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ne “we : NEW YORK HERALD, SUNDAY, JULY 14, 1867—TRIPLE SHEET. 5 eet ° ‘ery, 1831, contamed am addrees to the public. Ihave | causes which im ancient or modern times had been | American bau: had been floating over his head, | OF always in our own favor, On the whole, we | very soon madea between himself and Black! UNIVERSAL fREEDOM. Bee ry io tt with the greatest possible in- yaks at the bar of the moral judgment of mankind. | he could not have gove there except at the peril of bis | CM find po encouragement to an snommpponichan before rescbing. aeaenee He shortly after a torest, and it is the key to the future life of Mr. Garrison, | (Cheers) Ho admitted the claims of other philan- | life; nay, with the certainty of finding » bloody grave. | tone and absolute pretensions eituer in the general | ing the qaarter pole, however, overtaken by she black, eo, | thropic causes nearer home; but the miseries which | In all the South he was looked upon with derision and history of the world’s many wars or in the American | who lapped him very prettily and held ievel with bim plaint mdeed, (Laughter | arose out of poverty and vice were not to be compared | contempt, The whole nation, subjugated to the evil | War and its resulis, No doubt there is much to be said | until the half mile,was reached, when the bay again let which is a very common and loud cheer) He said in the first nomber, #I am | with those which were the direct results of positive | power of slavery, rose up in arms against the effort to the other way. The question is set The slave is | daylight between them. At « pviat about baif the dis- Meyd Garrison's Greakfast in London and aware that many object to the severity of my lau- | Jaws and institutions giving to man a property in mau. aim liberty throughout all the land to all the inhab- | free, whatever else be is or is not, The United States | tance between the half nd three-quarter poles . guoge, but, is there no cause for severity? Iwill be | (Cheers) Amorican slavery was & system twice | Itauts, And yet he asked for nothine that was not per- have gone through that ordeal of war and that schooling | the black stumbled and fell, Keno, who was at the Re 6 Ovati ae hah, ee true and as mneempeoneising as | cursed—it cursed him who served apd him who held | fectly reasonable. (Hear, hear.) He was not the enemy | Of fuanecial diffleulues through which other natious | time about five lengths in advance. came home the wi Poriger the Creat Ovation. Justices amin earnest; I wil not equivocate; {will | the slave, (Cheers. It did not aloge concery ibe slave | of any tan. While the slaveholders were lunting | have bad to pass They are beiter able to sympathize | ner of ihe heat before Blackbird had beea again pub Rot excuse; I will not retreat a single inch, and | will be | States, but struck its roots deep into the free States. | him for his life, he never for one moment entertained | with us of the Old World, and to make allowance for our | bis legs. Time, 2:55. ., beard.” (Great cheering.) And that, after all, explains to | America was a country which seemed destined to test 4 any other feeling than an earnest desire, under God, to | Many shortcomings. Whe gallant soldier has almost ousted This ended the sport, and the crowd soon dispersed. a great extent the future course of his life. But what | the question—What man can do best for himself | b» bie to deliver them trom a deadly curse and an | (he social bully from their public gathering, They are ? was the temper of the people amongst whom he lived | with the most favorable conditions of external | awfulsin, With him it was nota personal matter at | driven to the wisdom of administrative tact and political AULQUE AND REMARKABLE ASSEMBLAGE at that time, or of the people who are now glorying, ae cireumstances, who, with # heart in his breast | all, It had reference to the eternal law of jus- | Compromme, All these are matters for congratulation, Ss they well may 8 the abolition of slavery in their | ora head on bis shoulders did not look with intense | tice between man and man, and all that ho | Dut they are dearly purchased, and we are forced to AM ICA. om we country ? it was very little betier in the | interest at the conduct and progress of that great ex- | asked was that. man should ceago to be made and | regard Mr, Garrison not as the triuiuphant logician, the Korth South. J think it was abont | periment, and rejoice in the event that bad redeemed | treated asa beast, and be regarded aa one bearing the | #!!-persuading orator, or the snecessful champion of a achlaacks the year 1835 that riots of a most terrific ion took | its yonng'and noble life from the taunt and curse of | image of his God, (Hear, hear.) They had met to cole- | freat canse, but rather as a man fortunately relieved of + - Bpeeches of John Bright, Earl Russell | pisce in some of the Northern states, and during thas | slavery? (Cheers) And if such was tho cause what | brate the canse of humas freedom, and to rejoice over | his work, and backed up in his crusade by good soldiers, ’ Fite iu Boston, Mr, Garrison's life was ia the most im- | should be said of the man and the services be had reu- | America delivered from slavery. | (Hear, bear.) They | ™%ense aries and abundant material resources, Rumored Repulse of the and the Duke of Argyle on the minent peril; aod it has never been quite ascertained to | dered ? They admired nim for he tmmense ok and | bed met in a spirit of peace ‘and good will towards o this day how it was e was ve upon the courage he exhibir (Cheers. ) es oF merica, and he was sure that that good will would be ari f Rights of Man. eisscey Car hie great work, Turning to the South, a | the English abolitionists were tar inferior (0 those Mr. | rociproated to tho ulmost by-bis couairrmen, (Cheere.) [Pa alecenede ae taeee ets | Paraguayans. State that has lately suffered from the ravages of armies, | Garrison bad encountered. His Grace went on to say :— | He desired to disclaim with all sincerity of soul any io ‘es m the 1 jews, July 2.) the State of Georgia, through ita legislature, if my | That is a tremendous sea whieh runs upon the surface of | special praise for anything he had done, He bad simply ee It must never be forgotten, and the London heist ares temory dose pot ive me, tA Dill oftering | the buman mind when storms of passion and of |: tried to do bls duty, and to mainiain his manhood and nan eels beitenie ry any oe emainns Ee iy Fi ten thousand dollars—and many wou! ve done | self-‘nterest run counter to the secret current of con- | the integrity of his soul before God, refused to ® formi iy a i ivi EARL RUSSELL’S CONFESSION. as ith the raulticnde ora ile Sadoatonea to nully opposed to secession and the war, and which at Brazil and Bolivia on Good for five thousand—for the capture of Be we sclence and th» sense of right. It was on such a sea se, tbat he (Mr. ery crisis pleaded for a restoration of the Union on the jarrison) embarked, and almost ip a one- Now these are menaces and perils such as we oared boat, except that he had Hope with bim. (Loud | to the joy of heart im thinking that | DSS!