The New York Herald Newspaper, October 30, 1863, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

COCTOBER? 30) 186%2TRIRLE SHEET. “4 ————— nh ae demmities were Lopof tr. Loneoy (@regtanploase)-thateulighteded the | to what point 40 aadreqn yay romnaris: If I were toargue | troops than youheve,you will have to go to Mlinois to UNION RATIFICATION MEETING. os Sgn the seals admon hot a eos ee hh Suche to (he (ue bane Of the cantest, ; any to-night it would be torshow ety to find them. Veo wurenre thie ge y 2 ig not eguape the | wild Hm tuetatihis moment is heldvbatk only ax she aids | part of slavery to ascert Kis aud to as- | war is to we (:Noe ‘and alarm duri 18 eventful rexn. nost acute charapin of tis ino tha. op tne sig. Wo are ks png leer Recounts bow gradancy in vbe antional f of thls government wag : south) bas jor years barely esca oaks tor a“ fever, at. and the 7 cause that goiniog | wor yeas “Lag perdi py Se ee — thd | prodnce a sabetant fal reason for ita insiietion, exe pape herent (oan = m7 ub ap HOG baba leat cov the soldier's ballot, like lis Blocd, ty n republic | cause of bit countr the chief | resolved, inst the defeat o” Woodward, a wary cu Dusiness of the Cabinet, Assassins were 4 Kervalive, tie rebuke of Tuttle, a dissaiualed gever behind every mustache, Specie paymen!s ard the annibilaiion of Vailandybam, a martyr to (re peuded for twenty thr ars This metropolis 0, dem: te that “ r Abe mas €8 of ey edie totiea at zoe merry of the mob, and ror | Suniel wert Ingen ce Of Op Cte Tee aa mee: | ShAt we were febting tne battle. uf m. jority of the American ponple that he would seize Har- | upon you, fellow citizens of N + gre 7 iste ; s : ou do “ - ep from his dwelling; its contents—the baayires Ot | No party can be entitivd ww the conmiilence of & country | Poy UNiba. ind when the starving operatives of | That was the histnry ef this question when Mr. Lineoln | your proud uncon I learn ng, art ae pia oh fase pet iy ome pees np onccnmnges ere} roo ay he defont al its | vancashire, the erushed ma-ses of England spoke ont, | became a candidate for tho Presidency in 1860, aod it was | of the rebel territory? 1 call upon you by Head eet tne vecerabie. fucitive | qacplen Was pooner te teecdod art ee arms AS | Euclacd heard their voices, aud go there was no inter | opealy declsred throughout the South that fhe was elect- | every consideration thit can “move oF operate aad i retreating yaa Pg Be grec og We ung a ne a a Be or yeotion attempted. Fngland and Louis Napoleon both hav- | ed President of the United States that the government tho minds of freemen; 1 cail upon you by Bhs eucesiecrs’ the fourth deurne, dutioguished. ail = 0 the treat no the. South was iestiza: | Tie’, wholesome fear of the masses at home, bive pri- | should bo destroyed, Mr. Lincoln planted bimaelf upon | the past glories of this republic—which bas deena home Rate tee that eras come 4 2a ee eee gine darker promises Of | dently kept aioof from ali active iutervention in our afla'rg | what was called tho republican piat'orm, against the ex- | 0! liberty to 80 many. m Ilious of freemen: Leal upon you tained during the regency and after bis auccca:i certain N reuern democrats. Aud later, rebeltion, S14 7 Cappiause.) So the scoond hope of the rebellion is gone | tension of slavery into the free Territories of the United | by the unnumbered bill cks that mark the graves at An- Crown the sime imperial policy, with less of | fered hy talline blows, revived avon ths hove of apvost- | (OPPs neg hope was on waivided North, and tere | States, taking tho broad ground. that tho eonstitution | Helam, the Cumberland, the banks of the: Rappatnnockt Own same imperiai policy, tion yas; and now, , baving eatrusta ty it comes home near to my heart to night, citizens of New | of the United States did not carry slavery beyond tho | and tho Potomac; T call upon you byvall ths grand solem- York, that 1, in common with the masses of the democra- | States in which {t existed—taking the broad ground that | nities which surround the name of Geurge Washington tic party. who vever wore the shoulder straps of offic: or | every man into wi God had breathed the breath of a | and the fathers of the republic; I call upon yon by all power—the men who marched ever in the ranks—that we | living goul, every man for whom Christ died upon the | the sublime inspirations of freedom, of religion, of huma; were to be soid by the infamous leaders of the rebellion | cross, was @ freeman until there was some law to make | pity, that you will now pledge yourselves esch to the They calculated on a divided North, and tit ts their only | bimasiave. Mr. lougiag said Mr. Li:coin, you are mis- | otber, to your country, to mankind, and to bistory that hope today But we have answered that question in | taken; on roe be left to the people of the Territories to | this government, free and pure as it came from the hands Cipabion,, Se. eviews Wilk. palitons Saori ene Fiminately denounce, the motives: and meusures of | hor aiswer, whether she endorses that Infafnous transac- | on tho Southern ground that slavory is older than the | - Governor Yates took bis seat amid great applause. brew, abolition of Bast Indix despotism and West ‘udis | tho e.natitutional directors of our national government, | Ber auswer, whecher ¥ which the democratic was | constitution, that it existed before the constitution, that ers, tee, free eee cure, Sad oan nd | That, ovorwheimed 2s they have been Ly diMleulties and | Sold ody and. soul, head and heels to tho Southert con, | the slaveholder hada right to. tay. bis slaves SFSROR OR HO. Cae ee et others of less prominence are now constitutions ‘or tho | respousibilities of @ magnitude unkown to thelr prede- | feqoracy, ‘The Chairman introduced as “the next speaker’? the ‘4 jas ign! into aby State ind . od— (Applause) And, standing on @ democratic | into any Territory or iy te independent bya _ ae. ‘ Bae meen a wanes is en po candid patriot will withhoid,the expreesion of "I eay we have moro just cause of complaint | of any law to tho contrary whatever ; ho | #8.Schuy'er Colfax, of Indiana, w! vow safle , bot that errors have been so many, but rathor inst the f ra of r took the broad ground which ‘is now applause. He was being a nat! vriginal benefleence moro ceriaim and extensive— | that they have been so ew. That oar and steady aay eopabilesn of pe all, prey ig ha for by the South , that slavery must be the pitlyo New York, but prouder still of being a citizen of the and is yot the admiration of the world. | advancement upon the land and the wavers, being the cs ~ 4 United States, The question to be decided now was how had been engazed in long und bloody and exhausting | tury and civil authorities, fs the rightful glory of both | bis rrieug Brutus, So from the ranks of- the Northern | one against the other, and that is this: it isthe point— | one to the battle feld had shown that they loved thelr wars—the fruit of mutual aggression and wrong—the | these brauches of our country’s service. The masterly | Gemocrney came the dagger that went to tho beart of the | @ Sop ackiont freedom. 