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NEW YORK HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1860.-TRIPLE SHEET. 5 vation of \he iwalieuable right of upon it, by tae staienion of She side by side the free lover and the Sabbatarian; and Sige ot ae Us eet eomenn of Sow ret, with an exemplary pereiiecce ave sney amintained | Terloree oe coun iriog to: cbaracterise in-deor gatherings. without ‘tbe condition jere the fo)- er then went on to prove that «large class of ir jos and their practice, | ®!f government. So tar, then, from be mn OO : ‘ato should abolish involuntary ber- ) Y though they bed not demanded the repeal of | Set pete megraleey upon their pollisca stoek, | Se#tiMed the right of governing tbe pecpie of ibe Territory Giioers and the speakers were allowed upen the stands; commission of crime, and thit as a from | the Fogitive Blayo law, yet had interposed every 000- | proquced ite Et, - r—the eternal nigger. | % W8# distinctly repudiated by the ordivance of 1787. faithfal persons were placed at the bead of the steps, ‘the had ta | ceivable obstace in the of ite execution. He then } ttangbter.) Trey ate 8 drankjpigger—they— | ADd #8 Mr. Benion observes, the ordinance “became ibe was permitted to pass without a ticket of | ‘os and among ‘as sates of ‘Haven, and | sald:— ‘anid to sbow that. tbe at least the . Darie of all the Territorial governments down to the pas- PF eradioredainl the forfeited the regard abd affection of its ‘Banbury celebrated | of the repul Dien in thee antame—they Gow age of the Kaveas Nebraska act in 1854." Thos, then, edmittance. In the meanfime, the immense hall having . It would be to show that this saly-_tho enevteiion fo the letter and +y ir hours—all over, where, they saw the sable gentle: | bat Deen acknowledged und secured to ike poopie ‘Deen filled to overflowing, crowds began to congregate carelees of the facta con- Killed rats. (Bursta of | and opinions of the fathers mau, Ubiquitous, this black principle was becoming Of the Territories the right of goveraing them= asound these stands, Then the outside meetings were the formation of the constitution, oF he never, yen had in 1 nothing thes was | cate, hazhor designs upon en of attenuated ‘Of mere extension. | po a a ge I (salons Me 20) uallorm and galled to order, the chairman and other officers appolated, thi coast, by the action or in- oF Saxons Mt was Vornly | tale great end growing coe Fee ar mesetion 00 Coleegs resents fay ine | tain elther the POMee of Cougressonal interterensa ‘and the speakers introduced in regwiar order. The ut- government, never formed any part It told no story of “Gar- | that our 0) Presidency they reaily resolved that they saw # nigger oF to contend for the coptinuance, with the people tn their Territorial condition, under en pted organic law of am interrupted sovereignty, should they have agreed to of led to the formation of the constitu. wen”? to the Irieh heart; it mest enthusiasm prevailed during the delivery of the apr ng ‘The leading motive which indaved te Sn z a iB i 3 Bo . “Marteleige ' of the great Revelation im tue juences. Their motio ae 2 5 | slavery, fellow citizens, is suggestive of an important Shia new perl When ‘aominading a. rail epi the | | ! wpeooues, the open air oraters being frequently interrupt- adoption of Ube constitution was one | of the Freachmwan recall emotions of Fa- aby restriction ypon the seme. Thur, fellow ciiizene, ¥ ed by borsts of cieerd and bemorous remarks. It wasan | ¥ (rely overlooked vy Mr. Seward, what | therland to-biz of Goressny, ner izapiee the Oagtilian | the South, wbo wi Jiy implore the Nori not to di@turb | ppineantt-al checreer ot hee creates tine it mover | bave endeavored to disclose to you the history and trie motive and incresse trade and commerce; | with glorioue dreams of Rovrsnvalies; and if'a stray note | this periieome question. No heed ie paid to the solemp | Occurred to you that it, ae woil as every ober gocial | CODSstreciion of that instrument #0 often quoted for ine euscodingly intelligent gathering; much interest appear- | to promote the material and wealth of the | of “Apmie Laurie” found ita way Ww a Scottisn ear, tbe | counsels of the great and rood men of our own times t0 | phenomenon produced by the iiluences of am expanding | OPPressicd of popular soverciguty in the Terrivories. You @d tobe taken in the authoritative statements made, of the constitution in this relation | descendant of Piruco or Wallace mourned to hoar an air | cultivate between the dillerent sections of our brother. | civilization and periodically impremsed upon ite surface, | “MSY Judge, ‘also, with what propriety it is “that it ie so and the lines of argument pursued in the speeches, as been drawn witl so much fidelity, precision aud ac- | thur abused to which bis countrymen had been accustom- | hood naught but feelings of mutual regard and friendsbip. | y but the p-oduet of circumetanoce in combination wick | ofteD claimed for the support of Congrersioosl inter- J curacy by one of the ableet ex that instrament | ed to mareb to victory over many of Europe's ensan- | Hear the voice of Henry Olay. In 1848, upon the floor of | the effort for human advancement, that force inherent in | {Fence in apy respect, aud bow precisely it defines the tee well timed enthusiaam of the populace abun- | that the coun! produced, that ! shall trangoribe a | guined felis. (Cheers.) Is it surprising, theo, that the | the American Senate, he enid:—‘‘Anxious ae : always am | our nature, and which prompts and directs all the currente iebts of the persons with whom it deals. You have datly attested. Stil it was somewhat dif- | portion of that » Ta most profound, The vast family of man, from its origin professed your faith in the same doctrince taught je Awakes were disgusting to our peopie? (‘*No,’’ | to contribute whatever is in my power to the harmony, | of lon, No.) Now, the inetisution of slavery is by asmenee concord and Denahicen et wie sent people, 1 feel myeelt PP pono moment, has been invariably impelled by and veoured, by the ordinance, and now that the new to the world, although it has been the whole stock | irresistibly impelled to do whalever is in’ my power to | this perpetual agency.” Mysterious as ‘t may oom, when | demance, is it unreasonable to civiliga, | dissuade public from continuing to agitate a subject conveyed apd defined as ® philosophical principle, you "| Will each, without fai), recognise the power in the desire feces of the ticket reported and sooepted to might will welling for a time upon ths patriotism of | ofeach to better bis condition. This desire, applied to be confirmation strong of your belief that all men may, elaborate and best considered speech ever made by Da- Gult for the hearers to follow the speakers close. | DV TRO tO? on the floor of the serate. wt was delivered Jy, because the meetings were constantly interrupted | in March, 1838, during Mr. Van Buren’s administra. Dy the arrival of different political associations from | tion, and may be jousd in the fourth volume of his -| worl Mr. Ketchum here quoted the well known views ‘Various sections of the city and from the surrounding of Dasiel Webster from the alluded to, and then er nations. in Greece and in Rome, in Vienna and in France, Thompson contirued speaking of the claim of the repob- | the thirteen colonies