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2 tweon such adversaries, it was obviously desigable to | » such of them as were not requited for coast duty / Pm FS egos ¢ point where their services eou'd be more usefully obse ee cs or tame. who labored im tha P ‘men obscure, Ww - - “y 4 the Crimean war our ships were cooped‘up | earhest days at the foundation of thts reformation—ani “ “ k Sea; and as the American gove: | when l remember chat | came to afterwards to build on | oe * | their foundations, T cannot permit, in this {ree country, allow Russian Alabamag and Fioridas to is: the honurs to be put upoa me and wrested from those from your ports, the commercial navy of England wag | who deserve them far more than I do. (Hear, hear.) | ablo to range the ocean in perfect safety, and the inter When | began my pubiic life I fell into the ranks under ; appropriate captains, and fought a8 well as I knew how | course wiih her colonies was never for a moment sus, pouded or interfered with, latte at so ed he ranks under their command. AS Lhia is my Inst | How thematter pass to tion OF slavery itself’ Lecause in an fll-ad hour, ao- pe the Rrcehetening of tite wisest men of tho uth, they mixed Lalla government national life with ‘tho institution of iter ta “shin the peonte ios ovene bd Feseidenty who was under oath to constitutiga and national govpra i, take their choice betfeon the safety of the onthe eo. Vernment itself and slavery. We wore content to wait the pauntiot saa ead Gnee I'be estabilahed aud ex. a said slavery sl e3! 5) tended r do tay ‘other "than actopt thi popular address on the Amerigan qu in England ol the ¥ res bi may be permitted to glanée at iat ‘Der histor hae { ‘hee:s ) The polics have no right to inter- Now, however, tes wo Seine’ Ge & syeeeron 0 thé | coor, Wane? Ee Manchestag I attempted to give the | 80 long as you keep the law; but when you American waters and another in the Pacific, both our | history of the externa} political movemenis for Atty yoars | violate w they havearight. And in constitu. position and hors will be very different. All | past, as far as it was necessa y to elucidate the fact that | tional government, it has no ht €o attack slavery: eben . highways’ Of» cotaineroe will “be oF to | the present American war was only an overt form of the»; slavery is merely a State institution; but w that State the ighway © open contest between liberty and slavery, which had been | institution comes out of ite own limits attacks oiber the Russian oruiset who will sweep up Eng- } going on politically for half s century. (Heer, ber) } Biates, it becomes a national enemy. ers.) But it lish werchantmen wherever they find them, and carry | At Glasgow I undertook to show tte condit is said the President leeped bis jlamation for political hom into New York or San Francisco, and the British | Of Work and labor necessitated by any profitable system | effect, and not from humanity. (Hear, bear.) ee: SPS Beet of slavery was that it brought Jabor into contempt, affix. | ‘THE EMANCIPATION YKOCLAMATION, will either have to fritter away their immense navy in | ing to it the badgeof de; fon, and that the struggle | | cayoys, aud thus be unable to undertake any serious | operations against our coasts, or baye their whole trade { interrupted and their commercial sys:em thrown on its beam ends, It is not improbable that this prospect, com. } bined with many other considerations, will confirm Eng- land in her desire to back out of a war in who) the cer- tain dangers far outweigh the pcaaible advantages; but, even in the event of a rupture with Frange alone, the Presence of a Russian fleet in the harbor of New York will be of the utmost importance. Ineed only allude 40 Moxioo and the French West India islands, an expedi- tion against which would paralyze the action of France in the Baltic, especially it, as we flatter ourselves, the Russian flag should appear side by side with the Stara and Stripes. Let me say a few words about Rear Admiral Lessoffs- Koi, who commands the first Russian squadron that has ever anchored in your bay. Stepan Stepanovitch Lessofis- koi is one of the most experienced officers of our navy; he was captain of the Diana frigate which sailed from Cron- stadt im the fall of 1853 to join the squadron of Admiral Vutiatin at Japan, and was wrecked in the great earth- quake at Simoda in June, 1855. After this catastrophe he built a schooner, on which he embarked with his crew ‘ho Amoer, and got clear through the Allied feet into Nikolaytel, a feat that was very much admired at the time He then took cervice in $he great Russian Scam Navigation Compiny, and was eubsequently ap. Jointed Caytain-of the Port at Crongtact, from whence he was removed to St, Potorsh irg In the same capacity about a year ago. Ho received his flay rauk for the pur- pose of being sent out on his preseut mission, for which he is said to bave been recommended by the Grand Duke Constantine ia preference to Adm rai Shestakoff, whom some of your readers may recollect as having superin- tended the buiiding of tho General Admiral fn Now York, and whoafterwards commauded on the Mediterranean sta- tion Shestakoffis a brave man and a good officer, but rather di‘licult to deal with, and it was therefore thought desira- bie to select a person of cooler and less excitable temper. tor so delicate and novel an undertaking. No one has a word to say against the c’aracter and nautical skill of Lessoffekoi, but his warlike talents are yet to ba Proved; in which respect he diffsrs trom Admiral Popoff, of the dn whch the donilict took Diace Between | tne North and Pacific squadron, one of the heroes of Sinope and Sebasto- | the South—you Vbiila ming/idhas it watery moral, (Hear, hear) !t-was a conflict of opinion and of Pol. His ships, with the excoption of the Osliaba, are now | tnathy, Sr which, ny argument and ‘appeal to moral making their first campaign out of the Baltic, somo of | means, it was sory ie pee, og ares bo ers to vm tha adopt some gradual mode of emanoipating their ‘Blaves. aa eT ak Coty, Deen Wadnahed:iass year. Rho. Peceavet-a: Wall this was thought by the South insulting to. them, was built. at Archangel, the Vitiaz and Variague in Fin- | and as the South apologized for slavery ivstead.of defend- land, the rest at St. Petersburg. The flagship Alexander iord it, renin — bese ward gern hie = Novaky was originally intended for a sailing line-of-battle ee ee coe a ee ship, but was converted into a screw frigate; here she is conflict was political, and it arose from the attompt of the South to extend their system far into the North, to fill all considered’ a very fair specimen of naval architecture, but offices of the State, at home and abroad, with. men we do not know what you may think of her at New York: etotumlig} te pal h they did t ghut up the Y stioal prevoemmen toatl ‘who desired | 2 extend 80) aj Wier ae the Amerioun gpaleens in erosts every free working man: 00 of lobe. (ear, bear.) Ibelieve that the Southern cause fe the world, (Hear, hear.) In Edinburg I endeavored to jealous of their individual eovere’ there we ‘nation, apd how in that nation.of "re Waited Sates et grew up two distinct and antagonistic systems of develop- ment striving for the of government and for the control of the national policy, in which the North