1only have tosay to you pest country more than their life. it was for those capiual of the latter twice ocoupled by @ foreign ehomy, | diplomacy of this administration; the towering ability | Gia yarty: the fatel-blow came from the hands of the | that you might as woll attempt to run a red hot ocomo | WO stayed at bome to prove, (eel and that of the former menaced and kept in terror yer | and she success of ita fiuancial head; the ‘statesmanship friends and members or ils own Bb hold, Any | tive into a powder zine without explosion as to think | ‘Bey loved their country better than be 4 party. Biter year. inousands of lives and millions of treasure | and patriotism of ita chief, are recognized with pride bY | Gemocrat here will boar witness that we had been | that in this day of enlightenmant and in this age of pro- | Péaled to tho people of New York to have Sacrificed. The land has becn wasting with | the loyal people of the nation. Those who denounced true to the ‘democrats of the South; that we hat slavery can come in contact with freedom and | Where should, at the head of the cont Te ‘agon: frvemepionen 4 t! A She sallecing ae Stony eecceoe he See asec ean vol. | Washington throughout the doubiful period of tho | rougne every fight. side by side with them at the five. (Cheers.) ‘Mr. Ligooln was fairly elected. Is not States, trdmple party under foot, and stand 3 Revolution; Madison in the war of 1812; Jackson in his : a that ‘hee ‘i oy Znat s¥itution and tho Union, Revolution was havo even yet not been wholly dried. But the Amerioun | condlet with nulldention, and Lincola io, his strogzioe | Ss0ndog as Northam men with Souther, Priocipien; that | elected?” Will yu'sot be governed by. the majority? fe | When tbe poople had an, cpem ballot box leaneplapn dies ery sid “4 lod of time, @ | with the great rebellion; will be charged} by posterity | we have ted at aa Logan, the Indian chicf, was | you are not governed ‘majority. by what rulo will | 9t@88 their wrongs. He would, however, bis groutor amount of combined peace and freedom than was } with common motives, aad history will do fastico to | Poinved at wy hiv fellow rod ron whe cried outs ou oa ot governed by the majority, Dy wnat rule mur | belief, in the presence of God, that people stroge!iog Surfaces ‘Never before haa #0, largo an inhabited terete | Sagaiants and assailed nen the friced ot the white men?” end so wo have boca, | life, your rights;. your iy, oF your persons if | 88 the, People of Poland did, had a 1 rise tory remained for more than seventy years in. theeujoy. | geen areata ne cxmting, confit by the na- | fissed and pointed. at as Northern men with southern | you ave not governed by the mnajority? * But, fellow citi thoy be i y . Ate ¥- | tional authority to defend the constitutiog, perpetuate neiples. After all these nacrifices wo were to havo | zens, whether Mr. Lincoln was ‘airly elected or not, he is He knew no party but the party of country. The time ment at once of internal freedom aud exemption (rom the | the Union and preserve the nation’s life, is equally sacred stiesnntacrea Ge ane lore to this rebellion. ‘And your President; he ts ‘my President, whether he is & good had come when, as Cices Ae every scourge of internal war. It bas done all this fora period | with the war of the Revolution, to which that nation thig rebellion Jeol! 4 eacers > ‘entered upon but | one or a bad one; we are to have him for the next or man should have inscribed on forehcad what ho ot ‘ons eer Shae a oggt pay ag beng — yet (cig hcp orn cncoggrng adem for the assurance so often given by tho Northern | anda half, and nobody can help it. It is a good deal like ‘ hh of She. comaey., mre ey votek Our federal system has saved its vast territory for nearly | Qvery means of success which God aud nature have | Press that whenever the republican party should | an Irishman who had a bad cold. Some man said to him three generations from the mutual slaughter of men of | placed in our bands. That to this end we heartily ap. | march to the salvation of Washington they should | “my friend, you have a bad cold.”” ‘Indade I have,’ Gabe Statea wodld wate ‘thaske tO. AWCaRaNN” Line wi pugocrated to the argument further than to sey erie of That's 4uot wMve endorsed’ that | history of fais country; that 1s the bistory of the acqusi- yeas @ civil or poli but, Dorn of a | tion of the Territories of Florida and Lou! y necessity, | was proud of it “(Cheers.) | the history of the Missouri compromise in 1854; of 7 ck to foreiga intervention, ft taught | the design when Governor Wise ‘aimed th: but I swear in the presence of Almighty God the tree nati Mout were elected President of the United States by ever hive an inch. (Loud cheers. ES 4 el of this ment: say three fourths of this fair territory out spiracies and plots im the midst 1 the Fr were the order of the day—counterpiattio Another Large Assemblage at Cooper Institute. Bpeeches of William Curtis Noyes, Lewis Bar- ker, of Maine; Governor Yates, of Illi- nois; Hon. Schuyler Colfax and Hon. Galusha A. Grow. President lLincoln’s Telegraph to Gov- ernor Yates—‘‘ Dick, Hold Still, and See the Salvation of God.” v tice, The miider William roversed this absolut eoutive power t) the opposition, hat taught her own Mision restored ministerial responsibility, aud pracy | gople. as weil as her sister States, bow mach of encou- tically guve @ now constitution to the realin.” Under bia | pavement can thiua be imparted to (he rebel government and his successors, especia!ly ber gracious Queen, who 4 | and how hie our own and justiy deserves to be the admiration of mankind, Ree Yhat while the honest exercise of the richt ag a result of the advance of free privciples and a freer ) of critici-in upon the nets of pubife men {s approved and action of the public will, untrammelied by arbitary | defended, we coudemn the abuse of thas right, as prac- RESOLUTIONS, OUTSIDE SCENES, ae, &., &e. ‘It io a matter for public congratulation that the nights of gassy declomation that usher in an elegtion have al- most passed, and that in a few days more the orators who ‘fret and strut their hour upon the stage” will have ‘vanished from tho g2ze of men and disappeared from the ‘columns of newspapers. We wish we coald add that then ‘hey would be ‘heard no more.” ‘The last of the ratification mass meetings of the Union party was held yeatorday evening at the Cooper Institute, ‘which was well filled by a respectable and intelligent au- @ieuce. Over the platform was suspended a large the same race and speech, from the sight of ravaged pro- | | march over democratic bodies and against demo- | said he, ‘‘butit isthe very best cold Ihave got.” So it copy of tho caricature of the meeting of the friends | Vin ina cities taken by storm. It bas aocured alarzer | Honal faroese provision bounties TOF TOM ee neat, | oratic bayonets. From James an “down | is with regard to Mr. Lincoln. | He ts tbe only man | Colm, ndcanes, Wien the dare wert ad saitinry Genes ‘ef Governor Seymour, and on it were seated some | ginount of industrial happiness, of social comfort, of do- | ing the habeas corpus from the uses of treason—ipiem. | ¢verY Northern politician said the same thing. | through whom tho will of this nation can bo executed; he | the stout heart of Abrabam Lincoln quatled not, and he @ozen Custom House officers besides the speakers anda | mestic affection, of diffused and not aggregated wealth, | nitving public officers from the malignity of arfested | 1B@men who burned Lael in our State—the Valian- | is the only man under abe Os rebellion can be put | despaired not of the ropublic. He tl Ur. Lincotn Jargo number of citizens. Thore wore three platforms | of charitable gifts, of private and public virtue, and of | traltors—retallating for outrages upon Southern Unionists | {mn hims— Cond taughter)-{ am not quite sure that | Sen; Het tie aly ea nln to, bear “ine. forces of | vant when he looked for @ Seorelary of the Treanury he . ary elvitand political liberty, especially in the, Stites not | and weakening the euemy by confiscating the proparty of LOR Ceca hrair pacer heey Ee tho omer, and Dring to doar tne forces of | called to the head of that department a stateaman-who imieiann Conners: 0 mone ‘Gar goverament) Besa [aot gh eg Magee Gyn she Se teeownie ls. that it is not worth correcting it—(applauso). - good or bad, he is the man under whom this government foal 4 Fryer al ee tks orbena sive wart é on. 4 08 lor, creed Pre. y a then, ia its briginal force and integrity. and for all who: | elime~and ihe Prosident’s immortal proclamatios for the | thought to sell'ua; bat, thanx Goa, tweaty-alre tnoustad | f0to be waved or lt, (Choo's.) Tam oot hero fo pros Eatlonal credit which wos destroyed whe ME. Chass: ever enjoyed its boneficence, is beyond estimation valuable. | perpetual emaucipation of the slave. of us refused to ratify the sale. The democratic oindi- | nouncos eulogy upon Mr. Liccotn; I have found fault | came in ag Secretary of tho Treasury, was Low erected in the street for the accommodation of speakers and auditors who could not be