The New York Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1866, Page 1

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)

THE NEW YORK HERALD. el — ra i nm WHOLE NO, 10,760. NEW YORK, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1866, PRICE FOUR CENTS. == were boi in sol i th: our citi nang ss ag AUS impressive scene in the exercises, the members standing | towns and villages, all draped & the habiliments of tH or taken away. |The save might ot be dequicwd by ible coughs | row, the symbols and tokens of profound and heartfe - remained an unconfessed conscious- amid a silence unbroken except by irrepressi 6 ef, to Pi teg NGice pee ithe capita ‘of hisown | ness that the system of bondage was wrong, and a 1 ! ; 1 hich fell on | declaration every one of the States had retained, each | just to the North, the East, the West, the South, and the | was not only directed itlest and most i Sry. Tieoe wore all. seated. and expectant wien the | the Semlgaey ie har iasstet neh oben neve | for Haale the right of manuimisting al sates’ by an | Shale neater ts wont tetsoen connie with to malig | Declscact naret rected cenlnat fhe gentlent and most i hour of noon arrived. was not a house where there was not one | ordinary act of legislation; now the power of the peo- | to any section. I am devoted to pes but it may be | justifiable cause, but when the rebellion was directed H At noon precisely Speaker Colfax called the House to | dead. The nation wept for him, After bei ee over servitude through their legislatures waa cur- | necessary to put the foot down firmly.” In the old Inde- | againet human bature iteclf for the perpetual enslave: i dome wed, and the privileged class was swift in imposin, \dence Hall of Philadelphia he said:— I have neverhad | ment of arace And tho eflect of this rox on wee } ald order, as ho is accustomed to do at that hour, and a short upon by myriads of loving eyes, under the 16 | pen recognith ait o first jis magnigcent Capitol, the remains of our President — and constitutional obstructions on the people them- | & feeling politically that did not spring from the senti- | that acts in themselves piratical found sheltor ia Brit i ” prayer was offered by the Chaplain, This was the “ ves. Tho power of emancipation was narrowed | ments embodied in the Declaration of Independence, | ish courts of law. The rosouroca of British capitalists, which gave liberty, not alone the people of this coun: | their workshops, their armories, their private arseual try, but to the world in all future time, If the country | their shipyards were in league with the insurgents, am cannot be saved without giving up that principle, Twould | every British harbor in the wide world became a safe THE MARTYR PRESIDENT from the crowded galleries. ‘The short journal of Satur- . ‘There he sleeps peacefully, embalmed in the | Festless memory that it was at vurlance with the true | rather be assassinated on the spot than surrender It, I | port for British shipe, manned by dritiah sailors, and day containing a few words of reference to the speéch- | hearts of his countrymen. The Senate and House of oe und peda was therefore to be i; have aaid nothing but what I am willing to live and dic | armed with British gun to prey 4 our: peacetul corm ‘ - 1 read, Cher! Represe: commemorate 0) organization. © generation that au merece ; hips coming from British porta, ng +, beso pe senility, this Deanery abt} Pepa on pega ‘This day, the | made the constitution took care for the predominance of i IN WHAT STATE 112 FOUND THe CouNTRY. freightod with British products, or tuat had carried gifts » sat down, Afterwards a letter of acknowledgment from | iti or him wham we moull, bh im the dead of night to escape assassina- | of grain to the English poor. Tbe prime miwirter it the ae properly, Seepems 2 pene by the ordinance of Jefferson; the Secretary Seward, and an apology for not being present, | selected. An eminent citizen, distinguish: his labors | new school aspired to secure for slavery an equality of based on ill was reported to the House, and services in high and yempnailie! public yt my ‘at | votes m the Senate; and whilo it hinted at an organic IN MEMORIAM, | met on toes, vas rpored or pad erties Bish and sesroalve abla So@wem | ot cat mnoaid cantata ios. slssure. osha At ten minutes past t the of the United | Joe in the history of ble country, and done much to | Power o0 national ie tsiation, it assumed that cach State States was announced by their Sergeant-at-Arms, and | transmit the fame and renown of that country to future | separately had the right to revise and nullify laws of the that dignified body approached by twos, arm in arm, | ages—the Hon. George Bancroft—will now deliver a die- | United States, according to the discretion of its judg- xd at Was ton nine da; The outgoing President, » tug of the session of Congress, had stil kep House of Commons, sustained by ¢ wooffed at the thought that their laws could be amented at our requost, 80 as Lo preserve real neutrality; and to remo Jority of his advisers men engaged in treason ; | now owned to have boon just, their aegrotary ans clared that in case of even an ‘imaginary’ apprehen- | toat they could not chauge thelr laws ad infinitum. sion of danger from notions of freedom among the RELATIONS Witw BNGLAND, preceded by Senator Foate Presi course, (Applause, ment, slavor, “distnion would become inevitable.” Lincoln | The people of "Amuriee then wished, as they always et comarras ie Mini bet Senator Foot SAYERS 44D FORMS BELaTiON. aud others bad questioned