became independent tes the Aide: ian Billy Wilson and others on the platform to help . it | Mr, Gay and the duty of bis countrymen | gurrounding circumstances, ects «and ies the , 88d should of right, govern themeetyes. (Applause. woburbs, each cfub or society being headed by a band of | resumed his remarks. Here, he raid, is a description of | was planted here by the English crown. Yet 1 defy the | to beed the inspired words of Clay, of Washington, Jef. Seined of Social and id deta progress, or, in other At the conclusion of Mr. Cochrane’s joud cali ‘music, and accompanied by giaring torches, innumerable | the leading inducements to the formation of the consti- | ablest among the enemies of the South to prove to me | ierron and Jackton, to cultivate the Kindlies; feelings of | words, constitutes in ite application what we areaccus. Were made for Dr. Bradford, but be to answer, tvansparancics, with various devices, and banners with | ‘ction, drawn from pure bistorical sources by the band | that in any other oo where slay ed ib was | frieudship between the North and the South, Judge | tomed’ to pronounce the civilization of the age. When — % there seemed to be an indieposition on the part of ex- 4 is there. nobl 7 exis }, and | #0 tempered with humanity and ben’ ut as it ‘appropriate inscriptions. It was interesting to observe | therefore not Ep for this eccasion. Do you bellows is, fal- Nay, sir, but I will farther ealleage tbe jest re. | lican party to harmony of sentiment with the opinions of | ¢jyiiization of each embraced and tolerated African slave. © Ve the Union, the band struck upeome patriotic airs, how all these clubs and associations—some for Douglas | low citizens? “gars the conatitution in this, the right | publican of them all to show when where, in the | the fathers of the patie upon the question of slavery. | ry, The state of the industria) and social relations made *P4 the eub committee having the rockets and romam 1 and for,| of true history, it & failure? Has it been off of | whole history of the world, the negro has beer so far | Our fatbers treated the slave quesiion in all ite bearings | servile labor conducive to the general prosperity; in CAB¢les in charge—those indispensable pre-requisites to aad Johnson, some for Béll and Everett some f0F+) the track prepared and iad down by its founders for the | frem the devil and so near God—ec removed from Cupn}- | with great pradence, forbearance and caution, deeming | other words, through the slavery of the biack man the Patriotisin—deluged the r¢porters and those Who were #@ Breckinridge and Lane—seemed to be animated by one | last forty years’ Tho constitution is substantially a treaty | baliem and barbarism, and 0 approximate to civilization | the benefits to fiow from the union of the atates of vastly | white man ‘bettered hig condition.” When by the muta. “P forte s to occupy standing seats near the platform common object dear alike to ali—the- preservation | of trade and commerce between the independent nations | and Christianity—so useful to himself and to the world, | more uence to mankind than the freedom of that | tions of those same ‘ndustria! relations the lave became —” & Flower of light a of which the Union is composed. By observing the ar-+| and go likely to ameliorate and regenerate bis race,as be | portion of the negro race whom Providence bad | a charge upon his master—that is, when white labor be- | Jouy A. Gopruny, of California, was the next speaker. of the Union, It was istoresting to observe | ticies of thistrea'y an amount of material prosperity has | is in his present condition of servitude in the | placed under their control and protectien. Re- | came more profitable than slavelabor—each of the North. | He observed that he was proud’ to address so Vast am ow they all came forth with euch unanimity of | been produced such as the world has never bebeld in Southern Siates, ) Yet im his pame you | publicans turn with disdain from the exereise | ern thirteen States abolished the institution, leaving tho anne. congregated for one purpose to ratify the fecling to promote that object. Delegations came from | ther country. Look around—survey the island on whieh are invok to do: gracefu) cclamm | of prudence, forbearance and caction, preferring, im- | Southern of the thirteen sti! in ite possession, because of Union ticket end to defeat Abraham Lincoln, the camdi- we live—the ships and veseels in our harbor, the cities, | and noble arches of one temple of I'berty, and \o \ay the | stead, to follow the example of John Brown, and carry 00 | toeir juilure, through climate and other causes, to attain date of the iweendiaries ‘and the Wide Awakes of the State early every ward in the city, and large and eathusiaetic | the villages, the hamlets, the wor , the laborato ly stracture mouidering tb ashes and rob- | the war againat slavery with the rifle, the dirk and the | that point in the ecale of population and civilization °F New York. (Great Applause.) There were two Pere were their members. The Cooper Institute was the great | ries, the cultivate! fields, the insti of learning, | bish of fanaticism and corruption. In connection alow | bowie knife. Thus have we proved that the claim of th: | where slave labor ceaser to profitable. (Applause ties in the country, the patriotic and the fanatical. e entre of attraction for all. Among the societies which Fae ech deveted to relighee, the intelignas popaieticn | mo )a remind 300, thab.it 4 pe mame eee nese we a ee mith the ‘opinion’ | This, fellow citizene, is the patural By aie | Bee ey Tete eer re ga fer our coun! A D ef ‘near! munie! r count yy 80! L ‘ ‘= took part in the general display were the National Union rnd gy MA 'y—exhil ting ek pao His fathers pon wery | slavery appears, prospers and is abo! It is the cre- is wholly destitute of foundation. Finally, my ‘fellow | ation of a neceesity-—whether real or imag! still » ‘liberal goverpment. The fanatical organisations gave citizens, ff we bave forgotten the noble and self-sacrl | negcssity-cincidental to sow) growth. Itt ie thé emane. £0 to the Wide Awakes, who would sot’ tre ficing deeds of the pairiots of '16; if we have ceased | tion of a civilization, defective if you please, and to bere- {© tbe Union and deprive them of tl lopger to beed the solemn admonitions they 80 fervently | moved only by the action of the civilization which pro- | He was proud to eee the oonservat breathed forth to their Dosterity if we bave turn- | duced it, “It we not within the category of evils tobe sup. | Of the great Empire State exbibit itself, and when it ed our faces from the golden examples they set us, | pressed by the enactment of laws, Dut musi depend en- olled up ® majority to repel the black republicans it the Precepts they ‘cach us, then, indeed, are | tirely upon the interval economy of the community Would doa common duty to God and the nation. Be had we unworthy ‘and devenerate sone of great and godlike | which acinewiodges be (Cheers) And thus the man. | "e#ided in the great State of California for eight yeure, sires, If the invaluable legazice they bequeathed usare | per in which slavery cisappeared from the several %D¢ from the time of its organization it bad never defea pow to be cast away, then should cur names becom: Statee of tbe Union conveys to us an im t lonson, | SOY party that stood upon