Siapiy aug. aiy’ Deca, is ilioved Uae gorerassent E rome would be in the hands of men who would give their wlo'e influence of long run, hostile to commorce and manu‘actures all the world over, as it was to every other interest of hu- man society ; that a slave nation must be a poor customer, buying the smallest quantity and the poorest goods at the lowest profit; and tbat the isterest of every manufactari mation was to freedom, and ant ‘wealth among all nations; that this attempt to covor the fairest portion of the earth with a slave population which buys nothing, and @ degraded white population which buys pext to nothing, should array every political econo mist, every far-seeing manufacturer against it, as strikin; at the vital interest ef the manufacturer, not ‘by want o} cotton, but by want of customers. I have endeavored to rekindle the feeling of the British public agatosythis sys- tem. RADICAL FUSTORY OF THE WAR, There can be ng doult that slavery is the only and sole cause of that gio@ate and cruel war which is now deso- jating the American continent. I hayo endeavored to show that this war is the most audacious attempt that was evr made (o build up slavery. Tet me ask you to look at this struggle from the honest point’ of view, and in Its moral aspect—that {s, to take our stand- what the enemy says, but from what we say. When two men diller it is in vain to hope to produce peace between them by attempting to prove thateither the one or the other of them is all wrong or allright. Thore has been some disagreement between America and Great Britain. Now, I do not want bere to argue which is right-or which is wrong; but if some one would persuade these two dis- patents to consider each other's position.and circum: Btances, it might not indeed lead to the adopting of com- mon judgment, but 1¢ might lead each to say of the other:—{ think he is honest and means well, although I bolieve he is mistaken.” It might not even lead to | settlement of the «difficulty, but it would put an end to the quarrel. 1 do not you to take our case and bolt it bones and flesh, but t> put yourselves in our tracks for an hour, and look at these subjects as we look upon them, and then form your judg- ment. (Hear, hear.) And first, as to the carliest form se Ratural enemy of free labor and the laborer all over the | sketch how out of separate colonies and States intensely | a inst the cause freodgm. In © Liverpool 1 inbored to show that slavery was, in the Why the act of issuing the proclamation was political, but the @isposthion toy was noe) (Cheers)) Ms Lincoly is an Oilicer of the State, and in the Presidential chair has ; BO more right to follow bis private feelings than any one | Of your judges bas a rapt to follow his private feelings on : the beach. A judge is bound to administer the law; but | when he sees that a rigid admioistration of the law goes ; With purity of justice, with humanity and with pity, be is ail more giad, because his private feelings go with his public duties. | Panett was asked why uot let the South go? (Hear Hi ul i near.) Itwas asked, “since they ‘woa't live aipeace with you, why not let them apo" (Hear, hear.) | The anawer is ane army they are | We are ready to j 800 of them if th -derritory is ours; it bel to the " {ihear, and laughter.) Let them go and leave the nation ‘ territory and they will have our unanimous assent. (Bear, bear, from one or two voices at the end of the Toom and interruption.) But I do not wish to discuss this part of the question in this ad capandum way, for this, it seems to me, is the very marrow of the matter— (hear, hear)—but I will ask you to-night to stand for the moment iv our place, sce the question as we see it, and { then male up your judgment. This was bagoe by the act { of tho South firing upon tho old flag that had covered both Sections, North and South. with glory and protection, (Sonte interruption and cries of ‘Speak up.’) T expected to be hoarse, and am willing to beso if ToaDtlag Agno the | mother and dangbter hand tothand and heart toheart. (A burst of applause.) If I could succeed in 80 good a work I would willingly be silent for twelve months afterwards. Well, this war began under circumstances tbat obliged the North to join issue in order to jrevent actual annibila- Uon and subjugation. The key of the country was in point, and lock at our actions and our motives not from | Southern hands; they had robbed our arsenals amd taken our treasures. "They had possession of all the most. im. portant offices m both the army and tho navy; they had, too, the advantage of having long anticipated a pre- pared for the conflict. We knew nct who to trust, One } man fated and another failed. Men pensioued upon the government, and men lived upon the goverament to sap and betray it. There was not one Judas, but one thou- sand in our country, and to have given up our territory ‘and.our principles without a strugglo and without a biow would have been craven and mea. (Hear.) ‘he honor and safety of the grand experimont of seif government by free institutions demaaded that so fagitious a violation of the principle of free voting as that which. said if party is outvoted we will make war with our opponents if thoy don’t give us our own way, should not be suffered. (Cheers.) Would you Englishmen permit a minority to dictate to you or to pro- claim themselves independent, if you did not accept their will? (No, wo; never.’") ‘Then do you think that a dis- tance of three thousand miles makes any difference? (No, no.’”") Why’, this division principle once introduced would have vo end. It would go on until ft resolved the nation {oto ite original elements of a number of isolated States. Nor is there any reason why it should stop with States, for thé same doctrine of secession applies equally to coun ties. (He hear.) Doés arithmetic charge moral or politica! princi If tt be right for one million men io a Bate to why not equally so for half or quarter that oumber—and if right fora State, which is only a name for the division of a territory, why is it oot equally 89 {ur & county: and if right for a’State or a county, then why is it not right also for a town orcit 4S ‘This doctrine of sevession is the huze revolutiovary mill- Stone that grinds national life to powder—it is anarchy on velvet. (' We know it, for we have fought with this bos age ery, and undestand him better than, you do, (Hear, her.) But apart from that there is no Though the Russians. are certainty not deficient in na- cy nd.to tional pride, we have but little national vanity; we are | sapitione’” ter obagine tie Srey en quite aware that in naval: matters we are mere tyros, siavory, as the mal “ . of political success, and hope our marivers will profit by the: ta So A far more injurious part of the Southern policy was the now hive of improving themselves in their profession. of constitution, not overtly, not by external ag- Advices received here from Central Asia are unanimous | gression, but stil changing it. Bylaw of 5 in describing the agitation that prevatis in Afghanistan | through ‘Infiuence, by oonatre and the regions contiguous to British India. The inhabit- | dication ,- tilted Southern” courts were more and more tied up to Southera principles, ‘The North would bave had-to submit to stavory, or else to oppose it by-violating law and constitution, put against ants have herd tbat the White Kban—as they call the Emperor of Russia—is gong to war with the Sultana of the Lugleez (Queen Victoria), and think it a favorable mo- ment tor them to rise against the oppressors of Hindos- | them by the construction of judges,, » ere, tan, Tho knglish payers mention au irruption of the | te'cnory, Wale Gp aac. Ais inWe the Cobar!” Afghans into che Panjaub, to which, however, they attach | tution, and the policy of country the poison and black little importance; but if our aocaunts aro to be trasted | blood of slavery. (cheers.), on the movement is much more serious than is represented | my own testimony. en wo by the orgauS of the British government. 