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EW YORK HERALD. I WHOLE NO. 9436, NEW YORK, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1862.. ; PRICE TWO CENTS. <—_——s THE HUGE PWS IN BROOKLYN. comeerns, what is necessary to eave tho pub- | (Great cheering.) We did not want thie war We m . SCOTT fiole, you wind that aataiive clas toma aes | meena engage ie i. Weentrented the higher | The coprer a leiterwrites ty Sesenal foots te the Geare- ‘deal more and to ry deal more than our w men of the Nortn and the higher jaw meu of the | '8'¥ of Sinte on the day befove C9 Cay mite, mi ‘the consequences to the country if thie potiey that has so long kept usin darkpers as to the actual condition of the count ie longer permitted to prevail. say | LIA ETS ‘What do you said every day when speakin the other side of the house deem entirely | South to abstain from thie monstrous contlict. Now, | hublished by Johm Van Dusen. it autho wisdom e'conatiution: Teak | of the “wal aod ite reverses? What” gentis’ terms | eonaiateat with patriotism, Now, appesi toyou aa bust | when, ‘he moan a the’ somth waade “the. agoues | dinos altvet the Promigsacnce tee cee AnotP.er Groat Gatheri of ews, men, I appeal to you as men who, in all the concerns | and the sword the arbiter (they elected, and not we); | auy‘knowinige of the manuer iw whith way con eta hae i ng ‘all the principles I have stated, whether | when they determined to settle it by blood (and not we). thon to @ith f from General Scott ‘ould have got jnto the h Van Buren, “TP authentic. (Laughter.) The statement im the telegraph, then, does not come from Mr. Lincoln or Mr. Seward, because they know that it is authentic. It would be evasive and improper im them to say “if authentic.” They do not know how Mt got into the hands of “Mr. Van Buren, But eae feet caneade they do net know. If I bad been asi state whother it was ed from Presi- dent or Secretary of state pe ed the; not be regarded in the conduct of our natioual | the sword, so far as (he present is coucerned, must be the afte? Js corruption less dangerous there than it is in | abiter; and in our strong right arme it shall strike vigor- the workshop or the cvunting room? Ie departure from | ous and true blows nous life of our conntry, for its in- sound principles and rales of conduot leas dangerous in | stitutions and for its flag. Edgoiause, ) Now let me say the meneepent of national affairs than in the conduct of | this to the higher law men of the North and to the higher private It is ualy necessary in all those matters | law men of the South, and to the whole world that looks to apply to the oor cerns «i your nation those same prin- | om witnesses to the mighty events transpiring in this ciples which you all adhere to witb regard to your | country, that this Union never shall be severed, no, never. Own private interests to learn that you eanuot save the | (Loud cheers.) Would that my voice could be heard nation’s life. Unless you will do what we now urge you | through every Southorn State, and I would toll them their to do, not only to iaintain your army, not only to snp- | mistake, Look at the conservative triumphs in the port ee ernel.: en 8. Sen to Wels, be, Se — and listen not to 4 teachings of those who say clear of the nation’s affai t_ then, | that we are not true to the Union and to the vonstiti- too, to demand that those aftiirs shall be ted with M i economy, with integrity, and with bopesty, Now, my | years forthe constitution, and vindicated your rights, friends, we mist not only save the nation’s Ife, Dut-I | when it was assailed and denounced, You kuow want to speak a few words ag to the mode by which the | that when yeu deserted your country’s flag, nation’s lifeshali bosaved. Itisnotmy remedy, Idonet | you deserted” us who iad been true to stand up before you to claim to be wiser than my fellows, | the principles of this constitution, Read — these Ido not urge-this upon you, my radical friend, because it | trinmphs, and they Leli you that they bring into power ig a conclusion I baye arrived at. It is wisdom in which | men whose love for the constitution is a tradition—men you are ag much jnterested as Tain; it is as much to your | who \uherited it from their fathers—men who consider it advant as it i to ming. ‘The remedy thot I ‘offer | identified with the constitution which we are pledged to for you is the rew:lt of tho wisdom, of the p teiotism, | uphold. Therefore it is we tell you, and we tell the whole of the suffering and of the toil of patriots | world, that this great conservative party will erect the of our own and of every land, wio for long | shattered colimne of the Union. (Cneors. wild Tift years have been endea: oring to work ous principles of | it higher up still, vearer Heaven than it was before, and ver any dena wld henefjt the human race. I mean } from its lofty top and growing greatness there shall over the remerly for a] this thing is the consti(ition of the | wave yonr nation’ ith every stur and every stripe United states, (Cheers) Now, the nation’s life will not | that has been id in the wonderful progress of it the Unterrified. Tent and ftienday that more than two bundred thousand Northern " ¥ fo—young men, Nes, the and hope ot pny Jand—bave ty laid in The ed 20d 0} of all classes: too-that' on “a ‘hy ‘ied the _ Pople ni men of all cl an essent! we have misapprehen power Academy of Music Crammed | 0 ectrity asm poopie Speaicing, then, as feel lave a | with whom we hare beet ombatting. (Cheers), Now, ith th i rd Fi right to do, on of the great conservative party | whence came all this misapprehension? Was it accidental Wi ie Ha sted. which from this time forth 1s to represent the policy of | or casual? How came it about? We were all of us our government, I mean to be moat explicit and Outspoken | taught at echool that the South had great resources. popes in all that I have to say. (Cheers.) We were told of its productions, of the character of the i A Vows—'‘ Bully for you.” country, and its great capabilities, We learned tm our Wontogne Street Brilliantly Waminated---- Mr. SeyMorn—I shrink from no questions. I seck to | early readings the character of the Sou people. wd grapple with every problem involved in our present posi- were taught to look upon them as brethren. y a ’ tion. If the people of this State shall see fit to place aud the etories of the Rovolutionary struggle. We all Calcium Lights, Pyramids of Gas Lamps, toe ‘eni i, Hw Hxwoutee chs, 1 wih wo go thera | heard of CwneralJackau and the Daitie of Now Orleans . wil anderstand\y¢ om their part of all my Prlause. fe all glovis u stern valor faylor. Music, Cheers and Patriotign. 8 ARE Aas whine, Quan ie:| fares} Thee ae ae te Leora tee the gituation of this land? “Ico not propese to look | play North and South alike, was known in eve- oso, ibe drat pace, 0 iaqaire wlat'is now teium | tat, woot iho. gloat aiotrepolia, you of the, beau pose, in. rT » to inguire now the situa. » We the gheat nictrepolis, you peau- The President’s Proclamation “ ‘Arraign. tion of our country, and what duties does that condition | tiful city of Brooklyn, while you every day looked out on impose upon us. Ibelieve the war might have been avrvted; | the beautiful bay ‘yonder, and saw vossols deopiy ” but when I believe thus, I recognize the fact of its exist: | freighted with the rich produetions of the South; whi ed and Denounced. ence; and recoguizing that jact, 1 accept it as a thivg | you find in your workshops ten thousand evidences of which | am bound to regard in ull my views as to the po- | the wealth of the South to buy, and the ability to produce, liey of tho future. I recognize and accept the fact that at ad wore made to believe for years past, that this was a ‘this moment the destinies, the honor, the glory of our Iploss, dependent, poverty stricken, imbecile people. country hang poised on the conflict of the battle Hold. I | How came it. that against your early teachings, against Speeches of Samuel Sloan, Horatio | recognize the factuow that whether we would have bad | your readings in bictory, against the dally oleervations stand honored principles which for #0 man; Fegard to General Scott—that they had mé to lay it before