the opinion of Taney; sich | pave wrahed, an they aalil:wlals, Mendip lations vars I 0) N United States, TheSenate had merely held a meeting | MF. Bancroft, who was sitting between The now theory hung asa bias on the foreign rela. | impuguing ho ascribed to the “factious temper of tho | Bi .iand. and no man in Engiand or Atonoa can doxiro on one side, and Representative Washburne, of Tilinoig, | tions of the country; there could be no recognition of | times.” ‘The favorite doctrine of the majority of the Sime’ Groucho ke in their own chamber for organization, when nearly | O° (0° 0 0, Ail + oni Haytl, nor even of ‘tho Amorican colony of Liberia; | democratic party on tho power. of aTerntorial” Logisia: | ‘agitore strously, than 1 Thi coupiay hs alway every Senator was found to be present, As Morgan and | the other, then arose and delive and the wirid van given. 00 understand that the eras’ | tan slavery he condemned as an attack on pears getline er date ping i odo 4 all ite history has tat factod rights of property,” ‘The Btate Legislatures, Ne | the dayy of Hasapaen aud Cromeelie again insisted, must repeal what he called “their Unconstitu | ministry of tho elder Pitt, and once agaln onal and obnoxious enactments,” of “it would be im- | istry of Shelburne, Not’ that these lave not at al ble for any human power to save the Union.” Nay times been just men among the of Britain—like if these unimportant acts were not repealed, “the injured < meena Gran. States would be Justified In revolutionary resistance to | Halifax in tho days of James ae So the firs. NCROFT, | 22 227 suture and McDougal, Sprague and John THE ORATION, - lishment of free labor in Cuba would be a reason for 5 : that island fi Territories were an- Sherman, Wilson and Fessenden, Doolittle, Howe, Sum | Sexarors, REPRESENTATIVES OF AMERICA: — ps sas Pte tog Florida, ees half of Mexico; ner and the other distinguished Senators advanced down ‘That God rules in the affairs of men is ag certain as slavery mast havé its sharo'in, them all, and it accep pre any truth of physical science. On the great moving | for atime the dividing line det ungttestionod Tn the Hall of the House of Bepresene |e eee eee eae ane actnad etenaing | PONE wbuch is from the beginni the world of | domain of free labor aud. that in which. involuntary on the floor rose to receive them and remained standing | the senses and the world of thought action. Eter | jabor was to be tolerated. A few years passed away, persevere, 1 » ville, I, of a Houghton in ours we 6% and | the government of the Union.” He maintained that | ya \%,4m Atay Nae gal onlhng «<4 until the Senators were seated. hal wisdom marshals the great procession of the n& | the now school, strong and arrogant, demanded and ro- | no Stato might secede at its sovereign will and ploasure, | Be !ndilferent to a country eal geen tatives of the United States, pena a de restored before the President of | Hous, working in patient continuity thru ne ages, | ceived an apology for applying tneJetferson proviso to hat the Union was meaut for perpetuity Tana that | Cobden Go ae A fg eo nomen Sailer of peace - 4 enoompassl : ight attempt to it only by coi the United States and his Cabinet were announced. Mr. | ovents in its oversight, and over offecting. ite will, | 0%°8°% sqvarren sovmesaxrr, Ciliatfon; that ‘the. eword ‘wus not ‘placed in” cher | £70! our civil war, but who, while they broke their Johnson entered leaning on the arm of the venerable | though mortals may slumber in apathy or oppose with | qh application of that proviso was interrupted for | hands to preserve it by force;’’ that “the Inst desperate | TmBished bread in sorrow, always encourgod us three madnese, Kings are lifted up or thrown down, nations Iministrations; but justice moved steadily on- Remarks of Lafayette 8, Foster, | me oan eee aaa natuifentatincy | Come And go, republics flourish and wither, dynastion | ward" In tho news’ that ho men of Califoraie bad yer O8€EF, | ments, The President was received with manifestations pass away like atale that is told; but nothing is by | chosen freedom, Calhoun heard the knell of parting members, | Chance, though men in their ignorance of causes may | slavery, and on his deathbed he counselled seceasion. President of the Senate, of Gattety on see A hole oe think 80, ‘The deeds of time are governed, as woll a8 | Wa-hington. and. Joilerson and Madison had died. de. Senators and all rising to their feet, Ho was © | judged, by the decroes of oternity. Tho 'eaprice of | spairing of the abolition of slavery; Calhoun died in a cushioned chair directly in front of the orator’s desk, Yecting existences bends to the immovable omnipotence | degpair at the growth of freedom. His system rushed Z i the centuries, and has itil ts natural develo, The death bis Cabinet taking simtlar seats on his right—Secretary | Which plants its foot on al irresistibly to its natu velopment, neither change of pw hor repose. Sometimes, | straggle for California was followed by a short truce; but PRAYER BY THE REV, DR. BOYNTON | wocutiocn nearest tne President, next Mosers. Stanton, | Hit’, mensenger through the thick darkbess of argue, | Sroxste for California was flowed by a short truce; but Welles, Dennison, Harlan and Attorney General Speed, | ftsteps along mysterious ways; but when tho hour | pot evil, but good, soon sought to recover the ground strikes for a people or for mankind to pass into 4 uew | they had lost, and, confident of securing Texas, they eh yee. suilhnaigiwananel form of ‘being, unseen hands draw tho bolts from