1¢ will be re- | corroboration of this statement by Br. Stephens, the Vice membered thatthe mutiny of the Sepoys was the direct | President of the Southern i and cousequence of the Grimean war, though the plans of the Leaner He is expostulating with hie own cil be‘ore insurgents were negee Sy the sudden conclusion of peace, | secession; for to hia credit be jt said that umtil’ which allowed the English to employ their whole force | nient weut out no aan over: tore: feiearulty” proteciet ii the suppression of the rebellion. ‘Bhe complica- | againet the dlerageica at Se Cinieaa ne man ever, tions now arist in Europe may have a simiar | more sincerely and more pei ee m oe rh yon tira bathe ker take | than the Vice President ei the Confedérato ; and part in the iny may be very | this is argument different to what it was at that period. Ruasta, could Bonthern: taeibven to leat thet ion. He easily retaliate upon the lish who are violating the | says:—'I am not here the advocate of the North, but I gracanted@ neutrality of fhe Sea by supplying tho | am here the firm friond of the South anti your institutions, Circassians with arms and munitions of war; they would find to their cost that this is a game which two can pla: and for this reason I speak faithfully,and I only state at. In 1842 the Afghans, imperfectly armed and equ! facts which are clear and aod which now as they>were, inflicted @ heavy blow upon the power of | South demanded the slave trade for of England tu the East, and a few able engineers and officers | Africans for the cultivation of our laud, did not yield of artillery, @ certain number of rifled cannon, &., would | the right for twenty years? When we asked for the enable them to resume operations with infinitel: Action of Congress and of the Senate, was it not ? iter chances of success. The unserapulous conduct Giana towards other countries will sooner or later meet with its deserved reward; for if we should be in involved in ‘Wheo Wwe asked for the return of fugitives, ras It not In. co in constit y shoul tareed to nat ba was not the tive Slave law of 1860 |. hostilities with her you may be sure that we ehall find | pissed? If reply that in many instances they have means to attack her ata it where she has shown her- | violated thie law, and have not fulfilled ttreir je golf most vulnerable and least able to defend herself. It | ments, Isay that as indi and local communit! would not take many days for a body of twenty thousand | tiey have done so, but not by the sanction of,the govern- Cossacks, Kirgheez avd Turcowans, with half a dozen has always true fo- ment, for that A terests.” And he went on to show how the government had been in favor of the South, inasmuch as batteries of horse artillery, te march from the line of the Sie Daria to the borders of Afghanistan, and their ap- Prarance on the banks of the Indus would be felt like a he majority of the presidents, the of the. Inorat carthqake, which would shake the British empire | ve’ sme ortPascaters to foreign ounce: aus the ten’ 10 India to its very centre. Some wiseacres may think loyes of the executive t_at home, had been this a dream; but these same wiseacroa probably never | Bocihern men, acd Teabe coder Oy es expected to see Russian fleets in New York and the Pacific. | Was there ever an indictment laid against any ublic men as. that laid by Mr. Stephens, addressing t asacmbiy in Georgia, unconscious that be would BEECHER IN LONDON. be Feported, and unconscious that I should read his ‘weet to an Engitsh audience at Exever Hall? He bas laid ovr country on the dissecting table, Immense Mecting in Exeter Hatie—Scenes | carved with his down to. the heart, Outside the Abolition Temple=Rev. | drawn the ‘ind palpitation of that heart, Henry Ward Beccher on the Sana— to tell you what the and what has has been plan been the effect of Southern dominatiyn during the last fifty years. (Cheers.) The Southern policy, consist- ently pursued, was to control the Territories and to con- trol the government for the establishment of slave influ- ence hout North America. Now, take Aad firs that the North, a, slavery, baving rid Mt of i own — in it, looging for its extinction, was un- able until this war to attack slavery directly. (Hear, hear.) They could only contend against slave policy, not againat slavery directiy. (“* Why?) Why? Becausesiavery His Exposition of the Union Without Slavery—His Op! mom Russia and a Union With Engiand. {From the Landon News, Oct. an). Last evening a lecture was delivered at Excter Hall, under the auspices of the Emaveipation Society, by tho Rev. H. W. Beecher. The meeting was one of the most enthusiastic perhaps ever held in London. The admis- sion was by wckets, the lowest charge for which was one shilling, and for the reserved seats, of which thero were four hundred, the charge was two shillings and six | was the creature, not of national law, but of Stave law, pence More than an hour beiore the time for the proceed- | aud subject only to State juristiction, A direct attempt ings to commence the main entrance in the Strand was | on the part of the North to abolish slavery would have bes eged by crowds of persons anxious to obtain admis- | been revolutionary. It would baye destroyed the con- s\n, and soon after the doors were opened the room was | stitution by a violation of the fundamental principle filled to suffocation, and thousands were outside seeking, | of Stite independence. This peanliar structure of our bot unable to obtain, admission, aud, tn consequence, & | g ye:nm-nt is not co unioteliigitle to Englishmen mecting was held in Exeter screct, which was addressed | as you may think. It is only taking an English jaea by several speakers, and the shouts of the people were | ona larger ecale, We borrowed it from you. A great beard from time to time im the hail. On the platform | many do not understand that there should a State in. | were the Rey. Newman Hall, Rev. Dr. Halley, Dr. Hot- | dependence under a national governmest. Now,1 am | lund, Rey. Hugh Allen, Rev. W. Brock, Rev. @. Wilkins, Tov,'J. Hinton, Rev. W. Tyler, Rey. J. A. Galloway. Rev. Dr, Bunting, Rev. Lr. Jobson, Rey. Alex. Rayleigh, Mr. J. spark, Pro essor Newaurch, Professor Neath, key. J. tpg, Mr. George thompson, Mr. J. Cassell, Mr. W. Wiks, &e. rhe scene outside Exeter Hall last evening was one of a 03 extraordinary description. The lecture of the Kev. BO: well posted in your affairs, but the Chamberlain is,and ; ean toll you if 1am wrong when I say that there beloogs to the city of London certain rights which Parliament can- hot meddle with, and yet there are other