the constitution alone. Calle ‘fall the various political organizations in this city, op- | Power, and rescue the country from the dominion of a hirsing and byword upon the tongues of Pee pated 1 | It was the people of the several States who removed it | /orTpis had rolled up handsome majorities for Perce and dhe Gectiensel. Linesie, bined to swell the Sectional party. If she is awake to her best inte- upborn. But a Beary cies Sew oee ee atill beatae in | from their coniines. The exercise of that sovereiguty (or Buchanan, and it would again roll up # majority for the poeed to om: } Comal considered pored - | harmepy with the revolutiovary , all will yet be | which they hai successfully struggled was ihe simple ana | Union ticket to defeat rectioualism. (Tremendous ap- member They all had bands of music, iiuminated trans- that men of business in this | max, we have been deprived of the commonest well, tbe Union electora! ticket wil] triumph in the Rm- | effective instrument of their relief. The same insirumen. Favre. eater reminded them of the heroes that wond me ask, treaty League of the Eighteenth ward, the Twentieth Ward | paire: e violated, be brokent” It weary to say that we Breckinridge and Lane Union Association, the Fighth coe hae Seren pene Ward Dougias and Jobnson Ciub, the Seventh Ward fotiohnn?, Woeie, i net be Be National Democratic Union Club, the Spartan Artillery, | treaty, not on! trade commerce, the Ninth Ware Union Clad, the Filth, Seventh, Now. let the State of New York, with the Atlantic oooan | tax has been impdece upon the four counties compoeing ’ ° ’ | atone ext ity, and immense inland seas at the other, | th's Meti itan Police district, exoeeding that paid by Twelfth and Twenty first Ward Douglas apd Johnson | gfording facilities of commerce with numerous the other fifty-four counties; that five millions’ worth of @lubs, and numerous other sesociations. Ipdeed | let the of New York look to herself, and ber great bartered without should regard the material ire and the union of these States wi!! beas per | tality, whenever their civilization requirce, it is to | the battles of the Revolution, and counselled them to perencies and appropriate and humorous bemmers. The | sav intaes and uninter. Petual and enduring as the names of tbe honored mud | be ‘Sapeoted, will remove. the, wstitution’ frow*ing | forth their latent evergies, and urged them not to be ia= ‘Kings county delegation made « splendid turnout. They ‘trade of the several Yenerated men who gaye it life. Then— South, It is for thie exercise of the sovereignty of the | Sotive, but to go to the polls on the 6th of November and ak manent foeh he fry wp Rosatag an, stneaied |, Ban eS Sees we Naini Seater eek eee ntae terns Maaee| Pretest ee Lee, & good deal of attention. There were the Union Leagues prosperit MOpited we stand divided we tall? is not inalienable; but may be lost, and is actually lost by | | A musical individual was called upon for a song, whem ef Brooklyn, Light Infantry, Kings County Battalion more than ‘It made and preserved as & nauon. the inhabitamts of the Territories.’ As a sequence to this he apg ® song, entitled “ Hurrah for the Union.’? Gab, the Hickory Boys of Kings county—a formidable us and the ‘The union of iakes— ihe union of lande— deprivation of the right of self: ment, they claim | Which was relished by the crowd, who sang the chorcs 2 arwith a Gui The De better fed, ‘unton of Btales nove can sever— that in Congress alone is invested the power and charge | ¥'th unusual earnestness, The juveniles evidently pre- beay ppd clothed any other people, ‘be union of besrte- the uninn of bande of territorial government. Permit me to <ietain you wish | feFred to hear the singing rather,than the ef- mecratic Union Club, with a splendid temple of liberty, prosperity results Es Sis me! a brief exposure of this political heresy. Now,@caution | forts, abd, therefore, they demanded another song froma the Twelfth Ward Club of Brooklyn. ‘The end of the pro. | from the treat; commerce between the 1 een A Jou, tu the Bret ‘place, against oxafoandisy popular | the vosalist, who responded by singing “Three cheers Soe : we a foreign nations; Ww ‘seen, Loud cheers followed the conclusion 0’ Judge Foomp- sovereignty ‘with what is termed squatter soveroiguly. the red, white and blue.”” While the gentleman was dis- eceaion was made up of delegations from Richmond | tay ited States. Are | ness wedded to son's speech. ‘ Notwithstanding the origin of their use, the Novda | Playing’bis vocal abilities at one end of the stand, tbe county and Jersey City. Nearly all the associations trom put in jeo- Sere aleo made trom thie stand by Pogeno J | themselves have an inherent siguidcation which ren- | ¢VeF watchful and indefatigable Rynders resorted to, the boures, iiteratar Pon verted, by | onward and onward up town—our greatest thoroughfare | Sullivan, Judge a Hiar~ | ders discrimination between them of chief impurtanoe. | otber end, and, perceiving tbat a tlag was partially bidder BrookJyn bad open barouches containing their oilicers ringtop; and the meeting, and distinguished invited gueste who came to honor tae | te! oS Join in the general procession Roce ceee eoreee e ene ee ree) salighisuiag's astsveratio Urother, wie did s0t appear to eocasion by their presence, or rather to do honor to | being than there is of its | those of Venice in her glory, rising, equal and free, are io bo found, there ie popular sov- | COmprebend the "8 movements. ‘He lssinging Abemseives by being present on the occasion, These . Ketchum was fre- nd, upon the ruts of STAND NO. THREE. ereignty. But where landlords‘aré, and their tenants, too, | Sb0Ut the flag of your, countrymen, said Mrs Brooklyn Clubs made a really beautiful display. 4 applause, and was | spacious marsions of every variety of architect SPRECHES OF COL. VOSBURG, HON, JOHN COCHRANE there is aquatter sovereignty. It ts ai the root of feadal | RY! Tikies abate tae hich . — Pro- Tee members of most of them were ~ dressed mr ination for ae ci im the ne po Mesa F 7 Sipe aap Agel iar ths Re which constitutes tue Bure men Mite te Hiderable guato The vocalist. who was all this tima ” RANKIN AND RYNDERS—UPROARIOUS ENTHUSIASM— | ¥ vw constitut Me 1 fo new and eplendid’ opforme, something “a1 | Corer ners of atmos sand, fr toe eioee tea | Stsnine Srery se aod tes Meese ceeatpeme"ceas | Sonos faxp Cuonvens ay TuE MULTITUDE—cnaxp | /An, and support the tboory of trons, pincipalitig | TSSrehtat i th acl from, whesee ihe cheering miler in style, but much more bandsome in | great that get an opportunity to hear the | explored universe—tbe noble rivers that seem to caress- | ?YROTECHNIC DISPLAY, BTC., BTC. the soll of & ee Pipe Ser apy yl ms | Came, tad tobe surprise ho saw te Marmbal mppearance to that of the Wide Awakds. They carried | speakers in front, Mr. Bradlee observed that they bad SPide'Dant cad the Wont ad the tenths ont tacoma Just as the monster assemblage had been called to | of ownership in the soil. If the squatter’s right of ocou- | by, # Feléct gathering of the faithful, one of whom imtero- arti colored lamps and torches, which, together with pray i eh ‘the Naor ot Lol ‘Deautiful uniforms and elegant marching, produced a fine litics Cao. 10 wan a benctifal Sight to sve Unive varices uno. | ecetcncr neeriant, be said, fi the, reason we —- , Se e