the public. ‘(angen andtaaee » I will also agree that they had no knowledge of the mon- ner in which it was obtvined, and Twill go fi admit that a careful attention, (o the hiv'6-y of eet try for the last eight months hus satisied me there area great man, other things in regard to whieh they ave DO know le te rs aud laughter.) Now, there are jnst two peradbs w! AeA Tight to compile oe ne publication of this letter, One is Gen. Scott and the other is Mr, Lincolus Not one word of complaint has ever been made by eliher of them. If it is, I am quite ready w an- ‘swer to them on a complaint rye to me for any injustice 1 may be supposed to have committed, Thut letter was obtained by me in & manner which war a secret; and it is very odd that @ most accompli and cultivated lady is Selping anp.te keop it—(laugtiter )—so that you will see enacted for the first time, between now and November, the old play ef ‘*Wonder ; or, A war or not, it exists in all its vast proportions 1m our iand; | and expertences of life, you entertained this monstrous | only be saved, but 1. must be saved, by a strict and rigid | our count a whate: \" el ‘ Secret.’” Renewed om Seymour, Jobn Van Buren and <I recognize the fact now’ that. itis tho. duty | mistake which has dyed the land red with tho biood whicth | adherence to’that great charter of'yourIibertion, (ha, | encores neapioat Malmomnise sat tates ota oe | Tie eratacial thing foe toa, ig Adee wheter so and Devid Ployd Jones. of every man who loves bis country, of every | bas flowed trom the veins of your brethren. Go back, | newed cheers.) Why is it that in this day it is spoken of | an tndividual—let other mem say and think what they | authentic; and that being conceded, the mext thing 1s, true ian who would stand by its institutions, to | my radical friends, to your Ceachings, to your radical | 80 lightly? Is it that in atime when our country is agi- | piease—as for the division of this Unton, and the breaking | whether the contents are of a charactor that are of tue tated—when we are in the midst of a civil war—that men | up of that Rreat natural al'lanee which ie made by natur c & 80 prompt to desert the great barriers which upheld uot | and by nature's God, 1 never will consent to it, a never, only the in: titutions of our country, but which protects | as long as I have a voice Lo raise or @ hand to tight for this to eet ey i. py in sve) porate se in your | our glorious land. (Loud cheers.) rights? (Applauce.) the constitution of the United Mr. Seymour was repeated! . States? {e ita mere parchment? Is ita mere dead lett? | seat ki anergy ring tace highest importance to be known, and, being known, tiny ought to be acted upon. What I want to =, is, that wh on the President got this information hefshould have pavee' - ho should have regarded it. Why not? General > was a whig from boyhood—a life long whig—as lon; + that par any existence. He was the inst whix« \- see that the whole measure of his influence and all the | od to Bed prayer meetings. (o back to the sacred ‘weight of his power is thrown in that battle field on the ouse of God, aw Ee will see that this monstrous lie . . wide of the flag of our Union, (Cheers.) Yor this reason, | was told by no accident and by no inadverteuce. 1 tell Democratic Relationship to the Govern- then, we are Bound to dg in nf ahr what Imapy of ug | you this fatal Ignorancs was Cit result of long years of ahs, we done in the past. Ave BI among t! is ane systematic teaching that spread upon the land the terri- ment Changed Within the Last Few | vales or the country ‘where 1 live to inva our young | be caluuities thay now flood it. (Choors,) Say hat . ty men to rally around the standard of our country. i have | you please, think what you pleage as the cause of the war; | Is it a mere record, having no vitality and no valuef SPERCH A REN, didate for Prosident, He was a patriot in every fbr. ¢ ‘Wothe—The Democracy A Bow done al that was in my power to do, to uphold this gov~ | Say it i avery, say ite abolitoulsin, say it fe ainbi- | Toll me ~ that, ponder ip TORTS pees WE) web canis ecco oe an Vea Daren with | bis frame. (Cheors.) He was inerefore a. frien, gy “Commands the Situation. ernment. ough it wi an administration of my | tion, say it is thegtbirst of wealth; but ezery man knows, | patchwork and of bunting, ingtead of bemy as it is a : them advice which ought to have been heeded. ( plause.) Was he competent to advise? Had he upon tie pisins of Chippewa-—had he in the Florida campaiga—bad in his past shown that he was competent ag @ soldier to advise how military proceed! should be conducted and what was bazirdous? He juet deem the Mexican campalga; he had landed twelve thousand men upon the hostile coast of Vora Cruz, fight- ing the battles (f Cherubusco, Moiino del Rey, Chapuite- peo and Mexico. Leoiay a without a solitary reverse, ‘to the cay ital of, lexico, sarrounded by eight millions of people, p ting the Stars and Stripes on the hats of tho jontezumas, and conquering @ peace honorable and glori- ous tothe country. (Vebement cheers.) And was he nok a proper aye to tell them:—Gentlemon, # you und rican! suiagl 8 tall aes tereetion toa require a young general; it will require the ou the force [ have described.” He gave notice of the mag- nitude of the enterprise; but they did not heed it, It their misfortune. And now the only advantage of the communication ig that hereaster, in subsequent proceed- ings, they may be advised by the past; and while they are’ obliged to prosecute further tho war, that they may take the advice of competent military men, and not of misguided, ambitious partisans or con- tractors that make money by its prosecution. (Cheors.) Now it is suid, gentlemen, that this is a private lettor. A private letter! A letter from the Comrffander-ia-Chiof of the army to the President of the United States, which it was to be expected he would act upon, and which Doing acted upon must be laid before twenty | millions people. Why, itis preposterous to the last dogree to pee that ‘it partook of that character. I agree en- lively with those who say that any ono who publishes private letters should be excluded from the society uf gentlemen. J agree with those who say that it tw infa- mous to the last degree to make such a publication, and where the party whose letter is published is dead, it then partakes of the character of the byena aud to make the Jeter public. 1 invite these republican gentlemen to Wek at the publisned letter of Genera) Kearney and denounee those who either copied it or procured its publication, (Applause.) Now, ge tlemen, one word more of personal explanat! and then I shall be through with tbig branch of the discussion, fac from interesting to you, ana perhapsi might add, very uninteresting to me; If ccems that 1 have not only pub lished a private letter, but I read in (he Bveming Post that Thad sat down to dine uninvited with General Soott the other day at the New York Club (iaughter); and this is mentioned as an ev! of my want of ledge, ne it certainly would be, of the courtesies of life, it is thi stated:— On the asme day on the ub, at the war ealing thers, alone at a table. Mr, Vau Buren sat him- If down at tho same table, uminyiod, and there ae i nner, Dut satel ere». wind: the Gemeuns “lps oho et tai ta inake ® hivaniel on wortubout the letter of che General which bo meant to read. ° Now, how any friend of General Sc.tt would veoturo to say that anyoury sat down to dine with him, uninvited, £ oto imagine. Ui choice, yet till wae the government, of my country; | from one end of the country tothe other, North and South, be and | have invoked al! men to stand jeyally by it, because | that if the pecple had been well informed with regard to ms Pe aera) RCA t br sey nH each eat poe are ee Pagina and South, this . f position e | war, m: ‘iends, would never been. (Cheers, ‘The foeret of Gon. Scott's Letter—A Lady | great cionervative cues of our land, 1 uo hia Tasdert then, thal the great underlying ‘cat-o ef. Users rm “oongervative” in antagonism the term | evils bas been ignorance, But for this misuphreh Welpizg Br. Van Buren to Keep It. “yadical,? for this reason: 1 do not ignore the | this fatal mistake, that was so insidiously teuleated it existence of parties in our country: donot wish to ignore | your minds, your country to-day would not be baits in them, 1 Believe them to be esseutial to the wise and just.