The New York Herald Newspaper, October 9, 1860, Page 4

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a 4 NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1860.-TRIPLE SHERT. to u ght to say if, by my eivgic voioe—the Southern States | ration for Bell—(applause)—forgetting names, forgetting | ern or slavebolding States. have 120 votes in the | succesful in the balance. Btill the democratic Presidenttal sled, consenting toll, and rif could be constitutionally doue— | men amcrifcing all personal predilections, and Grectoral Coben fhecn one by votes will as cer | avemues for our would be everborne by the would not liberate every African in the Southers States ourseives under tho pricciple—enrolling ourselves under | tainly be given against Abraham Lincoln as the sun will coparieg to curselt Evérett. Who can that if | knew what to do with them when they were libe- the principle dear to the beart of every honest and patri- | rise upon the day appointed by your constitution for | whee all our manufactures are in succeasfal and ) | muck of the vote rated. (Cheers an‘ cries of ‘‘Thore’s the diifoulty otic American—a principle written (pointing, amid the | the de ivery of the votes into the public urn. You have | developement, the channels Loesrt cou- | mated, many of his strong friends there contden Therefore, do vot misunderstand me. Tam no advocate applauce of te audience, to the fag di ly over the | these 120 votes against him, and, gentlemen, if the | to overflowing; while our internal traffic is constantly in- | ducted, all arolizery goveramest is atil! despotism and | hope to carry the State for slavery in the abstract. (Cucers and groans) But lead of the Comer op upon the banner which waves | State of New York withhold her thirty-five votes from | cressing, end the commercial relations with oar taterior | tte sul slaves? the necessity of constitutional | sippi the democratic our British ancestors brought it here, and Great Britta over your President's ; the principlo—the Union for | Abraham Lincoln, although ehe may cast them, wore it | States are augmenting veyond all previows experience; | restraints; and where these are establushed— Coen 8 A00 ast ee the oppos! is responsible for it, We did not bring it bere; aud wo ine sake of the Union (Loud and continued applause.) | tn her power, to the bottom of tho Atlantic | while the labors of the hu man have been crowned | where goverument simply only the powers the popular democratic vote 80 Of the North, where we could dispense with slave labor, Genticmen, were these great sacrifices—and they were Ocean, no what she does with thom—if | with a superabundant harvest; the mechanic busily ea- | which have been submitted to its direction—the decisions Tones. one third, J aud it is now cou@ned to | trying scritces—trying to the hearts of men filled with | eke witbbolds them from Abraham Lincoln, he caunot | geged eden) he reiertmmrer yy) bang our min- | of the majority become the legitimate rules bad grog secure the electoral vote ha to the national ry member of the community is bound to obey. | ri, if'we r and ee eet a icispeneable, (Cheers) There are | the passions aud the ioterests which excite us in life— | be President of the United States. (Lond app'ause ) erat reaourcsrapi ping and add! eve . 20 divide the suffreges as spensabie for slave labor—rice, Sugar | was the occasion which culled for these eacrifecs ade- | Therefore, tiemen, altho. every State of all the | wealth; while health bas been unimpaired, all | This is the basis upon which our fathers iaid broad epg toy democratic North, nod ‘all ths Weat, and the East, shall be ao for. |* trades and vocations eminently successful, there bas | and deep the foundations of our matchless in- getful of ita duty to the Union as to go over to that dela insidiously arisen throughout country @ sectional | stitutions, by a clearly and well defined writ- ticket would judged by the vote of 1866. But Sive and well denomioated traitorous party, the black | political organization which, from hunble beginvings, | ten constitution and Cegeenentative principle. | Missouri Judge Douglas bas republican; although every one, I esy, should fail and | bas at Jeagth Struck for the supremacy of the federal | Tha it whoie be ove reoreant {n respect to its duty to the Union, | government, under the leadership of a vigorous and | framework of our political system. {t has been | democratic rival or the New York alone holds in her hand the keys of the puvlia | resolute intellect, who claims thai the policy uader which mpl ‘and maintained by the united nationaPdemocracy | In Tennessee, where a local safety, and she alone can save the Union. (Vehemont | we have thus far achieved national ‘and renown ‘constituted the .) Now, gentlemen, an election will take place | cannot longer be perpetuated; for Mr. Lincoln, the Presi- | creed. This party, occe 0 formidable and omnipotent, | exercise its influenee, if the vot eieerrom tn tee Hee oF Pennsylvania—not for electors | dential nomince of the republicans, as eocly as June, | bes been distracted by dissension and division. Ipro- | terion, you may divide the for President and Vice President, but for Governor and | 168, in a public address, stated: — pose to inquire if there ia anything in the views of the ve to Judge Douglass one » Lieutenant Governor, and some other State officers—and We are now far into the fifth year since» icy wastoitintea | Teepective standard bearers of these now separat @ind eckinridge the remaining three-fourths, & good deal nas been said by both parties of the | with the avowed ovject and confident pro: of Buon ‘au | alienated orgavizations which should prevent their re- | sition electoral ticket must prevail. importance of that election, and of the effect which It | end to slavery agistim, Under the operation of a ee spective ts from uniting to resist the common | contest would necessari| be very emoit! may have upon the Presidentiad election. Doubtless it is | that agitation bas uot oply not ceased. but bas Y foe. As the illustrious Clay once said: When our gallant | home of Major Breokinr! dootton” The white man cannot stand the rice fleld; | quate—were the sacridces aemanded? Gentlemen, what cae eiey die tader it. Tet him be dora on the banks of | was atetake! Why, let us look at our condition. nt ws the Rhine or of the Libby, one stroke of the san in @ rice look and see what is threatened by the poistical field or iu & sugar plantation or cotton plantation | party against whom we are 4d, and ak would kill a white man before he had Ft through ourselves were or were wot, each yy. (cheers) I give you @ fow of my ideas; demanded? Whetber or not a persisteuce ia these sacri they may not agree with yours, if they do not, reject | flees wore demanded; whether we are not called upon by them. Make these four millions of black men all every principle that can move the beartg of patriots in free, and | ask you what would become of them? | an honest desire to make those sacrifices, but all otuers Who would receive them’ Le; those people who talk im | that may be demanded for the accomplishment that this warniog by the British and Fronch West | meeting has in view. (Applause) Gentlemen, we Let them look there and see whether the | occupy a pogition which attracts the admiration of all uade free, will work if not compelled to do | who bate us, and I may Bay the envy of all adroad who black man so Let them say if our Southern States would not present — jove