effisient chee’ on such | the House. ‘The influence which land owners | constitutional movarchy as an instalment of the long de- | and trials which he encountered. The new expedition whole performed with wo «erful success, who willdeny? | & democracy. Fach of these States ‘a represen- | had formerly brought to bear upon Parliament, in | ferred debt of freedom, sighs through all her liberated had filled the hearts of the country with high expeota- Whi re else in the history of the world have such resuits | ‘tive commonwealth, composed of t brancies, | resisting railways, when called for by the public necessi | States for a representative confederation, and claims the | tions, and though Dr. Hayes had met with difficultics im been brought about in so short.a time? Andifl desired, | With the ordinary divisions of exsctive, legisla. | tie#, was now employed tocarry measures of afar diffe. | titlo of the Italian Washington for her héroie Garibaldi. | getting an outfit, the deepest interest existed in the coan- a3 I donot, to give this discussion the character ofrecrimi. | tive and judicial” power, It ia true, that in. | rent kind, originated by cupidity, knavory and folly. But | Here, then, fellow citizens, I close where I began; the “ebay yond to the expeditioa. It was for him and his nation, might Tnot, dividing the period which has elapsed | 80IE Of the States some trifling property qualifica. | these gentlemen had discovered, by this time, that rail- | noble prediction of Adams is fulfilled. The ques- rs and crew to recollect that glory aud suifering ge since the commencement of the Ruropsan setdementa in | Hons for eligibility and the exercise of the elective frau- | wavs were as a golden mine, to them. They sat at rail- | tion decided eighty-four years in Philadel- | together. No one could rise to a higher nature wil ‘Amcrica into two portions, viz. the one which preceded | ¢bise have been abrogated, but not with any perceptible | way boards, sometimes sclling to themselves their own | phia was the greatest question ever decided in | experiencing their share of trials. He ought algo to reodl- aa cme winch tus followed the Declaration or inde. | éivet om the number or character of the voters. The | land, at thelr own price, and paying themselves with the | America; and the event shown that greater, | lect that he was charged with sustaining the honor of the pendence—the former under the sway of European go- | §) Stem, varying little in the different States, always | money of the tunate stockholders Others used the | perhaps, never was nor never will be decided among | American name. In conclusion Governor vernments: England, Holland, France, Spain; the latter | ade a near approach to universal suffrage; gud the great | railway mania convenicut, and to themselves inex- | men. The great Declaration, with its life-giving priaci- | bis individual wishes to Dr. Hayes for his success. under (he government of the indopendent United States— | increase of votors has been caused by the increase of popu. | pensive, mode of purchasing constituencies. It was , has within that interval, been exerting its inflaence, Dr. mop response to what had been uttered, spoke might I not claim for the Jatter, under all the disadvan. | ation. Under ciective governments, with a free with | strongly suspected that honorable membors adopted what the central plains of America to tue enows of the | as follows:—I feel too wenige | the value of this meeting to tages of @ hew government aad liraited resources, the | &rdent party divisions, aud questions that touch the heart | Yankee legislators call “log-rolling,”” that is, “you help | Oordilleras, from the western shores of the AUantic to the | Tegard it as an occasion of mere formality. I would be credit of greatly superior energy and practical wisdom in | of the people, petty limitations on the r: hs of suffrage are | me to roll my log, aud I will belp you to roll youre.” At | farthes: East, crofsed the earth and the ocean, aud glad to express to you all Se ening ate, it bas for carrying on this maguificent work! It was the inherent indeed “cobwebs,"* whichthe popular will breaks through. | all events, it is a matter of faci that, through parliaman- circled the globe. Nor Ict us fear that its force is exhaust- | myself, but I am unable to do so. is little vessel, vice of the colonial system that the growth of the Ameri. | The voter may be one of ten, or one of fifty of the citi. } tary influence, many utterly ruinous branches and exten- | ed, for its principles are as broad as humanity, as eternal which kins been red for her perilous service by your cat colonies was greatly retarded for a century in