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* NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1862. ee be, 5 a ROTI SERENE aE. nosing manage ERENT acme. <omend vermin, - is, would in ‘ad the rights of man, ‘int devoting three columns to denouncing the gov” om Drawi pea ba ee Sah yr Pw Soe dn el pa Bal ween rand "5 the namo nd giving oucouragomont to the rebels—would | Ons Kentucky and Misstt! State Lanoree?? ety ‘anothor day of thanssgivi i cept thors whose sons haye been #iain, of widows whose hus- | « dew” verat Bave permitted ned treasonable doc. Kewrvoay, Extras Cisss 477—October 4, 1862. Pave to bo kept im saating, and illeainae chm, bands hans haeeeeedaeiar mothers who bave beer . thing ig er or 47, 18, 58, 18, 49, 31, ven 4, 3, 29, 37, 75, 19% fr ogden poe for its succeas would be more hurtful | beroaved of thetr children, of children who have becw gard ‘same Of Masgach setts, tad a Yer 1g: a Kenwtvoay, Cusss te the Union than the loss of the. Army of | robbed of those to rovidene ftaugtit them to look ig Sy tchemaiay cae ted the Potomue and the capture and the sscuingot Wash | for protection, of ssnore which moxcebe she destruction of eee SE Sak, |. Wioulere een pean eee aes alike | ington It i#aticket upon which all the of | i's members, of the dead whose bloo Shas been shed to 5 . i. i Febelion, or, in employing | tho war will combine at home and abrat, aud Wo which | prese-ve our government from shame, OUP land {rom do- J tho grgat leaders of « emoeralic party, wont to the : WY, OF BA. Louis, Me. ‘and approved, and the following resolutions were pro h a i = way sale ay ont parent fee thelr posiiien: Could thut ius semen, Sur homes from the —in whe uname of jus- aig eee ys Moor OMmetat Draw Werane ars ie posed, vociferousty applauded, and adopted:— they not act toge! gan istoric patr! 4 neighboring State, who re- | tice, truth and pence, and of man’s last b.Agt Bope beneath | lion, tri tive of party i~ ,, Me me - J the. cop- | cently’ started upon tho Wise nain route o-shift himselt | tho skios. Rebellion is doomed, its last hve is i politi- | tion’ between the so-callod denom “Mt and ‘ho rurup of the , Bema Oxase (25—Octover 8, 1832 “d inquired in eloquent i, 31 Cass $50—Octobe: Resolved, Thst, in this yreat an perilous exigency of our | OF Should be alike a" ‘zelman, of Sigel, country all partisan fveli ‘ines, with | Stitution and crashing, “Ghote attendant Jealosieios and anti ies, a Doli: | the} not lay aside for this ay, should strifes into Canada in woman's clot proscribed Know Nothiay party, & , to avoid a draft, be per- | cal aid by home divisions. Destroy this hope, aud our terms if the countrymen’ of Pin mitted, as ho should be, to stump New York for this | government shall nevor die. Go, it, 1b, Th. ought to : mit i 0 daluded . ‘@ud all minor questions laid usile as unwise sad | and struggles, and act in one &tend and common concert, | ticked, he would doubtless raise @ whoop that would si- Mr. Dickinson was loudly cheered on taking his seat. and of the gallant Corcoram’ would: Wi . into sup. ; 3, 32, 39, 6 7 irlties wa in tha’ lie’ we invite alvloyatctieens, | tut thegrout citadel which }otcets and shelters all 1S | lone the most distingushed brave ever proauoed. by posses ‘i : porting an Seeeateetion whdon had’ tate $9. embrace Glacutsen edbaap uabeaciing! nt Oh en mae tae Oe 9 by their acts and votws would encourage aud | socured trom destruction? No» Fy a# such is adequate | Tammany. 1 have uo new light upon the subject of this MOR OF FON. KMAN FRIMAINR. the romnant of a party whose ofy was,¢ | 'ut Bone but ‘fou < vf, MORRIS & co., Americans on gaard"—whoso solo objeat! va * | ‘iimingtom, Delaware, the adoptea citixen and deprive’ him: of the’ jw. o - an American. The Soymourites called themsvin,* "Oo. | OMeial Drawings of the Library Asse- servative.”” It was the conservatism ofa man who, .W"#) | Slaton Company's Lottery of Kentucky. a robber attacks his father, soizes him, bas tnitow Wf (1) 9 9, Chase No. ¥2s—Ootober 3, 1362, away 80 gently that, while boing romoved, tho rote." |" °* ° », 8, ts, 1, 22, 0, 56, 10, 31, 23. takes the life of his father. Rather let us: have'the com: | 5a 51 47, Arias No. $26—Octoner 8, 1952. servatiam that when'mrobber attaces his father, shoots } °°) v ciroulire, & 42, 13, 62, 8, 67, 60, 4, 66. 7 Fo.” Ciroulars, &e., add) down or stabs him onthe spot. (Cheerg.) Mr, Seymour Le thoughe it unfortunate Rhst “the: beads. hold! for __% FRANOE & 00., Covington, Ky. Py'tze,* Cashed in All Logalizod Lotte: rebellion, or the manner in which it should be treated. I] Mr. Temwaie was toudiy cheered on boing intreduced stand to-day where I stood when Sumter fell—determined | by the Presidont, anf whon the applauas subsided he to see my country’s flag vindicated—to see the supremacy | progeeded to speak as follows:— of the constitution established and upheld—to soe sove- . reign law acknowledged—to seo rebeiliou crushed—to act Me. Cuaiauay ann Fautow Crrwuns—I thank you With those, and those only who would go ail longtha to | Beariily and sincorely for these enthusivstic choors. break it down—to act aguinst all who woud be its de. | thank your eloquent, able and distinguished Chairmay fenders or apologtsis—to act with those who, in pursuing for tbs warm, complimentary and undeserved eulogiui reboilion, would sop only at tho outposta of civilization | Which he bas pronounced upon me. But in a crisis like ‘and Chrimianity in efforts to destroy it—to employ every | that through which we are now paseing, the individual means, moral and material, knows toman ts cut itup | ®0ks into insiguilicance in comparison with the great and to cut it down the most oifectually, and at the earliest | ©2Use in which he is engaged; and I have not the vanity airepattien the governiont aud our brave volunieer army 10 | He Cy or auch maguitude, nor ,Howld auy one attempt mecessary to restore the Union and coaguer it. The republican party, for whie {claim no right to ease—all who wonld not co.npromise with, mor - | speak, which is not responsible for ma}, nor I for it, $0 far as I understand its position, does not pr.fese to act aginst ive that mation lace | the rebellion as a party, but in thoary and ta practice liys Ingbe cauitdates of the Uaiea Repuviican Convention, held | side for the occasion, as it did last year, its distinctive cope Aap Ee action as a party, and its members unite in commox with wed, That our candidate for Governor needs no com- | all loyal democrats and others who are 80 disposed, upyn mendation at our bands. Road his letter of acceptauce—ex- | a piatiorm inculeating no party ends, but (ay its vou Iibacta past aud prenent, and, Jude for, your, | taries tothe vigilant and thorough proacention of the war y e , until rebellion shall be conquered and the constitution Tot, uitor a word against the lofty patriotism, the boundless | acc nowledged, without reservation or conaition, leaving by State lines. but whe bell -ve t vis tho sheel-anchor of the repa the government debt were not taxable. Why it was the act of Congress, declaring that phi ropy and the spotless Lutegrity ames, B. 3 “4 to suppose that thi: iy a i Are fi ation 4! rl ‘True, he t: zed with being radical. He is radi. | to every one his full, perfect and independent politi- | moment. (fremendous cheers.) 1 devotea seven of the ppo is enthusiastic demonstration aud re- | they should be exempt: in | *a€oranation JOSEPH BATES, Brokgr, ‘rorth. Tre. ho ts charced wth being radical. Hos radi, | to, everyone his full, Derteot aie oi ty is ascocia. | beat years ot my lve im olor for the setiiemeatot this | PUD 18 duc toany personal merit or popularity whicl, | great moasuro onabled. te govurnmens 10 Gal, ‘all the M1 Wall are roam No. 1y New York. fhe Too's this upas tree ef revelling, and-restore pene’; not | tions. To this platform I eptirely agree. 