Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 NEW YORK HERALD,* FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1860, ! ' oT 7 ? (Langhter.) ‘The bold and ambt- | tm order to yi ‘ ne O babitan or what his | ela, on the contrary, our relations are quite friendly, 424 Cuba, which have been eo-repoatediy urged upon Spain 4 represeatative how he shall vote, you convert this re- | daddy and maumy ugh and amb visit the tomba of our fathers or Weng 06: hs Mciotinn tehsil me be Mag 3 a the late hes ctl ae cg by the refusal of by our Mfnisters, have bese *eo pereisteutly: tne | puthe into ® despotism. (“That's o.”) Why elect a | tious young fellow weat snd dug up th he the scenes of cur childhow!. Henee there is aut color or sect, is iu any jeopardy. ‘That ts partioulaiy | the ing, that pationoe is exhausted, aud Lord Joan Russell is not C.ogre*s, if the President has a right to tell the mombers | wilderness be carved out his own fort own |B inan 02 the frontier that doa't love this gle- the case in the present instance, wher (ae seeue of hos: | the Cabinet of Berlin to join in the reumonstrances Sddrees- | unwiting to listen to the idea that all diplomatic inter. Low they are to voter ‘There is ad end of represeutative | farm, pat vp bisown fences aud perl this ona | Plous Unions aud Because we do love the Union " . of Chris © ground where | ed to Turkey, appears to have vanished. | course with Spain should cease! There must begome end —governnicnt whenever the Executive is permitted to use | reils.’ (Laughter and cheers.) He tivated his owa | Our motto i bever to do an act that would alienate nue tilitiee is the cradle of Christianity, tne gi | “ , m ic, | 0 warnings contemned and promises violated. The Spam. or abuse bis power by coutroiting the action of the repre- | fields, erected a gcnoo! house and a chor’h—yrs, and | portion of the people from anaiher. You ean only pre- fhe parents of the Lumaa race walked and talked aad | The Pruspian ambaseador at our Court, Baron Bismark, { Weh Government is couteat to receive from Bigland, for eevtative against the wishes of bis conatituents aud of his made his own cabinet work, too, By thal time I reckon | serve the Uoion by maiwtaining prace and harmouy nd loved, and, most particularly, where the ground | who bas been absent on sick leave for some months, bas | the suppression of thix comuperce, pecuniary aid which it individual conreience, Hence, in my opinion, I was fght- the wild boy bed gown his wild pretty well, and | Concord among the people of the different sections. Re- 4 F returned to bis post, and labors assiduously | never dreams of apply iag to the object intended, audcan- ir g « greater battle in Ditnois in 1868 than tae mere qucs- | was fully ab capable of eelf government a¢ the cue t a member that one tie after another has alceady beew is wanted for a railway) to India. A new | how P; Bot, therefore, claim much cousideration at our bauds. tion who should be Senator. (Applause.) In my person stayed here az’ acted under father’s and mother's severed. This fell spirit of sectional strife has i port of Leander will swim (span) the Hellespont— | to comeut the anciont alliance between Prussia | BO, Commie, clalte Bint oie tat our ba to ex. — the question was submitted oe people ot Hiuncie, whe. | vice. And what more? Very. likely that young tel the holy ennotuary, aud separated the churches snes aw Brune! or aStepbenson—and before many years the | and this country ; besides which, the accounts con- | press his entire confidence in the intentions of the United _ ther or not their Senator should be the mere tool of Exe. | after be bad made a home for himself in tho West, foua | ne North, churehes South. ‘This fell spirit of eee vay, through to Syria, | tinvally arr) from the East must convince the most | States goverment. He bas good reason to believe that cutive dictation. (‘They deeided it right!) Yes, they | himself a little lonesome and concluded to come back and | tional strife bas —— brethren at the communion te fiery horse will go oareering on his ay, ne , 4 the | incredulous that Prince Gortchakolf was justified in draw. | the Americans are no less anxious than ourselves to stop did decide it right, In opposition to an unholy allianoe be- See the old people. If he did, ten to one tha: he put his | ble, And when you pirit of strife so deadly thas and down the valley of the Euphrates en let the credulo wntbete the exportation to Oubs, and she pre {British and tween the republicans and the federal Alice holders. , eye on the prettiest girl that could be found in tne weigh: | it can sever social Lie, nd religious tie, and poitticas tention of Europe to the condition of the Chris. | United states ‘veasels fiogstiing fo’ there. Garca mould , (Chetrs.) It'waa boped when that Leoompton coutroversy | Borhood, and took ber out West with him, thus taking | what is your constitution worth, when’ you havo saaie ing the A 4 sof the Porte and that an intervention of | gurantee both the sincerity of our ailies and the proba: | bad bern settled by the vote of the people of Kansas Druses goto murdering Christians, and the Old Man of the mount the hills in the rear of the place and bombard | they were agreeably surprised rather than disappointed | decjaration, indeed, has a bearing upoa many questions | Executive of this nation ts to be itted to dictate his bod ination: but will it answer } lind that at least five millions sterling out of the | tesides the slave trade eeparaation and MMi’ who desire | successor in office. It is aaid that Mr. Buchanan naturally ‘ sure | CBC had’ been subscribed. | In the present state | peace and unbroken commerce will bighly estimate Lord | feels mortidied aud wounded to have & man nominated by gor ent of polities and of the European money market, the | John Russell's well timed candor. his own party in opposition to his wishes. —( ter.) on gums aud | attempt to realize @ foreign loan is pretty gene- Whether he thus feels mortified or not, it would have , thousand | rally Considered a false step, especially as conditions been weil for biua to have considered when he became a mortars, were once in a position on the bi i were bot favorable enough to attract adventurous specu- can¢idate 1. 1866 in opposition to General Pierce, who was feet above the devoted place. They eou'd sue! 4° PG, | ators Phe plan of a new government bank, under the THE PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN. ‘ under our system S preerctest, the right to govern | justice to you Swit 4s to myself, (“Goou.”) No, I itself in all things thaf are local and domestic, and not | am pot going on. I have done more ing to day than € federal. And, what is more, Mr. Buchanan thought so in | expected to have done all sununer. I thought I was go 1856. Mr. Breckinrid, also thought so in 1856. | ing to pass quietly through, but every road station was ‘The republicans all ht so whea they voted | so crowded that my friends were literally over- for the Crittenden bill in the Lecom: controversy. | wheiming me with kiuducse, and it was not io my heart (Cheers.) The democratic party 60 now. (Ap- | to refuse to respond to them, I made no political Plause.) This priaciple of popular soreecey speeches because 1 was welcomed pop inoely Ay ™} . ‘ away from he ole. eee rr mye hema only the smart te pene spelen ete ed jue it? “You must bind Mountain attempt the game of assassination if thy are | 1) reat Powers is absolutely necessary to putastop to | biity of really ext ing this od! io. It ig against 1, thist the Warfare in the democratic party would | est boy, but prettiest girl in the district. (Laugh- eurts of this people You expect to mata. ‘The latest accounts froin Sicily say the commander of | {Le strociticn perpetrated by Moslem fanaticism, dificult to exaggerate the importance of e'tagnly avowal | ceare.. Bot justoad of that, the war waskept up; sad uow | ter and'cheers.) Now, are you going to tell ine that such | tain the Union, You cau only bind those hearta together, Fined ‘g to march out and | lic had 80 little confidence in the success of the | which confirms what we have already stated from our | We Hod on the national theatre the same game being | people are not capable of mr Nore merely be- | aud mould them into one, by observing those great prim the King’s forces at Messina is going to mare ‘ as to be raised in Baginnd ‘and Holland, | own knowledge, though for some time the ofiicial mind | played that was attempted in Miinois in 1853, Now | cause live in @ Torrit “Not we.) Lhold that | ciples of justice and equity