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| NEW YORK HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1866.—WITH SUPPLEMENT. 5 eee el Ee EY 1) Oe ee ee, eee AE ee ~ ‘THE NORTH VICTORIOUS Henry Ward Beecher in Reply to Wendell Phillips. sert the ent, from the : Aimoncan liberty, isthe rights of labor. | What are the | beon, declaring liberty to be the law of this land. We si he at Oe canals Shen it serermnenh toe, ae Lat tho People have their cotton, and call hone th one tw of free labor? Tell ye mo what they are and I | oug! je, a4 @ neceasary logical sequence, toamend | What bas the war done? The war has settied the fact, J perio yer pl rane 2d th nl galt wenn ©, wo will echo them back, and say what they aro to you here | the basis of representation, which was notoriously made | whether they believe it or not, that it shan't be. The want U pane nts iu the South—thes» predatory that are they to be la Georgia, ia Alabama, in Florida, | on account of alavery. and is different and unequal 19 | fact is settiod 1: shan't be, and ull that you can ask the | DUsanees. (Applause) somurumere, -- Wo neee tonen.ne. Soairigh bogh One ANG the sume wheee ilascay 1204 ene citizenship i8 | South is, will you give up the fact and say so? Will you | 7 want to pm Inoeitnn a tothe ches rah of their right aa freemen, that T dowand | lion of obe ciisenahip witheut remand ie natlonatiiy, | GNe,uP, the fact, tho you st it believe the doctrin:? Bouth, but 1 will not weary you by relating what tne ing, at ton o'clock, Her remal pa ta te ag Meath od ed iremnee, oa ceeete tahoe ey wanes Ls npr o lonaliy, Are yon going to keep them out till they don't believe the | Gerstand is the condition ot the Sunth nae week tabs | eee eae are eer eenaaae will b Gre hot work is the right of men Noh; to work oF not to | ponent part of the consttutian’ of the United, Siatrn, | Gore? The question ts sattied when they say, “Wo | Sotin aditerunt paris It you hear tal nersanue jer aits | Soaking meseenpany’ the facet Sint arr Sark, lo the. Hght of en Nocth ; 10 work ee net tg. poeent pest Of fhe constitution of the Un ‘t | have moferred this question to the court and arbitrameut | fywar pare of the Mi arbad accounts in the | desising lagssompany the funeral will And carriages b rl - of the a the South, = fing iy eter; i rat then to Se guaceatae’ pz green. of war, and war has declared against us, and we accept | wit) not hear bad accounts {rom Georgia. fre man boon provey in ep mrp maeee Se how fever Hyon: say hese mast be burdensome y, ay the land; secon: are 10 | the verdict ~we bow to it” Can you im honor ask any- | foaduehe ii follow tt sg ee marred Haag svodh pats» Sie Pam One. ply, “Wait till they are before you meddie with them. guarantee these rights to every man by eflicl eadache it d not follow that be wvust by the goug Kocarr —On Tuesday evening, February 20. Vera Ty tend the funeral, from ®t Masy's church, Mott Havedy oa Thursday afternoon, at one o'ctook Axpenson.—O0 Monday, February 20, Many J., relic# of Joghua Anderson, ia the 74th yoar of her ago. Funeral from the residence of her son, Cornelius Anderson, at Ryo, Wostehestor county this (Wodnesday = t legisla; | thing more than that? “But then we want guarautecs Laughter and applause.) It is not considered a necessity | tion. A part of thathas taken place, Other perts of | * siibowa. ay Sees, area A in his feet ; and because there are bad spots ia the South | Boaaxr, formerly of this city, in the Slet year of his age, “STATEMENTS OF THE LATTER CORRECTED ie & man to work if he bas money to support | needful legisiation are now under consideration of tho for mrttery oo roar: parte cenet bee the (ota | it does not follow that the whole of the South isin We | His relatives and friends, and the friends of Momra, himself; and if a man can find food in roots as | Supreme Court of the land, i o% that guarantee that they pay ight again | *™e e0nditlon. Houry 1. Beers and Sackett L. Duryea, are invited squirrels do, although it may not be best for him, yet TREEDMEN'S BURRAD. 1 ‘ ‘THB PRRLING DS TUR SOUTH. attend a funeral service at the romdence of Mr Duryea, he is to edie judge and not me nor you, I demand There {aa Freedmen’s Bureau, Thero was in Congress pen geo dee ta can eae oe T wilt now glance at tho state of fooling in the South. | No. 27 Wost Forty-fimt street, in thigeity, this (Wedoes that work ehall’be as free to the black maa there as to | @ bill for the more efiic’ent organization of it, All men's mourning there of which we a. Mord or kaow. | When we consider what they suffered, who thoy wero | day) afternoon, at four o'elock, and the funeral, at the the white man here, You may work as you please, for | hearts have been v excited by the tidings that that | leago here. What village has been blotted out in the that suffered; when I consider where ¥ wtartod the deceased, near Roslyn, Loug Island, whom you please, as long a8 you please, anc for as much | Freedmen's Bureau bill has been vetoed by the Preal- | North? Hundreds have been there. What elties depopu. from and where they brought up; when I consider the lay afternoon, at three o'clock, or as little as you please, TI should tike to see the anda- | dent. (Some hisses.) Iam sorry that he felt it to be his | Jated here? Mas , popu | whole history of the case, the stato of public fooling wan. in Brooklyn, on Tweglar morsing, Yobre- NEW PHASE OF THE STRUGGLE. here. Whole families extin- 0 cious man that hoped to live in public life that should | duty to veto it, andi am sorry that tho bill was sodrawn | guished and lincaue inte South is far more peaceful than we could expect, It ws .aflora bref lino, Korma D. Marixeon, wife zo blotted out Thore were no bells | het en, > et. | of Ret. Lefferts Brow a ‘ “SHB PRUSIDUN TS VOTO, | sere jo introduce abil toto tne Legislature that a man | pin Ne wae ctllzed to feel to be hia duty to veto t, | Funx and no trumpets wounded on the return of the shat | Mul,e0URH, Dut it in far better than wo couldexpect, | of Hein, Ketrci irowsr, in the Sth year of bor aie | Tau, or ai astipulated price ‘agreed upon’ by another. | or reorgan'zed burenus bot sal hat narleutar Torta of | (ered Tenants of armies; and pow do you want a guar. | La'ntc "rattan any South te in to be Fecoustructod’”” | invited Ur alent the fenseal ca eammlly are respect’ ally It is'a mockery to say that those workmen of the South Dorewu which that ill ‘contalized. “Te'doee nat. commit Aiiamgite one war agacgy en 7ed South will wok ) ghey arw our Vitter enemieg; they gash their Ses | sarees Guemme items, er Inte Tose, No Beveme free, © Presid t ss all.” I wonder if you think that after you soundly whip | teenth street, South Brook) ? WHAT THE SOUTH WANTS, | “ei their labor js pot lent against any proper department administer: THs SOUTH MICK OF WAR. ai ba ladeing te tank poate tk Degen supe | Basnem cas Hastings Weelchastor county, en Bom: d revere (ines, Jomm A PLEA POR THE NEGRO. ing to the blacks throughout the South, We know, on ok of & man that he is going to thank p But it is replied “They will not work; they must be | the other hand, that he in favor of such abureaa, And | eye), Ber will ear bet Ge en ee [ote Week Generel Lee. whee he sanders shied bare | Gay, Vebrony 1, siter 2 long Drought to liberty of work gradually." ‘Who says