1 despiso | accursed question peaccably—that it might. be taken out | 1 May possess. T proter rather to ageribe it t what l | money it wanted, which plaeed its credit'above par, ex = SS ee by making Tweddle Huli »poc: Mor fault finding ‘with | Hops: TO tls Ptiome, and ‘expecially at auch a time | of the political old North and South, and be let alone to | Believe to be its true cause—that great and noble cause | citing the admiration of the world. Inateml of saying it | _ Boye Ha Vana Lottery..Prizes Cashed Work out its own poculiae problom. under the mysterious | Of Which I chanco to be a representative, and witls which dispensation of a guiding and boneficent Provideace. Now i identified, (Cheers.) On the 2ith of Soptember that it is unnecessarily made the pretext for a wicked aud + 4 convention was held in a ceutral city causeless rebollion by the Southern people, [care not how | Of New York, more important than any other potitical svon [ soe its end. (Renewed applause, long oontinued.) | Covvention which has ever convened within State Thold the war power bread enough to cover tbe whole | fF its proceedings wore more intimately connected with question, and T confess, in atime when our government | the life and perpetuity of our government and our free in- direinpling in the balance botore. the world, 1 like to | Stitutions. ‘This Convention determined, as its principal Ree eee ea cen it is well,and boldly, and thorough. | OB/éet, to present a platform and a'ticket for the support ly done, Tet those who take the sword porish with the | Of the people of the State of New York whichshould un- sword is my doctrine, aud let those who raise a rebel- parca ays Sip rien two great cardinal principles—the lious army against the constitution take just sueh aid | One Was the determination of the people of the State of see eratrt ce martiat law and the, war power in their | Now York, whilo this terrible rebellion Iasta, to ignore all utmost rigor mete out to them, whether it be hemp, or | the parties and dilferences and prejudices of tho past, and steal, or load, or # confiscation of property. 1 would to recognize the great fact that the civil war that is now see) prororred practical and real acts in the premises as | FgiWE around us has burned up the cobweb ties of party seeps detnauiod, under martial law. as auch, to | 18 that purer blaze of true patriotic devotion to our be- thoories or paper proclamations, for I hold the war power | loved country. (Applause-) Another principle which abundant and legislation unnecessary; but, the Prosi- | ‘st Convention sought to ropresent, was the stern, in dont having determined upon a proclamation, T would | #exible resolation of the loyal and patriotic pogple of' the have preferred to see how. it would work it (ho last | St#te of New York to press forward this war fOr the pre few months of the old yoar to the first day of tho | S@fvation of our government to a successful termination tow. CLaughter and loud sheers.) But, ifthe proclma, | BY fusing into its prosecution, with all their heart and tion weakens the rebellion and strengthens goverument— all their sou! and all their strength, the entire vigor, : oe , : energy, resources, influence and mons of this great as I hope and believe it will—T am for it and all its conse: | Ana Sxtwortul commonwealth, (Loud cheers.) “Tins vas + ” urnished, Highoat lea was‘ unfortunate,” every patriotic man would say tt | 2a4 wformation, | yr alvat price paid for dow as the. most feskanele claenmstanca Wei tae wisi, fete TANLOM & 00., Bansers, 19 Waal atret enabling, as it did, the government to obtain what mone; = waa necessary to prosecuto the war, John Buto the cow. | _SPlem@id.—Thiw Term t+ Only a Fore= trary notwithstanding. (Cheors and laughter.) Now, | TRARCE of what can be p No Nasnd At tie eat fiat Revo: when called upon in the fave of the ehomy to citunge the | Tayts212 Broadway, wine eer ready to apply ihe pers government of this State from the hands of those who co- nd every one \Vho is particular, with his falP Operate with the administration to the conwolvt those a which’ 80 fax “Witpamied yt else of who carp and cavil at and denounce the govern- city that his store’ is continually crowded wit ment, while they give encouragement to tho rebole, | °usomers to purchase whut they know o bea good, weil Mt the ‘people, should answor aa the Irishman we | ane Oe was the water. By the explosion of a steam- " Wont, an irghmans a mare ‘aad f colt, were throma | Cantrell's Balmorate—Very Oh into the river. The Irishman could not swim, but gaia. | Very low to, lok. at, very comfor table to wear a Ing hold of the eolt’s tail, the animal was bringing bin | Prudent to buy, ure Cantrell'g exc Bent dae ence safely to land, Afriendon the bank cried out, «Pat, | Ehould be careful in the selection of their feet cover tm. a why don’t you let go the colt and catch the tailof tho | the best place to purchase ts at CANPRELL’S, 31 mare.” ‘My friend,” said Pat (spluttering the water | way, between Eleventh and Twelfth streets. from his mouth), “at fs no time tO be swapping L0Ts03 | Ves now!? (Loud laughter and cheers.) Referring to the | ™ = recent proclamation of the President, he showed that the | MISCDLLAREPUS: Presideut, as commander-in-chief of the army and navy, LL WHO ARK TROUBLED had Power to issue sxcl a proclamation, and quoted in A GRATER, cantare atone support of that position Judge Story, Judge Taney and GRAVEL, GOUI EUMATISM, ors. 2 Lines ‘0 * = DY: STAY ER AND AG‘ B, others, Abraham Liveoin, on. looking over the whole PereIA VEVER AND AGI “Syerzthing except Tole, Davi and eT trae aime a ihe heart | M8 this. (cheers) I defy and goorn all rinsing of party Galtors in arma.” ‘He isdoing his duty to bis country, and | goDgs to gather the hungry and alarm the timid. [act Za November next the State of New York will do its dity to | aud propose to act entirely independent of party. I desire him by electing him its Governor by an unprecedented ma- | to put down the rebellion by fase of arms, and bald ast ity. ri oived, That th our candidate for Lieutenant Governor, | {# “ane shall aot with (hose 700 Wen oe ge) The domo- ‘an Tremaine, we recognize & man who, in the hour of | DY tM See et akan or hee WUk oote mF ‘countsy's peril, can lift himself above the arena of cratic party forsoo! 8 of men wi ‘ay SE ee ae ta ahackles cat sayee*Nok my | accidental honest elements, with here and there an honest but my country; iis unity and preservation atall ha- | domocrat who supposes this is a war with abolition fana- BPR TR asa id scaethisonr, anit elisha: (Angee Lahr cle ined oe tee ity net like : r to lundermine ‘and destroy ab whether “they, be fue open con ee eS eee ane poe ip Teniete ot cues of we North, who ate ‘eiliog Plotters and | crats, wno have been carried tor life i tho ambulances &n ignoble peace at the expense of a degraded compromise | of the party; strasgling Know Nothings, not inaptly ‘traitors in arms. named; hards, so bard that they eracked in seasoning; «We shall elect him, pieeitesteadtiy it may give offence to | softs and shysters of all shades aud periods, and the Your Southern brethren,” and their distingulshed Northern nunth-regolution men of 1861, who proposed t poultice rebellion to death by propositions of peace, are now Oger tee Batice rican Tanne the democratic party which 1 to save the country. and for Clerk of the Co “What can you expect of a people,” said a philosopher, good men and trie, with no uaint yy upon their | “when a monkey is their God?’ Shade of Jefferson, garments, men eminently qualided arge the trusts | where hast thou flown! Spirit of Jackson! I almost Stout to be reposed in thete banda, We shallserve them.8s | hear vou exclaim, “By the Etornall”” Mr, Seymour, Rea eeng orreelect them by overwhelming wajorities, | Speaking apparently ex cathodra, informs the people what Resolved, That, in tae emphatic lang Br aa ncew Sonn, this faction, the self styled democratic party, pro- i ug ‘ gon, “rebels in arms against the government hat poses to do. ‘The burden of the song is, that they pro | quences, and any and every other meisure which will {| A20. 