upoa which our whole systoms meet Garibaldi in the open th fore he basachesee iirough the medium of Messrs. Baring and Hope, that | gromed to shrink from a recognition of the fact. The | you fiud the question submitted whether or not the | every political community, State and Territory alike, bas, | rests. ( .) My friends, I foel that I have done in- the town. A wise det The town or the fortress at Messina c days if Garibaldi, with a battery of ad then President and a candidate for reelection. '(Cheers.) and fir ‘t shot down on the heads of the garrisoa, | direction of the celebrated fiaancier, Baron Stieglitz, ; Jt is true that I was nominated in opposition tothe wishes | 4d bon-intervention is a cardinal parties; and it never was in my heart to gay an rove sued eas for all Dafa. meets with much greater approbation; but, on the whole, of the President. It is also true Mr, Buchanan was | the democratic platform. Every democrat has | thing to those that were kind to we. To-day I have ouly while the latter would be powe prey Mr. Koajevitch (our Muister of Finance) has hitherto | MR. DOUGLAS IN THE NORTH. | nominated in 1856 in opposition to the then President, | heretofore declared and considered it a fundamental | 1 on these political topics because your chairmam, At Naples ev ss at sixes and Sevens, NO} been more zealous than successful in his endeavors to ‘who was a candidate for re-election. Su Gen. Pierce | article of bis creed. But here I must be just to other | who introduced me, iyvited my special attention to hom’ oak ‘idence in young Bymba. Va | improve the financial couditioa of the empire, whish suf- had then pursued the same course which Mr. Buchanan is | parties, We democrats are not entitled to the exclusive | I do not intend a6 ag neral thin, tv euter into the polita- ae oat ae to the cause of Garibaldi sending | fered very seriously from the immoderate issue of paper si now porsuing— that ia, using. tha power and patronage claim and exclusive credit of this doctrine of non-inter- | cal discussions of thi year. Ik \ the first time in twea- Pious reports are alos! as fo © GRRE = o | during the late war, It might be thought that the four | His Reception and Campaign | which the democratic party bad placed in his for | vention and popular sovereignty. In 1852 it was adopted | ty-seven years that [have looked on at a political ight vafter he had made lim Premier in Sicily, The years’ peace we have enjoyed since then, the revival of s ch at Concord | the purpese of defeating the nomince of that party. What | 98a plank in the whig platform. Clay and Webster esta- | without laking ahand in it. I am now enjoying a holi- ° 1 is that Farina was under the thumb | trade occasioned by it, aud, above all, the reduction of pee . would ¢rery demoorat in America have said of Franklin | biished it in the compromise measures of 1860. Geueral day, visiting the watering places for the first time, tak- tcavour, and be under Louis Napoleon. Lf the | the army, would have bad & benelicial effect, but, unfor- weyers ba Pierce if he had (ried to-divide aad defees his party merely Pierce was nominated upon it in 1862, and elected upon it. | ing '& little recreation, and, it scems, speaking ‘little s get what they are ighting for—a ruler of their | tunately, various circumstances have concurred to new | out of mortification and chagrin at not g the re | I remember well that in the contest between Pierce and just for exercise, ughter and cheers.) But, —iu the present state of Earopeaa aifairs, it | tralize it, The great European crisis of 1867 Speech of Gen. HL. S. Foote at Sara- | wwivationt Whatever have been said of General | Scott, in 1852, the whole controversy was which purty mon,I must sgain seriously, and with profouud grate ‘tue short of a miracle, Several large steamers | and °68, though not immediately felt in Russia, Pierce in such a comtingeacy must be true of James Bu- | Was entitled to the mos' cre iit in adoption of the | tude, express to you my thanks for the manner in which: ye beew purchased in Kegland, aud in warlike maeriel | reacted’ eventually upon us with unprece tented toga Springs, chanay now. (Cheers) 1 should not havo referred to | compromise measures of 1860. The whigs were inthe | you have received me thia day. It certainly is a magal- the hero's cause looks stronger than ever. Of course, im- | violeace, and reduced our mercantile community to @ kes, hee, ke. these things this ‘time, nor dur! this canvass, | habit of claiming the exclusive credit, because their groat Dt apd imposing demonetration—one that I feel patience is manifested that Measiua is not captured, Cala | state of prostration from which it has not yet recovered; but for the fact that the President of United States | leader, Henry 7 me the author of the nee, Ye | Thaye a right to be proud of, and one that reflects cre fit bria attacked and Napies © vn; but these opera- | the revision of the tari? caused an enormous influx of bas taken the samp, making public » for | cause their godlike Webster made the argument to vindi- | and honor upon re who have got it up. I do not accept tions cannot be accomplishe foreign goods, Which, a8 the successive bountiful harvests Senator Douglas in Concord the purpose of dividing and cefeating the party that | Cate the measure, and becaus) their model President, it as a per tribute to myself. I believe, aud may st of all these f attacks and counter | in Western Kurope decreased the demand for our produc- . . Ld . 2b - elected bim President, Applause.) What are the | Fillmore, poo the bill after Congress had passed it. | rejoice in the belief, that it is intended as a forcible man- Parts be ened Pal Conference. This | tions, had to be paid for wm hard cash, while at the same | MAGNIFICENT RECEPTION IMMENSE GATHERING OF | y.ccong assigned by the ident “for endeavoring to | On the other hand, I was iu the habit of denying that the | ner of expressing your devotion to those great political a are to be, Franci ‘eph of Austria, the | time iarge sums were sent out of the country for the ma- THE PROPLE—GREAT SPEECH AND GLORIOUS EN- | yivide and break down the democratic Party? He does | whigs were entitled to all the credit, or to more than half principles with which my public Ife is identified, nd the Kings « terial of the new railroads that are now constructing. THUSIASM. . not assign the personal reason that he don’t like the | Of it, for the reazon that while I admitted that the whig | (Long and prolonged applause he petty roy al fuer Thus the quantity of precious metals which bad increased {From the Concord (N. H ) Patriot | | nominee. But he puts it upon the ground that he don’t | party furnished the general that commanded the army, | The of Judge as occupied an hour and ie a vies little Very much during the rem of Nicholas, when their ex. | | At half part ten o'clock yrsterday (Tuesday) morning | ijke the platform adopted by the party. What is there in | We democrats furnished a majority of tho soldiers that | ten minutes. At its conclusion, He was conducted ts port was forbidden, diminished 80 rapidly that of the 420 | the Committee of Reception, which consisted of Messrs. | that platform to which James Buchanan has a right to jave the votes and u through the crowd to 4 carriage and drivea to bis she = measures ony ongress. But it cannot be denied that both warters, the residence of Oliver L, Sanborn, Req Whig and, democratic party, in 1862, stood pledged | followed’ by a large mass of people, who cheered by the platform to this principle of non‘intervention by | bim with the greatest enthuelasm. The people oom Gongress with slavery in the Territories of the United | afler began to assemble iv the Court Howse yard and \i the | millions of roubles that were in cireulation in 1855, it is | H. P Rolfe (Chairmag), T. P. Treadwed, 0. L. Sanbora, | take exception? It is the identical platform upon which calculated that not above half remains in the country, | J. V. Barron, J. 8. Abbot, Edson Hill, J. EK Lang,G.H | James Buchanan was elected President, and without get | All this led to a depreciation of the payer cur- | Davis, and several other geatlemen, left the Coucord | Wich he uever could have been elected. ’Thore ien't aa a | rency that has bad a disastrous effect upon the | depot for Canaan, in order to mvet and escort the Hon. maa in all America that wil! deny tbat James nd toremocy waich Mr. Kuajeviten | S. A. Douglas to Coucord, The train reachod the appoint- wa and John C. Brecainridge, in’ 1866, | were Will any man deny the truth of these | vicinity, and before