atreams of pyrotechnics, as they came from every poi com: of tbe compass, marching to the music of their ban‘s, dential election. (Creers ) i taaeves onaniel uaere thr comer aie with more than quadry; and all conveying to one ceniral point, and that | ip our joal history that questions of such important y the Cooper _Icatitute. the even: the } issues bave been presented to the people, consequently square became #0 densely that it was icult_f have never bad 20 much responsibility resting upon us for the clubs to pers. About halfpast ten Bat the present time, ‘The election of “Abe Litcoln ‘theres y gated bim relative to the forthcom: torchlight procee~ Order within the walle of the Cooper Insite, (oe | a ere ea rit Remain to, {26 | He. Marshal Ky oder replied that on the 26d be weal myriads of patriots, who were anxiously waiting outeide Congreds of the United ‘States, the trustees’ of the | b&veacrowd that would aston sh the natives themselves. ’? for the organization of the mass meeting, were addressed | people of the United States in whom is the | He then spoke of the size of the mecting aud his deliberata opinion was that it was the ‘meaning, of by Marsbal Rynders, who said the hour had arrived for fhyadie ton d of pee aera ncnercos by | course, the largest) he ever saw together in foe Ye commencing the proceedings. He sommated Colonel —" Doe he bed Ff Fem sp yn tea a y Colonel Raxkin, of Pennsylvania, was introduced aod Vosburg. of the Seventy-frst regiment, as President, | pends on no squatters right of occupation. It is of pakeae Rip Re demonstrations of welcome. He i) enced his speech by remarking that men of all poit- which was enthusiastically ratified by the audience. Coles signee & and meee in the ag It dys ab- | tical preferen re Col, Voancxcm thanked them for calling upon him to | riphig, mye ng fone oy om peng ~~ a their country. There was a great crisis at hand, and the preside over the Union masees of conservative men who | to the sovercignty of the man, and go far from flourishing | Oly way to secure the ‘try from the dangers of had met together for the purpose of rebuking re With the squatter or feudal Tight, exisis only in conjunc: | tectionalisan and ‘anata vras to lay aside al! minor tion with the allodial right or titie of the land ia the poo. | Polit ifferences and go for the Union. (Applause. > publicanism, and for the purpose of establishing a record | pie, an ever familiar exempliication of this ace) Never sitce the days of 1776, when the Unicom customers of all sections—new vessels for ocean and ri Ne 4 i H & g i F E that ad. tnd ail the clubs, swelled by accessions of ever experienced. (Cheers and cries of ‘‘That’s #0.” eitizens from the several ‘meetings, all formed into one Fy, ple gree » ¢ (Cries of ‘No,”’ ““Never.’’) democratic ent ‘unbroken line, constituting a a on, which 5 1 fs eee: s pth paren gg rye pubite or private. | time honored ve excelled in magn: recent wake | (Renewed cheers.) juce @ reaction in the | allies—the federal Union. wise constitutioo—which Union party that would tell throughout the whole | truth is to be found in the instance of the States, where | W#® im danget, was there anything t ba » aod marched through Principal Sno taal cell taade tes tomatoe of every | gave, aud give yet, free citizenship and equally indepen. i find which would speak in thunder | te allodialitle attaches the land to the people, with | compared to this great demoustration. | Tt wag Mhoroughfares of the FT They gave vent to the most | government on the face of the globe. It would create | cent individual Tights to vs all, and whish we have | J apesk. | whom, consequently, is found the right" ma Popular | *2 avgury of euccers, aud he would say to thens wabounded enthusiasm s!! the while, and the tnousands | such disasters in the mercantile community that those | tested and found just and beneficent, is good enough for | tones in the election to be held in the State of Pennsyl — goyercignty. The exercise of these coexistent rights | Wen the polls closed on Tucsday night in the Koystooe a which assembled at various points tosee | who are now living in opulence would be gman 3 me: is better than the de iusive promises of an empirical | yania. (Applauee.) It was almost the first time within | constitute the right of sufirage. Thus derived, it is | State there would be flasbing over thewires upon lightoing: tb equal enthisiasm. : gary. It would throw out of employment ‘a our oily organization, whose eole plat‘orm ie Sam! — Eu saastoenen took aver be had crltpenmns (ba coanaeve | through sutra; ‘a President is created. Bat the | WDgs, the glad tidings of great joy that the Union peo- account of the proceedings of | sione thousands of honest workingmen and women, and whose principles, if carried out, tive element in such masses, in such forces end | sufirage wh eds from the squatter right could ple f Pennsylvania bad redcvemed tho State, (Long coa- tbe outside meetings. we would not only witness the soeaes of 1857 but hare ‘upon ‘us a" visitation of calamitics. (Cheers) | with such enthusiaem as bes been manifested to | jnuree” through the fealty of land tenere, but tinued cliering ) Then would the march of Union mem them increased tenfold; and in order to establish th: Aud go long as (as I contend he is) the negro is better off | night. He would tell his hearers that the news to the creation of a kiug. (Cheers.) Thus far, | Commence and the march would not cease until after the STAND NUMBER ONE. result let me call your attention for ® moment to the | and better cared fur at the than ever has | would go from one en4 of the State of New York to the | aoa within’ tbe Btates, the of popular | tolling of thebe)l on the Sth of November, announcing SPRECHES OF THE HON. HIRAM KETCHUM, PAUL B. | relative positions of ovr country at the nt time. | been his Incky lot bevore; and so long as his | other, that the conservative element which had asem- | goveruinent 6 of simple aud accepted application. When, | '2 Wasbingtom city that the Uaion was redecmed and dis- BRADLEE AND OTHERS. Mr. Brapize then referred to the relat! portance of | advocates fail to submit some practical mode of amelio. | bied there that night would be te doom of the republican however, we advance to tbe Territories where the land | ¢®thralied and that the black man was driven to his home party in this State on the 6th of Nove: eheers ) There we who would speak, the North and the Sovth, the products of the one and | rating or bettering hie coudition, until he, himself, ‘The fret stand was situated near Ciinton Hall, and the | tb) Deoussciures of the other, and showed Low great | unlesrus pupilege end pule on the garinente of audience, which assembled in front of it, vied with the | was the neccesity for maintaining the constitution invio- j—wnttl be proves himself capable of producing from ing the Union uninjured, He retired Homer, « Michael Angelo or a Mozart, I believe | ber, (Loud title i is present contented posivion, that the Colonel ehould go on, and the gallant gentleman | pie te govern uhemeciver by virtue of their iubereat right | HAKe & stump Fpecch, but he would say to those vandals ) | | in the cold regicus of the North. (Laughier and cheers, ‘other eloquent gentlemen {| {ite 1 not allodial, or in the tnbabitante, but in Congress 7 ‘ That was pot ibe time or the place vo discuss