elements ia ; which the Parliament—that is, the will of the nation—is just as supreme as over any other town or city in the im. Now, if you anderstand that the city of London can maintuin its own rights even against Parliament, Mr. Heecher was advertised to commence at seven | then you understand tbe principle of the American "° o’clce<, aud i was announced that the hall doors would | yernment, by which certain matters arc exclusively for | be « poued at haif-past six, The crowd, however, began | jocal jurisdiction, and do not to the national to assemble as early as five o'clock, and berore six o'clock ernment. (Hear, hear.) Iwill give you another il justration, which will come home to your bed and bosom. There is not a street in London where, if an Englishman gets sight of hie house, but ho can say “that house mined at Ovce to throw open the doora. The rush | js castie;”’ and there is no which can tell that took place was of the most tremendous character, | that man how many members shall compose his aod the hail in every available part became filled to | family, how he shall dress his children, or what their | overdowmg in @ few mivutes. No perceptible dim'- | meals shall consist of. The ioteriof economy of the | hution, however, was made in the crowd, and at half- | house belongs to thé members of the family, and the it became 89 de: se and numerous us completely to biock up oot only the footway but the carriage way of the Strand, and the Commitee of Management wisely deter. P.stsix there were literuliy thousands of well dressed | government caonot interfere in it. Bat yot house is, persous Struggling to gain admission, despite the placards | part of astreet, and the street part of ‘the city. I will exbvibited Announcing the hall to be “quite fall.” | give you another illustration. Five men bave a partner- Tue policemen and hull keepers were powerless to con- | shipor business. Now, the partnership represents the tend a_ainst the immense crowd, who ultimately filed | national government of the United States. One member of the firm may be a gambler, and a drunkard, and a crowd both in the Strand and | lecherous man, but the firm cannot meddle with his Lur eigh street morals, or with hie family. It cannot interfere with at to minutes bofore seven o'clock Mr. RB. Scott, the | anything but what relates to the business of the firm. City Gaumberlita, aud the chaitman of the meeting, ac- | Tho States ‘came with this doctrine—that comp suited by a iarge body of the committee of the Eman- | each Sate, in respect of its interests and institutions cipaticn Society, arsived, but were un be to make their | that wore local and peculiar to it, was to have un- way ‘hrough tue crowd, «01 a 16 sou,er was despatched | divided sovereignty over its own affairs; but that all to the Bow street police sttion for an extra body of | such questions as commerce with other nations, and police. About thirty Of the reserve meu wore immediate. | treaties of peace, should be under the general government. ly sent, and these, aided by the me. already .n duty, at | ‘The general government had,no more power than was de- last succeeded in forcing passage for tho chairman and | legated to it, and the matters which pertain to the do- his friends, mest'c ecotomy of the States were never given to it. the spaciou. © rrid rs and staircases leading to the hall, 6 i! eaying au imme M . Beechor at this time arrived, bat was himsel( un- | We were bound by the fundamental law. The con abie to gain admittance to the bail until @ quarter of an | flict between the North and the South when wo this hour after the time appointed for the commencement of | war was, which should control the ment of the bis address, The re bore his detention | Territorics—siave inatitations of free institutions. That in the crowd with great good humor, aod was received ‘With @ perfect ovation, the crowd tug forward in all Airections to shake hands with him. fe war gt last Heat] carricd into the hall on the shoulders of the p: y the doors of the hall were at once closed and guarded by — & body of police, who distinctly announced that po more ing 4 period of eighty years the North, whose wrongs Persons would be admitted, whether holding thkets or | aro not from their lipa but from the of their enemies, | hot. This had the effect of thinning to some extent th6 | has the local rights of the States, evon though crowd outside, but some two thousand or more people | they were mere civil rights and contrary to moral right. BLill remaived eager to seize on any chance ot admission | (Cheers) The fidelity of the North to the doctrine that might arise. At a quarter-past seven a tremendous | of State rights, her forbearance onder insult and provoca burst Of chooring from within the building annouvesd | tion, hor reluctance to meddle with an evil which abe | thet dir, Peecher bad made his appearance on the piat- | hated, aad her determination to hold fast to the constitu form, The checring was taken up by the outsiders and | tion, are worthy of better than a contem, Terr hood agata and again, sneer, of the alli enormous pational vavity, Mr. Bojamin Seott, the City Chamberiain, took the! (chheers.) Ni chair, and in opening the proceedings said the crowd out | which we may be . ( It se side was so great that Mr, Beecher had not beea able to | duct of principle, am of liberty, and | am find his way to the punctuaily, say that there is such ® record of pational fidelity ‘The Rey. H. W. then came forward, ond was | was for this the North rt, ¢ war. It produced eman- Tocelved with loud and reiterated cheering, mingied with | cjcation, but she oot to sare nat! some stray sibilations 4 knotof some ball & dozen | tons, to save territories, to save those laws wi ich if al- persons at the back the meeting. He said —iadies | lowed to act through of years would tofallibly and gentiomen, the kind reception I bavo received io this | first circamacribe, ‘Was the conflict. It was not emancipation or no emanci- pation, The government had no business with the quos- | jon. The only thing the government could join issue on | ‘was, shall the national policy be free or slave And T call | to witness the forbearance and integrity of the Northe wo It country requires bat a gingle word from me I should be | slavery. This is the reason why that truly glad M1 could take al ps by jee aad conscientious magistrate, Mr, pn oy) rously ascribed to oe, al fs; on Sd to Gave det of the sentenes was lost amid tumult deen the pioneer of the anti slavery caure Inthe United Btates of America; and when | think of # ich men as Wild, Leavin, Stewart, Garritt, Smith, G Levit, W. Godirey, Tison, and that mux accomplished the people rising and waving thoir bats) most fear whea | came here that my voice from much speaking, but my tear is now your yoice wilj change from much speaking. | sense the world iteolt without a people jno nation, that wouid give up territory It is said these States are sovereign over their ‘itory. That was the very question came up States sat in conveution to form the Union, ion there was'a resolutten introduced by the jdelegate v had in ‘reference to one of your own counties. If Kent, instance, set up for itself, T Appreneed, th@ those who defend secession in the case of Pacers States of America would be inclined \* Ces alter