The New York Herald Newspaper, February 23, 1862, Page 1

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THE NEW YORK HERALD. WHOLE NO. 9296. NEW YORK, SUNDAY, “FEBRUARY 23, 1862, which ie destined to hold a prominent place in tho annals caused a national salute to be fred in Washington nied his decision with an impassioned declan al son must now be 5; ° Unio mm | " Parade (: peaking for the Union, with | would crush the weak om of history:— je Grouud at noon. ton, whereia with profourd immorality whieh no cne has | clarion motes of pat lotism protesting against the | {hu ona ut Yaecteak, OF Poe yg hy eon e VICTORIES GAINED BY THE ARMY AND NAVY OF THD GOVBRNOR'S ISLAND. as yet fully laid bare, treating the people of the United | usurper; the peopte of Virginia, in their hearts, are | eof a man is not so much in his wordsas it is in his t ‘Thoro was a general dross parade in the afternoon by | States ax shrew to'be tame! by an open scorn of the | against him; periapseven the majority of the inhab UNION SINCE THE COMMENCEMENT OF THE REBEL- | the regular ariny troops at Goveror’s Island, The aflair | facts of history, with a dreary industry collecting | tantsof Richmond may te weary of his aspirations: and | Tn ation his w! le goal bs awake, Si Same ° eicainnaaed LION, was very croditable. . evidences of eases where justice may have slumbered or | as he goes forth to-day to array himself in the unreal hie erg ee raps pty gta — THE DISAPPOINTED PUBLIC—THE PARK. —— ’ Set i ge hid feed deat: | freee amar nich he pasted, his comers drops away t io strugaliog for ita rights or for its existence, 5 Hi * ee by confidence sortion, with a partiality rom him iu the presence of his worshippers, irretrie or, doe 5 fe e Pater Patriae--- Amor Zalles.. June 2 ait ree a nae Brome, see Vase, Cely att would hava ding acon an advocate, neg ting humane de. ably and forever— his conscience stings him with remorse quent: . crouaaatt ta ed tee — a J ; amd th nemoria's of | forhis crime: and the course of events convicts him ef ar- | ghi1¢ . a ' Boonayiie earty im tho forenoon until nearly dusk by a floating mass | Clonal statute books: tn hie harty weal to prov wri | shine of we turn cur attention to ’ ‘moro ct re party weal to prove that the | regunce and folly. His elevation is but toa pillory, whee ne Patriae. fegeees ooe siaan ogy, Tom mat mors paring therm) | fain nop eon hl the nro a have'soorhe| btands thr gorau ofthe wort (appeuse)” Tech| ie 'rve'g yh Ang Laurer Hill... First division, From two o'clock uneil four oiglock P. | Wich the white man was bound to respect” he has not | mond, which he thought to make his capital, will son be | entails. We nation fot Satan—ra- th. Itis only wi cnly denied tho rights of man and the libertics ef man- | i@ the possession of one of our gonerals or of another, and | 44/57 v4 Vind, but has not lott a foothold for the hiberty of the } nothing ean save tim from the just wrath of his country | warthonders s white mag te rest upon. (Applause, ) } Duta hasty exile. (Apptause) GHEY JUSTICE VANEY. PROMINITION OF BLAVERY. astating the ¢ nders about our ears, that we arouse to its true anid come to a remembrance of the fact that Je- is not only a God of love, but also « God of battles. M. the City Hall balcony, windows, steps and esplanade were crowded with thousands of both sexes, of afl ages and conditions in life, all on tiptoe of excitement to sco (yee aaa Rich Mountain ... Boverly (Pogram’s surren Ourrick’s Ford (Garnett killed) Forsyth the military. Their patiovee was sorely tried,and onty | ynat ii ‘ain rt r ‘ Bp s quisition of ‘teney, who, I trust, did If the views ef Washington with r e D Fe: at Gos we division did not parade, as the oceasion required. of this robelion. lapse of nearly ninety years, his opinions on slavery are | but that it is his arm of righteous judgment, to fall in ali : F #0 temperate und so clearthat if they had been followed | time whenever crowned tyrany would crush the weak or A SOLDIER KILLED BY THE FIRING OF A CANNON. | COuntry witBithe excitement which swept they woukl hive established peace” among unholy rebellion would dash the hopes of the world. An unfortunate occurrence took place about half-past | us Who vainly hoped to preserve a strong rc On the 22th of Apri’, 178, he wrote to Robert As we? turn’ and look back down the aisles of the past, q @loven o'clock yesterday morning, resulting in the death | though nagegw isthmas that might stand “There isuota man living’ who wishes more sincerely | there is not a century, not a half century, searcely to temeeriie. .- of @ man named Curtis, belonging to Company I, Inde- | evnttleting ‘*. No vation can adopt that than I do to seo a plan adopted for the abolition of | my knowledge a decade, in which we do not see the rays ta Rosa Island, pendence Guard, Twelith regiment New York State Mi- suk. and live; the judgment hag in it no element | slavery."? fApplause.)” This was, his txed opinion; 20 | of Ylabeing steel. ‘To pas» by the martial records of heroic Lebanon... litia. It appears that Company I were engaged in firing | ef p° Nibality; I will not say it is an invocatienof | that it the following month he declared tw Lafayette — | and fabuloce tin. we find the phalanxes of Israel sweep. Japn Creek. a salute at Washington Parade Ground,and Curtis was ead past; thore never was a past thatacgeptod | “By degrees the abulition of slavery certainly might | ing from Ryypt to Palestine. Joshua and Othuieland Shaur- ilot engaged in loading one of the pieces. While #0 engaged ‘bh pns. (Applause.) It we want the opin- | and assuredly ought to be effected, and that, too, by Je: | var and David scarcely pass from the scene when Baby- Bolivi the cannon became so hot that a charge went off before in the when our eonstity- | gislative authority.”” On the Oth of September of the | jon end Assyria come together in mighty shock. TI ; Fredericktown. . the usual appliance at the tauehhole. Curtis bad his take them second: | same year he avowed his resolution ‘never to din of arms has not died away in the Rast when it begins ‘amp Wild Cat, arm blown off, and received injuries from which be ¢x- f o n Justice another siave by purchase; adding. “it being toswell in Hellas and