00™ field, and, after the experience of eighteen months, found sara 3 v1 We hold that they cannot inv pose to restore the constitution and obey allcvnstitutional | eonduce to that end, (Revewed applause.) The Union aye yeqg ee: consisted of republicans, } that’ these slaves of rebels wore the principal source I a Ce ee a a h [nthority and defend the liberty of speech, and he | candidate for Governor, General Wadsworth, 1 have | democrats, Americans and whigs, and loyal citizeus, } of their strength, aud, therefore, he said he would bring hd at chat a — Iiuuches into a homily about observances of law, and in- | known for many years. I know him as a gentleman of ailinities, and embraced an amount the whole military power of the nation against that insti ed at Sehiedam, in Holland, and exelu- crush out this mad a vokes the names of carly aud emineut jurists, as though | Ligh sociat position, of sterling integrity, of manly and h, of earnestness, respectability, influ- | tution of slavery eers.) That proclamation bound f the proprietor, by progexses and from fre nail w th the livelie Iehad some possible relation to the question, when it has | honorable Bearing, of unpretending habits and simple | Ce aud patriotism rarely equalled, and never sur- | every officer and soldier of the aru andes radioater unemployed ane unknown mation of the President ¢ intention to-ciuanci- | no more application than the farewell address of John | tasies—a dispenser ot bounteons charities to the poor a ed, too, bythe most extraordinary c® | see, by the order issued by General McClellan that ated analysis of several eminent Tate the slaves of all rebels wha do uot return to nelrailesl: | Rogers vo Ibis childven. This rebellion cannot weil be | who has a heart (or suifering wan, wherevor bis ay Ything likerowdyiem or intemperance, constituting | that goneral understood his duties as an officer | wih dint or iauor didtilion Cente: arabe anes by the Ist day January, IMG. Tt canuot inireiovalcits | sued by summons and complaint, nor brought to trial be- | be cast; who, when Ireland was perishing with famino, sb marked feature in its character and in its pro- | and a soldier—(cheers)—and had put the whole | aud which Is the case of the uervous and visecral dorange: pam iimoiy io ckriie with Catal comes from Richmons’ | Tor 4 Sustice of tho peace or referces under the code, nor | sont.a cary af provistons to the relief of her starving | ceedings. | (Applause) Their attoution was ilrst called | subject in the following paragraph ment, serious congestion and worbid desire for hubitual aad Xt is likely to strike with tatal elect the fountain head of | Teds a grand jury, uor be conquered at the county | onildren; who discharges all his relations with fidelity. {| to. the selection of an appropriate principal standard |“ Cheeta gaa iperate udulgence which such liquors invariab y temd ‘Resolved, ‘That it f clings of. pity and con- urt, nor held to bail by a judge, nor tried atthe circuit, | do not’ kuow whether 1 agree with him in ail | bearer to lead the Joyal massos of this State through this a aian bec oninérs and solliers, cqnesrning | public rise induce. tompt we look upon wtubie wind dissatis: | nor have an efiectual sentence of judzment aftirmed by | political opinions or not, aud do not care. I agree | Contest. | They (ortunately found that there was a cit whan curate ct ell beyond, Ham omtitaces Cate piceee Gt ree | arte ee taee ee re oter nL fled portion of our so-called ‘fellow citlzer who spend | the Supreme Court or Court of Appeals. Noose should | with him im tho great practical idea of putting of the brea New York, of great private weslth spectful expression of ‘opinion, tend greatly to. | Bar Bm fanipor herewofore. used, but with the spe vainly imagine that by thelr mug speaking, they tuay be- | fall to sympathize with a candidate, auexpectedly aaplr-') down this infernal rebellion at all hazards, | at Beceaniley seater Pent LI STS A parse Rem ME Sriee gre meme wtrmey ded ape paces [el ced BPA et fey aod. reditaa o “ sr retencalbdaros tas i 0 Syne Mod. y f , Whose cor 0 necessi- : « C n views, | the spi an for that firm, 9 nd earnest | sential'oils of the Ltalis : bers) tod by ev come worthy candid Fort Lafayette: the Mark Mod. | ing to guberpatorial honors, whose condition is any cost; and this is tho only matter dirsctly | Drinciuios and. feellags; but. More than this. | Support of the authority of the government which ts the Senet OS Of Dee eeerreny eee: OY Oe under consideration. And I agree with bim sub- stantially in bis excellent and mauly and sensible letier by which he declares his acceptance of the nomination, I believe his clection at this time as Chicf Magistrate of this groat Stato essential to that ond; that his defeat ‘dies of the community, aching to be kicked into martyrs; | tous that he cites the words of Lord Mansfield on the oc. full o: sound and tury abut the rights of the Souca, but } casion of the Gordon or “No Popery’? riots nearly # cen- having no word of rebuie tor vraitors, no denaueation for } tury since, to prove that a governinent assalied by con- ¢ Drw al aud floud sh wire ities perpetrated upon ibe nen | spiracy and armed robellion has no remedy but what is and tromen of the South for having. dared to stand by. the ne ieee pirie occ nent heya they found that he had given the most un- mistakable evidence of that patriotic devotion which was desired, and that when this rebellion iirst broke out ho had’ abandoued the ploasures, luxurlosand highest duty of the Amy rs.) 4. lt is che ly proved to be absolutely pure in its reeti- ‘rho position of the gove:nment was substantially this- | feation—« qualtity obtatned by oy It saw the lion of slavery come out from his constitution. | “ich no other uip in the wor! alintrouchments and jeap at the throat of the severn. | ,,%,,2¢!8 Rett inion; No sympathy for our noble soldiers now in the field, fireside, and with th ment, Ho had been driven back to his jungle neMOry E g rocess of on | w ’ “t | conforts of his owu fireside, and with three sons had en- pack to his jungle, and it was shyt rere orth cons of fue bane men a ave | geibed by, he slow and inaMtcal processor ebocom aa | would be estrous; andsial support fim, Semone, | tered the Geld of duty, wor, me high miuitary pnt, | BOW, prpored Yo rake bis aahly by the, inane and iS ““Bhey arc jomed w-ticir Idols; iet them alone.” ” | or it has no meaning. Here it pile ‘: every j Peters elector, independent. of ‘all party names, he had been assiduously engaged in devoting himself | damned be he who first cries hold, enough.” (loud and wa, fever and ague, general deblity, sluugish in Resolved, That our hyartfe which are now used only for cheats for the people, and we night and day to the service of his country. (Cheers.) | lengcontinued cheering. ) Tt was not a question of origi- | Of the blood, deticlent assimilation of food, and exhausted ratitude 1s duc to the gallant . offsorn und inen-ot our loyal armies wid flecis, wherever | When England was agitated by the throes of violence; they may be; that we tender to (hem our highest admiration | W! ‘ for tel brrolc conrace, patient e1 irance and indomitable | >! bestoged by Lesley ty meres bigotry; Spicer -zeal, and we promise thei our earnest and unceasing efforts Manstleld was sought vy infuri inved, tana es, and his fo relieve tacir disivesses, strengthen thelr arms, forty | Bouse. Leb pechclemrpergner corel gail mah eae are Set efor the future well belug of them- | viotonee, He declared that every citizen was eutitied to his 3 rights according to the known procedures of the land. He SPEECH UF DANIEL 8. DICKINSON. stlowed tothe world the calm und, avrfal majesty of We lav Unshaken amid convulsions, Self-reliant in its strength am Mr. Dickinson was then introduced by the President as poy wasaiiven to no) acta, whitch destroy the spist of nalabolition. If it bad been the President would not | Vil pueruy. have waited eighteen months and would not