cases.” \ laws, are always for liberty, sud thus we find tht the of Weetera Virginia 7 eet Carolion a Northerni bas fulfiment of the contract of the Union, and we call upon you to defend our righta and maintain us in the Union.” ‘We could not allow a line of fire to be established 1,560 miles our southern border out of which should shoot ‘war and disturbances of all kinds. We had to deal with ‘a people in the South who never kept faith. They bave disturbed the land as Habal, of cursed memory, did israci, (Cheers, and some expression of dissent.) And when liberty bung its hoad, we find this Habal in the way, say- ing, ‘Art thou that which disturbeth Israel?” (Uheers.) Bat now we know the nature of these people. ‘e know that a truce will be a.cloud breathing thunder and light. ning, and that the object of the South is time and oppor- tunity to give them the means of taking possession of the whole continent in the name of the devil and slavery. (Cheers ) One more reason why we wil! not Jet the con. test ed and then begin again, and that is that wo do not want to become a military people. (Hoar, boar,” and laughter.) THR UNION DANCRROUS TO FOREIGN COUNTRIBS There are many peopie who say that America is bo coming too stron; (No n0/"”)—she is dangerous to the peace of the world, but it you permit or (avor this divi. sion the South of necessity becomes a military nation, and the North will be ag tema to bea military nation likewise. She must have forts along the frontier of fit teen hundred miles, and she must have men to man them. She would re,uire to keep up a standing army oi two hundred and fifty thousand meo,and when a uation has a lirge standing army she 1s in constant danger of being involved in wars. Previous to the war the logal foros of our army was twenty-five thousand men—that was all—ond the actual number was only eighteen thou- sand. That was all (nat was required, and the 7ribune and other papers occupied themselves in writing down this army ag & mob and a oulsance. But let this di- vision take place and instead of eighteen thousand you will have a standing army of two hundred thousand, and there will be an army of One hundred and fifty thousand or two hundred thousand in the South, and when Ame- rica is forced to keep up such enormour armies depend upon it she will be like a boy with» knife ia his hand, she will always be wanting to whittle with it. (Cheers and laughter.) It is the interest then of the whole civil- ized worid that our nation should be united , that its gov- ernment should be under the control of that part of Ame rica whieb has always been for ep and that it should be wrested from the control of that portion of the nation tbat has always been going for more territory—that has always béen (he supporter of filibustering, and always Shown itself foremost in attacking foreign uations. (Hear, hear) ‘THE CHURCH AS AN ABOLITIONBT AGENT. Bat this ia not all. The religious minded among the people feel that in the territory committed to us there is @solema national trust. Wo areal! taught that in some fs the flold of our religious efforts, and that allof us have an equal respovsibility for the moral condition of the globe: but how much nearer does ‘that responsibility become when it is one’s own country that we are ing? The church of America is bhe- coming more and more to feel that God gave us this territory, not for our material advan! but as a sphere ja which we might labor for the glorious Mg ad Christ's charch. it t# that we are to plant Chris. tian civilization and learning, and lay that spiritual basis of the church of Christ in the American continent that shall redound to the honor of God, and giadden the heartagot all good men. We could not, perhaps, an to tne existence of slavery where it wat fore the war, but we could restrict other paris {rom @. Bat pow that slavery is routed from its do- fences it is our duty to see thay it shall never be ine Condition to blight this fair western territory again. | (Hear, hear,” and some intorruption.) When { stand } and look out upom that immense territory it is brought home to me as @n fodividual man, a citizen, and a Chris. tian minisier, that while we permit the vast area from the Atiantic to the Pacific to groan with the unrequited toil of Bondmen, and to be polluted with the curse of Slavery when wo Cam prevent it, there are men who will forbearance is one of those things of | say, and with good reason, ‘Give ap your missions to the Sandwich and pence, ind Islands, to Africa, and to Asia, and look at independent of Hons of pounds, shillings, questions of national honor, Independent of all secular Considerations, there i the far more important one—oar duty to God in removing from the blast and blight of slavery. (Cheers.) How hase voices many are those wi sounding all over England, saying let slavery It is recorded in the y of one oye a aie ye Burtos, that wi oe i Soized wit 1, With wonderful pres- miod and Mtized the animal by the street, aim | amine of first. (Cheors. exaggorated, statement. aro minified, not mag No man can undorstand how great the; THE PRIVATEERS. co POS EOD EB Movements of the Rebel Fleet off and from the till he stands im our midst in America, No und Or tha ib (Cheers.) But it is said, war of extermination is,and I have seen it stated that a peatilont tellow from 0: the Gospel,” bad come over to that be was in favor of a bilt—Captain Semmes Prudently Avoids Her— How the Rebel Captain Paid His South Ameri- can Pilot—American Traders Port— Tho Vanderbilt Relieves venue pyc sr rt my own way. We believe that this war and Reports en Earthquake—A iste test of our inaitations; we bleve that 18 | Oatetiog g Tartar at Boa, Go aan bound into ‘Simon's Bay,” saying they. were fn want beef “4 Bred rom of liberty and’ slavery; we Dellore. that It isthe ~ [wigs ‘anotee hail Sate tena te 1 boat of cause, of the, common people the world over | mae Vanderbilt im Simon's Bay=The | board’ We thon hove the sbi to, Dat 10, the aot of doing against their oppressors: we il be oa Sirag- Rebel Fleet Sails Away. 80 @ second gum was firéd from her. We then ht the gling nationality on the globe wil ‘we con: {From the London Shipping Gazette, Oct, 20. fair looked rather suspicious, bearing there was # like- quer this odious oligarchy of pe an gay that The “federal wheel steam ‘Vanderbilt, 12, | 1! ‘war bet) giand America. 