the: 1 coptens that on reading bis message it has left a pro- | (Cheorg.) “But we want guarantees that they will give | purown his hands round Gen. Grant's neck and thanked | Buapes, in the 02 your of his age won't work? Not thoy who are best acquainted with | fousfd impression upon my mind, that he urges most 89- | tho froatimen thelr righta at hoy will 6'V® | hin for whipping him and compelling to surrendert or | The funeral will take place from the residence of Bi them. I say that the men who know the Irast about the | rione and woighty reasons why, im the form in which {t | muy coxstirvrion 4 GuARANTER ov Tue PReepann's | ‘Hat General Johnston should have regarded Sherman | ov-in-le _— Aitkon, Jr, 241 Hadaon at. thin (We Regroca aro the Southerners, We have had abundant | went before him, it should not have become the law of Raaiem om as his benefactor? And should the South go upon its | Resday) afternoon, at two o'clock. The relatives aml fler Schools and Colleges to be Opened. evidence that they lived so near to them that they could | the land. But I believe and am sure that no man inthis | — 1» not the cu knoos whon it sees a Yankee, and say “God biess you, | friends of the family are respeottully Invited ty alton c . onatitution a guarantes? Is not the whole . ; Suacn, —On Tuesd p . not seo them. We know that opinions in the North | land is more in favor of some lovisiation that aballamount | Jaw.of labor in the South a Yankee, for all you have done for met" These men that Cua un Tuesaday evening, February 20, of conges, , qunrantee? Ix not the whol * en, daughter of Win. N am@ pare bate: sebaiaas chenect, for we based our orsalons te aa offolent protection for the black man than Prest- | public sentiment of this nation mighty enouch, with roe {alk thos do not tie the oot. of foal ng st the South, i oe tee Linea ies 1. intent q bugater f Wn. N on ‘our knowledge of human naturo at large, whereas | dent Johnson himself, (Applauso.) Tey aro to be pro | Constitution on it side now, ant al natorat lowe wat Dated ATE See Oe Gok take tt tacts in tH ike |. Tea nee anc fetes ane eapeetfally luvited te ‘EQUALITY AND FRATERNITY. he. &e. ke. they were tually in commerce with biack men in | tected, but they are not to be protected at the expense ’ constructed, If you do not take the ' the adm & nystom that misinterpreted | of tho'constitution, but by. ita Inwegrity. No one In the (og Egan xy gorgabelanplgag ol peenh oy op honla of hor wounds, you will not take her {u for « long | attend the funeral service, this (Wed now! a human nature and contravened God's great laws; | United States is more in need of having that immortal Sean, to their courage and to their intensity of sinosrit time tocome. Human vature doos not run this way. [tia | balf-past seven o'clock, at the residence of her pae- consequently they were continually administoring | instrument maintained than the poor, recently enslaved, | and zoal greater than the state of panic aud fear which {| BOL & question of abstract Justice; {ta practical question, | ents, No. 115 Cannon stroet ment on wrong principles, It was said that the | but now emancipated black men. Mon who have know!- | geo in the Northern mind. r and you must decide according to known law and to bu- Davinwon.—Ou Monday afternoon, Febroary 19, Rowm lack man was cruel. © what oratory have I heard— Se as freedmen may be warped by their hy | Tue NORTH FAS LOST FAITH IN Gop AND NaTuMAT. Laws, | M2 nature. I know the South will fect sore, Thay be- Ri KAN Daviteow, tufant son of James C and Lydis Am what streams of blood have run down platforms in demo- | and by thelr genarows rentiments so. ha not Wed Lo con You seein to be $0 stricken with four that you have | eved in thetr canse; they were defeated; and a greater | Davidson, aged 3 months and 17 days. cratic speeches for tho last twenty years! We have gone | sider that whilo legislating to save the freedmen, it may | Jost all thought of God, and providence and natural law, | “!8#ter could not befall them. Thoy lost evorything— Tho friends of the family and those of W A Spaff through a war that has tried men's manhood. Professor | be at the expense of thoas Iaws and those instruments in | and all power of moral influences and public eentiment, | MONSY, fame, ambition, charactor and all; doop g Enq., are tnvitod to attend the funeral, this (Wodnes Wolcomb told me that within the sound of a horn wero | which bis very safety itself resides; and if they are car- | jut] bave that faith in the cause, and that taich in God’ | OY°Fbangs them, and profound sorrow oppremes morning, at ten o'clook, from the residence of bis ya four thousand able-bodied slaves and not twenty ablo- | ried past the point of moderation, it 18 well there should | and that faith in you, when you Wake up to the full con. | “8 they are expected to give evidences of thankful bodied white men in that region, aud the slaves knew it; | be opportunity fur reconsideration. sclousnese of what yoo are and what your powors are, | Of indies! strat ey UN, AIH eve the oad ee oe a eee eeliny, February 10, of A lecture was delivered last evening in the “Academy of Music, Brooklyn, by the Kev. Henry Ward Beecher, being the third of the series given under the auspices of the Brooklyn Fraternity. The occasion drew tozether an iumense audience, the spacious building being filled to ® perfoot jam. The subject was one calculated to excite | yet neither you, nor, nor any man can point to an in: SKLVINTREEST, that Tam willing to risk, If the Bouth wore twice aa | °% Kindness ntrotchod them. You must give | Dovetas.—In ti {ntonso interest, especially when contrasting the lecturer | stanco in which’ during this terrific struggle there was | Those rights are to bo recurod, thintly, by tho great | strong wih what wo have now on one wide, "They ean’ | ‘hem hopes New business will lead them | typhus fever, Appim, wile of Gea A. De ont himself end bis topic with the lecture delivered some. | 2R¢ sinsle case of inaurr’ction, or violenve, or untemp r- | Inws of self-interest, and L confess I look to the great | not bo long in withholding from the freedinan his fights |, foretold graves; new thought will check | daughter of F. % and'Minorva Drew, of Br ed judgment. There haa been none; they bave conduct- | natural laws of God in homan alfurs chiefly. Not that guaranteed to him by the constitution old tears, Kindness and business, that ta what Lot not your hearts be troubled; ye believe in God, Sime ago by Mr. Wendel! Phillips, entitled “The South | ed themselves with a forbearance and with « prudence | there is no werk for legislation; no work for voluntary | gix sourn JUSTUFIKD IN DISHONORING THR DENT CONTRACTED they want, I hold no community can do better than to | believe also inme. In my Father's bouse are maay Victorious.” Mr, Beecher, perhaps in a spirit of friendly that 1 think scarcely lesa ene divine inspiration in thts Christian charity and muntticence; but that, as man is in Waheed Ta, eke Cieae age Gers i he at ho, though | maDel eo It i tanh tag would have wld you i much suffering people. (Applause.) But they were de- | made, the great laws of political economy, the great law We ~ h pure and jnat, was the object of a! eIDOet for. &o to prepare a place for yor Contest, chose a very distinct and rival subject—“The | clared to be tas than men—unilt for literty cowards; | of labor-supply and demand-—that works'uncons-tously, | wont eereegelay Bt Bap goat erlang $4 | giving and forbenring, and who wut or than that | Kenosh (Win) papers please copy. we should sult North Victorious.” The fact of these learned doctors disagroemy, and that one of thera was to hold forth on his chosen theme, was enough to account for the crowds that filed to overflowing the Academy last might. Not only was Plymouth church fully represented, as in duty bound it should be, but the bench and bar of Brooklyn sont forth their luminaries to wark the occasion with an and as He wan to ux, toto | Panwa... —On ‘Tuesday bruary 20, at the residence Thero ia a ghanimily in it for wour f hor mother, Mr Cath MeLaoghlyn, after a shoet woe that no uch. (Applause) It | bat severe iltnens, Carmmmina, wife of Patrick Farrell, it asked, Why uot leave them out tll they loarn better? f the family are respectfully For the samo reason that the father and the | mother do not throw the rebellious fon out ral, Thirotay aft re 4 of doors and expel bin till he learns. No; bat by kind. 4 residence, No. 6 Colum nesd and love and patience thoy ene and we were laughed to scorn when we proposed to make | makes men work willingly, and teaches them juatco | pat dont th. wor 0 to do it dge it fro soldiers of thom. Not those men that ever reccived a | through the portal of selfichinense-these tame T chinks Bee oa conites Ut wees tee ae et Pad rie charge from them after they were in baitl: will a ain deny | are likely to compose th» diffienltios between masters | to be taxed to pay for whipping myself. We ought the courago of the black man. (Applause) Again, they | and tnoir Inte servants faster than almoat anything | not to oxpect that this morsel should be rolled as say they wont work. Well, they wont if they can holp it, | else, The South cannot resuse tate without cotton. They | a. peciliar lixiry. under thelr tongue, The. bonds That is the best thing I ever knew of thom. Would cannot have cotton without negroes. Theycannot have | of tho United states are the basis of tho work under auch circumstances as they hithorto hi negroes without treating ther ‘stly. I wonld vive more | national banks, and all the banking business of these and friends 4 the fur | at two o'clock, from her street, Brooklyn. eer pe ' beon in--circumstances upon which judgments have | for two good cotton crops ra'sed by the freodmon than | United Stree are cant t ttonal hono ; q : ‘ Saw Dot space Tor en adlitieeal Peele to eee i ie | een formed against them? Would you work if every | for ve Congresses, though I highly reanect Consressoa, | fx ta bo mroserse Te waa wean nal Menor | him with hope; they open anow the sj Furton.—On Tunsday, Pobraary 20, Aww, ¢ pit or gallery, and whon’ the lecturer ‘appeared the’au- | tar you earned wero taken from yout How hard | You are to remember that negro labor has greatly | that? (Applause.) Form erly the South had an intercat | Virtve, and ho w again taken into the family. Tam | wi 0 of F mothy loton, “daushtor Va » pper would you work? How early would you got up? How | diminished; unfortunately, io part by death, We have asked if T would take a man toto my church knowing | rine Dafly, Ballynweargay, county Weetuneash, ambition In breaking away and in putting her lato would you toil. if you did not get acent for it? | no statistical record, but I have a atrong Impression from | elf in an amvaganian to thonationd eovermment. Hor | im to bo asinner, If Tdidn't take them in while they | Mae 25 your dience was tm astate of high wroight excitement. At a Hor friends and r We attend quarter past eight Mr, echer made his appearance, Would “ e atte: 7 8 yal hi enough th a f Jd you work if your farnily were not to be bettered | reports made to me that in another year it will bo fond | festa agoninin 10 the national government | Hor | woro still sinners I wouldn't have enongh in th 4 : ; Senet oheamte Gemnsd wahatenin Fovei’ MY | py itt ‘Would you work if ther» was no possibility of | that more than a fonrth part of thisactive laboring force | wit i Thole pollard ieee thon Daren thee | 1, say ‘wo. (Langhter.) I take the ais funeral,.cu Shereisy ® soy ot hl alga ip sieutioovinioag Makai dial gf 2 lifting yourselves in the civil status of the community | of the late slaves has been destroyed. slavery, Edo not doubt it, was the bost foundation on | form him. If they do not went forgiv aun = tei @amaae a Yanen, sgel Mr. Runcemr said—Before 1 commence to address you | OT leaving your children better than you found them? YPRID LABOR. which to bu and they meant to build up a | Patlence I don’t know what nood they would havo wena. —On ny nia Pern ¢his ovening Task your Indulgence while T make a cor, | When a lad, thongh not cruel, T was sometimes heed- | It is diminishing tp another way—very honorably—in | power in the ‘ae the world had never seen, | (0F # church at all, IT would lot them walk on their chives and Teese ot’ the ton sin: ial aes Teetion of @ stalement which was mato hore last Toss, | 1¢88and thoughtless, I recullect on one occasion tohave | a way that always marks th» advance of Iiberty; in | Paev besun bs teeing latornethe Noch pe nee et | own legs—throw away the orutehes and ordinances | Sane Rbedaa Caplan tuainia padicn, trees wee take cay overt as atneene nt ce mas made here ast Tues | taken an innocent fly and pulled off one wing, withdrawing from the field ehfldren and women. Cam | they began by bullding vp with doapiecd workmen ag | CC® church, The South wank kindnes, wordy of rating yon dae geringt a. Mane appaledyye: | suaded tatbor it must have been misreported, of, it cor. | Wie one lor, another log, another, another, not one who thinks labor in the fel by a woman a gross | the North did with honcat, mteliizent workmon: they | @iousness und truth, They need no patroniz, | residence, 916 Broadway, tie (Wednewlay) aiveruoun, rectly reported, the arrauive must have been given to | 424 Another, and 1 laid him down on'tho table and won- | hardship or a degradation; but when among four mil- | tus their country of clay und the North, lnete of Ina, | A bat they nocd Saeeens!) Serer Od tc te ce Meee Wereiby sb Reinien., Meageal . Hero are these black men; we | finns of men and women I see a atrong tendency to draw | and God took the two bali in hie hand, amoto them | tat with them, will ‘arther being Weha Me ond’. i. Main, aged 1 year, b neath the distinguished speaker (Mr. Vhillips) by one who de- | them a better mind any denunciation 4 their legs, and then say, “The | back the mother, and wife, and sister from servile labor | ta vor in the war, and the South fell to dost and asl ceived biti, At any rate, the statement is at variance b ms ' shay od . Hd Besides nt * with the truth, "T should not make this correction on | HY Dlexer won't work.” (Jauzhter ) But experienc» | tn the fleld, T think it moker a finer senee of the family | while the North is solid and unfeactured yot. (Lad ap: Se ae Cae eee oc ieka, Lansee ita latives and frieruie of the family, and aiso the my own account; but Governor Parsons, of Alabaina, is | Work “for wages. It ia tive concurrentitestimony of im. | Gone And, akhouste ae OF {the elements of civitiza- | plause.) honitation Lsmate him, Tthank God tho