eight o’clock, the hour for the meelf so anxiously ever since heen. | ed place st half-past one o'clock, and the cars from the to the doctrine of non-intervention by Congress | facts! (‘No.”) How them does it happen that so | tion at the City Hall,uu immense crowd bad co lected, As to the reduction of the army, though | orth soon arrived. The committee entered the car in elavery in the Territories. (Cheers) I made | many Old whigs, 0 many old democrats, have | filling the ynrd and the street in front. At cight o'clock. y Of great importance, it hus not been attended | which Mr, aud Mrs. Douglas were seated, and were seve- | speecher from the same stand wih Jobn C. Breckinridge | strayed away from the pan where both partios used | Judge Dongias was conducted to (he Hall, which was sooa with 8 corresp: nding reduction of expenditure. We have | rally introduced to the distinguished Senator and his when he was advocating his own claims to t! to tread in” peace and ony? Whigs and demo- | jammed full, and the rec: ption began; and for more tham scarcely 400,000 men ander arms now, instead of 800,000 be residency, and heard him go to the extreme | rats were in the habit of quarrelling about the distribu ‘ap hour the étream of enthusiastic men continued to pase Adiers as ir. Douglas left Montpelier, Vt., in the morning, and at on euem , or # million; but the pay of both oiticers aud sol in favor of popular sovereignty iu the Territories, | ton of the public funds and the specie circular; but at | before hits, sbaxing him hesrtily by tie haad, until ali bad «hiy probable; but Peannot | been raise’, their arms and accoutrements bave beca | several paces on the route fouad large crowds of people ob wgain, of T recollect right, the democrats of New | the fame time they were agreed on the slavery question, | bad the plearure of 60 dowg. after which Mr. Bailey, of ’ io’s name aod fame will | greatly sums have been spont in | aeeembied wt the depots to do him houor, This was espe | }iumpehire held an immense mass mecting at this capital, | Nou intervention ‘was a k common to both parties. the Boston Herald, was called upou for a speech aud re- at Aneou & men, intriguing mea, | asting artillery on the rifle system. The reorganization | cially the case at Northfield, Roxbury, White River juue- | jy #: bruary, 1856, previous to the nomination at Ciacia: | You whigs agreed to etand by that, and so did wedemo- | sponded bric fly, and Judge Douglas also made a few re- | avy, Which bas been pushed forward with wou- | tion, Franklin, Webster Place aod Fisherviile. At ®¥e- | nati, at which Howell Cobb and Joseph Lane and | crate. I want to know whether you, old whigs, are | marks, waich were received with great applause. ° rey weter the auspices of the Graad Duke Coa- | ral places in New Hampshire the train received an acces: | Jamos L. Orr of south Carolina, made speeches; aud | going to jump off the ay plank remaining in the plat- While the men were thus honoring Judge Dougias and int of money, the whole floot of | sion of numbers, for many carnest democrats were anx | in every one of those speeches ‘they advo. | form merely because you find me standing on it? I give | gratifying themselves, the residence of dir. Sanborn was & been converted into sorews, or | ious to avail themsoiver of the oppertuntty to hear the | cated squatter sovereignty in ite broadest sense, | You ‘air nolice that 1 bever intend to abandon it, if1 find thronged with ladi who gathered there to pay ther generaily, play ous | of the d they are derful e by new ones con. | able aud eloquent exponent of their principles. Mr. Doug Applause.) l appeal to this audience if these facts are | every whig in America on it. (1 tor and cheers.) respects to Mrs. Doug! {and ‘at Nico. | Ins epoke his thanks to those waiting at the depots, bat | (A! true, Yu ibave the ape-choa In. say pocket.”) That | So it was with the American Party in 1860. You Ameri. While these receptions were taking place cann a wore Eogland, and Ame- | mace no politi-a! remarke. gentleman says he has the speeches in his pocket. They | cabs and we democrats differed t other matters, bat fired in the rear of the Court House, aud at a later period General Admiral aloae swood us in On the arr! of tho cars at Concord, an immeuse | were written out by the speakers after they returned to reed on non intervention, Remember the twelfth arti- a fine display of fireworks was made in fcont, while dur- lion of dollars. In addition to the | er was waiti'g to welcome bia, aud loud were the | Washington, and published in pampblet form by the | le in that celebrated American creed, in which you ing the whole time excellent music was discoursed by and the civil service, in whica the | hurrabs as the iliustrious visiter Weft the cars aad pro- | national democratic conupittee, a3 a true exposition of | “Pretermitted’ the ore question. ‘“Protermit’ | the bands. a alartes of the ctticers bave also been considerably tn- | ceeded to the carriage in waiting for him, A salute was | gemccratic principles. (Yes, and in the Boston Post”) | WAS word used. iow I want to know if vy Meg attractive features of the evening was @ creased, in the vain hope of patting an eud to peculation, | fred a8 the cars cutered the fepot. A procession | A gentieman says ‘*in the Boston Post,” and, Lbelieve, ia | YOu are not willing to pretermit it nowt Pre- fixe display of Chinese lanterns between the Cty Halt smmat | it must not be forgotten that we taves vers expensive | was formed, preceded by a band, in which Mr. | every other democratic paper in America that had the | termitting, I reckon, is about the same as ton. and Mr. Sanborn’s house, and also from the pole in frome hat | impersel family to maintain, Thee is probably uo coun. | Dougias, Mr. HP. Rolfe aad Mr. Bailey, of the Boston | space to epare for polit cal speeches, In other words, | interference. Let every old line whig, every democrat, , of the State House. the spoils aud the rule belong? Fast will precipit for ali accounts a cat of protecting tas Garis | try ia the world Where so many separate courts are kept | Herald, rode in an open barouche drawn by four horses. | fellow citizens, I stand now where every demosrat in | €Very American, every conservative man, rally on this Soon after tenjo’clock the crowd began to disap} and Me oe penieotes wloot aunt | ap aain Buse Domes feo lOREEREA MlaNL Vina chim LA ware Sellawed tT the memtare Us Aiea IAT oes eel ties ‘Yearé ago, advocating the right of the | Privciple of non-interference by the pent gereset | before eleven onr city resumed its usual quiet hae thou: la hos any imimedi | court of the reiyoisg Emperor and Empress, the court of | and friends, in a long string of vehicles of every descrip. | people of every political community to make their own | With slavery in the Territorice, and you w ve peace | sands who bad come here to houor our distinguished flud large roa and | the Empress Mother, the courts of the Grand Dukes Con | tion, and by four or five bands. The pronession passed | jaws, to establish their own institutions to suit them. | 2d ha-mony all over this land. Remem! has ’ guest bad departed for their homes, highly gratified with of the West ail | stantipe, Nicholas, aud M.chacl, the court of the Duchess | along Main street, Washington street, State sircet and | selves. I claim no peculiar credit for advocating these | B¢ver been sectional strife in this country except when | the proceedings of the day and eveuing. their own way; at | of Louchtenberg, that of the Graad Duchess Helena | Sehool street to the State House, the band playing and | principles. That principle of lar sovereign'y is as | the federal goveroment attempted to take power over the y between the Black aud the Le | (widow of Michael Poulovitch). and that of tho Prince | the peeple cheering heartily all the way. Toe marshals | oid as free government itself. It was the principle upon | loca! and domestic institutions of the people. So long as The ¥ heates and | and I’rincees of Mecklonburg, ail with numerous retiaues | of the procession were Messrs Eleazor Jackson, J. L. | which every battle of the Revolution was foight, Re- | Congress has confined ite acts to those a Speci- mg Men's Democratic Conven- @ the valley of the E . 