have reog. Pee remote | requ eet peatee rr aeg nized the institution in the loyal States. The President | ebrity, but ends rather to subdue the letter frailty by en was forced, step by step, until he had finally determined | ing a Wislike to inferior liquors, Aud it Lavaraoly cor. to take the monster (slavery) by the throat and strangle | ree! ad water, whether in swampy or It, (Cheors.) The President appealed for his support to the bd ior in “il aap loyal people of the State of New York, and the question atte, Ww “ was. ‘Should he be sustained? “(Criew of Yes yeu.") | nasi oniumane, ane Eat oaies "i the Propeletor’e The man who attemptod to stir up the sentiments ‘of the | | For sate, wholesils aad rial by all {he resp:etable drug. < “ They found that this man was one whose charities were a eee te a Oa eee sinome read the | wotconfined by the limits of his own land, but iu that aoe eae nuken lotter of one and the cautiais, Ducking | time and hour when Ireland was suffering from starva- and filifng spoech of the other, and then gee who is worthy | [100 be took from his va parse and by his own means of support. The intrepid Tremaine has already spoken for ri bh ye : prov ions , ive cl anh caused-to be himself. He isa Union democrat,and a representative ie us taser" CApota lest ie yren A seg of the of the Union sentiment. He may laugh at the assaults erald Isle. (Applause.) Au y found in this per- re oe aa teamnose who seuk te-build up a selfish, | #2 the most, uimistakabie evidence in all his public and rotten organization in the name of democracy, as | Private acts ‘and declarations, that he was devoted body hhew the person of the king was insulted; when P.vliament fer one of the gvod, loyal, sincere, outspoken democrats of w. Violence was rebuked, the heart of the nation was re- and soul, faithfully and honestly to the great work people against the loyal order of the Commander-in Chief ists and grocers in the United States, hai Sae.te Hor lolence vas rebuked, the heart of the nalion was re. | OP capital’ for. spoils and political stock jobbers. | a at ey ny work of costing ove | le guilty-of sedition and shonid be punished accordingly, | UDOLPHO WOLFE, 2 Boaver street. whom he bad spoken, The audience stood up and cheered | gtilied. Listen to his words: They envy his position and fear him, and hate him, ncirhate soe" pees cs ‘i ‘ the unholy rebellion which threatens its existence. (Loud | (‘That's so.”) He desired the people to support and PERE 1 Yond and continuously. ‘Mikerable is the condition of individuals, dangerous is the | for ho eaily took off their shallow mask and im ae ere ae ena tee Tnaintain and do full justice to that youthful command. REFERENCES IN THIS vITY, Mr. Dickixsonssaid— mae Oe ie Rene aera ree ni alea nce ortawe bet Pete te tenon econ er ch tte aie {touts that "were, represented “by those. dologates | Goueral MoClellun, (Cheors.) Lot dot sald'he, the repu: | SARA Euaactah heb. Prot f Cituical 8 . -_ what is the same thing, no certain administration of law, i ey - i. re, ” , i= Uannocuayx, M. D., ‘rofessor of nical Surv a a (ng Mec rrotected, and the State made | may be heard trom hereafter by all interested, to their | Lanisested, that upon the first ballot this genticman | tation of that brave and scientilic and skilful commander rgoon in Chict of the Btate Hospital tm the elty of New Wo may a3 well come - — to Ue great subject in J which 4 hand. We commence by discussin itions of those 2 who are placed before us in ‘amination for Governor at a It is casy to indulge in rhapsodies over, or to sentimen- talize on, the beauties of,the common law, and such offurts rego rere ey the candidate for Lieu. | received two-thirds of the votes of tho Convention, and company and a better fate. If he had kept ‘one he might the selection made was confit: with cheers and an en- 4 thusiasm rarely witnessed in a political body. I need sc be acess in 7 coniaaeine ae loyal men, “ tho Rariaxt, M. D., Professor of the Principles and sympathizers and secessionists have endeavored to do the ¥ “ehe’ Y Sit unholy work of appropriating im to themsolves. 1 | Prscde'e Surgery of the New York Medical College in the time when one of the most shameloss, causcless and terri have secured the other, and he probably regrets with me ‘lo rebellions that have ever desecrated the earth visited Ae ee enough a amas a Begs teateed that be bad not done sc. He Bay pa on roe iiektt by wot Taention. io you are = (Crepe tneles selenide ornate = be ae Fras ee ere esis (> were Lew 13. & Seve oy ‘6, They didnot, like the two characteriged by theprophet | YH, Weems “tuquering “such, rebelion, they | ou Who havealready injured him by their asoclations | Vextion next turnod is atteation to ihe aolection ora | Mppl, abd wherever itmay ve. 1 ask you to give three | Joacew Woosrry SLD. Tuner poor, but neither wis ter from the contralrogions | fe as ridiculous as would be a homily on | Pettstinny ihe ‘gupport of the Tie 8 Tet cai’ wittan | Giididatefor the socond place upon the ticket, and, true to | cheers for our army, embracing every offoor and soldier | xOt Sek: i B of this great State. Both were in the full maturity | Moonshine to arrest ap earthquake, an apostrophe to fail, and Mr. Jones, like ‘Tray in the fable, will be pun- the reece or klein all (hye lines that had hi- io Wig ae = McClellan down to the humblest pri- And inauy others too numerous (0 mention in this aaver- ‘of natural live; both had been honored by marks of | the deWs of evening amidst a hurricane, or a proscri tion | ehéd tor being in bad company. Must not every candid therto existed, they turned to one whe had seen party lines ranks. tisement. exist when partios wero organized alter the strictest sect man admit that the whole course of Mr. Seymour, {rom | or ine democracy, who had nothing to recommend him the breaking out of the rebellion to the preseut moment, | 1, the favorable consideration of the Convention and to has been destitute of patroitism, or good or generous im | the hich office to which he was invited to accept the ‘The audience rose and gave hearty cheers in response | Persous shoul | be particular in purchasing, a4 the whole to the suggestion. ‘Then there were cheers given for | vty. ss "ooded wilh “Amertonn gia, puto In imitation Tremaine, and one old gentleman enthusiastically exclaim- confidence; ‘both had beon educated by that | Of Mrs. Winslow's soothing syrup for the Asiatic cholera. care known only toa fathor’s solicitude and a father's | (Laughter and cheers.) If Mr. Seymour himself had rend, hope: both wore blessed with ample wealth, the fruits of | °F lad permitted bis hearers to have read from his it rich RTICLE lustrios aud entorprising progenitors, and both wore | orudite production a littie deeper inlo this scrap of | pulses or emotions? Must not everyhonest clector admit that ; FOR UNION SOLDIERS, F ‘Sater gy cence tn tec at | Sor, wu bean tad an ere | Boise ote carci oe re | Sete return a cat | Col bow Abraban Lio, ArT ood ROU tas ceeaacee t jufluence upon public affairs in moments of ? politician, and of a cold, caloulating and trimming one at soul, in sustaining the armsof the government. (Cheers.) ‘The meeting adjourned about six e’clock. fait an 7 iy ma compa, om port ” » | lics—a question concerning a particular measure under peril. In this, theic country’s evil day, both left the a ig @ part tmt? Must not every honcet man declare that the speech J Ana’ with an unanimity and enthusiasm such as 1 State ir birth and the Government—and had no relation whateversto the a Se ee, hal Stato of thoir birth and residence, and thelr Lomes of | ‘ection of the British government or Its integrity, or its | Platform upon which he provestas fo, tae ead an | ave Mover witnessed before, and that produced an im- News from Albany. COX'S BONS. Comtabrond., Che bid adieu to his wife and children, | ‘undamental laws; that Lord Mansfield was ove of the se gegheemso aie err frankness, manhood an pression that 1 shall carry gratecully