the | gemanded that the established line in the Territories remedy of a despairing people’ woul atory amendment recoguizing the decision of the Su me Court of the United States, The erican “caw! he called “a ing eee - a ed thought ita daty to make t ‘or the amend. ople ever conferred on another, France, which «anda ment before any of these States should soparate them- | Foreinest on the continent of Europe for the solidity of solves from the Union.” ‘The views of the Liatenant | jer culture, ai. well as. for the. hravery ‘and gonezowm General, containing some patgiotie advice, “conceded | ini ates of + ley A a Mow pena the right of jon,”’ pronounced 4 quadruple rupture 4 thera ee lin of the Union ‘‘a smailer evil than the re-unijting of the Tasting ferinas fragments by the sword,” and “eschewed the idea of oa eh Ainertin by Mevabten Rowen, invading a seceded State.” After changes in the Cabl- | comuouly as the doctrine of Monroe, had ite not the President informed Congress that “matters | Prince, wad if it lakes auy Mi Re - oye FRANCE AND THE MONKOM DOCTHINE, The not of recognizing the rebel belligerenta was con- certed with France; France, #0 beloved in America, om which she had conferred the greatemt benefits that one 4 Then the Supreme Court of the United States, in long | gates of futurity; an all-subdaing influence prepares | between freedom and. slaver it ed. Cony be e vd avery should be blotted out. | were still worse;’’ that ‘the South suffered serious e wane - * President Johnson, the Cabinet, Chief Justice silken gowns, headed by Chief Justice Chase, were an- | the mind of ve for the — jer rage Ble The country, believing in the strength and enterprise | grievances,” which should be re “in peace.”* Sem vee, wee ae ried va oula came received respect from | Plan resistance find themselves in con! mn and expansive energy of treedom, made answer, though | The day alter this message the flag of the Union was ; na gee ily Chase, General Grant and the Diplo. | Downced, came in, ware received with ave the | of Providence, rather than with human devices; and all | reluctantly: —'Bo it 40; let there be no aurife between | fired upon from. Fort, Moultrie. and. the insult was not | oPortant member, IL ts emphatically the the President to the bumblest, and took seats on hearts and all understandings, most of all the opinions | brethren; let freedom and slavery compete for the Terri- | revenged or noticed. Senators in Congress telegraphed bons, the first Napoleon, the to their constituents to seize the national forts, and they | ganor matic Corps Present. right of the orator's table, in cushioned chairs, similar | and influences of the unwilling, aro wonderfully attracted | tories on equal terms, in a fur fleld, under an impartial ident Cabinet, | 2nd compelled to bear forward the change which be- | administration;” and on this theory, if on any, the | were not arrested, The finances of the country were ae es to those occupied by the Prosident and Comes more an obedience to the law of universal nature | contest might have been left to the decision of timo | grievously embarrassed. Its litUe army waa hot within | qh» tate President war perpotadiy harensed by ru The semi-circular picture was complete. With | than submission to the arbitrament of man. DRED SOOTT DECLAION, reach—the part of itin Texas, with all its stores, was | mors chat the Emperor Napoleon the Thirl desired for the dignified President in its contre, the Cabinet on GNOWTH OF THE AMERICAN REPUBLIC, The South started back in appallment from its victory, | made over by its commander to the seceding insurgents. | mally to recognize tho States in rebellion ay an luda The Mem! Bo ‘ouses of erab! highest. In the fullness of time a republic rose up in the wil- | for it knew that a fair competition foreboded its defeat -agoyronsiotins wwleo yg = Mc a creed reap dey derness of America. Thousands of years bad passed | jut where could it now find an ally tosave it from its Congress Assembled. court on his left—Chief Justice Chase, Justices Nelson, | away before this child of the ages could be born, From | own mistake? What bave next to say is spoken with Wayne, Clifford, Swayne, Davis, Miller and Field being | whatever there was of good in*the systems of former | no emotion but regrot, Our meeting today is, as it present—an arsomblage of dignitaries rarely seen upon | Centuries she drew her nourishment; the wrecks of the | wero, at the grave, in the presence of Kternity, aud the One State after anothor voted in convention to go out pendent power, and that Kogland held him back by of the Union. A peace congress, so called, mot at the | her reluctance, or France by her traditions of freedom, request of Virginia, to concert the torms of a ea or he himeelf by bis own better judgment and cleat tion for the continuance of the Union, Congr: perception of evanta, Bas the tn both branches sougbt to devise conciliatory expedients; | our porders, was, like ourselves, datractod by a i were her warnings, With the deepest sentiment of | truth must bo uttered in soberness and sincerity. In@] tho Territories of the country were organized i a ous 0 steallar 4 as teobetalen ot any one occasion was introduced to the view of the gal- faith fixed in her inmost nature, she diwenthralied re- | great republic, as was observed more than two] mannor not to conflict with any pretensions of the a a redleg a ae 8 meareny ot Pee The Flags on the Public Buildings | teres. sun te voay of the house was not full. There lgion from bondage 10 temporal yower, hat her wor:bip | Ghousand. yeark_ ago, "any attempt to overturn. the | South or any decwion of the. Supreme Court, and, | Wd, had. fasten spondence; in ike manner, the : ght be worship only in spint and in troth. The | State owes its strength to ald from some branch of the theless, the secedin, os formed at Montgomet " at Half Mast. wore vacant seaig among the Roprosentasives which paid. | wisdom which had passed from India through Greece, | government. ‘Tho Chict Sustico of te United States, | n° provisiontl goveramest, end pursyed uhetr refeuticss | ceclensstlcal policy tat ae ae he ae fully suggested the absence of a portion of the lawful | with Whea Gresce hed added of her own: the Po without any necessity or occasion, volunteered to come | purpose with such success that the Lieutenant General cond, retained tte vigor in the &c. &. &e. Congressional quota. Upon any other national occasfon | dence of Rome, the mediwval municipalities, the Teu- | to the rescue of the theory of slavery. And from his | feared the city of Washington might find itself “in wi war under it would perhaps have been noticed more. tonic method of representation, the political experience | court there lay no appeal but to the bar of humanity | cluded in a foreign country,” and proposed, among the —_ of England, the benignant wisdom of tho expositors | and history. Against the constitution, against the | options for the consideration of LApeoln, "to bid the seceded Slates “depart in peace,” ‘The great repablic pt alive polliial berite, seomed to have ite einblem in the vast unfinished Capitol, | enh « "in ett tat thee at that momcat surrounded by masses of stone and pros- quiet but through the end of slavery, so im M trate columns never’ yet lifted into their places; seom- | there could be no prosperity until the crushing tyranny ingly the monument of Bigh but delusive, aspirations, | of intolerance should cease, The party of slavery in the confused wt of inchoate maguifcence, sadder | the United States seut their esaries to Kurope to than any ruin of f pete ~ ga soliett and #0 did the party ie church jn Mex. ~ ~-ead joo, as organized by the old “panish council of the The 4th of Mvch came, With imatinctive wisdom | jidios, babel s dlewens vesake Suaten tod Repub the new President, mpeaking to the people on | iican party had made an ond of the rebotilon, and was es ‘The exercises were commenced by music at twenty | of the law of nature and of nations in France and mory of the Wasmmoron, Fed. 12,1966. | ncseg past twelve, tho Marine band playing tho | Holland, all shed on her their sclectest. Indluou Se ie ‘More than a month ago Congress set apart the 12th of Mi one It Trowatore ina manner which claimed | W2#hed the gold of political wisdom from February for a sort of half holiday, when thoy, as the " cad wherever it was found; she cleft it from the roy Protection than any other property, that the constitu- “ the attention of all, gleaned it among ruins. Outof all the disco tion upholds it in every Territory against any act of a Pony erp io Amneionny emma ca PRAYER BY REV. DR. BOYNTON. amon and sages, out of all the experience Of past | Jocal Legislature, and even against Congress itself; or, listen an eulogy upon cbar- . haman life, the compiled a perennial political philoso the President versely promulgated ‘the saying: acter of Abraham Lincoln, the martyr President, EM, | The Marine band, in the rear of the reporters’ gallery, | phy, the primordinal principles of national ethics. The | “Kansas is us much a slave state as South Careline oF Stanton, Secretary of War, was at first selected to deliver tion, against @ previous decision, She | against a series of enactments, he decided that the slave ig property, that slave property is entitled to no less performed a solemn air from the opera of It Trova‘ore, | wise men of Kurope sought toe best government im a | Georgia; slavery, by virtue of the constitution, exists in mixtare of monarchy, arstocracy and democracy; and jicipal character of sla when the Ror. Dr. Boyaten, the chaplain of the House, | T°0e. Stat behind these mame. fo'extrartfrows been | Vvety ferclony.| The munlclpal chameter of slavery delivered lowing prayer : pn faking the oath uf office, pat every question that | cablishing the best government ever kuown in Uuak reg» George Bancroft, the American historian, was substi. | ‘livered the fol neylanal the vital elements of social forms, and blend them bar. | ssa. the ‘uthority of the courts was invoked to in- | divided the country, and gained a right to universal sup- — Li hehe os ree ted takes fhe W si Almighty God, who dost inhabit eternity, while we | moniously. in the free commonwealth, which comes | trodace'it by the comity of law into States whore slavery , by plaating ‘himself om the sugle Wdea of Union. | and giving promive to the nation of order, pescy and for the War Secretary. appear but for a irttle moment and then vanish away, | nearest to the {lustration of the natural equality f all | jad been abolished, and im one of the courts of the | Bhat Ualou be declarea to be aa al; | Beceere were wee, be perp! ope halon PREPARATIONS. we adore Thy evernal name. Infinite in er and | men. She entrasted the guardianship of established | United states a judge inced the African slave Ostensibly to prevent a crowd, Senators and members | majesty and greatly to be feared art. Thow. Ai" serihly | rights to law, the movements of reform to. the epint of | (uk lectins, at omens eat aerated cones 4 " " distinctions disappear in Thy presence, and we come be- | the age Fv drew her ‘orve