po.it! hhe hoped the aodionce would par. | OF ane benedt of the peop Saigince ter abvern the wuet. | subjcete, but he would tay God’ tpeed one and all in the Gon bim if he ealled upon them. The crowd demanded good work. In that flare of ecthusiaem be gould not others fn numbers and enthusiasm. Shortly before eight aoa ne cee “ eles teed ter by virtue of proprietorship, aad the right of the e’clock & splendid procession of the Ashianders, bearing | “rr. mooting was subsequently addremed by W. A. | and to regard him, with reason acd science, as an infe: | was encouraged to continue his remarks by much excl. | fiiet i# but the struggle continued | "ho would desecrate our institutions and the constita- innumerable transparencice and torches, headed by a fine | Guest, E)| P. North and others utmost ps Bohn rior being, proj Conditioned in « state of tendor | mations as, ‘Go it, Colonel,” *Don’t give it up,” “Don’t babween t coy and. freedom-—Ddetween tes courpations tion, “hands off.” (Great cheering.) When meu spoke band of music, aud carrying im the line their banner, | prevailed throughout, and the meeting was not termi. | pupliags. | (Applause. ) Therefore, 1 exhort all who hear | give up the ship,” &¢. The President, however, did not | of » landlord or lord paramount and the natural rights of | Of the (ulon mecting they would not be likely wo say hich they have used in each Presidential campaign since | BAted unti! the clube to withdraw for the purpose | me—all whow my words may reach, no matter under | yield to the petriotic desire of the aseem- | the buman being. It t# identical with that which wag {at there was only & handful of Union ravers, but whem be ony Se - alg of joining in the genera! miduight procession, What gevial sun they may bave first opened their eyes; | vlage, but imtroduced David Rowland, who read maintained by ihe colonics againat the attempt of George | 1% people of eystone State took’ up the 1848, spproached from Broadway and took possession of a lish of Vice Presidents, followod by Captain | the Ibird to govern them without ntation; and, Pevspapers with & report of this enthusiastic meet- been born: 20 matter with what acsente of fepesch they ‘the stand, vpon which no one was admitted without a STAND NUMBER TWO @ born; ve wie whee Soceene 7 “ a A . may Lave Oret learned to lisp a mother’s name—to be no Ucket, The meeting was organized by the selection o" | creycres OF THOMAS W. M'MAHON, EX-JUDGE | party to this fou! political Cooapecp 00 hand down to Renders, who recited the resolutions adopted in the hall ; ing they would go to thelr work with better hearta wbich were concurred in by the masses amid vooiterous | Xmerican Consrexs of the, proposed viction be eelowints | than ever pihey did before. Mr. Rakin reminded cheering. Capt. Ryuders said le deemed it unnecessary or the people of the Territories, it is in each instance %* bearers = of the proposed alteration of tha iwterferepce with their constitutional rights and made to Les. Should apy attempt be | evident celight with which this consummation is re | i ; : i E H ; H orrines een ea eee Ad the | im rH a fh wit a faded redection of the ardor with | (40 be more explicit, nothing more true indeed, of the | lian display—and they succeeded. The scene, es they seniaat that sections its prees in egaioah inst section. “it | Salfampgves. The pollticiams have divided and diwract: | A resistance, which’ will, “plunge, the whole | wbich ft is cateriained ft the Mate, | Liverally, | SPeteence, That did sot purpose 10 impasse | Pmreed 18 froutef the HunatD oflce, wae beth striking ih | ea the pubic mind. They bare taised false iseves of | Country iuto the vortex of n Geadly, dentrvctiveand blooty | (ellow eitiaens, i# the country all alive with ths proces, ordinanee. | That it did wot purpave to Mmpate 8 | and picturesque, The long line of torches, the parti= men, | theirowncreation They bave beeo factious, turbulent civil war Let po abollijonist or blican covecle him- — Sicgs, the conventions, the mass meetings of lougias 4 a the following officers:— THOMPSON, AND OTHERS. their pr ogentes, to future generations, the Union and the | to read the report of the committee, which presented ad | equajly tyranny on ibe one side and sdbjugation on the | CoP#titution of thig State, which was to give, for the Oret Abm. Bininger, Chairman, (eo. B. King Chicf Ses’y. The second stand was erected on the west side of Fourth | Cobstitution as they received them—the free heritage of | electoral ticket which would defeat Lineola and Hamita, | cae ( peers) The right of eabgevenciient iwherea | time in the history of Now York, pe® the right to , VICK PRESIDENTS. mankind. Mr. MceMabon coaciuded amid loud applause. Fred. Douglass, and all the rest of the nigger party, 2 the people of fhe Siates. Can you tell me what right with white men. (Loud cries of “Never, never.” H. AT. Granberry, A. J. Van Winkle, Edwin Dunn, axenne, cheno by the Conger Institute. % was designated EX-JUDGE THOMPSON'S SPERCE. | SPEROH OP HON. JOTN COCHRANE. ie lont' by removal to a Territory, or what right ia | Hecsuticned tem against letting the fair fame of the Henry B. Price, '8. Rverott Rassell, G. W. Armstrong, | more partioulnrly as the Irish stand, and thousands of the | py judge Tuoxrsom, of the Marine Court, was then in- | How. Jouy Cocsmane, on making bis appearasce, was | gaiued by return to a ftato? Not one—not ono, Friel metropolis OF the Dnlon be stained by Raving it ‘Chas. Smithson, John T. Wilieteon, Robt. ©. Gwyer, tons of Erin assembled there. Indeed, the entire space | troducet. He eaid — | greeted with several rounds of applause. The Ninth | Atd the inhabitants of a Territory are abso. {il tial Rue lurmilted bree tee uld. they portent ‘tee Joba B, Hopper, Theo. B. Voorhees, Wm. i poaite Lafayette place, from Clinton Ball to the Insti. | . F#U0W Ciraame—The nineteenth Presidential ewestion | Ward Uaion preceded by a spleadid band, | lutely free and independent. Yet aro they amenable 0 52 T.¢i6' 0 "be witnessed in New York 1 have the ‘W. 7. Jennings, = 1.. R. Kerr, James P. oi , is close Mt hand. As the eventful day approaches the | so that it tmpossible for Mr. Cochrane to speak! | that restraint essential to the protection geen are ae dd Bymgs yar Bon), 7. Manbeck, Joka P. Dodge, Sation, | tute, was closely packed by an Immense mass of human | ‘cep interest we feel in the welfare of | “] will wait,” sald be, “til the army of freedom y from rapiue aid depredation. | Kelekerbocker vote slongnide of the egro’ Let the W. F. Jackson, " John Cow: , B. W. Winans, beings, who formed the audiences for the firstftwo stands, | ally increases, while the popular excitement grows In in- | paescs.” It was in euch timer ax this that, in the revo. ) ; the propristor (SOS cao and lusperable, ew ana’ f Hi George W. Emith, C, A. Budd, = E. Marrenner. ‘At stand number two, James C. Marriott called the mect- | “usity; and when the deciatve hour arrives, which shal) | lution of ane “ oom. <— colonies tomy } ot ited ty Tae Rie ete tone et ae Guense A. Bocuisemas emde a, fow remarks, and wae ; freemen—dispersed e wde ol ir admiring fellow citizens. 