with mo to | DRAYTS ON THE CANAL DEPARTSIENY PROTESTED—A A. ‘All who want a Crutch or Cane, turned his back upon his broad and fertile acres and his | victims of violence, and uttered what was excellent sense alt Kise of slipperynees design, Intended to strike a | ‘!e latest moment of my existence, the Convention ten- QUARREL BEI WEEN TREASURBR LEWIS AND AUDITOR Callon pigs lane, utousive business pursuits, and with his sons and as | oF the occasion, but which, if it had been proposed as | big as our goverament ang design, intended to strike a | gored that nomination t0 the individtal who stands before | BENTON, ETC. * you to-night, (Applause.) And now, gentlemen, as to seni our sons wo the fleld of blood and leave politicians | “HOM Ve -ateu ts to be rendered, yor bave a fight, to sistants repaired to the theatre of strife and dangor au antidote ior a rebellion with half a million of men in while yet the arm of government was paralyzed by } “rns against government, witn the avowed intent of troachery and dostitution reigned in the camp, and or- | Sibvertiag it, would have appeared as cheap, and puerile, Aupany, Oct. 8, 1362. * = STORE THAT IS THE 8) E WHERE YOU CaN Several drafts on the Canal Department of the State A save 20 per cont in bu: ing St ver Plated Ware, Table i Gitiery, Toa Trays, Firo Irons, Refri government have, within the past few days, been pro- | Cookiag Ulensliayand every article under the aun {or house: dered forward cargoes of subsistence for famishing sol. | snd shallow, and pedantic then, as its suggestion for the | 4+ home who are denouncing the government, apologizing : ai anh wu hans, ary the ma Shs | Sneparto draw, Govranenin mae usta | foopa onan are icttng to maier tow nat | i nye ta uo he gas the gs | "ne nna mene EScaneapw AD D RASRTORD, Shp Iu Seabee hore” (Ghicers . sega talenee fons to | mente.” (loud applause.) Constitutions and laws are | {iY OF, covery core areas and sympatinrs Na a an ete a een’ | The difculty arises from a quarrel between State | riiustrated Catalogues free. Third aid Fourth avenue care 2 : ‘ ; | peace. lon sp) sympathizers | (¢, ; | Treasurer Lewis and Auditor Benton. pass the do.r, : the cause of the coustituisn; he ‘volunteered bis own | '0 be observed in all its civil polity,and ordinary exi- ~ (Cheers Allow me then, gentlomes, to state ina lew ountituis wv , quite too near us, what is going on in our midst as well | Words that 1am from the crown of my head to the soles | The Auditor claims the right, in drawing a warrant on r services to the government for the field, in any capacity | goncies even in war; but among the first rights and whore ho could be most serviceable in pits the bel pele eae ee holiest Lares ols a ; Wus (entirely unsolicited by htm) appointed a | © preserv: 4 eistaior volunteers accepted me commis, | chee. Constitution, law, freedom of speech, liberty of the gion, and has since devoted his ‘time and onergies and | Press, usurpation, tyranny, &c.,are words easily " ample means to his country’s cause, aud Is at this hour | nd even parrots can be tanght them. But men shoul doing sorvice. ‘This man’s name is James S. Wadsworth, | know that the instincts of a government, as well as of an (Loud cheers.) About the same time the other indi individual, when assaulted, are self-defence. The father vidual designated left his family and resulence of repose, | 80d Capra a dependent family who should fail to Dut not for the scat of war. He hied himself away upon | °mploy all his energies whon assailed by a murderer or the double quick in the opposite direction, and for nearly | bandit, and instead thereof proceeded | to recite from a halfa year hid himsetf among the lakes and rivers and | /aw lepriphiee bey § with suicides in the sight Fomantic woodlands and inland towns of Wisconsin, and | 0f God avd man; and a Chief Magistrate who should tail his tonguo was as silent on the subject of denouncing | t protect bis government against forolgn or domestic the rebellion as thse of tie murdered voluntecrs, whose | (003, armed or unarmed—whethcr avowed or silent, +‘ ghosts walked unrevenged amongst us.” There we | Whether wielding openly the implements of death or ia- may suppose he basked and balanced, and watched and | sidiously acting as the advocate and apologist of rebel ited, and turned and twisted, until autuma, when a | lion—would himself be guilty of treason, and would de- forgiven for its treason, have Viarder washed from its | ‘every emotion of my mind and every faculty and pulsa- bloody hands, and be warded for its villany tion of my heart, unreservedly unconditionally a by Hberal propositions. This party with ite pro- | vuloo war democrat—(ioud appiause)-—stending upon tions of peace ha ‘been exposed, abashed the platform of war, war, war to the knife, till this rebel- positions of peace having been exposed, abashed | ion is crushed. (Renowed and protracted chovring.) fororsh ' ta Damewok tie, wih, sre But, 90 far as 1am concerned, neither In thought, word ng of a different shade, but quite too flimsy to deceive a | HOF deed, aball the idea ever, be harbored that discerning and loyal people. Like the cat in the fable, it proce! Paige | ' nature in- has whitewas! its coat, but the teeth and claws are shoul one and indivisible, skall over be Meoccrnpie.. Cal back your ‘sons, I repeat, or | be divided, (Continued applause.) I am inflextbly op. Crush’ thts insidious minster at home and the rebellion | Posed, to the entortainment of any proposition OF any ‘abroad together. Rebellion has lost faith in expected ie any time or under any circumstances, that feroiga reebgaition. Its twiserable sy mpathizors in kay. | peeee with the armed rebels shall be thought of, unless it Keg serge to some ttnn, Pose Darel mie | gatae nana and amare mah O'Connell said was a regular lineal descendant of the glorious land. (Uproarious app! ). I have already the Treasurer, to specify on what bank the Treasurer A. S—T—1860—X.—DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS sball Aram bia check invigorates, strengthens und purities the aysiom; is @ per= > fect appetizer and nature's great restorer. It 1s com| The Treasurer rofuses to recognize tho right of tho | of pure St. Croix Bars, coteeveles Caltsaya int get Auditor to make such directions. He therefore draws | N¢Gbs., Faricularly adapted to, wea we peers checks on suéh banks having canal deposits ashe deems | gentle tonic. and is just th for che proper. Whon those checks are not drawn on banks | "74 ¥Y all.grocers, croggista, nol ene aay, New York. specified in his warrant, the Auditor refuses to counter aoe me sign them, and hence the protest of drafts, BOX OF PAPER AMD EXVELOFES (SiNGLE Ixy 4), ont REDE'S, Ai SoMOMiGd Gadde by tha’ kedliceiio telmovathe. | ekitee e e oop State Treasurer; but the Govern understood to have | 7\ORNS, BUNIONS, INVERTED NAILS, ENLAROED refused to interfere. joints, and all ep of PSs cured i out pain Since Governor Morgan’s absonce from the city an | of,nconvenienss to the patient, by Dr. ZACHA RTE Oe effort has been made to induce Lieutenant Governor | 8¢on# of the city. wai ed thief, fails to meet the occasion as expected. ‘Bimal knot of defunct, defeated, desperate, and despica. | serve Impeachment, conviction and execution. (Great , - | Observed that this canvass is to bo waged by a | (, . eset.) sores Die politicians, who had for years bung upon the sub. | cheering.) Those who volunteer as exponents or oracles pede Ne ee at oe ieee: the panting disregard of all the ordinary civilties, courte. | “Ampbell to exercise the functions of Governor, and sus. IRECTION LABELS AND TAGS—ALL KINDS, sistence department oi the democrat: in thi of constitutions and laws should at least under. | Mand tt toy 0 0 | sies, decencies, or regard to truth of ' ordinary | pend Treasurer Lowis, but without success. white and colored. printed and plain, tn qua STL NR TOUE. Dy sateriag WARS, euay wereld stand the subject they are discussing—should eae eoalin ec creas ta etal hope ore political controversies, and that it is to partake | treasurer Lowis remains firm in his determination to | sll purchasers, at VierOn's. mavakees, without leave the honored name of democracy, under | Know | that in times of | peril, to th nation | eiion at home. When this hideous monster sees us | nos aac cewithit at home and abroad, (Cusere) | Pesist the claim of Auditor Benton to control the canal | 7) RESDEN, 18z7 Sieh to Rerpotrate thoir covert treason, as the hypo | oocy of every goverminent as a great necessity, and may | wnited ag one man, i one ciate purrs ee TA th hea already baying at-my heels the whole Southora | deposits, Dre VON FALLEN a vor re * » cl e as nth etree! lew 5 Their disgracotal sud disloyal rogurd stauds out ag the de. | and alarming reality, and is neither to be run away from | CXterminared. .) It would long since ‘have | jory ag their masters bid them. Perhaps you’ may | | Scraeus Cover Cincurr.