accommodated inside, The meeting was organized by the appointment as ebairman of Mr. Wm. Curtis Noyes, who, after thanking | jt must bo perpetuated. We prefer it, because we think Resolved, That, unable directly to thes: date for governor os Maine, Bionn Bradbury, standing | with many of bis proceedings; he is not my candidate for | Shove par in the markets of Wall street. He might sa she meating for having called on Sim to preside where he | it the best. We will protect and deiend it, be: | upon our aliots, tho Uniontsts of Now York, wisbout re- Pd ne rte aren: Te inst fart rege Fagin Senay Mire von gag Rg By in’ as Daniel Webster. tnd gait of Alexander* Hatnil hhad only expected to have an opportunity of speaking, | oie oe a in eur vandent’ friend, gard to past polities! divisions, will ote at tbe polls for | From the flcld ho would recall the troopsof Maine, I | my candidate 1s to' be @ Union” man, without pagan eons as ceeentaetths an ‘eaid:— and ally, France, there is nothing but sadness in recalling | aro represented; and being to-night in county meetin, said it before, and I repent it here to night, that until the | regard to bis former political antecedents «r opi New York to crush the traitors and co} ds in SPEECH OF WM. CURTIS NOYES. While it is not the function of a presiding officer to make an elaborate speech, yet you will pardon, if not ap- prove, the effort to direct your’ thoughts and affections to the great interests now at stake in this country, and in Bo inconsiderable degree depending upon your suifrages. The constitution of the United States was the work of the wisest of men. Under Providence at was wiser thin the wise men who framed Wt, (or it secured tho ‘blessings of liberty” to all, ‘and knew no servile race, present or pri spective; and in its beneficent waking was sure to destroy thet remnant Of slavery which it only tolerated until time should, as it Inevitably would, eradicate it. The bright dawn of ‘this era bad gladdened us with its light. A deliberate and constitutional expression of the pe ple, in the peace ful form of a Presidential election, bad decided that Slavery, not being a national blessing but a curse, should mot be extended. Hence orward it was doomed, aud its © = Advocates and supporters, detying the result of the they had accepted, if they did’ not tender it, rushes rebellion aud civil war. They repudiated the freo constitution of the United and armed hands prev. its further application to ani control, a8 @ governmental agency, over ten millions of people and thirteen States, lawfully and exclusively subject to its benign sway. As to theso people and this territory, they destroyed the constitution and bade deilance to tho remaining people and States that doved and reared it. They set up a new and hostile government, defying the choice of the people, and divided ‘the Union from Fast to West by au nnascertamed and un ascertainable boundary—the foretiste of unnumbered quarrels aud perpetual wars. They rejectol the offer wously made them—of @ general Convention under i 3 last spade of carth is thrown on the grave of this rebel- | pious. Whoever brings an honest heart and @ stron; pepe one Ie anes enceaien: semlied,, we condielly Sane Sunerae lion 53 shall know ne friend but our country’s | arm to the support of my goverument is my aoe Saad ay autos care ae any with the stability of our republic, and the almost anvary- | $e Gcr Ce een ee eee Tone ee friend, know. go enemics but our country’s ene: | candidate, and he alone. (Cheers.) A great doal an ‘before the rebellion brok lng happiness aud prosperity of cur people. Hut webave | Jeu Keyser for Register, Joho, 7. Hollinan for Lecor- | mien,” go help. me God. (Applauso.) Tho fight | of (ault bos beon found with Mr. Lincoln during his | Posting upon James river before ihe revelliin broke outs domo-tie enemies’ more. dangerous than foreign foos— | achs Henry Smith for Supervisors Tana Dayton for Surro- | ss now between democracy on the oue side and slavory | administration. 1 have found fault with him in | So cyoartthan nie owner aod crawled Ata tito the scarcely less dangerous than the armed bands of the re- * ,, : ee r on the other, It is Satan on one sido and Christ on the | many respects; ho has not travelled fast enough forme | none. Ho was ‘a very religious durkey, whereas the mas- ‘th, Henry filton and Florence McCarthy, for Judges vi bellion, Thoy are the preseot managers of a time: | of the Supreme, Superior, Common Pleas and Marine | tbe’. Its hellon one side and heaven on tho other. | (Applayse.) I have been in favor of calling out a million | so wag a yory irreligions man. The’ darkey thought it it | rf Which side do you propose to take in settling this quos- | Of menIn addition to those already called out, and i am 4 " tener eiacieinen, imipenem tee Shunt, “reaper inaly eee tee Sea eeee Tiaer Eae e demoeratie party opposed to us ory oubagainst | for itmow. I would send two hundred aud Orty' thousand Wp ho nada) tehanasl, ave pisoparte Ua banaD'™ Tha manter, lofty patriotism they are incapable of imitating, “Vhoy, | (itaetor avd of marked qualifeations for public usefule | every act of the administration. ‘They say the calling of | men to guard the ports we have taken, if need be, and | Bhyhestiay (Madi ave Mlcove Me darkoy, ‘better pat? too, sympathize with the rebellion, and in their secret BfME, 75,000 troops was unconstitutional, the emancipation pro. | press them forward to hurl the thunderbolts of war. ou down in de water again.” Again ‘the mactor’s hearts pray for its success, Like thelr friends Resolved, That in the unprincipied alliance recently | clamation was unconstitutfonal, the Confiscation act was | That has been my policy. Hoe (Mr. Lincoln) was too slow oad showed Itself abive the water, and again the dark elsewhere, they oppose and obstruct the lawful | Conciuded in this city between two hustile factions of the | unconstitutional, and, in fact, every measure of the ad- | for me. TI was for the proclamation, for confiscation, for | asvod him, ‘Don’t ‘you betiove in the ort now, Naseat?” Pf coat of ths nation: they exaggerate its | °PPosition party (in which the hypocrisy of the one is | ministration wus unconstitutional, except the rebellion | conscription, for the arrest of rebels and traitors, and for | he master isted in. his infidelity, «Well, said the mi Mud” depreciate. its’ morits; thoy laugh | eduailed only by the audacity of both), the people of thie | itself, Yow of New York must roll up a majority of | every measure by which we could put down the rebel- | jnq.masier Persiated in his in go down again, massa,” Av its catawitles” avd rejoice over 118. defeats; they are | Metropolis havo witnessed tho most dangerous encroach | 60,000 on Tuesaay next, (Appinnse and orles of “Wo | lion (Cheers) You say Tam a radical man. I thank | Por the third time the muster cme up, and the dar only Lappy when the rebels are jubilant. Elevated to | Ment upon their rights, their liberties and their satety. | will.”