4 every oppressed tm the rill be weaker if we | cantain Baldwin, Arrived in Simon's Bay August 80,'and | Thectmanding officer of ihe troops on bowed wax are shoved tothe wall. We re; it as an awful, and | ior contomber 11. then requested to haye a guard under arms jo cage of yet glorious, part of the at ae See eh The last of the Confederate steamships of war Alabama, Anything.ocoarring, which request wae immediately a. ‘on for hundreds of years inevery nation peed ri " only sixteen hours before her | ceded to, and ‘all proparations made for av attack. and wrong, between virtue and vice, between 7 ty and | serival, The Vanderbilt. refitted in took in nine | Sbont half an hour afterwards a foor cared boat came despotism,’ between freedom and carries ‘coal, and was supposed ve gone | Alongside with an officer, all armed. ‘The officer thea with it all the future condition of our vast continent, | somewhere between ‘and St, Helena, ascended the gangway, and on his arrival on board we and secing all this we have all that we | Alabama took a short ran up | Observed that he bis sword a revel have—our children, our wealth, our national storos—and } 4,4, coast, and returned to Simon's Bay September. | vers inthis belt. ith cutee We lay them on the altar and say it is better that all | 16° haying been in sight of and, was re- | The following conversation then took place between the’ the North has should perish than that it should botray | Ut; having ie ua and redtting when the | oflobr and Captain fie this hope of the oppressed, apd should not uphold the ‘not, it ts sald, from (kR—Are you an. American? cause of civilization. (Choers.) And if we say | motives of policy, seck an engagement with the Vander- ain Lonamas—Ne, Tam Captain-Longnise, and tlaveat shall we. enable them wo "pproes toot ee ee ree ae Ti ane Wotess want to see your papers, Captain Longman. mifllious of people with impunity, or shall wo | 8 antagonist, ae he did the San Jacinto at Martinique. These you shall not ses; Dut we aro a. Beitiate eBip do for them what we want for ourselves? Standing on our hearthstones, Spereen on the altars of the church, we will sacrifice all but priociple. I would advocate ten, twenty years of war—evorything we bave rather than give up princip'e, You will understand the love of liberty exists as it once did in Great Britain. Thoge who hold éhose priaciplea were our ancestors as much as yours, whose example we inherited; and we are determinod to carry through their principles at all nazards—(ch)—and cost. (Revewed choors.) Agaivet this statement of facts—(hiscea)—no public man and no. party could stand up for one moment in England, and it is therefore sought to falsify the facts. I will not mention names, but I will say that there have important organs in Great Britain that baye deliberately and intentionally sup- preseed truth. (Cries of “The Zimes and waph.’, lt is declared that the North has no sincerity, aud that. it treats the blacks worse thao the South does; that emancipation is a mere political trick, not a moral sentiment. Uh what a pl'y that @ man should fall nine times the space that ‘measures night and day to make an spostacy, in order with his clpsing days to wipe Tho Georgia is supposed to have gone to some distance, and the to Augra Pequina, where she landed. ber cargo of wool, and then cruised off the Cape, s Captain Semmes bas sold bis prize the Sea Brido, He ha’ not taken any more ships. ° Arrival of the Vanderbilt—The Rebel ‘leet Leaves the Coast, {from the Port amie (Cape of Good Hope) Herald, pt. 15. ‘The Confederate cruisers seem to have taken their leave of the Cape, probably owing to the arrival of the federal cruiser Vanderbilt in Simon’s Bay on the 3d inst., on her way castward. Captain Baldwih £ the Vanderbilt, and uw Distressed Vessel. (From the Port Elizabeth Herald, Sept. 15. ‘The Dutch bark@Mohanna Elizabeth, of six hundred and five tons, from Batavia on the 30th of June, bound to Amsterdam witb a cargo of sugar and tobacco, put into Simon’s Bayon the Ist inst. for repairs. She reported from Sbanghae to Woolwich, with about 200 go! tillerymen) “vn beard, and’ if you ate in want of thore isa guard of gunners there (who were ail with swords and loaded ritles). 4 The officer then Observed them and was making Me way to the gangway, when Captain Longman asked bite what right had he to stop a ship on the high seas under false protenccs, when he {replicd, “Recollect, we are at war,” aud then loft the side for his vessel, We .them filled and proceeded on our voyage. ‘Tho Silver Eagle has on board tive offcers nnd 152 men, one woman and child, of the ‘Thirteonth battalion of Royal Arifiicry and on> man of the torrie: ths tt liom, Shi bas also on boird two lieatenauis oi tue royal Davy, one leutensnt of the Pworty ninth regiment and thirty mea, three women and two children, of the sixty- seventh regiment, invalids. and. time-expired men, id charge of Lientenant Tibberts, Her Majesty's Thirty first regiment, besides Lve' private cabin passengers, About twenty two vessels were spoken, and upwards of one hundred sail of vessels passed Ly the Silver Magle on the bavi perienced id ec. saya Cena Dut trerit teas dunmseiien las chaos Intitute 90,02 cast, longitude 2 oath doris whee | ee biel fi jays. eers. zi ver ese Monstrous lies Oub ni uspecte: vateer agil, the North were true, still it would not alter the fact that | 108t her main and mizen topmast, yards and sails, rudder i) iP Pr Off Be! bead sprung, &c. Tbe United States steamer Vanderbilt towed her from Ospe L*Agulbas to the entrance of False Bay. The steamer then proceeded to gea again. The Johanna Eli beth has eleven first and second clase pas- sengerayon board. This is probably the vessel seon by the Shannon in distress, Why Semmes Avoids the Vanderblit. {From the London Shipjsing Gazette, Oct. 20.) In c mmenting vu; the probable consequences of an encounter with the Vanderbilt, Captain Semmes spoke with much modesty of the power of his own ship. He said that aithough the machinery of the Vanderbiit would be a good target in fighting with a steamer, it is Boteasy to escape from having a broadside. He found that to be the case withthe Hatteras, Although he dis- posed of ber pretty easily, it was as much as be could doto ‘prevent her from giving bim a broadside. The pian bo. adopted with the eras was to use his large Biakele; MOVEMENTS OF THE GRACIZ AND UNITED SrATED STEAMKR MOHICAN. [From the London Ship):hig Gazoite, Oet. 20.) Rio Januano, Sept. 34, 1843. On the 18th September, at four P. M., the Gracie bark, formerly the American b rk Fanny Crenshaw, was towed. F Mohiean, aud, fearivg hestilities on the part of the latter, the mas- ter ordered the towboas,.to return. and anchored his vessel near Fort Villegaigne der the provection of the same and of her © Egmont. It is reported that the Americaw Mmuster bas givea orders to the captain of the Mohican to tire on the Gracie, the Lotty (formerly the Americ in bark Abigail), the Vir- ginia und the Ann Ks Grant, should they leave the pert, as soon as tbey get outside, om the plea that they are Southern property, and it is supposed that the Mebican ie jow cruising about with that object. It is Nee ens wie Northern success will carry liberty. (Hear, hear, and cheers.) But I bear a joud protest against war. There ig a select band in our land and io yours. I wish their Bumbers were quadrupled who baye borne @ solemn peaceful testimony against ail war under all circum, stances. Although I differ with them on the subject of defensive war, yet when men bear a rebuke of their own land, though I cannot accept their judgment I bow with profound respect to their consistency. But, excepting them, I regard this British horror of the American war a3 something wonderful. On What shore has not the prows of your ships touched—what land {is there witha name and a people where your banner has not carried your soldiers and your sailors’ When tho great resurrec- ton reveilte shal! gound tt will muster British soldiers ang sailors from e' country under heaven. It js said, ‘1 thig.js a war 9, t your own blood.” ‘Why, how long is it since you poured soldiers into Canada and lot all your i y yards work night and day to avenge the taking of two gun from the stern of his ship, and that gun did the | ever, that the Brazilian government has men out of the Trent And was 00t _ Pye ca poo own | work, The gun 1s an elghty-tive-pounder, aid he thinks | clearance ors of Lbese vessels; sherefure they willues al — ze fen me me ae broom Hoa pharm tent, that bis only chance with the Vanderbilt will be to use it | be able to leave the port. yee pacut has goto old that" rs begins to.chide the | UPR her machinery. Hts opinion ts that the Vanderbilt eer ee bas very much greater than the Alabama, and that it will be: deapossible for him hy thao from ber. He does pot intend to go aud look for her; but he says that if he has to-fight her he will do bis best. : child for what he himsex formerly did, and then the child days, ‘‘Fatber and mother are getting so old that they must be taken away from theic present home and come and live with us.’’ (Hisses and cheers.) Perbaps you think that the old island wilt doa little tonger; Perhaps you think that there is coal enough, and tbat v4 i@ mot quite run out yet, but whenever Ss a a aaa ats for a principle of nai fe, she ig bees (Cheers) Next to thii c born horror war ia the attitude of Great Britain iring her nae sympmthy to the South. (*‘No, n0.”!) i, Tam much perplexed to know what to toes 1, of course, am like the majority of Englishmen. I dd not believe the Zime:— (hear, and a call tor three groons for the Times, which was beartily responded to)—but! was going ‘tw gay that though I do not believe it, I always read ft. 1 shall have a different story to teli when J get back. (Cheera.) ‘THE RCATAN ALLIANCY. AMERICAN AFFAIRS, , oan. i TO THS EDITOR OF “TIE LONDON NEWS. * I think the helders of the Confederate ootten loan are entitied to s me explanation with regardto, ep fa Lond The Alabam: Scem atthe Cape. rom the Graaff Reinet Herald, August. Rel. os What atrikes one most on board the Alabama is’ 80 small a'vesscl Garrying such large metal, She is much larger, if eho ts at all larger, than ber Majesty's yacht tbe Victoria and Albert, and yet she has* guns of the largest Sho is the ‘smallest ‘vessel with of bonds by the C nederite government tu pay: | arms and other warlike st: res purchised by Its this comtry. Are. these bonds which, I by merchants at a very great depreciation their nominal value, pavabie before or at the ree Re. war. and bave. the i» kiere a lien op the prevent si cotton in the Southern or not? Iteadnot bethe wish, should imagine, of the Confederate goverument, inflict an injury on the holders of the above Leno = trust, therefore, that the prier of these part! Bot affected in Ay, lanue of pddd” tional bonds by t eine fey I ea 7 ‘A OONFEDERATE BONDHOLDER eman asks me to say a word about the He near.) Well, Ce area ae Fe ged fx lew Loxpom, Qet. 19, 1863, ? e 7 pe 9 as Bout you kuow that when a women tines ¢ Russo-American Movement. ‘er suitor is not attentive énough she picks out another THR STATE OF WARSAW AND PATE OF Cr: ‘and fiirts with him in her lover’s facet» Well, New York AND RICHMOND~THE “FANATICS OF fs in the same way flirting with Russia at this moment, IN 8T, PRTKRSBURG AND WASHINGTON, it she has her eye on Ruspia, you may (Hear.) {From the 1» Oct, 20.) When Lhear men say this isa piece of national folly ‘The warmest Forlsd ad I stooge epee sg Sak Dactenog be &.Deapi sine Tia sear loted into | poarcely saabins te Weal of nye follow in solemn circumstances foterest ), Fel i viirmishos ween joser- Placed: when I hear it sald, whie Russia is actually en- | £20, and proceeded with the boat on board the Alabama, ip nah TBS Rainer ia tee tea ‘They bave no resale ged. in treading down the liberties of Poland—(bear, | which he then piloted into Smith's Winkel. er fixes the attention, und, though the (bas Heer tk is not even decent of @ free country like the ‘Captain Semmes then asked what the pilotage cost, and | throws lives and fortunes intotieoacale 80 lightly caght Northera States of America to make believe to flirt with | Van Kuilenberg toid bim what the was. Cap- | to comma d admiration, 14. dogs not give ‘the leadors: her. (Hear, hearfand ‘That is true.) Well, 1 think so | tain Semmes mot take notice of tha one | or the loga!ities a insting . These are more hi spilotage ; and | like riots than batties, and the rational strength seems te iHlings urned to | expond itself iu them invaia, Many victories are him £3 for the job. This was | yes the total result of all the naserted without | short of one su success. Now, however, oy in emmes and the Ala- | war appeara to be trans:erred to the city of Warvaw, the conflict @ vew form which attracts as@ excites the interest the most indiilerent ite ex. Tle 7 pce In the capital of the > tom of Poland concentrated at ‘and we learn the bark Saxon, = is & Vessel. Tho Alabenas left Slmon’dBay ca the 10h et hagust, to all to in the tas: settioment of Europe aga trust or gif, it oer poled ty, arse Romstee perore since 1815, 20d bam ree Russi em Bi 00 Laleocen America and be- been a didiculty to ull of them, Atexandor and Nicholas are also mons'rous—(hear, hear)——and --—— ore peg rr agp eget mete acts Bo herever commerce with its attend nt bless! civil Return of the Vanderbilt. kings of Poland. ‘Ihe jadgmens bas passed sation and religion fla their way throughout the habita- | the vanderbilt again put into Elmon’s Bay, on the $4 of | them bas boon materially influenced by the system of Bo gteke| tharecnehe the, tevo Sagees freeeces ae areas ‘| Sagtember, for cont goverament they authorized or permitted in this portion of ind the Stars and Stripes of America, to Of their dominions It identified tho Russian power wave together in friendly union. (Loud cheers.) Now, American Vessels from Table Bay. ad the Russian name with the worst kind of des whea-any one tells you again that Bir. Beecher is in favor of. ‘ou will be able to say how fa bh iss ; when it that be wants to sow ditcord betwoeu sathor and son, you will be able to say bow far he docs so. All| ever sald against England 1 would say quite as readily, and more #0, before her face as belind her back; and when we feared that England was about to lend ber mili- tary influence to the maintenance of a system of oppres- sion, 1 denounced her as ,] fhould under the same cir+ cumstances denounce her again. (Hear, bear.) But when Mook not to the sentiments of popular assemblies but to such significant acts as the deteation of those rams at Liverpool—(cheers)—when I look to such weighty words 3 those spoken by Earl Kussell at Glasgow, and by the Attorney Gevoral at Richmond; when Liloek at the acts ‘and declarations of your government, ace mpanied by seen aud felt of the cuthusiasin of the F (From the Port Elizabeth Herald, Sept 16.} Three American vessels, probably taking heart from tho presence of the Vanderbilt of the coast, left Table Bay on tho 2d inst.