the Peloponesns, The Messepian Charge of Fremont’s Body Guard Pired in about fifteen minutes. . : Nr my first wishes to see some plan adopted by wiich | wars, the Persian invasions, the Pe,opohesian streggies, ° Romney (Gen. Kelly). slavery in thix country may be Ap- of y be abolished by law. (Ap- | the Thebau and the Macedonian, overlap and follow each Woodbury... MuAh NY, i - yee Soagireey oA Leis noel protease s4 ns | other in quiek aocession. Tn the turmoil Athens, > mu es, at a tim Thebes, on 5 CELEBRATION AT COOPER INSTITUTE. = Herquie, | conreation “for traminy, our cousution. wit | rows cured and died amid one. cass af arme, The PARADA DRM A RRADARRAD imwhatare csteem- | sostion, by a unanimous yote prohibited slavery forever | noise of arms has not begun to wane when Rome comes Oration by Hon, George Bancroft. - ‘her monarch; ‘argument from | in all the territory that then belonged to the United | storming out of Italy. For three hundred years Carthage, At two o'clock P.M. the large hall of the Cooper In ahrusts forward with | States. (Applause.) And one of the very first acts of | Gaul. Spain, Macedon, Pontus, Syria, Germany, bri Passi complete - | Washington, as President, was to approve a law by th her y led is worried with her stitute was filled in every available department to listen a a fc: whieh that’ ordinance might ‘continue, tohave filet | fleets. Italy and the streets of: the capleal haelf resound OOS SOON 1862. 40 the eloquent oration by the Hon. George Bancroft, his Peni feet.” On b yr meron 1794, in the midst of bis cares | with her servile and civil struggles. And so Rome rose, Capture of Port Royal Isiand.........+0+++ torian of the United States, the singing by the Union Glee " ae President. he devised « plan for the sale of lands in | flourished and waned aiid one clash of arms. We have OUR Farhad pl ced ahh Caan Eo a ee no | Western Virginia and Western Pennsylvania, and after | no time to watch this to the ond. before, from VICTORIES FOR THE UNION. Huttonvillo.. ps re oy aps ty pee performances ae nnd acaaire sore or kale have | the northern storehouse of | nations, hordés | on feat ointlexter. xa 8 . order to prevent any overcrowd- ’ ies me wi for hordes of armed bands pour down in suc- SLU Sedat sass Defeat of Humphrey Marshall at Painiviie. ing of the hall, tickets of admission were issued by the wth Laeaee, = co a Tee NN ete a poe taper a glen noc ice itn —alhnrond Seana a. wa we of this 7 Biue’s Gap... Eemmittee, by whom they were distributed gratuitously; i scorn piiecanerty whjeh I posses very repucnanUy to | sweeping round the north of Africa and into Spain. Nor Out of the Lo al Rout of Mershail's'atmay Dut notwithstanding this precaution to secure comfort ¢ my own feelings.” (Applause.) And in less than three | time to wateb the Culiphs, when there is a stir of Romney (Gene i fivo thousand persons were obliged to leaye without even x J , ‘ to 009 bis hopes for the future in these | mult has not subsided. Pies Europe steve ite: rush to- Peo le of the North Roanete inteaa getting near the doors, P othing i more certain, than that Maryland | warda Asia, andi allcn fre herself with the of . Springfield (General Gurtis).. At the appointed hour his Honor the Mayor was intro” } : ain ‘miist have laws forthe gradualabolition | tue Reformation. Cuarles V. and Francis and Solyman Surrender of Fort Donelson aiech to, (he én Tea ¢ the United States of slavery, and at a period not remote.” (Applausc.) | the Maguificent fill the sixteenth century with trouble. Li sc eorignte ael Eecat Grtek (aarhes oe audience by the Chairman of the Joint red; i Nicginia ‘end Marylaug haye.-got. bec | ‘Tilly-aed Wallenstein and Gustavus Adoiphus and Crom. 2 Bentonville, Ark...+........ Committee of the Common Council, who immediagely a $ far an its, . ‘to realize the confident prediction of | well fill the seventeenth; Marlborough and Bugene ta d Civic Celebrati oR Sie Rett opened the ceremonies with the following remarks: ence, tae seenennrs aman coogi Alena E ell (tg prettier iene yep ts eek on ln Mili Se : b in the District % . not suggest in ei ; Bonapart ry and Ulvie Celebration | a rcactnet. cc em... big, 28 |/dane Wate reread i caakle Tees ete each We Bae teen tickets a Sete” a Nee we ge a arth pe ge yep nee : in N York, Lucas Bond... .10 | auspicious eircumstances to commemorate the one bun- , ~aegrewr tairsy svimiten,, which ornted buries tan | avoteriterend Yorktown and vera Crus to the nineteenth. in New Yor Destroying the privateer Judith, dred and thirtieth anniversary of that day which gave to oarene, UAE eye .southeand, hag Bowel Cecpiam’s history Of. the workd, what, wif, Ras It . Chicamacomico........... +++ Oct. 5 | civil liberty its truest friend and ablest defender. fs " ae hae (Appiause:) The history of the world, what, sir, : Repulse of the rebsis at the mouth of the Missi Since we became a nation hallowed memories have al- 2 sd Pgs snenenat pee enn eames comity wer. leew, sic, if wee 2 ” 5 of our war be.the unmitigated evil it has been re ted to sip rea i ways clustered around that eventrul day; but never be- pee os eaiect af ; " ab thi be, then this earth mast Mave been livtle better than a Oration of the Hon. George iséa ‘ortraltors have attempted to destroy, ie uous political | SFeW Acaroful distinction between the pursuits of uy from AB ms | heron Adain-c the rosane an aud yet sroogh al, \° ah Ge ge eee lightshipe in. Wilmington edifice that Washingtem spent hie’ life, tar necaeall ‘eas and the sesyice of is conten, Fipsbel Meas ‘Behring £0: the Straits, of ef the | man, as: risi been ‘becoming culti- Harbor, N.C. bi 6 pe ishing. | man must be ready to devote to the good of aS roll, on-the.shore, clap, their. |. vated, more bumane. Is it true that war is thigterrible Bancroft. farbor, N.C. if Jan. 15 | But recently their wicked ellorts assumed the most g)- | his ability, his wealth and his life; and he never ste n Tegion'the lant 18] scourge? Is it that the world has. ‘improved . Fort Henry... Feb. 6 | gantic proportions, To-day, thank God, the dark cloud | 'therpapiic service to become to hima bouree of gain, Ie vated by 6 bands oF the hee. (Grewiap- | in spite of war, or has it improved Trip up the Tennessee . The