coase- | 2¢28, but op such questions he will vote in conformity | sions, projected daring the mania, calculated only to | as truth. Aud if the visions of patriotic secrs are des- executive ittco with a zeal and intelligence be- queuce of their being involved tn all the wars of Europe. | With the will and wish of the mass. If he resists it, the | benefit the inhabitants of afew miserable old boroughs, | tined to be fulflied—if it is the will of Providence that speaks the high appreciation of the cause which engages There never was a period wince Columbus sailed from | kO¥erument itself, like that of France in 1848, will ia accidentally omitted from schedule A, were anthorized in | the lands which now sit in darkness shall see the day— | Our attention, is about to me upon a voyage toward Palos, in which the settlement of the country has ad- | down. Agitation and popular commotion scoff at chee! the memorable session of ."am(similes’ Life of | that the south and east of Europe and the west of Asia which my hopes and efforts during the last ae ‘vanced with such rapidity as within the last sixty years, | and balances, and as much in Ligiand as in America. Ste » p. STL) shall be and the ancient and mys‘erious re- | have been constantly directed. =r gin. ‘The commencement of the Revolution found us with a | When Nottingham castle is in ruins, aud half Bristol things, be it remembered, took place, not in a oe gong the East, the cradle of mankind, shall receive | ever of good or evil fortune may mo, she is to be population not greatly exceeding two millious; the cea- | & of ashes, monarchs and ministers must bend. | newly gath republic, just sprouting, 80 to say, into ip these latter days from the West the rich repay- my companion and support. While a timber of sus of 1800 @ little exceeded five millions; that of the | The form bil! must then pass “t th Purlia- | existence on the frontier, inhabited by the pioneers of | ment of the early debt of civilization, and rejoice in ber lasts it must be a witness of your coad- present year will not probably fall short’ of thirty-two | Ment, or over it,” in the significant words of Lord Macau- | civilization, who had rather rushed togéthor tuan growa | cheerful light of constitutional freedom, that light will go | dence and generous aid. I can promise you me- millions. The two centuries and half whick preceded | My; and that, whether the constituencies are great or | up to the moral traditions of an anctent community; but } forth from Hall im Philadelphia; that leason | thing but my steadfast and earnest endeavor. i the revolution witneased the organization of thirteen colo- | *mAll. That a restricted su! ‘and a limited constitu. | they took place at the metropolis of the oldest monarchy | of constitutional freedom they will learn from this day's I should fail to reach the North Pole, I shall euo- nies, to which the period that has since elapsed has added | en¢y do not always insure independence on the of | in Europe, the centre of the civilized world, whore public } Declaration. cumb only where men of world renowned daring and pru- twenty States. I own it has filled me with amazement to resentative, may be inferred from the re- | sentiment is propped by the authority of ages—heart of dence and verance have already failed. prea find cities like Cincinnati and Louisville, Detroit, Chicago | ™arkable admission of Lord Grey, in this very debate, | old English oak encased with the life circles of a thousand Another Destructive Tornado in Ohio. some special advantages which attend my expedition it Iwas in London at the height of the mania; I shall be my Tot’ to complete the obscrvations et and St. Louis, nu. to mention those still’ more remote, on | that ‘a large proportion military préts—to find railroads and electric telegraphs traversing forests, in whose gloomy shades, as lateas 1789, | Reform bill before them. I have already observed that the ‘wild savage sull burned bie captives at the stake, | Would be impoasiblo, withia tho limits of this address, 10 the matters laid to our charge on the occasion alluded to, The ministerial leader (Lord Granville) candidly admitted, in tho course | to bot hfe) that this marvellous ‘‘etate of things urred with his brother The despording or the unfriendly censor will remind me | enter into a detailed examivation of all of the blem: this tumultuous civilization; out- breaks of frontier violence in earlier and later times; acts of injustice to the native tribes, (though che policy of he government toward thetn has in the main been paternaland | Peer in some of conscientiously administered) the roughness of man- | ¢xeggerated.’” ners in infant settloments—the