@ of the surrender of the principles of Mr. Lit SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. ip our time been accustomed to in this country in any | cheera) 10 our reception today we are entitled to think | the overthrow’ of slavery would be the means | ClN’S proclamation of liberty. Tne Lopdow Mines, pes} 4 f poor measure in of our political movements, (App'ause.) And we shail | of him as representing the increased power and torce his count r? in | ¥@.S8¥, ugh’ not to forget this, because at one time ~ of the pation party e Unit en mankind, It Is true that we have seen Is some | un; led ox thi «hrc rallbagy ler: an i ‘This morning © great recognition breakfast was give | if we measured them by any of those who have been | of the most tremendous and bloody wars which histor “poy ais vantaionet Fre eye 20 long & | maguied its moat disrepuiabie representatives —the two SHOCKING CASE OF BRUTALITY IN B10. pel o' in ont te Wm. Lioyd Garrieon, as the leader of the American | concerned in political movements amongst us But | records. I must adinis the time is not yet come—it is bof July, and on all other days ol the | W0u8, for example—as tho best expovents of American euti-slavery partyin the United States, The occasion notwithstandiog all this tt he-caase was gatherine atren HD, Bot even now inmght—when we can beat our swords into e driver's lash, But mow sho was froe, pose nergy St ese woo bt revolutionized an 4 json found bimsel and by surrounded by | plou, ares and our spears into pruning hooke. But . i eth st '~ ' rom Richmons was perfectly unique, and in more respects than singu- | 9 smali and increasing band of mon and women as devo. | if'we look as these great events we. oball fe that in our England, He bad been frat eta ie petore onan | Washington and restored the Union upon the basis of SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. Aariy was remartable, It was a demonstration of the | ted as he was io the causen We have in, thiscouptry & | own time the march of great battalions haw been cen- avery mission, and bad always St it Gon iliet Mie Cons letion thet ge terF | Busmored Repulse of the very nobie woman who taught the people much | erally in the wake of the march of great principles, u Nave i} Vt} Wand. Wo) x dij hat “disunion c Senliea mas saigiock sates UE Belcan enti goes on thie subject about thirty years ager 1 allude to Har- (Cheers ) Tp the freedom of Italy, in the consohdanon | he vould ceaite ac pr yg ap BH a whoo faerer ereat body of thos who favored Advauce=The Brazile- political and religious worlds of British society bave | riet Martineau. (Loud cheers.) 1 recollect very well | of Germany, and still more in ‘Atnerica, and s0 America stood side by side wita Eng | Secession,” but that ‘they went into the movement, not of the for yours extended to the anti-slavery’ cause in the | the impression with which I read a most eloquent and | trlumph of ‘opinion as the tricm| Innd in the great cause of negro emancipation, aud side | t¢ tivide the coantry, but to obtain now guarantees and | Miniatry=A Shocking Case of Crime in Rie~ United States, and 11 elicited a series of addresses than | touching paper which sbe bad written, and which was | (Cheers.) Ican understand the which must be felt | by side might they continue to stand together, shoulder | S4vautages for slavery throughout the whole of | jrierous Scenes the Consequence. prctiey and. evidently sincere | Rpousbed. im, the December number, 1838, of | the | by @ areat sovereign over a. great goueral when, stand- | to shoulder in all that In Just, and noble and good, lent ius, Mohedsieigneains. of, the. ‘icemense -peas.whi Rio Januino, June 8, 1867. more earnest, eloquent iy tminder Review. It was entitled “The Martyr | ing even amidst the heapsof siain, he can feel that bo | ing the way gloriously in’ the world’s redemption, | 2)Pary political and patriotic mnotivos played tn th P f ire from. Bi protestations of admiration for American institutions | Age of the . United 7 Tbas paper in- | hes won the independence of a oouotry; or, silll better. | (cheers. Having paid ® brief tribute to. tho | contest; but the preat fact to be noted iu that wheroas | The last dates from the seat of war ere from Buenos fend regards for the American people have never been | ‘Toduced to the English public, the great names ap- | established the independence of a race. " But we can all | abolitionints of America the speaker sald that atone time the American people wore ready to make | Ayres, May 29, apd Montevideo, May 20, The news is cE 4 pearing = ie fos Of ection im thigoause in America. | andersiand stil Deiter the giorg.of him who, like our | the only singularity. in this. mailer was that be was eis pape i pAcracr te aes almost destivute of interest. On the 21st ultimo # rather ‘Beard in Engian There inguisbed character, jatingui end to-day, when, after veara of obloqy; ly permitted to be the first to raise the ba: ¥ i hy Mr. John Bright, the member for Birmingham, who | eminent guest of to-day. (Appiause.) There was-Ar- | and capression, after being, denctinced: onthe fatiancal’| jnimediate, agd ancon@itiabal empanoipetions whieh | PE | maintain the Union” rather than inake any further eur. | serious shock was given by the allies to the Paraguayans, Ded boon engaged in a hard ght for partiamentary | ‘Ur Tappen and Lewis Tappen, and Birney, of Als- | supporter of ‘extreme opinions, he finds himself ac. | was huppy to say he did not at first unfurl in a free render to the spirit of slavery they preferred all the | on the tater attacking the right wing of the former's rane yagi to wwe o'clock thie | 22M & planter and slave owner, who liberated his | knowledged as the prophet and apostle of a triumphant | State, Ho went to the Siate of Maryland—to the city suffering and risk of a great war. Mr. Garrison was one | camp 4 telegram from Corrientes says the Paraguayane se of Commons up to joel slay can became the first candidate | and accepted cause. (Great cheering.) With regard to | of Balthnore—and thera, for denouncing the domestic of the chief agents in this transformation, and as he con ‘ morning, was present to take the chair