Celebration at the Academy because is passing away. The strong arms and ‘stout hearts of c ; is rumored that men among us have known how to ob- pom) Let us begrateful toa good Providence which | of war? War has long been dumb; hag patient); our, noble volinteers—doub nerree Oy Tighteous | tan trom the government, for a moderate and incidental | has established liberty as the rule of our country beyond | and uareplying borne all that peace” has pared A! vel rs ion sy @ Union whic! - | and essentially irresponsible use of little else than | the porsibility of arelapee. For myse:f, 1 was one who | been pleased to say of her. It is now her turn: #he, too, ree ictee ee ie ae on ee ae. judgment, sums of money which exceed the | desired to postpone, or rather hoped altogether to avoid | has something to say of peace. has nurtured g blows under which tho rebellion is al- lo direct tax levied upon one of our smaller States. | the collision which has taken place, trusting that | many an evil that war has cured. If ever there was a of Music. Proud, no matter what hireling seribblers in Europe may | haiicwed fad seam nt Never? 2 trusts t0 rear its un- this be ‘implies a shameful want | society by, ae ee bare rere, tse clear by iis meat 0 speak ineale semen eae and here write to the contrary. But to come to particulars. It is under these bright promises that we meet to honor ; t yy Rime ferced aps | Sten omadheoodiarst:lewketa whaaeiae ~~ OA TN Ait ‘i of sagacity m the executive department tion of the community. But slavery forced upcn | arms; and the world’s friend, to whose menrory this da} ‘Theday was ushered in, cloudy, damp and diseourng. (ie dee Bec se vas to ates lesson it gin from the i In | us the issue, and hus lifted up its band to strike a | js set apart, we not only revere as pram hy mee Mass Meetings at Cooper In- | i: 0Y th thundering of cannon—national salutes: bay- ‘aber whore mal ng. Sicanpace SEE ES Oe y The great y death blow ai our existence asa people. Jt has avowed | vencrate asa Christian warrior. My subject, then, is s! pe: 'ng been fired at sunrise on the Battery, at Union square, te = irate mK ne ni ae Be iat 5 Gaara and seleeey Cp bed our national | the world’s obligations to war. ire isa boing of — * : > » y v. Dr. g and music by > fe, of our unity as @ republic, and forward no man | science, reason, taste and will. you correct a man’ stitute and Irving Hall, in front of Odd Fellows’ Hall, and in the Park. People | waltace’s Band, Washington's Farewell Address was hn eey desérves the nae of a statesinan who would consent to | religious belief, if you exalt his reason, purify his tasto > rose with the gonviction of an unfavorable day for the | read by George H. Moore, Eaq., Seeretary.of the Histori- ; ¢ the introduction of that clement of weakness and divi- | andentobleand direct bis will, you have raised the aiiat celebration; but a8 noon approached the dark clouds sped mies wy gant compensation for sim} sion into any new Territory, or tho admission of another | whole man. This js the cvurse of education by which the: cal Society, in which he was enthusiastically applauded, ‘on a body of generous amd devotedly pattivtic | slave State into the Union, ’ (Great and prolonged cheer- | modern man has been produced. Now, sir, | claim that away, then peeped out brilliantly, and doubts began | particularly when he came to those points of the address | Men? {Applauso.) iu tho name of the ing.) Let us hope rather that the prediction of Wash- | the modern man has been mainly indebted to war for . to vanish with the gloomy atmosphere. The city was | whieh treat of foreign and domestic dj hs repel dhe insinuation; and it is known to all ington will prove true, and that Virginia and Maryland | his present high grades in these respects. It is no dis- The Integrity GE . Fhe | asniy: itt ost cic telltsy, "Brea ere, coset f foreign mestic difioyities. the poor of our city during this war has, i goon take their plices as free States by the side of | covery of mine that Judea has educate! man’s consci. : e >| A new national anthem, by Willian Ross Wallace, dues and exalted’ feoling, and firm resolve and | Obio and Pennsylvania. (Loud applause.) ence Greece has exalted his reason and purified ais taste Grea t Re blic. ——— ee where nie for the inner man might | entitled «God of the Free,” was next given by the Union. Fame Wy us resignation, gone beyond all prawe. (Ap Finally, the ; Legian eee fins home, by her —— er neo a and e 5 © public offices were bermetically ‘ 5 people of the Unit must this day | directed his will. The stan man’s 'y as pu je scaled. ‘Merelileite(’ clecks; Wades people, eter. | Coe eon ares Sone). WASHINGTON’S CHARACTER. ~ | derive from the example of Washington a lesson of per- | the patterns he loves todwell ou. He goes to them as Me a a 0 y ple, ~ | below the words, in order to afford.all an opportumity of isinterestedness ef Washi ‘8 conduct beams | severance. We have been forced into a strife froin | fountains for refreshment, he sets at their sacred and ~~ ers, young «and old, male and female, native Jearning and singing it. The air is ‘Old Hanared.” in still greater beauty when, for the benefit of this | Which there has been no safe escape but by the mani. | classic feet, even at this late day, as an humble student. i and foreign, thronged the streets in gala suits, while win- année Gane ‘we recall his conduct toward ‘his Hetook | festation of an immense superiotity of strength. ‘the | Athens! What a thrill dees the very name send through Banquet of the Common Council at | sows aod noesctope wore renpendent with the nabooa! | Gud of he re we Ry ray Rte yy k DOL ee oo a ee m ensign. The entire city, im fact, was dressed in bunting. ‘Our flag is for the right unrolled, for distinction; i Bs r alike | Which they may adopt for solving the question | Palestine—the land of the te home of Jesus, is the St. Nicholas Hotel. fe te credenar a fed eee ee “pivot the allowed time of ed Ferree tend ss pls faverdeaid Meee ae a. | the werut rasknese la list whieh yields xo compromise | (knee oot.” Weeevertaiaes-sigast acbole? whet ae- 1 1 a fully send to bul ate tl it of his 6 worst ras at whi yields vo compromise | three al re ever ty rt wi je in