work in done, | mambers of Company G, Fifth rogimout, NG KN. Y. concepned with me init, “And, therefore, if such a state- mg . And, although there may bo loes cotton, T nin KRAURRNCTION, The constitution stands now as the summor #ky stands are reapectfally snvited to aitend the funeral, from t rial men in the south that for wagos they are working | very glad of It. Twonld. like to goo at overy step that coms od, and hav’ , Eetles Wad! Dalian thay wacked’ antes tee neb Lealt | lenor ce growing rearce by bringing back women and chil. | thn Moca reamnces have peaaey ne aries Re rears advancing and advancing; and though no daistes blow | F Of is parviita, corner of Pity trot ewok anf the attention of those who are disposed to be despondent | dren from the cotton feld. no onger ambition for that empire in the future in which | 20% nor aun warms, do we not know that every ads auc Broadw this (Wednesday) afternaon, at o'elne ss to this extraordinary fact, that since the last Chrisimas MORE COTTON. they should ran with eottoe piaphales King. That ia all | (9K Month brings us nearer to the summor and to the Hevan On M repel ety ry 19, Lewy Haven, ag holidays tho total industrial aystem of the South has | There ts another element. There ix going tobe mors | gone, and they are where Bolshazzar wan when he had | Petloet day of liberty? (Applauss.) 7 zears, § moothe ond 90 608 ae reope ‘tie practt-ally and really undergone a revolution, now tha ppted than ever before in the South, not | feathers on hia body aed prom in tin mouth Each a - — Ne relatives a Of the family are respec the whole. ableDadied force of the laboring men of the Account of the operation of the abolition of | will deveinp the prosperity of the South. moving upon eens ae, HOTT Chacon, are Sonth are transformed from enforced laborers into paid | slavery, but from the abolition of plantations. Ex 10, this (Wednosday) afternoon, a ment, made in my own home, y own people, uncontradicted, it would, I think, seem as though silence gave consent.’ Iwill read the report and then make the statemen::— The other day Henry Ward Beecher and bis friend ‘Governor Paine ti Alabama, camo to Faneuil Hall, Boston, and brought the most insolent message that ever © Accident.—Immense | inyiied wounded were not, but should came to this Hall. Governor Parsons said to the Loyal - Pt- | the new basis, and each day will make it plainer and o'ehoe League Club substantially: We do not believe in hadenes peers) and are working to-day for wares. 6 | ing where the planter owns the laborer he cannot rn | plainer to them that national'ty ia necessary for their ATES ACCIDENT INSURANCK COMPANY ec OE On Monday Fobroary 19, chusette, You believe in free schools; we do not. You | impossible thing—this mountain of diflculty—has all | those gigantic plantations that were formerly run; but | prosperity. Old aapirations must die. ‘The war passions OF BYRACUSE, NBW YOK, a bref tines, Sonam A. Hal of Jolin W. rr believe in free labor; we do not.’ You believe in been moved out of the way, 60 quietly that we scarcely | there are now goine to be many emall farms, and inany | must cease. It is a new South we are talkin: ut, It] Who havea cash capital of u d'87 yearn and bb days. mechaa‘cs being equal'before the inw; wo do not. Wo | think what has taken place, as silently as the nig! t +i-ps | sinall farms will raiso more cotton than a fow big farnas. | has anew political economy, Tr was m new { God TWO MUNDEED THOUBAND DOLLARS, ® relatives and fr enda of tho family are respocttufiy "want to pnt the heel on Massachusetts jams. We say it rr the iy and men ee fugpien ant feel Boe; = EMANCIPATION NOT A PATLURR. has said by the side of the repulchre, “South, come ALFRED A. HOWLETT, President, invited (o attond the funoral, this (Weduesday) after ia all bosh. We have in reconstructed Alabama a dif- | (ese men have come out from, the state of unpaid wnd Because the planters don't make n great deal of | forth!"’ and the South has come, though bound hand and |G. P. COMSTOCK, Vice President. At half past one o'clock, frota her late readeuce, No. ferent plan, and I shall be obliged to you af you let the | UAWwiliing laborers jato the condition o€ paid laborers for | money, bad for the State, bad for the community, gow | foot, Methinks I hear the Saviour say, “Loose her aud | Tf, ANDIREWA Seerqary pHa mynd . ferent plan, and I shail be obliged to you af you let (he | wages, and are doing their duty faitbfuily. for a sinall clase. Slavery and cotton made n few men | toc ber go! ¥ W. AHI GATES, General Agente “tus Mentads, Webbeiiey. 10, Mane i, wite plete the Mr. Beecher also made a speech on OF PROPERTY. enormously rich, beyond all estimate In the South; bat PrRKDY RImTORATION Ofice T3 Broadway, In the Union trust Compan hae ts Rebate offber age’ that oocasion and preferred the same request. Then | , 1 AMirm as. part of this bill of Liberty that thoy are to | {t made sevoral porsons lower In civilization, in religion, | Om the other hand, look for one moment at the effeota | hu thetstof May heat, whou they wilt ocupy ther 0 {he funotal rorvices will take plane on Thurwday afer. Sonator Sumner go’ upon his feet. “Governor Parsons," | bave rights of property; just the samo right to earn it | in politient economy and in actual morey; but uow, on | of aprolonged exclusion uf the Sourtoru States. eis | Nose one oF ALBt Ann's church, Eightoontt seid “when @ man asked bread from Massachusetts vin neta toll just the same manner of ow: it that | the overthrow of slavery, these few growers of cotton, | wean ny the citizens of those States more and more from A. Aavic Fifth avenue, Her friends and nequ nt, ances, ale tho mombert uf City Lodge, 161, 1. 0. of cee M Haye, aon ¥ aod A M, are ee. ital be given freely; but when you ask @ loan of ua the sume power of conveying it that you | who before were musing 200 cr 200 balgg, would raino 500. | the national government, For five years they have not | looking tere bg expended to complete a task, the man who ry have; Just same powor to bequeath tt that you have. | Thoro ix # large class 10 the com: it he hm - of ¢ c ¢ ‘They are to be raised up into ali the rights and immu- | tng use of black iabor. The mers oy wilt oe io afollyane ye mie = alge peg of rnd siren The ong par of Ihcota or i ty for ladies, goutaand | ¥ | apd the friends af her brother, tren. The largest assortment in the ety, Cheep. 578 | ui) inembers of Alias Lodge, 3h © not felt any blood to the money for au experiment wishes that ty felt the teed of it. They bi experiment success. We Bein wish success to | Bities of property as they ex'st arcordiag to the lnw of | workin in the fold with the black inn as Twas brovght | running through them F anypes * from tho nhtional | roadway, oppomte Metropotiian Hotel BROOKE apectfully Invited to attend ‘Alabama, You ask us to loan you a million anda baif | the land In tl nat deapicah's | heart, It tk proposed to make them live five years more ake = :A, BROOKS, Agen. Lavinoxton. In thts city, on Tuceday, February 9, a Jes ee 2 a land. ee up in tee field with the black man. It Cosas ey aro to have ele civil rights— mi- | for x white froe horn boy to work with ablack boy. The | ont of the Union. Is that the way to make them love 1 nal law—not a code for biacks and a code for whites, | time is coming when with cotton raising black labor witl | (i? Is that the way (0 make then foot their need of the mM. eee ‘This country despises class legisintion, Class legisia- | go up, und persons who had been giving $12 aro now | government? ra bs phat of dollars to send to Alabama. We would, before we gave it, wish to know it would come back.’ “Well,” Legal Lottertes.— | oh. ci uerom, late Captain New York Volum tod’ friends ere tuvited to aitend te father, ald bey want the ro to volo— ATH, Broker, 176 Bronds une "i nme of the agra does ot veel ln Windipshunotie. tion, unjust always and odious ow hero, is vst an un. | giving $20, and some will probably give $25.” very curren: wrrnour rietore — ee nt: | Oa a Yen Wyek sing Wing, on Fheretay, When I was in Washington, Mr. Stanton requested | Jest, and should just as odious in tho South as in the | year cotton wilt go op. It ta too precions not to In the earlier stages of the war for Italien indepen A Boon.—Ward's * Paper Collars | wwoive o'clock . me to make the acquaintunce of Governor Par- orth ; one crime whether committed by black or white, raised, Next year men will make as much money in | dence (1 may be somewhat mistaken in my fact, but ino Gents’, wh A wholesale Maree At Newburg, No ¥, om Tuesday mornt Murder is as mordorous at a white man's bands as ata | raveing cotton ax in dirging for oil or gold. It im oxtra- | this is aa I remembor it) many of the bishopa of the black man’s bands. Theft is no more thoit if aman | ord nary to see what a civilizing influence ia olfectod by | charches aided with the Teal m4 pation, and were de- carries midnight on his faco than if he carried the morn. | the pocket. A man te sometimes #o lnc’ that '6 | posed by the Pope. Their places were not filled by the ing on his brow. | And as with regard to tho criminal | snaps at every one who goca in his storo; but when the | Pope, boeavas the now bishop mnt take the oath of al- Jaw, there is to bo on» court of adjudication, and equal | cnstomers begin to pour in the won rises in his face, | leg ance to the State, and they either co ld not or would rights in that court for all, upon the ground that to man. | For every porron that comes in, for every child, he has | not; aud the Pope’ punished the churches by loaving hood belongs the law and that court are for its protec. | a pleasant good morning, and acka, “What is (t thot | (ham without a head. The churehes were at first ox om; and they are to have the right of appearing, of | I can do for yout’? When a man's interont is excited | ceédinaly alarmed; but they lived a year, their priests wading and being impleaded, of bearing witness he can be complaisant to his enamies. There ts nothing | performed their fun tions, children wir» horn and bap Vobruary 20, ALavaxon Sommer, fom of Albert and Kil both Mapes, tn hia Zit year. Funoral at Nowburg oa Thursday morning, at half pa ten o'clock. ‘ “ 100m Tuesday, Rebrumry 20 Moewim Bera, fons, as tho most sensible .man who hed been aent from the South. I made his acquaintance, and found him to ba as described. After some weeks I received both a telegram and a letter as had also some score or more here in New York—men active in public of voces nn, uesting us to meet and confer with Governor 8 touching the state of things in hoe WILCOX & 1 Lottery Prizes nad Information sent J BR CRAYTON, 10 Wall siveet, NOY. hter of Teraet P abd Artnenia Jane Morseroaa, 4% months and 17 of the fan ly are respectfully ing witnessed against, just as any other free man in | that man will not do if you only towh him right. When | tized, young maidens wero marrted, the people were in. es the community has. labor in the South ts [properly developed, when the | structed Sabbath after Sabbath, they confeased and were + Merrsoh wich avense The remains will betaken ty Maton Lalaa@ states are properly resuscitated, and when’ the blacks girived, and by and by it boon to oecur to these | ™ Vourth street. for joterment + ‘Then, depend on good treatment, they will begin to have some urchin, We cor slong very well without » bishop; Se een Pee omer vs ‘ ‘Mownit. On Monday, 19, Cann, youngest do ts the use of one anyhow? od arg Dyeing / i pense of justice. I do not say ttmt'in ridicule, We art And it beesme nocet | Burning of Bleecker Wicccs deni Watson | Gammie of spell ti to grant those rights of Inbor 07 Promoting the on gary to repair tho mistake of policy and reinstate bahops The relatives and friends of the family are respectfaliy Verry are two doctrines J of the Southern States, beg | #8 soon as possible, before the churches should learn to | BOUKS, TAVERS AND MON . * ‘ | # ot NG0 Soamacrod' Gy SoEwArs” Thee We tee old tae: | Youve to eull yeerambcsién 4s these tooneeee to cane | the along without them, RING'S PATENT CHAMPION Sar ot tnt pansnare og ale gp aan ig Yio ae ingrematlen doctrine whittled down small. Ittsanessen. | 4 it seems to me, we have not given sufficient VIL RFPRCTR OF PROLONGED HXCLOBIOY, New Youn, Vob. 6, 1806. read . tial element in monarchy yet. Thore is but one other | emphasis our calculationa, In attempting to Let va not tmitate this mivtake. Let ua not upon any | Mesere. Henna & Co, No 251 Broadway: — Un Toceday, Vebruary 20, Wussse ground—that ia, that su belongs to manhood, and 0 Diack man prosperous in the h | consideration Leach those Staten that they can get along | pian nt tas ela’ cath aque tat One Bt ZONE Pate eT ae year — isting that every man that is born ia bora to suffrace, and not | Will you punish the whiteinen for the ovila they brought | without reprosentation in Congrom, and without close | Pig.talns Wu the oudlrs The fefp wes ia cor of ‘The relatives and friends of the family are respectfully hing, it to suffering alone. I claim # for the black man sim. | On themac!ves, and for their own woes, and aay let thom | alliance with the national bheart ay represented hO | to the second story of the ki rm brick we tha Fourteenth " wd the - Thurets pty becaree he ls. mao, Gree thes avtecs only Lciaim | get out of them as best they can? We are apt to say | national government, In not a free circulation of healthy | street, and exposed (n great body of fame from the large | revit, allem) (he fapera). om Thareler « it for every man; not as a boon given to him, mark you, | Wat no man can be prosperous except in the general | blood better or a diseased limb than to leave that tink | amount of bay and other Combustible material contained in (, betwoon Fifth and Miath ree = The but as an inherent right; because we have taken the | Prosperity of society itself, We want order, forgivences | wo ite own morbid coudition? In it not better to roingtato | 8s burning stabi 0 eouwood Cemetery Cut tntormctt he and grant . | doctrine that every man bas « natural rght to liberty. | of old projadices and renewed good natnre in the South, | die Southern States, and havea current of polities from we one Ee pened tt. The books, ere: Sin. tad Maandl patel ta ania’ tans the sehaek sewed Now, in our ace, in our country and undee our institu. | for they will tmprevo its condition, and de much for tho | the North and Weat flow round and rovnd the ciecio? It | Pal Tctin oleae Gt inners Y norte PANO KULARE, are. traps 4 Fulton Verry Kalirosd | gtrond the funeral, from the rexidence ha Pou ’ Compan, ne; the Fouth te