The New York Herald Newspaper, May 8, 1867, Page 3

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Dut the crowning esult would be reached—the full re- | the best relations of political economy, my ‘segro to all his rights, (Applause.) without apy feud betwixt bim and his natural rand LETTERS F.\0M GENERALS BUTLER AND SAXTON, pele maving harmenionsly Aegether ino development Letters were tien read from General Benjamin F. | unheard of in its extent of the material of this Saxton excusing their absence from | country, and far above and beyond it; laborer lifted the meoting, im the action and aims of which they fully | up to bea man, with the necessary leisure for the do- intellectual. REMARKS OF THOMAS J. DURANT, Now, for one, I see toll J. trunare, ol Mee Coisan ena the gest | und for the teat mmeorninas pes st of these Pe the principal topic of his speech being on the a questions, In action of the General canmnading. in New Orleans iy) long run, to the credit "elteenaeaeeeee has established and decreed tibort; iy. in and been charges for the wi ox oie Justice and liberty it did to eave itwelf, for the black man, it did not from a sense of to him; not because it favored the cared for the man, but because simply the troubled it, and it thus avenged it. Again and that the party went forward 4); Was fenced 10. p> oe To-day the quant, r is presented to it, which, if properly answered, cs or brand the statement asa lie, and put it tan MEETING OF THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY " but certainly 6 from during the riets and massacre of 1866. If, he | ti be “it sai nothi but to the end of time, The march of events ni Addresses by Wendell Phillips, Colonel py ine Meeting because White | sald, the statoment of ihe Geatral wes Sérreck of widen | rule, You ‘canuat” Dae fyi tt gta. SET | length “tought ag {900 $0 face with the qheaet Higginson, Thos. J. Durant, Anna do, surrounded by @ nation thoroughly in in tis | House to insult and balk the purposes of the mation and to | he bad z- doubt, the guilt of the massacre of New | any power had been able to bully it into silence the | which cannot eld to ve one of public expediency aud id ° end Gelermination to make absolute justice the law of the | 6° unwhipped of justice. (Applause.) It is because they | Orleans clung close to somebody. That General when | slave power would have done it. The American people | of military necessity. To-day the question Presented E, Dickinson and Others land, the only real question which stirs the anxiety of | allowed the crow: traitor of the whole to linger for | asked if be could have prevented the massacre said he | cannot be coerced either into silence or subupission— | to us is one of abstract right or 1 republican could, by ferbidding the Convention to meet, or by | they must be convinced. They have reached over the Convention while it was in seasion am | Of intellectual lite which must ete eee and ey force; “but,” added the General, “I knew thas | which must have reasons furnished for every step, It such an act would not have met with the approbation of | is yy} 'y muet proclaim as its watchword universal liberty if is ever hopes to win, andif it ever repudiates that watchword it must die, (Applause.) And repudiation can be ag successfully accomplished silence as by any thought{ol American, is nat of the absolute fact, the | months in the right Rand of the government at Fortress oal to which we are all tending, but it is of the path | Monroe and write out the record, which the next time foroagn which we are to reach that goal, We stand | that a LD ep bathe this continent in blood and to-day no more certain than we did thirty | break ite U: the therefore, with an uutrammelied press, of U years ago that this continent and the American | Jeferson Davis and Robert E. Lee and say, ‘‘1f I fat! in my superiors.”” This needed, the er said, no com- | with a parifed pulpit, with a vigilant watch over dis- | words. An Oriental legend ‘says j Congress Urged to Impeach and Rez | yeom, sso, that this cor Hime “recognize justice | te enterprise I spall not tang on the gallows Dut be mugat, Al could tell where the guilt ‘iay, (Applause) | Bonest men outside ofboth the balance wheal, tho safety | mt down before, the gates of Pelli. ena move the Preside a0 the “law of ite nationality. do not remember the | Doe or the Aanerioan people.” (applatee) Men tet | Bade (colored) followed ie brief shavemen; Waos | vatelde rire shone ai rere publican insiitutions—this | after season, and year aiter year, hour—I never the ‘ittonist who doubted that Lng — mgood “ (App! a) on 1 onc cg ed in brief addresses, bs ould ail be left free and wen for | turnings of the season, to see if they would open. After within a certain time, no map was able to prophesy —S vl mele Teuere sot PA tah Fs ~ aoe - Py ines pM gga OF THE LANDS OF REBELS peed great } ueemtians. For one, therefore, I amfor | the elose of a thousand years, wearied and exbausied, when, but that in due time the ideas committed to our ues pis J noi saiertiag yor Ag yy wi ba 4 ie lon was put and carried:— hae ne unturned, no effort untried, no word | for an hour he dropped asieep, and in that single hour bands would leaven the whoie nation, and that the Bouth ne it, ited men bin Resolved, That a large measure of confiscation and the | Unspoken that will take forever and entirdly out of | the gates of pearl swung open'and the al awoke i Whe Future Policy of the Radicals | pressive ot justice and love, would m ve subi to that military division of confiscated lands mong the ‘sof the for- | American politics the question of race, Never hereafter | only to ree them. close So the republican party, } peo a fe ere geleagermannle Sls aR and promised 10 support it, I, in the face, of | wei aes socurity to bis othe aia Sct oF Justice to him as | shall the angry feud detweca tho soctious, or the still | after bearing the heat and burden of the day, and after Foreshadowed. man ever doubied ; We were always certain of it, e American people still entertain douvts of the safet r rights, and to the nation itseif. | angrier feud between races break forth from tho the sweat and blood of a long and wearisome mareh, and after its heroic struggle and sublime Sgbting after its unparalleled victories, if it sleeps now, it because we always ‘said and believed that God ruled. | Of the megro. And I am that uncharitable one that ‘The audience then sang the Di and urned. great lakes down to the Gulf, from th ‘The only doubts that rested on our minds were these:— | suswer that I Know a man, resident to-day under the oxology and adjor , from the ocean back to the Pacific. We will so clean out both courts and legisla- ~—— One was whether in this great storm, this conflict of | “ag of the nation. in the Old Dominion, Robert E. Lee, | Evening Session—Adadr, . | tures, both college and Ii that there shail be no | waken to find the earth sliding from under its feet and grand principles crashing against each’ other like giant | echivalrous gentleman, the model patriot, the honest foe ie ee ole ene Pull ossibuity of the blinded eyes of justice being ablo to the gates of pearl and of victory closing before 1k. (A OTHER ANNIVERSARY MEETINGS, | vessels in a tempest; whother in this conflict the nation os eines ithets endorsed by and eanc- le istinguish a white man from a black, I know that } plause.) To-day, with the black man deprived of Di American Anti-Slavery Society continued their | slavery bas been abolished; I know that the slave has anniversary exercises last evening at Steinway Hall, | gota title deed to his 3, I know that in one half of Wendell Phillips, President of the Society, ‘ag | the Union great shackies have fallen off from the black chairman. A large attendance of ladies and gentlemen bard Fee peed ee tine thin he ee aera: should go to pieces; whether there was virtue and na- . &e. &e. &. tionality and intelligence enough to save the nation in | = Lee, steeped to the lips in oaths to the United States this struggle with so dee; chore constitution. And he kept them all religiously in 1861, boo ripe pr hae, ted *, ne mat Oe ‘unti! he had learned every secret <e oeen and rights in almost every Northern city; to-day in our midst, with a party who says to the South, repeating the invitation of the French officers, who, on golng into battle, exclaimed to their adversenes, “Gentlemen, ire "i tend that up to the year no thoughttal men carried that up to that ber is harvest is actually gar” Looking at them from a eelilah standpoint, 1 THE AMERICAN ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY, bad the materials to decide that doubt, | Fors long me neo i cade ue on ak alee ot comprised the audience, who occupied the hall and gal- | nered, before ane er Biveted tai he we cannot adord this, The whole history of tbe pane, 4 Geren after question adm: ir very substance consti of our national z p Taity-fourth Anniversary Exercises. de. | Shion slderwhetier the nation told be ved wily | Cbtauan of Virginie according. to ‘Ward. Beecher Jeries, while on the platform were many members of the | Tire’ itis necssaacy that the community, both North and | of the outhe mors astute chan wer’ with stateamnen -fourth annual meetmg American | erty or only the North. Woe meet to-day with, I think, Caught all the moment he was in a con- pe tae should nos only stupidly accept, but that-they | wiser and politicians shrewder than the shrewdest Anti-Slavery Society wes held at Steinway Ha, in | that question practically eettied. This effort of the ition to them ; Weare asked to take ‘The meeting was called to order at half-past seven intelli receive, and in all the cnstoms of | Yaakeo, they have always beat us where diplomacy was Fourteenth street, yesterday morning, in the presence { Southern aristocracy either to divide the nation or to stook in the bellef of the y of » white man’s oath | o'clock, When the “Battle Hymn of the Republic’? was their life— literary, social—they sould actually | concerned. They have beaten us in fair feld with ‘as * ro speed se give coloring and form to the institutions which govern | #2 Virginia (Laughter and applause.) Friends, | know the imbibe the new You cannot graft intoone civill- | the sword, and again they have beaten us large sudiente, recent political developme: this part of ‘the continent is a failure; and it does not | this ia not an anti-slavery speech of the model of the | Performed on the organ and sung by the audience. zation the institutions of another. You might aswell | and restored themicives to their old posi- f the nation and the unqualified triumph of the princi it—as we humanly speak, it does not admit of a | lasttwo yeafs. But whon mon tell me that they are ‘The Cuamyan announced that he had intended that | take and put ono man’s arm on another man’s body. | tion, and are about to fight the old battle with les on which this organization was founded give an in- | ?0ubt—that the American people have won—bave de- fring to nominate General Grant for Premdent Miss Anna E. Dickinaon should be the first speaker, but For instance, take jury trial. Jury trial grows out of all | us onthe old field of diplomacy. Let ua see to it thas vila” tei a (insane Many of ‘creed the death of slavery and the life of the nation, | { they don’t take him the iJ the circumstances and the entire fabric of the Saxon | the lessons of the past are noc wasted, and let us not re- } ‘tense pop’ terest rearies, Many (Grest applause.) That is one doubt settled. Analyse | ‘alk as we used to in 1860, that as she had not yet arrived, he would open the mest- | race; it begins in the cradie; it 1s part of the Saxon | pudiate the past for the present, papers. demo- the brilliant Nights of the anti-slavery movement were | an American down to the last drop of his blood, and you | ®PPlause.) It was when ng bimself, and would leave tho platform when she | dlood. Analyze = genuine ‘Saxon from the German | cratio and Southern, every day tell us of tho affiliation advertised to be present, and in consequence attracted | Will find tho Fourth Day of July in it—(laughter and be advancing so fast, and came. forest, and would find twelve men and e jury at the | of the old masters with their slaves, and of the-kin ze rere. Among. these wore | 2pbia&#e)—and te recognition of one nation as the law that wo might = bottom of his heart. It was well said by that statesman- | feeling existing betwoen them. We read of frank an of the continent, Well, there 1 another doubt relieved. PENDS. Sree PERL lke man, Daniel O'Connell, when he was pleading tho | generous words that thege Southern masters now spealt cause olice. ‘Sir, ‘This is now the thirtieth anniversary which I have Fy 5 4 z 3 ‘Wendell Phillips, President of the Society; Anna E. | We not only are certain as a people that this nation is to wi I shalt be content when you | to their one time chattels. Evory de: atic paper de- Dickinson, Colouel T. W. Higginson, Hon. Thomas J, | S¥UFVive, but I think we are certain, humanly speaking, States, bartering principle fe come to New York or to some neighboring city to attend | sive us an pe oar Jury trial is the beginning | clares that these same old masters will bold their influ- Rev. of another thing: and that te that this generation of | 90d Fessenden, principal im the service of the Ai Slav. and the ipba and the Omega of an | ence over their four millions of ex-slaves, and w'll march Darant, Rev. John 1. Sargent, Mary Grew, William | Americans, this generation have made up’ their minds | tering the leadership of thelr egg merican Anti-Slavery Society. It | Englishman's liberty.” Well, now, fifty years ago, the | them to the polls, It will not be tue fauit of tho repub- ‘Wells Brown, Edward M. Davis, Rov. John W, Chadwick, defintely —eanght, by the war, learning a Teason writ- — the Senate Dought up by the ise nea a first pledged myself to the princi- icy a ment undertook to angel ito rt lican party Pt they donot. I recogniae the fact, how- Aaron M, Powell andothers A in blood—that absolut justice ent ignorance impeach because em! im the constitution of this ty. Ww trial. Before » under the civil law of the | evor, that gratitude must lead these sometime slaves - umber of appropriate law of all races shall be the law of this nat ion | day aa that whoever has ye tag at the table and crows. | right in the Tature ag in th Trecognize, through ‘rather from impulse than froin aiiy dislinct undor- hymns interspersed the exerciees, among which wore Poo tho Lak down to the Gulf there is to be no whi *Hlow long! 0 Lord of Hosta! how long!” by Rev. John | mam and ho black in the irs i : all the din and smoke of battle, through tManding of the great and broad principle at the root of | all the circumstances connected with the alleged crime, 2 “Bat plause.) No matter what on ‘ajould wit Se Botte and, after being a hundred times jeationed, th: fe Ae ot oh Si “a ig yh mache ts tle of the ublic”” “9 ¥ Ne mn ced the Shibboleth of the a cross-questioned, the | hesitancy of tne Suuth a year it these 8 Ste < a Rep oe ae Faith local sau cavers iaipl, ht np piovement f ID maativaces of yearak moet Judge put the conflicting stalements together and made | know who ie their fiend, and Know, too, that the Stare 3 Laser presic ed gs organ, look nto the 1408 OF a or parchment; t! tas young men rally are. lies Anna out his opinion, noting the demeanor of the prisoner as | and Stripes should be their flag. I belive that those ‘and Mr. Charles U. Gunn led the singing, me Re , from Maryland to Michigaa, without wiitouched; that here entered feta and was loudiy ap- | ®,Partof the evidence, And in the same manner the | whom they turned to as their friends in time of war The meeting was called to order at eight o'clock by | /ately certain that, with no distinctions of » party” we see him with SAL ‘The speaker stopped, but many voices crying | /¥ecureur du Roi now cross-questions and bullies any | they will turn to as their friends 1 time of peace, and ‘Wendel! Phill; ie Y | mentioning, the body of the ‘até sound on this | School house bebind hi oat, “Go on, on!” and the lady signifying | *ccused person whom be is called upon to prosecute. | give them the benefit of their ballot, You do not need ¥ ilips, President it of the society, who spoke as | question. So true is it, that fork New England back to prea the her preference eR 5 Phillips. continued | The simple reason is you cannot make a Frenchman | to be told of the ignorance of those people. Siavory is @ ‘ToRows:— era ante no Jowa, it 1s no longer a distinction between republicans | over his head, NO State gover his remarks} 1 say I pronounced the Shibbo. | Comprehend jury trial, and never will until 1967, because | poor scliool teacher. No one denies that these men es 7 peacctasaa and democrats; that is not the hne. ‘The only line run- | bim until more than one of the y witb the indifference which it hes like a piece of alien metal on the common soil of | must, to a creat extent, be in the condition of the pris- mec ‘WENDELL PHILLIPS. ning to-day among the masses of the people is loval and | Southern S:ates are in their ‘neh Gsuaily ent towards such questions, | Dis daily 1ife; it does not there. It is just so with | oners of St. Mark. who, afier betug iong imprisoned tn ‘Lapis ax Gexruxmex, Mewners or THe Awrnican | rebel, There ie nothing else. Parties prevail at Wash- | tell you my faith. I do not tof a ve of strength and a lavish | freedom introduced at the South; itas just so with | tho dark and filthy duvgeons for months and years, tan, ; vaunr-BLayaay Socierr—I congratulate you ma th ington, They do not prevail among the people. /\atsalachiing ot You upon the very | Gomocrat of the Northwest, is elthet substantially f ig circumstances under which this session of | repubiican on the i'sues of the war, or he isa rebel ‘the society is held, It is now, I think, the thirtieth ees- | You can