from the happy recon- | gewanded its restoration. galleries Ball ‘Bey ri < mone fomned ake by Thy fay and fst vot theow wo er ormenat EXTENT OF THR REPURLIC, Chief pd ng me ‘elaborate opinion of the of Representatives, where the ike Lg justly cul roug! TRRRITONAL, 3 Moreover, the Chief J in his op! Since fifteen hundred tickets | {fom communion with Thee. But through Thy imfnite | Republics had heretofore been limited to small dan- | annoanced what bad never beca heard from any fagis- merey a new way of access has beew opened through | tons or cities and their dependencies. America, dying | trate of Greece or Rome—what was waknown to civil ‘and he announced his determination t fulfil Cite om: a Gelee to fect tm North. Amesicn © bettress ple duty of os care that the laws B® faithfully exe- } A imperialiem, would transform the republic uf Mexico ented in all the Seven days later, the conven- | into » secundogeuiture for we house of Hapsburg. tion of Confederate States unanimously adopted s consti- | America might complain; she could no then vation of el own; aud the Dew goverument was | interpose, and delay seemed Justifiabie, It wan sen pena allen ie ea that Mexico could pot, with ite wealth of land, f the negro ith our northwent, nor, or thereabouts wore distributed to lt galleries | yhy Son, and consecrated by his blood. We come | that of which the Hike had not before been known ypou | jaw. and canon law, and feudal law, and common law, | race, ‘The imue was made up wheter se great tepub. | Compete in cereal aed naer b which will hold twelve hundred comfortably, the | in that all worthy name and plead the the earth, or believed by kings and statesmen to be pos- | and'constitutional Jaw; unknown w Jay, to Rutledge, Nie was to,maintain its provi in the bistory Giepated ge ey gegen nee mm of lon and acce} through btm. the | sible, extended her republic across a content. Under | Kilsworth and Marsball—that there aro ‘slave races.’ mankind, oF « rebelli on negro sia. pews L none ; owe wen | Sh eet, siiiedgh Me pyod friphtee sclemnnitiee "af. la” sense ‘we. ere car, her suspices the vine of liberty took deep root and dled | yin ™r Mad Marshall—-that Seger: Mortag the T on wy a thibughont | °F develop mines, or borrow money; 4 that the impe. s@aracter and color may have been insured. It was | ried bak to tho hour when the nation heard | the land; the hills were covered with ite shadow; its | auhorbty of this docisiom, five, States wenftly. Ine eifiiaod word. To the & ord PA SE Sl AS oticeable that with all the radicalism of the present | and shuddered at hearing that Abraham Lincoln was | boughs were like the goodly codars, and reaclied ato | {no carlieg exntaplo of a sixth, and opened the way Tor | ‘You aan have no conliet without ives the matings pedi gory Salle sg Be | Congress there were no freedmen provided with tickets | 40ad—was murdered, We would dow ourselves subinis- | both oceans fame of this only dangle fodusing the {vee wegto to Bewange; te free | aggressor,”""'To Are. the paaslone, Boueenn y= eh treasury tor the support of wa Austrian sively to Him by whom that awful hour was te god dom went out into all the lands of the earth; from negro Yecame 4 slave if he mi 7 - all, input chove to | aventurer. to participate in the honors to the memory of their do- | We bow to the stroke that fell on the countryin the very | the human race drew hope. . nth» ne wes Cain SrOn become aggressors; and on the morning of the 12th of '7RR PREDSECITE CP RarUmeGAn NETeUENED esaned great friend. White people who bad come from | bourgf its triumph, and all its shouts of victory PROFHRCRS OX THR CONBEQUENCES OF At. VistT ral resources, destined to incalculable greatness, closed | April began the bombardment of Fort Sumter, and com. Walesa," b teb partes af meomamnne anaatt rs ‘distance under the belief that none would be | 19 ane voiceless sorrow. gave and the Lord | Neither horeditary semengen nor hereditary armstec- yes on its coming prosperity, and enagted— | pelied its evacuation. grows up, and forces themselves on tho consbls “ ey "a ils eonmtivubi ery ole onde eonaiderable bitter feoliig was engendered. They | of the nation, as this national te-t "bears witness Nature works ja sincerity, aud Je, ever irdeto accent he condition of slavery for himaei and his | ret faith tn Ue, perpetuity of dhe ‘Union. Support Rp bd Ney Bomgaey HG a ing em- 8 ives honey, viper 800 5 posterity. in ance Dougias, who spoke as wi e voice of ty 4 erneae’ bee poet ‘Tidand oF srgued that if the Hall of Representatives was not large | PMT se Gout Of argreai | stores {ta juices, and so do the poppy and the upas, In |! i SRCERBION RISOLVED OF. million, bo tnstantiy. called’a meeting of Congresr, tao eomiineny of cesuaba. hiuscow tn Se telnooed emongh the Capitol Park should have been selected. No | triumph, and th 4 NN ee an ee ee ae Sediiteal wooen ce | wae te eee mae remmatond to day Rat tas teten | 3nd summoned the people to come up end reponse the | Low perpetuity is to be mrcuted againat foreign occupa papount pplicat attem: bribery - . Still, O Lord, may this to us the seed, each in ite kind. In the individual man, and the leading statesmen o to the | f os and property whi n neized from | 4, Ne KU’ Cekent oF . Pa . } 1 ee ve cna ecapeatne cn ruaeun; |‘ warahig: 'Be yo sino rady, for each an hour 'as'ye,| sul’ more. ino nation, a jest iden gives ive, and’ twe- | loa that the cuslewctect of the African was socially, | foc" Uiean the ee oe te Nant ene rm Grace ban s0lgn treme (we'Gse of Saas; tie Boos | Faptlon were available