us. They envy our position so far as that senti ihe same ruinous aspect ag Jamaica, St. Domingo, M ment can be reasonably aud honeetly entertained; they | calculated to have influence on many minds. Doubt. | suemented. In my opinion tt will not cease until sc ship of State is drifting upon the breakers—the surge of him; wut many of her finijue and Santa Croix, where they have sought epvy ua eo far, that they aad desiee participate in Our | Jean It is well nt eee! to affect the reault in the State of | fall Ihre been reached and ptaaed “a house divided easing | beating over her ven sides, each moment threaten- | bave long regarded with favor the claims of Juigs Do berate the slave and make him his own master? ca cflorts. Even those who are oppored to us, and whobate us, | Peonsytvyania. Doutless it may bave influence in many | permanently half slave and half free Ido not expect th ing the crew with instantaneous desiruction—shall we | !as tothe Presidency. If, however, we give to Ju: plause.) How are you gotag to make him free? There — cannotwithold the tribute of their admiration. (Applause.) | States of the Uaton. It may influence some men in our | Union to be dissolved: I do not expest The house to tail, bat hesitate in our exertions and waste valuable time in | Douglas one-fourth of the ratio vote s are four millions of siaves, They can only make | The country is in @ stato of prosperity unexampled in | own State, But let me say, gentlemen, that New York is | ¢o expect it will cease to be divided. It will become all one | ay upon the salvage when she shall be restored | the balance to Major ridge, still the opposit them free in one of two way ‘The first is to buy | the history of all peat times—a prosperity which 1s not | no foliower of any State in the Union. (Cheers) I hope, | thing or sil the other. Either a ata of slavery will | to safety. Let us rise up as ‘and men, and feel | ticket would be returned to the electoral college in | Tbelicve that the Union candidate for the offio of Go: | Mrret\ths further spread of ft and piace it where the purlic | he ennobling consciousness of having made some slight | decision of the Presidency. But if we bave traced | vernor of Pennsy!vania will be elected by this time to- | alii .tie cetha advocales wil push it for male morrow night anes We are iafurmed from | become alike lawfal (a ali the Stales, old as well as uew, North | Common country, Let us conacieatioualy inquire {f auy | ern States, as deduced from the experience of 1866, « the most reli gources that this result may | 4s weil as South. sound national democrat, and any constitutional Uaioa | bave given to Major Breckinridge the advantage of | confidently be relied upon. But then it may percban Thia sentiment, so utterly at variance with our past | an, makes any cesential concession or sacrifice from hia | Southern affiliation by residence and sympathy, and s¢ by pom ey, be otherwise. Thero may even be | political experience, 80 entirely inconsistent with our | Political creed, in giving at this janeture of our rational that nothing but disaster can resutt to the ‘democra heavy majority in favor of the black republican cand! | previous success a8 a prosperous and free people, re- | fairs a hearty and cordial support to the democratic | party in that section, how are we encouraged when date. It should not, it ought not, and, gentlemen, it will | oetyed additional endorsement by ® new promulgation | republican electors, whose nomination wo heve here, this | contemplate the North, where the repubi! party not discourage the people of the State of New York ia the | from an eminent Senator from ‘his State, who aiways | Dight, ratided. In 1856, at Cincinnati, by common com- coppiaat, and striking to secure the control of tho fo slightest degree. (Applause.) Nay, gentiamen, if the | carries into lis public digcussions uncominon ability, and | Sent of every section of the democracy in every portion government over rights violated and the authority them. Why, if we take the value of the — oply national but individual—which pervades all classes of slaves, there is not money enough in the gociety even in the South; pervading that class of society country to buy them. Shall the republican party autho- towards which mock philanthrophy directa {ts mischie. rise the Secretary of the Treasury to take out of the sur- | Vous design even to the negro himeelf. (Applause) We EE funds what may be required to purchase four mil- | are in the erjnyment of this wide prosperity, aud tons of slaves? (ironical laughter.) My Irish friend | jt inthe result of our magnificently conceived, I think I here says, “Where would we get it’ Why the whole | might say our divirely instituted, constitutional syaten country has not got it. Then again, what right have I of government, We bave been carried onward under its to take your money, got from the sugar itself and the administration to a pitch of prosperity which no words of tea—what right has Congress or’ the republican party mire can describe, and we have been held togetaer to this i — ; z i ? H i z 2 i 3 £ F = a f i i i g e F e to take our money to buy niggers with’ (laughter and day by its universal patriotism ond fratern’ Now, | Presidential election in all the other States could precede ‘stematic, istent devotion to his disorgsnizi of the Uniom, the democratic party was cousoiidated | tle constitution itself defied. Heretofore that organ! chores. Crive of “None ") Ahi but they Say, "We will | geutlemen we are informed, 1a language altovether too | the election in this State, and if, aa I aaid before, all of | Soetrimer witch hes clearly made him the Warwick of | wPOO ® common platform, upon which. wo entered | tiou bas beea content to oarry here and thore a st mot buy them.” What then? “We will declare them | plain to be misunderstood, that this state of things shall | them should prove reorcant, ‘and shoula cast their votes the ‘blican hosts, When at Rochester, in the fall of | iuto the canvass and were successful, by the elec. | election, without Bay Dees of securing the control of free; by habeas corpus we will take them up, one after Lot longer continue, We are opposed toa party who | for Lincoln, the thirty five of New York would remain, | 35g, i Seward reaffirmed this odious sectional geati- | tion of Mr. Buchanan. The leading characteristic of that | oational administration: but now, stimulated by our n ‘anotber, bring them before a republican jadge and back have begun upon narrow and sectional views—who haye | and the Flectoral Cotlege of New York would be | inent of Mr. Lucoln aa follows, by stating: — contest was the nationality of the demo. | fortunes, ft strikes boldly for the supremacy of his decision with 100,000 Wide Awakes, balf soldiers.’ begun upon 4 narrow and originally admitted trivial and | the ark of our country’s suvation, (Vebemeat “l ghee Gein atic systems are continually coming into | CTY. contending ‘inst the sectionalism of the oderel govereseeh, wae of energy never bef There are two eides to the question. (Cheers.) Before insignificant question, with a very insiguificant number | plause) Without New York Lincoln anno! succeed. | ..Qor ‘~ Trait Ghall {teil you whet this | Position. At timore, im 1860, the party | equalled in tts existence worthy a better cat ‘ell, now, gentlemen, ag I said, New York {mltates no contact NOG Sevaths think ‘ria accidental, wuaccessary, | WAB divided vpon the taterpretation which should be | Io Tlinois, where Mr. Buchanan secured the ¢ locto State in the Union. She is the foremost in point of num | {ye work ot intaresled fanatical agiaiors, ata thorevore | given to the Ciscinaati platform: yet in’ the Convention | vote, by the plurality rale, while the combined onposit vers; she ia the foromost in point of wealth; she ts the | ephemeral, mistake the case aliogether It is an irrepromib'e | which nominated Judge Douglas the following resolution | to him, of Fremont aod Filmore, was nearly 30,000 | foremost in potntof business activity; she is the foremost £ iat beteene copoding and, otras, soaks, ame it means | wag triamphantiy passed — jority of the popular suffrage, {€ we transfer the ent by rem uv ouperr gure wine ort e| fue Cob iepansn! eet fe conaa | "Remi an ote cote wit be Qnccna i | Bileed rae stcnen eran of fhe domera Srey neater br lece degree tenitate us’ ‘Which of all the | Dither the cotton and rice, Aelde of, Hoth Carolina ind.the | enone’ of rediriction, whomeee it ty te, Fepiaat eh the | the democr atic Jove, thus woited, will amount to 141.1 States of the Union do we imitate—do we follow’ Who | freelsfor,and Charleston and’ New Orieana Vecome mart | federal const (ution ov ‘power of the Tarsioria! Legilatare, | aguinat 06,280 throwu for Fremont, tow represented in the State of New York looks to Pennsylvania or to tor logtiaiate weorehandise Siete, Ge clae) the rye Satie wee we S Sy lh Ponieg] yy 4 Lincoln. But if the democratic vote isto be divi Delaware for & prooedent’ No one, We aro the drat, the | Mitendered iy thelt farmers 19 alave cullure and wo tue pro. | Court o( be United abowd ‘be respected by all wood Zorrigsemunet ae penmaanes mee moored foremost, We stand alone, and, with our bared, strong bo: | Gite of slaves, and osu and New York beoome once | citizens, and enforced with’ promptacas and de ity by every mH pubilean electoral mp enh adi Henna dhe ego denon in the bodies and souls of mea. [tis | branch of the general government, Bell and Everett) still the republican electoral tic e will presen paseab) € they do that” they will see rents in the Wide Awake par- | of advocates—thi- is the anti slavery party. We are op- ty—they wi!!! see it diminish and melt away {nw thin alr. | posed by that party and their motives, and the objects CAppiacse.) I wieh I could apeak to about ten thousand ch they had in view are now plainly and distiactly 61 those Wide Awaker, I wish to tel! them of this result | and palpably avowed; and that ayowal is, that they are in a plain, unvarnished manver, [cars as little whois Pre- | working to establish the unconatitationality of negro fident as'any man in the whole country. He canaot take | sinvery—the very institution upon which the welfare and away wy head, for there is the capital; and he caao0t | the prosperity of the South depends. It is to bring the take away my money, for I have not got much. | machinery of the government to establish that position for (Laughter and cheers A volce—'I'd like your check for | dissolving the ties which unite the negro servant to bis few thousand, old boy") I am, therefore, as much | white master That principle is annouuced la the clearest indpendent as any man in the community. It ts nothing | and most unmistakeable manner, It is announced by fo mo who is President and wo ig not. I never expect | declaring that a coniict bag commenced—an it- ies to be, and therefore it isa matter of indifference. Bat, | represaible conflici—which ehail not cease till those (bis great truth that induces so many _ | would prevail. But ifthe Bell and Everett ticket shel! r my friends, I feel for my country. (Cheers) I have s | tice which at. present exist, aad which consti. | capism; aud the Union, by the vote of New York aioue, | unsvoceaat empty at gal compromine tween the aire Pliner nn Ur doterenina thet Hin tho auty of ail tuo remain in the field securing the same vote which Little of that old passion of patriotiais which { learned at | tute the wealth and sole prosperity of the | shall be preserved. (Appiauae.) Gentiemen, so far from free States, and it ie the existence of this great fact that given to Mr. Fillmore tn 1856—viz: 37 451—and the de and depart vernmen| very being a cause for discouragement it should be a cause for | Tenders ali such pretended compromises, when made,-vaia sud Terrien, then te tee Tegiolettve as wel an she cry in the | ‘cratic vote of that year. consisting of 104,279 vo epheme! r for Brecé renewed exertion, If Now York takes Dut hor part ie | "hese doctrines, 90 revolutionary and disorganizing, | department of the government bound to conform to tuat | “EI oeia receive one eighth’ only, of the dence c with oor ‘fellow citizens of other States, we | have been re echoed by every-prominent advocate in the | decision. Governor Johnson, of Georgia, the Vice Prost | sptagth and Judge Douglas scouring tho renal: have ‘the house, equally, to be sure, with | republican ranks. Candidates for gubernatorial honors | Jential candidate with Judge Douglas, on the éth of June, soven-elghtbe, “the republican electoral ticket w many others; but it’ shall be reserved for us | bave opeoly reiterated them ia ali the Northern States, Milledgeville, 28 the chairman of the Committe on Keao- | °°! the vote of the State. In Indians, in 1356, | South, shall be dissolved and destroyed. Now, gentle. at | men, what can we expect from the success of sucha never did’) TI cannot look upon these stars without | part’ Certainly one of two things. Either that the my heart leaping in my boeom, and my tongue taking | people of the South m ubmit to insult, must submit words of inspiration to vindicate the honor and perpe- | to loes of property, that they must virtually submit to tuity of the government under which we live. (4p | be denationalized and become a eubject province or su school. When I came off the stage and made my speee! 1 try (Cries of * ¥: ) My friends, I am just done. (Cries of Go ject provinces, precisely a& Oabadaand Ireland are at this | alone to breast this demoniacal treason that threatens | sie candidate for the State aud federal legisiature They wine Bechanap secured majority of the popular vote by | Ga.) Ihave calked ‘with these parties and rewoaed | Yay to Great britain, and as many other subjects and | the country, and wo sine sball save it. How great | have den, also, opealy proclaimed by distinguished and | 'utlops, reported the following propositions; over Fillmore aud Fremont. If ths same votes reiatt with them. They say, “Ob, we are for the Uni oppreseed nationalities bave been to tyracnical and | the glory, how inapproachable the bouor! (Applause) | sble editors of promibeut republican jourusis—by that | 1. that ‘be citizens of the Dnled tates have an eal should be polled in the approach! we do net want to destroy the Union mouarchieal States. (Appiause.) The South must | Who would not be proud to be a New Yorker, aad, iook- | portion of the metropolitan press in even this national | {1 nelle mil thelr propesty Of Aly kind fe tie te mton of tue | Ccmocratic vote should be-equally div ing at the result of the election, find thet the menaced | City committed to the advocacy of the republican causo— | Convene Court of the United Mtates {a the case of Dred Beott Kvorett ticket going with the dem¢ South have net one friend in all this Union wave New | By tts religions and bigoted fanatica, when they bave | ‘wich we reersuige nn ue correct expoaiion o( the coawiiin: | of the Cemocratic Prosidestial caadidatea’ would 6 York, and that great and powerful New York was ratriotic | @etceaded from the bigh dignity of their legitimate mis. | tion in this partiou'sr, slave property stands upon the same | the electoral vote. If the Bell aod Everett ticket «! enough to do the deed nad strong euough to sccomplian | 0m as spiritual teachers, to drag politics into the sanc: | foting aa al! other deacriptions of property, and that neither | romain ia the fleld aa strongly supported as in 1856 ii (Cheere.) These considerations, gentlemen, should | tuary of their divine calling. Mr. Heury Ward Beecher, | ie general rovecument, Ar ai ter eT eemerty ia | Fillmore, and Major Breckinridge should er make us even more resolved, more courageous, and more | by far the most talented and eflective of these pulpit ora- : ~ af wer but oneeighth only of the popular demoo deter mined than before, should an adverse fortuae attend | tors, stated, at a lecture in 1465:— aay other ¢eseription of pi ; that property of | Suflrege an Mt. Douglas too remaining 8, electoral the banner of the Union at the Pennsylvania olec evasion, at adjourning at conosaltny and tion to morrow. Now, gentlemen, can we suc. | oo The reason of cur long agitation | in all the Termtories wand upcn the same’ eqn! and and that justiy conservative State, which gave its do not wi to drive the Southern States. | eitheir submit to these evils willingly or they must for the Union.” Will you allow me to | be made to submit to them through the power of the Put n similar case which I have had some experience in! sword employed in Northern hands to crush the prospe A man marries a wife—(laughter)—and she has her | rity and independence of the South. Are you prepared pockets full of money—votton, sugar or rise. The husband | that the power and strength Of your State, fellow citi. does not like the way in which she manages her house. | zevs of the North, should be employed in @ war go un He says, ‘Madam, you are too extravagant; you spend | holy’ (Cries of ‘No, never i) Then, gentiemen, if you mouey too freely; you do not know how to rule your ser- | ayo unwilling that your swords should be thus 60 wick. vants,"” and, therefore, he thrashes her for breakfast, he | ad! employed, you will show it by your conduct as you thrashes her for dinner and he thrashes her for | belleve that the people o’ the South will not peacefully | ceed? M& seems to me that we cannot fail It seems re Port tothe democracy in 1866, would in 1360 pass t supper, by way of variety. (Cheers and Iugh- | eabmit to puch a degradation, One of the great pape f to mo that Providence, who has at all times here- mye wb nyt yt ty 4 republicans. In Ohio Mr. an recsivet 171 ter.) The wife gocs to a friend, who calle | ag well aa the necessary resui! of the snecess of the black | toforc, from 1776 to the present time, presided over and ses ane ’ ‘ ‘votes, against 137,497 throwa for Fremont, and 28,125 upon the husband and says, “My good sir, why | republican party ia the prostration of al! Southern in- | and carried onward to @ successful iseus the destinies ar 1 not live together are in our midst for Mr. Fillmore, Suapbining Sebdemeertin vote do you beat your wife so? she will get adivorce.”” "He | toreste—the destruction of the political power which the | of this Ssaary has speete the word; and,the evidences of | and tuggin ‘a throats. They will search each that of Fillmore, we should an aj te of answors, ‘I do not want to be divorced; Iam satisfled to | Southern States ie entitled to enjoy as equal members of | the fat having gore forth that woare united aod destined | vtber ab Aad if, 949, which would bea maj of popular vo. keep her; I want her as my wife, but I must do with ber | this great confederacy of Statee—tat this Union will | to triumph, are as palpable as the sun at noonday. {can | PY an nme ion te ak ace the State But if this majority te to be divided bet aa i please; I must interfere with her domestic relations, | be dissolved and a line drawn between the them.’ My confidence in them ts period wal un. yoo Rea aL, eal el ereee aan to Breckinr ge nnd Douglas is more certain th: and [musi thrash her.” (Loud laughter and cheers.) | North aud South, and that this glorious Union, formed {a | sbaken. (Applause) But, geutiemen, let mo call your Let it be settled now. Clear success of the republican nomince. But should th That is tho way republicans would treat tho Southern | 1776, must perish {2 1861. Are you prepared for thie’ I Sate Bo — 7 tor hep nt Sen | trust you are not, I know you are pot. (Ories of “No, Tauren Wide Reaaceasd mate them 0"; | Fopaviean taj weetenp-ra autre deen He while at the eame time they say, “Oh, we meant you | wae poner the men eminent statesman io their to stay {n the Uaion.”” (Renewed cheers and laughter.) | ranks hoped to Lecome their chief aud leader—to be their The iat remark I make is What are the qualifications of | candidate for President. That atatesraan, at the approach Abraham Liveoin to be President of the United States’ of this canyars, having returned from Europe, found the (Cheers) Whatare they’ They have giveu us bis por- | condition of things tu which the country, by the John trait. They say that it is @ fair likeness of Abraham I‘n- | Brown raid, and he made whet was called @ moderate, cola, Well, Ido not know that how # maa looks hag | conservative, gentio, coaxing, wheedling speech, calou- anything to do with bis qualifications; but this thing | lated to foduce the people of the South to believe that Strock me, that if Lincola looked like bis picture, and if | after all if be (Seward) was elected to the prosidency, be it is Dot a most infernal libel upon him, be would Split 9 | might trample on the means, and on the men whoelected fai Dy looking at it (Golsterous laughter and applause ) | him, and bapiy turn outs very tolerable, conservative, That ts only [my opiuioa. Ah! say they, be 1s & | well’ behawed President. Gentlemen, what followed po AM yy a we. done’ f§ os The biack republican party, in a oe a om ickeon, b were leadors—: co losophers; in Coagrees, whether’ Abraham’ Lincoln showed bimscit | weere lus extreme men -lte philosephers: tense to be a statesman or whether he was as dumb as | here, and a secret consultation there, and in & lamb before the shearers. (laughter) I ask the | other places, and they came to the cenciusion Tepablican party to tell me what Abraham Lincoln hes | that if they elected the little leader of theirs to bo Prest- done; what new principie he has advocated, what great | deat, he might be @ really good one, and that he waa not theme has ever come from bis lips? Ho is © very respet- | the man to play false to his avowed eeatiments. And so abie man, [have no doubt—as far aslcan learn,a very | they denounced bim. This man, they ( » when be waste and Attention to a single thing which may not be kuown to | the pace lances ouall You appoint a committees of fifteen to take | in reet for the charge, Sound the trumpet, God mare the to consideration the means of reconciling all jarring | right | and conficting interests of parties, factions and men in Justly convinced thet these sentiments are in positive va- this State of New York. For this puipes your | riance with our logisiative ¢: and that sooner or committee was iteelf composed of men of difereat | later, tn some form or other, their faliscy must receive a political partice of different professions and diifereat | final extinction unfavorable to their wishes from the affinities, men