| the blood shed by brothers iuvan unnatural aud tretrm, Char! mg, of Cok bia Paonia ga Saveur bie deh bein cidal Lent (poopy Neate jay, Moy fricuas, that the Mr. les Ki: cuse, and which put in nomination another ticket, dif- | national life demand the truth, 5 Wi it sho ‘accor oh Caoarec. <2 MMBPED | Gere fom that on which wy name sania, saw it to | ist no Longer he amped be ses eae Sea 7 Sette ata eagerane > hei wens of hat the | ur “decorations, and which oa onlinary cesssious must ‘ollege, Gets ths c2e Direct, — | wakéandv ine: ‘thoy daw ft to sok a trintnph” BOL | iA igh’placel who (olf'ws (hai this war wil bow maticr | moment ab this thing, without impeachiis the wisdom | grme™tuuli uit naw wen dled with, ardent (rlendg cy ids vepat alone over us but over the conservative membe:s of their | of only thirty days or ninety days, or that | of these men, without impeaching their patriotism. What | magnificent beyond description. (Cheers.) You have v &., oe. ‘own organization. They saw Mt there to say that they glorious emblem, instinct with overything that arouses | the remark that he thought it was hardly necessary, (ar aaa): fealngs Sud appeals (@ the nation’s vride. | Mr. Vax Bonkw was received with hourty 180 and Applause, A ve you, are not only ‘i aa ofits in favor of loyal support to this government without jee rtness RE ‘3 atta crt 2 condition, Dut we have au thor advantage over our op- | geatulnto you that we have assembled in. so maguiicent a Ponen te. , We, dropowe to, Dring this war to « speedy and | Chamber as this in which we now dnd ourselver. It is, 1 definite und. dotereetiae een gicuds, we have & | believe, the tirst opportunity I have ever had to address he Uni 3 object, and thut in, to restore | tho of this city, aud I do consider ita source of the Union as it was. (Cheerg,) ‘We are told’ by a great ee cote fat eel de eh pay that they 4o.no§ want tbe Union as it was, but ihe | S"No2'so magnificent. th ite Potala as nentatnl is it will be ended in the next three months. | is this proposition? You, my friend, whowant this Union | qiready had the pleasure of listening to an would put in nomination a ticket whose very presenta- | Do you remember a little whilo ago, whon | saved, you who want to knew if we are in favor of | able Yaw eloquent” address, and if 1 consulted tion by that organization should be an argument at the | a man’s person was unsafe in your own intelligentcity? | bringtbg this warto a successfn) conclusion, why do you | simply my own inclinations, I should leave ‘The Brooklyn Academy of Music was crowded last night | capital of our country that their own peculiar extreme | If he said, that three hendred thousand men could not | doubt us when we tell you what we propose to do—that 4 | the uiseussion of the great queetions which now agitate from footlights to to) 4 galler ith enthusiastic | Views of policy should’be followed ont by this government. | crus out the rebellion, he was iu danger of imprison- | thing is defluite, and that something is within our reach? | the public mind whore it has been left by the distinguish- ig ip teeaeoes galley, W tusiastic | Now, then, in behalf of all conservative men—I care not | ment, and now more than two hundred thousand men | Whatdo you do, in the affairs of life, when you embark | @d ypeaker who preceded me. (Applause.) He is your demoorate, assembled to ratify the nomination of Horatio | what party they may have heretofore acted with—Iac- | sleep in bloody graves. (Cries of “Thats so.) Myrati- | ina great ep, ote you confidence in any pro- | candidate for Governor, It is his views that you are to Seymour for Governor, and to hear speeches from their | cept the issues which they have made with us, and { will | cv frionds I again invoke your attention. Ido not belivye | Jost that is brow fore you that is indefinite in its | endorse. He stands upon the platform of the conventign ‘eandidate and other leadors of their party. The accom. | State them very plainly and clearly, to show whethor at | that the concealing a truth, destroys the truth. I do not | purpeses and indefinite in its end? What is this idea that | that put him in nomination, and those who sestain him party. this time we should be sustained by the great boly of the | bolieve if you close our lips against fair and full debate, | men don’t want the constitntan as it war, bat they want | ace expected to sustain his principles and the principles of modations of the Academy were all too small for tho as- | joya), intelligent and conservative citizens of qui State. | you will thereby avert the calamities which ignorance | au amended constitution” ‘That implies that it is to be | gho parties who havo pat him in nommation. (Cheers.) sembly, but for thoze who could not gain admittance tre ee Seat plats Tega yelper sad poe these sub. tik a fairs duectioo' of ah ara a, ae oy oe iam pstayrpetng fe, eee oes few tae he tere Ne = humble mem r of ie association thas cated ef jects which are i . which are is ire. ld—yor u E him, claiming an ‘@ not) ut an individual voice there were outside arrangements mace, Montague street | Ocetial. wot only toour success inthis great war in | miy lock it up in banks or bide it in | tho constitution shall be amended fo suit meas Mr. | ju the deliberations Of the poeple, able to give only a ‘waa brilliantly illuminated for some distance with a cal- | which we are engaged, but which are indispensable to the | deep vaults, but al you Cogeaeotn | shat, it tells a (liisee a a shall be naan ; nit him? ingle vote at the polls; and while there may be slight cium light, placed as the central star to the lights of | success of the government under any circumstances. Lop- | tale of depreciated currency, a8 surely asif it passed from ssed for Greeley . you open Pandora box, | differences of opinion between him aud myself, it gives saitude, in the shape of tastefall eanee the election of Mr. Lincoln. {deplored that remus hand to hand in the full light of day. (cheers) Hide | where does it end? bos meh wants a provision that ist | ino hearifelt piecanre, to fay that 0 geueral and cordial ts et engenow, “4 % ut be was elected constitutionally, and it was my duty | abuses in government, lock us up if you will whilo we | bear heavily. upon one class of the countey, aud | my concurrence in bis views, that] never supported a pyramids ef gaslampe. Two or, three stands for | te pow to that decision. 1 did’ so for the pur- | tell of the abuses and mistakes which haye brought de | avother man wanty a provision that will bear | eandidate with more satisfaction than 1 shall Speakers were constructed in the street, and most of the | pose of sustaining ny sso the President of the He pen our Bali ae slaughter upon onr brethren, fovea BY scrips. fasta is ey, ie man | support him at the approaching election. (Loud choers. i United States. 