ours; and I claim the richt and Me ERRING'A PATENT ONAMPION APES, © Wooster street, Usia (Wedneaday he and yauneren we = of Alabama er colleges and common means to keep them going. When Ala. ‘ama shall complied with every requirement of the gat when she shall have been readmitted into Union, I ask, since her debt is unly three and a half mill‘ons of deltars, that we negotiate in Breeton and Ne a mitijon and a half to enable Alabama to open black and white popaladion-- ess una Eleave 160 you, ‘thie a fait statement that req ow this a fair statement that has boen made of that west and of that state- moot? The response in 5 York was in the tions, it is impossible for a man to bave liberty uni as ho | benefit of the black man. Whatever we can do to re ty better for them, and therefore it ta better forthe whole hag all that ts indispensable to liberty, by which it is so- | babilitate the Southern States we ought to do; for it will | sation, Tam for union. Lam forthe nation, The South President of the Bleecker street cured and operated. Ii a tuan eave 1 havea right to my | redovnd not alone to the bempfit of the whites, but in a ear, then I have» right to the puleations of the atmos. pay “we to that of the blacks alxo. We must not that this administration will not for tho | cue MOST RELIANLE PROTECTION YROM FIRE | o'clock phere, without which the ear is nothing. Ii I havea | forgot th» magnitude of this emancipation, undertaken it of the whole. Wo are paralyzing the Cinton 0 WOW, KNOWN r MoAtmae —On Tuseday morning, Vetruary 2, Karma. natural right to my oye, then Ihave a natural right to | for bettering the condition of the black man. Woe must | mon of the South, and putting the whole power of the HERING & 00 '8 tuna Aux, wifo of Patrice J. MaAlear that without which my ‘eye would be of no recoat, A | Dot for a moment think that this work has failed be. | South into the bands of malcontents The men. th NEW PATENT BANKEWA KARE, The relatives and feende are recpertfully invited to nat«iral right owns its inetraments; and when you say a | Cause itis slow, We must pot think that It has been a | hike us leart have mort intinence there, where there ia a | (With Herring & Flovd’s Patent Crystallized Leon, or Frank nd the funeral, from her late residen rand man has a right to hia Hberty, under our government, in | failure because it has been attended wth loeb cause | growing discontent at an exclusion which th y cannot 4) htireet, ob Thomday morning, at hall past Our nation and in this age of the world, he has with that | ft has beon accompanied with reat eufferme Kmanc'. | wndersiand, and the reasons for which they eanuot im. | THR ONLY HAPR MADK Wiklol Witt. KYER( The remains will be takes’ to Gk & batural r ght, and asa part of it, aright to all thos: m. | pation has not been @ failure because muliitudes of | agine, aud’ they are Inclined to listen to the men that : ¥ from tence to Calvacy Cemetery for airumonts that are indispensable to the acquiring and | men died. No; we should not think any such thing. | teach’ them the bitterest thoughts and the bitterest No. 21 Broad «In Hrookiyo, o9 Monday, February Wp, executing of it. Now, tf there b> one thing that stands | If we get thes» men ont of Fgypt into Palestine—ooly | things, whoreax Union men are without influence &., Je., eldest sun of James A. and Klien Nichola, i fi i affirmative. You shall have your million and lainer another, it seems to mo that it is that a | one-fourth of them-——we will show a moral problem | powerless, and will be so aa long ax you keep them o YARREL HERKING & n te Bde cof Win age a hall in any aingle day that you present yourself as you | man has a right twa yooe in the polices, inthe iars, tn | salvee, after four thousand yearn, that in thet early | bt tne Gmlons these thas’ base tho Union tad te HERKING & OF ene orig te + deseribe—a reconstructed Sinte, wishing to op n your | the legislation that is to determine his character, ‘bia | period of the world thy did not drear of. For mysolf | the North will be the mon mowt tn powor Ratoher Matr Dye—The aitend the funeral, tia (Wednesday 0, wh tour common schools for whites and blacks Two gentlemen | place, his family, bis condition, ix reputation and his | If you show the binek man, broken down hore aud there, kvrEO 8 OF ADME SMe Gea Gun Inve eaiiieaines, sidiete | hetoth, from bis tate reedence, 830 4 Areet, neaw alone came ferward prossed their readiness to | property. It is monstrous to «ay thata man ‘4 free when | 1 Mhall not 0 propar d on that account te may that evan The Utmost evil in admitting them thas can reenlt witt oey Oh dandiag ctseet hat | Moyt, Without furpiee notion place the whale million and # halt required for such pur- | everyth ng that is dearest to bm may be legislated and | oipation isa failure. If one half of the black race in ten | Le (hat we shall be obliged to takea longer time to do a onl 1. 1, om Montay, February 18, poses as that stated by Governor Parauns. 1 make this | managed by others, le having no voice and no iniinence | Years hence stand frm and strong on the broad platform | rome things, which now we mean to do by legislation Criatadoro’« Onsen Onan wom oh ve babe On ye Atatement now because I think it is due to Governor | init 1am, therefore, not only for impartial euffra of liberty, and bey n at that to recuperate, I shall | Many Of the things which we seek 10 accomplish by b and Wig ¢ t bi year of bis age Tarsons to do 9. ‘an wie Uthat Is bettor than nothing, but itis not the true ground— = Ao price a ® for Nberty has been bi «ball Wy ged to aecompliah by moral means. The Ayo app’ The funeral service wilt te held at # chor, viCTo i ppla cheay is an easy thin to o b vat pave seen 4 annie doo ry “ Mtaw ad n, @ ay aflerues PL iJ sacuitna SAG ee bas been {fred 39 the whole a © as hee itd whee a wee poople (i oie tes eeeigen mn, Snpidetion, omen “Mage i os dren Often Look Fi and Sick ee ere ome ee ithern “tater in war, 80 completely has rebellion be n « lo ond: out of bondage into the blewimes of lborty ye aus Although there in « — reene® ©, » Mew ebraary 19, after a sew dearoyed. Ib ie the _murvel aber tore, and Pe yal opty cei bora ee, Biy MAy expect pring and suffering. It i# beiter that one on which I would be far from | (em secther cause thee having Wormetm the Moemach, | | Fevem we Monday. Yveresey 0. oe pe teh Que own fears most & long con- | Mhon't you consider ita great evi!” 1 consider it an half of the people be assured of Mberty forevermore for | ms of whoierome legisiation, till | BROWNS “VERMIFUGE COMPTTA” will destroy worme ‘The frieuds of the family are resperttally tavited te inued war, but since last y there has been no evil, but Teas than having them vote ‘An to the meatier | ‘hemeciven and their postority—are, better than that | would balance that by the other consideration, that it uneral, (rom bia late feedence, 147 Washing conflict im that way, and were it not for of evils, if a wen would not do anything that has no evit | [oF 000 fourth the tino the same number ttved grovel | may take too lon time, and we may too | without injury to the ebild, «(We the Ddlacks. « have things changed within | Oh. with ft, what busi Kes he ta this woriay fling ta bondage. I give my expericnce ax it relates to | mach upon legiviation. 