who were rivals of each other in the pur. | bands of the highest judicial tribunai—the ‘loa rosting suits of {ife, and in other respects stood in positions sloee of alt questices oe either the rights of indtvi- somewhat antagonistic to cach other. These gentlemen of the sectional have eat down and have succeeded. They bave procured | tors have in advance ruthlessly assalied the su fu the union of all these avtagonistic parties seve one, and | dicial sctbority ia orcer to weaken the force of its dec|\- that one bas announced, through eatisfactory organs, its | sion, and ite claims upon the confidence of the people, readiness to unite, andere four and twenty hours ‘ights — to adjudicate. The imme shal! have elapsed it will have recorded its readiness to | diate act of hostility which aroused the republican party ratify the union of all the brethren, the Uston | to the overthrow of the Court was the iaterpretation givea men of the Siate of New York, and will oome | by that tribupai{u the celebrated case of Dred to the unanimous su; of the Union tickets. (Cheers ) | where the Court, for the first time, gave its dicta ‘The only pers ws who bave hesitated ere some extremely | lows. Speaking of the territory of the Uni ftaunch and true, th friends of Southern right .— the supporters of Mr inridge. are all thai bave yot withheld their consent; ead can T be mistaken | 41,7 ; ‘peool alted States ‘Their (the democrat « § whole Sas Gk case coke ne asone ommake the | Bo therefore, vba it = ear mar y eeveral “aa ioe oh Geogr orga tion ped the oiow po RO epanimous in the State of po b their ct anit fapreeentat ein federal go eile New York wil! not withhold it? I you, gentlemen, I eS Teak eecrtred (ge Teg pee and ane 1856, even though Major Breekinridge should not rv secltry vote, nd he ate ezeagth af Rear should be given to Judge Douglas ineo!n + Seperate emenaee sad Wisconsin, if we may . the the J ros i f t : z E ' respectable country lawyer. I do not mean to speak | tajked of the trrespressibie con{lict, was in earnest tell 3 the peopie of jeter mine the agninat lawyers at all —I mean to say that for he tells the cocntry, ta his moderate speech, that ii | know they will not. (Cucers.) When I began on this iment bokts bs for (eet comseon to vali exalt be | question for themselves, winent ¢i ou acount m there are on who would make ax was only a figure of eloquence he indulged inat the time, | topic, I bad in my miud what I shali now ctate I | Meccised other States ase member Unica. prohibition very. President as Abrahein Lincoln. Why, gentlemen, and be did not mean exactly what he said, and if elect- | have spoken a little in advance of my ideas ‘This constitutional action of the Court at once pro- And, still later, in his letter of acceptance to tho Ba't!. id furnish you #'th 60,000 men in New York as good od, he ts going to be aconservative, constitution loving, | I bave spoken to you of the reauit of this work. | Voked the bitter denunciation of the republican leaders, | more wor ongps eyed ey te 4 from the hegative man—cot a reprosentative man. Isaw | law abiding President, and after all, the South would get | The result of this work is a bappy combination of all true | when that most indefatigable sectional legislator, Seastor | Convention, be :—“The friends of constitutional a friends of the Union—of ail real opponeats of Lincoln and | Wilson, of Massachusetts, in a speech in this city, said'— | ¢quality do not, and never did demaad Hamlin throughout the State of New York But the thing ‘We shall change the &: Court of the United States, | SVE Code, nor any other code in reference to ‘Terr! to which I wish to call your particular attention is the | and place men m that court, who belie tm vate, interior act of that committee. Ihave told you | maoulate Chief Justice, John Jay. that our prasere will be im- | Congress, or by a Legisiature, either to estan. w it was composed. You know what they bad to do, | Pious to Heaven while we sustam and support human slavery. | lish or prohibit slavery, but assert (fortified by the They bad to ark individuals who were honored with bigh ie Seward, speaking with erecta getameaty, boonane goes a penen tribunal ope mm) Leg tes J of on the electoral tickets of rival tee - in bie tative it, Seuate, March federal government, |, to secure, ‘y SS 1868, + a sera ' | when neccesary, to the citizens Crreass en- life, and to give up to others no better— r joymeat of their property in the common Territories, as ce Ae p The Su part nao can roverae im gouioue jadement | cipowners 10 its juriedicvion.”” Tt is thus D .e people Py ited ‘atsas never can, aod | shat on this mooted question of sia’ tm the Territories on a placard that Abraham Lincoln would speak for two | on with him very well. So as his epeech about the irre. sbillinge for any cau That, gentlemen, is no recom | preasible confiict was all talk, and he does not mean to mendation. He had ove speech with which be weot carry it into execution, he will not do for us. Sohe would throughout the country; he made a tilt with ins, and not do for them. Seward was not one of those philosophers Douglas beat him. (Cheers.) I, therefore, say this: let | He was only one of these stump orators and politicians Abraham Lincoln, as a |i ha eplit hal who wanted au office, and which he wanted to make as ‘woodsman, let bim split ratls; but I protest - | warm and comfortable and sang for bimecif and bis dent, he shall not try his band in splitting the Union (Loud | friends as be could. He was not one of those philoso appiavse ) My last remark (and pardon me for keeping you | pers He was only one of those gentlemen who mike 90 long) I Lave now come to Ah, say they, Abraham ches at will, and talk pleasantly and coaxingly to Lincoln's a very honest man—a very, very honest ma, | theee whore sometiaes called the multitude, for the ves. | tion. ingeed, Why,1 poe Lis hooesty will make bimcarry | purpose of getting their votes, intend! whea he got | They had to bring the most opposing elements | they never will, accept priv 80 UWhoenstitutiwmal and so | there is but @ lime dist inotion, really but little faatdits ‘ns fain hehS ntu | Baten tcm tulrueie ace wae | Recar tein kasi nage tt | Gece See meme eksties | anavad oc ast womans tu amc ve | Se Promise em. en you wlll see the Diack politic& upon this principle that he always acti le in ou suppose am -] il vy ia ding raised, of free labor againat slave labor, And as 20 | this way with the three old taties, bis eneapnalons 1a po that nb r trol with the cousuietien and the iawnot cake SF | proseat Chicl Magistrate may be inferred from the § 3ecc8 given to the li FH ef 1 tt He | : man drevtms that the Southern Staves wil make us staves, | [tical life. Be first made’ court, as a It follows, a8 a necessary Consequence, tlat Abrabam and gallart youth, to an old lady who Pf Lincola, if honest to his party. means todo b's best that | by the name of ant! (sunty) Meson. (Laughter the free men of the North shall make {ree the lanoring | Ido not know whether an actual marriage was coactu: population of the South. (cries of “Never,” and | Detween the old lady and the youth at time or not, cheers.) That is his promise, Bat, again, they | but certainly be was very attentive and exceeding! sy i may hare another meaning—that be is | amiable in his courtto her until the old wena aed, peceniarily honest. They mean to eay be will not stesl. | aad thea William H Seward becemea widower. Weill announced his preference for