1 deplored the policy he adopted at { and which to-day reiden the great ocean itself with the | wants to work ab a provision interferes with his | te hae, as T have alroady stated, fully discussed many of ‘sual conoomitants of old fashioned democratic meetings | ie cicet of his administration; but it was his right to | flomes of burning ships. Conceal these facts if you will, | Peculiur views of goverminental policy ag a person:i | the questions that arise at thie juncture, aud it. will not ‘were brought into play. decide and adopt a policy, and it was my duty to obey, | but will that stay destruction, will that ambition be jess | Tight, And whem, my frieud, you will for ®momeut | by necessary for me to enter very much at large upon ‘The stage wes crowded with many of the substantial | and I yielded tothe decision of rightful authority. My | hurtful becaise, u seal our lips? "No, my frienda, you | tolerate thie nee? Maat we are not \o restore the | that. Allow me to call your attention to the manner in friends, we have always been opposed to the doctrine of | but aggravate the ev e tell you this for your bene: Jniou ae it was, lerate @ proposition thal in i hich he was put m nomination, He was first selected @itizens of Brooklyn, aud there were a number of Iadies en the “Bigher law’—that doctrine that men have aright | St, a8 wel! as for nr own. We belong to that great con- | tion to all th vils of civil war and all the uncertainties we be ores pat Sea Me ” Pe ress ous the stage and in the boxce. to set up their own views, their own passions | sofvative party that wil govern this country hoceafter, | which hang over our ounntry is to throw into this state | party of tbe State of New York. (Cheers.) Ho was af- Before the commencement of the proceedings the band | and preios pee the law of the land or rf Cera i Seay you, my bsiagint aha whether you riper en eeeenesh of sicerey try tafe aan terwards adopted by a convention representing the dem- popular the decrees of the regularly constitated authorities | Ike it or not, the day has come when a ni ghty political . Applanse.. must see this, and all men must } ocratic party of the State of Now York. (Choers.) As ylayed soveral ona co pet in response to calls | coting ‘within their constitutional. limits, (Ap. | revolution is not only about to take place, bit hasalready | feel this. Lock at the questions which are soitled by | | have Viiready aid, upon a previous pe ing pre- from several Hibernians, gave “Garry Owen. plauge.) It is thus; se we hold that men | actually taken place. (Applause.) I tei you that wheo | that constitution, which, if unsetiled, would agitate and | forenge was for another Pandidate, and 1 hoped that that As Mr. Seymour made bis appearance on the stage, es- | are displeased ins the luysgol the land they snould | we shall have that pews, whi ne will yet wield, we mace this poe 10 Peipaea, cap a of a bere oe candidate would have becn presonted. Such a course . | have them repealed constitutioualiy. ‘Tho 'aws must not | will not only ourselyes. enjoy speech and free ight are from New and, and many of us are wae not adopte. The unanimous yoire of the a ee a. see eG recog: | he resisted, We hold alo that if mea are opposed to | action, but we will extend the same prividoges to | New England descent. Lock at that compromise. | Yonvention of the party of which Tam a mem. nized, ere was, @ unanimous outburst of applause. | those in authority the rightful remedy has been given | you. In good faith, I toll you that we shall never Here are six States, with less populvtion than | per gclected Horatio #eymour, (Loud wpplause.) it has ‘Most of the audience rose to their feet and cheered him | them by the constitution, That kind of remedy you ap- | retort the benigeeoa § bhp carapace us. (Ape Fe ee «oe Catleage than Ohio, geo boen suggested that now @ ibird candidate may be put in t plied in my case once, When you became tired of me | pla And when you digeugss our policy, when you | or an, having six—nay, every mau in New | the field. When # meeting was held in tho of New gg Aorta 2 < You turned me out. That is the remedy to be apphed for | condemn our judgments, you will be still protected by our | Eugland has “scveu—times the voice of a mon in | York’ iast Memday week, I tovk. the liverty to ‘The meeting was called to order by Mr. James B. Craig, | the removal of unpopular officers. Now, when we held | stroag arms as completely as we shal! now protect our- | New York in tho Senate of the United Stuter, which Lo- | state’ ia presence of the present candidate, aff with who nominated 28 presiding officer, Mr. Samuel Sloan, | the power of she State we contended for these principles | selves. oak Hee is sunthee thing necessary to save the | day srr Fpewiag idee of your ie We | his aecent, that if Gen. Dix ‘would be nominated, W there President. Hutson road of ity to the laws, this doctrine of obedience to law, | nation’s life. That is, honesty and economy in the admin. | are willing to baye ing $0; we are willing to accopt | was a general disposition to conceutrate the voto of the sesieaes — 2 pe belted re Youare bound to respect authori- | stration of public affairs. (Applause.) Now, you aud I | that beeause our fathers thus determined it, we of New pecen bea, i the other candidate would consent to ‘ a Mie, SLOAN'S SPEECH cereal upom | vg those Brielblcs which we advoeated then we mean | Bays not been vn'requentir told, when wo wieied topotut | York are wiling to wubgoi. to that eyvality becavse we Wee astminel denkenk thas be ceil, aamile si “na ag practi pmpletely. én t t was regarded as great e' nblic, ve OUr CO gaerifices Tor it. Fe z bea ind ald—it fe n0 formal thanks that Licndor. 1 foo! | to Une goveranient us conditional support, Woter gun: | tiat "we were ntrue tote country, ard’ were | plate.) II yon beg oamond eur courtituuon wbere | 2 beset, Now, yore, Hah Be woun, Chea uly Ghat thie is & crisie~-this ie a solemn, this is aserions | Mr. Lincoln us the President of the United States, as the | diverting the public miud entirety from th» aiairs | are you to scp? Some men will say, why don't you say | ton was not accepted. It would even at that time, hove te the country. (Hi, hi, bi.) Weare here, loyal | representative of its honor, of its dignity and its strength; } of the South into some other cllaunel. (Lnghtor,) | that all men are bore frec abd equal’ Why ts aman born | produced some embarrassinent, beaxuse the disting ‘ished to our our whole | and though I am politically oppose to him, 1 never | It was a puzzle to those people how we could find so m i York nobequal to a man born in New kngland? | men associated with him and Mr. Wadsworth wpon the 3 sg t > the Union us it was—emphatically strikiug | have allowed if to utter against hi is . | leisure to discuss the merits and demerits of individ iter.) Where will youend? Where will this war ‘+ kets fe rs am atterly (unb) s the Geneval bis , ve allowed myself to utter against him one disrespect- | leisure to discuss the merits and demerits of individuals, | ( ) y respective ttekets for State ollicers would also bave to be is table etore isa—(loud cheers) —ta the constitution | ful term, poner I ever allow myself to 2 oo. | Bat am extremely puzzled to know how some of end 1¢ you disregard the constitution? Iappeal to you to CePauItatunabncwilisiaaan: txneden ‘o. aroul. a polléscal greatly chubye siace this morning, it nagvedy shou d a9 it fe. (Another still more emphatic knock on the table. | We say then to this government you hive our firm re- | people them:clyes can deem it worth Uieir while to write | louk to your constitution; take Hup and read it; see the | ontest; but since that time local nominations have been | “ine with him without any Invitation, le would himself sitting outside en the ecurbstone, (laughter This conversation purports to come from General Surv. It i# unequivocally and absolutely false. It is retailed 4 person who should haye known better, in my burma judgment, who occupies 4 distinction ‘in a literary point of view which should intuce him to forbeir from mingling in any politica! contest, at least, by any false cheers.) Shall 1 say mote? (Yes, yes.) | Hance, our confidence, our unconditional loyalty. We | long articles about a man #0 ins'gnif Hoitwi caveit to others. We have como Nore Vo-bight impoaa no tartan upon you, we do Dot ask yea ts adope | Whenever our tong “the” candidate of the | our policy, but to mark out another that will recetve our | frauds whi the State of New York. unwavering, our cheerful support. a is our position | are told 6 East bat ; aivert the OFFICERS OF THE MEETING. on this sub,éct. This is the policy we have ever adyo- | great waF ou the South. (Applai v " cated; not now alone, whea we were in the maorit; Jook at thesethings. J tell you it “is in vain for A large number of vice presidents and secretaries of | two years ago, uye one year ago, as well ma DOW, place armica in the field, It “is in vain you free! ant as myself, | questions that have been settled, and see to whit a con- b parties—candidutes for Congress avd for and I attempt to look into the mountroes dition you will be brought if you will enter upon the weetitie tracts local sph la endoubt- a are being practised upon the country, we | business of shaking tbat to picces and of bringing ques- | ody, it is too late to make any change. Besides, to pre lic mind front the | tions before this great, excited community, now involved | sent’ a united vote in New York alone, when Penney Why, my friends, | ip all the horrors of civil war—questions that weresettied | yania, Indiana, Towa and other Statos have determined only by the utmost calmness and utmost patriotism usder | to bave an election and to show a divided vote, world the pressure which was brought to bear upon them by all | pe unnocessary; and. the intelligent and. gagacious editor i the meeting wero thon appointed. when many of our republi friends wore de | up your lives for your country. In vain ‘you send your | the exerwise, and all the suffering of the revolutionary | who sug) d the withdrawal of both candidates and the | Fepresentation. It is a false statement—that private « n vi nouncing the” administration of their own crea- | ous, brothers and friends tothe field, for T tell you, when | struegie. (Applouce.) God kuows 1 love my country. | nomination of a third has mow, I doubt not, seen that | Yersation made by Chas. King, of Columbia Collogo. | Mr. 9 gona tion, whea jmapy of their journals were indulg- 7 the battle field there is no wise system | He who knows my thoughts knows that I long to serve it. | such a thing is impracticable, In the language of the | King enjoys the signal houor cf being the only man ia The following resolutions were proposed 9s the senti | jng in language which we ‘held to unfit to sustain them there, no honest adininis. | (Appl MT URI Latwa ubieele gt eat No | man who was wivised when struggling in the stream to = ber bag PR Ln gi tee Uomo | Buates porary mee i hee of the E on of afffirs ill supply them with all th | Knows all things knows that! would count my life as | jy - ab ot fe who eve man. n Boe eee eee erg ena. | srond tha sedtinantsiaoe expressto you. We look coihe | series of life aud the means of carrying on tho w ig, if J could but save the uation’s Nite. (itenewoa | fob§o,the tall of thi f aby yee the mares iti | the signal honor of attacking fre. Jack’ un Resolved, That il appre avowed the sentiments f now express to . ere Ee ee nreHle Beate Bon eatin itt | other side of tho house, and what do we sec there? They one doubt this, All admit that cor cesat say that we are not loyal men; ani we are not unire | destroys the army as well as it destroys the n «ter her death and endeavoring to wound the feelings of the patriot hero, Jackson, through his dead wiie, aud it is appropriate that’ he should now. undertake ty retail . a hen, are we asker! if we are wiliug to | the circumstance. He found himself at (ue side of a 0 a speedy, prompt and glorious conclu- | rapid stream and undertock to swim over, riding on the cheers.) Why | bring this wa Have we less interest, iny radical fri Seymour. quently denounced as men untrue to our government, | morality. All men know that untess you ha | si d, than you | mare, Getting beyond his depth, he was’ b: ing carried eee viii fotwithetanding we bare not_only made these declara. | and ecovomy in the government of | have in the gt this our'laud? Do you not know thut | of tate the stroam, and found “himself, strageling | ‘alsely a private conversation to the injury of the hevo of epg teeny ariel OE ae tions. but we have carried them out to the very letter | as in the conduct. of private for eighty tong managed the governimant, that um | for ais hfe. In his agitation, "he seized the volt by. | the Krowt wars that nave distinguished this country frou Leet Court of Appeals oPreverick A; Tat and to the very epitit. Has their loyalty,1 would ask, | inevitably follows Now, what dor our admit wailone (aulte (and@ed knows | tho tail, iastead, ofthe, mare. A man standing | 1812 to the preseat day. Applause.) Now, geutie.noa, 1 been unc ditional? Has their obedionce ‘boen without | 1 again appeal to you, my radical friends, they wore numerous eno ga); with all vur weakness (add | aiongsidd said, Let go the colt and take hold of | lt Us proceed for afew moments to consider what aro the we terms? 1 beg of you to look back with me aad sec how | yitt as well as for myself and for those wh Wwe have occasion each vay te pray God be merciful to us | the mare.” "ahi"? Said he, “it is a protty | she grounds taken by thoes who are opposed to os at itusg Via , this was, and what was it they demanded before you we ask for good governtent, us wel! sinners); with all that you may lay as errors of judg: to tell a inanstrugeling for his lire and | election. What are they for? What do they propose ‘That the democracy of New York, waiving the } troops stiould be sent to deiend the tag of the | selves to you, then, il ment, corruptions, if you please (and 1 don't tui | eyoaking with water to ewap horses.” (Laughter and | li [understand them they propose to abolish tlaver y in tne Of thelr views upow questions not rendered tts] oountry—of your country-—that a policy should beadopt- | that affect t0 fay before you far to be better than you are, amt never have claimod that); | cheers.) You will forgive me for indniging a little in | States of this Union in which slavery now oxiats. They tive by the Imperilied condition of their country, here | 64's please thom. Who was it that did this thing but the | s'atoments of the monstrous with all our faults and ill our erro:s—we do say that | qesctotas, for Sines T have become a supporter of our | propose to drive aut the sottlers who are now there to piut in their stead colonists from otber states while we governed this country it became th ni tat is the only end that any rational charged by us, not subjects o President, Ihave, like hin, been tinged with the anec. jons that the eye of the world ¢ ernor of Massachusetts? der the government tReir sims | oxtreme radical ¢ (Groans { they will continue to ie in thi ere and united se of all logitim: Afidrew.) Who were among the journalists of the country | bu! proved to exist by authentic d dotal vein. (Laughter.) Now, what are the circunt > reas the rebellion and restore the Union asit was, and | that assailed this ddministration—that threatened it with | frem Congress and public investigations, [ appect to | y. we were more prosperous Saciiuaroaiciare necessary 10 consider at this clectiont | man cn the other side baa | over sndicat tain the constitution as it 1s—belleving that that overthrow in case a certain line of policy was uot carried | you, to you, at) th’s finn when the na- | Wiser than you AS Lbelore said, and now repeat, at this crisis of the |‘ “lich this war might ought, To t am \ coulition ¥ opposed. (Great applause.) It is true Walsworth suggested another pian, avd that to whip the South and then to let them go (iaighter ), blican friend#, who are extremely alarmed ‘gestion made by me that in acertain coutin- Kk life is ‘at stak country Thal! be governed solely by oue consideration Whatever [ believe would promote the vigorous proseca ) We | tion of the war—whatever I believe would lead to the dinary | overthrow of the rebellion and prostration of the enemies inciples OF | of the country, [shall pursue, regardless of party dis it, founded in wisdom by our fathers, clot! orat 8? No, my fries tion about these terrible cor. | better than y: but because, v humility, we we eonstituted authorities with full power to accoinplisi pot met ineae bee Hund tesecie ie arcane ruptions befure 4 A out to your attention, | willlvg to accept the teachings of the fathers and’ to toll unantmously passed by | was it that continuously expressed the seatimen's of the | Our frieuls on the other side of the hovise love to talk of | the besten paths which they tod. (Che: nt was pledged tothe | great radical party of the country—that at all times | the nation’s life being in danger, while they do not want | morely did whdteach man of you dves in the mnot be departed from | endeavored to ‘force their views and policy | yout» talk about what is duc to the nation’s life. [ tell | aifvirs of lite; we adhored to those weil tried and which ere og SS thon the. government “of” these, United States | you, my friend, that happy individual who hopes to con. | action which you adhere to in your store—which you ad- | (iuciion. Atd’ it is becuuse’ 1 believe the vefoat of | 6 ‘ain States