1 rely upon rans eS wed weet the year, Crore could be scarcoly the shadow of a Trarpront cvittia toto tere After tet ih te een, | the tiacks. Pray say Tamatvien my own opinion. {| c™mscience, Churcher are ‘my songrems an re are eee ee Hintw J. and Frances BH reawon why aff tbe lately seceded States should not be choice: among them. To have hundreds of thousands of have lived in Brooklyn cighteen of nineteen years, ani | shoolhouses are my leg neglect of the trouble often canane prolonged sickness meatha ropresentext in Congress to-day. There is no jast Fas00 | thon in wc ety, but not stockholders In society, not vital | Am talking to my own townemoen, as the repre. | reciprocal, or identic The relatives ant frients of (he family are rexpentfulty why, in so far as the whole people of the South are con- | With its thrubs, tue ambitions and lis tnleresen chat a, | sentative of any section or the representative of nny | vathy influonces; and York, Wile from + Thotnas’ et and their relations aud feelings to the govern- worse than to have in soci-ty #0 many men ‘ne Saw ty. Ido not #peak as a con laws, wh chy at best are bot ANDHA RAV R® wu hey Should not be included in their repropenta- recruits to be tained and drilled to their duty, We wit an one citizen before fel citizens, to ¢! my me external power, What is a windmill without wind, Fear Mt wren Trenty reo tion in Congresa, It wm and right, also, that these | Go" yous and heslthy, and wo have ao extmsintiog wa for your consideration, and for which no one late | of a water mill Without a stream of watt? Why pate WE.ORS F 0 whould be e! iy cuaranteed in their liber. "Alt a th bn.0 great ineonvent to adh mee ponsible but myself, [ have rey atedly spoken upon | tll) apon tly op with & water wheel, or ina valley if ay morning, Vebruary 20 wuttealy, & ee “gd enewomage this ques- to vee: m4 rn veal better = nea St mantis oe —— fe it relates to Une binck. Let me now con | 1 no = aaailt What are laws without Peemure tn says | of Chartes 1h Me ceed yearn people 1 nyster represen. . good jer the tomat? They ars water mills wit | the wate CANDO nts Of Ube faully are tow fatlon, Cor theaa ia the halls of Conaress. (Appiuuse.) | Dagtn to vote alter coming ore, they ole wild for a rear | <QURSTION OF THE TATEN AND conDITION OF rae sont, — | without wit, "We mus fall bark | of ether eshare | tke fonesot, fips her lose F- abould be dove forthe sake of army 4 ‘and be. Misjas the bomag 6 Wate hb 6 per Thold the seeded States that they be reinetat may take a little more time, but we s Vast Vilieenth erect, on Thursday mut cause, Of this—that Providence bas pat the future ing when @ man bagina to aquint across bis vote; and | "28 an possible, and as soon aa may be consiatent © more thorougidy, aud I believe fen o'chek seosn yeni or the South and of the North upon thi« after five or ten years be ix f right, Tho wildest | (2 Public interesta, True, nome delay is necesary ben, throughout the South, they will show an entnast Ouase, Feb. |, 1a. New Haven (Conoeetoat) papem please copy Tt te just, on both Co ascge | that we #houid Irishman thet over swing @ shillc'an, when he comes But this delay, thoagh nec wary, t# an 1 notwith liberty and schools and churches and colleges Depot for the anit of thin eelebratet Fire Proof tale te Yommare Oo Mootey, Fobrasry iv, Mre Mt @ 00 & Betisement of the condition of the black man— here, will be educated in twenty years so that he wjil sanding—a necessary evil it may be, bat yet an evil have never een even io the North, when | pemored from No. 10 Maiden line, to No § Cortian Vomenta, daughter of the late Abram Morm, send OF ‘that be shoaid have this liberty—for that wheh works vote as Well as you do. Therefore, although it may be a Quick nem and promptness are the things to be regarded, ry mon shal! it under his own vine and fig tree, | New York years fot the lowest class in the community works for ev great inconvenience to teach them, roe that at for. | 804 delay & thing to be depre-ated. It might not be | biessed and blessing ” The reletives and friends are reepectfully invited to fama. If you exowre justin for the middie classes it | Sie should vole. I am for universal eufirege. Tight to doit to day; it might not be best to do it to- | i & DANGEROUS TO PLACR TOO MUCH Frown fy THe CeNrRAL Grover & B ‘* Fivet Premium Klee | ices that J. (rom hee late teidenee, Na 160 Kat ‘Must not be but you it all clases, woums fo vom Morrow; it might not be beat to do it this wiek or the GOV REARS. tle Rtlteh and Leck Butch Kewlng Machines @85 Broadway | y fourth #lreet, (his (Wednesday) oferta nn, a too SEBRICAN LIRRRIY DK FINED, “Then you will have to co a step further, and admit | @*X!: bat the novemity of delay ia ax much an evil not We must do all we can to introduce loreal government. Macht € x Pty Hy a PP Reha eers ay incl: | women to vote.” Even so; I would, (Applause) It is | Withatandin jag bg tt ened epg then regal nuberout to place tas inash peer te Ge sey Guilin Mowe tr, Friscon, tip teseswey ngete resid, | fawren.—Ad ter tate Gustendl $60 Sigheh stoves ~ ‘ - a ae the fever be subdued, but it may ‘ernment. It t# © most extraordinary epectacts | moe ~ > a ~ * ag ‘ ‘ my settled opinion—convietion for “opinion” t« not ? o . f= . . February 14, Many Bums, daughior of Williaa A gam A ae (apbiatae) "When there, | Mfong enotigh—that women are not in the way of duty | Rothe naht to break it down at once, but trun; | of the times to see Congrons eathered from the poopy Immense Prices Patd for Old Hooks.— oy A hamper, aged years & excthe ond ® fore, we demand that there aliall bo a Liberty and a citi. | When they do not give consideration to the duty that mivand pa Kop] forme hehe aoa patting it mn i “Leon the Pretest, Ce Be os eee eqn f~ 4 : a ‘ joke be " 11D Naseee wtreet, behew nn for the least and the lowest, it is in effect Soa ia Be peavidence ws waiting vo pes upon them; whee | held it would be betior thas the Bistes should be | aed thereby clotuing him with a power greatet = : osama Oe Cee Eee in ey Got for the totiom but for the hols of siciety, which lees & ie aan ot pte Gonna io ge kun | Brought into the Union to morrow, every one of them. | than any monarch ever wielded, and the Tread-at | Mujaviro te Most Delicious and aa to eaten ee Nene, Rarer samecey) re Foy ay aust) AL | St AH Ao let mg gar Yt ‘And im thie regard allow me to vay {hat t raunot wo with | vetoing Wf and returning it, saying T cannot give | sting of 3 ve. The oder te ithe» bosinet eomponed | 9% Natl ae then, y thon el the President or Congress. 