—viz: the Kedron for Baltimore, the Charles Colgate for Desolation Island, and the Antelope for . We expect to hear of their being over- hauled by some one or other of the Confederate cruisers. The Vanderbilt After the Georg! potism, and made ft a kind of terror to the nations Of the’ Wess. To repel any further evcruachments tm any direction by such a government appeired worth every sacrifice, aud the feeling at last, found Ite exe Pression in the war from the collects of which Russia haw not yet recovered. France, England and Ge. miny jadged the whole tendency of Russian policy by what | oland saf- fered under it more than by the internal administration of Russin itself, And what materi advantage bas the by ust, Cape Town intelligence that the Vanderbilt had visited Simou's Bay; that she was gone of in chase of the Georgia; that she actually been seen by the Cape Town eignaiman from the Lion's fill; that she had boarded the steamer Kadio; and that it wag be- has pot added to the strength of the empire nor its pros- perity. Im peace it was always vecessary to koop @ lar army im Poland. It bas stways been gurrisofed aud oe cued as @ bostile territory. ‘vor and discontented, the history of the connection oj |’ lond with Kussia js one up. what T ba lived she was fighting a Confederate steamer, either the | varying record of calamity to both nations. lish people—declaratious and an enthusiasm which come | Gror, hs aoe homo most {0 the American heart—t feel that the two | Cecrge Or the Alabama, not very ar off Cape Polat, | rulers with a more civilized people than themsev os #0 nations are still one iu the cause of civilization, of religion, See tee ale eae Cape tomter, tae ia commander of the Kadie, co A with any Re plo and I trust hall continue to be one iu international ‘The captain certified to the fact that he had been at- | pacity for governing would have found some betior mode poliey , ani in every enterprise having for its object | guaty boarded by the renowned federal Captain Baldwin, | of administration possible than the brat the furtherance of the Gospeland the happiness of man- | ‘That gallant federal saw the Kadie steaming around | can . (Cheers Mtiee'somnd tusthet comsarks, the reverend geotieman re- | Bate ze yee: hither than the obligations of trouties tx viviated, snmed bis seat amid ioud and protracted cheering. ton d, The request was cemplied » Professor Nawmas moved, that NSleney Ward goon ‘with, and a boat with one of the lieutenants of the Van- | Kussians are now to Poland what the Turks wore to Hum- its most cordial thanks to the Rey, derbilt 1 4 bonraed her. Durit i + Gi it, in the ordit sepse of the word, for the Admirable address which ho has delivered this | tion on board the } Kadie the lloutenant of the. Vanderbitt ab seaged 10 exist.’ Iuseta has lal opyhing that mabe sveaings sed ecpreetes ts hearty sympathy with his re. | asked Captain Fowler whether he had seen anything of | ths possession of a territory an advantage. Tho arty it te Probation of the slavebolders’ rebeilion, his vindication Of-} the Alabama or Georgia, and was answered m ihe nega- | obiiged to keop up must absorb more than the revenue ef the rights of a free government, and his aspirations for | tive. The crew of the Vanderbilt were all at quarters, | the kiugdom. Commerce, agriculture, every kind of em peace aad friendship between the English peopie and their the guns were pointed at the Kadie during the time | terprise is perisbing. It would be an incalculable gain to American brethren, and, as this meeting recognizes 18 | the iteutenant was oa board of her. Russia if she abandoned the kingdom of Potan® to itself; Mr. Boscber ene of She sarly pion cere of hogro emancipa, | The Vanderbilt is arined with twelve broadside guns, | to govern’tt guen iw the moord, against the hoaiiiiy of Ce the changplons of that great eause, It rejoices, in this op- age | ae dik Ahi id ee alent snasant ua nis eomsetbien ve fs she great Wonern Soapuinee vem + lb pH -~ ” ne crowned da eho ‘ant! slavery policy of President Lincoln diol commana {he savage proces of ‘caer eer itnwnis Hatt secttided sad, Mr. Guoncs as the extermipators: imagine. attompt to Russian. ‘Tnorusom supported the resolution, which was carried al. ize Poland bas now been carried on for thirty years, and: most unanimously, only three or four bands being held has ended, so far, by leaving Russia with nothing im ‘up against it. Poland but ite army, which the national government ‘The Rev. W. M. moved @ vote Of thanks to the defies. In the midst «f the Russian guards the Hotel de 4 was seconded Sir C) Fox, aod Ville of Warsaw bas been set on fire though the troepa. ong Th hg gem my . tb epee command of the Polish sntad the tex federma building tuey were again Feoetved with loud cheors. A peateriots wanparouive boon benston te womre ped call for a cheer for Abraham Lincoin ws responded to in ‘BO vessel can pass up or down the stream without rem strong body of police were stationed” in the Strand apd cre madly’ parent tae oar ia coatioed by ite Barligh sirest, but no broach of the ‘peace ovourred of the Country in the untiring epirit of betred. calling for their interference. what Russia has to do, to her unprofitable, an@ wn i arog teguagr hs "Rare, Frente ont Titrevets the hers. taomea snrethee’ ioe ta Sts advocates, were posted in the neighborhood of the hall. could or ths Norden ba cu of te a ER, Se ra woul ive or ie ees i oe oe mera wees te Rema tne, French Reports of the Tactics of Russia, | Twn where serore, cabenaily es highee qualities hip. Governments wore caf itm the Independence Beige, Oct. 30.) swan obliged to exastino the we mado for men, that they five under ahem with a St, Petersbarg. Poles, seeing their hepes on the on shore. He, pd amd s man was to tegen side of We : disappointed, have, it is | Liou Rump snd i ment, and that the bumaa rage must be exterminased stated, offered to Turkey ea alliance offensive ‘and de. | Mouille lig! rather then their peoutiay should be modified op feosive to for the empire of the Sultans all | oust the capture Abandoned. The present slate of Warsaw will be that of Vane ite pecceanive wars with the Canes Rave cutee #6 00 otis toes oe one ‘The | the cition of the South if those which are selected for sacrifice large portion ot the Pi eatiesaty Guest’ te AS Grverner's decision ts, however, mot final; and Mf the Ame- | cannot avert the pone ee Se. ‘urrection of Poland, have been Or at loagt | Moan Consul can fied evidence yh Yee ce nee” a Ronin acme fae aut thoy ae, | Sanaa Sn terra aur Jen ee | Ween OO Feary,” py ea fn the worth, Wi give ample redress to the aggrieved parties. Russian Great Gans ane iron Armor, Sin on ceelion et Freane, We © reer cee TRIAL OF STEEL, GUMS AND ARMOR PLATES of Kertch into a place of war of fird clas. | The V Loy iroumstances, she intends to protect the ea- or (From the bg hy 2 trance Sen of Aroft destined to become the arsenal Cations Berry the 17th Tia sapeiment ae Ceescal has left (or the Orisses, in order ra ahi reports tbat ia Fa ant pt ia (orem tore ore four bande oa at St. | nila, New or a four and solid cot. with | that he bad A very long passage maving Ma. | previous Oe yh a-yt thst | nila, avd at Anjier met rales ‘ernment to a are now aa bs a Fee ite ctig, wile ee of one chured. An immense hail, end 00 task ths Sana. eapplied by ‘violation tobe wore * ‘virtue of thie tresty, Rusels, in | The Nabob, which i ep ote Vac, Utes, Sorts ‘east tron Las Dames) He AY the >a as ter ot provimns, oad wea with some by ike Dg yy Teer the protection or ner cis Yanderit spo met off the Cape with he Raglan | Zoe Sard a nt Se eis SRR Sees to “eh beconting | on the 2d of J: Seo oe a fow days prier to | be ar feet Lod ioppeted frora whe epitit af ine | le departure creas ‘tha port wews was Tocclven cootran. | Soreagh th plate, oxk end teak \proke = Reig.