?) One thing must be said for therepublican party— | you for the compliment. Radical means to go two said, “Boy you bleove in the Lord, now, mons: ower m our own State by pretences of devotion to tho | Political conventions, throwing of all pretence to | thatno republican is to-day in arms against his govern. | the root of things. There is no compromise be- | Oh’ yes,’ ata the master, “I believe.” “Well, prosecution of the war, which were false aud hollow, they | TePresentative fidelity or character, have committed | ment—no mobbed and hunted abolitionist has taken up | tween truth and justice, between orror and injustice; | 1%) eid tho negro, 40 avoid any future backs'iding have used the power it rouferrad to embarrass tho’ gov. | their usurped powers to a few trading politicians, | arms, (Cries of + That's so.) We mustandeball haye tho | aud I have found tint it is the best course, after all, to be | Tht to'save your soul you'd better ga down and die in de eroment and prevent the increase of the army ata time | 284 they, in turn, untrammeled by a sense of decency, | Union restored; but we don’t we ® Union like that, | true to tho suggestions of your own heart if you want to faith (Laughter and applause.) So in order to avoid when the deficient quota of New York alone, amounting | Std despising like the interests of the community aud } when Judge Hoar went to South Caroliua to try aques- | meet with a proper, response from the hearts of tho peo | any future backaliding the peopls of New York should put to wearly 50,000 men, occurring during the crm of their | the wishes of the honest adherents of their party, have | tion of ‘constitutional law, compelled him to run | ple. (Cheers.) I stand up here in this metropolis of os Seymour ard his Teigods ‘and to hold them under- Executive, would have been sufficient to achieve somo | bateained away both county and judicial stations. Crying | from its soil, with bis daughter of tender years, to escape | Now York to say, fearlessly and bold'y, what! have said | 7,,’Co.clusion he recited the verse from Oliver Wendell’ greats ccess and perhaps putanend to the war. The) out against alleged arbitrary measures to maintain the | acgassination, I don’t want to seo a Union where a Charles | upon the prairies of Iliinois—that no cry of abolitionist, Holmes:— r Te‘used to maiutain public order uring the draft in our | oVernment of their country, they at the same time at- | Sumner may be stricken down in the Senate by tho blud- | no prospect of political promotion and no shining light of “From blasts that chill own city, thus requiring the withdrawal from the army | tempt tosubect the peopic of this city, even those of | geon of a bravo Brooks for words spoken iu debate I | buman power shall ever seduco me from the Ged given From suns that smite, of 40;000'mon to precerve the peace, and causing a tem- | their own faith, to tho most corrupt and shameless | don’ttwant to see a Union in which adronkard, like Mason, | sentiment of my beart in fayor of liberty and humanity. From every plaguo that harms; porary suspension of important operations at tne best | tyranny. The glare of the ivcendiary’s torch was hardly | of Virginia, can stand with bloodshot eyes and biue tips, | (Cheers.) Born and reared in the South—my futher and In camp, in march, in field, in #eht, Seasou for conducting them. They opposed tho draft it- | ¢Xtiogiished—the ery of the helpless orphan and of the | belching treason on the floor of the American Senate, | mother born in Fredericksburg, Va., and {born on the ‘Oh, God! protect our me at arms. sel¢ us unjust in principle, having. previously been ge Murdered innccent was scarcely bnehed—-the yell of an | We shail have a more glorious Union than that; and | sacred soil of Kentucky—with ail tho tender recollection: ? its promineut advocates—thus contradicting them. | infuriated mob, inflamed by skulking leaders, was but | when peace is restored I shall be indeed happy to visit | of early ‘life and home, the grave of my mother, on™] and called for three cheers for the gallant defenders of the- selves and denying the basis of ali govern. | Just overcome, wheu tho independence of the judiciary of | again your motropolia, and/before such another audience | Southern soil, still I say, lot the evorlusting curse | Union. ment, that every man who enjoys its benefits ig | Ur city, the ultimate protection of life and property, was | ag this listen to the song of our poet: of human bondage be blotted from the pation now and The cheers were given, and then threo cheers wero: _ bound personally to contribute to its defence and | “irect!y assailed, Precedent mas be searched in vain for Sailon, sail on, O Ship of State; forever. (Great applause.) Whenever you establish free | called for and given for Mr. Coliax himself. provisions of the constitution, to consider and redress | {i he will not do go voluntarily may rightfully be coerced, | tue Overthrow in this city of upright judges, by their schools iu the South, whenever you establish the only SPEECH OF FX-SPEAKER GROW. any alleged grievances: and under thele new coustitut on | In like mannor they bave, {rom the begluuii, deuied tho | 8H Party, to compass personal intofes!s or political aywrminieiern aristocracy in the South which should be established any. | ‘The Hon. Gatvama A. Grow wns the next speaker. He of government, based upon the oppressions which have | existence of any power in the constitution to put down | Schemes. ‘The discarded candidates, although not of our With all its hopes of future years, where (that is tho aristocracy of {ree American labor), | gaid that every one who voted at tho last Presidential Baddened the worl in its worst ages, aud which dec'ares | the rebellion, ‘and have systematically opp.sed every | Political faith, we shall sustain. But tho leeson will not Is hangin eee ieee ry ne fate. whenever tho Bible ts no longer a sealed book in the | election ‘voted “for a traitor, except the men who voted “the institution of negro slavery as it now exists in the | measure passed by Congress to that end. It was no sur. | D@ complete unless all the expected fruits of this atro- In ail ps oe ‘and pemapeals tone, . South, when schools and churches are established there, | for Lincoln and Hamlin. Those who had voted for Doughis Confederate States, shall be recognized and protected | prise, therefore, that they rejoiced in the invasion of tho | ci7us combination shall be turned to ashes on the lips of In spite of falgo lights on the shore, when this disturbing element of human slavery is blotted | Voted also for Hershel V. Johnson. Those who voted for by Congress and by tho Territorial government, and the in free states, predicted its suocess, and prepared a revolu. | 18 inventors. Under these efrcumstauces no upright PaiVent wor Youre breast the'bon, out forever, then we wili have the perpotunl sunshine of | Jonn Rell voted for a traitor. and those who voted for- habitants of the scverai Consederate Sta‘es aud Territories | tion in this city in its ald. Defeated in both attemp citizen can fail to perceive that the honor andgnfety of " Peace to smile over and bless the land, and not before. traitor shall have the rixht to take to such Torritory any staves | they still onuivue thelr dialoyal combinatious aud ellerts, | New York aro involved in the success (to be achieved pos hesris, purmepes-ece.sll with ihet (Choors.) | Donot fancy to yourself a diflerent proposition, | P*ekinridge voted for two traitors, lawfully held by them, in any of the States or Territories | and proess to seek posce, which cannot bo attained in | Only bens effort and persistent good faith) of the Our faith, triumphant eine | want to fee the war ended. that the balmy sunshine Outside Scenes. of the Confederate States’’—thus, as the Vice President | their mode, at the expense of national disintegration and | cotire Union County and Judicial Ticket, ‘Are all with theo! are all with thee!’ of peace might settie on this land, but there will be no peace 3 dishonor. They refuse to seek peace by the only means SPEECH OF HON. LEWIS BARKER, OF MATNR, Peet mantendncanegadsieg = yhnt ay ar anja: | "abs country nor wil this rebellion Wie until avery dies. | Three piitforms had been erected in Astor place, whieh left to secure it—a firm and vigorous prosecution of the | Mr, PresineNt—I remember ouce hearing a simple, un- lown in tho South with Goneral Grant for | wero decorated with flags bearing the following mot war. They encourage the rebels to further resistanco,and | sophisticatod country ind, who undertook, at a achoot ex. | OR@ of curmose eaualttl and pairiclle Western Gtaton | six wocks (cheers tor General Grant) —and was in some | ogg. 1-One fag, ono destiny and ene country,” “Sustain: thas projong the war. They cry out against the arrest of | hibition, to recite the Diede, “iy uame 18 Norval,” which (Appiatso.) Tk ‘has als) given a diatinguabed citizen | Srmies como withla reach ofthe lave, whenover bo was | our brave solders;” \+Pledged to sustain the ational uni- now traitors and their aiders and abettors, aud the suspension | he did so much to the satisfaction of his rustic neighbors to its executivechair, and no one executive | within the reach of tho Union lines, whenever bo heard ‘ted largo bers se _ —— er rp brane - — assistance to the | that he began to believe he hada talent for the staze. | jae ‘moro oF worked more nobly in the cause of pro- | the sound of the United States troops, the day of jubilee ty.” Around these platforms copgreg. pam! por d ot ara ty Tahete, tho army and to dis. | Fult%f this idea he obtained the consent of his parents to | coring supplies and meu to put down the rebellion. 