the streets as in former years. Bus, in lieu For Duty still its folds shall ty; and cules CORiila rik @ Miglin wee ac ‘him- | from the feverishuess of impatience. (Hear, hear, and | vote to art, what patriot, what theologian—ever thinks POPE bg ben wry of the masacs were BS ha arian burn, x, \ aarr,.” eaacck fovget that Washington masalmare loud cheers.) All the A wre ond. tod hie word haye } of surning back for pei cameo: to As- 10 wit thousands, pouring im every here Trath, Religion, goard ; that he never was taken by ine; that, their upon us. ils 18 are waiting to | syria, to Carthage, to Kgypt or toancient Germany? Who ROCEEDINGS . | divect sings stamped ‘Tho patriot’s sword and martyr’ x, ‘eantion, he never missed an Gtattein, | vee if We shall havo the courage to make lt manifest that | thiaks of adorning our streets or our temples with m0- BITERESTING P WN CONGRESS: . ari owe hg esa inn - No is aire a , bat he never sent bis ward except rd freedom is the animating ing} of our constitution, dais from the thick lipped oieiee of pt? Who thinks tht pa, ed tbe chimeet ray Wetec wpenroai,| og aM rauswnuees Tap ec Sa"ta wana ‘ezye wing toad | Save cp tofnt the conse ot Wsnagen, Wing Xp | prvi Ae the Ryan empl arectare be —— y 7 XC when cor v ovul i. en pyrami ‘Hail Columbia,” and all the other national hymns being oer eines, eerate every tet Weta tess le eee sivas cases reece and | 2 ri be jaccompanlea wih, the “Talim rte Thee es ean ereae teenie: dina irom qonoralty A was always under fire with his | Swords are accompanied with 1! nction not to un- | stan eccentricity or whim—t iy THE REBEE FLAGS TAKEN IN ACTION | rertermet ns manner thas elicited the warmest piau- © thos we'll keep our nation’s ity fon, and committed no error is the field but from excess | sheath them for the purpose of shedding blood, except it | received taste. No, sir, Egypt, and Assyria, and ancient dits of the je. At sunset more salutes firod jor fear It by despots hur... ie cournge. Wo must not forget that in the war | be for self-defence, or in defence of their country or its | Germany, and Carthage, have not been instructors of the Shinar porary piel oni <uvndiin ibaiihsien weed ‘The blood of all the wortd is bere, of the Revaluhn Washington, among cher great objects, | rights; and in the latter case to keep them unsheathed, | world. Letus look first, then, at Judea, at Greece, and — —~ pulpatesig agit stiri they who strike as strike the Dore arms for the maritime rights of neutrals. When so’| and profer falling with them in their handsto there: | atRome. When the children of Israel were bound by ss Sp eceleen light and glory and pa. God of the free. our nation bless Forp eager inour navy showed signs of disaffection, | linquishment thereof.” (Applause.) The President of | the chains of the Egyptians, there wasne word in any lendid Tilumination trictism , In aap my baperaeag tg at its birth, the first impulse of public feeling might approve a bold | the United States haa charged us this day to meet and | language expressive uf the idea conveyed by our word eres And make its life a star of hope act, which spoke for the fidelity of a gallant communder, | take counsel from tho Farewell Address of Washington. | ‘holy.’ Among all the gods of the nations there was: THE MILITARY DISPLAY, For all the straggling of the earth. ‘The just indignation which is felt at the conspirators who | We charge him in retarn, by his oath of office, by his | not one possessed of the attribute of holiness. Man emu- of the Ci . ‘Then shout beside thine oak, © North! struck at our life as a nation might exult when several | pledges to the country, by the blood that has been shed | lates what he worships, and the very worship of man. _ arr ‘0 South! wave answer with thy palm, of the least worthy of them fell into our hands, But | and the treasure that has been expended, by thosecurity | everywhere was dobasing to the race, destructive of Sahl And jn our Union’s heri ms, this excitement only shed a brighter lustre on the mode- | Of this generation, by the hopes of the next, by his de- | man's pufity. Among all the nations of the earth thore ‘The military display on this occasion, we are sorry to ad ration of the people, and their perfect mastery over thoir | sire tostand well with mankind, and to be remembered | was not one, to cur knowledge, that believed in the u Together sing the nation’s psalm! passions. With one voice all have agreed that due re- | in honor by future generations, totake to his heart this | true God. There may have been individuals, bat announce, was not as brilliant or systematical as we bad s1,38 g. a. ’ THE ORATION, spect must be shown to the neutral flag. A ship at sea is | injunction of Washington. (Applause.) Young men of | there were not nations. It was necessary, there- The Herald Buildings INQ | wished. Contrary to general expectation and the require- | yr Ggonam Bancnort, the orator of the day, was nex, | ® Portion of the territory of the ne wee flag she | New York, suffer one more cet before we part, in grate. | fore, if ever man was to be raised from his debase- ments of this peculiar occasion, there was no consolidated by the chairman, and spok 2 ‘t | may rightly bear. No naval officer of another nation | ful memory of the dead who have died for freedom, for | iment—if ever man’s conscience was to be educated Blaze of Glory. . parade of the troops of the First division, Major Genera) | ‘troduced by » and spoke as follows:— may exercise judicial power on her deck; the free ship | us and our posterity. Long after the voice which now d his belief corrected—for a people to be torn out. ‘ righ io Man or New Yorx—As the organ of the city of New | frees the cargo; a neutral ship ina voyage between nea- | addserses you shali be silent in the grave, keep fresh the | from among the uations, and the knowledge of the one Sandford. The only reason that we could obtain for this | york on this occasion, it is my first duty to remind you protected by her flag; the passenger who, in | glory of Winthrop, of Ellsworth—(appiause)—and of ail iod firm:y pl it, that 1 might jg seer § Scasciencs must be educat Tuinanslaiik ei Waa great oversight was that General Sandford did not think | that we