of the Union might bo allowed to go, oy A ninaiais of Yoo South a without tooheos t the embarrassments they | ceal trom the world the causes of his downward course, | here to tu yrurcomimerce. You don’t engage in theories; | Mr, Wadsworth and his ty is evgentin! to this | Pally cordially to the support of Mr. Wad: ow in arm againet the constitutional govern mightoceasion? Not the democratic journais, not the | he hopes that coucealmont will be a another time reme: | you dou’: treet mem hat do; and if you dou't trust men | that | urge upon you and pursue such measures myself | Proposes to let them go, and of the Now im arms around the capital; that in this national eme: ive journals. No, my friend=, but the men who | died: but he only hastess himself to an untimely end, 4 | with your private ailairs, why do you trust them with | as best may lead to it. (Cheer). He is, as Thave had | Which very recently ba eae ho My ~— m Conarene, Deniehing at focltngs Of a OF resent cod you and me as being untrue to the institutions | tell you that the government which conceals frande com- | the covduct of (he goverumenty My radioed fehend, with occasion to ny betore; the open, bitter, malignant enemy very well be parsued Now, wea Ww the polley aug: ty With t only fis duty to the whole country; that | or the country—as not loving that flag (pointing to the | mitted against itself, and. which considers it un- | bis superior wisdom and superior virtue, if he will have | of George Mecfoilan, ‘the Commander-tn-Chtet. | ¢¥s rE Gua eeuneamar mae’ Gare. te omen eats Vletic ot eretaneine ce eeeniee ae y 5 rlotic to leay ba itso, will find that he has committed an error in devist * 7 Stars aud Stri ‘aswell as they loved it. (Great ap- | patriotic to leave them bare, is on the road to a (Groans). I venta ison oF for any purprde of overthrowing or intertering with | Stirs Mt owed the appeal to the lag) T charge againat | destruction, Tot the matter of slavery be forgotten | ing from Quove great principles which have vecn estab. | gyinmi-sury general of this detend am maintain the supremacy of the constituttn. aud | them here, and I appeai to you if it be not jet it be true that no African ever placed his foot upon | lished by the experience of the world. You are followiug | and 1 thus publicly miontioned the Unign, with all the dignity. equal have been foremost in every measure. cal to gay that General Welsh, t has so stated tome, name that, if it were oatradiction must be conditional submission on the part of those who have risen in rebellion against the laws and govern- ment of the comutry—(applause,)—without qualification, u whom you admit, when spe of them, »s 4 true and | was mistaken, a wiatry—I tell y if you have a corr 8 of the #everal States unimpaired, ant that as soon il ¢- | gov troyed—you wil! be deomed | unlit Lo be trusied ia your own pri ilairs, and yet le by Mr. Wadsworth or Mr. Welsh. None stich has | Without reserve, until a victory is accomplished over the hees objects are accompli:ed tho war Cen suena Gower. grit the sues | Eo \nevitably'as ifthe army of the iusurgents was this | whou they are placed at tho head of a grest national or- | buen atompiod, abd Lever will, aud wo are to actapon | onemics of the country. ‘Tho unanimous feckiug, aa | un Barer ne foniagnece, in the joyalty of te chizens of the | Cethat's s0."?) Now let te say this, The natioval life | moment entering the capital of your country. Corny. | ganization you shake your beads at us as if we wore un | jt ae a conceded fact that such 18 the case, It was ut that | derstand, of those wlty support Hovatie Seymour te, that ite dommbcnatie parte that the: iegal wadanees: | cannot be saved, unless, iN addition to furnishing your | tion will not ovly destroy a nation’s peace, but will de- | tue men. “With regard to that constitution I bey time. Has General Wadsworth changed his position, to | this wat should | be prosecuted. (applause) | Now. ‘and imprisoninent of citizens of this Staie | government with ali it demands of arms and armed | stroy a nation’s character. Let mo call your attention | to read it again. Where in any constitution in the be now any more favprable to Geuerai M lan than he | one mode of promec S eaheer Pair son, roy oe the other day, and f no armies should march forward until the capital of the enemy cymes into our hands—thot they should march forward to take Richmond. (Applause.) That,as | have already stated, is a natural resting piace in the war. Would you treat the South worse than you treated the Mexicans? When Mexico was taken nobody thought of carrying on the war into the provinees of Mexico and subjugating every individual Mexican man that could bo found in any portion of the territory. When Paris was taken, on two different vceasions, France was subdued and a poses was the consequence. When Vienna was tuken, on apother occasion, Austria was overthrown and a peace followed—and what I yontured to say was that Richmond was the natural restiog place iu the war. But iby po means meant to say that ochers who desired to gofurther might not keep on, but, as an Irishman once said to me in regard to purgatory, they might go further ant fare worscs (Lumbter.) thought by the time I got to Richmond I should want to sit down, Cetaiuly TL wonld not stop these repablican goatlemen who are so flerce for prosecuting the war until the Jase cout is expended and the last man killed, Tam ooly « private in the ranks, and if T were allowed when we Awe denounce | Men,it has, in addition to alt that, a loyal support on the | toa fact that should be rung throughont the land, and i | where in any government in the world that ever ¢ was at tho time he was last heard of? ‘the nl 8 Gs a usurpation ANd a crime, and that the free- | Hart ‘Bt the people of the country.’ ft is in vain you fur- | will ask you if it ever before has been presented | do you find written down so clearly and so plainly the | of law is that he remains the sume now as he was last of prete aa protected by the constitution, | nish arms; it is vain to faruish material strength except, | to your consideration, through the press, or by | limits of your rights and the limite of your duties? fa | proved wo be. (Laughter) But if tho President of the ete Ree ise wintn, tonctin the coming election | so, there be obedience to law aud respect to those who stand up for the government, in their own way, | What other goverment in the world is this the truth that | United States, who once displaced McClellan, has. to tis ‘any class of loyal ct ree with ‘is in th tionai authority. tn this dread crisis of our country’s fate, when every. | Ove Man muy stand up against this whole community ond | immortal credit, seen the error of his ways and restored herein expressed; we hereby invite the o ernment that’ wi thing should teach men to be honest and faihful— I ask | say I have my rights of conscience and no man ean step | him to the command —(applause)—if Abralvum Lincoln of all citizens in giving the most emphatic expre: opinion which ig to bring the war to a prompt aud tri- | you if ever before this fact has been presented to your in between me aud my Gol except in this land ot ours | can coufess his error and replace this young and gallant Yo there principles by auprorting tho ticket dominated | {gy hant close. Bat appeal to you if that cau be dye | consideration’ I elect only one from a vast mass of tes | under this constitution whicl they teil you i« nothing bat } commander, whom the whole arimy called to be restored hetionset-pebish on the principles and action endorsed by the radical party | timony, The document i8 numbered fraud sixty-two. | #pieve of parchinent. Iu what other oountry im the | ts the command—cannot James. Wadsworth ow say, At stera convictions of pablic duty consirain | OF He oantry and the radical pross of the country. | (Cheers and laughter ) These are the investigations of a | world Im the judiciary placed above the jaw making | for the satisfaction of his supporters, that he vow be: .Preniden Wine im polley art bad ih pata. | (Cheers and cries of “No.”) Task you, my friewls, iit | single committee of Congress. Look at the large volumes | power to bold itia restrainty It Four