1 | had come, and he threw down his hoo and plough and | of Persons who were unable to flod room inside. Aid Of this semi-barbaric con edericy admits making siave- Fy its corner stone,” madly invoked the arbitrament of war. Our alternative was to meet the chailenge thus given us,or permit the destruction of the constitution of Qur fathers und tho disruption of the Union which their Dicod had cemented. With hesitation, yet wisely and well for ourselves and future generations, we also in- Voked the god of battles, the god of truth and of univer. | ebarge niea guilty of gF cs ; : \ reise sovttiva tee taseiete WHTuLty abuthbolt vente the;proat ixcoetie Ter satay wy penne cuane sey erOncaccgueaaie nat {2 | have great pleasuro tn introducing to you that executive, | rushed to our army. Now you will have no penco in this | stand No. 1, Mr. TI. Heulet being appointed chairman, ot ended; 0 fc overnmn| he use of those agencies which have ever ” fran oppression have becn driven, aud ecattersd like | been .decmed fawfat. and oll rpotuate tho na- tinge Cpe gly ‘had Baek ny Kits My SPREOH OF GOVERNOR FATES, OF ILLINOIS. into the heart of ia, south and’ North Caroling and | The Rev. 8. M. Lanpss, of Washington, who ta the n f tional'life, which, indeed, are conforred by the constitu- | with great perseverance, and ho felt little doubt of his | og covernr YATES was greeted with an enthusiastic ro- | to Richmond, Virginia, Good,” and applause.) You | of his remarks sald that it was a mean thing for England tion for Ubis exulted purpose. They deny tho legality of | ability to acquit bimsell creditably when the time come. Prasdseh ant faline ettinaes of Kee Coke Tome eed tulle about the ellect of the proclamation; you have noth | to covertly attack this country in its hour of weakness, the currency established by law, and Fidtoule and attempt | But when the boy was ushered on the stage he ee eb vt ing to do with it, to degrade it; “They predict national bankraptey aud | poheld a spectacle ‘which ho was entirely wn: | would be but to say but isle. indeed; 1 coustdor itea ie God moves in a mysterious way fais cnnsiey poten ie inceroularoaine teoreeiela: (9 toe general ruin, to dishearten our people, demoralizo the | prepared for. Thero were the footlights, the up- | nor. You have been entertained by an address from a His wonders to perform; senses. He also exhorted the people to. duty on army and stimulate oyr enemy to jrolonged resistance. | turned faces of the expectant auditory, five | citizen of Maine upon the far eastern vorge of the repub- Ho plants his footsteps on ‘tho sea the 4th of November next, and raid they could strike Tney predict u repudiation of the obligations incurred to | thousand pairs of eyes turned on him—the whole | lic, [come to you from the far West, and as I come to And rides upon the storm. the rebels barder with the ballot than ‘athe battle secure She natiobal Ki le. as 8 crowning fact, the judiciary | frightening the words out of him. He could not recall | you over the hills and valleys thousands of miles way, as | Fellow citizens, if this rebellion had beon put down at | field, The sposker was interru frequently in the is sought to be corrupted by the baleful presence of those, | a word; but his native pluck came to his rescue, and | ] have left my own [ilinois—as I entered the State of 'In- | the beginning, if we had been triumphant at Bull run. if | course of bis address by persons in the crowd asking bias. in whom these enormities fad their best exampte aud ex- | cried out to the Duke—“Hallo, Captain, supper's ready.” | diana—as I passed through the vaileys of Ohio—over the | our flag had waved in victory everywhere upon the sen and | «show many sons he bid sent to the wer.’? ong eo = or ag a bi Pare: Med any When I rode into your city and saw my nounced | mounta ns of Pennsylyaula, and beneath the sbade of | upon the land, if the rebels had submitted and succumbed | Tbe chairman next introduced Mr. Cuas, Sranctn, who, tag See oeircethy eves be pace eae power: ny agaspeaker here, 1 began le corre Hike the country | Mount Vernon, upon the banks of the Potomac, did not | this question’ would have been settled, and this Union | receiving some slirht interruption from parties in the taelt ndlicrenten hy aioe mene be nang caamselves und | voy, the part I was to play. I went tomy room and ar. | oxperienco the feeling that I had crossed State lines. I | would have Deen restored with slavery. But {t was not | crowd, asked if there were any frionds of the Jul seroval Gi Chubtiantars SiGe wie catinoa only await the | ranged the nicest little speech you ever beard. I repeated | feel that they are my country, When I look to the fast | in the councils of Almighty God that this question should | rioters, or any friends of Horatio Seymour's present. ie v= con a ac ae mtd it, pone be cunmitted | jt over to myself, attitudinizing before the glass, a la | to New England—the first bome of our freedom,! can | ever be settled until slavery was abolished, aud abolished | The speaker's voico was here ns ane i ete Charles Sumnor. But since I camo upon the platform, | say, «There is my country;”—(applause)—when | forever. (Appiause.) I said Mr. Lincoln moved too slow, | bisses, which wore changed Into choors for ieresio Sey! y the leaves of autumn; sustaising only give our brave men greater consts and ‘courage; their march is ouward, and the heart and extre mities of the monster are already withing vbeir iron ras). [i] success disheartens, aud famine and want dis courage the people aud their leaders. Ultimate defeat, ‘ they know aud admit, ts Inevitable. ‘Ihe hope of foreign succor, save, perhays, inone qnarter, is abandoned, and failing to dud relic! iu'our dissensions—the critical period having been triumphantly passed with the victory of our arms over the revolution of July-—their last rofige is to + vent the loyal North from doing its duty to itself, and God and the country. Their aim is to destroy’ this Union ana its bieased constitution, and their aiders and abetiors are among the potentates of the earth abroad, fnd those who ure tow seeking to be made leaders of the people at the North by your voluntary choice. | ment, ‘The decision of the people ag and remembering that! was in the great commercial 100) en upon the ° 7 Of the former, only one has extended tone a word or look | exteusion will “Ye annulled: | the slave otigurchy. | metropolis of tho. country, and ooking upon tho ea of | {ts orange’ groves and bowers, I atill say? “There | sion, turk fount ieout after all Wat he could nex mote | aniy boutris miccrable sowmndiels: roterr levout on ball, sycopathy; but it is mach that th eof the ley | which ruled so long with thongs of iron, will be | human faces bere me, I have forgotten all my part, | is my country;'—(renewed applause)—and’ standing | faster than Providence and God, and he hid to move ji &e , and charxed the pollce force present witt belug inoffi: North calls to its follow of our republic, tffriendly and | reinstated | in dominion: that Dencficent ‘proclama- | und I must fall back upon “my down £ast | here, in the oonsmercial metropolis of this great republic. | us he did. (Renewed applause.) As I said at tho chi cient for not putting # stop to them at once. (Tlie police cheering toves, the presage of future con*ord. While we wisely shun entangling foreign alliances and seek only the welfure of other nations. not casting in our lot with theirs, ages can never obliterate from our record the ro. Soilection of those unimitated kindnesses. On our North- ern border and across the water the famished tion of England, lately fet by