4 eren estab! : Clay Piatt, W. B. Draper, + W. A. Conklin, ing to order and proposed the following officers, which Si chee ee ‘the eacred oe erat ue Yaue tn the of revolution to olebt, end the fires | government whenever their sooial condition shall an- bs pop be Lee was willing = om EI" brows, Jn, WM. » di Muward, were unanimously chosen, to agelat in the conduct of the | elective franchise. in the choice of the next chief magis- | that bern her ght are but a feeble reflection of Lovnce its necessity, yet, it ta quite clear that, should the eae a , aioe Lashed W.H. Falconer, John Basset, Jr., W.S, Tisdale, trate of these United States, then shall we reach the most | those that are lightec on every plain of the State, and | ivhabitauts of a Territory execute this power with danger Be uskea yop stg yd ee W. W. Ball, M.D., wetting. _. | trying and momentous crisis in the career of the Ameri- | they are the borbingers of a glorious victory. The news to the States, of in violation of their organic polity, the | (2 olee—iWalt til the Sg bal Ba SO ‘Tue Cussnway returned thanks in « brief and handsome | Judge Connolly, Chairman. WM. Tweed, Calet Sect'y. | can republic. It is trae that the Presidential contests, | that reaches ve {rom youler country (Pennsylvania) is People of the States woukl be justified in removing — {% St Wait tll the chete pam”) Me. Ryedere—z aa VICE PRIRIDENTS. heretofore,ave often times been characterized by the | that there cap be no question that, benesta the vigorous the evil, even to the extermination of ‘ts authors, Still, ont care a damn for nbs. Here is the poetry — manner jor the honor conferred upon nim, and called up- | Thos. B. ‘ hrocs of a patriotic citizensbip the there is no probability of such painful extremes. Tae To many a meeting have I been, McCoy, Armstrong, display of most bitter and virulent jigan feeling. | eforts and throes P the repud \ Aad man: T have seen, on the Hoa. Hiram Ketchum as the frst speaker. LW. Peter Masterson, Jas. Wardiew, Thus bard and severely contested battles have in- | lican party will yield on the 6th of November. (Cheors ) whe ne ee = We pn ding py om ng ry Det sever Sno tote Mr, KErcuc was greeted with loud applause as he | ¥! Jas. B. Benset, variably been succeoded by cniversal ‘and harmony | Fellow Ciilzent—The vast concourse that occupies unis *i*terbood of the States, and the power of admiseion bay ° on og ES er Pet Wm. MeArtbur, smongst our countrymen. East and West— | space and crowds the vast hall siguilies, without mistake, ue Ween confided to Congre will, with alacrit; oceeded : came forward to address the vast assembly, Hesaid— | Bernard Kelly, J. W. Rich, Chas. C. Allen, all yielded « respectful snd patoratie “obedicnce to the | a truthfal ¢emonstration of pub! opin No enthu aoe qed om whieh will aoce ere jong veltshed ted waguay = ich of = ae of this vast concourse I. »Patrick Crowe, lar will ae expressed through the national ballot box. | siasm within bas exceeded plishment of bis purpose. ms s S Pplauded linens To aight lt prevent, tbe ouccem ot the republi- | 3 LE La mad present attitude of parties im this critical contest , this meeting to ight. Those who toria! government. orgene laws and enad! | boys. Ho wound up by. narrating 8 conversation See ee ere am 72 Van Fen | sorebodea sad reverses to the fortunes ofthe people ander | they who bebold is atenaty are remade of tBawe more | Tov’ swine inhabitants of ine Treviorie and foeppeopie | 10M the threat of bis masier and take. bie lastatins t japate vaye wi * e re } Save anited tb Geenly way ln Stich their Union could J.t-Carbrey, Peter Monaghan, P. Kerri, ‘nd practically verved in te sot with which the uame of Andrew Jackwon wae halle by ofthe Hates: and ence, tn, the orduauc of 7 (ap. | Tilt toe othe oat ee ene tiene pe peony lm eng Td Spblicatenscess | E Robinson, Thos. Mouroe, Williaa Cliapman, Af BG my ry Fen construed iuto & charter to Congress of the | When Abraham Lincoln should be elected. Mr. Nyndere ‘would have been made certain In this State; to defeat | Avg. Francis, ings of mortification and alarm—mortification, that an power to govern the Territories, But such @ con- | gernemncet © Gas vlan nag laboring ; iaseee , ‘Uhat svccess, the formation of one ticket, to be su) Judge Cormoriy, the chairman, made a few appropriate | vpgovernabie spirit of eectionaliem, thadowed forth in | sumption, and rebukiog the charge tbat the excitement | *truction cannot, for on aaa prevail. So far Country. by all the opponente of the republican party, was the only remarks, bi the objects of | th@ Chicago platform, may attain the power, as it che- | is but art ficial and ite duration evanescent, The couser. from impeaching i authority, then, | would most strena- Other speeches were made at this stand, and the great- ‘measure. That measure is the one proposes | Mtreductory ; explaining briefly the objects of | ches the wish, to ignore and trample upon the dearest of the country hitherto have been disorga- bsly fortify it; and as its nature and sanctions have beea | os, enthosiaynPwas manifested until the close ef the fonight, to accomplish it we have assembled, and we | the meeting, and expressing the firm conviction that if | rights of the South; and alarm, that distracted. Numerous partial political or | forcibly stated by one of the champions of repabiican- meeting. Bave nothing to do but, ee past differences, | all the lovers of the Union would unite in one harmonious | cy may be inaugurated which wii! ly be followed | ganizations, distinguished from each other, in ‘tm, ! will read to you, See ees, he oe j . to pnt forth all our efforte in support of it. effort the object ‘sought would be triumphantly | by ® complete disreption of these con: Sistes. | Some instances, by obsolete creeds, and ia other by but thercon. I rend from Hentun's Review of the Dred Sooty | 41. SCENE IN FRONT OF THE RFERALD ‘we do #0, feliow citizens’ If our purpose is fixed, if our | achieved. His were to the point, and were re- | Alter speaking of the Southern view taken of the princi- | ¢istinctions, have continued, nevertheless, tm: Decision, at pate —* Though entitled for the North- SCE a b L! resolution ie firm and unalterable, we cannot fail to suc: | ceived with favor by the audience. | ples, the object# and aime of the republican party, the | bers, who bave extertained in common the one at | west Territory, this fundamental tergjtorial law was in- OFFICE. Ceed, for the majority of voters in the Siaieef New Yore | Tnos. W. Ucsanon wes introdueed an the fret ~ | fey ng —So thoroughly obnoxious is ite creed in | conviction that the (uioa must be preserved. Their or tended for Southwest also, aad lied to the A DELEGATION A MILE LONG. ‘opposed to the republican party, is, beyond all doubt, | He waa received with great applause, Gracefully ex. | that quarter, tbat no republican orator has yet dared to | ganic divisiots long separated these patriotic men, and | Territories there a» soon am they were ceded, and im fact tee te nee delegee ‘Tested by the clection of last Presidenish pressing bis ackno ts for the warm reception be ¢oter @ Southern State and diecuns its princ’ . Ibmay | prevented their polltical od operation. Bvt a common became the bagis of al! the Territorial governments dow. pracy y' n i fe" Cal canvass, thet majorit wae 45,600; it bas notdimi- | met with. he to vay — weil be asked, if the South will pot tolerate in their midet | denger—a danger which threatens our institutious and 0 the pastege of the Kansos Nebraska act in 1664, Tae ton—immense in enthusiasm, in