—Part 1—Oyor and ‘Torminor. | “sect ated Bathe, @1 each, yieided, but for the hope of propositions of peace | degire wo kuow whether these assaults and these trom political ee barhlgge rtd a igerpeeeen ‘oud } attacks intimidate me. I answer emphaticuly, but for seeing the Executive denouni for unconstitu- | ho. | felt as if it was an honor to receive in my person tional acts, and @ party rising up opposing the war in | ine plows which I know are aimed at the great aud pa- ap Rn merengue Pomerat understand the } riotic cause with which I stand identilled. ( Applause.) matter in all its bearings. w many brave spirits | | have counted the cost of breaking away from the mis- Red cheek YC tell COAL OLL DETECTOR. JOHN Part 2—Nos. 2008, 500, 3004, 3008, 3010, 3012, 8014, 3016, 22, S024, 8026, 3028, 3030," 3032; 2034, 3040, TAGLIABUE'S PATENT. Covrt.—Part_1—Nos. 2363, 223, 1861, 2209 s pee. ry ; 1861. 2209, | Price $i and upwards. No. 3) North Willian street, 890, it. Part 2— | 994 ind 164 Broadway, N. ¥., and 40 Pulton street rae ings of mon too stolici iu political depravity to be gifted | Nor quicted by reciting boarding school homiiies. ‘It do- with ordinary instincts, snd too rogerdioas of the pepalar mands and should receive every elewent of power which will to be mindful of shame; and the dofeat they experi- | slumbers in the bosem of the nation. When Lord Wel- encod at the hands of the people should serve asa warn. | lingtou upon an exigency proclaimed martial law, on ing to trimmers and traitors and parricides and ingrates | being asked what it was, replied that it was the discretion se. | of the commanding general. Military law is the law for 352, 2354, 2356, 2358, through allfuture timo, [his movement drew tic have been quenched forever because of this shamefui Nos. . a es whi: saci tes ane ‘elude e frum hie biding place, and he forth with | the government of the military forces of a nation. Mar- | Dav a - > | called ties that bind me, not to the democratic party, | 2372, 2574, 2376. ‘ : Sii'the courage nf iia who-i acouilies with his wife, be | Hallaw is more rigorous still, wider in tts application, | $infut division—by reason of unis miserable political am. | but to that miscallod clique who stole the name of Home? |. CoMMom ’Pikas.—Part 1—Nos. 1271, 1272, 1274, 1278, | F)=TRAGTHSCOGNAG, SHOLEAND, AND LONDON ing driver, une: the bod. «hile remaining thus escoused, | nd 18 defined by Smith, an early and eminent writer, iu mead a epolis. But God will Se ee Buin | crat as thoy would steal the livery of Heaven to serve | 1277, 1278, 1279, 1280, 1282, 1283, 1284, 1285, 1286, 1287, | Waiskey, either of which with, pure spiriss, produce o: declared that whether she consented or not, bo would | his ‘English Republic,” and by others who have gom- pa] prey Nousnels has Seu bersare a Oe na the devil in. (‘*Good” and applause.) With a full know. | 1288. ‘ art a 1146, 1250, 1283, 1259, 1260, 1261, Imitation 6 piso Compe Olt end wey ‘Tusect Powder. fook ont through a knotiule in the elapboards so long ua | Viled its best detinitions. The President has no such | Mi nove perilled their lives in. endeavoring to crash ang gn ben he Fe ernshoneg 1263, 1269, 1270, 489, 2138, 1200,'1291, 1292, 1295. sa'e by J. W. FRUCHTWA\ ) 42 Cedar strect, ho had the spirit of aann. (Great laughter.) He exter. | Power as a civil magistrate in tho ordwary administra- ed the political canvass, and on the 28th of Octobor, 1361, | Yon of the government, but, ina time of conspiracy, a few days be!ore the election, made 4 speach, the burd on rebellion and ws ig Ro eee ran go Mn) in his of which was an apology for the rebellion and a conden | Judgment the public safety demands it, Posresses, nation of the aduinwstrition for having meted out tho ri | #nd may and should oxert if necessary, as much power as gor of ma: ial law to chose in arms against the govern. | the autocaat of all the Russias, for the purpose of pre- ‘ment. Though abounding with flimsy disguises and go. | Serving from destruction the governinent confided to him, phistical generalities, it contained one potut worthy of | Seymour to the contrary notwithstanding. (Loud ap a rebellion which gains hope, and tenacity, and endu- “ * ~° Panos; aod. poresvernsos, if Yes. work of conspiracy and | [s.tne Conteserate Stales or io the duate of New York treason and marder, and holds on beoanso it wees a |}, ere: Se ee coe eee a eae criog up sealthily and ia ‘disguise | P24 and palled up the bridges behind Bim, and siovd peace war Party io, heir ‘bones ere bleaching ‘upon | Feady vo fight this battlo to the bitter ond, and stand or crap ‘battle field in the rebel States. Those wis loved poner Union wat man of his cour oa nati ve re * a " cers. political con! wt this time and under thom ask you where they are? You cannot raiso the | {ise circumstances, was repugnant to ail his tastes and Arrivals and Departures, bes? THE JOURNAL OF COMMERCE, SEPT. 30, ur ARRIVALS, a I. ay ‘bi ais for mo Dea! m3 ene pe | IVERPOOL AND QuEENSTOWN—Steamslip Clty 0 _ | called Doctor Vou Bisenberg’s alt passage Expander toned M Hertingoer 3 8 Bogione Mies Pee Mee aang | Regulator, « glx iy fife hundred Mins 9 Grostios Mise Mt Ts ean Ww Tareas Me Rogers | pounds, about five feet im betght, a iwost lady. ‘eM Fa Pus tor restoring wight and hag just arrived for Doo Pnye’'s Romeee es Seen Me ee rar te Perty. | tor Von Bisende the evlel ried t, and will rg, the eelebra zr A pa be on exhibition a’ the Doctor's office, 816 Broadway, for = icantic machine, weighing FN Mrs Posts, dead, but, in the name of heaven, call back the living , tf few days previous to lis use, The instrument ts cons{ructed not ouly notice, but uf the soverest reprehonns: Si | Plause.) It is a powor dangerous and linbie to abuse— , but, , to all his feelings; aud the question arose why were we | Cap W oii Super, Mr ware - ects... ean Prehonnsion; ard } Trouid always be exercised with caution, and omly ia | Hist are yet spared to us, or, de-broy at cue Blow, one 1 under tuo mecossity of entering into a political discussion | Sin sf, Aimon indy 1 Mule ¢e idediy'on the mot sclentife principles. ‘Fe give a dota oft is true, that ¥ must be aboltabed to save this | tmos of danger; but In such & period it is. the govern- pt tp witeh\ rebellion inaiinettyniy terns | ° © politi contest at a time ike nls? Way was it W fleiy, dS Bryne’ Sele Me Meekeae Be ae spare, | Our oculiat and auriat seems to doe yerything in tbe U if the should be a . ment’s salvation and rock of deience. The course of the D thal js hour, when our coun! bleed . u nd . eof h fe y i ni the pogpls oF He vuld ba allowed to | ment's salval = for rolier. But yesterday a proud boy in the heyday of | nae Mh orn Me iota of Now ing at every | sorunaurton AND Hamvnc—Steam: Pad PT aby MN gy Ww ep 7 k is made up, and r withdraw uh government which cannot | Prosident in arresting spies and the apologists of rebel. | fi", Tang fells “Ho was tho ouly son of hie mother, | DYre before the quota of New York is mado up, a hope fell. » | when we jo" ergies, money and in- ih give the,: the proteciioa suarasteed by its terms. (*“Shaime,” | }ion—in suppressing tr: coby. Emma, Mr Rosenheim and famil, iteannot fall is 80 constructed that ‘open the most ob- le presses—in suspending See family, 8 re a ace uns glorious Unlonthls heritage of tu- | {ie habeas Gorpus, and in laying his hand apon the aiders ands was a wid bo fall bythe hand of revel mir. | jience to uhe work ot oblaiing voluatdra to water the Mihertinn Pouce ans Call Wolvert, | atracted air paawngoe. Tia new consulting fopine. 