the charitable agencies of» our Meeming harvests, utters his growls of deliant gratitude, But even he has been subdued into silence; a series of mYlit ry successes, unparalleled in history, have en the understanding and so tened ‘the heart bis keepers; rebel emissaries aro dismised, Febel privateers are detained. The evidence now being alarmingly sufficient, former misundorstandings ure de- red and futur rd admitted to be defirab'o, if not tion—(cheers)—which by its own inherent force, | notions, and thrown myself upon your genorosity, : ‘ ” Mee need tole esate and tailllous of freemen. who | ‘They breathe substentiaily the spirit of the platform on | ing over the vast scone, North, East, West and South, I | people to the banks of deliverance upon the other side. | him.) Captain Brower, who now made bis appearance, Bak rill be consigned to kbreteee’ Cecaeee ay PA which we curried the election im Maine. Thad the houor | still say, and will say forever, “there ia my country— | You all recollect that when the children of Israel bad en- | the Chairman and a few policemen removed'some persons - Of the hovor and. faith of the republic Avon etne Ceat | of drawing in a country school house in my district six | (Bravo aud loud cheers)—citizens of Chicago.” (Groat | camped upon the banks of tho Red Soa, when they saw | and harmony was restored. Mr. Spencer concluded by Tuption must enaue. The rebels refuse us, th 2d'8- | resolutions, ou which We substantially based the cam- | fanghter followed the utterance of this lapsus linguae.) | the enemy behind, Pharaoh and bis chariot and bis horse- | saying that Irishmen should know that they do not own any restoration of the Union am mar the cia ped anetion’ paign m Maine. | They were:—First, Resolved “ the rebe!- | Fellow citizens of New eee voico—All right’? and { men, and the sea in front, what did Moses say unto them? | America yot. Will they accept less of their friends, who deny the right | LOB! whconstitutional.” (Applause) Second, That it | Joud applause)—Chicago will be a New York after a | He said, “Hold stil! and see the salvation of the Lord ”” Mr, Giibert made a very short address, when the pro- Of coercion’ pin laying down ther? erie had Tetaraane | i$ Constitutional to put it down. | (Cheers and laughter.) } while, (Reuewed applauee.) 1am not unaware that you | You remember tho triumphant song of Moses upon the | ceedings at this stand terminated. to their duty peace coui © Soba bed Wy Gly tems cinaed manna Get ated ee TE are on the eve of an Important election. If 1am here to- | other side; you remember tho swelling symphonies of ‘At stand No. 2 Mr. Naumenn presided, the speakers be- There would hayo heen peace if they had not taleea theme, | ee eres and cries of © that’s so.” ) Fourdh, night it is becanse, though a citizen of Ilinois, I feel as | that chorus of millions as thoy shouted—Sing ye | ing Messrs. Lambert, Thompson, Errick, Ketebum and’ ap. Uhall they bave peace and 8 dived Union, br pense | eat neers nem while about (t. (Good, good. much interest in’ the result of the election as you, | unto the Lord, for he. hath grorionsly. triumphed; | Shannon. with the’ Union ‘restored apd Ite fans weer dct that Coney goes to the right. Sixth, that we gofor | the the citizens of New York. (Cheers.) We are | the rider and his host hath He thrown into the A great delay occurred before stand No.8 wns inade- honored and. respec 6 ¥. Coney, (Iaughler and applause.) The spirit of | not met here as mere partisans, to determine a | sea.” And when I sent my flaming despatches to Mr. | use of, when at length the Chairman, Mr. Skidmoro, ine ted? Any other peace Is tho | your resolutions is very nearly the same, and on “ : eee ee ane ar ee ee ee tenes Tacit, | peace of the cbarnel house; it rotains the only. great evil | whieh the Union loving’ men ot New York ean and Grand sod the lenportsok question whether thio eatery: | cal eet a millon of mene eoha “iter! wlapiaed: Las mate whe ms dackon Te Sait tna gba pouteived Cherish it, cultivate it; let us avoid every orcision | tutious-it winders the cary bond whieh aes ue a: | wil une, When the boid, bad men who inugurated | this glorivus and grand old government of ours—sball five | buck to me, ‘Dick, old siill and geo the salvation of | to draw the poopie from the other stends, which wero lott for the fenowal of strife; “let, us rely ‘upon. the | pathy to the wise and good and humeare of tine contucien, | thi# Febcliion und ontered | on their unholy work, | or die. (Cheers) Aud upon you, the citizens of New | God.” (Loud and long continued cheers, and a voice— | e'mparatively desertod, and to keep’ them attentive they calculated on three facts to give them success. | York, on Tu next, d «“ 7 ‘ ple. (Applauae.) in thirty mililiow of peo: | mind by the careful training of a quarter of a Century, | from tho broad West to tell you that all of our States are | God Almighty never made a purer or « more hovest maa ‘The proceedings were enfivenod by the strains of « : that wo of the North would not fight—that we were @ | faithful to the Union aud loyal to the conatitution. | than Abraham Lincoln, ce ) 1 stand up before | powerful brass band, and the usual discharge of firb- A long list of Vico Presidents and Secretaries was read, | Mesh, cowardly. lily-livered, money-loving racs—that we ({Bravo” and apilange ) Ohio has pronounced her ver. | you to say today that after an acquaintance of twenty. | works. tice magnanimity of the English peopie. ey have not failed, they will never fail us in our battle for’ freedom and the Uniov, But at tho further South the shivering occupant of a Yhrone is planting the vultures of Paris upon the soil of ~ Joved money more than God or country or free instit stb: ‘a ean ears, cl eect icae cae ocarterc eater esaerrena ta anaes | an neo oees were einen uty ciomn tions, "Tho eli that we kool to. diviaity consiting of | Wthuaders in, the ours of Vattandighutnlowicethad the | de Gometin of clearness thought, of pure aud iofiy | Democratic Rally in Will lameburg. Sa is grave'y hinted, at a fitting opportunity. by a single Tht RESOLUTIONS, SO on oag whewke Sooo seh a ire a ag the roars on the Western borders to which he | and prudent statesinanship, Abraham Lincoln has not an | SPEECHES BY HONS. A. OAKEY HALL, HENRY C. @wroop, to fasten their polluted talons po some of the Fevolted States, lest the eagle of the republic should re- Store them to the paternal nest, and at the same time give a stable government to Mexico, This nation and its Fuler, in conjunction with England, aro regarded as de- . giring and inclining to aid in the disruptioa of tho Union fad the overthrow of its government. Why should ‘these, or either of these seek to destroy our constitution of government’ It bas outlivea coun! constitotl Ds. fa Buropo and America, When it was adopted France ‘was under the eway of an absolute, but a most Christian klog. The Union cemented by our constitution has been cotemporary with a constitutional king of the French, a convention, directory—that witnessed scenes worthy the orgies of bell—a consulate for a term, a consulate for zs Ife, an emperor of a republic, an emperor of an empire, a oonstitutivnal king of France, an emperor again, a consti tutional kingyor France again, 4 king of the Freach, & provisional government, a dictator, a president for four years, a despotic provident lor ten years. During this period of Kaleidoseopte government, lettres de ache’ were more abundant than arbitrary arrests in insylvania sends her vyolce, too, and | equal on the continent of America. (Cheers.) There is a MURPAY, LEVI 8 CHATFIELD, 8.