owe thanks to a God for the patriets who port, steps on board a neutral ship, honestly | Others who, being like yourselves, in the fush of youth the occasion demanded it. There were, however, several | achieved the independence of the United States, and who | bound for another neutral port, i us safe against seizure | Went into battle surrounded with the halo «t : . formed ‘the unity of government which constitutes us | as if he were a guest at the Tuileries or a barrister before | and gave their lives in witness of their sincery Magnificent Appearance — of | very credtavie ana Imposing regimental parades during | one people.” ‘To-day we declare to peoples and to princes | a court in Westininster Hall. These good rules will gain | whole country mourns the loss of Lyon, and will not be | « ior His taste aud will. Hefore the days Rome, we belold, therefore, the chiktren. ‘wel rescued from Egypt. ’ But what’ is their sub- th Cit; Hall. the day. that that Union is complete and shall not be impaired; is | renewed strength from their recognition by the American | comforted, eurotling his name by the side of Warren. | scqueut career? To learn their great lesson,aud then e@ UL iy . THE VETERANS OF 1812, dear to us, and shall be preserved. (Applause.) The | people in tho very momont of a just indignation against | They have passed aw but their spirit lives, and | teach the world, they must be planted by themselves. ‘The veterans of 1812 assembled at the Mercer Heuse,at | Wise and the good in each hemisphere desire us to con- | men who were guilty of the darkest treason, and had | promises that our institutions, in so far as they reston | in a central land, adapted to the purpose. Bat tl paclahcme agi ipfriry arnt " s At | tinue one; every fibre of the sensitive heart of the indi. | fallen into their hands. (Cheers.) freedom, shall endure forever more. (Long prolonged | land was occupied by stern foes. Battie followed bat- eleven o'clock A. M., for a street parade. The bad state of some appearances, throbs in THE RRUKLLION AND POPULAR INSTITUTIONS. cheering: | tle, by the’command of God. And on the issues of The Day in Other Parts of | * the woather, however, and the muddy condition of the nation; the people of England | _Wasbington not only upheld the liberty of the ocean, | _ When the learned speaker resumed his scat the Union | thove battles hung the welfare of the world. Jericho stroots, caused the origioal intention to be abandoned, | } shall believe arc with us go iong as there are among | He was a thorough republ ‘And how has our isis. | G'eo Club sang “The Star Spangled Banner,” the audi- | (alls, Ai is taken, the Anakims are cut off , and by war the Country. : saad - | them men like Bright and Stuart Mill. (Applause.) The | tory justified his preference? How has this very rebellion | ©..ce joining in the chorus, together with a very amusing | the land is won, and there is hope for man. But on all ‘They, however, proccoded to the meeting of the United | most wonderful career of improvement in the history of | borne testimony to tho virtue and durability of popular | wuartetto, ontitied “We're Marching Down to Dixie's new nation was surrounded by disbelict and cet Sinden Ath Americans, at Niblo’s Garden, and listened to the oration | the race is the witness that weare a nation. Italy | institutions? Tho rebellion which we are putting down | Land.’ This was sung with a great deal of humor. and . Again and again the nation falls before of Mr. Dutcher. to adhere to her passion for | was the conspiracy of the rich, of opulent men, who count | almost convuleed the andience with laughter. The hour e preseure. For three hundred years, therefore, the FIGHTH REGIMENT. bringing together the parts which the selfishness | laborers as their capital. Our wi xtended suffrage is | for giving up the hail having arrived, the chairman | scourge of war closed arouad the apostates. Saul LONG MAY IT WAVE, ; of oppression had dismembered, and the ill cement. | not only utterly innocent of it—it is the power which will | brought the pregramme to a sudden termination by the throne, szeceeded by Mavid and Solomon. a { At daylight the Eighth regiment, Washingto® | ed fragments of Germany derive from us # hope | not failtocrush it. (Applause.) The people prove their | stating that tho Rev. George Potts would pronounce the were learning the lesson, and there was peace. errr Gréys, fired @ national salute in front of the | of @ better reunion. Now, in the day of our tribula- | right toa popular government; thoy have chosen it, and | benediction, which he did in a brief but very pithy | But then followed the four hundred years of wavering, armory over Centre market, The concussion of the | ‘0B, the people have proved that they are inspired with | have kept it in healthy motion: they will sustaia it how, | prayer. ‘Tho audience then retired well pleased, while | and finally obstinate refusal of the truth. | Aseyris . life by the grandest spectacle the world ever witnessed, | and hand it down in its glory and its power to their pos- | the baud played some national airs. and Babylon, the scourges of heaven, each swept Teports were #0 streng a8 to materially affect | in their uprising in the majesty of undivided conviction, | terity. ¢Applause.) And this is true not on!y of men their forces now upen Israel, now upon Judab. Israel was annibilated; Judah was laid utterly desolate, the window glase for several blocks in the vicinity. At |-concentrated power and determined purpose; in their un- | who were born on our soil, but of foreign born citizens. and thoxe who escaped the sword were sent prisoners to . repining resignation tosuflering and privation, their sub- | (Applause.) Let the’ European skeptic abo per dinesgea ngite y Pas gn wero ae ie lime pationce under strange discomftures and’ weary de. arr large ee ee Ws: ee, ome Po ng THE ACADEMY OF MUSIC. Rabylon, These overwhelming reverses were at last Fee ad throughs the ‘prince et arlene! Varian. | jays and long continued inactivity, from inability and | us, and we will show him a spoctaclo wonderful in lie ADDN DA effectual. After seventy years of captivity, suffering and rey ating solid company fronts’ and were wary’ wy! | perplexity, or from judgment and choice: in their out- | oyes, grand beyond his power of conception. That which | Oration of Rev. F. ©. Ewer-and Concert | bimiliation, on tho retiirt of the remzant to Jerusalem — Dlauded for their general good appearance, hen the speil was broken of the seeming pa. | in this contest 1s marked above all that has appeared is 2 tele onmeuny oft Matas that remnant, learning from the past that defeat and ” . 