Major Breoicia- bot desiring to inSuence the action of others: — i E 7 arbitrary votes and to decide, bys majority of say 6 Allies, and states in much i and | at Caioago, in 1858:— y were ry Tf I were tn Congress, an¢ = vote should come up oma were, hableas they were to error, to to | guestion slavery should Eepae 8 5 tex Terr jue partiality, like other mea—so ‘eanctifying ia | iy") sect te Dred Bott decison, f'wowa weve bat ft ite ration on their minds was the sacred cause in which they were engaged, that all thetr deliberat 4 tentiment which seoured an coho from Senator Sum- | } vier | ; i i i i HH 5 | : y i i i i i i All L can say to that is this. When God was patting out | hedida’t ions ‘Let us congratulate oursel his rengeance against Sodom, he told Abraham if he | to court as! on ever; question, grest and email, enied in a unent. | Se? Of Massachusetts, when bo said:— greets and all who are waited with of in could find ton honest just men tn Sodom, be would spare — half eo large an estate as the anti-Mason lady, for she had | mous vote (Appiaure.) Every measure which they Ea? erat Gite. 4 pn vende he rogaionmants of Gls ot, to where tation of our opponents, that it for the sake of the ten. The ten men were not found, | the whole country, ae wherever there was a Mason there | took, apd which rerulted m the report presented to you Calwhamer talk the path of duty ls clear, Tem eee eo all past differences, and dete 80 Sodom was burned, and the Dead Sea cow rolls {ts was also an anti Masoo—(iaughter)—and so Masoory war thie evening, was onanimovsly affirmed, aud that report Waves where Sodom was Just so, the republican party. | scattered all over Well, be looked about for a fresa al- bas now mei your unanimous approval. Now, ble. H i : ! i While the repablican organ zation | f 5 i i There was an old philosopher by the name of Diogeas. | tance, ard peeing thai the second olf lady was | men I recogoire in this inastery of events over the pas- | formal address, pot forth as the vote, under the plurality ru Diogenes lived ina tub, and be thooght all men rogces — likely’ to be tees wre to him in hoodwinking | sionsof meb—in this perfect combination and harmony | ®ction, tn 18667, stated: — the combined peau or Ove wight he took his lantern and went about ; the people be courted the old Indy. Anti (aunty) Rent | for the purpose in view, the government of an overruling | It is one of the most ismentabie feat: Popclar majority of 6,5: “Diogenes "" said gome aoquaintanes, “ whatare you | was her name, emall as herestate was He courted her | Providence—of that Providence which has heretofore | mecratic thet & gallant State coald only looking for’ “An honest m; said 1) “and T | for some time, aud she too, I think, died. Of this I am | protected this Union from all cangers, and which will, 1 | of justice, and plurality in the last con bare not found one yet he repablican party bas | not positive, for aemall quantity of vital breath, [ be | trust, preserve it to the last, (Cheers.) A word or two fi. - Lt favora! played the part of Diogenes: but they think they can | lieved, remained in the old woman, and perhaps she | more acd 1 eba'l bave done. I have claimed that the now be attained if the suffrages of its con save the republican party by having found one man who | still existe up at her own little piace at Helderberg adm chiizens are to be Givided rival caudia: will not steal. (Laughter and cheers.) Do you not uo | Mountain, (Laughter) But, be this as it may, what ‘s true of Now Jersey Tr equally trae-ot derstand why they speak about his honesty’ Cast your | phe died or not, bis relations with her were dissolved. Eng'and State, with this difference: with eye at the acts of the republicun legisiation of last | What,shen, think you be did? He tmmetiately soled energies we have but limited hopes of winter in this State of New York, and I put this | another old woman—Anti (aunty) Slavery The nationality of New evems to have question to you, did they or did they not steal’ (Ories of | laughter) Anti Slavery when the ne Pe es cara “Yes, they did.) Did they not steal your franchises, | estate in his widowed It t then most evident nothing but dissster worth milions of dollars’ Now I am done, and | jn bis courtship with the old woman, until on will resuit from the cotimusece of our div 1 give one piece of advice to all You coming home from abroad he heart of the Johu Brown man can gainsay this, and tho democracy live in a splendid & moble city an empire | raja, when he aaw the effect of it upon thejpeo; cap have no totereet in per ng & division as well noble State. Tam sur begae to ‘car that ft would not do for him to have every Sormmate but tn inangeretiag on onposttioe ov ed by f nil climes, all custome | Calon loving man in th» country agatost him. comtinued prosperity of the whole Uuios Oach’ bere my friend thia account that he mace the conservative speech e ‘8, ‘toe of the irrepressible cooSict, claiming that then, t be euch @ combination im the ovo! there my friead from the bea which made (he old woman jealous, aud cpon whieh she | the age, Windeld Soot (cn A gallant holdicg Sates and non-slavenviding stares cannot live | States as shal! prevent the saccrae of the rop. i nd the bine Morel, from Né alled all the philosophers together, when a grand con. | old bero returved wearlrg won, | Presidential Shall the entire Uhe fede. | barmouiousiy together in the Usion. however, bas | nee? 1 am aware thet heated and violent / France and Eogiand. I eali upon all adopted citizeus to | guitetion was beld, at whieh Wm H. Seward was tried | this whole nation bowed doen in homage to his teleata | ral goverument, the adoption of the constitution to | not been our experience ip the past At sdopiicn of it muccess, and look for fut: stand up and vote agatost Abraham Lincoln, or you wil! | ja the balacce and found waoting, nod bis fate was theo | and to bie patriotism, and one of the ical parties of | this timo, be reversed? Shati the farther acquisition of | the tution was recogoized in al! ori. irocgh of the diferent democrat: labor. | amd there Jecided on aud written out, but not made] the Union nomioated the hero for the Prosideocy of the | contiguous territory by peaceful annexation be arrested, | giua! thirteen States, that period clig-ate and sot! tiove to whict they beloug; dat or be | known or pobliehed. It waa not, indeed, till one | United States, No nobler character, no abler or more | when it seeks to come into the federal Union’ Shall the we determined the kind of institutions fitte i to the | forget there can be ne furure to those who treme | fine, bright morning at Chicago, when Seward's | eminent man could have been selected He stood before | inbabitants of each of the States enjoy their rights in | requirements of the ve sections of the Union | down 7 | friends and suitors were look! up with confiience | us clothed with such attractions to the American heart, | common with their brethren tn all the States of the | Within covstitational limite, and we have eng n te the Come one, come al! come from the mountain and congratulated themecives that he would be the next | with such claims on the petriotism of the people that he | Union? Sbali the people of the Territories be left to | periag aod dwelling in barmony until we have reached | ragod come from the valleys, come from the bill sifer, acd come Preei¢ent, thet ail of a sudden the sentence of the from the forests—all coms together at ® Dand cf conter- | philosophers