collisious of adventurers | for Some of the st = yet compacted ae a stable Bociety—dee is of wild | there is a justice and wilder injustice—border ficense, lynch law. ‘All these Tadmit and I lament; but a.commantty cannot | #l! human institutions, however row up at once from the log-cabin, with the wolf at th» | 80d successful in its joor and the savage in the Rye goriiny bode wae into the order and beauty of communities which have been matur- ing for centuries. We must remember, too, that all these blemishes of an infant settlement, the inseparable accompaniments of that stage of progress aad phase of society and life, have their counterpart at the other ead of | by our legislatures, and un) the scale, in the festering iniquities of large cities, the | lated by the mob; in short tl gigantic frauds of speculation and trade, the wholesale | Men and of governments are corruptions, in a word, of older societies.’ When I reftect that the day we celebrate found us a feeble strip of thirwen | ¥ colonics along the coast, averaging at most a little more than one hundred and fifty thousand inhabitants each, and that this, its eighty-fourth return, sees us grown to thirty- of the debate, that, though be conc ‘of his remarks, « to our discredi wise io as elsewhere sometimes breaks down under the lust place or of gold; that unwise laws are sometines tho frailties and vices in republics tions aa of individyals, ‘nm your hearing, that wherever else fan I belicee tt to dieacy, these spocitic arraigamouta of a fore‘ @ountry bad better be let the public pes ‘ishing to put any to free disce proscribe any et ecocy wih o fre apt to assert th periority of th. <wgg thone of all otherr, it appears to mo + tions and laws of foreign nal allusions it of pine? on "The executive branch of « ory Rie “the executive bri See eon the part of the latter they would 9° te ea tolerable insult; they cannot be deemed so atkerive oa the part of the former. If there cbber objection to this practice it would be suf aA ita direct tendency is to recriminition; % of reciprocal disparngeinent om the part of cow members of the legislatures of friendly Stal ain that a pariiameatary warfare of thie kind must i increase the dishiculty of carrying om the diplo io discussions which uocesart! cen States ites commercial aod territorial interests teach and ; navy pointe, aud the war of words is but too nage donde mind for more do ‘we! adapted to prepare the pablic ry POPULAR GOVERSMENT NOT A PATLCRE Let me further also remark, that the # n which I propose to combat, via: that tho experiineat of ernment on an extensive electoral fran Shise is substantia in the United States, and te red upoa " f rapid 4 Washington, 's not only ot abwty, but it vhren ta. Bat The mass of the poy and the alditional it be expec slow to admit of Britieh or ie a upj ar improvable races Qoutinent have ben or have ee up upon recent and high! two hundred and ify lying (m @ stato of navure, uses to eradicate conditions of pr Dack® but those ne this t The settlers of ally conducted to thin & comparative wed period, viz: the last Mach of it. they with no time-hon most of tho physi of the members of the present spots which, within the memory of mn, were frontier | House of Commons are, from various circumstances, afraid to act on their real opinions,” on the subject of the | his were ly much We, too, must it rie eae that, statements made ¢ foundation, in we could ‘wish; thet our political system, like that the bane of II free govert : : party, al roments, works tte ” ier rf Thee ‘4 ove European pation,’’ he observes, were to act in the some good mnen excluded from it; that public virtue hore ular laws sometimes vio- displayed ‘they are in monarchies, in the new world as in the old: equal, or less degree, time must show. The question may bE ay ow om lg asked of na- y beholdest thou the mote that Is in thy brother's eye, and considerest not the beam years, Baw tho Railway King, as he was called, at the zenith of rer; a member of Parliament, through which he it | walked quictly, it was said, “with some sixteen railway bills under his arm;’’ almost a fourth estate of the realm; his receptions crowied like those of a royal prince; and I saw the gilded bubble burst. But I did not write home twoea twelve and one o’clock on Sunday morning last, showed the corruption which springs from heredi stitutions, nor did I hint that an extension of the ri in- it of mark our intercourse with foreign nations."” “ If any same manner, it could not war for a single . Wo garecivel Goa bean, Sepaeted oh xf ot quarrel with the United States. terest, strongest poss: to maintain the closest friendship, we have more than of | once been on the eve of a quarrel; and that great calamity @5 | has only been avoided because the of ; | Country has had the good sense to treat the government of the United States much as we should treat spoiled children, and though the right wad clearly on our side has yielded to the unreasonable pretensions of the United States. eee Stee amen ets eee, While Cincinnati was visited by a thunder storm be- very destructive tornado passed over Springfield at pre- cisely the same hour. The Republic of Monday contains full details, from which we extract the principal fasta. bi encouragement. ‘The gale first broke forth near the residence of Mr, Gwynn, rg haan greag ni in the northwestern which we aim, best that I can do will be no mere than a fair return for the kindness whioh I have received at your hands. I am praud not only here but also in New Y« delpbia, of which I am a citizen, [have received most ve s 38 iE 2 FE to be worthy of this joint manifestation of trust. hope that we sball meet again, and that I shall be abl Suffrage and a moderate infusion of the democratic prin. | the Col’e dg ina southeasterly direction, destroy- | dition, I thank you heartily, gentlemen, and tender te | ciple was the only remedy. 9 ing everything oat ny ii Pat wean, tue | ZUR heartfelt wishes for the’ prosperiiy of you and OUR IATERCOURER WITH PORENGS RATIONS. frame, stood on the east side of Buck Oreek, just | 7°uis" I bave time for a few words only on the * a + J His Honor Mayor Lixcoun was next introduced, and overbearing tone” which ts esta w inten e ‘West of Wittenburg College, situated on a high pent of | He said his Excellency had already extended thre States, scattered through the interior and pushed | that is in thine own eye?” and that # question may arise on which our honor seeet, oar cet ree. ‘4 it Fucton, of Harvard College, was the next to the Pacite veraging nearly a million of inhabitants, ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICR. our lutorests will sue consensien enour part impossi- Tyg Ser irs ait ae bao athe panera speaker. It gave him the highest pleasure as each a well cbunpacted representative republic, securiag | An honest and impartiat administration of Justice isthe | ble” tajared, though stunned. ead frightened, the infant | Grineute oc those ison at ony cae ee to its citizens a larger amount of the substantial blessings | corner stone of the social system. most serious one is an impartial judge in his own case. If we po oe nestling in beddi ‘all Gueeutelons of tho Unit ity of ridge, that they ‘thom the of lio than are eujoyed by equal numbers of people in the | charges brought against us, oa the occasion alluded to, these rather indiscreet suggestions in the on- | Gesolating wreck strowed le earnest wines of all connected with the College fir the feeder et act ain ge | Seay rls ne art ead | Sat“by eases Sess tbe cian uae | near endenenaa ee cate coc, | Sey nt gna ce fe tains Gea 3 and, of | country, fr o the Vail mot—by 6 denial as a assertion—the oe degeneracy, I am tempted to exclaim, “Look around you.”” | States, who orice commanded the public respect at home | would We loft Precisely a8 it stood before; that ts, cach vd ee cae eiie wile in his elty, ana ‘oe | ee ty, and in bebalf of thom he wished De. Hayes ut merery (anne AND ScuRNC 1X AlcRICA, and abroad, are now a) Party purposcs, and | party in ite national controversics thinks iteeif right and | egcape of the inmates was even miraculous.” Seteres Spesiien. When ie Ce senna tae y to fill up the wilderness witha population pro- | that some of their decisions have excited the diagcat of | its opponent which is not an uncommon case in | “On tho opposite side of the creek a roof was taken off Seo Ue. Bapes wesld remember Gat be Sat tie = bere hap nf manga and Katies kyon all bn Taped ss G4 borat a plod ne <a peeve agen ~ a. This at least may bo | the large smokehouse of Leuty & Grant, thence onward ht agate caiaabenarcmeamecaiaateeseie x omary 0 mae; cout ie ces by clection, some annual elec. ided, without fear contradiction, that the Unit itheast ilder: achiewment—wns by no means the srk of tan, were: | fotns Chat tae cadipetes’ comtsied oftaatomertaites | fetter te their totic "we Geren gorere: ce, thoes Mickerica aid ease ore fect ix thickaces’ | qi:tTot AGamas was next introduced. Ho sald that at al allotted to the United States, and thus far perforrued with | jority, which has been establihed, will not allow the de. | ments, bave abstained from all taterforence in European | which'show in the debris the twisting powor or force of | caue® inwe*aum, lad been the messare of civilisation. (I signal activity imteligeaoe ad success, The