with the inexorable doorkeepers } think mot the Son of Man cometh. Any one of us gress, and glory; a false conception portend disaster, | morally and politically wrong. The new school was | schools; industrions and frugal; many of thom delicately | fons coming back after « hone tories of ‘rerctoticns | Gad the extra force of Capitol police instructed to Keep out | be called as suddenly as he whom we mourn. We | shame and deati. A hundred and twenty yoars ago a | founded exactly upon the opposite idea; and they re- | bred, their minds teeming with idens and fertile in plane etaed eek ta Lawn he bese Ming: ee ab all but Congressmen, their families and ¢worn friends, the | worship Thee as the God of our fathers, Thou didst | West Jersey Quaker wrote:—“This trade of importing | solved firat U0 distract the democratic party, for which | of enterprise, given to the culture of the arta, eager ih the Cightoenth of that bane. The guests, and tho reporters, Fifty dollars were | tae for them apath over the trarkless sea, and bring | slaves is dark gloominess hanging over the land; ie | the Supreme Court had now furuisled the means, and tereut them to these shores bearing with them the seed of a | consequences will be grievous to posterity.” At the | chen to establish a new government, with negro slavery dt pursuit of wealth, yet employing wealth ‘less for on- Ee ee Sagtasion than for deves the resources of their | hranch, dudaining a (ile from ge eecking happiness tho calm of domestic | of continuance Hi by many of these unfortunates for tickets. They | great dominion. We oe Thee Gat te Mevewee eth tee. ores of —, was on eae i Ao onl for ite corner stone, as sociily, morally and politically eo king m3 ge imendins jon planted Thee | causes; in nearest ife, cl vers * jor generations : oly Oe dedieged the catrances to the Bosunde, through wich al | ref eedtey, yuldance and protection thet Repread rap. | raakly;and worked isclf toto. the’ oryaniem of the | ‘ sik dere had ‘been ivpatod. atwarlite. Now, st abe cry | falfusort to the tale box? What fore 4h ‘were obliged to ‘and waited in sorrow in the rain idly over the breadth of the alate, ae with it | rising States, Virgin stood between the two— As the Presidential election drow on, one of the old | of their country in ite distrem, they rose up with un- | tected for ue overthrow? Thess momenwns que | shat was falling til) afier tag exercises commenced. ogee berty, churches, schools and’ all the blessings | with soll, climate, and resources demanding free | traditional partion did not make ita appearance; the eppessable patriotism, not hireiings—the purest agd l little time and expense were devoted to th: 4 Christian civilization, Wo thank Theo that the pro- | labor, and yot capable of the profitable employment | oiher recied as it sought to proserve ita old position; and | of the best in the land; sons of @ plows ancastry, i han of the trag American jife has Irresistible, | of the slave, She was the Jand of great statesmen; | ihe candidate who most poarly represented ita best opin- | with a clear perception of ‘duty, unclouded faith avd i r draping of tho for the occasion. The sustained BY To Abad” aod Thy they saw the danger of her being whelmed under | jon driven by patriotic zeal, roamed the country from | fixed resolve to succeed, they’ thron; round the of the @lock and the and pn fogd in time to struggie against the delusiobs | end to end to for union, eager at least to confront | President to #u, the wronged, the ufal hay of | desks Speaker and the alm power, because the might of God was in 1D | mabetame erase gpegey cha Hoe bane wa | i » regen ere apenas ea na | n't Vemaih tren oe Sesce ioe: saring tags | Geseemset Zanes, ci'tate” uses bmsenmreurt | Pen yin han, mien wmmdmain Sot | val he Fe on Ina etn: fa tht , “ * “ om 2. eli veran : vel , whe - or mr hi a | SER-ET NER Ses all. Mr. Stevens’ motion for en egies greet crmeme ars portion | Wee urate We i crak ieneibealg sie | Cal us sncad aisy bo wrens temee expereassa ttn Whyee hearts kindled with devotion to serve | he sione among vemporal sovereigns recognized the | Saturday to allow those in A on Tor It heroic defenders opposed to the “security and yinems” of their com | statesmen of the country had failed; there was no hope | in the ranks, and make their way to command only as | © “1 shes aun. fn. deteame Op ee wee the Hail not werpery boar of foal We thank Thee, oh slituenta, “would in time have the most destructive f- | from those who wore great afver the flesh ; could relief | they learned the art of war. Atriplings in the col- prbleice of ‘the ath “Chale in ton Vases cherge time to ft up es wen tabblan toate sal | nceneer! tas their very existence” Aad | come from oye whose wisdom was like the wisdom of , an well an the most gentle and the most studious. Senate es Cate teat Wate id ee on i defender. And when treason ani uence, “endanger hoger, wr eel P ¥ | acted upen. All the = afternoon ened was miawaieg ite armies, thes, 0 God of whe eis the King snewered thers thet “upos pain of hie bighags little ebildren? a ate and loviiest charscter 804 | Victory of secension. Yet events move as they we or. more pleasantly spent speechmaking upon Presi from sheep Thoy one reared ispleasure portat | ‘RARLY OF ABRA! Lancoum. bh Ye Henne on the head « | pedo nge yn Union—s topic inthe bumble cabin 10 botome the nd stay of this | any reepect obstructed." “Vharisaical Britain,” wrote | the choice of America foll on # man born west of the ba yl fp fies cab ty mbar agin H dent's Mormege and poy for the | Etat