7 i being federal, tion —§; bh of Ex-Scnator Foote, of arailway and telegraph live and a | of tited and untitied valets, who are paid haadsomely | Clough, C. H. Hill, J. B. Sanborn and J. B. Cuiturd. tember, for one moment, what was the cause that led to | fled in the constitution as g federal, 4 pee! yi cha i cstabl het through the district cl var to | for doing nothing, and all making cxpousive journeys A pluiform haa been erected ia front of the State | the revolutionary war. What was the demand of our | tbere bas been peace. But now you find this country Mississippi, in Favor of Dowglas—His Brit tia the better, and the sooner will that land, | abroad every year, especially the Empress Mother, who | House, which wus occupied by the committee aud frieuds. | revolutionary ers, the denial of which produced the | threatened with sectional etrife, and why Bocause you Denunciation of Yancey, Cushing, Sii- - jlewsrd aud latterly cursed as‘ 3abyloa’” and | oscilla.ce almost continually between Nice and Weldbad, | The people, aumbering severs! thousands, flied the yard | wary It was not indeodence, In the beginning of that | &T¢ pow real xing what the Father of hie Country, in “his oF ig aally neat ae erly can to conteibate ha. quate | end aihaee-extenvagaese ta. proverbial. theviaperoe-|in fronkl ahe-uleing. is: DD: war sovevted 40 -the Ceutcoversy. cur revolutiouary’ fathers’ did. got ‘de. | farewell advreea, cautioned his countrymen agatst. You | dell, Jeff. Davis, and Other Politicians= ivy, the commerce an! the | and Grand Duke Constantine have both numerous families | platform. sire independence In every petition to the | bow find this country divided. into two ; ectional parties, The Secession Question in the South, woule Moslemiam and Pagan | offons and danghters who, in due time, will have establish- Mr. Roux, Chairman of the Committe, said:—Mr. Doug- | crown, in every address to the Parliament and | One Nortl and another South, The republican pony ae &e., en, Kee prowess of Christian warriors, | mMepts of their own; the younger brothers are following | lar, 1 have the honor, sir, to be the organ of thia vast | people’ ci England, our fathers set up and om to passions, prejudices, aud the ambition ie —— tue world. * | the example of their seniors, and if the orgaa of philo | concourse of your fellow citizens and friends who have protested their devotion to the British Constitution, and forth sgainst the South and her institutions. Secession- SPECIAL REPORT FOR THE NEW YORK HERALD. . other phase in its | progenitivenees should be a developed in their | come up from their farts and workshops, their counting | their loyalty to the Crown of . Ce Taat's God's | ists of the Bouth sppeal to passions, prejudices, and to the nannies o has ronchaed another shane (2 lt | Grotentcana,” ber Sete WOMEMMee Wik’ Se pecteady Pittoee nad eumbantin, to presheen eed rived tena ek ee eee Ser terete | cotton of theerennion nde agniuat the Nort wae dani ee nish cpio ie foverun ct Woull as sown gee itgo | Overrun with Grand ‘Dukes aad Grand Guchessos, | a cordial welcome to the canal of our State, (Applause.) | geld it. ( ”) ‘Then what were our fathers con, | Our institutions. ‘The re that the fede- Heary 8. Foote, of Mississippi, who re Lot going w endeavor to | Who tnust all be provided for at the pudlic ex- | Very fow of us, sir, Mave the pleasure of your person: tending for, if it was not independence? They were te wrth ven plow perry Ay ont been spending some weeks at the Springs, was tavited the eubsidy, There is tho | pense, unless the Turkish custom be aduptod of | acqraintance, and if this visit shall prove as pleasing to | contending for the right of self goverzment in the colo- The ccess! Kn eet ee 4 federal | yesterday to addrees the Young Men's Democratic State end of the line, and | bowstringing all the collateral male reiatives of ag it ts gratifying to us, you will not regret that you | nies, They demanded the in their own local legis. erpment shall settle theres e ae enemas seems im. | the reigning dynasty. You Americans are fortunate peo- ite made it. 80 long have you been in the national | latures to pate all laws affected the local and do. want the federal government w wiell its tion, in session bere. He accepted the invitation, as Tbave from the first, that the sab- | ple; you pay your President, but are not expected to sup- | councila, 60 ably have you #lvocated their cause, that | mestic concerns ot their ive colonies. They did | Power agaivet slavery everywhere. And the gccessionists | and spoke last evening in Metropolitan Hall to as large am uted. bat it will be only after astraggle, | 9ort his cbildren and children’s childreu ad infinitum. | the democracy of New Hampshire claim you as their not deny the right of the British Parliament to pass laws | Waut the federal force wiclded for nee arb y "ome Audience as could pqueeze itself into the not very spacious n of affairs exivte in Parliament. | Seriously, however, government will either have to our- | champion, aud we rejoice in this opportunity of teatify- | on all subjects which were imperial and not colonial | Thus you find an irrepressible conflic: ween, His the » defeated on his most darling | (ail its expenses oF to open new sources of revenue, in | ing to you that your eminent services are held by us in | They did not deny the right of the British goverament to | those two sectional The one is the antipoies to | oom. appearance ou the platform was greeted with lieved that he bas over fifty or | Which case an income tax would psesent the most natu- | grateful remembrance, We acknowledge to you our gra- | do all acts and things which afiected the general welfare | the other; ce} one is to the existence | enthus'astic demonstrations. He expressed himself de- jsown party with him, The most important | ral expedient. But although an import of this kiud is | titude for that coustant support which you have given | of the empire without interfering with the local and do. | of the other. republicans of the North and the se- lighted at the enthusiasm prevalent in the Convention mesures are entrusted t him. He carried Frenca | adopted in almost every other European State, it would | to the great priociple of popular sovereiguty—the foun- | mestic concerns of the the colonies. Bat they | cessionists of the South Precisely the same rela- aan the ate treaty by his eloquence, another | be vehemently by our nobility, who bave been | dation stone upon which our institutions rest. (‘ Good demanded the right of self government in each colony in | toa to each other as the two blades of & pair of shears. throughout the Empire State critical m>meat has fall-a to the ground, watt now there is scarce a per- | hitherto exempt from direct taxation, and whe are alrea | From no statesman have we received so muc ~ | respect to everything that was local and internal, and not | ‘They both turn on the same pivot, but cut in opposite | in the country's history in bebalf of Douglas and non.ia- gon, out of Parliau: that does not curs y. | GY excersively sulky at being obliged to emancipate their | low me to say to you what may not be so satisfactory imperial. Aud our fathers put forth the Declaration of | directions. — and cheers.) Interference by tervention—(cheers)—of Douglas and the Unioa— lea “ lder term, and say it is all a awindle | serfs without an equivalent, which even the liberal Prince | reflection—from none is there so much expected. ‘The | Independence only when they foand they could not Congress with siavery in tho Territories is the pivot on chi er 4 He fleets on trade are certainly very un- | Dolgorouky calculates at one hundred roubles bead. A | realization of the past gives assurance of the | jocal self government without it, They submitted to in. | Which doth turn. The republicans teil us that Soon (cheers) Douglas and political reform, prayed Givtetone has large Liverpool | busdred roubles upon ten miiliong of | serfs would | future. For the gallant resistance which you made | dependence as a necessity, in order t. get local self go. | must prohibit slavery wherever the people want slav- | that that fecling might prevail still more widely, might mercies is to be | make the nice little sum of a thousand millions roubles; | to the Lecompton scheme, which if consummated would | yernment. They establ the independence of these | €r)—DO matter about prohibiting it where the people grow stronger and strouger, and energize every man im of the Galway eubsuty. Today , truly ® modest demand in our present financial sondition. | bave been a great crime, we thank you. In the noble | colonies only a6 @ means of acquiring the rights of local | @on't want it—they probibit it themselves. Hence, the ’ y Threctors of the Galway Board | But, says the Prince, it might easily be rawsed by issuing | and successful struggle which you made in 1868 