test him the moment you see him. He may sion that I have had the privilege of attending. And I = know where he lg — a pean : ‘e saw men as trees jo not know their Deliove no one of those audiences have gathered under | rormal condition. We bave not yet seuled down into Circumstances of such encouragement as we do. We | recognition of the present attitude of public affairs. to be on the very eve of the accomplishment of | But any man going about with the test of this ques- ail’ that the frionds of freedom have ever asked | HOD aud the experience of | th pe role ‘ing the people, will be I @f the nation. We stand in an hour when tho puted 7) aS. isech, done wos extny Gam de- mations! council has already endorsed by its ac- pet the country, in the old acceptation of the amount of opportunity, 90 that we can throw away any | the absolute equality of the black introdaced anywhere ty Upee any ecrount we Chases to fancy, wen | 1m this country, it does not belong to American life; it ee like most Americans, profoundly ignorant of what | 40¢s uotfit in anywhere; it does not dovetail with any- slavery ‘or how strong the slave system iteelf was. ting ; it does not belong to us. Now, therefore, you I nad been it up, aa most Americans are, in aa cannot expect in @ moment to naturalize this great ualified adm: mn and acceptance of the great re- change. It must be done graduaily. The philosophy of and eulogistic tone in which our institutions | Duman nature shows it must be. You cannot expect to ticised and admired. Iwas a hero wor. | Sit up at Washington, and by a cunningly devised perch- twenty and thirty years, when brought into the groat eat of St. Mark, and standing to the sunshine eo lon shut ont from their eyes, they stood stricke for ever. It is not strange that these sl freed from the dungeons and caverns of slavery, brought mto the full blaze of bight, into the bright sunlight of liberty should be dazzled and lose their eyesight ut least for a litele time, and con- found friends with foes, The negroes’ vote will bo an clement of strength in tho future of property handled and directed, aud with it we shall defeat our adversaries with their own weapons, With a little education and property qualitication these men can be made to vote 58 sf : 7 i 38 5 - i 7 i cannot be done. Now it is not trading 1 object shipped Henry Clev as the great. Atmerions | wo altogether, but I want a good trade. Webster sold us Mhmost a statesman.” (Laughter,) For | @us for.nothing, (laughter,) and if Lincoln's party had inte SEF Hy Fe ie) i i veneyie tak bee men are- created been bred ome into power and no war intervened, he would bat i South the republican } fuen and by its laws the whole claim of this sradlecicueute whet Sethattien Ge ann mcomee Teuste anes fee yearser palm Tiedpene tel suid gs cnittor a ehadow.. ba denaer to-day ta thes for | ganiy ons A on | (on delet barrin excammeewabe | Bociety, that is the absolute civil and political equality | to float of into what may be the 1 Carolina fronrtbe alter was ‘all of American | tte simple preservation of fap agen the republi- | they deny it to your comrades in New Jersey, Now Of the colored man under our institutions of govern- | ebeldom of the land. Those two points, to my mi know it. One-half of the wi ‘aud that most that was good in our institutions | “#2 Party may sell us out for triumph of | York, Ohio and in Michigan. Irecognize it as one of fmeut wherever the flag floats. Not on! aimed are settled with me to-day, with all that ind behi: hate this return, and have der its influence. Ihad no idea, not | ‘he party. a, chiefs have but one anxi- | the marvels of the ago that these mon act as intelligently ly that, m us ‘Now, then, under such circu! what is our | their time when they can the life-long battle, of the great, deeply . That js nos the. ation of ir as thoy do. Look at Beauregard aud a {ma moment when the earliest purpose of the nation it- | duty? Well, friends, I think this audience represents | 1 do not fear them. (A evil which we were encountering. The not that one man shall be and another that; but it | speaking to these freedmen from bigh pec sad wish elf, the thorough, absolute, unquestioned decision of | the indispensable element in all republican governments, | The whole North can of the year thas immediately followed it, the | '* that the great party im which thoy sha | authority in tne eyes and ears of the ust bynes pn “€he people themecives is, instead of being far bebing | S*PCCIaMY. jp, such boure as these, Tt represents, was | Dee, Sess ase So ey Se gt ee pee be. divorced from. i no, ot wham we rendie the ing always satended: to represent, and represents | -Devises! A rasitton moment out of this bling. for | Bot homes Now, 1, have the ge sab irs of ot wham we read. ie ; Rational action, far ahead of ik, Weare acsombled at a | more: iastitntions . They wore - for | sme anxiety. 1. Deiieve that when that. ide | not recumbent and deiiant, peer, ‘ ‘when.Congress represents omly half of the perpose: ouside of an. leAepeadestet pret tae is ig Sere tees ecg ea eben tae head: Lee eee ie eae s San: > ‘Ratton, and whelrthe action of fast spring iustend ‘There mast. ‘paasled rather than, - by: the faesethat out. ea oy grees nate Pmicmprys ng oma These men of the south have quickness and Keennes } ef Reing, a Suality is only onewtep in that direction, certain men Jaw, and wl unrecognized in the: shall Put an anredeemed demveras at the helm of and cannin make the mest of our {which the nation iteelf ie moving: Outside, in the other manage available caus abegoratn an. slteersonk cy pag gg er gr ben ph gee Es Le Tag Mea ig Tt we’ are janice for the are snd. preter | ome that Banal Joins the: grate Drotherbiod. of free ieee prevent Tee zm wnch wer Srod at | and hmowe | Fat a urna, ite Fe (itwen) Sew | eres foot and Eee ' (Appiause.) Naty inéeed, the sBesiute Decessity, there must always of Eiijab ent {stomaselpation' ot ber slaves, "tet by ibe” hes Spe wy ace con at a ia | ech plnfortd fa thnee pan tests call sveryiniog by smaion: Vestiomalion of Doers tase "et imperial sxncter; © thas with pe personal aggrandi2°ment in view, with ‘ ~_ direction, form to: ‘with no fear of ‘with ‘Then for the first tiare I think abolitiontets | 18 right mame, It called a a aati 2 Woe lly Mea Me ‘the “Tae ae he eee Nit eaves tbe people ap tee fan. men the death jm whieh they bad | 2° 5 Pie ee It St ae South, if we faiter on the plain abstract of right our own ‘country ali nght, in the hears of the pe creuieantiovean’: mantis otaeea tot bends enough to soweamplate b wevesens after te arecpae an eteataceesat Winsted ‘poke them out in. plein Saxon words ow. the great | through waich our onsmiee cen sib us to the death eevle, with the sass great <menghciaetebarecs eutids wiaae satis teen 2 hasan te Presidepoy. What weare to ‘against is the inex. ppt cn a ~ pm py edge pap ae | merit and strength of the American abolition movement | Said the great King of the F; to bis son, “My hero count them for the first time the dis- Grer" man mun have dove den perience of @ few converts. ere classes of ‘Out of Southern soll; talked of it asafar off | Was that it gave things thelr trae uames; it had uo son, you must seem to love ‘people;” and, the pom Einculshed edivocale end’ obampion of tmapartis! Neesty, | time the Of public aire por go We had not the slightest conception that | ours, |e sear the Americal people, “We said to | fae dhewo's a en ag a Fa “ Durant, of New Orloans—(applause)—the public anxiety parties. ite broad reaching roots, its innumerable Gores, pene- 0 wae wer. Now ee Oe nat eae neat ease), she represents: ait into the gress corps of Gated every altar of New Eugisnd; that the tmissma of | Wem tl how it may te covered up, | love. justice and liberty; but no man, North or Booth, Gains the North’ in the assertion that. abeclate justice ciple wae mot sacrificed. That was Sere, teens Set Gog mined won Ania Wate Was tats ear Eeiced by union aud ibry thw ual pee @ball hereafter corner Bow * ul ren vol ol majestic iseking st heme we. count coma. onrandlncs au potion We are eporescbiog turped: politician ‘and "sateen fuike mato | and frank ‘trom the cousict the | ‘ill arop oA plece by ploce vo destruction. fe ts ‘the most venerable and devoted fat the entginn! ante cag be nothing. attend glad to ita bidding. 1. am desoribing at | People ta, and out from the he erg ons oN gpg Se Soames epee este wie; | enante Wem toched te Sie arg ane tel Sennen loa. | Bao ee EE OG, a f nee re tt gery to join voice have toached tht goal ys, It was a long, ime, ia By ry : ‘experience over before I id io was ovliged to | it commences to die, from heartand roots, Our history Sass Sree eS see | ee ee, a AR ry gp Tobrta eras | eee’ pcuce tem pet Seema pensions of ‘perbape one of the closing years 1s the s - 2 this the m aa y famiher with polities that it touched ; thas there was po inch rest in the to come yet secured We y @f the existence eo Sa Mer [Preabeaiial secon, mead, i wal, political, where ne us as an orm bee ee Bem wack ft thang a Re ‘kaowledgment of final ‘vigilance, that ‘drotene mboorbed : befo c a woe os ees rw ‘aiuhon a ihe Hime before to trims down ‘order to | State, and in our day we have Btate to State, and : tesbance whieh, sosmenito) be: yet Seemmnery in. Shir 4 Sites CA * fin praises, that the annonaces this as the rule of Weatiay srsonneny, summonses one ‘and secured rn vo er nernenay romeo tea body. ele nvens- shrank from disturbing not say it? Tt is no dis- | our a it ‘while bebind us followed with | eedint Aeneas tnnravvema cimeeas et epuact didate to personal affairs to: ee ge call ig spade; 2 need | awful pa oven pats, seee ie avenger. All wo want aad has commenced. How that sbail be de- mpateny So: Sane ties, ‘office ‘le concerned, thai | aad tative, ‘There we bet Gas way for the Mabt io ae. ie the great igsne chat as engages our atten. | institutions cover the pie ter where the Jeb a ~ a] Bet pent it ome way for the right to go, Sea. ‘ane woall Keow net, although “the nation itseit indiepenasble ‘That 1 whére you aeree See i not dared to utter my whole Le ee pe pratt. geo teeth peli ‘mouch alert, fully vigilant, thorot and | are ears. Some men staried up tHe game my (ay ) lded tn this Dour aa i has been in the hour of actus} poomce Dae eet evnen i hen: renetved fall a sense of justice petng itite shaeen ereloans tae mapelbag edhe sd Condit, yot, the moment parties descend to the level of the sanction of large majorities in Congress, a honest as T ant | tide of parties, Independent of ils tomptations, becomes world is fall of vbem. Tho republican party to-day ‘all the more necessary. lu opening, therefore, the ses- and I say it not to their discreax, but to their vindica- sions of this anniversary, 1 will invite the Rev. John T, \ion—1 drawn into the great maelstrom of a Presiden- pplauee)—io begin with prayer. wal election that levels every American te the one fervent ty appropriate to tue occasion. was consideration of what is to carry his party at the polis, ‘then offered . Jobo T. Sargent, no matier how much tiath he conceals and how inaay PL Fh Seer tare fats ao te as oan Wises a v ‘now jeury ry @udience joining, accompanied by the organ:— does vo-day that there is no tically speaking, | *companied by their parents, teachers and pastors, Me calla The election of ® man drop of wh th in the world 1s the man of ion, and the Sethe aon wndo-ok Wak aa owe hgh’ a gathered in many of the principal churches of thie city Bball diced o jorce worth minding is man who believes. | else. Welt know the rest of the history after this Au - work take \versary exercises q Fee cpeaing wide of treetou's oxtat won tee real ‘cca: heme toes Nive "hundred, and. ‘uinety-nine nen vat of | long battiey afver this dread experience, after this break aborter Noah's ark vo attempt anoiber political move- re vl tue ma sy ag aed Tation was passing—the alcction of wach a'man to the | & thousand never had # belief, Now and sgain | ing up of all tue fond dreams of w real and enthusianic | ment, When I see men in she interes of party wc a following 1s 0 let break asunder what remains Executi e crowntbe action of the people, putting by | Comes. man that all recogaize and believe, and we wor'd | benever in American State and American Church. When { Horious opportunity So secure ee. the churches selected for the above named purpose:— rat helt old fetters, bolts and bare, Lp are (izes around bim. °C we were brought face lo face at last with the actual | #Y see rian tebe Mpy should 17 Luay fo the | Brick chureh Mission, Thirty-fifth street; Alexander wAbd bea! thelr many baitie sears! r mee Ragen fend ivelt; wen, dinging aside all disguises, trampling | ESPEpio of something more. Wecan reap etairer har. | Mission, King street ; Park avenue Presby- Om side, © God! their prison door! al the ander which timid politics | Vest than that; we can secure greater result. Heury | terian church, Thirty-fifth street; West Pres- their opprecsors plainly speak | and stint charch had hidden themselves, | Wilson and that race of trimmers bave no hatred of the } pyerian church, Forty-second street; Baptist church, Adagio ue iprant tho weak wig nck ad tot fe seg hog | ago oly uy ond mera sa ane wp | Py-ird | aoe Reformed Doth chu, A oul 5 5 , ‘THE ANNUAL RETORT, he milk aud water neck most, efforts of thi ‘body | the public opinion that will demand ail that the bour | Lafayette place and Fourth street; Baptist tabernaci ‘The annual report was next read by the Chairman. It tee ro" ipim in due time, It aa ect eam ine teen is nolicesod on Uk he requires, they will pay attention toi They will say to | Second avenue; Reformed Dutch charch, Washing whole ‘of fovernment was with the great in, @outained the following statistice:—Amount received | 54, ‘of the people. Bot im the meantime, if yen which jab the heart aad straggle to woich it was summoned. y ‘eli us to | 98 a8 William H. Seward said tome when 1 was intro- | square; Fourteenth street Presbyterian church, Secon from subscriptions to the Standard and donations, | Quik about among politicians, you will find that é& coln begame the band, aud God flung it like # thuoder- | take off our armor, wo sit down and y the leisure | “ced to him in this city, in the Supreme Court, as be | avenue; Presbyterian church, Kightesnth street; Luth- $10,629; batance ae bed Seommet, 9088 seamount purpose ie not risk the chances. of bolt against the South and. cr it That mao | whicn victory igs} alluded to some remarks I had made the day before on | eran church, Fifteenth street; Mercer street verian Standard jee ex- eneration has done enough, because oub of the battie | te ompipotence of public opinion, Said be, that in « sa eect Fur aegis | Seat” sad os fate you, aare Nat i HI, ae eee i gals 1am nos only ‘an | the republican party wands Just there. They will abolitionist, Taman Ameritan, Iam not only pledged use public opinion just as fast as we manufacture it, If and devoted against the system of slavery as the virus | you would manutacture’ p ly of republican institutions on this continent, but | Wilson would not aare to come to New England have an intorest an broad as the fate of humanity, I | With bis present record, the havo an anxiety aod an, interost in all the great ques- lev one which concern the to whom this coatinent was 4be originator and pioncer of the movemeut which we meet to-day to celenrate. The only thing for’ue in tho future is to work on the me, to the same reasoning, and to same functions towards the people. Wo mand here to-day tu tell the people without fear and without favor, without compromige and without conc! si hat the editors of New York journals utter im their editorial roome, but do not priot in theircolumns. Thie society was nothing but a gy. the Ld the party on any such positive individual, They know and acknowledge the necessity of a ripe statesmanship, ry By Re re oe SD House; bat they recognize bog u role that they are jeceas of the party, Bo matier at what aperifice for the ys na ciple, And the consequence ie we westion made for the coming foosball of party organizations, There is where our i i i k, $9,869; balance to the account of : i t ‘THE RESOLUTIONS. which follow were then read by Wea. jopted by the mecting:— oe! that We moet at nation thoro ‘earnest fastitutions on ‘the corner stone ed na, far advanced In the accomplishment ? Hi HW 3 H g E il tet iam church, Broome and ‘ a. vigilaiee comes in. There is where, friends, I rat spy upon ca Presb a regard ihe oaths of Southern white | we are to >Ub aide all this milk and water conciliation, pie. ere is nut a republican to- ‘that does net | belongs. Looming us and over ur as we advance i 3 ry ’ men and the provisious of Southern State constitutions as | all inie forgetcsg of the lessons of thirty ow in his own soul, and that will oat confess it are large momentous issues enough for our future, apd —. Fa Noyes 3° yennetiln artoon, Mo street ; for the labor of the next generation. Foremost before us stands the question of temperance, the groundwork and substrasaw indispensible to the Lae ate J ‘of repuabli- ry i faz y' whic! in cocnsel us io follow, and to to front | bis own chamber, that sf he puts Grant at the men coeds Ue iaakch. Tne Dewing 1s the tines na | thie republic ho fea trailor to Geltysbarg and to Ander- matter what chips fly iac® Our faces; the merciless | 20nvilie. one. Not « js wilt print this criticiam and remorseless jctgment which charac- | fact @etapulpit will speak yy We are needed for terized the § anti-elaver moysment for thirty this—te, fare in the face the American people years and secured TE * Pecceas™ There are | the rebuke of its own comecience, giving the only two to Qe Trusted to-day. Tiistp are lie to its own lips, There is a new scene comieg history catiien taeme tf pn I Ne ny tg al Nort maelstrom nt election, which eae ie tes or ee irpea ae {every politician's lips acd buys too slight 8 ite S eaeaae y ime civil : rights negro, and, in view a By hbalf-past two o’elock y¢ afternoon the cbil - dren from one hundred and fifty y schools were assembled in the above named cuurches. The exercises consisted of singing and prayer, interspersed with ap- propriate addresses, made by (he various pastors and the leaders in the Sunday school movement. The cbil- dren seemed to enjoy the festival with zest, and ite Tes wore ia many instances y enbanced transient, super not Understand eitirer his time or the institu. | November, 1808, lives, We have @ ballot-box | when I can get a man’s ear foren hour I will endeavor ‘and intelligence of the | to impress the trath on him. If have @ bailot-box resting on | its cradle he will smooth the path e age) P idea, drunken people (applause). possible to trust | leave that cradle bard tasks A debt of three ” EK pn gee gg be ay science, opens to us a new door of Fepeoi smeutatioas te a Tas of, b- 9 ‘who have not | bundred millions of dollars every right band, y the distribution of choice fruits, confections, &e, The egented am Prery ine and killing every twig of that odious but not alone, Wwe send apr ¥ E applause.) Weare a nation | and half aetmiliion of patriotic lives, hidden in early | services continued until four o'siock, when the children \ G Weeden ond cjuciny shocks be Gremio yableh bas potsoued “tse” Datige for tbs, loot te the Baca oF "Vithin every atom of that blued is tbe | graves are enough to give for one politcal stop, God | returned to their school rooms and were shortly after- ‘Be feferst set sTeaahes ony ate or Be Bos a sk cond met neifce h We are fat Se eeela We are Krace all aglow with tho | grant that overy political step we make may not un- | wurde dispisved. the constitution forbiddi 7 © debar him (applause)—that class of men that would not wid ith as, | Weta nates on iy be. pare Tune way od. : from ctv!) and political rights; and his sub-cantial security constitution itself, bat the halls of Con- hen love of fe in a oo i Le 9 ag . jased wa — bag Fe vesing Bien Protection of the polloe power ott ‘he Wiisa Segall as tne very Rocrennsuns of caste and Of a dant mages covers: ‘tapi have their own | bands and thous through In the evening the annual, anniversary of the Now a by the North of the same rule of impartial | (ent, {Applause.) And the only other force in this ¢ by Sipe vat taanty fi. A — seine onl —_ at York Sunday Schoo! Union was celebrated at the Calvary government tbat deserves a moment's confidence is the Baptist church, in Twenty-third street, Dr. Ferris, the soiled loyal white blood of the South—(appiause)— ist churel Resolved, That in view of the fact that the rebellion President of the society, presiding on the occasion, The a was ble use of the ignorance of the poorer classes: tri ‘and that | anything it means a people adequate to take up an evi Wel Savet ee ‘skulle of one’s one- | and deal with it conscientiously. When the Emperor of beavenwas a drunkefi ae South— y ih th Madness the men ked their lives there for thi Beitah eaders—and in view of tie rariher Teel thet cant Seg anGen the wer, as pensing, ons wate the | mien Rovengo and intoxicat'on were the ideas which | Rosse moved by the aapeaton of the ninever nth coo. | iyegting, which was very largely attended, opened, after readm| eV ¥ te oO! eee ro Baxon blood placed each aide . wi , broke one onal; Y fe to dee hational questions and interests: t tthe | traitor took the coromand of tbe Union, left the unsafe Sere a canal aad wll nak crate tha’ inauitaivons | of Brasil followed his illustrious exauiple, there waa no | an introduotory anthem and prayer, with the President's streets of their cities to bring to the North their testimony that the White man, as well as the black, of the nineteenth Century have made the wages Claimed of the nation absolute justice before bimeeli, his | Obstacle, and that in due time, with propor assistance | of labor so large and the ingenuity of science report for the past year. It was truly gratifying to think ‘Fight and ia government to secure general education st of the vast progress that bad been made in loading tittle % f hun- Union; and hence, wherever a State refuses bse of an appeal to civil war. blood of hui thousands of their subjects was not spilled, but or to establish and maintain common schools, the ol der O . | and under the day, it will | 80 acute that for a m be drank in the quiet councils of imperial will they struck off = “ "f pa eT a eee bo ee Os Oo EES eo crudien Of tite generation efectealy from | week. ‘arven sueh: 0 Yasipecnee ro, with gach @ blood Shall not tats be possible ina groat | children to the fold of Christ even siace the last anni syetog to Future evuriy. and. te, sitio veutremnect.1o | Glemente are tbe right band. aud the left on which the | ever Hghting. these Toriblo baities over again, (4p- | and such an opporianity, the man who does not eee in } repaolle The rowenaers of Europe and the decvpl | verary, In ovary mapas’ Tn Mee aud chelare reseomed 6p . course of the guveroment i® to rest in times to come. | plause) the moveme: Put the American people asa mass | tu Brazil shall have vi ‘and now paths opent ness ; scholars Frlored raced Temove the tatior of the Write House at seme. | Now, 1 Know that in the delight, in the exultant triamph REMARKS OF COLONEL IGGIRRON, above tbe control Of ie appetite and so exrure ine | American people only achieve by war. Mr. Puillips; on } TT or nem now missionaries, and were working Capplause) and © hour Congress delays that action in. | over our victory, we have Deen accustomed to go back Colone! Hicainson was then introduced and proceeded | security of repablican inaututions ix as blind to the | concluding, was londiy applauded. ibiy in the vineyard, while handreds of littie ones ‘Seapets a dingraces ‘ts =“ Poy ite Ne ward and throw « mantic over ali the scenes of the great 4 address the bemoaned He bam when os ‘= “Sayin ia tg iar Yar Ke eats tne ioe SPRRCH af ea and re. | woreadded. Jesus had said, ‘Suffer little children to justice, and makes more and mor nocens Us elements of American society for the Jast thirty years. rown, On whore soul is peace, to @ year bo- yantry, wes urn of a die, of which tho WA DICKINEON then a 0 unto me, for of such is the kit im of heaven,’’ ya dt nna AM surge on all frends ot freedom to | We have mud ""iet by-cones be by-goues!” and fot us | fore nis death that the time of speaking wae gone | most sengdine man would not have dared to prophecy | ceived with hoary applause, ve fei Sina: cou we wore aiding our Master's work In epreading tuese Reép vigilant and ceaseless watch on the supreme Court | Walk together right onward in the execution of the na- | by. Words from Rite hed the e@vet 10 sijence bits | 180. ta A961 wheiber one prominent demagogue | Wt eee wiored ily the disadvantage un- | Sunday echools aud planting the seeds of religion in Sans present effort of revels to make use of in order to | tion's purpose, All that is right—unlese to point «| fur years, Action was only worthy ends ould take this city and the Empire State out of the lows :—I recognize thoug! ‘ag after ube very | infant's hearts which mast bear fruit in years to the wheeis of government. moral for the prosent, it is of no weo to dig up the | John Brown, It seemed now strange that he should | North into the Confederacy. And you know, every | der which any must labor in “J tiewan | come, What sight could have been more impress! Ly ‘That we warn our How citizens | scenes of the past. But when the nation stande as it wery | one of you, that if Fernando Wood had put New | eioquent addrem they bad heard from the sen than that which was seen yesterday by of citizens? On thie day the scholars of more than one iy freed . ep olended only does to-day, in danger of bartering its security for zed the position taken by the so- | York under the banner of Jefferson Davie it would | who hed jast spoken. I realize pre-eminently the at operation of Southe: bip, ol ag the directing inflaence of the fature of Ame- | have because the of thie cit most necessity of saying nothing on & subject so ther- Se make them, the Wools of theit own, ruin, and me exhort | Peverence of tbeit feepome(bilty i this momentous hou, ficen paliticn, and an was the foremost wing io tse | ruled tho Empire state,” 1f'is not amien ‘to touch | oughly discussed and canvassed; bat a fem words lt ST on soot them so wisely through the war—trusting no one bladly, | We are to remind them, show them tbat the nation does 1 it will remain in the front in the future. Mr. } om & question like thie, when a dozen times within three | say on a phase of the question wills ser tilt these few but guarding their own rights vy the independent | not forget the sinful porition and ity of the jlips had spoken of Grant sas izes the Senate—the highest, most digni- | me. 1 beg you will liston postontly ¢ ‘his day to be told a A Tho re 11 be | SME, classes tenor fittern years ago, ‘are to remem- } * power in American politice; but im the world-have been closed under a pre- | words are spoken, No ome needs at tile Coy a | a tay he inark of Christ the last anne uae! ick, be Raye yi ty fund | D6? friends, without bitverness, b fact of bistory, pA rata the br ar of General one tenco heen lca only in order to shield the | the indiestions Taya rhs! hand pe imeatly demonstrate | oocasion on which we met like the present we = ¢ senter unfriend rough can bere wersnip tod of Gongron a a time wuen General Grant was suspected of sustain- this, thetect that tue repabiie, a ie see iy Oe AX Ay reward ym the eA use) siuce we must put thorough ; New York Ob- | ing Mr. —— ma ye pg HE. received back wards, graduai dissolu- | other and beter But oor corps was reinforced Fie ip and decided purpose at the heli, | server and the American Tract Society class ; ‘with more indifference by hi for a stil would was toncale height | with fresh hands, and no less than eleven new missions. “Sib. Resolved, That Tn our juaganens ine, people a8 tt00 | Wikn Wige Nahe Taogerca tee, Gen Pa genes | shore at th sae, poman power, and the work | rics were added 'to fo Taig nein gl 3 I judy: @ | ised who 1 practieed one thing, after histo 4 S84 sound thoronghiy in eardest, und determived to leave | ioicoity—(applause)—thes the guilt of the blood of thie no nation of the m No yt yo of which--the ‘Sor internal life tor aesutary; wed it nin epoch closes with. | five years of war is to be (Great appiauee.) before to-day wou! Be ancean, what We subline pet Of eebelare eat the full accomplishment of their purpose, it wilt be the | It is not the Bouthern slaveholder, It‘ ie not the Doug: more pow: page of its With many wrongs righted, with ‘The other ay Cy felteh leaders, willing t» sacrilice principle and jus. | Jas democrat or the Breckinridge, \raitor tbat is guilty ready to drop record Civiltestion Watsformed; for op. square and ihe Pit Oe tS hipped of | the frm rank of the blood of this rebellion, It is faise to many oor slavery, liberty ; for dempotism and were our ie K wilt be anvitier pros that ineteame Fromevery | Cristian, #0 called, of tbe American church, ned a = and through it aii uumanity shim Re tate | Baie Einigland ining eich tee yore abr covered | Whig, a8 be vacnted hitheeif, as anti-slavery ete of 8 ud aotf-oncrinee Sad tee Coaren tps ia, Confederate pirates With, Mogiich ‘ Fadical abolitionist. It ja the men that. said ttle raral Raion inves Ghats ere Blessing of tx of forbvore to put tte and did nothing. It isthe men said, many voters #ing the onward march of burma righte to on the ) oy —(appiause)—and we shal and ft not. Ti je their skirts community, lemons of (roth, for the ‘be sisted with what was already ‘Soyo warstocrwcY | with the biood of Andersonville and the nogro im the fuvure | wi nok eiaveaieas ; ‘grasp of m 40v- thet am 60106 bask (en youre the sue. | stantial SS treunas save PAGE.

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