people in their most perilous hour, to them | Franklin in cee of Vegas “to Pace Alleghanies, amy el ser od econ tory the erciesiasticn! policy of the sxttenth, aad the __ Thee ears hI BAT fonatay while thy laws continue 6 s wells mother could read, but not write; hie father could CSS THE ASSEMBLAGE. ase with @ rd strength, that | many hundreds of thousands are into » lai do neither; but his parents sot him, with an old spell- THs PROF OF Amamica. filled before half: , and apd loving, eo sare ee ae to Gon that is entailed on their pomterity. “A porious ing book, to school, and he learned in his childhood to When it came home w the comsiousnes of the ae ockae ane oneli'Genr teihe om the | tad Miah amet we ae on Oe Re Stas tan” nas tae ne | Oe eight years old he floated down the Ohio with amarienes Ste the wer Ri they were warieg was | Se caged tap gutta, Worteg aoe cote cloug | Sense, Gi-the mere poteizas' wes eveciaaored fy tno George Meroe rove to the Logalatro of Vinge: | nis fever on raft, which ore the family and all tit for tropa ital thoy, thanked ‘ort tin the aeverhy emniro piste to the right and left to be Giled by the | wobler growth of hws moral end spiritual nature, tt be bg tie ee Shesasciees tor Coots Gap with es Iomenalle Gal Tee came, as we believed, into sympathy Christ | injustice upon was, he gave Ss ‘They were very dignified, and perfectly i, BEE a Contincntal Congres Jefiernen, with a |S jl fy EA President # wit Greased, calmly resting the papers, in marked contrast | oy BB, anh Noa i ey hdl g ny EP a hours. Of Sergea way cabnte herd et the fant tauver for to the unsnsy excitement of regular session, Tho | Lower wnich ioe ee Caen ee mae | coreer ase of “All men are’ crested equal, | Asiatic’ iiterasare be Knew the Bible; of po hyo, y yt EAL i support, H of the House—they whe carl and friz their te a at hs of our cause, "We think | wih ea inakenable t ry ne ra {atin and medias wo" more than” the sraaaation ts tcl hoe the, Gicmn Wha cont 's Fables; Jobo Vv atmanel —- b ah os eapeeet. go. tos sonsyien In the | of bie ange os oe ‘one TS cotta 59 dat for the default of New Frogre.” The Wadluops. of Wor and Williaa } ae FM A Ther pat fo woe ‘ a to fh gw or th Ag, seing as apon e moral | Jory, 1m 1104, Save consecrated avery pats of Ponn passed to hia dimly along the lines of twe cou oon hod SSS 2 Baie | eS ee = f ‘assured | national vi by a part of New in of ladies’ gallesios was beautiful. Biue end gold, 3 ve.yeng 2 not die entil a bob ns! na i baa a A Knew that bis great work was done, vainly Ld able, i] and emerald, erminer, plumes, snowy handker- onee forever when the ordinance of 1787 wae Hatteres wo , and he recolved all the boner that earth could be- i Gunew Ge dae ate 4 S2iSekacet Gen tight of to Smenyrs cova. "We tank Theo eat wohhave ths ‘invery, bas ae ‘plone herd Bes Tot im med ade on oe pores! tenant General's stall, eocupied prominent places in the | from the death cves Provide. for thes. poriows moment DESPAIR OF THE MEW OF TUB REVOLOTION. out the | inom in setvion exceeded & million, that «lo my, one of (am gallery. ‘There wore no such contrasts Of Diack | oa, whose strength was sufficient to receive and bear | Tho hope in Virginia that the abolition of man; science, | very two able bodied wen took mms in ps fad white in complorion, however, an may be acon | the seght of peveramment, snd who. we an, wilt work | the sare’ trefe would bring with the gradual abot ide ia tum mith, until | Sar) and at one. ume every fourth ‘aide Oh ee ee ee ee saree ont ihe erat pore, Tot on om parte pe * In supporting taciplent measures for oh tu trate cad commerce yee gg rot: bentred and. Soy-tre Gomiad Sek vera s Bows. ‘The Marine band, in scarlet uniform. | Qnole thank Thee Representatives: emancipation Jefferson encountered difeuities greater come a government of land, net of men; every | cervicn One, wtihin tour este, Ole orgsaten’ qoilery. The diplomatic gallery was cocupled by | Of Abranam Lincoln's tomb, to express once | words, that broke from ti ee tnat His) Neue, the of the pocial organization fred | Cn Teda ya ti. bast and im the Wast The, well ‘weachée of the several legations, with elegantly dreened ae eS ber oF ee tems geever,” wane works & cunpelr. was themselves from the military ery icos which were the out thousand; of # should volunteers | conditions of their tenare, and, throwing ir inst, two-thirds of 9 Indies, though not by any means crowded. Long before made im worthy ts be remembered brs, tnd the desire of Washington's heart that Virginia : "aoe: be lamane ‘of eorveying; | dea 00 the industrial classes, kept all the il to them: 2 jpeon tho malo galleries were full, and stout men, with | then s redeemed and tranafigured land will De a fitting | remove, sarery Os Pon pr wa Pee be bat of ogiish Niterature he added wo Bunyan nething | heiven Vast het had been inanaged by monas Seat e dag emest ‘bets firmly fixed on thetr heads, struggled with stray with wisdom to bis great that the wr Ofer Topelenmnees of the ection of the Gass, Ged but Shakspere’s plays, At twenty five he was tories as en: rong, women in the vestibules and doorways for a peep at the e nation may also be to him. that he could by ing freedom to his own slaves. | tw the Legisiature of Illinois, where he served eight | propriated eormela, were taterior of the ball. hte of Sur adgea ao our lagatatrs be. conta iy pp Cy ge tpl i ately aque tne, beautetel Sent ot, dayn In the leog During the bum of expectancy General Butler entered Sry Gets cs oie, ty aan ot ak eee Bat the idea of colonization was thought