in your | self-government. Thus you find that the revolu- | Tepubleans want Congress to ibit slavery whenever | the republic, until in November next such a majority bot T believe the report to be | government bonds—which, of course, would bo @ firat | own State, against a brave enemy in the front and a cow- tiovary war is justified ‘ouly upon the ground tiat | aud wherever the people want to have it. The secession- | would be rendered in favor of the fundamental principles pcre di ag td nemo clatioa of our paper | ardly troop of camp f: lowers in the rear, you had our | the people of the colonics had & right to govern them. | ist8 ef the South, on the other hand, demand that Oona- of civil 1 as would PY the cavillers of curreacy. | It is likely that the majority of the noblesse in | sympathies and rejoiciugs; and im that brilliant persona! | eelves im their local mattora without the interference of | e@rees sball maintain and protect slavery wherever the | °f civil liberty Ryere anes not show the “liberal” ideas of their colleague, aud will | defence baer recently made in the Senate agains! | the British Parliament. We are vow told by the republi. | People don’s want it. They say that they are going the day and put down faction. There wore three im- : to im, for getting into | Submit, though with a good deal of grumbling, to accept | that “lump” of Senators who exait the rights of property | cans of the North, and by the disuniouists of the South, | Dave it protected by Gongrees wherever necessary, and portant objects to be accomplished in this great contest— fie S'smtictad, | an indemnity for: the Land occupied by the peasantry, | above the personal rights of freemen, wer have awarded | that the principle of nou intervention and popular sove: | that it is not meceesary 60 long as the people first, the vindication of the opelgheged intervestion; re isa great deal of | Without insisting on their baying @ ransom for their per- | you the prize 6 much coveted by siatesnen—the jewel | reignty is very well in the States, but is all wrong in the | Want it, for it they want it taey will protect it ” - : » M. P's who are in | O08; but it will be seen from ry how didicals i to of comsisvoncy Cheera.) In the _ life of eminent men | Territories (Laughter and cheers.) They tell us that a hemeive. a & a: ry when the peuple poh second, the cleansing away of all existing corruptions ta introduce a rational system of dnauci. jm inte in’| there is no period to parental hearts tura back | Territory is not sover: and therefore has no right & want it, ap only time are going - | office, reformat! usages of most our country. with so many sweet and affectionate recollections aa to | exercises poversign pent Or establish ite own iustita. | terfere 'to protect it. Thus, both ot thous ven ge hap ech a: bn tf rly, bat of be. | | Thear that Sir John Cramptoa, the British Minister, | that of infancy and childhood; aad while the Northweet | tions. Iat me ask them if the colonies were sovereign | their respective claims ou the doctrine of intervention by | deleterious influence at the present day; and third, the between the | Who left for Kugland a few weeks since, will not | claims you as her mau, and the nation as her statesman, | when our fathers demanded the same Fight of sclf-govern- | Congress with slavery in the Terr tories, in oo to | saving of the Union itself from the danger that menaced 4 return to St. Petersburg. He has requested to be removed | New England cherishes you as her child. (Cheers.) | ment? Our fathers demanded this privilege, not for sove. | the right of the people im all cases.’ The © | it, ‘The principle of nou.intervontion had been discussed Thope he will bear his pun’ to some other fs ed for political, but for domestic | Sir, this is an o2casion to’ me fruitful with ions; | reign Stas, but for dependent colonies, for provinces, party, on the other hand, proclaim the doctrine of uon- ake abl all rt 1 philosopher, He needs a | reasons. His Indy, who was a great favorite with the | but lam admonishod by the impatience of this assembly | for Territories, while they were dependent and remaining | Bterference by Congress with the domestic institutions | £0 often , And 80 ably, expecially by their own dis- hiss 6 trial teau monde of the capital ae long as she was Miss Victoria | that this is not my benedt, so [ forbear. Permit me, ia | jn a colonial and territorial condition, (Cheers.) Our fa- | of the people everywhere. (Applause.) We say to the | tinguished candidate for the Presiceacy, that it would be Lia's paper begins to be in fear that the | Baife, Onde herself im a false position wow sbo is Lady | conclusion, to tender you assurances of the sincere ploa- | thers demanded this privilege under precisely the samo pes ‘Hands of? Touch not the local | 4 wearisome and unproiitable task for him to undertake aued King Bomba if in daoger, aud now | Crampton, our aristocratic daines being furious at having | sure which your presence afforcs us. My fellow citizous, | circumstances that we democrats now claim it for the | aMlairs of the people!” We eny tothe federal govern: or” is beginning to pat the bloody | t yield the pas to the Axgbassado ‘a wite whom they have 1 will detala you bo longer. 1 cow bate the boner to People of the Territories. We demoorats acknowledge the | ment, zee our fathers said ane Bei Seon to discuss it here. There were many who undertook to buck. It is that kind of a course, pplauded at the theatre, or engaged to sing in their | present to you tl tinguished Amer! esman, | right and duty of Congrots to pass all jaws which are | ment, your own business.”” (‘«That’ right.”) Pass- | assert that this doctrine of non int rvention . rif 4 defend tyr ! ‘The consequence is, that ever since her marriage (Cgatinvea checring.) feticral, and pot local or territorial in their character. | ing Shirough Vergennes the other day, a gentieman in the bal age path tad . 5 atten Jed doctrine. How dared any man to say sof Pro- h people with ihe | they bave been carrying ona war 4 épingles with her, . A. Dovatas was greeted with loud | We don't deny the right of to regulate com: | cars my attention to an old piece of Continental | {4 vy say ous bn. would ouly give | Until, after a spirited resistance, the fair Hibernian has | cheering as he arose to addrese the vast assembly. He | merce with foreign mations, to make war, to collect, rove + “Did you ever mind those words—‘Mind your | sumptuous, idle, worse than abeurd, was it to as- Times would “go ia” for the Freach | prevailed upoa husband to retire from the contest. said — nue, to my those general acts which are federal | own ides,’ Another geutieman inthe care called | gert so. It was as old as the Principle of liberty utrignes, double dealing snd en Mr. Cuamman ann Fetiow Crnzexs or New Hamr- | and’ not in their character. But we demand that ee Maseachusetts coin, on the reverse | iseir in this lad of rj bmevts. Ii has beeu bello ving for support lately | Lord Brougham’s Insalt to Mr. Dallas, | smins—You will receive my grateful thanks for the kind | the people of ae as . | side of which was, “Mind your own business.” (“That freedom. was embodied iming in a loud voice to all readers that single {From the London Chronicle, July 18.) terms in which you have beon pleased to welcome me; | ny, shail be permitted to make their own laws and esta- | is a very good croed.””) That wns the cread of our fathers | in the faith of their colonial ancestors. It was aid be bad for four, at alltne radway eta Is the pointed insult levelled at the United States by | and you will accept my gratefaul acknowledgments for | blich their own institutions to suit themselves, (Ap- | in the Kevolution. That was what they said to the British | @ radical principle of the old ‘oring a ors to iafurm the pablishers | Lord Brougham, at the Statistical Coagress oa Monday, to | the cordiality with Which you have endorsed those genti | plause.) The republicans of New Harapehire will teli | Parliament went they attempted to force slavery on the pe ig Rysunge Tepublican party. » haw the audwerty to inneate Oliver Twist aad | be made an internation « question? No one could mistake | ments of welcome. For the firet time I visit the capital | you that the people of the Territory have ao right of ¥ Of Virginia, against 118 will. That is what our fa =m statesmen that Virginia tor “more.” The Tunes’ gruel is no lo ger colon, uatrious: “Malek | the aim of the remark thrown at the head of Mr. Dallas, | of your noble State. When | wanted to make a brief trip | self government