@D. MORRIS AND’ we have | I know that New York will ratify thi c wit 6 “4 ‘ resolutions, prepared by him at tho request of the Com n down on the blood stained flelds of Vicks: it Tope Fellow citizens, how hay , tee donee, Syises hs erahee is areeated ba th Jonh, coacenty siving baer id mittee of Arrangemente:— pag ~ yd Hy Hu son, and many other red fields of | how prosperous was thie country be ore this rebellion | thut traitor bis rights. (A voice:—Tbat's @ fact. The democracy of Williamsburg last evening beld « Resolved, Thst tho political parties which divided the | (ny South. and they have vindicated Northeru courage | commenced! From guif to guif, from ocean to ocean, | A man is at liberty to commit murder or to commit trea: | rousing meeting at Washington Hall, at which the great- \tizens of the United 8 ba Dy eae the | and Northern valor (Applaase.) They have proved | imperial power, wealth and unexamplod prosperity pre. | won, but he has no right to do it, If be does commit Citizeds of tho United Staves in yeara gone by have, and | that our patriotisin bad not been all exhausted | vailed uponevery band. it i thie country which Set, | mutder or treason he ie arrested, tried, convicted and | ett 4esfee of enthusiasm was manifested. Speeches were to winch tieey owed thay *xiatence when the ques. | in Fourth of | July celebrations; hut that the | Davis and his eympathizers—the Woods, the Seymours, | hung for it. THe does not lose bis rights, but bo gets | Pronounced by Hon. A. Oakey Hail, Hon. Heary C. Murphy, ribo wied. Orgaatestious the BesliniGl renter barney ME bre lere bln be Mok of the | the Vallantighime, and ren of that sort—would jeatroy. | them, Tke traitor has only two rights; be has aright to | Hon. Levi S. Chatfield, Hon. 8. D. Morris and Hon. Eli P. 0 7 i des it be done? bog *) Ni “ ‘ ato of loyalty and peacoy may well prove out of place | of their noble sires. (Appinuse.) “And they hava been | by the blessing of Gol, hy these siroug right agme of | forevortin the next Au trishimne, who. tanded usow the | NOttou. They were all strongly in (avor of @ restoration aad oven pernicions la 5 period o insurrection and rebel. | found foes worthy of any steal. “That first hope of the | ours, by that grand old flag, ‘pride ot the treo heart's | wharf at New Orleans, came to this country with magnin | of the Union, a vigorous prosecution of the war, and firm See eee petich ave become stagnant in the dead | rebellion has, ag the boys way, ‘gone up.’ They know | hope and home.” this Union shall be preserved now | cent ideas that this was a free country. ‘The first ‘man | 10 the opinion that democratic rule alone could give back | seth 1S Sat sted to fie livieg issues of the | in the South to-day what Northern men are made of. | and torever. (Choers.) Who began thie wart Who fired | who looked a littie sour at him be Knocked down, and | 40 our country its Teena coe ie peace and unity. Frement , she rasttese divictens w ich were visible when | Thoir second hope was that evox if we did ronse ourselves | upon your boat at Vicksburg as she passed silently down | when taken before the magistrate luis dofence was,"May | The address of Mr. Chatield was particu fevere on this defensive war broke out have beon obliterated by | to the effort of raving the country, especially after they | tho Mississippi river? Who toredown your flag at Sam- | it please your thonght this was a fr the administration, and may be characterized as the Lad + Wh ee lene which has swept over the | havicg sont our nevy abroad, robbed the treas ry, seized | ter? It is not our war: itis your war. You began it; | country and that a man might do as he pleases,” | speech of the evening. arraigned the Execu Gamnicatinn 35 : obo sar ite last impulse upon the | the forts and arsenals, and depriving us of all meaus of | and if by your own rebellious act the uegro is thereby | So these goutlemen supposed that, at the ex. | tive for tho want of progress of the war, eaves “ie pon = gat = fall of Sumter. defence that—in the event wo made the attompt—foreign | froed, I say let him befree. (Applause.) We never did pense of the mativval liberty wnd the uational Nife, | 224 be boldly characterized the managers at paving tallied tiie temanies tied democratic parties | intervention could be relied on, especially by togene Propose, Mr. Lincoln, nor any member of the republican | they might taik treason and not ba punished If they are | Washington as a ret of nincompoops and tinkers. He Al: ie ir respective missions, and having been | and France. ‘That was the secrd hope & or Union party, ever propsed to free the negro. We | not punished they do not get their rights But 1 know | !uded to the achievements of McClollon and 1 1 > ot tated ctsompt opthe aie men beeen” the con- | rebellion, And they might ii have were wiiling to be governed by the bond It was in the | there are othor apenkers to follow me, aud I have occu. | Charging their defeats upon the machinations at ce Mr. E. Detarmeny Som proceeded to read the following | years avd a half hive gone by and our boys in 4 2 culated on that; for wrong sympathizes with | bond that each State should have the control of read won, General Halleck tn fi o f mt eo rol ite own ied your time too long alt '. juestion » Genet jal came in for bo me : yl F, oe = Tg} Pek coone phd wee one renee san make them wrong, wickedness with wickedness the world | domestic fostitutions, and by that bond we were willing k Dow aro Wwo to get out of thin wer as T have ‘old abuce, all of which were loudly applauded by the large on aie wieersble end lanccens po a ‘amigna's, paper the pon nteng A - 8, 7 tft peed to the intetligence of | ov (Cheers ) When these bad men contemplated the | to stand, We want the constitution as it i#; but you you, we have not seen the end of it, and Tam as sanguine | *udience prevent. ‘ money based upon the spoliation of the fuods of the | grent when the image ot Honey Oleg ae rede more fin. | creation of a Southern government, based on human | want another covatitution; you want Jef Davis! const!- | of the result as any man. Shall we get at it by disunion? | Outside of the hall a largo crowd assembled, and a f nn Re nel Re ge PL Bi BPE Lhe fave ot drei eonry, Clay is made in effect to | slavery for its chief corver stone, they might well caled- | tution; you want a consiitacion by which slavery shall | How shall we tarn if England and this Yankee (Mr, | Meeting was organized by the apvointment of eh we eureen tor ue ree 5 a ne oem ern ae abiade of Andrew Jack- | late on the sympathy of the aristucratic governments of | be the chiel conver stone of this goverument; you want | Barker)? No. for ashe saya, thero is Lexington, Con. Biedealt a8 president. ‘apeochen foilowed, by aul susaina eeter tho tar A tog UT, ; jer of ‘secession, Europes) or the progiamme was to divide the cauatty and | a constitution by which you would overthrow this gov. | cord and tonker Hill, hero they will remuin for | Keller, Charles C. Egan, Fsq., Hon. Edmund Driggs, James thee any Dbarberince that over diegraced hamanity Wane fy uman ingenuity may be taxod in rain | to count out New England any way mi of New York | ervment of ours, And now, if in setting aside our consti. | ever. (Cheers ) Southern born as fam, if 1c u'd give | Bergen and others. “ ul 1 ~ . ation, ver} RAV i wi ‘I ry ind pyrotechsics, ves. ately om ate 5 as mf streste, | Bome Lon we * 6 eneatlo omuaplratoe. A tyrant, fn 1776, attempted | But there were no terms on which New England would be | it die aud be damned fore (Great eeoertages wee hee. fT -y Bg LR bh tim Not less than seven thousand persoas — - friends of our excellent executive. Doce such ‘patravage | pecks te nesnsclonte's rate any in yaraitor, to 1862, | admitted into this unboly alliance. “(Applausa.) But, a& | If it doce, t has committed its own suicide, As my friend | aot toat home of Our” new born freed m, | Sedt, all of whom appiuuded the sent the speak. n guarantee govermenoreal seabitity ta Mexico, or coy whe vole a in its manhood. Amoricxos | & New England boy, the son of a despised New England | (Mr, Marker) has told you some anecaotos, 1 will teil you | if L could consent t) that | would de-erve to be banisned | erst the echo, ihe names of ana a @lso, nnd an Emperor, for what period no one can fore Beene {romedly oF Scoretly gave aid and comfort to | madsill, Lam prouder of my humble birth ani pareatage | Ove. It reminds me a deal of a young geutieman | from civil society iteelf (Applause.) Will we give up | Governor Soymour wore the signals for n. “ *, "| ey r Sul ig hedy,and io