numbers, in tordbes, Berhd sirce that itme. What motive hove we for uniting? | When | last spoke in public in New York, it was upon | & mere discussion of (hose principles, what would be the our federal gevernment—bae at length overthrown ordinance was the @ natitation for the Territories, a8 the | pa ners, transparencies and everything that coer to ‘The rimple one that the success of the repobiican party | the eve of a memorable victory achieved by one braach | temper of Southern feeling, and what course would Soath- | ba riers which partisan politics bad erected, and we ‘ates, both wer? parts sb hademeetdemie tha “Ramat arei would be a national calamity. That party is a se: ‘onal | of the democracy over another, and I them resolved to | +a me purtue Were those principles to be pul in prac- | bebold the hundreds of thousands of ibe Union-loving et 3 | make up a pr al eran onetration, party; itis arrayed against a section, be | participate no more in public afiairs until that organiza. i tee’ The anewer is at band. The South will uever per- | men of New York uwited im support of the one Uaion- ‘asus r rhe gotny Ae | They were determined to beat al! their former eferts a caune of 2 domestic institution established in that'sec- | (ion was again folid aod united, But the party haa been | m preserving electoral ticket of New York. (Cheers) Tho ; . this line, and, above all, to take down the biack repyo- | i i i I «, i E € ak n, of Breckinridge men, of Beli and Everett men—all, fame authority, at page S1, and im resistance | colored lamps, the traneparencits, the variows uniforme, ed discoroant. But we must yan eure a an received. iiaprension that the constitution at: | ihe bands; surpassed anything of the Kind eves jr Union men—(cheers)—sad thoroughly is it dred with the reatoving aud the patriotic ap. were animated ope t—opposition’ “to the ‘South’ OF | soldersbip in ike coming striit. (Cheers tole apd BE tet ype Le bog f hefore attempted by the demoeracy, even in combinations recession how: : 1 Jee towards their brethren of peais of the army 0 eloquent = speakers ing of that ‘tof the Cousttution referr to the ne : are ‘conteellod by “2s "ae c4 peck } gt — ag etl Hy upon which Soaeecs, proceed ome what enuren they may. The re- | who are apreasivg far the note of alarm and raliying the Ff ment of 1 itories, Mr. Benton te —‘Tho ite palmicet days. The delegation was madq to the Norw, if it be ascer! as i hope. John (, Breckwridge and Joseph Lane. ( ) , Publican party is steadily aiming at an offensive aad a faithful citiven to the discharge of his whole duty. (Ap © it firet pr . by Mr. coation eons a up Of the bard handed workers, the mechanics iu tet, thas ths North fe united apainot The South. It,i/pat thene gentlemen bare a reprentatative por the tisk, | Eremwrve warlare upon ibe sacred rights of property. He ptause ). Die you bak of what dnager is 't tbat { speak 7 poreruments for the new Sates arising on tis te, the laborers, representatives from the working pertion these things are 0, and are to remain, how can it be pos ‘yet which we ratily te night; and | glory in being found then eaid—Now, what course i@ it {oir to infer the repud- i ankwer, that which wl! attend upon Ube success of the ferred to the ss tall, —~ ip, the bana gible tbat we can expect or hope io live barmoniously | as ap hemble ¢o operator with the theaka ef Shapes ‘A. | Ean party will pureve in reference to the slave question repoblicane—that which threatens im the election of , 2 vg ng of the community, men who do most to up the with our Sootworn feuiow citizeas [i foliows. as & a com “agian and honest John Bell in seeking to resoue the snd the policy of ite agitetion, in the evcnto! Lincoln's Abrabam J.ncolp, It cannot be disguised that fearful = pod by a. » Wealthof the country, and the mon apon whom tha SREY coBeequence, that foouer or inter the Colon must be | ebatr of Washington, rson and Jackson from being succers’ | have asserted that at least the gre on pervades the Southern States and drives rapidiy ber 7 nay aakatione’ - ie Union must rely in the Lour of danger. There they were, dimolved. Parties formed, aot upon princ!pire | gullied by that sectional hs traitor, Abrabam lincola, of that party are in favor of the abolition of woward towards anticipated dissolution, Whie it « © ands’ oul wtod by 4 A . Abas it is 80, it ie | Pitory o and ‘rules and regulations’ tome in blouses, some with red capes, some with green, part of ‘vaicious mea to depior rics of admipistre Lio, Det upon se: tone! ideas, mest io | of [inom (Applause jo perpetuate the Union, to Mates where \t aiready existe. Should it. unforto ‘Ytably rewult. Nothing eige can pen ewer ve U ave (ree homes tm trol of the federal forces, it will ireist the lesa their p aime to ri the eveat which Séded— Scant alveravions ebich go to repulse the 2 some with brown, but no matter what their uniform, Seitoc cise ought a moment to oe C ned. sal ihe. © of the earth, r primeval fo- \gorous and deepe prosecutioa of the © irre: preeipitate the effort, saicita: and mist eg Ft dent: Alpes J {2 RPS there was no mistaking who and what they wore. They hinge in the rete, eniareed our commerce In a trgle century beyond row it Now for the evidence. | none the lees their imperious duty eet ee eee i an tax Choered and cheered ogain, till Fultom street rang wit isasirous condition’ I! gil historical example, and caused ‘wilderness to pios- | Heiper jrociaime that—'Nothing short of the compiete ball be trenght with secession | ee Cone Ot OS eee Sees Se 4 wat the echoes, and the spectators catching their spirit, re- pal down, We must pom like the ruse, to guard and @ Our constitution. | abofftion of siavery can save the South from ial dissolution. 1 is, leliow citizens, node an 4 t~ a‘ eeeeey bape Saat My ’, sponded with the same enthosiasm. Each company as itt nigations lead tnevi | Did not the great Calhoun disagree from the great Web. | the vortex of utter ruin ery urvst be trot! , conjured in the braine of frantic politi. Tider ior amet ee bority Le required for the assertion that Paseed gave three long and loud huses for the tabiy to ruin. The ty te & party of one ster? Md not the Henry Clay ¢iffer from the tan of genutee decency and refine uld hold waves which 1 am spéakiug. 1b 18 er att eee mn coertituticoal power te govern the poo, | N'W YORK HixnatD, and paid all the Booors of Moa. Bo it won deciared by the lather of that parly at no lets immortal Andrew Jacksou’ And how often did | property on any terms ‘ead efiicting | fach—o. _ fuck Proceeding | vie in the Treritories, by reference 10 the languageet ibe *, marching salete. There was no cad to ibe ite birth; that father ie William H. Seward. % isa phy- not the Iate eloquent Rufus Choate dissent (com Steph Je ie the choice and elegant of © Meiper’e the ‘extensive conventional leagues and the inter | pis im tie Titi tnlonal suinority will be rank, Says (xpesditere of | reworks, Romas candies, blog however ca A, = Douglas end our own Dickinson? Bat (ivfamous) Impending Cri certainly very erstandings which exist at the South, for a Sunebt nn Re Ih ordained, &e.. "tbat the mara BDM, rockets, and that now indispensable sovelty, , i Giied with but ove 1500, when the great storm of fauaticiam swept over the Complimentary to Washington, Je‘ferton, Madiaon and 4 offvetive eftort at secession tn the event of the “ I eovethimest, be one dvetret (2 calclom "light, whieh, as it flashed a idea, if it dwells long upon that idea to ihe exslusion Jaud, and rocked the ship of State from stem to Mource, alk of whom were, to the day of their drath, eiretion by the repul of their candidate for the - ahs ectavation that the | e Foute, brought out in full relief the we of other (dens, that must become upsetiled, it loses its were not ol! of them that survived the hand of death tlavecownersand holders. These disgusting eeutiments FPicsccucy, | co pet meas to be understood that ail, or ‘congress wan pot to be s governthent of the °réered lines of the different companies ax they marched balanec, it becomes diseased. The technical name of that fownd arrayed in solid waion beueath the arches of the were deliberately erdorred and approved by eitty cight even the greater portion of ovr fellow citizens in the ‘ be no at @f the phe Bor tbe Territo, ‘ODE Im Compact marses. On the banners and irane- disease is monomania, and sarge member of the patents —conatitutvon aad the Joide ot the mational fay, contending — 7 "publican members of the present Congress, not one. o foul are nctoatec by Buch an tat | do mena that wid it We further 10. be obecrve’. that the portion | LATeBOlce were tbe old time honored mottogs aed watelx im every insane aaplum are Mmonomaaiacs. So if a man's for the compromise mearures’ (“Yes,’ ‘Yea,’ Shom, be lt remembered, bas as yet disavowed th@m d co operations: tuis view, extend ance devoted to the erection of courte, tho Tords, @xpressive of their determination to sland by the magnifying and practicing one | cheere.) But there ie one manly dering the session of the rame (urovgh the South i fuMli tend strength to inspire alarn vopeaee Sve . Union. t againet all enomien, in all whicks of officers, and the im oo Of popular assem wire attention, apd is deprived of the authority of articcs, asd pro- fe that theee Xero moral 4 in virtue to the neglect of other virtues, be necessarily be. | tongue, whose famblar face and silvery comes a2 apsale ons and bad man, What '* | hoete without wh: ‘, & man to, fe With some degree of county were to be among the fore~ delegation company B of the Bell snd dick ire intathe expedioncy b the gure rv nt police of the reaity y trae of indtvidands tee nally tree of amsoe ple 1 foorb® and coa- held, Thongh in xc im tbe guide of & governtats : ute Mea” we observed a trapepareocy # ix parties, moral, political or religious. rmle ities, who Ie country, her lug freedow to every human being 1y our republican op} pone ed aor phen yh the government wing Inscription —Our Bell toile the knell of Joal |'\ustratione of these truths end Watehle=s form of government, second to wherever Congrees has the coa- legitimate copatitationality, ye eae eerie ‘Wo mate ail eoedtul teres cod fecciaee, | binglt republication where Rverett goes.” Ketchum, tb support of this sssertion, thon referred to po other man that breatbe#, but who las been tempora ave on the subject.” Filly-nine ie North their seopection the terciory OF Oluer property’ of the. Take iL altogether tbe delegation from Brookiyn male the anti mazonic party aud the temperance party, 201s! rily estranged from thi ‘at common cause by the Congress voted for the adoption of e State rights, ap United States.” But when the ordinance r—~4 A magnificent display, and wee pearl, fie m length. iy wo » black republica. fi vide for the os of the peop’e in the Territory. Nt p a ib a0 thelr pt A | & y faded again to the repoblican party—the party of one treseherour chicanery of the most cracelees and infamous the inflammatory and revolutionary proposition, The Seam ab ooeeds with ed respect for their sovereign (huorobes the Pere, and Capes, ond bronse bm -- weg yo bende, for with a torches, 5 bro ibe COLILUIDE peace and quiet o ame tothe checks onservat.em characte d balances of spoke of \@ promiaont leaders. Continuing be politica) cabal that could bring the blusk of aeked what bat a become tvled in heck of an enlightened generation. | refer, | need hard): feeet! werfol to reelet such Jacobine from forct the repubhean ereed becomes cowservative ; b~ pergorie fin beara, by wer Swelling ryom atin. ay, {2 the codeated {fiend of un all, Jaines T frat}. | into proce and Wreasonable desigue, sic cevated—the pegro ie relinquialied. But let the mere ‘abie. For instance: ‘And for extending the fundamen- | 6s they wore dhrown into the abade by the woiid rack cle idea. could 0 most important (Applaure) A sense of great wrong—a sense, Thus Pours wight be consumed in multiplying 8b av inveterate abolition.st cover a avighborbood, } = bye vil and religious liberty, which form Lnterrified fu@ionista, sion Sr Constitution and think it waa doing 50 | (oo, of mistaken principle drove Ackilies from the ranks how that, though our edverearies may only t= end the +4 fied ee 4 tution Lyon ae Hey) lee, eae fan arenas pi —coul! regalve, in oldest States « f th (his friends, bot did not the body of alain Patroclus poke Uve extension of siavery, fact ed , than does the republican darken his doctrines. (Laugh. ed; establish those 7 > Union, Aled with edceated eticcen ieee of tien se tae | San the seiecbey of the beloved Check Cate. win, back | toi where lt aireeay calsts cb only await the election | ter). Cuivereal emancipetion ie then the corner staue of | M# tbe Dasle of all laws, cosstitutions and governments A CANNON DRAWN THROUGH THE STREETS Lis edifice, and wpom it be ercets a pyramidal structure of | WDiCb forever hereafter sball be formed im the #ald Tor- BY ONE HUNDRED MEN. upon the siaveholder and manumissjou of the slave. tory. to provide also for the establishment of States Among the demonstrations that preesded the Unicow bighest inte! ectoal endowments, aud in ay ae of again to feme, to glory, to victory, the uurivaiied son of of Abraham j incoin ard of the constitutions and invasion of property SP4 permanent government therein, and for their admis the highest type of civilization, to elect to the omer | Pelens’ (Renewed cheers.) And whatever may be his But if any doubte ex: emith: our of the Commonwi openly appro ¢ egard State ticket, at the head of which | drsigne enemies upon es on he a DF the | festarde, pe tats favorite of FA bad | siete aiansy cut, righte— ered, abaolute avelition. Such were the in Wa orcad danse Saeuiapinent Lowen Kets Girish ts Cintas, aa. inane found foremost im the enforcement . Hobe of ‘te com i carly streets, ermoon, S.'ar | Reerner eet’ © eerda Salts | seteieieen a hie hemonis, Atma ac aot Seige ‘ag RAG Re aR Ae wa Bees! | te, me rh red omen wy th? There is slectoral ticket. (Cheers fe our 80) pent ive the penop! 0 \ 4 bes 4 ea | fn all of our ine. We Ly Pe or — | N Teper fant g ele ee lhe at articles of between the original States herded by # band of music, and drawing ® brase cannon, Nein! Ted h vin ‘ple ‘Doroughfuree Fue ie—to the low citizens, it has, these many Years, boon leader gent and apiendor of which ali the States in the Union on of the oppesition, that their ultimate suc progress throug? re proportiopally contributed—beea polluted the other } wip ey: ph A the mind of the North that ane of | even! oy am oorganired and well disciplined | again’ at Soutb—apon a rub. Loulou ie totes a trattors called Wide Awaxes’ | ordipation to the exacting and nefarious demande of the was i i t & ! : i | i : i #