6 Broad, ‘or the " ‘im. | 8nd comforters and «! rs ison and conspirac; > army an up the regiments—we found ourselves | stein and family, lor, Mr Brew 1 Mis wis wuecesst uf. man hope—this as) him for the world’s woary pligsim— | and comforters id uiettore oto tanks of cvery goad | the loyal States would give rebellion aid and comfort, | ‘indor the mocessity of belng diverted from the patriotie | Canaily, Mr Lauren fe ang af hm Pay fa nny Fa i de Boucherville, A Ulil, Win Hiller, Mr Campbell, Vicwrine | TVURNITURE OF NEW DESIGNS AND SUPERIOR this roluge for tue oppressed of carth, in the scale of ‘Denoath the biack und bloated and bloody. | citizen. Let assassing whet their knives—let spies nud the corrupt aud curruptin the stalled aud seultiy ing peintrinty rnp rae re sae ere pea tution of slavery. Souner than see this Union vecat ‘pce! sovera, lot not oniy the Wistitution perish whenever and | SbFidKed—let couspiracy and treason plot at thes Later wherever it can bo found, Yul iot tue habitations that | "al conforences-—let pollticitiis achtan uit emergencies fhuve known it ports with it, aad be known no more for: } Sha when all this has becn done the. action of the Presi. over. | (ihav's the tals, bully or yous followed by lead | dent in these measures, though probably not free from sheers. ) yet this returning fugitive from patriot. | 7, Gud acrers,. vill be edhe bekees em proclaims a3 his crecd, in eilvet if not in worms, that eo the sight et ‘tienen, alien = edd if eithor slavory or the Union must do destroyed, it | SRO aty he Somer ~T 7 should be the Union. And the name of this mun is Ho- Ge erecas op Lm Dood i mF, rated, ‘stand talents and propositions of peace. She asks you with trembling |, r @ political it. A sol Tip and tearful oye for the idol of her heart, her hope and | SOrk te enier te eet nee wh wore a joy. May Ho who tempers the winds to bn shorn lamb | Cause of it. That responsibility rested solely and exclu- | protect her, You cannot restore her child, but you can } ively upon those leaders of the organization calling itself destroy one of the accursed oauses which protract this | Gemocratic, who had chosea Horatio Seymour as their bloody and terrible war—the politicians: , (Great | candidate. ’(Applase.) The proots to sustain that asser- applause.) Thestorms of autumn beat 4 log cabin } tion were clear and overwhelming. Before the fall elec- standing by the little brook beyond the hills. The winds | tion urver the rebellion broke out the Republican Com. moan, sod the leaves rustie, and night is ring: A | mittee, representing a ty who were then domimant ‘woman weeps over a hearth, cold and cheerless and deso- | in the ten tw the Stae Pemocratic late. A group of little children, with Saaraie euneat Committee the right hand of fellowship and invited faces, hang upon her knee wondering why she weeps, | (non to como forward and agree upon a platform, watv- Frank, L Ronswood n workmanship, at very lew prices. e nd wal pot Parl nd Bedroow rf tee of and beautiful styles cannot be surpassed, Call and see at FR, KRUTINA'S niture warerooms, ‘Nos. 96 and 9 Bast Houston street, ven Bowery and Second avenue. te Improved Photo- ETTER, NOTE PAPER AND ENVELOPES, OF latest Toitials star on la atm acaity igesign sed L Cie ange Danerne Tals SPLLRTON S60. 44) and 45 Broadway. OURNING EARRINGS, PINS AND. BRACELETS— Woe patiern For sale by GEO. ©. ALLEN Woe 8. dev ha, $5; colored in ratio Seymour. I convict bim of it and arraign him before | ang of time. Lo and are asking for their fe ee . 4 yal men find the rule no ineonveni- ing party organization, and simply containing the plank eee eee eee eet cot “in hemination by | chee That the disloyal should condemn it, aud hate it Alas! of the unrestricted and unconditional prosecution of this | ,.Bredricks & Co, Photographers, 179 | — ay TE ro posing Orginizations fer the ofice of Governor "), | as they fear it, is natural; for Nor wife, nor chtdren, more abail he behold; war and the sapport of the government. If those gentle. | Fifth avenue, Madison square, GOTEERS EN TYLER, MANUFACTURE! this Siaio—the one by tho loyal maceos, acting as a No rogue o'er felt the halter draw ee ee — men were in their hearts in favor of the prosecution of | trpsses—Marsh & Co.'s Radical Cure as ‘ Bs ant Brondway. Union ganna end nipendent ot | (auger aud apne He‘ wi ced Fn the no a a a ee | Fre Nee ae aheP ees Stet ce | GiiviR WUNTING GAARD WATCHES VOR, TWRLYR —| ion, wi marci v' 6 inherit. yal SILVE! yx <4 ATC tormer Political opinion pledyexi to the support of the ad es Shas revetettonasy site. Rf raghden Bed omega] Pore bor wa Ee weetoume oe th any oiner truss oliice of same name. Female atiendaat | ee ie anne y Neorrect time-keepers, for one UF vT ministration in all just cilurts to restore law and order— | ,, ene coon wo ag mon — cemrersiin Party 4 mouaditionai reduotion ott ir boll and'speedy | ity mon, or ite masses, or its principles in his present eh caech mere » Fobellion, and t9 any | course, ihan Jo. Smith represented the Christian church. ‘amd ovory incasure calcalated to secure that result at the ‘The old Jacl san denne wae ot fee aoe = expectation of propositions of poace {rom politicians, who | the part of the republican party. But it was refused; foar rebellien will not be ‘constitutionally, treated, ‘or in | the democrats ran a party tickot and were defeated by the hope of some new reading of the constitution which | hundred thousand majority. Suppose the men who years ago had an active participation in the democratic party— teas eer dee an Radical Poa street, fori 2 offlee, corner of and Ann indor Bar. — oe hums, Afemale attends ladies, gy STEEL EARRINGS, PINS AND. BELT CLAs?S—FOR Sie vy GEOG. ALLER, Nu. 118 Urowdway. fo. Mh Wall GkO."C" ALLEN, No. 419 Browtway, one door below forly Ne earliest inowent; the othor Drought forward by political 4 from true faith, holds, and always has held, the Btate of New ‘and enthusiastic applause.) That bereaved | who gave it dignity and , Crosweil, and Dix, aod | Trusees.—.White’s Patent Levers Trase,” | — on _—— Fe apne, thelr offerts at at | York by tlarge wajority. (Applause.) | ‘The scheming (Renewed and ce iition looks te yooe ‘Those chiviren | Dickinson, Hottman and Silas Wright—had been’ cou- | tethe best, Light, clean 4 eany, "| PRavecuixa siters tien ender new and ungtoved disguises—tho peace party faction of which Mr. isthe “nominee and repre. | “demand their gire with tears of artless innocence.” You | sulted upon the question whet the —preposi- : GREGORY & CO., % Ton matriots of 1961, the apologists of rebelliog and the vil- | Soutative yours since ; broke up and destroyed | cannot restore Mm. God alone can shield and comfort the | tion of the dominant party should be acceptedt oo ARMY AND NOVY OFFICERS gaaetotaot 186) the ag rasa It BAM mst Crowren | the democratic party by contact "with it. | Last year it | widow and fatherlens, But you can remove one of the | they | would, have boon unanimous in the af | | Masehelore Hair Dye ene Beat in thy Y with ('® bait a million of hrmed mon in the revolting ge {is platform four times to get it into good cheat | chief causes which servos to protract this hellish malig- | firimative. They would havo said, ‘Talk abou, world ;instantancous, harmless and reliable. Sold by arug- crvitiaxs, States, and tts splos and pimye and creeping miscreants | 126 Shape, nnd Was then beaten by more than a hundred | nity and mischief at the ballot box. You can cancel the | ruining ® party organization, and calling it democratic fete and perfumers everywhere. , 81 Barclay street - fn the loyat States, with the plenary power of martial thousand votes. (Laughter and Noche, Rane ‘This | demands of hungry politicians. A settler in the far West, | Dow. As well might a man, when the Hudson is broaking pT eT EL () LARGE QUANTITIES AND FINE VARIETY, {avry Instead of propositicns of pened, “O0.the cocasion af | F@at,it hoped to gain strength in whe cliy. the asses of | upon Indian Yorder baw volunteered with the true | up at Albany, and the lee Gling ite banks from side to side, Gasenrttes Weeden th seeinion, aus Ri eh WHOLESALE AND RETAIL, democratic party are Ww ly organi: of the ptoneer, to defend his coun over ng piers, propose to built a and trans: ” yatifying the comp! a , pes als Fecout nownination hy the Atbany Convention, ho war | Me tte members are always loyal, und whe organized, | sod cwildren are roused from thelr s himself and wite'and children upon it to New York, | 88% fost eruvlly taken. by surprise,” He aki nok expect | Bt ar Z is a8 true as was its great leader, Jackson. ts ale pame would be vefore the Reap sae nedibers awell the ranks of oe brave armies in guard equal that ue upon whom s surprise par ing the nation’s capital, in protecting that dear symbol sails when thoy dod a table already spread for their } oy Mberty and the Stars and Stripes, from dese. satocrememens. _Clasemer.) Since he is a candidate for | ration, and in defending the constitution and the Union, oa high offive, Volat fons to pubtic questions are proper (That's #0,” and cheers.) They are acting with the tubjects of examination. Since the speech ho made uncer | t) oy organization at home, and are endeavoring to ox. shoso ombarrassing circumstances has been mate the | ninit to rebellion and to the world the sublime moral “ — ‘Also, Phaion & Son in,” the Best Arti~ | All the NOVELTIES in the line of GENTLEMEN'S FUR- cle in the world for dressing and preserving the bair, So! HARD. OF bath tad —---- BROADWAY ANU GRAND STERET. Cristadoro’s Hair Dye, Preservative and HROADWAY AND WARK ae id retail, No @ Astor NION PAPER AND ENVELOISS.--/BIZB STA. aes See. U \ionery Packages; also Army Dortfg.ioe low ‘or agit. G. 8. MASKING & CO,, 36 Beoxmun sivoet. los por! night by the yells of savi hellhounds, to perish | That man would be wise in comparison with you who the cedar wk ro ad scalping. knit hee hi talk about forming a party organization when the govern- cabin i9 in flames, and the ferocious ment is tottering to its foundation.” (Applause.) Again ters, with hands dripping with the blood of | was the proposition generously made this spring, and innovence, bear away their trophies to oxhibit for reward | again was it rejected by these Seymourite democrats, to more ferocious monsters stilli—savages professing | There was not a single principle for which the Union Christianity—conspirators and rebels, who stimulate the } republican party ‘was now contending that had not been Ted man to murder defenceless women aud children that | an issue with the old democratic party iu the days of its platform of the organization which supports him, it is |» ectacle of a whole Jay ing aside political partisan | they procure from political traders, at an early mo- | power and glory; while there was not @ single issue bet apie ene * 7 nett emmane tem ter roview. rem the cre opinions and a Mtad acting together to presorve | moat, liberal’ propsitions. of peace and compromise, | or principle represented by Horatio Seymour which had | gene for Wigs, Toupee. I $100.000 *"™ abound, Khe had not declared he, hed een takon on- | tele revetuttonary inheritance from deatrncti tL That borderer will return to, grect his loved ones, but | not been Beld Uy the Hart(o=d C-avention and those who reg ees “SUPERIOR CABISET FURNITURE if at they are not there. A heap ot ashes is all that is leit | controlled it. (Cheers.) Those who held the Hartiord him; tears roll copiously down his sunburnt visage; but, | Convention claimed to be in favor of the war, but ob- like the fallow deer, he yo alono. You cannot 1g | jected to the conduct of the war avd the manner in winch ‘back to his embrace the beloved object of his aifection, | Madison's administration was carrying it ou. So incensed cost. ‘s Hair Dye, 50 Ce: t8, Biack or a, best in-use, Devon W Feet, and Siraly by tar pe ie Soe vost have supposed ho had made | 5 when poace is rostored and it is reorgunizod; but Tam fet elaborate preparat Nut thers are other cases equally Fomarkable. A nowiy eloclod Sponker of a Woatern 1.0. | it 1oaMt ah older veltien tn ite ranks than, Mr. Sey mor Gislaturo, though decttring he wos take ‘yy surprise, and | H1°9 qs yood right to apeak for tne Me has: ‘and T may, sold by Use Prof. Le M/.Aler’s 50 Cent 11 ir Dye but by procopt and example you can ala fn ramoving the | were tho peuple that a convention should be Held at sch enoxpectedly eavoraty manuscript, routing thanks tox | perhans with propriety, predict what it will uot do. Ustestable hope that a rolitical party can aucocod, in | & timo, Lembarrass the adininistration, that the party | Black aud Brown. ‘Tue beat, Sold by Druguiste. Depot, 66 | yn gett the whole of their Frecg the Honor coerred, and apoiogong forthe fperfectians | 0 ee a oe i Hat noacT Serie Soobtt or hee val Seay | Aiguation og low that no buble rose to tll Abo spot where ppp able ne = bra ab con oind scicoted he very v te or ver a e Ot oliticians. cheers. , thon, I say, t io u loyal Stat LJ no rose to tol where ! workmen it rth dros, Heckine hy was unnecustomed to extorn- | Dl that the cogesces teem Matha Kester hae doe und | Scvanitad--iol thera eet 'topotner as one man’ Lat no | tiey went dowa. Andrew Jookwin was accounted a'goss | qBenmettal ComplextonesLated’s Bloom M Supers ot of Youth, of Ligrid Poarl. has no equal for Parliying ad | eXPOLEN of manuiacture s apoaking. Mr, Seymour's speech commonces to 7 ion that he is now doing more encourage the endurance and | political organization, as such, be supported or encou. | democrat, and he stood on record as holding it was the fying the We ‘ s fr rrare., b, . Le istitu na acl tort round aud sustain U ernment i lown rebe! teks, an road: ri dont, veliilo tig ‘old democratic. party of this Stato ‘as a party of | a common uniou. Lov rebellion, in all ts provoan forms pont nae . ze gn hoping au forms | lion. (Cheers) Supposo that Androw Jackson were and ail its cloments, be crashed by every hand and | Prosident,and that the rebellion, instoad of having origi- cursed by every lip, in its moral or material forces. in the | nated in South Carolina, had originated in Massaohusetts—- ogg of in the serpent Dr oF disguised, in its Cull | the people of that State doolaring that they would not strongth of dilated, in the feld oF in tho political canvass, | romain in the Union whilo slavery “wns organized — in battles of blood or at the polla, at home or abroad. | and suppose that when tho State of New York was called ‘This ¢ demanded in the name af Revolutiouary meuo.ieg, | uyou ta ald the government. Horatia Sovmour bad wade ion Li Need 1 le Cc e Wevat fe la. Linas i Li and ord Pleats” Word Division sieeeus New York eh. eace “Whieroring, ‘L will moter consant’eonsented;” power and influence. They hope and believe this faction not moroly fa regard to partial friends, but more, becanse | is its snecessor, and possesses some of its clomonis and he ig jinpolied to suiler moral martyrdom, for tho coun. | influences, and await its triamph. Could the murderous. try’s good. There has not beon belvre such a forcing | tatterdenilions of rebellion, who are described ng reek. gince the raye of the Sabiuo and the on Ted ing with a rank compound of villainous smelia, shagg: Raa it js true thet Mr. Seymour began to dealine | with ahrods of what was clothing, and creeping wh MEMBERS OF COU y i i ; ~ pou LATK BOW CGS ggrpicaTioN Itations Upon Chronte Diseases Con ‘uiven daily by De, WOLF, S88 Broadway,