and make'decla- | on abdMtion principles in the United States, (Applause.) | the nation be represents, will not he rememb:r with | lave trade, he was arrested, tried and imprisoned for a | AB%d himself to moral means we are entitled to say | were repulved wilh great loss. General Osorio and stat ‘vation of his warmest sentiments, Mr. Garrison was beets eiel i.) De. Channing—(lond cheers— and tentcolneer She thie reception could uot have | time. Lat bim state a litle incident i connection Sccate Guisk aae nein moral: tstompt, and set 25.1 had eriived at headquariers (Tuyetyy @papehe bad an dams, statesms President ry ven im only a few years ago? | with thatafair. In , thirty-four years after he bad pote ‘ interview with the Marquis Caxias, His contingent, accompanied by bis daughter, Mrs. Villard, and his son, | of the United States, and father of the eminent Minister | He was then not the representative of the | been in pricon, he went for the frst lime since his im. | ‘he end of time, wor ‘My. F. Garrison; and among a most brilliant and distin- from that country, wo is now in 1s elty—(cheers) people of ® countryor of » Tpoverament. He was frtanpraent tG visit. Baltimore, ‘The. soldiers. on th Sr with that of General Portinho, is advanctug to Paraguay, the follo ble ns were | 80 ere was Wendel iNipa—(loud cheers)—who the representative only of a party in the United States | American army were there then, and it was, therefore, numbering in all ten thousand men, The exact route by po a Nat tg ‘ ee _— isiged Run, | siinitted by all who know him to be the most powerful | I have always held that public reveptions in toreign | possible for him to visit that city, Ho was very curious WEST POINT. which they will enter Paraguay is as yet unknown, but it uke an esa of Argyll, and distinguished orator who speaks the English tongue. | countries, least in other countries—for I will not | to see the old prison, and, if possible, to see the Sere mer one tene 1; heved th 1 : ell, K. G,, and the Countess and Lady G. Russell; Lady | Now I will refer to others, There is Charles Sumner— | call America # foreign country—(cheers)—that public | oid cell again. (A laugh.) ’ Bat when ‘he went to SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. \¢ ta generally believed that it will be a new one, as the ‘Ma Stanhope, Mr. T. Hughes, M. P., Mr. V. Harcourt, (cheers)—statesmav, and Horace Greeiey—(cheers)— | receptions of representatives of parties are almost ape] the spot, behold! the prison had vanished, and so ho r . presept one will nevor take the invaders to Assuncion. . -» Mr. @. s . - | tio Mr. Lincoln his disappointment, and he, wi ' ; “ on, the Hon. E. L. Stanley, Mr. J. Stansfeld, M, P., the | But Deedes these there were of noble women aota few. | dom Js the policy of hie government, and the assured | great readiness of wit, tad “io, Mr. Garrison, the dif. polyoma clam oh aoetarocmae ale ma Inia nonavsyrenspce si 8 agaabeenge Alrite, hilt ~ pplausc. re was Mrs. |\—there were two sis- | policy of his country; and we accept and welcome Mr. | ference between 1830 and 1964 appears to be this—in ‘5 a 8 ter is thus stated:—On the morning the 16th ult. a a bala “a Lord A. 8. Churel oe Payne, Mr. | {2pPMingelina aod Sarah, ladies from South Caroling, | Garrison to-day, not merely as the liberator of tbe | 1890 you could not get out, and in 1861 you ‘could not Wrst Porst, July 11, 1567. | se of truce appeared in the Paraguayan lines at Iataity . ), M.¥., Mr. P. Urqubart, . Mr. G. 8. | who liberated their slaves and devoted all they bad tothe | slaves, but as a representative of the American govern- | get in."’ (Cheers and laughter.) That State had her. The members of the distinguished military board now | ‘ 4 Lefevre, Mr. D. M'Laren, M. P., Mr. W. Morrison, M, P., | service of the canse. There was Mra. Chapman, of whom | ment.’ (Loncebvers.) We wish to malaiain with the | self adopted the doctrine for which she had imprisoned | in session here to consider the expediency of adopting | Cot which attracted the attention of an allied detach- Mz. P. A. Taylor, M. Ps, Mr. Frederic Harrison, Pro. | ‘is# Martineau speaks in terms, which although Ido | people of the United States not merely relations of | him, and given immediate and unconditional emaneipa- | ¢onorat E, Upion's inf ment, who were ordered to go and recsive the bearer of * ’ not exactly recollect, yot I know described her as noble | amity and peace; we desire to have friendabip and affec- | tion’ to eighty thousand blacks. (Cheers) Ho oom. | “cueral E. Upton’s iafantry tactics, as the tactics of the . On > q Mr. T. 5 ( ) the flag. the approach of the detachment they were Semsor Maurice, Mr, ©. J. More, M. P., Mr. T. B. | and beantiful and good. And !t may be, for ought I | tion (Cheers) It is not merely that the country has | menced the agitation for the liberation of the slaves in | United States army, to the exclusion of all other sys- hs : Potter, M. P., Lady Lyall, Miss Cobden, Mr. Chisholm | kuow, that there may be some of her fauilly who are | sprung from uf, or did spring !fom usin former times, | 1831, at a time when be was utterly unknown, without | toms, are laboring zealously in the performance of their met with a heavy discharge of musketry, which killed ,. now within the sound of my voice. If it be so, all! | but that it is still springing trom England toa great ex- | means or supporters, and when the whole couvtry was is ‘i nearly the whole of the approaching force, If this tale Anstey, the Hon. Charles Howard, M. P., Mr. George s vy oma7s, Mr. Charlee B. Rovndel’ Mr, setgeans Peerge | RATe.@sy,'& Tope they will feel, in addition to all | tent tn the part of the country with which Tam con- | on the aide of the slave power, But 40 weak ie wrong: aia Phage asp add hit raya peal LEANN Sp be true, there are no torms of reprebation sufficiently ‘i a i oO ’ as 8 ct r of their ni it 16 i into apy how di vow dit a cers of he regular army, inctuding Generals Porter an , Mx)G, H. Hopwood, Mr. Victor Schelcher, Mr. Lionel | mother, that we who are here can appreciate her ser- wanes doing told tI at's brotuer, of a.sieier, of dangn- | the ‘bidding rate ere Pemeeae eae 3 | Hazen, with pistenig to pits aed Emory, of Generals | S008 10 stlgtnatize such an act of treechery: On the Ms if i other hand, !f the statement be faise—and it looks like it—no stiyma ie too severe with which to brand the fabrication, 2 ‘ices and the services of all those who were united with | ter, or son has gone to the United ~tates and is flour- | thrown into a state of convulsion by bim, and | ,. * o " fgg ty cg B.S. Major evant | ber in this great and noble causa, (Cheera) But there | ishing in the free Stale of Ohio or elsewhere. (Hear, | a roward of $8,000 for _ his ‘abduction wos of- | Graut’saud Meado’s siafis, has awakened a lively tn- Bell, Mr. Joseph Cowen, M. P.; Mra, Edmund Potter, | is another who must not be forgotten. Tnore was man | hear.) We ought to feel in going to America that we | fered by the sovereign State of Georgia, Where | terest among the throng of ladies and gentlemen that The difficulties in the way of the advance for a long time projected seem to be deep and wide ditches in the Bir George Young, Bart; Mr, Herbert Spencer, Mr. J. | Whose name must live for ever—Mr. Lovejoy—iAp- | are going only to a second home. (Cheers) These are | he asked, was slavery now? (Cheers) It had gone, ouse the charming beauties of West Point befit- M. Lndlow, Mr’'S. Pope, tbo Hon. FH. Moree, Mr, | Pistzeh—who In the free State of Ilinots iaid down his | tue rolations which T trust we shall see eatablished be. | for the Lori's flat had gone abroul : in the earthquake te Sees ences tiie tanta od IR Racetlods ot rear of the iirst lines of the enemy, which if once taken will stop further progress into tho juterior of the coun- hife in this cause, When I read the article of Harriet | tween the two countries. Surely, it is time to forget | He bad spoken; He smitten with His thunder the Beary Crompton, Colonel Salwey, Mr. A. H. Dymond, | Martineau’s, with the description of these men and | ancient differences, (Cheers) There is hardly an Eng- | iron wth gird By nd the gates of brass were broken, | War for convening this boord and selecting oMeers of such try. These ditches are full of water, and iramense abattis bristle up on both sides of the lines, By this it country from ruin, ‘and he could now express Terms. 3 ® Fs ho Paraguayans-Why Letters received at Buenos Ayres say that the conrage, ‘triotism aad firm resolution of the whole Pai ay an yaaa it domvaani, in | rebellion, They deserved, fo, be visited with chastise. understood by the bulk of the army, and the great dem- | Prove to die rather than surrender are in no appheted e free Stat it had | ment, was foundly impress with the justice C bil ff the o try, their adopts ‘t that od. Aaing (Wadham College}, Mr. H. Wedgwood, Mr. Vincent t, § mucins lea, suciety, Fe many in- | of God as meted oat to their whole country. fie ox- peace’ ges Dbasodt pi ole a Sac lt ag i contentions in the different provinces of the Pe could, by any possibility, affect the discussion of the Makea to ity tn Mothher supp A so merce | pressed the hope that America and England would, by per sd ° * | Argentine Confederacy are nearly ail st an end, and the ® Lean and Mr, Edward Miall, eg law when once the church teachers of the South po hone vigorously’ wieised, io ‘ot every consideration under hea resolve to keep peace. | fraught with such momentous importance to the grand | principal parties concerned in have left for Chile ‘The breakfast was given in the large asrembly room Decay roan real re Ndi pete pr hands the power of the State, It bes:owed polltical ofices (Cheers.) If the had old gradges, let them be thrown to | “army of the blue,” has ‘been in abeyance until this | and Bolivia, ef 1. Jamew’ Hall, Piccadilly. To the architectural | they ‘began tov cling to it on other and different | tan Menage ot poulicd aabition, Other milous tek the | wisy could wot these wrance be Tedresned ‘without en: | time and upon the present military celebrities now a tet hy ieee cha taken or tke ‘Beauties cf this elegant apartment, the natural beauty | grounds, and they “Evil, be thou our good;”” and | Brevalence in your national, Lee Se Ley nd | deavoring to destroy each other on the baitle feld? Lat here will rest the responsibilities of thew adoption or | risers emptying into the Amazon, The treaty ts greatly €f fowers in grea} profusion and arranged with great | ‘hus they had light and darkness, freedom and bonda®, | ‘Ne nisory sf Amérion aud of the world, when it seemed ve | t0€ fags of the two countries be blended, and peace be- | rejection, The board sre not lolling in indolence, but | to the advantage of the Bollvians, tnd caused greet Joy eattstio kiN were added; the floor and room were occu- | fated confusiou—(loud cheers|—and, unless there could | tov ans acon is fraome the heritage it theslang boven Pret nated Te tot the world te feeatene | Working with awill and essiduity mvifestly evident, | smong the enuire peopl Te aletot aa alniniy Cok since by four hundred persons, all of whom found places we been some miracle formed greater than any But Frovidence interposes 0 prevent the permanent | and glory. (Cheers.) In the words of his friend, Mr. | This morning at eleven o'clock a company of engineers Brazil ‘a quiet and non-interfering friend. fa poring rene tne gpesieor Be eee BK: 2 bot apring owt. of th Thea the slareboids oroen enh inspiring and ‘sotalnng’ high mora leek ree rrr be Wome Bey now on duty here and enlisted men of the army, with- | From the form which the debates have taken tm Par- Mar, Charles Gilpin, M. P.; Mr. Thomas Barnes, M. y.; | Women, I was driven, I do not know how, to think of a | lishman in this country—there is no one, Tam sure, In | And soit would bo in regard to overy conthet for the rom! P ew, and ily be noted, E MUP. W. Chouon” Mr. Hodgvon Pratt, Mr. Justin Mo, | ery striking passage, whicb, Tam sure, must be famil- | this assembly—who is not as proud of Washington ag | right in all countries and in all time to come, Having Fe At tade uuetes G ee wae Ss ns ae iar to most here, because tt is to be found in theepistle | of Wellington as the common heritage of our race. | pai m tribute of praise to Mr. Georze Thompzon, | /8¢ Anaust General Upton petitioned the War Depart. ‘Carthy, Mr. Longel, Mies Emma Chapman (Boston), the | to the Hebrews, After the writer of the epistie had | (Cheers) Therefore, on all these grounds—borause of said that he (Mr. Garrison) commenced the | mont fora trial of his new and improved system of tac- Mop. F. Leveson Gower, M. P.; Mr. W. M. Neill, Mr. H. —_ phy Fg ogg iry rypreogey | ns mecaes gt shia been St great Phempion, ° abe very agitation ‘aie Reet aids: brickbats | tics by the corps of cadets, at West Point, masmauch as % batt bina nok Babel natin’ cl a , si , Mr, of G mn and ol ind of serv! 6 rel to that cause, and on | and rotten eggs, and he jnished the straggle ou the eM iu A a will be seen that Lopez bas not beea losingtime. Some & Buxton, Professor Beesly, Mr. he ae prs Mr. R. | Barak, and of Samson and of Jephtha, and of David | account of the people whom he represonts, we desire to | soil of South Carolina, in Charleston, almost literally | Sey were the best drilled body of men