persous are invad- | jjeves the President did right, and Unit, Mectellan is the ot teu J It incites thetslave population of the United States to " ery man forces bis own will, bis | they have patiorth. {ask whether or not itis right for | ed, if your homes are juvaded, or your rights juvad- | proper man tocommand the arty of United States lat ten, Ot pro to wonul those laws ‘ow footings feivowrs honest Conviction itmay be upon the | us to lay such matters befure you--we who loyalty sup. | ed’ in any way that is inconsistent with that great (Loud cheers.) He has still time before the election to jecres. It punishes the innocent f. / oy tt of action—to that unanimity of pur. | mourning for thoge who Oli early graves on the | personal livertics, on, | emploreyou befere you listen to | say go; and unless be does we must assume that such is faertowwhich the Unter avn Bs Paotaed by tho-venes soleune pine ieee: Cahich We cam never, succeed in bringing tio Helis of the couutry, and who were called traitors | the teachings 0 men who say that this constitation is not | not hic opinica, If be is how Suspending his elfrts to at Be hare denied te the ", "in the iangnage hand—aud I now appeal to you, my radical friends—I ask | before the people those things that threatened the nation’s | that which no other people in the who'e history of the | gard to what ho deems his error—if he ja now admitting incoln to the Chica Must be | you, i not to come to our grould—to that ground which { life’ T hold im my hand areport of a committee signed | world ever enjoyed before. Written consttiutions are | iyis patriotiam and soldior like ekillesif he is now + come to us on this pla imple platforta, that, | stated, amoug other things—among a great many ot as | bald Lefore, our owii coutaius provisions for Ubi and watching the Washington jai!—(laughter)—I have ived, we cordially endorse aud ratify the local laying aowa sod’ p iting away from ‘among ius distinet things—that among the contracts for arms there is ove | rity Of the citizen, for the sanctity of his home a: thing ty sey about bis present ‘conduct. But if, on the nity i2 Di ma a en Genk ne action of the government, 1f this vast cominunity can be | port the government—we who bear tho badges of | charter, tet only of @ nations liberty, but ot SG iy ad He Mi Mighty, a and ateiot to untied South and ab Hown ‘this gigantic and wicked reboliion. On the other | when we attempted in good faith and in ali sineerity to Iny | to be regarded, lock to what you are throwing away— | overthrow MoCiellan—ii be is now Keepiug silence in re |, in the Linguage you ly inoperative and inexpedient, and t posse be . wr - 6 id Josey Mt, i vhich it is rare things in the history of the people of this world; and, i ob propriate duties as Provost General oe Man Resale Teens Gee na at ake a peas | we have ever held—throw away your higher law doo: | by Robert Ta'e Owen and Joseph, Holl, in which tis es y of the peop attending (0 bis approy a Presemted for the suifrages of theelec | and disturbin ons, we will all | of t ature. There was an establishment ia the habit | the safety of bis person that are unknown fn any other hand, tiutike the President of the United states views and opi P J of this county, : " tained | of furnizhing revolving pistols to the governments of | ment in the world, J cire not what the form of that | js plotting the overthrow of MeCloltan to-night—as U $- ation arraigning and denounciug” the Presi | i he cian tstes Suitvertee ofthe codnty respected, Purope at the rate oF twelve. dollars and’ tlt a pistol. | goverment may be, It is a hard thing for mou iu other | are rumors that he i# doing—it he is now eugaged ince. | to Itichmond and f Fy Coréat lnoghier ) Goat's proclamation of emancipation was vehomontly ap- | a4 th. war Drought to a short and successful termina’ | This war broke ent--the fate of the country was involved. | lands to understand that your judiciary can say to Con | nupolation of that gallant commander, while he is at his } taiuly say, Se eee pore . , patriotic man—coutractor—do, | grees or can say to the Legislature of your Stace, when | post in the face of the enemy and about to strike a blow | Forward the Blick Drigade. ¢ +) Penetrat ecause We Are & united people. (Applause. IT | And what does this v MR. SSYMOUR’S SPEECH, oR vo there ts any other grou or comppete who oo hems ale rade’ and A how ge we tie freer ahaolnriey A that we should not talk abou nes@ things, bu « r Mr. Seymour was then introdaced, aad was most ea. | UNION, If HH en ae cir ie oaition ie | look Soutnward? Ho charges the government twenty: | nine tenths of the people ot ‘ula comtry, if it invades tho | Mociellan, is suffering from want and from a deficiency of Shcatantioaliy resuived. He mid wei a vou. Tack you, 18 this poliey opposed tothe govern, | five doliats a piece for this very aame Kin of arm | rights Of the conscience of @ single ‘man, I care not | clothing and provisions, and about. to enter upon a battle Funiow Cinzexe—tho events of tho last few weeks have | jont? Ought i not to be accepied by the other side of | That is not all, Another concern offered to furnish the go. | how poor or humble he may be, it is but dust and | which will be final and decisive—I say if he is doing that, the hou Let them do this. Let them be as loyal | veroment wiih a similar article for $16 apiece, and t ashes, and ig of po avail. (Cheers.) But 1 cannot now | when in a subdrdinote capacity in regard ty his Com m ‘as they may desire, we will ioiu them in that; but | enable it to do so 1 new establishment bad to be erected | follow oud the caysiderations whieb are iuvolved | mandor-in-Chief, ho is @ traitor to the country, and more pote sand no protection for our persons, no protec. | je, them join us and thus ond tho contest, and then | te meet the cotapotition, and to be paid for, no doubt, ont | in this question of your covatitutional rights, 1 | richly deserves a jibbet than even Jeffereon Davis him- on for our homes. But the elections that have taken | the clouds and the darkness which now overhang | of the profits of tho contract. . Now, although it is ad- | implore you to look at them carstully,and don t think | geif, (Applause) Now, if, the other band, fag By Maino to the Missis-ippi, have demonetrat the land will be dissipated, and wo will see | mitted that the cbeap coptractor mado a better article at | that this constitution is something (pat belongs to the C) is ym ft have stated pee ving the purse that at every point, either the majorit before us a hope of making our ‘country what it was | a much lowér rate than the other, he could only obtain a | people of the South and not to you. Why you-—the rn resid of thd —Uniied — States radical party have been coe hed or (tec have encoun. | three short vears ago—tbe giory. the admiration and tha | contract for 5,000 pistpls, while the patriotic individual ple of this great commercial metropolis— you , whos 3S | and declaring his approbation of MeClelau—let jefeais, Sheers. fi orld, (Applause.) In anoth who charged’ $26 for an’ article be sold elsewhere f hiten gyery ogewn, you of this great city, the marvel of | him say 60; and although it woukl not of that Youmiat agree wiih te. And bare sun, or thing, | rho, cinta eae oa onder ‘for twanty-Ave. Waoandad | th oceds-AFe MA inloreat im thie constitution, amore | this engtioa, hs defeat would De 64 sul aud, for fear of any future ” (Laughter and cheers.) But my @ general disposition at that time to call a convention of the States. (Ap- plause.) It is not at all likely that I would be a member of that convention, and therefore it is wholly terial what I think that ought to be. [ never was amber of any natioual convention of any party that has assembled in the United States. Lam glad to tiud 80 much impur- tance attached to my opinions by those who dider with me, aud take advantage by hoiding the party responsible for what | ssy. | never was & momber of (hg Lag. siature either of the Senate or the Assembly. [never was momber of Congress, of the House or the Senate, and » that | there to overthrow this rebellion; if, sit! in his lnxuri ‘oicoof | ous home at Washington, while the army, hoaded by the heart of ep tay conclusive He vored ‘moral purposes we are now (he ropresentativ ’ at in God 1 ue ay be. (Lavghter.) But for all conser vat! ands the situation. vi I 31 " ist ‘on that single traucaction alone | varied interest, a more practical interest, than the whoie | would be at least entiticd to the ¢ olation which so ] trast in God f uever may ly vig 2 fPG0 not spesk lution Inoico--i | Recta, Linvoke your assistance, Tnsuboedinatlan wish | Bae bye aid akoe® $90,000, Thive-toited. this | South put togaiber. if you will look ipto its provisivos | many aammiresa deathbed ropentance. (Laughter nnd | that, | bave An opiaien at eet Sees oe Speak of the fact, which the world will heed, and whieh | tion in vhe departments of the government, must be put | as a very clear case, exsily explained, ‘thero is another | you will find itso, And they who aseail that constitution | cheers.) Now, geotiemen, I have heretofore taken ceca. | may arise. 