was read to the assembied maititade, aol rative men; sacrifice wpon the altar of your soantry biny Seward war repudiated, and Billy Seward’ was little petty /prejadiows and fecling®, and ‘arch in one | divorced, and the old woman took « new hoxband to her broad phaiaox to the polls at the next election; retoem | gelf—a remarkably haadsome one too at that—one Abra- feemed @ candidate almost invincible At that day, no | leguiate for themselves in conformity with the decision | our present gigantic proportions. We hare Matter whether {t was troe or false—I assame that | of the bighest judicial tribuns!, and can men who differ | through two wars successfully while this system has it war faire and & mistake—it was whispered | upon tnewental and Subordinate questions of general | Continoed; we bave augmented our territorial limite by fret and then published louder and louder | poilay nos meet for @ common 0% hen the are | ao exteut larger in aren than the origival limite of the Unt! it took perition i the minds of the people | of such momentous iseue—involviag nothing less than | original thirteen States; we have ewelied our popalation | | .¢ pte vifo, the righte of tudiridual States your country by carting your vote against abrabam Li bem Lincoln, the rail splitter from Ulinols. (Great | of this city ant State, that that great bero was not ex. | the pence and prosperity of the whole countr; Te tt | from three to thirty millions; we bave ext our a 7 opt col. No matter whe beresfter may be Pre Ot, ru | langbter ) Now thie wae a great chauce, for it wae foand | actly versed in o'y 1 affsire aud wae subject in some de | the dretate of pers seaguent to hesitate and Teccuinte commerce upon every traversable sea. our manu. | raged and the peat ay nelly for tuck and trast in "'rovidence (Prolonged cLeers ) that Seward really never bad originated the great ides of fe to the influence of the biack republican feader, Wm. | upon the individeal benefit that will result to this | feo to every portion of the habit | there remained tii recently ous atonal or Mr. Gaearp read the following reeolcticns, which were | the irrepressible confiet, aud that his epeecch at Rochester Seward. What wus the result of thet opiaion? The | or that candidate, to this or that branch of o sbo globe, aud yet it is proposed that this pace | whoss members cheriebed k o¢red sentiments, Adopted by ac-lamation | which announced the irreoreasible coufiet, or that idea io ole of the gst acd patriotic city of New York assem. | dissevered democracy, whea @ sense of common | {ui snd progressive policy shall be interrapted | the North, the Gast, the South, or | thae meoting be and they | in it, was one which he bad stolen from Abraham asta prevented a thon 7 | Uineo'n, of Titec, and that therefere be was not the ported the Cajon electoral ticket, for thetr wise accbe ((avgbter) But that Abe Liacoia Live labors, ard that ead committee be contin was the fret who had grven Dirth to the monstrous iden 1a accomplishing the success Of the elestoral ticket of the irrepress dic conflict, aud that he was conequentiy ported by them the troe mar—the true antl slavery man. (Ap. ) Resolved, That it be recommended to o And ths old Meck ledy—-Aatt (0 ty) Slavery kicked led at the meeting to which my honored frieed Gererd | danger should nerve every arm and animate sod & ntw order inaugurated tn toe administration of Allored, At vatic Carcen, and rotwithetanding the Mgh | every heart! Thank Gat, wo are yet free, | the federal govercment under a leadership of «candidate calms of Window! Sects for the enpport of the American | Tere ie sti abundant occasion for patriotic vigor and | Whe sball rece've no Votes ia bait of the States of the People, bis election war Cenownord af davgerons to the | resolutio, but nous for uenccemsary division and despair. | Federal Union B Union’ hee H Seward, a8 the organ | If on the threshold of cur struggle for independence our tm, exerted an {nflacnee | fathers bad yielded to temporary disasters, to 1 mieht fay, with tears | Civisions and opeecessary alarm, our Lborties woul ever bave been achieved No, men of New York, | in thie calamity go be averted? Cor. | tainly it connot be done if the democtatic vote tarough | Out the entire country is to be di rived in the approach } lug contest A _briel exam‘nation of the resalte in the Pens throughout the State, opposed to the eb Billy Seward overboart— not naif hand. ey? mo a him ae tart Presicential etr: ‘will demonstrate bo cola and Her Nie, 89 cosreve Us Ai. fogs in the come rough for ber, and I in's protrAlt was exhio't. |] she sent forth her sevteoes of emt whether you reity wader the !mmediate banner of the } ly futile it © for the soweerany to bope for tecotee 6 spirit that animates the movement in this city. aad that | fd f!l Over the comntry to show the exquisite taste she bad | the lergth and breadth of thie Onte ah intrepd@ nod gallant Dougias, of are led by the nneuilied | this time, woless by & biended vote of all the clements op. they be invited jo correspond with the committee of | in ebang’re t new. Now, w bererioas | on the dew in FioGe.c Soot ae & Candidare, aod he | footprints of the brave and chivairic Breok inritg?, or fol- | ported tor ctionanew in the approaching confit. Bat Gfeen, with the view to co operation (n their edforts. | about the motte Sewardimade @ Conservative speech, | bad cnly three or four «ec low the fortues of the pru aad conservative Bell, let | With ® voion of the demoerasy, and ali those who raily : apd a eet jost 6) much as to give rise to the probaly ether. Ter years age New Y us here, in the mutual presence of one another, ptight bas for ite sentiments “The EPFFCH OF CTTARLES 0 CONOR. Hity that be tyight rea iy be'trusted by the country aa Preeti. | New York new preee ovr mutual tatth that we will resist the Southern - | Conptitution of the country, the Union of the States, and Orn O'Cowon was next introduced After the ap. | dent and made ke 1, lawless, Colon hating | Of things Blacktey caniem, ten theurand times more | siooiet as we will the Northern fanatic, that we Will the enforcement of the laws,” we eae agnio with resiet- lauee which greeted bim bad subsided, be ap ke as fo! partizane, that be 1 be trusted them = They | Tatmpart, ite designs net merely sunpected but loadly | etend banded together sgainst al! dieucloniste as disor. ete Lide #weep every vestige of sectionaliam from the jows.