foanors of | stew and passions of the hour to hs checked by « frm ad. | politics, aud bare confined themselves tothe protection of | the tornado. ” Sula ceeuieet ten citedeh ie teentt nina ee cir descen tan: pilshed moro | ministration of the law; and that, in consequence, ir own and interests, As concerns theo- pokey crainares was eont hope of advantage, dnd better thinga: On the banis ofa rapid guigraphical ax, | ine ts this countey babe Soom mare gobeteete tases. | rotted arcccines on tans an SS an Bie premstace eocuptes by Juanes ete ow for the frst time a vessel teft the Unitrd States with tension, and with the force of teeming numbers, they have, | either the rich, or the popular fecling of the moment; in | tween governments, » contribute to the cause ef te very iehocy of their pes tical cxistence, suo | & word, that the Amerett haces a oa of fn porerger tne yom ca eres Se lly aimed at higher progress ia a generous cly old, ‘stars. not ‘tizens, | ‘to a a ‘poe tion. The mechanical arta have been Cultivated with un- yor beara se thin may be tras | law.” (RD international : usual aptitude, Agriculture, manufactures, commerce, be true nowbero in the United States) | Many of the questions which bave arisen between th deep om gay Bey the bavigation, whether by fails or steam, and the artof | ftis not true in Mageachasetts; and that West niaster | Country and England have been such as most keenly touch expedition. had printing in all its forms, have been pursuod with sur- | Hall pever boasted a court more honored or more worthy | the national susceptibilities. That in discussing these K. McLennan; and ‘solid brick Bi SS ee Prisiogiskil. “Great improvementa have been ‘made im | of honor than that which holds i oloe by a life were | questioug, at home and abroad, uo despatch tas been | ork thrown down; fragmenta’ of ib ents, | When teen Ce all these branches of industry, and in the machinery per- | and administers impartial justice, without respect of per. | Written, no word uttered in a warmer tone than might be | were carried with violence against 1 | for the men of science not only of this city and cous: taining to them, which nave beew eageriy adopind ta | ona, to the prople of Maraachusctts. Sach & eourt the | Wished, is uot to be expected, and is as little likely to cast side of Linssstene street doing morecr teen aaengere | if jottta © aut the world. These were the ra 4 pe. A more adequate provision Its been made for | peuple of Massachusetts have go wish to change fir aa | have on one side’ of the water as the other. | one sixteen foot scantling tht ‘of the Af. Present, which they would be glad to echo if education than in almost any other country. 1 | elective judiciary holding office by a short tenure. in | But that the intercourse of the United States with Great | pican school building: other sections of the porkhowse | Permitted. He would, however, express to Dr. Hayes, om ve tat the cites of Boston, Now York and Fis, | their opin, evieced i Chee Practice, this all mportaat | Britain has, inthe main, been conducted, ‘caruestiy in: | Font or Mel, Tool, sweeping, scress the, whole block, | Geiaer te tas Senne yseesigite seertay the deep, terest population, iS | branch of the government ought to be removed as far as , a8 becomes powerful States treating important sub. ’ " , 7 | which was felt for bis success not be tusensle ai : . rosible beyond the reach of political in luences; but it ta | Jccts, but courteously, gravely aud compiratien bs ext | eens Sane pee eet ot Spring | dle vo the danger attending the undertaking. Bet tay nin any other cities in | Surely the grosseat of errors to spoak of the tribunals of | well acquainted with ibe facts will, I think, deny. It | Gisplaced and partially » eertems Were brave men ana resolute, and went with hearts ¢ United St the United States aa being generally talated with party, or | would not be dificult to pasa in review our principal com py tf fee Tagg BE up to meet the hardships of the voyage. He could wish to represent the Taw in the maig as having coacst to'b9 | troversice with England, and to show that whon sho has | jm the rear part of Judge White’ wae thro | herp waned ge Hema = S Any other coun’ | respected and enforced. Taking & comprehensive view | couceded any portion of our demands, it has not beea be- | down upon a shed roof breaking through lato wy PA 4 Py eh arts havo reached | of the subject, and not drawing sweeping iuferencns | cause they were urged in an “unscrupulous and over- | mont occupied By & ber covering’ hor | wore going better Otted than was Columbus, on, his taste for from exesptional occurrences,"it may be safely sald that | bearing tone” (ap