to imerease | center of the mebest land in the State, to 1847 he wae | law, one uively whhis ikew ows wn ee eomarection Uniged (be ‘Whe hall and advanced to a seat which had been assigned | our trinmph was won ; upon our soldiers and sailors, apon | the L? j and in poly ag | ow a ee a a apd hy | Although so law forbade js Pome pment ry mn fnpte copra bom near the front of these set apart for invited military | O¥F People, and upon thove who are straggling on towards | support, able @ rea Madi, ferwon provi 1 1864 he gave his influrnce to ect mae to ies wan the rele of, Sak creer Saat ee mang GA et questa, He was not in uniform, but was immediately | iofed representatives | EE ortainly do femioe to, Kansan, Ih 1908, a0 the | Charth wan Peated on a contradiction, claiming wo be am 1 streamet ty om cathesiantio and appreciative py oe _ exists | rival of Douglas, he wont before the people of the | embodiment of absolute truth, aod yet war creature of . " be reshe;. tbe eB- reporter, who started @ pound of appiause. May it comtinue unti! the ison, | mighty Lp age am pte gy By onan ee the statute book. on. ‘cnet 7 a me rons bie mf Y boreareanene i irymen should | will not be dusoived, bat. the house will cease to be progress of tine inereased the errible contrast Bening” as the ex-general SS a ae | re cone said “slavery je the | divided,” and now in 1860, with no experience what- | between wealth and pveriy) in theit years of strongib, ve te. ‘xtered soon after, and the applause was of course re. | Teel honored still. nation labors, @ portentous | ever as an executive officer, while States were madly the laboring veopie, cut ff from all tn govern: atten with exact could appear less consctous of noise itieal and economical—e sad bit | fying from their orbit, and wise men knew not where | the state, derived & seanty support from the sevorer the beet ‘peated; yet no man tinguished orator of the ying 4 age bet im public chart than Butler when the Lieutenant General modestly took the whole nation’s mind. age with | to find cow Ome congue of Queen, Sis rane (i Sad, Red no bepe Oar Sd ces bee re ee Setw me in this should, that we may isfactory plan has yet been | of Bunyan, this child of the great West, was or death. A grasping -~—§ ‘on 4 on. eta seat near him: John A. Logan, John Minor Botts | in." President of America, with military ; over borders geationt cod mont rebuat of worn loft howe 4 James Watson Webb also cocupied seats of honor on “Laer & He measured the difiealty of the duty that devolved | the mortheast, st the a. © the Wout Indies, | on ease, built humpital tents near the armies, and > ro Pralee and the glory A new held the gates of the Pactie, of Southern and of the | Ce as mursen 0 ihe ak and et retuced blip iy nero hott tg RAMARRS OF VICK PRESIDENT POSTER. “inetibation. (0 fasten oceans, ber ine soma ommaent, aed the cx: | ores py % reiypren, tenthene Oy. the puttin, the Hon. Lafayette 8. Foster, President of the Senate pro \abamen, “lhe old Mediterramens en4 Red fea. and gar. | “@eTeeunne 6 Gar bene diplomatic corps—Sir Frederick Bruce, of Great tances to th shtet winktere The Obristion whieh Russia; Count tem. then called the two Bouses to order, and said ;— Stone Hieoned forte all the way from Madras to China fas expended Ove and « half Naa tene thonens Beiain; Bese Messki, of . gmarevengnell ay corasion could have convened this angust new ariaonrary hed eased with error on the growin of & | COV i rinen chonen wut A the beet, to Kemp wnsntied lot Austria; Baron Gerolt, of Prussia; Senor Tassara, of assembly. which tony weed cominon wealth where freeholde existed by tbe million, caret of the end made “" @oain, and My. Resslof™, of Denmark, with at ‘over ‘our country, Thay” vared fod religion wae Do in bondage to the Male, snd now we ct niin Pa rene op ‘na "civatih lagelionssovupiot’ cate on | besrel iar cane tad ese Senet tok consdently d+ ft ty te GY jot’ your | Yale chariy semmed wabeard of dimensiona. Toe ete « name and etvilimed ani not one word of sympathy for the Kind hearted post rr] Thoasand societion, the left of the Speaker's desk, prominently in | Kori inst the dark clouds long source of im man » son whom America hed chosen for her chie!, ‘bey he ihe tretinoin view before the galleries and the House, Count Mon- | heavil ot tom ‘vey our endn ‘were all ie ‘of the jeored oe and ‘Rata ee Foreign tannous eoptematenen to tie aapeuat of Sern 6 more welcome , meat re on tthiem totes, the French Minster, wae toh present, although fer =a the eit sisice of Rarepe, that ‘the gees ropuitis was | (Co wie Pte, Vinge @itachés of the French ombasay were. Neither eyes and the hearts of our Shouts of not ‘os Ge ow pried tw Port frm Pats, Virginia, Senor Romero, from the Mexican republic, visible in the 27, On songs of, trtamphe through our above pe sere, Ee Pe vee cl enwarwee sme Grane end ogee, ; dremed ca plain American citizens are wont to dress; | Potions that the most the at 2g oe 1 mi te 7 sit thay were eapectal marks for the before mentioned | rebellion exer Keown it ne the coe of; et 6 al of room vomere | SESS curried toe the te ire ~—| came for the On the right of the deck faily one bait pee oe ome rraery. cas the carvereal cumom, i wes bed teat 8 ¢ & te eal we om 2a op Loy mor a6 Bot while the Craw x. Same fo, coe He pees, Oe ocaen fete ot walt tase tnd Gavorsuons ot honor, | a horror from caught Ry PES 5 w Sy oe ee 9 fying west Aumeroes Conepicuoes among them wore a ae 4 - — r ” Bihan Al. 7 pF Le 2 5 ak i "hae sa po Co ae thy, comTIN VED 0m HIGREE PAGR)

Other pages from this issue: