The New York Herald Newspaper, November 19, 1866, Page 8

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te gE a z é | Fi g H E i ? \é ig : if a & H z tah ali He : il i it ; i i ef ‘ a Clergyman Saw ot are by Rev. Charles, B. South an@ North, boon of Bate to the Oatholto eat, The bell thas was to bu at the Cooper Insthute-Over Three Theu- 7 4 nlon, tit ther de- | investea eth the aud Coote igtinet | ek nents ta pecheres aia Wiiibe Retbee ound Persons Present—A Scathing Rebuke. the wiage, or to Tt, &e. cision ie 80 simply and mildly just that who do not | f Btates, and the United States it would invite them to the house of it would ‘Upwards of three thousand persons assembled yester- fates ‘of ‘which ia! ane enietins -ewmanngsteg 95 is see or the Tool it & be se eula, net bo ponents though one rose = ‘ef ia colored baba, wth the sanennan te thom the hear et te eae Hiner the “ 7 ritans, Union square, last evening, to Maten to Dr. | from dead, _ Probably colored race themselves United States citizensb' who was aftervoon at the Cooper Institute 19 Tisten to a } weil, The fire thing Id feel {te Justice if they were not killed by It those States if it may. The United ae in peay bomege to Gok. The sound acre veins Rev. Charles B. Smyth on Tie Nais: cet drs of the gis; the Ctigever, who had announced s sermon upon ons of his | “Tne wacom arerios AIMED AGaINst THB COLORED RACK, | fe not obliged to ask Evcland if It Say receive to Ualied Be the boll a ng favorite topics, The following is a reportof the address, The Cape in ite en ee Sot oe — Pacem tny nen} focanbi rain 8 oy ne ee Se ‘who did Saliaeer oe hich Listen: marked attenti template the disfranchisemen' erican citizens it it has to ask south Carolina may give the vote, ling their duty—that there was pee cycler at $6, Sah RN on. Taking J cause of the colarof thelr skin, and withoat crime, It | and it eannot. protect # colored citizen in his ‘right of: | church Salinne thee io peaver, If it rang the Angelus, auces of Now York, particularly the Naked Trath.” | geureto be discernible through tit in ao : Every available seat was occupied, and numerons chairs | the flesh colored ghia, imi nature so wel that the illusion 8 complete; with She exceedingly short drawers, aleo brought into requisition to accommodate one “ ‘his text from Deuteronomy xvii., 27th verse: “Cursed | j, carefully worded for that purpose. The committee of | representation, but as a beggar at the legislature | oh join in that beautiful prayer, the salutation to the sr ihe Targest audicnces ever assembled in the hall, while | uns HEB Hting, extending very Hite below the hip, | bo be thet removath his neighbor's landmark; and all | fiteen assured Congress tbat auch was the intent of the | of her Slate’ sovercignty. “When this “amendment | Biden Tisiae Venues, Braye esing, to. themselves o arg! ; apparently » Tt le shal! say, Amen!’? He said:—This just and | Second section, to overcome the rebel reluctance against | has become a law ‘che Will dictate to tho United | and to their children, and it would be another means of Jarge numbers Were compelled to leave, being unable to | and bodice so cut and fitted as to show off every inch a ‘A large proportion of the audi. | and outline of the body above the waist, The attitudes relinquishing their own supremacy of dominian over the | States governmon! the government to her. | exciting moro within them the spint of faith, and induc- ebiam standing room. ea s Tighteous law is illustrated by many passages. The re- | blacks. How, then, shall this disfranchisement be'ac- | For, by this amendment, the only way to actual United | ing them to practices of piety in thelr holy réligion. ence were ladies, many of Whom, it ia to be presumed, | ake “tnolr uadeioaente an Gancing so as {0 | petition of them shows in what manner we, asa nation, | complished? How shall it be proved that the chssea } Staton citizenship, representative citizenship (and there |’ At ‘the conclusion of thie brief aiecourye. the Arch- took this opportunity of learaing from an eyewitness the | figure beweath from the waist to the toe, except for such | government and people, are in danger of subj¢cting our- | SvoPt by the attsinder are spersone of color! Minen ® | je none af all, if not that, moncbe tat nt elite? Dosite the altar, jush ostsite the Tailings Of the sancta- pature «= obscene exhibition wking place nightly at | Fovering fe ne Reve described; stretching” tit | Selves to the operation of this curse, ‘Thon shaltnot be | and rights as a member of society, he is frst tried. By | and difficult as any State may choose, Aman canuot be | arv, He tae one te vasor aok froly. oll, and eno svadvay hoatee before going vo see Gr | fe drwvt from tbe, i, and daraing “tne fos | Paria im he lat, no ek nor pervert the covenot | no pwtiiy tla thom orn thow and ecasd |e reid ay man unos ft endoryed Sain | It for same Une a baring como antes the al pe Es a } zh. | oF indict sons or imprisoned ip on Teust come as an aristocrat, which wel y nds, It cost about $1, thewrdlven The lecture was prefaced by # prayer and | ‘has beld out towards the’ sudlence,; iometizpes in'ad- | of your ‘fathers, nor deal troachorously with thy neich- | Pi ci" Sy esumption of orime, without the trial of | rece, The color ie et memennane popular test; but by and’| was manufactured by Meneely, of West Troy; and bears the reading of the sixtieth chapter of Isaiah, after which } dition to the elevation, 0 e atage oat, manne on® | bor and thy strangers, But ye shall have one law for | each of them separately and singly. But a whole com- | by it may be the feet, that used to be advanced a8 | the following inscription: —“Ad majorem Dei et the lecturer read"sorn@ exivabts from letters which be | Smer rae ie Re aes as gone the stranger and the home born, for thy neighbor and | munity of innocent persons are to ae rived of the most a plea ip behalf of tho Socthern chivalry, for thate nerpote in. honorem St. Augiistiné, R, R. M. 8. Johanner seCiee, bad received, the majority of which commended bim for | the attitudes assumed by both in conjunction suggest to | thyself. And ye sball not respect persons in judg- en poe and yoy! ae eee and. | "They tong arte a teaveds tat exisincconcie cure: Peon eds becnstenea! ieee den grand the stand he had taken in matters ot social and moral | the imagination scenos which one may read of in de-|ment, but shall judge righteous judgment be- | taking thew existences heritage of caste, without | when once to constitntional amendment, enthroning | Iaudate on the organ, the Misses Major, amateurs, taking scriptions of the ancient heathen orgies. Even ii “ Y reformation, ‘The speaker bad the full sympathy of bis | OF the pantorotmic representations. the dress and ait, | #¥een every man, his brother and the stranger a prejodice. "What tee ie rad te inaridegiee of phere wr cheoiiinenn “Samay: Mat whe wove Sie} choad Mite te banediaticn of thet Bieaved Eucharist, - » | tra color? a ‘ whole 0 Aoarore, and one of two attempts to interrupt him were tudes are Andelteate and Woluptoous, Objectionable, | with him, Thou shalt Jove him as thyself.” | [70% Petia a State to deprive American citizens | loyal Population declaro that they never will admit tho | given by the Archbishop, who appeared in full pontif” quickly silenced, After a few ‘utroductory remarks, he | however, as at may be, there are portions of thé | Tho nature and operation of this law respecting land- | of the right of suffrage, of which treason itself cannot’| colored race to an equality of rights with the white race. | cals. ical performance which, to the least, are not proceeded t the main subject announced, and spoke a8 | tog ohjectionable, as, for example, the dialogue between follows: — the madam and her suitor, where he requests her to Whether, therefore, ye eat or drink, or whatsoever | Totire with him ton room which he shas provided. in marks may be further learned by the history of the | deprive the rebet without trial? By whom sball the | If you ask why, Governor Perry answors for South tribunal be appointed, and how constituted, before | Carolina because they are in a.majority’ And when the Jews, whose national perdition was the consequence of | Which United States eltizens must appear and be jadged | amendment has become a law, it a be bootless to SUNDAY ScHOOL_A ANNIVERSARY. its transgression. It was Jaw connected with the | and condemned to the condition of serfdom by the color | reply that it Is not a republican form of government ‘At the Thirteenth street Presbyterian charch last night 0 glory of God. 1 Cor., x, 31, the castle, and she, accompanying her answer with sly. f the skin? Every individual, so condemned uniegs the majority aro represented in it, Who cares Foe to a ne Booey ed text, I do. 2ob, fecnember, | si@SlO06. planoes, says, Dano I/rom. miypelt with vous | Jubilee, and: che lew of tiuerty th slip) Wabitsnte-of f Of Ne RS! TOE Te tae prone If erate. Ltn ae ally olan by deoroneedelead ie minority | the ninoteonth anniversary of the Sabbath soho! of that Se te. amanehs perverted 145 We women aro such weak, silly creatures! vod men are'| the land, and the law of security to every man and tribe | Condemned to axclusionfrom the basis of representation | ‘may constitutionally rale, and exclude the majority | church was celebrated. There was a fall congregation ip having ever either seen or heard it expounded truly or | such naughty, naughty creatures!” Then follows for the posseasions that ware theirs, b heritace accord- | on account of boing of Irish extraction, every tudividual | from any share in the government? Set that inequality | aiondance, ‘The church was crowded almost to excess. applied properly. ‘The connection in which these words & SCRE ing to God’s just ordinances. The Jews violated this { so challengod could put the State to the compulsion. of} of races in the constitution as part of the organic na- ¢ the th hoir signifeation, To the glary of Goa” | Which for indecency beggars description,.in which she | jaw, as recorded in the thirty-fourth of Jerémiah, verses | proving that he was an Irishman by evidence sufficient | tional law, and it never will be removed or remedied | After the opening voluntary, and Teading of the stand teaobes their sig To falle into his arms, he makes an pression, upon her | sixteonth and seventeenth, and the context. The land- | to convicta man.of.crime, No amount of brogue would | but by convulsion that will: read the frame | Scriptures and prayer ‘by the Rev. Dr, Burchard, the means in expressed thankfulness to God as the author of Po = vonges ll ie arm hs men, as on mark of the iphertiance of pened, St tend yeagry be somialent prot, But in opens & 9 setae hee gen both constitntion and fsa 2 Err It : Secretary read the annual report. From the report tha that for which wo thank him, in contradistinction from al tae ided. ‘Later inthe ine the same pair constitation had fallen to the servant ap the rules of idence the principleg the wedge of retributive ‘< = A eee ba follows Kyiicpela sa givens — masters was violated by the masters, and for the,crime | justice dre disregatded or trampled on, and | we set that ivjuatice of returning: into gubjection those whom God and the | a -rebel State can take ‘al mon by the | Pass this injustice and. on the heels of it the states wil! The Sunday rchool Missionary Society of the Thirteenth people had set at liberty. according to the divine coven- | throat, who are as white as the wh! rebels, and thrust } pass others pleading this very precedent. To keep | gtreet Presbyterian church support two Sunday schooi ant with their fathors, God swept the whole nation into | them forth as-serfs by the mere assertion that they are | down unrepresented citizens it will be pleaded that se- fan ido}, Thie text contains a great principle, which les | appear again upon the stage, still unmarried, enacting at the foundation of religion—the recognition .of the | another vulgar scene, Towarda the end tl appear od, ond the continual ¢ffort to keoyre praise | “ain, the performance having @o far left a widence lage be- issionaries; ono in the Mississippi valley and one in pareisance st tween thom, to be inferred, if you please, yet they dis- persons. It the right to disfranchise on scoount eonssary ahd'then if there-|' frase sonregs, one to him ineverything. This distinguishes true religion | coarse to each other with @ familiarity and coarseness Nile FROPOSKD IN THE AMENDMENT, © oe iaaiven by nt ce tae oduionien: is tang Sees im consequence, the sys- Cpe oer Palen las both from atheism on the one hand ang from idolayry on | that would be unbecoming to a married poate “Then, ‘This is the very iniquity proposed in’the constitutional | the right of the most despotic injustice’ under pretence } tem of serfdom will be strengthened with all the former zed iu the West, gratuitously, during the year, $460. the other.’ A neglect to honor anything as God is athe- | '® ® dialogue “about snoring, bedclothes, self-defence, | amendment, We propose to obliterate, by means of the | of a republican form of government, Even if the right of slavery iteelf, and nny excesses on the part of Ry total amount raised and expended duriny nightmare, separate apartments, sleeping alone in future, tom; an bouoring or securing honor to anything but | qn imndareecs hee tee NS ene lone in future, God is idolatry; but worshipping God himself by every- pg areas in Ln him ary yg og d - e polite ears of my audience utterly me thing ts true religion. It is moet remarkable in its ap. aaots the agent Detse entenibre is double distilled plication, admitting, a8 it does, of equality of virtue in | iniquity of the most subtile nature—such that it ought opposites and. contradictories, as for example in Rom, tone shumned os o0e would shun athe hoe at dalisate ot. m _ 7 ; y poison. Any person who @ thin; xiv. 6, Comp, 2-28, Col. i, 16. Much, therefore, as a | eyo Detohend the matter by recalling the rerssinde oriain poet may be condemned by some persons for | of the sentence, commencing, ‘You are an underlayer the year color of the skin, the landmark and guarantee of our | of suffrage could constitutionully be taken away from | the injured race will bo flaunted as a proof that they | was about, 1,400. ‘The special or detailed report from neighbor's inheritance, which our fathers get with our | American citizens without crime, the distranchisement | cannot be governed by kindness; that it would have | Fast Tennessee had been made. From the Misslasippi own in the constitution. That constitution, which was | by the aliogation of color, which i susceptible of no} been better for them if their slave-chains bad never | valloy, Mr. Corey had reported 207 schools organized, framed by and for whites and blacks together, without | standard, would be of itself anti-republican, unjust, | been broken, and that they ean be kepgin check only in | contalhing 1,638 teachers and 10,802 scholars. This bad respect to color or to the white race propose | cruel and infamous to such a degree that it ought tobe | and by a system of re om, subjugation and igno- | been effect by Mr. Corey's individual efforts. In the to.amend for tbe exclusion of the black race from the | prohibited by as severe penalties as slavery itself. The | rance, as near that of the old slave system ae law and | ontire fleld over which Mr. Corey had supervision, em- common heritage of representation, which is the Iaw of | authorization of slavery by the constitution would not} cruel custom can make it, We shall then bave | ploying twenty-seven other missionaries, 2,616 schools republican form of government without respect to per- | be more contrary to natural justice, conscience, and the | Jamaica court martials without investigation, and | had beon orgeaizod, containing 20,868 teachers. and sons. It is proposed that ve authority to the States | law of than the authorization of disfran- | Byres without eves s parliamentary question as | 138,711 scholars, Addreseos were ‘delivered by Mr. of this Union to exclude the blacks, bv reason of their | chise ~y the color of the skin. to the lawfulness of unlicensed murder. nd | Raymond, Superintendent of the Plymouth Sunday what they term the looseness of hie opinions, ana much | of mustard. Ts not that exh! lon, 10} hearers, appro- color, and without crime, from that right of representa- ete, OF THE PROPLEAN THE ELECTIONS. indeed it is troe that an Eoreprosepied race can fancol, ‘Brooklyn, and Rev. Mr. Mingin’ Superintendent deplore some of the sentiments to which he | Priately styled “the naked truth? is a ood | tion by suffrage, which is thefundamental and governing It is pretended that the recent elections are the yoloe | only be governed by oppression: Oppression must sus- | of the city missions, sion, and even that that is contained in one ee it may be even true that nature unadorned is | right of American citizenship. There is no possibility of | of the people in favor of the constitutional amendment, | tain oppression, as lies beget lies. Im thero any other the most; but the { Profession have a o “9 us couplets, there is in my judgment a senti- representation except by su’ . The constitution pro- | But the have had in’ view in these elections, not | method? Ig not that the method in all despotic coun. ve Iuent in il which eparkles like adiamocd in chasings of | maxim, which if ever true at all, {s true with regard to the | Ties that representatives shail bo shosou by the poople | the disfranchisement of loyal ten at the will of the die: | mer?” Pat arece car of tae tects ot representation and HEAVY ROBBERY IN NEW ORLEANS, ‘bony, aud which no coul can fally appreciate, but one | #Ubjects in those scenes, that “the truth is net to be told | of the several States, and shall be apportioned, along | loyal, but the su ‘of Justice and of their own Con- | you necessitate a despotism to govern it. You put it — that le in sympathy with the Mberality, charity and un- | St all times.” A public theatre, with @ promiscuous | with direct taxes, among the several States according to | gress, the salvation of their own government, the #u- Reyona the pale of protection, and then nothing but an New Onteans, Nov. 17, 1866. nectarianism of the apostle Paul, viz:— crowd, is surely not a place to display the naked trath | their reapective whole number of free ‘That is | premacy of their own liberties and of Con; all en- | impregnable tyranny can secure its masters against the | _ Mr. Lapeyro, of the firm of Pike, Lapeyre & Brother, ¥ hie Gf Shi0h Tak jecahehein esekohadat: of person, limb and voluptuous dialogue. Can any terms | the old landmark. Free persons tute the basis of | dangered by the usurpations of the President. And these | instinct and the struggles of self-defence, and those in- | Was skilfully roboed of a package of money, amounting Bis cawt he weang sheen Needesnnite , be employed too strong, in which to denounce such per- | representation. There are now none but free ns in | elections have gone ag they have because the le, | surrectionary forces and rights that are at work like the | to $20,000 in $50 compound interest while in the 7 b, a lofti Tongth, a breadth, in a | sarmators, Model artists they are, Door things: and | the Union, none but free inbabltante inany State. All | compelled to clioose between the Executive as a dictator | throes of a volcano, and always will be af mon dare to | act of purchasing stampa at the Post office yesterday range a a ete ae ie ocae ta titted | DIY tis, “tis trae. | But the infernal fiend himself is the | such inhabitants are entitied by the law of the constitu- | and the Co ‘a8, thelr own legislature, could neither nd human society on human intuitions despised, | No clue has been obtained to the robber, eublimi it, which Idoubt if even its gifted hadi , y iP word, er pore it, is ab ety ev my He fe of | Sreatest model artist of all ome and it is got tion to the right of reprosentation—that is, the right of | doubt nor delay. Almost without regard to the nature | human sensibilities tortured, divine aspiraticng bru- {pis glorious text On this priveiple 1 can ‘oonoaive ot | ony means out of keeping wh hi portormance at hie | chcouing representatives; that the right of sulrege, | of ihe proposed amendment, hey have chundered fort, | talied, immoral minds oppressed ant iiapriaoncd, and COURT CALEWDAR—THIS DAY, me wen doing things which in the estimation of | be said—Is it not splendid? Is et the Gl ane iglork. y | which, in plain Saxon, is the to rottie Bee re many waters, their determinat human hearts broken, *ALEADAR™ ‘THE OLD 1D CONTRACT IN THE CONSTITUTION. all be $) not the mas- ‘NECESSITY OF covarr sy INZUBTICE. Supreme Covez—1 Traw.—Non- Dy the Sainte tine OF | aR Or tho rejribiic; che eRecutive uot the jaw: | Injustice alwava'nleeds a Ray emi for the | tons.—Nos. 7%, 95, 10 77, 0, OL, ees ‘bas the Re ‘ef pate ad giver; the appointed servant of the people to put dows, + continuance of its prosori ve Fights. yf just erate 1 teeta” 16, 76, 77, ©, 8, 62, 8, 96, olor, blood, race or Ya PI Rarrow-minded people may be very oufré, but yet, in ? Granted, what then? Is it worse the eye of the Great searcher of Heart: are encom. ri wer the ability, the ee ee ee pessod witb His own holiness and glory, On this rib. Satan himself ay lple what would be murder to one man is justifiable | vie? The his po Hhompeide to another; what would be a broken Sabbath to | his potency” tor erit a noe mete 00 Ht Pp raged arin Angereres ban @ splendid seeets, It imitates no reality in heaven mt uu ” eeiseth ii, .0ue conaiiion ‘Is: ile “to in another. | Cath, or hell. | It merely ex! fea pened teath, a ee O01, 1a to sentatives. There and pupish a rebellion, not to build it up, not to protect nt must increase its injustice if it will not give it up. m1 Part 1.—Nos, 2267, 2891, 1985, 867, pefestion. Frey, ¢ citizen isin the basis of repre- tralore, The result’ of the elections" "4s the volce Bat when was any a rere ever persu into a An 1a, i =, sey 2, sa, aaah Se ani be exclndedtrom it without crime. | of the people declaring that Congress are | relinguishment of its privileges? “Of all the rights | iol: hart g.-Nos, 4. 18h lo70, dsdo,|Sae, Tee, gad Shes) ‘That is the old landmark, Now itis proposed, by the appoint keopers of the people's rights, | claimed by governments over their subjects,” said ve = J end- Ab The elections 90 carried make out a new deed of trost | jitt, ao Buglatioan, in his life of Ne “the right fe Tenn Demarest.) ‘20, 24, 25. Teens of 1t of the constitution, to remove, or and nul- poor, silly humanity in its voluptuous appear- | {ity that jandmark, which Js the sathe ing ag removing | from the people to the Congress. Into the draft of it | of injustice is the most precious in their eyes, and the | Law and Fact.—Nos. 212, 163, 195, ‘229, 174, 940, 176, or Oe Reareenel eet nosso te athe | 22084 and attitudes, made to look. the mdRS attractive, it by siving authority to the ates, a5 many of them as | adzolt politiciany have attempted to. shuffles report In pli ae are least disposed to part with. "It ie on | 288 968, 108, 232, 294 “agro: ot ee haaigan’s br religion, that | 22 Polson in tts primitive state to beshunned? Ist to plete to take away the elective franchise, or in plain | favor of granting permission to the rebels to run a | this principle that we los America, and that wo | .S0mmuoE, Count Part 1 Before, Ju = Nos. Senich ip snoes penylexing, le to determine when to bptly | memes et Teal oy Ag RE ro SEAL, OF | Saxon tho Fight to vote, which isthe Fight Br free repre: | railroad over the mock of, tho rights of the colored | sil cop Ireland in estate of vasmalage.” Call | Sos, a i Pan E-Betore onen. Non, 25) ; rit t 01 mer! . | race. The le rene’ oir grevsiont to mii 0 @ Chit ti ;, Fin princi, aera io» och the ore aca y | TAMER ht ioraed Star aun my ee | man, nepal eof avory Ameren tun, | rare The faaple ave Tented asin, Congressional | to mind” the dean “of cho Chet Sate at | Eat ab, Sak, fi it, be fact that the pulse of the conscichte, which is not | more dangerous. Adorned, it may be mistaken for only a thing that fs deop seated in the soul, but aspiritual, | putritious allment—for Aral or even for gold—and only ‘volatile, circumstantial, ethereg] oasence, 18 utterly too late may the poor dupe whom it has deceived gible to'an outsider Yet, in tho nature of things, find out that he is undone. But without the adornment must bp some general rule by which, on this very fafa ‘who would be 80 likely to destroy himself thereby? And ciple, the character of actions may be comm ver. | go, the most Darefaced, and avowedly obscene exhibitions ‘The text, therefore, not only contans s in the lowest dens of infamy are exceeded in enormity Brinviple, but also lays down a rulo of life which is of | by this splendid f human nature. How does it ‘aniversai benefit and of universal application—by which | stand in ite light of the principle presented in the text? swe muty qpeasure the conduct of ourselves, individually. Can any one who. oes Brae tor cpaowre sxyabpite a a ie snolhes, 20g sopoaging to which if I be | “Ande auch pleasure as ho may enjoy within the limits of fod in the aight even as the apostle Paul says | Christian liberty, out at liberty into @f those who hive not the law, that they “ate a law | ticentiousuces, Nice Mis of alastion ahh eb the lease for othor reagons than crime, that road. On the contrary, if that question had come | white men are bound to respect, of | Common Puras Corts! 1—Refore J Brady.— for color of the skin. This is the proposed removal of 4 before them, or could ’come now, previous to the | that as set by amendment inthe Constitution. Refer | Nos. Teas is im, 1 ah oe ee, tee ot the ancient landmark, our neighbor's landmark. { opening of they would as unanimously de- | back to the deciaration of the National Union Addrees | 16 1840, 1861, Pare2—Betire Judge, Curdoa0.— Noe, Oi And whereas the people sre called upon to say | cide against giving the power of disfranchising the blacks |, which I have quoted, that the amendment provides that . amen to the proposed removal, God provides a curse | to the rebels as pice have decided against giving the | ‘‘any State may hold part of its population in ignorance |” Cougs ov Gexunat Suasions.—The P. ¥. Dennis for bim who removeth his neighbor’s landmark, | powers of dictator to the President. They cannot consti- | and v: e, powerless, uneducaied, unfranebierd.” | paves and Thomas Kline, robbery; The People v. Catharine and commands the people to say amen to that. | tutionally do either. If the Legislatures wero now to be | And this in spite of the guarantee of a republican form M and A. Ri elected, with that in view, the people in every one of the | of government in the constitution, The Ti vassalage! free gran’ perhaps with the exception of tieut, | A condemn that. But what is that in cpmpari- would send members chosen on }) to forbid the |’ gon with the proj excommunication of the whole proposition and defeat the measure. The peopjé demand | colored race f ‘this country from all tical rights, by ‘not injustice agning, spy part of the people, but equal | donstitutic Beyond all a eae ee of Ln pee, are our nel ant ere be any inberent - the white man’s citizenship. there ts abso- lutely the same in the black man’s. And if any man fiom or anbibtag ens, ox ps, tenons of ron disfranchisement, and the van of caste co ” torp tuto eb and exact justige to “| branded the government,,catering to the fanio themiselves, ” having ‘the work of ihe las weitien. da Chrisanity is destroyed,and nothing isleft but the white elfizens of this ‘country from Pra. ca tae once GwOURD <OF- a. ‘aiizvoniws inode: | Batted ef ape rae them, the insupersble re- fo ina bears, —_ jeer nn Fre pei of ill-uged a was nothing to commend it from } sentation and the right to vote ney STRUCTION, ‘ he xe f3 those have always made slaves of SFEaing one another”. Ite plain, then, that in‘ibe eye | Peganinetoend, Toray the least, Mit iam queer thing.” | rebel fsrinsate or idiot aapfun wold be deemed |” Yu tho case of State policy, not only for to admit to the rights of man, a Ged tekaien Leb tc. cet Gian Gira ee ‘ot only an iniquity but a uniquity, with no plot, no | the right plhce for the inventors of such a ‘ThE | the present but for future generations, an organic funda- Fre sympaihico, with the Irish but to hold'down | $M A ve by which it is performed that determines ite. |-£0C¢_moral, implied — ng that i8 | country would not endure the tion. Tf Gould not | mental system of reconstruction, intended as by Divine | five millions of native Amorican in the condition | “'Munave Goome.—Nos. 47. 6,190 131,199. 198, 194, 136, 136, pee Bere greg : a naughty. nanghty,, nangbty thing throughout, | get so far as the door of one of our State res. 1 | commission to raise up thefoundations of many geutra | of ‘pariahs on acoount of the oploy ol akin, ‘The | 127, 18, 19, 189, 191, 182, 188, 194, 196, 186, 167, ine eric eather ot Ligst rots 4 io it is a very sacrifice to the devil. Let it be denounced | conid not have been carried Qoiigress. It could | tions, justice ts the first thing demanded. The commis- | Irish are not disfranchised in Gréat he - - od and perfect gift, im all tbat wo e ‘FEA | 10 press, pulpit, parlor and boudotr, until those who are-| not even have been di ne & possibilty. sion ‘and the opportunity ae equally from God, and | icans aro. disfranghised in America, and for colo. Bup- Died. . Fons ol oat njoy. | But | rexponsibte for Saal be coaveraled ty arene’ poblic DISFRANGHIARMENT 18 PRACTICAL ENSLAVEMENT. equally grand, comprehensive and,benefcemt, worth & io the same way 08} Rogseis,—On Sonday evening, November 18, Jaume ae a, Ae rere’ — Gentiment to substitute for it something that willim- | yo can rightfully disfranchise a citizon of the | rebellion and ‘a war to bring within our grasp such fare “al domblaation of the otuer | p, ey Pera Pa Denkedin Hessel, aged 1 potent SF Ieasurea, and maze him | Breve rather than tnjure the public morals of this splen- | United . The right to do so, for anything but | reaching, multitudinous, reconstructive powers. But | races of Great Britain in league with the government, | RUss#Lt, som of J , slg ‘nla lel - sitnens ane Tent tadnewered im: did metropolis (applause), something that will not stoop crime, would be the right to enslave him. The assump- B vpied hae dy a necessity. That ig God’s demand. | every person of Irish blood being, by virtue of a Relatives ‘sad friends of the family are My in- bo aeaenne i oy red teaiher ‘sete the hilt ae: oan Leper ye with gas of bea. tion of the right pone So Deana 6 poscag eo — if that be vi there will be an insurrection in'the | vision in the constitution, deprived of i te. | vited toattend the from the ‘residence of his istinctiy, when he says, “What sax Lthen? That the | (Appiause) it. apéaks well for oer for. fot 1B vote Sie becnieabeie aovonsla ravets 05 Faas to | parents, No. 18 Hammond street, this (Monday) nfter- 1 is anything, or that which 1s offered in sacrifice to | the native modesty of American ladies, and’ the | 11,8 'sking from the peop! pobagh cg ater kugabag ered wiv’ noon, at two o’clook. Hin anything? But Tsay, tbat the, things which the | westipctive virtuous tastes of American artiates. that | Play and aneerig ie at al, but mere digniues and | hotondure rotiery forburet ettering, nor permit ve ener | of the iiss being Roman Carhovier ead’ abe Booch Pres ie Sain eae Tee) Pron Rye gee Seren hora Ag not to | the and manager of this concern could find | trusts, to be conferred at the pleasure of the State sov- | to prosper ourselves or do good to others, by injustice. | testants. Would that be endured? Would not the civ- — ih devils. "Ye cannot driak the oup of the Lord Tout ia. Jeopardy thant incf charactor and eels awa | Ziignties on ax few persone as the goverament pleases. | Nothing but sheer justice can reach the evi of the lined world ring with anathemas of such oppression ? MISCELLANEOUS. py devia, Ye t be bi of the Lord’ to put in jeopardy their all of character and weal; and | ‘The second section of the p amendment: says | ent case, or renow the welfare of life tsouthern ede. OPPRESSION BY COLOR 18M WORST OF OPPRRGFIONS, SonaNine RABY ONE ered of the tableof devia. # © © Irony man | serefore to procure their ballet troupe found it neces-| to the citizens of the United States, “You | “Benes olence,”’ sald Jobn Bright, speaking of the ey’ t which is worst—to excommunicate and disfran- | ASTONISHING BVERY ONE. | noes TE eta a ceed io mothenean ie to bring them from boyond the. seas (applante) as | nave no right, in fee stinple, to vote for | of pauperiam in England, can ly touch the | chise on account of religion, or on account of color? A | “Tis success te wena tals prey ne eho Aue tod ft con- Bad Sor’ 3,10, 91,28. Tt ie plain, nontly, | {2,former times the Africans were imported, and then tatives in your country's government; but it | fringe of this disorder. It ia justice that le needed. | man's religion is voluntary; but hie eoler he cannot it to be the Beat olniment or iiaiment in use. Canee thet such enjoyents ‘as involve ‘an honoring of ihe | made te sing thelr own shame. tothe State jatures to say whether youshall | It is not benevolence but justice. that can deal | help. A man may secret, while he walks | of Quittor, Urease, Thrush and Spraine, whieh were given mr ition of sovereignty or any of the attri; | _/,0% bappy to learn that ‘my leotares are beginning to | be voting citizens or not. Subject oltizens, taxed citi. | with giaut evils.” is this the case Aunt be ceanot keep bis color between Gog and | uP a" incurable, have been permanentiy by 0’ few £2rh, oF 8 recognition ietEtuton ake ince thelr desired effect. ‘you ever see lightaing | vens. scldier citizens, mudsills, you shall be at any | whero it is injustice that is at the bottom of them. Im | himself A man’s religion might bind him to himen i have it, as it cures BR ge Culgtan eee ete was not followed by the rolling of the thunder? Now | rate? but not free. voting citizens, unlesw the State | vain will you lavish medicines when by law you bave | sacrifices: OF to allegiance U0. & power; bat hie | o.rverz hore owner should, hove lt, se, is postuvely cures 5 ~f ritotlas application of oaaie ro you gee the flash! Sooner or later you hear the report | oligarchy chooses. Your sovereign right ar citizens of | appointed pojsons as the basis of thelr daily food. All the | color cannot. A man's rel: make & traitor | in simple as well as ‘cases, being vory easy of apphica- oP an aan J and the rumbling, running, roaring of Heaven's artil- | tho United States to vote for representatives in Congress | benevolence of the whole world lavished the slaves | and a rebel of him, by bis faith in the divine right of | tion, and wi Off with a little sony acd water, ‘As to dancings and theatrical representations in gene. | J¢°y. How the clouds pour down water!—how the | is abdicated for you by this proposed amendment, and ia | would not have bettered their condition so longas slay slavery, but not hie color, which, if dark, isa of | | Ada Hoof ointment st 1 freely ucknowledged to be the gal chal | torte (hems a tad te ‘and cobsien | ¢arth trembles and shakes benpath your feet!—how | transferred over into the power and at the disposal of | was ‘There loyalty 80 far as it is of ing. A man’s rel he | Dest, softentug and preserving the hoof, Pity conte bor; ira aici eee pede oes | Sie arte te’ Reza | evga n cy pwc fs |S. eae Sua an eae a | Say i Ne Reece | Sabet tear eee eae Rot discrimination be used with reference to these, | Tery faalien to the conscience. It blessings. fro tovereugtiey thal can, cir pleasure, forbid you | but in re of fi you it, but cannot, lence it brings from voting for the United States government. If this | cannot bless ir unless you are posterity by | attainder, Ahh — NER, TEA AND Sihet mations Dia vestigation? Is it wath for | ghove, it stirs the souls of sinners, » sleeping world be- passes, then in to the willions of free colored | you cannot nae food oft of Toaves the basis of ‘whict Now we propone, byector Sar Amerioas Parents end to ot ets, te ort seep aliver Pissed Ware, fable comes aroused from its slumbers and quivers like an | citizens in the rebel States, or anv other clases obnoxious . Take away the arsenic or your generosity in | legislatures, by amendment of the constitution to sub- iar Richa Shine and Gi aspen leaf. Already there is to the displeasure of the States, the «overnment poison. Your benevolence is wholesale | ject the whole colored race of this country to the pains, BDWARD D ope Great 1 A QMAKING AMONG THE DRY BOXES, will bave. abdicated {is own power of pro- Serarsination in the Jong run If you take away Justice and Penalties and contempt of a seridom. in comparison | ______.._ Cooper Institute and Astor place, corner sireet _ Shook before, save when they nodded. im ihr dreams, | ‘cto and apse ot "roel Bisse’ clgncehien, | misty, Mea deer Cie Le RW tevcreneak cree ine, [rive reich the I vesslage is freedom sn tadepen: | (ORNS, BUNIONS, BAD NAILS, BxLADGRD JOLNTS an o S| mighty is rament over dence. We this, hecause Congress cured withoyt » RIC! Bowery, Bank are awaking to inquiry at least, and many more unto ® | ang what their enemies have done in the Memphis and j beings the whole #0 governed would bave been rebels what was Cram Pip conte. tion of the world and tne ‘manneeeh, ‘even before the amendwent | shell, ‘The benevolence that samtions has not Bites of Fionn bad aad the ge he ization condi New Orieans the Charch. The pulpit Stoateatceoeme tie has become a law, is but an example of what they will their tajuetice ‘that one of the elements of heaven in jt but provides the They wore chipcians t selinguich that power over OA Diets LEGALLY get al lt yh YORE beck | committee learned one instance; and somoof the feathered tribe who have | qo when the amehdment ie part of the copmivation. | certainty of hell, and im sanctioning injustice sets | biscks which they bad ‘accustomed to been roosting, stirred by the clarion notes of the bird a asaya onl FXPOONDKD RY ITS D8. 1) Sooven "docks under the government of the hy phew f unwilling to come gt ‘Counsellor, Ac. 78 Kaseau street. ebildrea of @ ‘growth ?”” When my heart bounds that Heravs in ny an com- FRNDERS. oppressor, putting the oppressed out of the | into the Union with toate Were petatesren tate oxesl be Sevier eR amd with (gratitude to God for Hie blessings, 1s | Devas f ‘anne bisen ir —_ It is not the Philistines that bave se! Dagon on | pasis even of a ible representation in heaven. | themselves before the law. We forthwith cut and square IVORCES OBTAINED ACCORDING TO STATUTE Sev tor wy feet for Joy to leap? And it may tongue | Seaton, has Teen “called by friend Ieeaya’ tas. | Bis, Place Ie vccttesed fitsede ot teeedane. . The | ton of ths manhoed aad digit uf tie tects ta chante: | oh cmmutmoual ernewtatory. legislation socordinaiy. | £7 trym, the Qvartont sz eiferent sates; alee Howry and sy ate aye ae iy yt one of the clergymen all whom be does not call Sateen 5 ‘Proposed reconstruction of the Jont in sacredness with that of whites--is all ‘that io te thee vopaspunets pe er de 4 ¥. 1. KING, Counsellor at Law, 218 Broadway. Fees Serre cint Wee anes | ser cancer aa cSt [Seri es ker a cele | rae ig tec | nn Sa ee een | cian avo Pa OP HR Maa AS tcbora nhs os Pam Soto” | Fre yf ito aoe fa coop | Secon cent ee nnaen again, | Grp anced ong mere oy fem | Sem ene ue nemo ha eae | Yas roan ar jut nwo tome eel ring Oy 893 jor the wi will com) ‘own assume — ‘ Braise ve the Lord. pigeon "ba ara Se ped ed Bag OE Ag yh e) ‘the the power of denying the Siocieranchfe to any rer them and nothing. else 6 ae dg pes rapey hind no rights that white men are bound to | To eure, you must take from three to eight of BRAN. " naked that | or caste no crime, does, in othe: ‘estab! respect own citizens respect ; Mo right to be consulted, ander ana rere ay ees in | phrase was rigant to erea. the objector heat, Ii the right, for any State that to held a part of | one another. Let the government treat the blacks Po AE ah rg Sih yf DRKTH’S PILLS dally, according to effect, The diet shoulé , Poe renee unto Him wilh the uimbeal snd herp. For the egg Pw {bare tous beled supposed | ine in and vi ub- | as and protect them an meu, and the | their own government or treatment, no than when ro may de allowed, but eth pleasure in His people, ylwe , was. He thinks I bave thus fary ikely. The coly panels for this ee ee ie ik aes, alee they were chattels, bought and sold. we ‘soon, Sere ‘When it \s comnidored that dancing in exemplified by | the sumber of ee ee eee, Oo neee: Of an infticted serfdom i, t thus turn- | or permitted to be taken away, all is goue, all | for by. amendment a state of yin Fao vd cured mayot fe xinte of old, and enjoined in Scripture; that Christ bim- | And if the Hxratp, too, bad not ita oat ing its free population Ie setts “abil ‘Get count, that jon vain; itisa of contempt and | descending blood to thelr ebildren, which is andTtake to show’ self was present at a Hebrew marriage, and that it was | Defore in ® condemnstory editorial there doubtless would | portion to balance the intelligent, cruelty against them. vote is the broad gauge. If | in reality what the rights of ‘are in Pris. Se cerry the kind, people feel at a loss | 20t.bave heen half as many persons present ea there | citizens of other States.” ling caste #f the South + you sake a law tsk, tha coined al ee ay end ‘without ad . to reconcile Sesching of the clergy on thie it with | Were, are notified that may any race | caris, you exclude them the rail of bumanity, pebellion, wi i ‘upon innocent citteene (fer that that of the clergy’s Master. The fact is the muet | te Hmaary in | or caste in serfdom, by political rights to them. | The vote is to all their other rights and the development | in the’ prevmion, hey be innocent of Mi of ‘Mllow to their people liberty of consolence in this mat. | @Y lectures, thore the next 3 | The caste i hp wh caste, and the amendment | of their powers aad opportunities,-what the vertebral | crinie) by reason of {he of the wkin. The AnD VA ter; but if Will not, the common sense of the peopie | for crowds will buy and read the and provides “the caste may Keep the blacks | column is to upright crestures in contrast with reptiles; | example of puck kind of as thie of the taking Canal street, wiil doubtiess take the liberty. To theatrical represent. will come to bear lectures, no matter how dull the | evermore in serfdom.’ Tbat is the declamtion of the | the bark bone 18 what enables a man te atand yp and ‘away our neighbor's landmarks (er the increase of our | _Ocronma 18, 1666. ations « similar rule must be applied. Ican conceive | Timer friends and expounders of the amendment, in thelr na- | walk; without it he must crawl. In a republitt take | own power in destructive of and private integrity | “neat NEWS FOR DISTILLEI 70 Row the apostle Paul, who taye’ of bimscif, 1 bave | With a tional address proposing end defending It. had to prove | away'the vote from a man and he falls prostrate and | ana vinde. It teaches fhe right of conspiracy between ae aes roe, eae eee 4 Lived ‘ail good’ conscience before God until | of it in that it is not severe upon the South, but mildly just, | yon cannot lift him up. two to rob a third; your right to hold your ‘hours. {Ste you. * ahis ,”’ could witness with a clear conscience | Propose to they aver that so far from taking away or forbidding the NO EDUCATION OR ALEVATION WITHOUT THB vorR. in order that another may rob him and give | 4: os Chomsa, 1 Broadway. Ghe wrestie and the foot race, in which the youths of poe if he dose, power of serfdom, ‘we only notify them that we will We cannot have education for the blacks if we de not [SES ere i the Sel: B pemennanen (Be sams of © eh “intiicensiis cunshaaiaes assenneneatilsenainen }.@reece acquired the development of nerve and muscle, | 80d if he no bribe them to exerciee it.” !We only notify | provide justice as the basia. All the seed in the world | jain who bas heretofore Jou, to rob another, in | |] NCIPTENT CONSUMPTION AKD BRONCHITIS_ONLY ‘he agility, the hardness and the by which they | bi* generous an the ruling class of the South, that we will no longer bribe | poured upon the deserts of Africa would not take root. | order that may oe out of that last robbery. anni Soe pessanded semenies & Beep themselves to become patriotic defenders of | Upon A lecture doit them to kéep their blacks in serfdom.” can be | But if you go down below the sands and set your plants | By the itution the ‘are freemen and have a | prover. OE VBA tt and homes, and from whose exercises he | bave al’ be more infamous than all this? It reminds | in the moist poil they will ._ The South, under the | rignt to their own vote. We to guarantee with | PROM PLANTS I have found the only YO Frequently drew bis illustrations of the Christian life. [| Until he shall provol us of the impudence of the Jews of old inuvowing and | simoons of avery, has Socom © moral You | their late masters, the white rebels of tbe South, to rob | as proved by my success. Expia Know not if he witnessed any other theayrical perform. | miélit be bad for the Times. Justifying a similar wickedness. Wore they ashamed, | never can reclaim it by giving to the rebels the feo sim- | the whole colored race of their right of representation, if | Advice WM. R. PRE Sacer. Bat I can conceive of representations which | the fact that Tam not delivering lectx ‘asks the provhet, when !t was proved wpon them? | ple of the sand wastes, with power to keep them such. | the States , letting only the white vote, = = = might exhibit buman nature in its true light, educe an | *itors’ so much as for the clergy's benefi Nay, they were not at all ashamed, but stood in the tem- | They would rather have a desert to themeclves than & | thas porn org the political ere which we have POLITIC. it moral, and teach some impressive lessons, | NOt attempt to drive him to d find declared that 1s wes the privilege of their own | nol! of vineyarde and live orchards shared ‘with the heretofore been defranded by the three-Afths clause. | ~~~ ee ‘Yea, I know, that a case may occur, wherein one may | rebel Lee — to commit just these abominatins By this | bincke, If you do not give the blacks the right to plant | Tn order to equalize the white representation, North Fo COMPTRO) obtgin as soul stirring, as deep and lasting lessons from a | tent myself with answering his Authoritative uational Union exposition, the firet and ' below the sands—the right to be rooted in the xubsotl of | and South—-in order to make ® white North. Siar vad Peipate Contin chaste and serious performance asermon, And | two or three others. Hi second sections of the proposed amendment ate demon- | human rights—you do nothing for them. Your mis- | ern vote oqual to a white Southern vote ~ be w wae le ea to this matter, too, the poople must be left by the | tap pulpit be made an advertising medium for what | strated to stand thus im relation to each otter:—First-- | siovary societies might dump schools, seeds and plants | we to reduce the whole colored RTING.—A MEBTING OF THE SBY: clergy to the exerciae of their own discretion and liberty | body certain! yah All citizens of the United States shali enjoy {he rights of | by the cartload from your Northern ourseries among | It "a tbe duty of tbe Cristian church Demvaratic Associa of conscience; and if aot, their commo say :— Wi id @ Christian paper be le an adver- | citizens evermore. Second—No citisens shell enjoy those | them, but they never will take root so long as you ex- | rebuke, eo far as ay be in their power, this held on Monday evening, November 19, 1488, at Botanic tke same, But our chicf concern to. ising medium for what itself acknowledges not to be® | rights to whom the State chooses to deny them, for no | clude thom from the basis of representation at the will | ruption and conspiracy. It is the business of our religion way. o'clock. All DANCING, THEATRICAL REPRRAKNTA : Cristian object? (Applause) How could it be ® | crime, First—All citizens sball enjoy those rights ever- | of the Arabs, Society will be a desert and to see that men do not use their natural, civil, political Gelintdie tre tee hea of particulag establishment which lias \athiy atiraciog | Chrisnan object when, the devil ig in tt? And when ® | more, and no Buate ahall have power to contravene this | bincks will be elote so long as you exclude | or religious rights to the robbery or injury of the rights | Gonuolly for Compiralier. are reapect(ully tufted yo atteus. & great deal Of attention. "T Know ot what’ may navy | Chrimian Paper knows that the devi sin it why doa i Moet’ righteous and necessary provision. Second—Any | thom from the right ot suffrage. "The basi of Of thelr neighbors. If that is being done by the . eer WALTER JOvG Fy Prealdaat jemen to whom a , a rights Di pated a my aye on gel meerbere mi ite columns daily? ‘The age we’ live in is bed enough ; State that chooses may contravene and deny those rig! tation is United soil, and whomeoever you exclude from | ment, it ia part of the business of religion to forbid that THOMAS REANY, View dent. Ewe: gee oye ee haat nig J “4 = yee ba tesa. peta onan | bas] ae wrong in the name of God. If it i auch denial the only penaity is ancl all | and the pursu: sovercignty i# Am | there are special interdicts not count them a# white voters, having Mefranchised | African desert, them as blacks. It is a huge awin ng here the United states t rath it, which the stepanes of a i 3 4 wi e government | and wrath 0 it, rT rue Chris- roe" — % git} enterprise, | cannoteven sink an Artesian well for the supply of its | tians forbids thelr te | to utter, The countey is D ALDERMANIC DISTRICT WORKINGMEN'’ citizens, bub those | commercial caravans without « treaty of to the | being with © tide of immorality through the BS" oraw wit bold thete meeting on Waeang sitive yt A who euter are robbed. It is af enormous | Arab oligarchiste, In putting tl ralence of such injustice, under the pretence of its being | past sevea P.M, on the eorn Hudson "Harrison wooden nutmeg. It is a mock avndion room, | basis of representation at the will of the wise and expedient statesmauship. But the most | sireets, instead of being pid Pitth We jotel as ad with Peter Fanks at the door and pickpotkets within. | guarantee the right of serfdom, and tundinguised poiltioal wickedness ix not moro detestable | Jourmed (0. | HITTON, Chairman “He who doee not feel that this is simply and mildly | will never be given up—never. than such Christian expediency, The church lots herself wars Bacane, Seereiary. Just,” say the expounders and defenders of the scheme, | the Southern loyalists will be abandoned in derpair the | down to the level of pohtical intriguers and corrapters a rer er i $ i by the purest imaginable. Who knows but they | bot if you continue ught it ‘would improve the health of the Parivienns THAT VILE ADVRRTTSRMAWT to give them a sail across the Atlantic, and that in so | much longer, Kir. Editor, you will make the Times worse. doing they were philagunically delivering them from | We have just one ground of hi for such ap editor in the peculiar temptations of life in the vouptuous city | regard to this, avd that is, that as he has followed the of Paris, and, like guardian angela, protecting them from | lead of the’ HxraLp in adopting the constitutional : (is consequences by transferring them to the famously | amendment, so perhaps he will amend his own ways and (Virtuous elty of New York? Or, who can tell but their | follow the Henatn’s example further by refusing 10 in- tove of human pature iu general is such that from the | sort an advertisement of such a thing, There is this mont generous impulses they have gotton up an expen- | difference between the Herat and mo on the one hand, re Es ‘‘would pot be persuaded though one roe from the | moment you have surrendered the constitution iteelf country, in accepting and not condemning and onpershaats sive and dangling entertainment purely for the purpose | and bim on the other hand, that if our condemnation | dead."’ This is part of thetr advertisement. But the | into the power of their enemies. ‘now claim im- auch robbery. me enn gen ne ea of lightening the cares of life of the buy and care-worn, | of It advertises it we cannot help such a result, and | amendment itself ie the inoculation of the constitution | partial sudrage; for umiil you shall have this tne eh ON aoa BpAlts, PAIRS, CONCERTS, LECTURES 40. COT an by giving the latter an opportunity on as low terms | therefore are not naible, on the principle Nacessitas constitutional amendment the constitution is on their splendid Palace Hi Sixth aveoue, ont as the moat extravagant places of amusement, of | non habet leges, but he advertises the nasty thing of his side and they fight on vantage ground. But you turn BLESSING A BELL. Bear Forty-second stress and. al, fronting on Broad Frome ie, Cualtaht and bel ¢ Hight, and in the | own free will and accord, their position, and compet om to surrender the mo- cg OI Wa Rory.saventh treat and enue, N aie bronzed light andin | In the next place I must anticipate and forestall an ment you take the right from them, and | The ceremony of blessing the for the Catholic | Washi Hall, Brooklyn, nnd nest the red glare recotding demon, the beautiful coun. | objection which may come from some of th who give it asa right of disfranchiement to the rebels. You | church of St, Augustine, Morrisania, took place yester. | Toms have been sew tenancer, regular busta, trunks and’ limbs chiselled out | would like an excuse for thelr negligence, vis. fhet ic erect @ battery in the midst of the constitution iteelf that at balf-past three o'clock. ‘There was « large attend. | sucrer recuse, new te = from bead to foot by Nature's own hand, with anexqui- | is to preach against such an evil because 80 doing commands their, and man that battery with | “7 past “ apt i 7 oot of teat Bae ee, ae nary any that the finest | tends to it famous, Answer.—People who raise their enemies, +1t is the renter beighas, tad you ‘ance of the Catholics of the neighborhood. Among the | __ a g ; art of man bas ever wrought in marbie, with | such as Hom mix up opposites, and make black to ut Lee instead of Washington in of the sbi COAL, WOOD, &C. 4 > charms mort bewitching, and attitudes of softnes and | signify white. I con that it does not make the thing jends of arn nner ap ROO APPA LaxUry most fascinating, fixing as with the power | famous It makes it infamous. That is precisely what thetr forces, NO} DELIVERING, ane Vee, Of that creature of ancient origin represented it te the di o70C7 Christian minister to do with such for the build! Oa at at the foot 4, B84 gold which lures the bird from the bushy like it | « thi “Thou speak my unte them," nays constitution to be garrisoned street, Fiver, corner, ne Gxing the eye. of the spectator and the double eyes of | the irit, “whether they will hear or whether themselves: P VE juoRD MY A A} 4 ise ih absorbing attention of goal and epirt. | they wil 1 “Behold, set before you the evil suffrage. Pharr go ey ‘Grate sof oper ~ Belg ior ing taatk' INE, enchanting creatures who the good; cheos® you Soy whem ye will fear.” an oo, net ton; email onove bad Ge Lt A M4 our “f Corner one. PY tive was bring thom and place them whete they would dyer cry, ‘impartial su: and THR BReT QuaLity, at An. ei courte, We must not faleo They make a law that Aiatos Cc Cy A Sh for baving such « vulgar 4 supported in of colored Amerioan citizens, and fav } 7 oe my pera gin. yy a doubt, could veil rit of representation he vote an tahertiagce of dela with in band, venging, for and c mari your | freedom which wo oo rece ny Wo! freedom Lee Ea as EE SPE EpsEeemnennand Fea Seda concern oredit for the hell | eonstita 88 eats 0 taveinsie ene Ttalleoable for Cieavoat trom mo of the 1 COALt O41 |--PRIORS ¢9 08 we; 4 a ling by | them as for white O ‘mm cannot be | ernment, from the basis of United for ywo moans, ibe ong ‘ revealed in the day by Bi as ye | anything more than a free ; 8 dlsck mam cannot | and then supplicate the rebel States Aah aealiion, ot ater, un allan te every man sccord teach, OF beranythi feen, "This inheritance und eebie ie in the 1s the prigne of ate vorner 8 Dave boon the sthat origi Yo | bene of tbe rektur Sears te"ebem We har fusion by the | sition ot “Chet ase citisena, ee mee" *. ve id ong - ——— EE. now of ‘repreachable A it 4 proposed to them their ry F : i k i ui a HH

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