unl they become a State. Have no | there said to the British government when it attempted | ever produced—Jobn Sagiat, of Caroline—in a political slab,” but thin and wavery, and the news reading | when Lord Brougham challenged him to notice the | through Vermont and New Hampehire, on my way from | right. Why vot? Because, they say, Congress has not | to control our in their Jocal and domes- | work Which he carly in this century, asserted tare beginoiog © fod that several ott " presevee of a pogro. Now, eithor that fact was presumed | Saratoga to Newport, R. 1,1 did not expect any public | given them that right. f have y that ao this principle, and unfolded it fully, without —— soot as good a report of everyabing worth ku to be cffensiveto Mr. Daliae—in which case to draw at | demonstration. My object was to make a quiet visit, a | American freeman, whether ina tien from apy quarter. And who was John Ot even to news from forciga countries, by able correspon | tention to it was in itself an offence, or it was not sup- | pilgrimage to the grave of my father and to the soeacs of | derives his rights from Congress, Caroline? In the Old Dominion that question would be dont » be offensive, avd in that case Mr, Dallas was | my childbood. From the moment I trod the soil of Ver- | that the tories of the Revolution tom ight ‘ i he intelligent ‘Sccmaas yeare of Free trade principles are progressing. A local jour. 'y aud uncourteously called upon to do pewance for | mout 1 found I was welcomed by the populption en masse. | peop'e of these colonies Bad no except those which | miliar to ther children, thoy placed it upon their piper | ege. They had ail heara about the resolutions mal bas t a the suspected prejudices of his country nen. It is difficult | Men of all parties joined in the reception. It ailed my | the King of Sagland granted to io their charters. | moncy and on their coin, in order that every child should | of 1798, end gertain |. ists, shallow and unsubstas- colonies It appeara that the | to reconeile such an act with Kindliness, courtesy, or do. | heart with gratitate, and rendered it impossible for me | Aud 7 ly that, inasmuch as whois of the | corum. Mr Dallas attended at the Statistical Congress as | to ditcuse apy of those po itical topics about which the | their rig! pjecta tra ect and vexatious char 4 a the fact ACHOR obtained | learn to read it, ‘Let us now act on prin. | tial ae they wore mischiovous, of the utter- its from the cvown, why, of course, the King | ciple. Let us say to Gongreee, “Mind your own | ed habitual praise of these Iwate ¢ sctetons when ke the repretentative of the United States; the aggressor | aasembiage differed in opinion. I hat supposed that | could take them away whenever he ut proper, | business, and let the Territories alone” I have | ventered to ray, there gentlemen had either never read, was 4 member of th» House of Lords—be has been | when I left the borders of my native State I would be (laughter) What cid Washington, and + aad | & word more to say to you, and then I bave done. I pre | or bed never been able Lord Chane lor, and the attack was made befure the | welcomed only by a few friends as I passed aloug the | Hancock, aud Warren, and Molly Stark to that doo. | sume that many of you have business befre Congress of | else Mr. Madison Friace Consort, who was Chairman ou the occasion. In. | road. Imagine my surprine at thir vast assemblage, this | trine? (Laughter and cheers.) They the Kiog of | some kind or other. Porteps one of you has aciaim for | go, ina letter te Mr, Everett, asserted that these resolu- body deed, the attention of hie Royal Highness was epeciiioally Po tye 4 reception, which exosets in its magaificonce | Fogland and the British Parliament that did not get | a pension. If so, ask your representative, when he comes | tons were pot intended to em the accursed doo- The Imperisl ¢ 18 comshe: Grawn to the outrage by the person who was the imme erancour aanee 3 have previously witnessed. | their rights from the crown, and hence that the crowa | home, what became bill, He'll teil you that | trines of nullification or the infernal doctrine of seces- Meoment, which will be haved with | diate sutyeet of Lord Brougham’s predioete; the gente. | From the bottom of my heart I thank you for this demon- | could not take them away. They told the Ki of Eg. | be aid the best, » but that it was lost for | tion—(vehement applause)—nor were PL eet we cee ede wie Rowe ud | man ia black asked especial permission of the royal | stration of your good will. You hare been pleased, Mr. | land that Wey obtained tuele rights from God Alimights, | want of time. want of time?” “On, T, ever 60 remoiely, to such evil and diabolical pre- tn Renin for the lest the ty or forty | Chairman te thank Lord Brougham. All circumstances, | Chairman, to refer in terms of approbation to my course | and that he alone could take them away. The doctrine | Congress occupied the whole time in fiseussing the slave cis. Mr, Madison waa the author of there resolutions, aken f therefore, are of a kind that would justify the govern! | npon the Lecompton constitution. While I have ceased to | of the revolutiodary war was, that the right of local | ry question, and there was no time to pass your peusion tit was John Taylor, of Caroline, who offered them for Defalcations are etill the order of the day. The Caion | Ment of the Ueited States in demanding a formal apology, | Ciscurs the merite of that question government was that, via. ‘Soha er from Le rent in the people; hence ” Apother may have au interes: in the Freach Spo. | ad: ption in the Virginia Legislature; and this same from " 1 Brougham, for hi ton escapade, or | discarded by the people of Kansas, yet I will not refr ail rightful government most emanate of " at bis got twto “Unior 0 the | lintion bill. Ask your representative what became of | Taylor asserted bol clearly and juentiy, irresinti- oes ae ite pores he sce aut | {om the presiding authoritice of the areus in which the | from a slight allusion,to it now, lest my ellence might be | pesplesand be cetabl shed by and for the temene Of the | that bill, “Lost for want of time; slavery question oc | bly, the principle ryt S'nls work, to Melbourne some time since bas embeazicd the sang | Outrage wasp tated. The authorities are the more | misconstrued. 1 ¢id fight that Lecompton constitution eope. That was the doctrine in the times of the Reyo | cupics the whole time; po chance for ing clee * | entitled “Constructions Conatrved ard Constitutions Vin- Little pom of £10,000. Tory have got the rogue, but not | 2OUsd totake sonte Lotice of the occurence, since we are | With all the ea and with all the power that I could tion. But we are pow told that thi# inberent right of ake your n tates why they ‘dia not | dicate’ He would recommend such a work as that to the ioe ey. Mr. Edward Biradiey must now raok with | {clined to suppose that Mr. Dallas attended the Congress | command. ( ts.) Reluctant as I was to differ ia | self government only to States, doo't ey the tari im order to raise money | the very dashing and fanciful champions of secession at Pullinger, end the Redpaths and Robsoas of the age, by invitation. ‘copted the invitation to receive | opinion oF action with a President that had used all | Territories, nor colow DOr provinces, a it did in enough to cefray the expenses of the government without | the pres nt moment—to the Yanceys, the Keitts, the cely he teapetty rogue ‘Ton thousand pounds only! iment which we have described. my effort t> place in the Executivechair, yet duty was | Let us examine this claim for a moment. 1 su; ‘Uhat bg millions of dollars a year, They will | Rbetts, ct id emne genwe—who think they have all the wis- What could the little foot have been about to diagrace are, indeed, considerations which make as yon ee persooal or party obligation. (Cheers.) | you, citizens of New Hampshire, without distinction of | tell only reason that the bill was lost was for | dom in the world, because rome very good natured poo himself with such a petty affair? There really was no Delther expect nor wish that the violation of decorum stood ‘a8 every democrat in Amorica stood | perty, allclatm the inherent right of self government. of time. ‘¢ in the South had bonored the n so far as to listen to digo ty about the thief. We shall next hear of some maa | *H0Uld reovive apy official potics. Lord Brougham is go | pledged by vote for James Buchanan, in 1856, to | (Yee, yes w You think it i an inherent right that uo | time; pochan se for the tariff. Ask them why they did | their wiid and « dectamations on — matters of sta! og two or tbree thousand pounds only. The pro: longer young; be was born in 1178; and although he has | maintain the right of the people of every State and power on ea th ¢are take from you. Well, I suppose that not pe Pacific Railroad bill; and at the ¢. time avebip whieh they never bad » aad never feesiou is in disgrace served bis faculties in an extraordinary » it | every Territory wo form and regulate their own domestic | democrats aad republicans agree fo far. Bat the repabii. | mind them that Fillmore was pledged 1 a Pacific raiiroad | would be, able to comprehend, (Applause and laaghter.) Y lustrious countryman, Mr.