—Fellow citizens of New York, this megvificent | turnec om him and they bare selected «tai aroxed. and Wm || Seaard now the avowed nad deter | gauizere ot the public tranquillity, aa we would against | lend Taking the basis of the Fillmore vote in Virginia preronts a glorions reaponse to (he glorious call fe princigies there if no doubt mined leader of the party He hae repented his con foreign iwvater, determined to form wiih our in 1886, which war 60.39, and taking the wore given to of the people of | oo hie vevenge har gone forth aa the | Bervative eperch, and row staede before us as the bodies a rampart over which no traitor el vail Br. Buchanan, which was 80,875, it wil! be sen, that if have Hot, gentle ‘ncolp, ood the chamopton of ant: siavery champion, advo aod @xpectast Prime Minister foot fret rests upon « patriot’s grave Let me not | i ihe Presidential contest of thie year one-thira of the men, met together pursoact to an sothority emanatiog | ¢ his cobservative apeced, ard tow he atters J of tbat backe ocamao who dee pot Koow bow | be misunderstood | beliewe thet the atteclhmeat of the | popular democratic vote br given to Jadge Douglas, and from any political party, from no quart faction, from no | ative word He travels through the J to ord wi'cot (be awsietance of some such man. | American peope to the american Usion is stronger than — the remaining two thirde to Breck in: ‘still the. friends of mine—from no friends of soy oarticu at mons. avowed coding ed champion of the irre Tanghtr Now, gopto ncn, thie te the atete ce things life itself, aud that the election of any candidate by acon | Beil and Everett ticket would be elected. jing the ‘ure of policy—but you hare met to porsoance of author 2 againet the rights and interests of ecity of New York. the state of New York, on the ational mejority. to eecordance with the forms and re- | state of North Carolina, whore Jodge amy oy bas meay ity emanating directly and spontaneously from your. i fploce: Abradam Ltr cole before you truly nore coepicles that Willam Gf @eward had the ser of | quirements of the constitation, is ta iteclf no csuse for Str ag and decided friveds, aod aenamin, will receive aren people—(Applaase)—The people called the cher opten of the doctrines maa whe a Seott, dencunced the patriot and elder, ce | any separstion of theese sovereign, indepen tent aad | epe-fourth only of tbe ar ‘vote, it will be together for the purpore of determining the great vote (ao all the Ofteeo Seater prived him of lie bok on the jones of the American | rate Matee But it @ not cient that we revere to Major momentous qrestion involving neither more oor | N = the State of things—thie @ the | people, nod defoate’ bim of @ candidate for the Presi | constitution Passive fidelity is only « 0 we quality. Tote, On | party againet the megro and his party less «than «the etm question: Shall thie great | jsruc be A great, promperoum, free coantry i J ceory © State of New York, stilt more inte | We murt support and defend i: against al! jofractions, received The reeling was addremmed we mt rested ‘vyavion of the Delon pow thao she | from whatever quarter they may come, whether from the — fore glorious Union cease the year 1861, or shall it be | threatened with ciel war and desolation. [tts threat other epeakers, sod was etith ja at #! uated . af forever? andories of “it sball.”") | eosd. not by reaten of opinions which We may entertain | wae ther a ty it every boor—bas before ber | federal or State departments of the government, It is | Mr ‘ porters eleven (one, ls the question, { whieh has called the | of th objects of this vere Tt te threate mort mint thie beck wordsrmes--this baodenme Abraham Lincole— | rot simply sufficient to obey the laws or ap rove the in. | more Im the epirited contest: neeroearily yee * Citizens of New York together ry order to constitute a | testy and directly by the pain prociamations and state | totally lnexperienced in bite affairs, one who | stitutions wonder which we live; they must moog A tran. in this 88 the reaidence of Governor Joha- ‘ committee of Afieen, who bave made their report this | ments of the'r cantilate and iter mumporators nad par. | ever dd a pingic a(i-mative set aa & statemmen, | sustained and advocated whenever thoir aathority fon, the Vice candidate with Judge soy Rat, comamition Bas sat, they ave, delibe. | tiniarty by thelr gra! mew’ hin. Bewarh Now, | exept to vote ageizet bie country when cers | rethieniy, sssailed by riolens®, or weir erisenes oa | Detglss, sapaming voto is divided so} THE OUPDOOR DEMONSTP. rated, ave actet, and Rave their re. | geotlemen, this |) the condition of things. Ie [te worthy | preted for our brave sole ers ‘aienen.) Abraham by tHegakor sectional combinations were.) as to give to one-third of the AAR AR a are pow en to pase upon it—to de- | object on your part te ri. pi suena, to vat peer of equal and Cre. the remaining Tremendous o Decne Gey cone a eee ee shoulders to the wheel, by 8 un! sed noant under @ go- | two-thirds to Major can recare the Trhsther_the mence they have used are hosorsble ous effort. defeat the attempt to make the ‘cn Safetel vole we apes ae and Rverett—_who Magniseent Terehiight ther those means. tf ty and vigoroesly enforced, | State of Now York an instrament in clevatiog to ‘that | oil ‘that ‘with Ber gallant and tatrepid Unboundea Enthusiasm. Are Adequate 10 inture the objecte—the the men who have these objecte in vfew, and who, | New York has not lovers of con} igaiace be im end other 2nd intuentiel men, bound Dot | os extasor demonstration was tbe tcc ao ow rs Union. rey ) } elevated, @.. have the power an. manifesdy have | batere of disoord aod civil war eoough ye se = ae oe ender the deetrine an of rights. Yeerwian bet a the = quest! before Fo . this even. | the intert carry them into execrtion’ That is the | tlectoral vote being given to sneh ® man such why was it to guard rights with Governor of the kind that has ever taken pleco ia th ing. _ Heretofore, prime miniater ’ (ios ) uch ap rious poliettuce? enshrine them in the con- Sl aot be fully enabled to secure one third of In immensity of numbers, in excellence of The meeting pert addressed fn an oloquent end stitution avd protect them such jealous care? Is not demecratic ‘Of that State? If in Alabama cdihetiece, « effective manner by Mr. The #ore E Tomtinaoo. the goveroment derived from the Is it noted. | we the a, Still predicated upon the | *#@ io spontaneity » S°SECH OF HOM, MRAM WALBRIDOR, miuiatered by their agents, and their bene@e? | vote of 1886, dividing democratic vote equally be- | by any other political convocation There were cal’s for Geaerat Walbridge, and in re. | And cannot the people be trusted the guardiaaship | tween Jadge Douglas and Major Breckinridgn, neither | stands bad been erected in the q wnited «= L_ (himk ehey are tne | sponse io them, the Genoral came foreard and was im beir own privileges? The avawer is piaia A govern. | would seeure the electoral vote, since Mr Bochanan ro. of the Inetitnte felled for the accomplishment of the onjecte we had in | majority of the people of thie State, [think that they are | trocuced to thé meeting Amid many cheers and ont. | mertof the people is cecessarily a government of une | ceived but 46,817 votes to 28,667 thrown for th: oppos | i front Cooper = fe the be CORNET, Bat able to, and tbat they will, accomplish the defeat of thet | burste of applause, Gonoral Watearon gpoke es fol | majority, bot the majority, if they by | tion In Louwiana, where Judge Douglas is eustained by | Third and Foarth avenves The » @ har D ret the ms © party and the overthrow cf ite candidates. (Applause) | lown— cour \itetional reetralnta may in secaring ‘gh many influential journals and many anle trienda, and | stance was admirably managed. They «: or ide for the | And. gentlemen, 1 willstatete yor why. ft le a plain, | ato ff ol fe) Cor) political «history = when | overlook or violate the rights of others. not be | which hes long been considered his the the flag of the Unioe, sod i! aa ¢ Rrectiarilge—(appiause)— | short, nimple, easy matter of calculation The menaced | aii our foreign relations are upon the most satie | mockery to teil the Py oo eh ye | 5 aneume bi _— agen oor aMairativd for Doug\ae— (applause) —aad our sdimi pack Of pour goumiry ia jaat which comgriges ike South. | faciory Uasin, when we bare boom most omincatiy that (hotr country la & free republic, and themacives renceq with their sentiments, Jn front o

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