idea not very complimentary to her. | bed, but fortunarely doing ions Bge 19 discover America. ‘They were golng with all the nt Lev the law of the land js ably, cheaply aad tmpartiaily ad- | self), Dut because they were founded in justice and aus- | thrown down in Mn Mocrow's, lot, in Rodger Teh, | cere rents to quite Chean; Wet trove wae, SON OEs pare mend whe we s he pencil “and the elisa of | ministered in the United ‘States, and tmplicitly obeyed. | tained by argument. This is not tho occasion for such a | Lewis Cobaugh’s lot, Mrs. Tor! » | not be frightened at shadows, oat 7 Eel ehnem american Soulptors and painters, which would adora aay } On a few questions, not a hatfa dozen in number siaoe the | review. "Ih a public aidreas which T had te hour of | “Av the foot of Spr stone band Scie them tho imtemabes tarts of tee eer ee nant Ak or ata a astronomers, math a Ce eee See ee | delivering ia Fr hall See," vindicated the cones Christop! thompeon, was badly wrecked, | gnd the at fri _ ae one ~ aR J aliste, al character, the .ikethe ques j Negotintions relative to the Northeastern boundary from nd . . at eee re kare ag 4 tiene to which they rete, bave —— ep 4 Soom =o Con mise tations of whic thoy though phere geiie,,and, wo. bree poy 4 ron good to them safel; ~ » ¥ ; on orld urely no tribunal in’ the world. whieh, like ave been the subject; and I will now only briedly allud ‘ 4 are te pass 4 into e beat dictionaries of the Fuglieh language since Johnson | preme Court of the United Staten, has, since the foundation | to by far the most important chapter ew dean Ficre part, Que woman hore, who list Veen vodfast | son of waters where the flag of the world was ewer a: Ma ater oparate ’ ae of a tribunal « a , bat # whether, in her jaterconrse with foreign uations, Amert h . y amen se ad, PA pepo Pe ——- ae nomen pepe al tlm ts ca has been in the habit tae og an easorapelous and | Sas ‘The brick touse, joining, oscupled by Mr’ Far Sn tor the Dn ino prvtection ot the ‘vessel cadber . ore generous on acts of Congress itoolf, nees the law | overbearing tone, or whether she has been the v ict | ‘ roofed. ‘ ; - ported,” Sacred science pursed, aa dutentiy, and the | toa einfaleration eoextenalro. with Tknow of | those qualitce co the part of others. After the short. | Sarthunssarests, cad Taine soaivored within and with and crew, feuvit commands as igh a degree of roapect ia | no such protection under any other overnment, ageiust | lived peace of Amicus, a now war, of truly Titanic pro- | (uated on the rocks, owned by Mrs, Torbert and Sante ee ee iuited ‘States, as in those countries where the | unconstitutional legislation, if, indeed, any can | portions, broke out between France aod England. In the | were utterly domoltobed oad Che tebe canticand others, | preset ted to the di gcatlemen present. churety t pablily qatowad: mule the Americar mus. | becalled unconstitational, where Parliiment,alicein theo- | progress of this tremendous atruggie, and fr the purpose uarriee aid creck below. ‘Tero ot tures frame Wound ce | 4g ute Temeel will not probably call until to-morrow, owing = ae aden! ry practice, isomnipotent. With respect to i mutual destruction, a success i a r from delays. civilian world. Nowhere, {am persuaded, are | san character of our courte, inferred Seta ten Godliness | Sut Gelges ba evened ents levend Uy tas tne Tewern te fr emg ay en my be se present wore Hon. George Folsom, H, B rere, mere liberal contrivitions Ww public spirited | which the jodges are appointed, the judges of the United | which all neatral commorce was nunihila'ed. ac as takce oat thes seaitence Gear, Munk of the rooting | Prerrepost, isq., and Dr. + Woodward, memivers exact or applied —gno form of polite titerature—ao descrip’ | offices by the earns tenure ae the English fates of the Mined. Wa own dist on the arousd of retail: | ioimane! OF 10, Mrs. Seibert's jot; two chimaeys pros. won of social improvement—in which, due allowance be. | courte of common law. ‘They are appointed for life, by | ation; apd Between thear Conducting frees the | {ated oo the Court Mouse, and a great aumbor of out- | Tim AWARD ix Tux Cask oF cuix Pexumerom Mit ta mmasie forthe menus and iesonrees at command, the | the executive power, no doubt from the dominant party | rights of nectrale were crushed. “Under these ardere and | truiuné® «demolished between Columbia and Main | grnaycm.