7" ‘ lysis of their gigantic preparations, in the heartiness | the oneness of heart and purpose with which ail the leas be y . aster always followed, in their case, adherence to error, ‘THIRD REGIMENT. of their response to Major General Grant when he pro. wealthy claeses of our ple, of all nationalities, are de. The day was celebrated by an oration and grand vocal | at last firmly held to the truth. And the nation that ‘The Third regiment of Hussars, Colonel Postiey, formed }; posed ‘to move immediately on the enemy's works,” | voted to tho flag of the Union.’ (Groatapplause.) The tor. | and instrumental concert at the Academy of Music. The | sprang from’ them becaine the educator of man's con- in Madison square at eloven o'clock A. M.,and paraded | (Applause.) Now the relers of the earth will come to | eigners whom we have taken toour hearts and received as nial and entertainment were arranged under the | *ishce—the corrector of his belief. Now, sir, the wars three hundred and twenty-five sabres, all told. Like the | khow that under the constitution which makes us one | our fellow citiz vo bee country that had | Creme in Palestine, from the death of Joshua, were not conducted. Eighth regiment, they paraded in full winter uniform, | people, there exists no authority that can alienate adopted ther Y sincere, earnest | avspices of the Seventh regiment (N. Y. 8. M.) National | by the Jews for their own aggrandizement—they were with overcoats, "The line of march was then taken down | gle inch of the territory of the Unitod States—(ap. | and ready for every sacrifice. Slavery is the slow poison | Rand, and the proceeds aro to be most worthily devoted | brought upon them by their errors, | And whether or not Broadway, through Park row to the lark, where the | plause)—that while we claim for each individual the | which has wroughi all theevil; anda proud and selfish | ¢9 «the relief of the widows and orphans of the gallant | “¢ ™#y believe that Heaven directed them, one thing is regiment was reviewed by his Honor the Mayor, General | right of emigration, there is no possible conspiracy, com- | oligarchy are tho authors of the eunspiracy, (Great 6 certain—the effect of these constant defeats was even- Sandford and several members of the Common’ Council. | bination or convention that can discharge any one citizen | applause.) A rumor reaches us, let us hope it is un. | men who have died while fighting the battles of the | tually to settle the nation firmly in a belief in the true The regiment then proceeded up Broadway to Madison | from his allegiance so long as he remains on our soit, | founded, that three Powers in Europe have combined to | Union in the ranks of the regiments of the New York | (od, and the utter detestation of the debasing gods of ‘Square, where it was dismissed. though each oue may for himself diseolve that allegiance |/force a monarchical government upon the neigh. | y, the nations around them; was to enable them to be the ELEVENTH REG by seif exile and flight. These many and ever pri bering” commonwealth, of Maxie’ ahs ‘tame, | Vormem: educators and uplifters of the world, And, sir, we ‘The Washington Rites (Heventh Tegiment) Colone) | United States are one, now and for coming ages. (Conth | when she sems, if loft to herself, better able to go- | The occasion was worthily responded to by our citi- | may claim for war that if it has done nothing else—it, Jouchim Maidof, formed live in Great Jones etreer at one | Mued applause.) vorn herself than ever heretofore. 1 confess Iam | zens, and shortly after the opening ef the doors the house | even with all its desolations—even with its miserable o'clock. They also appeared in full uniform. After the PRINCIPI RS OF THE GOVERNMENT. unable to devise what material or what political interest | wag filled by @ splendid array of “fair women and | ‘estruction of a whole nation, with its imprisonments, Colonel assumed command they proceeded down Broad- ‘The only ground of hope for the perpetuity of our Union, | of England can be promoted by this untoward pretonsion. » ei enxvous 10.4 wwe its havoc, its mourning, turning fair Palestine © | way tothe Park, and balted in front of the City Hali | YU Will find, men of New York, imthe words of Wash- | Besides, America bas never been a propagandist; our brave men,” all anxious to do honor tothe memory of the | to a desert—we may claim for by nothing shortly after two o'clock P. M., with the expectation that | 'ngton, spoken in this city. When, in the presence of | people, evon in the days of our Revolution, made no war | Father of his Country, while they attested their devo. | cise, that it has established a belief of on earth. Mayor Opdyke. would. review them. They were | Your fathers, Washington, standing under the canopy of | on monarchy, and did not even ask or seam to wish that } tion to the constitution, laws and integrity of the Union | Greeee, mother of arts, hune oF phiemply. ganten of ‘The predictions that Washington’s Birthday this year | drawn up in line in front of the City Hall, and a | the sk: , took the oath to support the constitution, he re- | their example might sway nations under different cir- i. aa logic, come we next to her. Her parthenon, her propylea,. ion of officers went to wait on “the | turned into the Senate chamber, fo interpret to the first | cumstances from our own. They left each hemisphere | *t the same moment. her temples are the models of all time. Her marbles have ‘would becelebrated all over the country with extra- $ 44 Dut on reaching his office they learned that | Congress the principles of our great charter, and the fit | to takecare of itself. A junction of three monarchs to On the stage, which was surrounded by tasteful deco. | been the study of the world. In the groves of her ordinary enthusiasm than left half an h policy for the nation to pursue. ‘Then it was that he laid | put kingly power on our flank has an importance which stood officers of the Seventh academy and lyceum. the memory and the meditation og * beg the onary tein Meeting at the Cooper Insthute, over which be was te, | down aa their rule the pure and immutable principles of Pannot eccape attention. (Applause.) the royal tami- yarenensprce:crethelfirar ono. Yee, bond Sneceen eneesiee ee ae verified in every particular yesterday. Fromall sections | preside. Colonel Maidoff, under these circumstances, | Private morality,”” and ‘the eternal rules of order and | lies of Europe would be justly incensed if the republican friends, and other J jew York, with | although the Saxon English may excel it in strength, and 4 made the review himself, giving the command of the | "ight which Heaven itself bas ordained.” And the House | powers of America were to join together to attempt to | some distinguished visiters from a distance. the German in the number of its words—none, not even @ the loyal North despatches reached our office, 4¢- | regiment to Lieutenant ' Colonel Winiburger. Major +, see tomes te eaeen a to frame Lge Eo os one vl » it right ‘About two o'clock P.M. the Rev. Mr. Weston, Chap- ee eee Smee brisk ite 4 answer, 7 force a mi on ‘icans 5 bers, ‘sion. soribing the popular faror in honor of the day, as well | Freidenburgh, of the Fifty-second New York Volun- | Ie, answer, peeehie® foe sanghtaned maxima, and | 10 ic wise’ to provoke a collision between he ayreenn, Jain of the Seventh regiment, came forward, and read | of its expression. Under what circumstances did this toors, Quartermaster Myers and other officers assisted in " ’ t “hy which has led American people through go many | or to try experiments on the mysterious sympathies of | Washington's Farewell Address. Greece, exalter of the world’s reason, epricher of its ane general rejoicing over the trivmphant march of | the reve ae ay abd Te othe eee | dliicultes, to cherish & conscious responsibility, for the | the millions? Aflor this, the Rey. F. C, Ewer, of California, pro. | imagination, purifier of ite taste, come to her, bloc? ear Union soldiers in the glorious career of victory. Does rougutnres. ‘The Fegiment paraded over four Ee destiny of Jacana On principles the aa —_ td Aerio ms ne | nounced, with ete Gnd xeciiont ‘aphasia the fol ae pe a oi er me a — government wi em UB one was put in mo- Itt ini op slavery and on tl , ‘ mn bot the recent gratifying inteligence from secensia altg | SotetCy Cr the sep, tbe. uniformity inthe appearance | tot while the foundations of mevardhy in France were | slave trade bad been, steadily respected, dhe country | lowing ouaioee the tiirteanth century, before ine Christian ra, 8 Thes- E ‘uml away, and the beams that would have escaped the the present civil iu *, y werrant us in believing that in many sections | of the men, and correct distances between each | °F rf oe pcanun tn i; eto Mr. Commanpast ano Guxtiewew ann Lapres :-— | salian prince collected the young chivalry of Greece, and ; tion of the Middle Ages were falling in. During the half | war. The famous Fairfax meeting, at which Washington south of Mason and Dixon's line tho memory of | company, wore ter proce f "Sl the evidences of orig century which succeeded France derqent more revo Bresided, on tbe 18th of July, 1774 ed publi oak ia M ations cap ly count up; bad man; jeclaring was most carnest w! me- he immortal Washington is not only still cherished with | «Mfcientiy organized and under the \uition of a frat class | sors of government in rapid succession: the dynasty of | rica to see an entire stop forever put to tho wieked, fondness, but that thousands of loyal hearts yet beat " SEVENTH REGUSENT. eae driven = cower tare America; the a age mbt a hat te fo at .) Xe empire many went wo the whirl of reyo- | was mi as an aor ality a Fesponaive to the Union, and thousands of lips silently | The Seventh regiment, Naticnal Guard, madeno treet | fation, Russia has ‘been couvulned by a eartal plot Yor | crime. “Thesentinent was thoroughly American, aod folned in prayor yesterday for the speody return of the | Mien cons idering the matter of celebrating this ang!: Pope lout atid woe ternporal power, snd'son 3 - Fos contarie cinep bands and ‘reseat cae Ey Pine oo} day which will dawn upon « happy and reunited pooploy | Versary, to have the customary street parade; | most shorn of it again; institutions of Great Britain | Yest the sentiment of Jefferson, that the slave trade need si wre but, through reasons of economy, the intention | have been thrice essentially modified by the annexation | is piratical warfare upon mankind, was reaffirmed by Undoudtediy the enthusiastic greetings with which the | was abandoned. The regiment, however, with | of Ireland, by the reform of Pariiament—which was in | carrying into effect the sentence ofa high tribunal of jus. characteristic benevolence and generority, celebrated | fact a revolution—and by opening the doors of ite two | tice, and tosave the livesand protect the happiness of Among the sternest facts of history stands war. The | sailed on an expedition partly commercial, ly pirati- ready instrument of tyrants, the agent of guilty faction, | cal, to the eastern shores of the Euxine Be? the last resort for justice, it has reddened every land | argonauts fought conquered and plundered. But, though and marked every century with blood. ‘The very word | darkness veils the precise nature of this expedition, has become @ synonym for desolation and mourning. | there can be no doubt ot its results the Greeks. But, sir, forgetting that eho is ite offspring, this is the | The Greeks bad been nothing before. But the era unfilial view which Peace takes of War. War may bean | of thoreturn of the argonauts we discover a new leaven evil, but if it is, it isan evil as toil is anevil,as winter | in the people. There was among them not only ® more is an evil, ag obstacles are evils. I do not mean to say | daring and eularged spirit of enterprise, but a more deci- that every war has not had its primal spring in | sive and rapid progress towards civilization and hu- an attempted wrong; that which to war is | manity. Look at the energy which soon Aga- always wrong; but it does not follow that | memnon’s army of 100,000 men to betake themselves to i Stare and Stripes were welcomed in Tennessee and | the day by a festival and concert at the’ Academy of | Houses to men of all croods. thousands, slave trader was executed.as.s pirate andan | that’ which is thus rendered necessary ‘by | mere boate, each with a.stone for am anchor. and row Northern Alabama are only « foreshadowing of what is | Music, the proceeds of which will be devoted to the re- PROGRESS OF CORRUPT INFLURNCES, enemy of the humamrace. This day furnishes a spectacle | wrong, is wrong itself. Sometimes the attempted op. | themsclves across the Aiean, haul their boats upon land lief of' the widows and orphans of the New York Volun- | uring all these convulsions the United States stood | of atill more terrible retributive justice. The President | pression, or crime or wrong, has been on oneside; some. | on their arrival, and commence, and continue for ten to happen in every nook and corner of the seceded | teers. unchanged, admitting none but the slightest medifica- | of the pretended Confederate States of America is com- | times on the other; sometimes on both. But when bad | yoars, the seige of Troy. What is it that marks the true * gtates, as our noble troops advance and rond the veil of SEVENTY-FIRST REGIMENT. tions in ite charter, and apn itself the most stable Hed to do public penance in his robes of office for fool. | ambition and guilty faction plot to pull away the pillars | advance of men, the elevation of the people, more than nf The seventy-tirst regiment, American Guard, Colonel vernment of the civilized Id. (Applause.) But at jhly ard wickedly aspiring to power that does notand | o( « constitution whieh is a common shelter from anar- | the passage of a nation from monareby, first to ie deception from the eyes of a deluded people. Have we | Henry. Martin, formed regimental line in Bond street t ‘we have fallen on evil days.” ‘The tious | cannot exist, that dissolves and disappears as he draws | chy, and indignant War musters its forces abont those | cracy and then to the government of poms at two o'clock P. M. They appeared on parade in fa- | smiles of Heaven’’—such are the words of Wasl tanta near to grasp it. (erent agsieuee.) issouri, which he | coluras, and unsheaths its sword for their defence, then | people themselves? And what was it in Athens but mot cause then for rejoicing with such a glorious prospect | tigue uniform, white belts and new overcoats. The field | ‘can never be expected on a nation that disr is the | has invaded, rises against 5 Reever where he de. | war becomes sublime. (Applause.) War, like every | chivalrous death of Codrus in the camp of the enemy and staff officers were dismounted. After the live was | eternal rules of order and right.” During oleven years | sired to usurp authority, throws him off with indignant | other God-given appliance in this world, may be used or | during the cruel war with the Dorians, that led to the 5 eapecially when we look back at the splendid reeord | firmed, they processed. up Brondwa ity and the of y and thence tothe | of perverse ernment those rules were disregarded, | scorn, Kasterm Tennessee, where Andrew Johnson—(iong | it may be al |. While surrounded the long sun. | abolition of royalty an government archons? victories won by the valor of our soldiers against | residence of Mrs. Col Thorne, in West Sixteenth I game i pags that ‘men who should Srmiy atow tne and continued applause.) ” ¢ shine of peace, if we turn our swention Se the abstract | What vigor and expansion did not the Persian wars in- street, where that ey ecoeneed the regiment with an | sentinients of Washiagton and Jefferson and Franklin and ‘The learned speaker took ecoasion here to state that | topic of war we are apt tO dwell on its horrors. We | fuse into the Greeks? The nation had met end battled farmed traitors on the fleld of battle? elegant silk national standard, in token of her apprecia- | Chancellor Livingston were disfranchised for tho public | Andrew Jobason was to have boen ent, but in | dreod it, then, as an incarnation of Satan, brutalizing | with the hordes of Darius and Xerxes. They were far ‘This is the true sooret of the intense enthusiasm yes. | tit of their gallant services during the early part of the jee; that the spotless Chief Justice whom Washing. | consequence of a despatch, he received trom his soa | men aed devastating the earth. Tv is only when wat mmbers to their enemy, but they were on serv! present rebellion. The tation ceremonies were placed at the head of our Supreme Court coul wan unable to do #0. ‘Mr. Bancroft read a de- | thunders about our ears that we are roused to its true | their own goil, and everything depended om the issue. terday. The golden recerd of victory is troasurod up in | brief but inte: and impoe The regiment sub- ye possibility have been nominated for that office, | 5] from Andrew Johnson, which was as follows:— ann & remembrance of tho fact thas | Every energy was reused to the utmost ; ¢' nerve was the hearts of the people, who honor their vol sequently jl a the principal | or confirmed. Nay, the corrupt influence in. | ‘*I dee nes my inability to be Were 4 \snot only ® God of love, but also a God of | strained, every device of the Greek mind those A volunteer army sireate ann vooiferously cheered st various | yaded even the very home oy oon final | second. pa net ma perene 3 1am fe gir end wit battles. We to realign that ‘God panetionne ons Pays pany) Ayden —. They SS . Court, inion. mand 1004, not mere! after | and view with pride their gallant achievements, At | P omeun wn Gvoreo of the Supreme Court, ia ite deciston, ona | up prayer \ separa (ire: | cree time, Dus thar icis His afm of righteous punish. | mie, Piavea—and they drove him ruined back to fers. arpeai | he learned speaker then resumed:—Anérow John. | ment to fall in all times, whenever crowned tyranny | But aa they atood after thelr victories, with what wore it FH i ENT, wach 8 time we cannot do better than recall that record, ‘The Twelfth reguuent, Colonel Ward, made no parade, 4 '

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