1 would bring all (nat | my new to it, Vetoing « bill that makes him so row vibe jasmine and heliittepe sat can te more | © > or’ — which our amended constitution has given to allthose wno | E&¥° them fo exercise Under just sauu waente once; they moan to keep them all out at ones La strong. What if we had @ President there them ike | fragrant? fur sale by all drvggivie « — © Pean tect‘ Winal wnt Kissa Moan gE Mberty le not tobe merely a name; Gumuie, Gel Gusads te bates the cet tenn | ray, wens it {a's part aad let the rest wait sunt | bleu, Sho sat there before oar martyred Lincoln, would ng Your Child's Heeoma pa a wt on x conten & matter of im p : * ~ | Bee bow they woald like it, T know they are etum ne have refused my much puwert What i we had that ROTM ING | f H ¥ re reapmre Id nee to it that we have got some. | And een eer ems on balleve that wicked po oe on this po'nt. If you let in Tennessean that prin iple | Prewident that was there before bim—I forget w iy yah ret p me dnd Penne ogee bay ome - pie rennin. | ite, & name. And when we look b rmed 7 | you will have to let in all the rest. T like tose a man | wae (Laughter) Do you suppose that yo aye aan, Gores wind catia, coftens the | n’'Ae W7 sttcad the funeral sev » | Wetauutagy ab iy we are not to take a foreign stand upon neipia oa They | bave a Preeident like Mr Johasoo? Bot lam mistakes tone ond energy to | 4 end pack the contents of their WOMEN IN OFFICR. would let in Tennessee Alabama, an a, and | inmy jodgment if there har, since the earliest aad beat | Noenpetead, 10 . im France irom what we do in| You will aay, “It allow women to vote yon must | when South Carolina came and asked why pot lotus in | days Of our presidency, teen a mam more hones, | aust 040 matte that liberty here shall be Ameri. | allow them to hold dMics."” If the men in any neighbor: | om the same principle aa Tennome and the others, they | moro single tnnded foe liberty, whey without boxe | Loan lhte pemek contain rights of in, Fights of | hood want a woman to hold office, why not? If they | would answer, “Because we thonght they would be better | Of the feclimes or of the heart, without bia of any kind, - =— by, tajety, cm Reterteg eventing, Property, rights of civil life, rights of | can be better represented by a woman than by aman | in than out, and we thought you would bo Letter out | endeavored to do that which he th mht best for the an “ map af Oo at tye Moet sean ang ) soe no harm la i. If we must have old women in pub- | than in.” (Langhter.) On what principin do they do | terest of the conntry and the whole country. (Applause) ay feet praders, ont tenth tecmurieg | connty, . Yo nave of Leteaid, Hetinghamstie, ve Fr dows not | } on at " o or bots af emmattse - ugians, age 11 years ie tive T would rat ones than sham ones. | that? I will consider that afterwaria Thie does not | Not another man f should hold \t to bea bi 8 if, 0% 4 preservative BOMUDONT has superseded | Mugiam!, amd 3) Yeeim a. sas tnene of b (Great laughter and appiause ) foom to be statewmansbip. But, not to dwel! upon that, | on that account, I should pass without oriielm bia arte, he was ANENDANENTS TO THR COMMTITETION, let un consider how they argue th if bin power should be without review. It ls dangerous | din | tow Nenarain Mowiey, afm wmvibed by ethend he was | _ TWis, thon, is what [undersiand to be thie fall bilt of | we mest keep thea Mates wet tll, wes to have any ‘miomity thas te et eanenaabie | ctiea! Philanthropy. harmed caren, Por into the how by the proclamation of the people | from them. What do you mean by guarantoes? te the critic of ail his fellow moo; President Jobe the fallemreliel fur the ans HOWARH | pewter) sflerncen, ot teen o'ehel. Nelp_ tur NTRS WANTED PROM THE ROTH more than any other, because he ls in a ploee of the aim lattes TRACTS Pom vote ‘wet wet freect | Twenty @xih eeret aod Fourth eenue, vis Herien few w the United States throurh their late martyred Prom the amendment to bim, ow | the social and solemonly ratified in You are going to keep them out until yoo are certain lent importance to the well being of the country | in oraled letter euvelopes, AGArene Dr JA. Howgh | road, ot tee o'cke® AM, or Aste Hows, vin Third — pT oe 2 ft would webct to let them in, It is tapon nie lo give Fecrh le you hold the sovereign viel to criticise do - ue 4 d Manitary 414 Aewrtetion, Maliadeiphia, Me Avec ate Lee Raliread, lewis Cerna —4dod's | great events: y acertainty, What are the things that you want guaran et that you have an able stalesthan amd an heneet om So & SES, His | wilt naturally arise tp your minds, How toon shoot! Secession, rebetith, the Soncliinn of tho | and’ pare man ana patriot in : The Improved Bitipiic Sewing Ma- | nvssvas te Breative, om feterdey, Perret 11, for the first | rights be secur d? Fi freedmen. What! «guarantee of pecassion? We want a | (Great applause.) There should be great joauusy of acca | Nee & SEED, i eesteey. Agere oe | ofver s brat itinewe, Jame Renny 4 kw bevoved, “Thou art | Our most excellent | tpn ply South are wilting to give \t op How | mulating power st the cent: Wheeler & Witson's Lock Stiteh Sew! tong four millions | we should make long would you take before you would conetier that or PROWOLA TION OF OCTET LOFTTE Marnine aot Botton hole Martine °E Rrowiwny love thus to declare, for be- | immortal re iment as setted—five years? Would that core them! I should be sorry to eee more government agents in heart forever hovered the dark shadow | States, low the Booth is jut in the condition of aman ‘hat has | the land This ts the bert eroment ever devard by and everybody free to own the | It ia not me Into court with a contoted Utle. He loves at | man Tor wil government. "ees ast, honeees, mote MARRIAGES AND DEATHS. ‘The there weene on carth that is | should ia the owner of tbat estate, and the other parties be | to govern provinces oF outlying lerritarion The povern Grego ert, corner Coan ent Congres eyewe, where + 1e me whe | week. Neve they are the owners of it All vin life i# im that jarrted. qtiew mare will be oTeret ap for the epee of be weet, i; o ~ r jeaeration thore have | oF to Infuse medicinal q The aecide 1 against bien finally, 4 wiat doew George FV Meyers, td amine Vets, Ae Brooklyn, on Mortdy Vebranry 19 doe # by the side of their | ail you pool alma quire? Doon it require They suspended the writ of habeas corp: Mus Jive Deywwe, beth of Mroukiye om Af David K et Jane 4 Ver aged dpm uw ink that they inet there evory year. may, “Mr. Judge, Lam perfecuiy miuGed thet Id cd ve? wee toed wtupid work as they mate of Wormaternbire ant la ton payers please capy. | dave not mire; | United States ta Own this property.” Do you wire him te | lafayettg 2 & witnens against the adaptation —Raswrnaey (nm Tharsiag, Fourtmry 15, in | The reiativegmns (riendu@t thes fomily af - ’ father | let an have to opinent Ix more required of bim than ¢ the soWroment to do bungling depen © HH. Peai's Methatiet Epwcops: cwurch, by he Ber ©. | invited to aly’od ihn foncres “4 en | children's lifetime way? “‘T atvall, an 6 good Citizen, obey the lawn vere ont mule for that ho we ne Pom, Vassar A Kemet loon, deughing of the kee | f ‘ > say to | think will meet the acceptance, upon the statement, of | think Yt was night, but it a decided agsinet me andl | Pre agent thirty degreee in the catrmation of the © Jods . Dendatress, ail of (nee witty ”, ond none boy. wan shall obey?” fot that all thet you would requite | If be would call home ail bis Trewery agents, who are | — o fa | the Ugited Stat. Of Contestants ins court? And now ihe Sooth believed | BONG 8 FHA, Wot Mote awl more aliens ng tne Youth ied. (ap- | of it, Row thet im secomion, The works of Calhoun were taught in 7 (Ap ) Vets eebame 10 see oo many of thew cory | At Mott Maven, of Toratay evorming, Foe t - pianne. ya | ort gmat throwghout the Meath All thronrh ms | set A, wileot Avtem Ackerman, Fim, seed acne Leta alow W are «A loonma, soung erry Cree Wing jo Hiberty. if is ia to be ‘The > = Thee are hentins fier 4 (ttle atime Ge de oot want Vee Gud friends wre tayeoiully levi Waly +