—In the case o* the iuzurahice upon the Pemberton ited saat ag ot beet tutlsaciors, | of the day. and this Gqually tn both countries. The presid. | decrees itis eetimated that ovo hundred twilioas of Ame. | Tite, fxg., wore Dloaiy Bad over ou the reste he retet | eu Welch dl lens winter, and (he rules of whieh, with perks astowiiag. At ths moment thé | ing magistrate ofthe other bran sh of Buish jurisprudence, | rican property were swept {rom the ocean; of abe losses | the’ fasten school building was demsiisind, act ths | thefekeeeee bare mmae ihe, tollowing. sera’ asapanting’ vas of the gloveare Lavigated with that mar. | the Lord Chancellor, i displaced with every change is | and sufferings of our citizens, in weary deteation for years | whole rirncture. so damaged that it wil near, | teapicner caferies tel curate ms . ’ as 8 propelling power which | politics, In seventy.one years since the adoption of the | at Courts of Admiralty aud Vice Admiralty all round the | fy by tal eM will pear, | 00 SRG PRCT Wiener the monster stoamship which nlaral ecnsnitetion, Chere bare oon bab Pope icre ap. | Che belGh WMAP AYMAN: But Pe BB OR. mF ° + ae WH" and » won experiment tn steam navi 08 the Linitat Steter, care’ vitor’ t a om Rorrow | Algo inken c. Fe ms 2 tin root w: we first sucormsful exit met Uiviiead world | polmuments ofa Lord Chancclior, on a@ many changes of | stricken an¢ ruined, into the grave, the government of | Main nieste ees et” elaings sormat uf Ooaiee tat 0 gathored by American reapers; the newspapers whic Piministration, and seven diferent individuals have King Louis Philippe, in France, acknow' ae ak in streets, und laid down ia the strast below. The Eo Te eae cere printed ae Arm-rican | filled the office, of whom Give are living. AS a member of | Gf the imperial régime by a lato and Partiat ce ee cme | main building of the residence of Marabdeld ©-osie as aud the JrBAL Of EO A i ct by | tue Cubinet sad ‘Speaker of the House of Lords, he | Gemalfcation (by the treaty nogotiatod with great skill | WRG . ite, old, warehouse of the S. Mf. and P. and presses; there are railroads in Europe : me Wy ily deep in all the political controversics of by the Hon. W. ©. Rives). Sagiand, in addition RR. Co., was bad ion 4 ~ urance Company ehall the American engineers and — travelled American | is neceesartly deep in all the Pott ead onage | CRPturC Of Our sip and the conte wtion at to the off, and weet end ‘Manufacturing Company, on demse’, oomotires trooe, armed with America®, Jk | tre fat 'uhroughoat church and Sate. ‘The Baier es ed eaticied the ited Staten to the todugaity of taking. | sgalost (icir'uinumos respectively, Laat be youn, , ME, AR : . ‘amaally a member of the House of seamen by im, t from Tessele—s ‘ yor. Ip the of Furope tuec> is machinery | tice of Rngland is . ‘our Of Amertran lnveatian or improvemmen: r obser ee Lords, sometimes 4 mcTAtt alt (on of parviesaahtp a citizedis, fica ied « be gf on | forint tolocopes of Amorioan coaster?) Ag icmates cine WH Eo” into actos! tarot the abeotrie te operating W Wwadoptad tose yathora in aimart em wxlengarsins | oi 6 Gaited States, and for « much stronger reason, in: 2 eosin aamuch as our judges can never be members of the Gabi. fan coptra, | pet or of During a consilorable part of his ca. Sane) fod ge ay paror cal v ‘with tbe Earl of Chatham in the Mmericatueives of baron Libres. & 83 trae oo age wits Ao Bar Ainerican Homer, Virgil, Dante, Coperns ‘iy > | Lo eae fucer, Milton, Newton, at rita om the world. as Bed migbty geniuses seem to be the buinan mind. Favot yacnce of favorable elreum. dace them, nor does the a Gon ee tances 1 thelr appearance, Homer rose in the | agains 5 jurispra. awn of Gree ‘n culture, Virgil flourished in the coart of | dence of bs roots deep into that of ‘Avgrstus, wate ushered in the birt of the new Kuro- land. ~4 or whole , Copernicus was reared in a Polish jcial system, 2 the ~ ‘owas trained tn the green room of the | fesaion tn America Papeot » “1 veer veas, forme! while the elements of | if, beginning at & F the. settio- | ment of America, we 2 down the live of the Ohancel thouglit and life were formenting towaed & geval | teand Chief Juaticedrom Lard Bacon and Sir EAward ; ; nder the prod eee tee, eter Fol Nmay claps before aay | Crs to the close of thast century, it will, in scarce i fy hase, as two centuries | gr oration, be found f> from the record of personal, Soe Coased claee tie 4a untioned of thee waa bora. | {oval and Politienl intity | from hich a uniicddiy i if it tw reatly matter of reproach to the United | -easor mig! re Sond, nese the lateg comparative! xd of tieit ex. | rity of the tribunal 5 coundacss pare rt pose, they we ay eaded another name to | of her public sentime Rat be would have erred. Tho thie illustrious Inet ‘ ich 8 equally trae of other | character of governmts and of cations must be gather all the of |e fo penerel reauaet ee, years, and a Fevoly. vo been tet ine of the earth), they