1 sanpons Tul ot TVMN Nc Sig ab Seaman eves tee the seat of goveroment—that the | down, 1 appeal to you again with regard to another | matter to be referred to, By act of Congress, in 1804, | are Dot men merely who would assail the constitutional | sion to aay that the adininistration av Washington ought | gethor now aah oe Suk tor tan orth, and OO Amorican people demand « wise and conservative policy, | point, Who iu the field are the goverals who, at all | when our fathers |jved, who thought that honesty and | rights of the Soutl, but they are mea who would break | to have known what they were doing when they entored | war must have given tle Thlin NO ng other ig ae Testoration of our Union, and meaning the | times, have bowed cheerfully to the decisions and man. | integrity were essential to a nation’s life, it was provided | down the barriers which it erecis around your home and | upon this war. avd to show that they were fully informed ir aarti ct bapelenl 2” Oy teathay ing bes be of our constitution in all its consyanouces. | dates’ of the governmont’ (Cries of “McClellan,” and | that no member of Congress should in any way be into: | around those which you hold dear. (Loud applause.) {| Tread a letter from General Soott to the Presideut of the | ‘arfyoman worthy ue MARIS | 8 ponawem the (ove .) I stand before you to-night, spoaking on be | enthusinstic applause.) Who are those who have taken | rested in contracts, aud boavy penaities were imposed to | want to say what we are going todo, Ihave told you | United States, sent to him through Mr. Seward, Very | come cil dot fight in the approvehing «« 4: aways of the groat conservative inter of our country, | whatever positions have been assigned to them by the rd againat the infraction oe the ‘That law was | Our position; I have told you what we must do to | likely you all have gocn that letter. It has had a very | other wi hie Seeecapplause)——tli't gavention ag one who should be eutspoken in tatements. Ido | constituted authorities without complaint? Who have | Subsequently amended, and the jon made moro | save the country’s life, nd what we must not | extensive publication, and ite coptents have become | a coward linn elt =anpians i, rar past Rot fool ag one who comes before you to plead for your | cheerfully and laboriously gone on pertorming their d hough ‘contracts have been made since | do unless would destroy the eountry’s life, Let ily known, It ig now published, by General Scott's | coming woguiher, Waninr Oe A wo Nendy Fem, soffrages; but I feol as one who hore now, know: | ties as woll as they might or could without disturbing the @ rebuilion, amounting to hundreds | me say a word to you, “higher law” men of the | dircetion, im the National Intelligencer, and \ts authen | history aad the gurl for), 4 by the tag Your sentiments, knowing your Views, aud having a | community with stories of personal wrongs or personal | Of millions, tho conntry, dyno New act of | North, You must give up that doctrine. (Ayplaaso ) | ticity is, | suppose, beyond ail dispute. "He informed the | which Was but ist eof the Covted stiles when tosay what polisy will govern 1s horea(ter disappointments? (Applause.) On the otber hand—and » bas been jected’ «by such wisions | You must submit yourself to the laws. You must | President of the United States that if he undertook to | memory of rope che thought o the glorions future upon conduct towards the great question which now agitates | again I appeal to you if this is not trve—who aro the | a8 the interest of the country at such a time demanded, | be obedient to authority, you must come upzn the ground | conquer the secoded Statos—which were then seven or | together, and by he UNEN LY “ing” strong conviction the American mind. (Applause.) It has been trul generals who have made prominent from the sim- | I leave this matter to you, my radical friends, to think | we have evor held, and we intend one you todo it | pino—it would foul @ 200,000 or 300,000 men; ¢ would | which it fed. only remained te until ee the i Of Cur nation is in porile | pie frot that they have plaged themseltes in antagonism | Ofer ; Lleavoit to my conservative friends—hitherto | in this way. We do not like your teachings; we thiuk | oocttpy two or thrée fears, it would take a young general | that if wre uit now have been the first Power in vhe 8 involving, a8 it doos, not | to their suporiors, or attempted to overturn the policy } detesrod by threats, deterred by imputations on your | you bave taught this poople fatal errors; we think you arg | like a Wolfe, Hoche or Desaix, and jt would cost two | to-night, We lause.) I say L hoped that when these con- alone but our social system, | of the government that they might gain for themssiyes | patriotism—to read’ these invostigations, and to jearn | governed by rene fracus, but you hays guntied | hundred and fifty millions of dollars. (Chegys.) Now | world whe oor ‘aie Whoa The convention they our home rights, is one Nar distinetion, Iustead of thomselves to | Something of the frauds which have sapped the nation’s | yourselves within the limits of your legal rights; for this | there has been a great deal of inquiry as to Where ob. | siderations CN. i ive together under te» mstitntion of to approach it with ful service in upholding the constituted authority | stability. John P, Hale, the repullican Senator, pe ghd nd therefore we shall put you down by | tained a of that letter, (Laughter.) I sta.ed when woutl = Applause.) It thse goatlem m would say oa hole Hnning victories on the battle feld? (A yoice,“J, | told the rush when he said that the ern- | the it. But with another class of higher law meo— | J road it that t waa not whole by Generai Scott to | os P bor vaiet WL leney gay, Tet tis defos exclly what io ©.") This spirit of insubordination must be put down if | ment had more to fear frem corrnptions in_ its | the higher law men of the South—who also havo erected | lay it before the public; and since that a statement bas Uy 7 Sum w sein toi: judgment of the con J oreny A we are to save the life of the country, But, my friends, | dopartments than ithad from the enemy in the field. | themsclves against the laws of the Jand and rightful a- | boon mado by tolograph, from Washington , in Tat acu ymen of thiscountey, aud then lot us agi ce that 2. rinse epithet or to in. | anothor thing is. noo to the national iifo. The | Let me past on to the comkleraslonror some other points, | thority, who have undertaken to resist its decrees, who | the connection of the persons with it, which f 7% auive mach Of {ie COT Sucet Of all (Be Aare 19 ‘am hongred this | people must be fairl it with. If you will examine this qnestion for if you will | would not content themselves with the ballot, but would | to read to you, a it is exceeding! ‘The state. | it shall req 5 2 \bject of shavory.® one of fueve who He oh seers he fod ¥ acy Must be no more with! ig of ran he people's sit down in your own home end rao rs would in pot A pa cer gg ang em we say we will | ment is one made by the associa NTINURD O nder date of | make any alterations itt it ws Na pany Why, look at this rogart! to your own private int th regard to your | settle that question, then, with t! bayonetand the buygt. Sunday tober 19. It in headed {eo