@ S Rarey, has just it be unjust to assume that the forgetiulness of which | institutions. (“That's it.”) 1a my opinion, the attempt | can tells you that the moment a citizen of Now amp. | whens te in 1856, aud Fremont was pledged to His FRIEND DICKINBON. pos aed to get bim seme ponice. is waste te Monday would have happened four or | to force upon an unwilling people a const whieh | shire (who poesessee the inherent right of seif govern. | it, and was pledged to it—all three parties | A certain Senator from New York, whom he once loved Collect the choicest and most sele st stad of horses in the « perba # even two or three years ago. they did uot like, was not only in violation of the demd- | ment so long ae he stays here) crosses a State, line and to it. Yet the very bill, the very measure to | and reverenced, and whom be still loved but pitied, bis world, and get them on the ground where the different There # another reason why every reoord of the oc | cratic creed, but it violated the American creed. | Caters a Territory of the United Statee, he forfeits the | whieh alt parties were pledged, could not get a majority | friend Dickinson—(A voice, eke a eae out.’* faces Are in nil their purity and perfection currence should be cancslied good that mon do, it | (Cheers) It violated the repnbiican creed. It violated | right. (Ironicaleheers.) Is it troe that a citizen of New | in either huuse of Congress. Ask your representatives— | Langbter.)—: resolutions in the of the The weather Intely ‘s very beautiful, (ruit pleotifal and bas beon said, lives after them; the evil dies with them. | the creed of ali free men, in all free countrics (Ap- | Hampehire forfeits bis iwalieoabie right of self on. | Whyt “Lest the want of time; the negro question | United States, im Cecember, 1847, in which be made the BTALo Crops promising ’ There is, indeed, ta the very principle of evil a tendency | plause.) I did not oppose the Lecompton coustitution on | meat when he moves toa Territory ? No, Sir ee,” and | takes op all the . and there te no time left to attend to '¥ dostaration of the Cae yd } to self extinction aud the examples which we have had of | the ground of its provisions in respect to African elavery. I | langhtor.) What provision of constitation of the | the material of the country" —at least to the inte- ¥, aud now Mr. Dickinson had be- Ouse St. Petessburg Corvespondenee, Vice in rablic life have had thotr use as lessons; | beld then, axl bold now, that if the people of Kansas | Uuited States works that forfeiture? (None.") Then Bey 4 come, to some extent, forgetful of thal priaciple. ‘Ho had . ~ - while the examples of virtue have beea direct in | wanted a slave State they had aright to it, (That's | upon what groan is it that an Amorican citizen ie de- country is to him (Mr. ‘) and others, St. Permnsnvna, July 10, 1860 their incitamonts, besides adding to the constant | good doctrine,"*) If, on the coutrary, they did not want | prived of his righte when be goes into a Terri white men for wow whether they would be willing to au them: An Bicphanting Ouricsity—The Iny Cor So. | eceretion of human knowledge avd civilization. Hoary | slavery, no power on earth should force it upon them. | | under the constitution and the American ’ wil be adminis. with pending Congress of flag vervigne—The Sef Question—The Roman Loan—The | Browrham will not serve posterity as an example posed the Lecompton constitution because it was not | it be said that the peopie of the Territories are hink the tal principle of the ed ecttandum = When, ia after days, men review | the act and deed of the people of Kansas. I proposed that | not capable of selfgovernment? Who are the of the told him be would sanction them. Syrian Insurrection, & his services, the exceptional mistakes, even the strongest | the question should be referred back to the people of peonte of the Territories? Whore did they come business may be attwded | General approved ; but Mr. Calhoun, of The object of general interest at the present moment ia | preiudioes which have been uttered even in the heyday of | Kansas, with the privilege of voting for or against it; and * Mauy of them are your sone, your brothers, who i legislation | whore friendsbip Mr. Dickinson no © boasta, seemed de cicpbant. Not the sacred white elephant of the Ki bis vivid eloquence, will be forgotten, and the mea will | if a majority of ail the legal votes of Kansas ratitied eft the granite hills of ir native State and went to Congreas—and I | termined to denounce his rerolutions and bitorelf, and preter . DS | remember ouly the exploits of that intellectual giant who, | then Kansas should come into the Union with that consti, | Kaneas hey were capable of #elf government, were they the they, therefore, advised bim earu not to hie ene esol :tion to a vote, bat to content himself with letting Of Sam, nor the golden clepbant of the King of Deumark, | baving acqvired more than the ordinary share of kuew: | tution. If, ou the contrary, a majority voted Against it, | Lot, when they left home? When did they lose their ca- An vite negro them lie upon the table, He took their advice, aud the ist but an elepbant of great size and rare beauty, presented | /el¢e for himself, became the most reatiess agent in ex. | the people of Kausas might proceed to make a new con. 'y to govern themselves? (Laughter and cheers.) - sail te fonting the ‘same knowledge te all and sundry—who, | stitution, with or without slavery, just as they ploased, | Were they any lose capable of seit government after they resolutions lie there at the presen moment, of Dokbara (ler petits cadeans entretienment having attained a high and rising position at the bar, | ard come into the Uaton. 1 rejotead from the bottom of tte Rakecs than they were ‘when tbey started? Did they » Remand it to the poopie } THE NICHOLSON LATTER. Emperor, which elephant is now wending | used the opportinity thus gained to vindisate jnstice, | my beart when [maw every republican in both houses of | ail their tense and inteliigence and the virtue they Lat them do The next step in the matter was Genoral Cars’ Nicholson T unheard of ditieulties, up the Volga, after | freedom ard the British constitution, whether it was ag- | Congress voting for that proposition. (Laughter and sati- | possessed while on the ferry boat crossing the Missouri | a# they please, subject to the comatitution of the United | letter. That act was done with market deliberation. ape march acroee the desert of Karokorum ond the tailed ip the person of the highest rank or of & private | rical cheers.) Having heard the republican party pledge | riv (Langhier.) Where and when, I ask, did the of controversy between citizen—who, baving been raised, almost against the | themselves so often against the lasion of way more | tive-born cit zen, who was capable of self-government where be was detained sometime | concurrence of his profession, to the loftiest seat which | slave States into the Union, it did rejvice me w panies besitating to admit so huge | {t ofers, used the inflacnce ihus obtained to carry out | them, every man in the Senate, and every m: | in the doctrine of noa- when be started, lose that capacity? (He aint lost it | inte: vention aud there will be Pesce and harmony be | yet.”’) T will not pretend to say what may be the opinion — twron all eections of the country. Why can we not no: é a 3 the same great and beueficial amen tment of the law | Hovse, voting to allow Kansas to come in as | Of the people of New Hampshire as to the capacity of the | live in peace ax we did in former times? You He procured signatures & passenger on boa: their craft. Whether 1: is tore | which throughout along and vigorous life he bad cases. | if the people should so decide (Laughter choors.) | people of the Territories and of the new Gane te gevere remember that during the Revolution the Hertears eouey | drawn up by bi requesting Geseral Cass to m4 Ceive this distinguished guest, or for some other reason, | lessly advocated. When men speak of Henry | And I will say to you now, my fellow citizens, that it isa | themsolves. I will ouly eny that we 0 spenta | Ww the letter, The letter was puoliehed under ne b but it appears that the Emperor will remain in the | Srewkbam hereafter, they will talk of him as the | matter of sincere regret that I find the republican party | whole manhood on the frontier, do think we are ca Foote’s) supervision and direction There was only one . champion of British lerty—ae the most eloqueat | now denoancing me for advocating the i prin pable of self government. We will never admit that you | democratic member of Congress who dissented from it, Capital this summer, and not make any of the excursions eder for the great Reform bill of 1832—as tue man | ciple that they then voted for. All I ask of them is to | are any Wiser, Detter, or more capabie of self government ‘That doctrine was then ied in the Balti. Which he was reported to be on the point of undertaking. | ¥bo varied the labors of the Woolsack by recreations io | carry out in fature, and apply to every new Territory and | than ourselves We havea great respect fur you of the more tiform of 1848, Mr Yancey and others According to some he was to bave an interview with | We dissecting room and library—as the man who in- | new State, the identical prisciples for which they all | Old States. Tthink we love you better than fou do us, being it, and refusing te “ duced leading lawyers of every party to form a special | voted with me in that Lecompton controveray. (Lavghtr.) And I will give you good reasons for it. I support the democratic ticket om that ground. So that Napoioo IIL. and the Regent of Prussia, or with Napoioon | society, bringing into one life all the power of conserva. | The President of the United States, during that Lecomp- | sim a native of New England, and I left the Innd of my ernity? These questions come home they were consistent enough with thenmectres, but not with and Francis Joseph, at Baden Baden, according to others, | ti8m, reform, and legal authority—as the man who lived | tom controversy, put forth 4 elaim which I, asa Senator, | birth, the scenes of my childh 4 the grave of my | Northwest with more force than they do a a be was to receive the Prussian Prince and the Austrian to advocate more reforms than most men had ever car- | coald not recognise. Fconoeded his right to recommend fathers, and went to the extreme Northwest, And yet into the plains of Liijpoim, and there you ‘TRE COMPROMISR OF 1860. ried, and to carry more than most had ever advocated— | the Lecompton constitution if he believed it to be the act | New England is my native land, and I love her on kee boy with a Southern wife, the ‘That great priocipie was embodied solemanly in the com- Ranperer at Warsaw; bot none of these mectings have as | and as the man who preserved a spirit of youthful zeal | and deed of the people, and I should never have quarrelled | that account. Tlinoi# is not your sative land, and you | with « Southern buebaad. When their promive meaeures of 1850 io clear and un) lan- et takew place, nor doos it seem likely that they will, at | loag ater the nae When other men lay their gray hairs in | with him on that question had he not claimed the right | don’t love ker, thorefore, as much as I do, who live there. | crown up and have gone to visi: the riage. LD fought in 1548 on the basis least for the present. It is probable that the approach the last rest. If to such & man some years remain, he | to control my vote and compel me to vote aguinet my Hence I say to you that the yy the Northweet who | thers or their mothers, or the graves of there nen intervention, and military pee & . proaci must be considered @ chartered libertine, and any for- | conscience. | holt that a President has no more right to | emigrate from New England, from Virginia, from the | they have bad to go to Virginia ne woll aw Taylor alone evabled their adversaries to vaoquish them. ing sol tion Of the emancipation question—a most critical | getfuloess of which he may be guilty will tarn, be | contro! the vote of @ Senator than a Senator has to dis. | Carolieas, from any of the old States, remain loyal ia | ebire to nee them both. ach child hase Rat ‘he democracy did not despair of their good cause, epoch for Russia—detains bis Majesty at home, and that | forgotten. The lesson which Henry Brougham seems | tate toaPreetdent. (Cheer) Tho President told me | their affections tothe States from which they removed, | tor as weil a¢ a Northern one; and he dow’ They embodiod very doctrine in the compromise be wil! vot leave St. Petersburg till it ie settled, which | Stl to need would be furvished by visit to tho United | that if I did not obey Lim and vote to force the Lecomp. | while they love still dearer the States where they have | curees heaped on the head of the parent measures of 1880, with the consent of Webster and P : Retrents Siates, to learn bow, under a rem dlic, the Eaglish love | tom constitution upon the people against their will, he | planted their wives and children, Yet we think we are parent, Then, again, when you come to talk others of the leading statesmen of that did can bardly be earlier than the ead of August or Septem # and Hoe reigns, aad how a generous poopie | would take off the head of every friend Thad ia oiice. I just a8 capable of self government aftor we get out there | dissolution of the Union, we tell you No more. In accordance with the recommendation of Mr. ber. Immediately after the imperial ukase is signed, | WOU revenge his prejudices by the heartiest of wel- | tokt bim, i reply, that my friends were as dear to meas | as we were before we started, With all due respect, we | trade Southward as well at Nort award. Fillmore, resolntions were offered in both houses of Com- bow t is understood that he will eet out for War. | °™* those ef any othor man could be to him, but that if Thad thik we are quite as compstent as you are; and [will | water that fews down the Misstoniypt press Ceclaring that these compromise measures comet - & friend who wes Hot willing to lose bie ofliee rather than — gtve you a reason for thas. I think the New Hampshice | water that flows through the Inkes of the tated @ final settlement. Thus the principle of non. inter. aw perhaps extend his tour to Germany, to join his 7 / es degrade me te 8 Loot af excouti¢e power, he di! not de | bey whe moves to the Weet when ho is twenty years of | We intend to follow that water wherever it LO = adopted in the democratic creed in 1068 and t > ie oF it to he ea t 60 (From the Loudoa Chronicle, July 19 } ferve to be my friend, (Applawse ) Here permit me to aay fae, is juet ae capeble of reifgorernment as the brother | mingles into the broad ocena. fe have ro | in ig creed in 1852, and was accepted by all Amort~ » who ie one vinkt to her relatives tw thet country. | tae depwation from tho Amusavery Goolety which | thes the great coutest beteeen the. Resetiice sen tareaie | tied ncmeiee omen. dem tee pour ‘eyes ‘vouss’ the | salted copietend faltteees @he as ernie ana sas te | sean cae tho exception of a few wretched abolitionists Ab \atervicw with the Emperor of Austria is still as an. | bad an interview yesterday with Inrd John Russell elici- | wae this: be claimed the right to contro! the vote of @ neighborhood, and fled an old gentleman who had two | alike, We bave the tie of country and of bloot tit binds | in the North and a fow equally wretched secessionists in tert) oe 4 she differences betwoen the two Courts | tet from that Minister expressions of conaiderabie impor Senator in opposition to the wiebes of his constituents, T | sone, The 05¢ was an’ ambitions, resticss, energetic thea you tei! os that this Union is to be | the South. Tt was, (uorefore, an ancient doctrine, and ue outet ine aed vignr, notwithstanding the approxi tance as to our diplomatic intercourse with the gov. | claimed! that the representative of the people is inaepem | daring boy, the other waa an amiable, kind, lary, disevived we say Never ("' for the rease® that we » 7 , apne ’ ernmenta of Spain and the United States. dent and ahould always act todapendent of eremtive pow. — fellow. ) Which of these boys do you think coun! Garr o Ces pons om the Ualinn question, With Prug, “ The earnest remousirances agaiast (he slave trade of ' er. (Cucers.) Wheo you permit (he Executive to direct weet © 1 Wich stayed at homo, aud tive with | tain @ passport and bayy