may prowily boast of ous et. | ed from a large expanse, ample of life and character, one career of disinterested | the testimony of age A t! . Jol of public virtue, one type of bama | } pond nl oy Ai the countr) ‘and all the ages | to bald up bs natitat! | Guay be searehed in vain for the parallel. Tneed mot | to Ite prestm ree % Seaton on every page of your history, on the baitie Holds | chinery are sometine heard 1 fhe end Jar. With to the great “o sw! with which Jus tice smiter the unithful Servant, the font Lord Chancellor (late yo of " Fngland) i ments of your fathers, on It i¢ heard in every breere at America of the Revolation, on the ‘m the portals of your Capitols inseparable from bumar ships they encouatered gnizulated to promote the In this groat an! promising bave planted, in the mair which bave appre a ub — modern Baroy, and expec qorable to the prosperity of # State—tree 1 @everuments—wriven constitutions aad laws, greatly —_——_ ner the fells of tadepen: | Wat sc'web'ali our own, He grew upon te evil of Ams. | gheerees of Vbe acqat oC 10! [oot ee ant 4 4 nt at her bosom, Sho loved aud trust- | “it show ‘a nge; abd thoogh stie did pot wait fur death to cannreg | eee protantel Rreratarthe seme venceam | hie name, bis precios emery Mi nears of his coua- | magistrate, who unitethe vigor opth to the experi year, has sunk more deeply Race and wnihority of wir score yp remarks, with @ trymen. ot vory faiteryg to the Us Staten, that a 3 candor not very Matterg own Cathe ond of tbe rewmnt George Mhird (A.D. te95), | Rngland was eccelied ¥ contem| Jaridical anthors! | not only ia France, fal and Ger + but even Ameri. | AN UNBALANCED PEWOCRACT ‘. Put, as T have already stated, it was urged agvinst on the ovcaston alluded $0, that within the let sixty yoers the United states bare dogenersted, and that by # series ronr, Lard Mans“old was ergaged in an embittered politi. artare House of rable wrovg (wiftiralized and ative. For this intole dured a day from | Leeenonl oe ey ea accruing under Yi) " oe | He United States eatery etree res ved east, Connell, bat the losses ana suffarings of a wr OPiS. Yersand a half duration wore suparsded. ebes ay the time regarded by the Where) #5 7) ag ee Statesmen ns uiyust and oppressive tx’ -7 1) > i and Gorge the eminent civilian, Sir Wiig oon Stowell), who prosided im €10 Tae Ra had Inid ths fw sore, h of / Scoruing ia Caurre— : Bene Pied of Lords eowell ean den, by Wil. | evee serious personal nfcey, 120 > x92 " d It “extreme thdscons wate y iv it the dhe orders in Council could be ta contrareution of tk | febiie ee Trew the almost universal admission of ths | ; such the case. As lately as 1847 the | lor—then Lord Chief Justice this remarkable = of Bag. Gouncil, Napoleon had no right <s Of hese orders in Were grievously unjust to neutrals: and 4 hat they were contr: iv | MF OW municipal Yarn?” con ivorad aderiorreae bare relative), p $s) a) vitiegiitines: oa ACANT AT Casts GARDEN, SereRiNTe DENCY Since the recent resignation of John A. Kennedy, the office of ‘admission hav | teo @ | informed, - Ag ey rutned fortunes, of to Practice and fence, of all the matters | Ske county’ rigtee ben Fohiko he levity with whieh ice now nai istic tas, “Bele attention “ot «art, eergete and thy United States stand august jarded lowest i Re > Féneoni = bt bpotica” ce the public boyd Last New vit dea ai foe ree | . ‘ ny ee Sa arriving in NewYork; to make sure th: ‘late to suggest msi candid minds that | i# protected from.“ smashers, the letter ee 5 nan te ‘us the - itinee with rete. 8 controversies, Lies of the Chancel ; < N's | Bey for the forw: grente a0 ta rine: pa Pails Taternational 4 country to on at wee somned oe yp » BP. 250, $30: Manning's Commentary on the Law | fests , and & variety of 108 OF scarce. pf Fatioes, p. 300; Wildinan's inst tutes of Taternational | Hox eeemoment. | Brom Wr ae on that the poai- sol ti, Pp. 183, 185; Freact Hadofeuitic aid Ortolan, wader tbe moprogna cies, Tis PrRORATIC Troe, follow citizens, I bave endeavored Appointed a com. ‘ de , without | Appointing a 1 Si7ieh, ith respect to oarseiren: oe biter aces Toarty | Ri ences toMy though Soreral weeks have sloce etapa’ the Pivister intimation that a fatal dogenoracy Is startin | LoWeXee, Isexpected to " over want - legeneracy is steal, 4 Come UP at the next meetin, area Ta.And to show that the eighty fourth ane | be nppetated to 4%, be hoped that a suitabie ‘ein @ Unite States in the fulllimeat of the | requsee no Gaull ohare Of abil ead” he tes, wien and vigilanoe, mu J " Michigatl a eg yne and Chicago... we Great Woetern, Canada oe | Western, Massachusoita,

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