in the army. | oo cnaents say that all hope of taking the present @ Fisher, Mr. Gorrie, Mr. R. D, Webb (Dublin), Mr. slap, aud tampebend the prophets, who, through faith, | give Mr. Garrison to-day a hoarty welcome. (Prolonged | buried beneath the wreaths and flowers heaped | The War Department a-sonted, and im aecordance with : § ‘Wiliam Mecdribur, Mr. H. J, Slack, the Rev. W. H. | subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained | cheers) The noble Duke then read the following upon bim. (Cheers) He desired ta say, with | an order then tasted, ci ular to tho one telerraphed you | Pelton by assault is now lost, The most general report Chann' Boston), Mr. . Fal Rev. Dr. Davis, M: promises, stopped mouths of lions, quenched the vio- ADDRESS. respect to the war between North and South, : * x 1g, that the whole army will go up tho Paraguay rivor by ing ( » Mr, T. Falvey, Rev. Dr. Davis, Mr. | fence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of | To Wituiam Lrorp Garnisox, Fei.’ — that never was A more cauesloss war undertaken, Tha | Yeerday convening. tlic prasent board, General Ayres, | ssels of the flect. If such a thi award vicey, Mr. Albert V. Dicey, the Rev. Sella Mar- | weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, torn- | |,%R—We beartily welcome you to England.in the name of | government of the United States hed never done ans- | Colonels Black and Cliiz, of the army, witnossed at that ecaryth lay tht rep ehh ny taj pf oF: aged fie, ar. Carvell Willigms, Mr. W. Redforn, Mr. W. 7. | Ing to fight the armies of theallens.” “And 1 aak i this | sympainy yourlavore fr ie redenpton of the negrn rans | thing whatever to upset ihe power of the alaveholding | time company dri, and later in tbe season battalion may do them good—barring the batieries—as they” ‘Miss Remond, Astiand, Mr. y now | from slavery, and for that which is a higher object than tha,| States; and even after the secession had taken piace, ‘ste h of I ] rT — Mr. L. M, , Mr. Witla | foe Med Go the heroic” band "whe here mate | {om avery, and {or IRAL whic Ee Oe ae ae ane the infatuation ofthe North that Nt mes willing | tills by the cadets, These officers expressed she great- | Scarcel? been smplozed ocelot Are araguay Mr, Frank H. Evans, Professor Fawestt, M. P.; | America the perpetual of right. (Immense | versal Res of bamensty and ju and who, having | to enter into fresh Smee for the eake of presory- | est gratification at the simple and effective movements | camp, as well as at Tayuty, but it is belloved to ha Mr. Flower (Stratford), Mr. Mark Marsden, Mr. Richard | cheering.) Tp the North, opinion, ni ee ee Me the Unie eorceee cars cacneete, And 7ey ere |. erinced by. he ieciies, 9nd. anqualledly, eceMnmena@e } eenmned one leas form, Moore, Mr. Octavian Stith, Captain Wathouse, MF. | favor. of the moet devilish delusion tht slavery was | gilt? ZestartS™ ote” sips aivancns "pecoaslats | voably.. They had slavery and then ollomed war and their adoption in their report, For reasons never fully ‘Wéwond Beales, Mr, John Dickinson, Jr.; Mr. W. Moy | divine institution. The moment that idea took posses- ff rica. Ni i ‘Trowes, Mr. 7. H, Groen (Baliol College), Mr. Robert | sion of the South war was inevitable. Nor fect, nor thes Southern salen, but even ‘in bowed the consi } war should not spring out tact qxowdl of interested spectators. Ina conspicuous posi- that dread! Then let us haate these bonds to knit, Mament there are some indications of a change in the ful brothereood, in. whom all | *"You commeneed your crusade against slavery in isolation. ‘And in the work be handy ; : gut notice and ner er porate boaunfally snaded por. | Ministry at no distant date, resulting in a practicet fea on the front of the platform was placed a large | turbulent Fong, astPioer Jet loose, the moment | in weakness and iti obscurity. ries ‘That we may plant “God Save the Queen” question, were ordered to the erfully Dor. form of the whole nial and political ma memorial porirait of President Abraham Lincoln, and | they found the | election in 1860 going ad- | wiih aiiiculty found the ofcs, of the Tatwator, io © shea With “Yautlee Doodle Dandy.” tion of she plain runoine tn front of tue academic build: | Chittry que Ministers are. boind anacked. right and versely power, took up arms stain thei: room, ided jogs, an ere, and OCcusi 4 marion Thea cams the earthquake 20 often fore. | suppsried yatew Toaign! nt permons ‘(00 the oficers oy pe! who met with a cordial rece from General Upton, were dled for aa bour in the Talh sapecialsy be or Fiance and te Sates of ustion, "ee and ea lh as Frere denounced. Perse” | tion ‘next addressed the assem after which, on the school of the company of bis tactic, Ita simpbeity | Oy, re or the Chambers, At be head of this oppo- the most composite description four of thelr of wroalthy men, slarmed | mation of Mr. Stansfeld, second Mr. "Vernon Har, | 8nd effeotivences, doing away with all complicated | Mit" Sieaor Tavares tiasta, the companion of Pre- th section of the wew,were lod out by ope of | Zocre'a vote of thankn was accorded 4e'the chairman | mapowvres, all countermarching and wheeling In10 | Fir. dgassiz.on his tip to ihe’ Ainszon.. and the most liberal section by ‘You were not vurued | for presiding, and the proceedings terminated. pow gg gey it ragape = en opie, pe | A bill has been introduced in tho senate for the ad- aed weber} ‘and to the highest culiar and effective adaptation for skirmish- ine! f the Conde d’Eu, the hi f the ki country, by denu: tion or ing, struck the board with surprise, They were | Mission of the Conde d’Eu, the husband of she Empe- ‘@ thousand nameless peculiarities ‘ou Lievd Garrisen’s Work=Abolition Agitators | witnesses yecterday that the cadets accomplished tbe | 70r's eldest daughtor, into ihe Council of State and the to vi of slavery; to sep the Seg of | and Professional Politicians Swept Away by | same movemonis with celerity, but that a body of mon of Senate. Great ohjection is being raised against the sa the ol on measure, on the constitutional ground forbidding fore: Several colored clergymen and a larg iaim the doctri the Libe- the War—The American Soldier “ Ousting | less intelligence and ignorant almost of the existenc: gaeatees Gulared lagen’ were -amene toe speepibiy, ku the t war, we iste vom sf Calton Gh con | OE oe oan eT aa tes cxshraieee sale thale nondoreent thie | THe bill also Drovides for. testa owing o8 tie Conde, oF Que remarkable of the meeting was composed of Fort {From the London Times, Juty 2, pbs ey rather on his consort, some forty leagues (a Brazilian vain, But this great triumph in the field was not | thet you wish yas we do. that this deliverance |: The compliments to Mr. Garrison in st Vsenen’ Fall ee en {chp gine ncn yriittery and | Veaue is four English aud American miles) of land in as white and colored, whoee special interest in the id have been wrought out ceful mes arose from tein connection with the out. | sii,,rhere came, after it another great triumph, | orc waasione engendered vyahevery in, tie wave owner | last Saturday bring before us in high relief the move m | CAvalty drill of the arma: ramaraiie (or ee eidation, | owe of the provinces, An objection lias been raised, on ‘among the negro population of Jamaica pet nae Noll yay ot Magy bo genet ms the front, | determined it otherwise; and we feel at liberty to rejoice, | which great moral questions are now treated, and no | ji its tayor, ‘The Hoard will remain here until the iatter | ‘he ground that the gift is an extravagant one, ‘the winter before last, But these were couspicuou ee the magna- | since the strnggie was inevitable, that its issue has been the | doubt will long continue to be treated, throughout the ‘of the week, as nay desire to-morrow to witness @ | Thiseity bas been suaken nearly to ite centre, and 1@; Bimity and mercy of a great and triumph: rewery s i " to the English 4 thelr epecial attractivences arose | {Cnecray “The cancaisbel were tren Ec awa: | Boers’ We are kowerer not moke thankful for the victories | ‘Wvilized world. There js much to regretin it, but ree Hui ta the "schsol of the battalion by General Upton, | #e*i0u8 riots have ensued from a shocking event, in from the influence which that outbreak and the subse- of freedom in the feld than for the moderation and mercy | ST@t6 aro vain in the presence of fact, aud must subrait feared they will bo compelied to finish | Wileh threo brotuers brataily ttitreatod their sister. The ‘tnd the um: | guined ia the ieory of, the world bave never before | Sherr ius ricemn which bare stited tad hallowed nerey | fo necessity. We live im an age of great canses, grand | Dut it is tnoch feared they will bo compiler ty wae je of Rio Jauelro are essentially a perocadle poopie, gaccessful prosecutions of Governor Eyre and his eubor- | in the North that every ¢are should be cause aud ours in the eyes of all nations. Principles, political doginas, popular movements, im- | aaiied to Washington by a despatch from the Assistant t there are certain things (hat even they cannot and ry pene of ane ‘We shali now wateh with anxious: wave toe development, | mense organizations—everything great, everything lofty ‘Adjutant General of tae r Department, wii) not stand, The story in brief, 1s ag follows:—-There Lod ¥4 enfraneh! tulties which stilt beset ti neration of | and wacompromising. The absolutism which is driven aro in thisctty throe brothers by the name of Fixutreido, nt industry became independent and h, ppler order of things in th i - : ‘The cadets’ eheainpment commenced this year on y 4 IK main characteristic of the meeting was its | Daiq for, echools were satablisned where they had not | from slavery, and the growth of free co from our thrones is imsialied on the platform, | prday, June 21. The camp {8 located on the oortbenst | They are men weil io do in the world, each being said oe ar dias aametioen tole F Trith the nemee of your fellow werxere Inthe | 80d the mysteries of the Cabinet are repro: | Doriion of the plain, This period, affording as it does | t@ be worth bis. $100, hey have & sister, a m wenanimity. heretofore been known, and finally full political rights | ¥ io as at strongest sentence in favor of the recent procesd- | were conferred upon the people who only twelve months | ray, suse Wl be held te grata‘ul and lasting reinem: duced in the, comebitieg | room. | Opinion | wiclde | the oply relaxation from study during the Year, nnd.us | Vile Norace The young woman herselt rival be ‘The y ngs of the United States government in relation to this | of two or thre years bofore had been described | Once’ a I lo eT pont the timo for the realization of the long cherished ex- and the most enthusiastic encomiams upon | gy “chattels,” po) thi Once more we welcome you to a country in which you will | cannot be changed. Formerty upon stations of the furlough class to enjoy the pleasures | Very young indeed, as she was married, against her ings to be bought and | find many sincere edinirers and warm friends. uestions it wan posaibie to indulge yp enae +} t will, at the early age of fifteen years, Furthermore, ¥ of home and early friendships, 8 ons of unusual interest Sip toa b tuber ring tao or inset institutions, as well as the most ardently ex- | aoi4 in ‘any market, (Loud cheers) We ma: a y, there- Resse chee: 7 wi 0 4 Becsdenprstvan fot naympetteue con of Bogan | Yon eat lasted that tte pecs trae Nontrs | itt” Roman Pagrus ele ru mvehatenring | Rat il eset Saal theron mache | SOUETT toys a oa a i Ae fe a,c ee Saree of egplenss and in spent which would bets | States, who befriended the slave in his bondage, will not | frieads, I beg to join in this weloome to Mr, Garrison. | world had left unseitied, private poopie, and even states. | &taduating class, orders ars promulgated to pitch tents possible to mistake, . i | now forsake him in his freedom. May we not say ou | Ii is permitted to me, and I hold it to be a distinguished | men, were content with practical good in cad. eee tate camp ah & euaped Reet, | 38 intipe “Afver breakfast Sr. Chesson read the following letter | {he review of what has taken at which Thave | honor, to join in thie tribute of admiration, absolute truth. ‘They lesrat to mend aad to mitigate, to | precede by a general etampeding force o frou ine Comie de Parl, who bad been invited’ to ai. | Ctly klanced ar briefly as is possible, that history has ne | fortune of ‘our race that if many evils beset mankind, | soften and harmonize. They preferred the mid course, Veying from the barracks to the then anoecu| carved ie ae ¥ sadder fame—but may we Dot at the same time, if Te Ao ace aaa Ms anex deeply felt instita, | end thought extremes to be avoided. This was the old | HOM Tooms all unaecearary furniture, | Tne epcamp- | Tse iaonatern for the sake of getting possession of 6 ham, #. W., June gs, | take s litte different view, eay bistory has no brighter | tions sometimes prevail tbat condemn ‘and | philosophy, and. it. was the practice of those despised | ent consists of eight rows of tents, two to each com: | 14 property, and for other base motives. have treated ‘will preveat me from | fame? (Cheers.) To Mr. Garrison, im the first instance, | even millions, to. what seems hopeless servitude, the POY, ood Nise uly to the extent. of wueir | PAY, opening on four parallel streets, and @ broad | ier eee a rously for four or five mouths, leavin Mit pravedi me,from | Thin ts due, Ihe creation of that cpinion that has mado | Svenigin ot essa tm ome Broce that heartot ime | seqnirements, "and did what they ‘could without | sveute ronning tbrough the centre | There are wate | Her io°\aary room, sleeping on the bare door with her and hasten to | Slavery hateful and freedom possible in America, is due | dignation against that readiness to encounter | wishing to kuow much more, But then came for the officers of the companies and for tbe tactical pa) Scar h tnvste ot Manion: ber bale’ ten chert Comtesse de Faris’ | in a great part to bim. His name is venerated in bis | guy evil Iu order jp deliver mankind, that by auch | the diffusion of knowledge, and with it, large oficer Tucano onponte het repectice com: | Oa cher unmentionsoe ndignies tated Spon he. own country ; is is venerated where not long ago it was | moans, by men realy to submit to martyrdom, these | classes free from personal responsibility, eager | Dring caduts, iw placed at the end of road street, | Sie was found in the mide of the greatest ith con- ed in @ room where they were brutally sll- ithe time, But let me tell the story, as I re- to avail myself | 9 name of thize with loquy and reproach, and his name is vene- | eyiis aro done away with and mankind obtains | for information and accesible to impulse, They ~ ceivable, and on the poivt of starvation, having been left are aboutrogire | Tatedinthle country and in Europe (cheers), and where: | a happier posiioa. (Cheers) | Now, that spirit ix | came by no faait of thelr own, and for the result nobody aa rd Oye how of mach or ioihe | sometimes three days wich nothing to eit Waren she or ever Christianity sofvens the heart and lessens the sorrows | found in Mr. He felt for the evils of | isto biame, nor is there blame; but there isan end of | Bog mud Maration of meals, which are supplied | Her child had anything to cat, it was bread and waver. his fellow men, He at once devoted himself to the | moderate counsels, practical sense, and “the golden ay By some means or other the poor creature contrived to. whether near or fe- | object. "He encountered all’ evils. He nearly en- | mean.” Every now aud then astandard—ayo, adozon | Mt the mest hall as eval. tite prenssce Of may te ac writing materials, hy ineaua Of which abe wrote — countered death itself in the pursuit, But he has tap- | standards are raised, and everybody must go in for one ship in cadet life, nad being. allowed tri-weekly hops, | ‘ree letters, perbaps triplicates, and threw them out oa tl pily lived to see the conquest of freedom over slavery. | thing or another. Not to disturb the smouldering cin- | sitnough they abru 'y terminate at half-past ten o'clock, of the window. Ove was picked = oye weed ho (Cheers.) | (Cpeers.) The in which evil prevailed in America | ders of half a dozen other controversies, Mr. Garrison . , thus became acquainted with the of i and | Sad im cur own colonies has been rightly described by | procialmed near forty years ago the absolute and imme. | smld the sweet ™ Home, Sweet Manel’ mt Mneoparste | ihe unfortunate woinan, which she at once communi. even whilst we are saying fav: things | my noble friend as the worst evil that ever afflicted | diate abolition of slavery, 1t was bofore our own aboll- | a4 wwoet 7 mente of social enjoyment, periods of en | cated to the Chief of Police—not the gentleman, wh depreciated existence. | of our friend beside me and your friends across the | mankind, (Cheera) You will permit me to join in | tionists bed achieved’ their much eamer task in the way, arrested the editor of the Anglo-Hrasilian Sn impristcable | Waler. We can share in the triumph that I have do- | anotner sostiment exproseed. oJ tue Duke of Aigyle | the "West. Indies, ‘where. slavery was an insulated | ¢utened intercourse, with the fais damecle, many OF | zimes, for boing rather inquisitive about tbe burnl sloquent defend: scribed (cheers), and in the honors which the wor'd i@ | the hope that this occasion may tend to draw | fact, with which we at home bad little to do, | the bewitching times that eluster around that season. | D'# Own premises, but the man whosn| him—not willing to shower upon our guest for the liberated slaves | closer the tics of friendship and affection which | and which had few social complexities even out | m4 ore Bir umbally terminates ob the 28h of | $e editor bat the chief policeman. Well, the Chief of ip thiscountry. In this country our position was diffi. there, Mr. Garrison found his vocation in the | Aueuet when tho cadets return to the old life of the | Police entered the house with his men, and found the gust, poor, and yet comparatively rich woman, @ mere skele- fact that neither on one side nor on the other was there the wisdom to deal otherwise with the evil, Both sides | barracks and its hours of hardatcdy. | Aite Heeevor duty | ton.’ By a peculiarity of lam, however, as no atiempt at ° prom: theory | “"Revitie, Pe aT istuntey “arith B3¢ A. Me? infantry | Bomicide could be proved, the crimbiale could not be of slavery as an iastitation recognized in the Bible, and | ari), august 1 to August 31, 6 P. M.; ‘breakfast roll call, | "mediately arrested. The people, however, took we der Ast Mmorning dress parade, 8 A. M.: guard mount: | matter into their own hands, Why? I dare net, can- len, 00 plan ing, 834 A. M.; artillery drill, 9 A.M. neering | Bo will not state ip go many words the reason way fur- graduat abolition of Navery, nor any security for the im- | Wet S08 4. art band . Hit of now | thier indignation was so fully aroused. The three mea provemen: pod tar na’ BP. Mk oponing dress paraia, | Af accused of a crime against their own sister 80 borr!- of im their own kind wishes and intentions. The abo- | sunset: tattoo, 034 P, M.; tattoo on party evenings, 9:60 | D0 that (or the sake of oar common humanity I feel Uitionists were equally imperious and impracticable, because | BY tape, 10 P. i °%° | vound to doubt it, So infuriated were the po} thas without the power OS rae oa “to these who desire to see life as it is found in an | the police arrived only in time to preserve lives of E all 1 or io this | They went uy the theory iy as the “ the hers, The people knew that the men were rich, movie, ete ‘athe | riebt of every haman being, and the unpardonable in of | ST™Y 08 the mare, fo beat the Neves ory ot vend a body | and suspected that the police, for n consideration, would = etree | fh Hae a an ha pear ana | cent aPhscpe ete | ey ea be er hl apa it @ in- i sas aa 1@} 1e l, r. at once | thin ia an age of causes, as we have said—Mr, Bright de- | '®° pment of 1867 at West Font. cs ove you take thou to jail, sad we will eecort ” =. os ten] TH oS Oe ee gear adj Pe wean want tention. © morning ensu: @al duties prevented fall into mu TURr. posed his store Uright abe enriye the objects of whieh be con- eae ing bis occupation as usual, whon Pi hem ~ who = ae tama a “ ee aaa ‘Tretting en Fashion Course. stopped dei ly in front of him and proceeded gy een mean Mr. e over rr There Fash fem placed this tro | sympathy may be spared and regrets allowable for baits | yerye eres ee eiher ten hee ae te to do Lincoln, wrillon deatbe im the Dela; for the still more numerous yy ' jor being fine, a very large | was the response; “but I have never seen a beast 1 consider it only the | wounded and broken down; for widows, orphans and | crowd of habitués of the turf was present im antici- | you.” This earned for serpents take a prominent jeer- | friends; half an empire in ‘ion; | pation of a day’s exciting sport. The principal trot, | face, which was returned by _s ~ Ds ag &oi,| whieh wos to have deen bet the sorrel lowed by 0 kick oF twa | The great triamphe of ‘of the | difficulties that survive, and it fad Stal- | ume to save tho delinquent eminent instrumen |, and pov We trust incur | liom Income and the bay colt Fred Penn, and to vem ne. ry per ), There government ingrace of injurious suspicions - | witeems which the attendants had been main- mai oo ’ 5 his enthroned forever. that Mr, ion of the controversy. There no- ered outside the central police po gg i None Cheering.) We welcome him among us a friend whom ‘he oatd Ging ta the satare of things to make more | \¥ drawn to the course, did not take place, of the three accused er from the very lowest depth of and political de- | *0me o See wee departed | painless extinction of slavery | aa | 88, Gt the appointed time, neither of the entries | the National Guards were called out, but Fath hg ein caer oon Kd pn i y bear io fee pes meee ned on Put in an appearance, & matter which created | 12 ihe tatermed themselves LI oy ri country rt o wi he iLaud cheers.) sore this; Wie uri, | 2s game associated Modern | There came 6 time eben the strife , | Some dissatisfaction among the crowd A rus- | there, An sitempt was made to which has ot doom of | With bim . ie eri an the current of the war itsel ; | Ming face was, however, improvised between B, Mace’s | but three of cavalry caused Savery ia all countries —(contiaued cheering) aad fer padi ace ot Perel) | be 8 wan aet ce at (Aire and we, cannot eller icnt | DAF horse aod William Borst’s gray—e single half-mile oa oe ae Eck cae eee a . % were side, Res thle great. mailer been tcoomplaned? and neniag have been settied without the utter dean—weights tq be unlimived, Neither of the animals {onal yet ever, and God only knows how @nswer may be given in another general question, how races | pu! appeared to be weil known to the attendants, but in 4 young English friend of mine bad So. seas ealy gress improvement 1s over sccemial ore It ig.due to the better side of human astare and to | ihe pool selliog the gray wae greatly the favorite, He was ‘8 spectator in the ) By & love of justice, a constant devotion to cireum- | the constitution and course of human affairs to man rode ap to bim and made a blow ‘aod by uni faith that which ie day of, patient, persoveraues in | hope and think, set some, more solution of | Shortly after three o'clock the Borses started from the | his eword. friend dropped om the ground, ‘will in the end succeed. ( ; When | look See ee the chain of slavery | the difficulty had been possible, the history baif-mile pole, the send-off ‘The gray’s the fereoy, bat @& this hail and at this sssembly, when I partake of the in America baving been broken, only the slave; but | the last six years, and the now presented | rider was mi light bay's, and, was | fellow bebind who was badly | @ympathy which runs from here to here at this moment, the mind of the nation bad been by the Union, we see, sublime conBlet pop gal apap gee 7 Now, the readers of the Henatp must Se caters cnt ness of to-day, I conast bet conwne! saved from intellectual and moral stagnation. ) | and the triumph of @ noble cause; and we see his favor), he came sormon from me ou the brutality of Present postion with thas whidh, not se far back bat The address was presented with great acclamation, ise, feaeen, for congratulation that tbe right | lengths aheda, ‘the Brasilians, In this ease the parties Ihe years o fy €, * your 1620—that the at whom we honor this ‘expression of their personal for his labors im the ee at 86, | bird, and P. Garvin's br, bh. Brown Bill, though the shall be proved we be merning wae solitary days im a prison cause of humen freedom and of their esteem and friend- | James’ are not for the reconciliation of two showed ap. sake was for thousende ready to vindicate. the 4 welty of Baltimore, 1 will not say for the jand of his nativity, he offered one pp A TO arg’ mile heats, best two tn th After humanity, eves at the was languishing in prison, for that I do not believe. ‘ail, bis moet gratefal acknowledgments, He was 90 | and the conversion of the not for the | twice the animals bad bee oy In Buenos an ee oe et acta Ree ttt Sid, net yicid 10 ihe impressed with the formidable array of re- | ment of the slaves er for the jon Ot }, bat | the Gn going opened om May Governse aleion, ary en pee ge] er Site cords uct romante ahem for the lenee of @ most horrivie war. It wase ot | the and kept it afl the contest for the heat | not yet met, to! 1 or amas mEreaeNee, WE OF he. 6 fore him, he he ‘Bet be able to address py Ty hy a cov. by ey nO content Keno, wi the but a, fe repress ardor wpa two years ‘he them except with a fatiering ‘and 6 stammmoring | ered with slain, that wes Seeurta. Fag con. | by ‘Toade no time ‘of, came faves legal neers May. 3 we audacity—I my of his voles, To him present ‘was indeed an | troversy ended as so 16 could caly end—in ‘he peeing Bleckdird euble die | preasion ‘that Be oon [yee even @ stronger phrase than anomalous ove, it was treatment te which he en freedom je the winner, | tanced as to the eccording ‘There wes 6 remot ia the eoursge t© commence the ia the hed not deca familiar, Tl pm have wager battle from | to ‘Was to be ne die- fed p= to the more ines thirty years be bed hed te look, the oppost. | eur ona driven to 1 f@ our inter taken the moa The time was, | nero with the rebels of the abolition Le a ) The ee the be it in to save oar graeme 0:40 13014, vove to emSerh at Romario | ‘mumber of tbe paper, published it Of Jone greatest | was ad ootlew, and though op Ameriean cHinep 00d tog we iqeee siways om ido wpeped horses started Ie vel, but Kono