act came ay frightened oa think a! but i know what we o ona : Se be ttn ged pom maser wakes Gae XE horace Davie Native’ tories and Hartford | England. It the “homage which vice pays | and sd Marra ato tbe result as to fall f inting pe the | West, We stand pro ared to awour that the tonsa vg tide OMctal Vote of Onie. chiedy on tradition ard usage, hae been ostensibly main. Signed te ae nec erasanlets and Copperheads, will be | 0 virtue. God, wo have got too many | ground Mory thereupon said t him, © Well, now, Jolin, | of the Missisaipol ehall ran blowl from its source to ite Citcrmxa, Oct. $8) 1983. taleel, it bea euaeranee fedionl Chan ‘Tne monarch: | pean Bred. i aur country’s glorious future, to one com: | little sctoolbouses at the corners of the roads. Wehave | If you are dood you killed yoursell, for | was ready,’ | mouth beiove we give up that river to tralt-rs, . who reloctantiy. gielded independence vo the telummpn of | Resolved ‘thet the Goieing wt tow York, coming and | have to ony Ore oS eee nue streets, we | (Croat avahter-)- We were roady to atand by tho bond. | and Wud cheers.) AST xvid iu my itaagural cae vote ofOhio is 495,427, Brough’s majority i) nie a © of ~ | on " i" mothers. tov many holy ia or myeelt pate siaver: oth , bat st Spr igi we Wa of r Recoce va nearly casted ature liberal poncp, | Graeme tram al oveanizations, ook with, eoatempt | Husacee, to reader an derable portion of . suet en war wiking ve tao by ted bend, aul cowie pits one | sevens or dreoben neha mee ena ae y 8 chts and liberties of the people: | democratic party to use ite name and traditions against | with all the bloseed momories that clantes geomet shboain Tt hoviiee aie” dunes by the ordinance of 1787, and by the higher erdtunnes of Rattrond Acstdent His mate hie sand bie government the grverument of their couvtry In ite moral struggle | aronad the batles of oneerd, Laninese Around it and + rg yg ‘“t kee als Almighty God, hoy shall boar omy sroemen and te THIRTY-ONE O10 SOLDIERS KILLED OR WouNpe . Parioment ly ane. CU: porns with rebellion ast wo bail with matiefaction the indi- | Hill, (Applanse ) But Insiead of going out, go far an in | ia the place of wity with the comm ngied blood of 1¢ “ Crrcinsatt, Oct, 29, 1863, tors. to ¢ y measures Of his ewe CAOtGOh..cie> | menabem Worked of peut ligwie tte foitate meee fe lion wre are nit going to let them go out. '(applause.) | Maiue (it ta tr te be would | (Cheers,) How will you ‘Tho carson the Kentucky Cootral Railroad, eontaining wi, a8 Toruce Walpole said, Abjared thete | bers, the signals of old aud tried leaders, dud aro prectt- | chit an «ephan, bo faasetnfrallremrtef gtd. Ao ochnhe | Lf b+ ‘y = do 7 oe 2.8 Oar uses kaos Sie | Hokies Se ee ee * a portion of the Seegni Ohio heavy artillery, were thrown, ed the by Mea 1 eae bg 4 mum ede phe et loyalty, | of this republic. (Tremondo Noah nnd bis preta.ity that the waters | Sous ste hove sive tn hed rn wer etentir frm tho teack twonty.seven filles from bia ‘eity thie 8 +All bis directions wore pere “ye peel missionary apirit in Sew cover the (aco of the earth, and sot bia | Thore is not a whiaper from the southern pre | morning, One man was kiled, eighteen reverely wounded Louis the Grex: himnolf could aot have boos tarng apeaite vod, That again and again we return oor gratora | and. mouey ard tracta nds ava token of (hat eovenant=-eo iT bad | ern meetings that they will oumpromiss, They say that sive alighty iajucet.. TY © Wherever the king's rermeyt famrumore Faralee penn ong > py ly Mies oat soldiers ae | yersion ot the bontten abroad. And we have ould write in lettors of flaming fire npon | If they ever compromised or wssociated with Ni rihern oop. | 7 rie c mie We was a liberal patron of general warrante th <~ ol nary spirit sometimes, and whea | ) Asoliiary slave should ever clink hie | perheats, it would be by holding thelr noses tow are | 9 brekem Fall. seret cabinets and bureaus ef bin Sxtpeieh ore ane prs cbaen bac Dg gent pln 4. 3 iF | wo (ait to convert with the word we send omebeiis wid | chains upon one inch of American soil, (Loud ebecr:.) | we to sccure peice? Tam so mech for ewe that ner Fatal Stat eu 'picion, In obediones to his benoste. — pathy and support | builets and b youets, aud we prove our princi les ortho | I! slavery rtonds in the path of this republic t say let it | 1 will have it it | have to fight for it. | want Aner Mhr'ats Of incurring his Uieilensure etesyeUnBorted by | with which the ballot bx has respouded to dox by apostolic bows. (Great Iauchrter.) Woe propose | die, (ienewed cheers ) She has exercived her ruinous | an hoforable peaco—a peace in which wo will Hanrronn, Oot. 20, 1869, MeNt¥ sapended the writ of habeas’ cor me meee of their triumphs. While Vicksburg tins a t to convert cur misguided brethren and bring them back | power ali along the pathway of our histry, In| hive a t that cam exist, and under which ‘Thomas Barrows, Jr., Brosidont of the Aamériean mille Or OIELE BuCcERIVE Years, withoul tho terrors | Cettesbure, and while Port Hudson, Littie Rock and Jato the Union git we bave to ds tt the way the Methodiat | 1444 she divided the Methodist Episcopal church | we can be prosperous and haypy. Thea our ovy led in the Of any Nate vecessiiy demondiog it. in many eae nee | Tennessee, have united in a national anthem , Connecticut | missionary made convert of the Dlucksmith on the | by Mason aud Dixon's line, and separated brethron course is tO light. The only at ikckville, was instauily killed im the depot im thie eity ¢ last evcaston, im 1817, when the revel has called to California, California to Maine, Maine to | Blue Ridge—be pa lot oF his coat, and inawed the grad | bet Iie io unity tom the days of John Wealey. She | giving Greek fire to Southern tea this evening. He bedarrived om the train trom Boston Bausted jwelf, and Europe was at peace, p lows, iowa to Vermont, Verment to Indivna, until at | of God late his unbeleving soul. ‘(Coutinaed laughter.) | divided the New School Presbyterian and the aytist ympathirersat the North. (A planse.) Ilinols bas | on bis way home, aud wos passing from the baggage to Bons Were arrested on euepleion alone forty bur of thy | length the voice of ali have been drowned in the popular | The second hore might have been founted 1) t ch reh, sed ty 1860 ah» wert tote the Charleston Con: 860 her genw als into the field by the dozen, aud she has f by. warrant (rom the Secretary of State, Yous of trate | Artillery which has thundered from the mives of Pennsyl- | chronic hitred which Kngiand bears scouutry and ; tit aud broke Int) pieces the proud old demoeratic sent ber ure hundred ard thirty-dve (hourand brave and | H@ Fmoking car Jost befure the train passed lato the jero oFer brought to trial, These unhappy porsone wore oie from the gardens of Ohio. its free institations | That country, at lewst so far avbor | ty In Is86ahe divkted and broke op the whig party | gailont goo there. (Cheors.) Sho has cheated the go- | depot when be fell between the cars. Ore arm wis cut Femoved (rom vrison to nrisoo, 1 chaise, arid after tong | State wlertice ages Rctiod Of ONE Opponents In every | aristocratic ciseter gy, was Io R¥injythy with the rebele. | Into two fctiouk—Fremont and Fillmore, and ow abe | vorninont out o the draft, the bones of her brave boys | off and his head was badiy crushed, Me, Barrows wae Imprizonnents were discharged without ‘trial. All theas A they havo pemsessed either legisiative or | Her arm has been fevched ac.oe the Atinntic, aid her | he# raved her arm against the federal Unio, and I ray | lie wpm the Tennessec and the Cumberland, she baa well knowa in New York ana B ane beat @utrages wore reluctaatiy approved by the Legislature, = cutive control, in withholding the sacred right of suf | bloody Ly tht been ea the bio dy hand's of pd 4 rage Crom our brave defenders i the Bold, exhiblus a fear | (Apptanse,) As we Western orators are ia | covered herself with mortal glory. a have oe three or four hours, 1 de mot know | raver troops, or i God Almighty | His boas to Rockville will be very great F

Other pages from this issue: