Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ee a ee er ee es Pega se NEW YORK HERALD. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1867, — “ dite ex, RR forced without were open to afl the yachts belonging to Pass trace sy th 101s, ‘afforded by the | 7 PoL AL CAMPAIGN IN OHIO. THE YACHT SQUADRON. sit paras wrtaee pargesknra" = | THE poumicaL ~ The rules Lhe race, ond. bu . ” > SPECIAL CORRESPORDENCE GF THE HERALD. therefore be seen that apeech of C. L. Vallandigham, ” Yacht th will lay to off the Nght 4 7 ia Whe Annual Cruise of tho New York Yaobs | boatat Brenie Rook iniiae win Leaver Fall Lights at mictate enlidod toatl tne sbrasties and. have ‘ve Mr, Vallandighain delivered Lib first speech of the Ohio campaign at New Middletown, in that State, on Friday Inst. We make_the following extracts, exhibiting his views upon the negro and the financial question:— sane suseesns; have advocated negro should Bat before { discass these questions there is another | doctrine to its legitimate conciusion and pot be ten o'clock A. marday, August 10 suject to instruc tions from (he commuter on the morning of the race. The course will Bo from the ligh(ship to # stakeboat anchored about.one mile east by north fom the hore on Sandy Pout, Block Island, roundiag # fro and east. back to a line formed by a staae! posite the north face of Fort Adame Club=Review at and Departure from New Lendon—Arrival at Newport—The Clambake at Mount Hope—Another Accident to the Alice—The Occan Sweepstakes—"Breaking ‘Up —"Our’? Yachi—Adieu. th (tw only thoee tratreactions incident tthe 8: incident to OM ay tera of werviiude "tho, market, price. of South Carolina shows that tho public stoke courte m the a Pareeeeses he fa carrie ef the the Sredit of the Blate, far from as improved, ar “United governments and judicial tribunals gcyu'esced in these Yacur Aus, Stakeboat and the fort. en ons — Gentiewen as familiar rewith the operations of | oi. os * for, a3 I bave said, | Of % You told usafew years ago you were: If the race is not galled fn eight hours, to be sailed over | ves: puroies have been received avid observed and terms | ciehimmes Of the Stace cannot suitor jaaue which doruands attention, for, negroes baving @ Fight to voto or yon Newrorr, August 12, iser.} of surrender stipulated and executed in with the g preset; Tdeal with the | Besroes b rin ne + ee pd nt - +4 Tam dealing with tho liv eqcia tho next da 4 rity, 9 allowance of time for tonnage. Rules and regulations | eustom of war. te aad firm autho:\t7 imeastre _——- Bike My inst letier the closing scenes of this year's aay phe: b to be observed in ali resi Until an armed league of hostile States, under an alien issues of the a: d ignore those of twenty, to 1369, if I should come hore, I need not be surprised te Se ee am dertook to overthrow this government, the cocasion | Order and ty on sel : ermarriages and ade feccution of the New York Yacht Club have taken Seine oes Sat eeelte walls | Op cele cree tie eeteeetneee tas | tial euler seven, ve or four yenca ng to 1850 the demntraie | Sul yu I for of Segre iatermarnages and o a RINNE: Union to realize that thi larantees of the constitution | 4) Sommuanication adi party said the negro question w: It had been the intention of the Commodore to order ‘We equadron's departure from Now London to this place em Wednesday last, but the verbal instructions that bad Been given to thia end were revoked, and shortly there- afer « signal went to the masthead of the Phantom upon us bere in Ohio, | made it $00 We pee ages That 2 but the ropubtican leadera denied it, They cannot deny | precisely what it means. It may be @ matter to A IN) Kombat s. 403 La ily }commites, could no longer be claimed by them for the assertion of an: you here, where I don’t suppose there are. Htnow. It is hore, and we must moot it, Some of you | Fou bere, where tdumit soppose, hero saad is GEO. L. sGHUYLER, : Al! the yachts of the squadron were entered, with the | j.cuy without.s franchise, | sensitive, exception of the schooners Magic, Fleur de Lie and | renounced by their own act, f by ayo Alice. Karly in the mora the significant sounds tha: ‘surrendered with their arma to the con- tary ex patriati fy rors avery quarin, aod. ab ten ovlock tha agua! ot tue | fresribedby thse wo romaingattoe't9 he Union sod whom I recognize now present were liviag, if not #3} number hundreds and thoasands, itis a matter ot oni st, in the year 1802, when | some importance to ts. Agaim, down South it active men, as childron at least, in the y Groat importance. The nexroes' are im @ tmajorley Pinta mooce with the unqualiged approval of ‘our entire Pop oo clusion, gentlemen, Zam te infortm you that the FE 7 rier, aud at ten o'clock the al; of the by M ners) command! cy rin at Chillicothe the eurly settlers of Obio formed a State ardering wll the yachie 10 despaich boats for orders. | eiintmouore Gade them sreed away to the potot of | Coadag.. These lerme bars been aunounoad be Congreen,, | Major Gener sommandla ec rorokog orsaolifving ner. | consiituvon. They eaia> at a time when wo ad a | 47iua ofthe States down (ners and ander the mysiam of > ‘Thie was soon accomplished, as small boats shot out in | gicriing, Meanwhile tho harbor was thronged with Graton or either of b es the U if they | ders in qucation: aud he indulges the hope that temperate | united government; when there was ssctionaliem ; ‘ncluding Ten: Look : Ds craft, and the ewift litte Kate, that had rendered such for ‘eoncerned to bear in : Ao ee gop a ¥ came from Virginia, from Maryland, from Kentucky, | & by iy. ‘How? For ‘ soceived brief orders that the yachts should at once pass | ecsonial service the evening before, fitted in and out of unites, thrown ee clo desing nud cae ia the Tatura of Barth entice | from Pennsylvania and from New dersoy, and from ae HM ad Me os ame Fe Mevreview before Fort Trumbull and the schoolship Babine, aud be in readiness and siart at the usual @ignal. New England, They camo ea bretbten. They came a3 men who thomeelves had fought through a | Shousand white men disiranchised. It would seven years’ Revolutionary war, orthe descendants of the officers and soldvers of that war, Thoy met together ‘even roure than ber aucient prosperity and renown. Very this pleasaat scene, with the committee on board; South, rst ‘alerai , . " 4. W. CLOUS, Captain 83th Infantry, A. A. A. G. suddenly darted away to the lighiship. Here was quite Or of aut jam or of reserve. sea and quite a breeze, the yachts prancing and ti ng | neith posal! with such earnestness that bot little tame was consemed dation sad sahustessete” yobs ormeemens rore ya ciection, The next siep, 1 presume, will franelise every domocrat in the Ni We entering wedge of it already. Of econrse ied BFg f i THR REVIEW. by the committee in starting them. At twenty-five inited States have been as often and formed a constitution, Thero were in proportion 43 Ms Toe pound of merriment tint bit been heard opon | Minutes to twelve waa afetea toa wanner ently | | On the sth of March, ll, Prestivot Liocan, in hie tran | ANOTHER TRAGEDY IN NEW JERSEY. | tony nogroe athe South ands tho Nordveyen, mor | 3, aupocral wen ue go, wo, ltranchie eh Bat unovjectionabls, A thin cloud of fog ton minutes there- wld q in proportion then than now, There wore as many in : 7 ho decks of severai vessels instantly ceased, sails were | sfc came up, obscuring them for a while, but soon this mag Py oes A A ne pins ph SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD, the State of Obio in proportion as wero ! tay tant oveee man wus cone ARATE ‘east at, and, the sigual gun booming from tue deck of the | impenetrable curtam was drawn aside, and a ciear blue | tho cretansion that slavery must Derecognized and p< tweted — same reasons-provatied on tho subject of negro autrag9 | while he was waiting and watching on the border, im Phaniom, the whole fleet glided towards the Fort in | sky bade them onward to the goal. Dawn , and y Comrensta ferrites ahve Se exclasive jurisdiction of | an Old Man Sevent: w Years of Age | then that provalt now. The same God reizoed in the | disloyal and must be disfranchised. © That would be am , divisions, | #t mea within range of the aumerous tslan seod | treatel wittdiedsin, ‘Bouts Urvolina dectared war and be: | Stabbed by bis Son-in-Law—New Market | "ct’e0s In 1902as reigns now. It was tho samo Bible | Sins able gohome for curryint ihe’ elactionss bat ao ‘Meir relative positions of starboard and port divisions | that stud the waters, the yachts, with allsailssesaliowed | teate? with disdain, South Cerolina declared war and bee ry y my then ag now, teaching the samo lessons of wisdom and | Hos we should comeante power, asin the uptu: oe @# given at Huntivgton, As each vessel passed the | {n the race, sped onward until the siakeboat of Sandy | SP bovtlitien 4, as the baste of | tho Scene ef the Tragedy—Arrest of the | truth; the same justice, human and diviae; the sao political revolutions wo certainivy will, whether witer Fort it vas salwiod from ono of its howvy guns, and thie | Point was reaohed, when, in astyle of grandeur, it was | setiieisent, © solos of groiual emamipanoe with som | Avenasln, humanity; the same evervthing that it is to-day. Yet. | fo gid constitution or under the monarcbical to first rounded »y the Paimer, followed by the Sappho, | pensation, Idier, Ramblor, &o. “Struggling up from the gate of the | "In September. 1889. one hundred days.ware given to those Ai times enveloped in a dense fog, and at times | Inarms against'the governmant to deliberate and choose With ‘a bine, Nenven ahora thee’ “te “tashien: | between retaining all their slaves aml thelr palitieal Tad every pomble manreavre, to creep sach {athe ade | Tithis inict—or war, fellownd’ by. emasclnation, condaca, vance of tbe other, the siukedoat off Fort Adams was | [err alter etic ce chs utoal righ sand Feached in tho gallant struggle by the two leading alin tbe 1st of January, 1863, emancipation was pro. lain | med. ‘achts, the Palmer and Sanpbo, the former passing it In 18% President Lincoln invited negott i fo tn a tbe Naw Manxsr, August 13, 1867, Middlesex county, N. J., was again the scene of a bloody tragedy on Monday night, the affair being stars- Ning in its details, and only surpassed in horror by the Coriell murder, in whioh Bridget Dergan sustained the murderer's role, and for which sbe is awaiting execution, New diarket, the scone of the-Coriell tragedy, is also the locality where the murder under consideration was committed, the men who were brought up in the school of George - - Washington and Thomas Jefferson aod our fathers; the pL ned Medb ete Kary ise Pre ie 8 and toy patriots, but not tho loyal men of °76, inserted in ‘that | Pi tion on the republican. party, will bee Constitition the word ‘wnite.” Why? Because they | inls Prascr Dien oe te eee eee car ‘ball meat thas Shore should be a white man’s 8 te Rover 2s ho their ox. (Laughter.) Yes, forty-five. thi ment in Ohio, They meant tha: the regro should have vo q F boot part or lot in the administration of polivieal aftairs, That | Suite men distranchised in Tonnessae because they was the signification of the word “white,” Taere were a FINANCIAL. Being finished, they porsued their course around the Stern of the Sabine, When rounded to the salute was Pepeated, amid the cheers of huudreds of Jeliy tars that Bed manned tho rigging of this oxcellont schoolship, Phe favoring wind, the brigut sunshine that shone ‘Bpon the translucent waters of the Sound, the pleasant Straus of several bands, with the bright eyes of Brundreds of Indies gazivg on the pleasant scene, was wou 110 make the occasion of more than ordinary tn- o in five hours and seven minutes from the time of depar- I rights and ture, while the Sappho was but two minutes later, The | 0D the basis of a restoration of politics! . hour and minuto moting the arrival of all that tho com. | mrmmire, of compensation, for emancipated slaves. No. mittee timod was:— negroes here, but tho men of tha: genoration believed nest x they wore not fit 1 exercise the privitezes and preroga- | NOW there are other, questions—aueet ons of to day. tives of white men: or whether fit or not they sald th's | Doo ciode ce 1947; and (hey shall bo buried into the’eara> {sa government and ¢ountry sot apart for thedomina- | Orton of te republican party of this State, whether enemy, teres: and pleasare. i. eae rid - 6 eave i. is ais at the conference of Roctrene. Mogren, President On Monday night, about twelve e’clock, an old man coy of aan rite pur Bagron pesiribion eeniinnre Lew they like 1 or nek Wo have Squoa‘on of our ‘and, pit ia it H! amed John Harris, aged seventy- eara, 708) os is growing ont of it, a question of taxation. You ate aan elas aise SE or Se. 08 | in NOLS after the urrender, President Johnion tonted er ef Neat Sruniten itoane, | ell down South, and that osr colored iriend, Fredarick | {708 Ont Oh wuon aco @1a0,00N000 ab feat oF dates tacked in his bed by his son-in-law, William Roan trea, and after severing, to the yard of the house, was again caught by bis assailant and stabbed, tho blade entering the right sde ead pentratin; the right lupg. After compieting that piece o! fleadiss: work the murderer rashed upon the old man’s wife, and knocked her down with the butt end of @ six- snooter, three shots of which bad been fired Roan- tree. as will be sven by the s.arement of bis wife given boiow. During the struggle with the old man, the assas- ain received a blow upon the head from some bard sub- stance, making a deep gash in his cranium, from which the blood owed freely, The wounded man ort to the bouse, and was removed toa bed inside by bis wife aud dangnters, where be now rumains. By a strange coincidence, Dr, Coriell, whose wife was mor- dered by Brujget Durgon, was called to see ihe wounded man, He dressed the wounds. but expressed the belief that the man was unable to survive bia injures When Your correspondent left the bed of the dying man this atternoon he was fast sinking, and, apparentiy, would not survive until nicbt, The nows of the scourrence spread like wildfire; but the excitement was not go in- tense as would be supposed, the residents of that vicinity haviog become somewhat accustomed to such deeds of lute. Detectives were immediately summoned to hunt for the ussas-in, but their eflorts were not required, as the maa was found quietly sucozing under an elm tree in the veinity. He was taken to New Brunswick and piaced iu couiinemeat in the county jail, He is an English- ‘mn by birth, and is about fory years of age, He was married to the daughter of the man whom he stabbed. He bad served during the war as a private in the Eleventh New Jersey volunteers, He is quite leavin Friday, botween eight and nine o'clock, the squadron : Jeft Now London tor this port, The start was auspicious. As Che several vessels passed within a biscuit toss of the @cck frouting the Pequot House, they received the @ajutation of the ladies, with farewell tunes from the : ands. Tho sight was very pretty, tho line presentivg he jaunty craft in a charming light. They passed from wiew of tair frends in the following order:—Calypso, Fans, Alice, Eva, Stivie, Widgeou, Phantom, Daunticss, ‘White Wing, Fleetwing, Magic, Rambler, Palmer, Fleur @e Lis, Sallie E, Day, Addio V., Nautilus, Restless, ussie, Sappho, The Evelyn hero parted company with ‘We Geet, shaping a course toward Greenport, L. I. The positions of the various yachts as they started was not Yong maintained, as in several ruch -races of exciting ‘@aiure some of the larger boats shot ahoad, keeping fa view until @ point off Stonington, when, @ heavy bank of fog coming up, obscured them from view. The Alice sailed along very cau- Mously, under direction of her owner, unill a buoy : @pposite that place was discovered, and around it there a ‘were discerned the Pbantom, Fleetwing, Patmer and Deuntless, that had rounded to under the direction of Pammodore Stebbins, who feared to proceed while the fog remained so dense. Several of the other yachts, not @heorving his order, sailed slowly along and were almost 3.—Idler.... cee. 1.—Dauntloas . Ni y wie. tecketoe coikha! tue aabieiohel ames ASRambier... i487 Thoute he had entabiisped to tend oligile entatives to Thus tho “White Swan,” as the Palmer has been often | Congress, Rapressotatives were, indeed, chosen; but not - } ome in ten could take the oath of ofllco proscribed by Con- — Laie vccassaksshin pumbansipedoaensowse gresn (or members, and thereby representation was lost. BRAKING UP. In 1886, er Cr Lane ppe gee) Commodore Stebbins baring departed, and Viee Com- | Fentvesntation, imposing disqualidestion for orton pn cers modore Bennett assuming command, word went forth | taln persons who lad borue arms against the United States, yesterday that those boate whose ownera desired to | aad granting by implication a general amnesty to all others. would proceed to Holmes? Hole, and rendezvous ti This amendment, adopted by nearly ali the States in the each taking such course as the dictates of owners and | Uiion. was not accepted as e setticment ‘oy any of the rebel Guests should suggest. But yesterday, in the eafly | Promptly restored to the Union, with alt ber ancient rights morn, several vossels departed, leaving the Danntless, red Calypso, White Wing, Widgoon, Restless and Fleotwing to bear each other company, unless otherwise noon de- and d aalty unimpa' During 1865-86 riots, tumults, affravs, and « termined upon, to the pleasant shores of Nantucket and that vicinity. ‘THE YACHT ATIC8, jong logue of cruel and unprovoxed outrages upon Union sole H Sf and blacks. Although many avnoying circumstances occurred to dlers, loyal retucee it plain to ail that military government must be continued from the Potomaa to the ‘Rio should possess Provoke her owner—the jovial “Goorge’—upon this ernise, yet she grows hourly more and more io favor; and when soveral alterations which he has tn view have been made, she will show such a merry and ficet pair of 0 mind respect aud seourity for thelr Inforee To March and July, t=67. Congress by the reconstruction beels that many @ veteran ekipper will gazo with astonishment, acts reaflirmed and continued military rale over the con- ‘ADIEU, In parting with Commotore G, W. Kidd and his band of quered territory—prescribing, however, certain limitations and regutation’ in restraint of martial law; and at the same Pleasant guests I cannot lose the opportunity to accord to thom my mocerest thanka, Of Theodore, Frank, Van time tendered to the inhabitants the privilege and the means aud Charley, with my “most worth mmodore, by which a majority in any one of the rebel States mizht gfcanize a legal goverament and be readmitted to ihe inion, It can truly bo said that they wore not always clad ip their “blue” for the admiration of thelr feminine friends, ‘ Row, bey reopen ag S.wheioee to Nyrset hey 5 01 allo Wied worsir ory by accepting in good faith the proffered terras, put but delighted in the work of yachting, and did not mind a bit of tar from a rigging, or a little stiffness from bard work, One and ail, and so with hundreds like them, is @ great orator and a creat statesman, and ving Itia di that Joba Me. Lagwion and tar clredpervns ar ie | £m ABNUAUY Ao puta 1G lyon bende. aay to compete with the Washingtons, the Adamses, the | fs0..) government to pay so much money—$100 of Jeffersons of a former day, and the Clays, Calhouns and | 81'C59 “any of thon:—tudoed, all of thet, 1 believes Websters of a more recount period, These men who tell are-payable in gold; yet a large p-rtion of them were- ‘ou this are not of the kind who framed the constitution | porte” at forty, tty ‘aud sixty cents on tho dollar, in 1802 They Dolleved thas these persons, whatever | Te." Bondholders” got fur $400, $600, or $600 might have been their intellectual capacity, ought not to | 2m araingt the government for *$1,000. ‘The. {ntermingle, and were Incapable of boing saccessluliy | Foagog” debt of ‘the “United states. ts $2,000,000, Intereoingled with this whito popilation. Tho negroes | S09 "“more than '$2.000,009,000, of. ik in bomdar gre Dot the men who helped to make Obio what it was | The Whole property of the Called ‘Staves fe bak from 1802 to 1851. In 1861 another constitution 090.000.000, and yot more than one-fifvh of this eat he $11, a tht eaveme nt Tbe and democrats | were | tirs’ prcporty {3 exctape froma taxation. What jet qi J" resalt of that? Why, that the other ja Hable: im relnscrting tho word “white!” as a qualification for | Toe heavier amount of taravion, Suppoms there. le ae! the right of suffraxe aud officcholding. They were ] against negro equality ; there were noo on either sds | Much tax to be levied jn a acho) district in whieh tam fa Eve ot, oe stitat tarts von our | thote proportion of $200,000, It stands to reason gros forests and make of them tho beantifal farms you seo ' around you. You did it yourseives, or your fathers pen eee big ge ‘tiem r ou republicans before you, The nezro didn’t make your railroads. and | OO" ag 10 prate continually about equality, is that right? is Sanals; i was old Paddy who did that, (Laughter) | Tet Goyal? Can you look matin. ve fece and tay It tes The negro did not clesr your fields. Ho did not briug right? Then look at this question of currency. 1 apout that vast and accumulating civilization which has fees ‘a bond differ from a qreenhack Will marked the career of Ohio; which, st within ny | iio what is the greenback? Nothing bat the et | ' —_ totey ine dean eee en TT ety’ pecptee | the govorumont to par: and the bund ia theeame, The word ‘‘white” was in both constitutions; both | 0° a. groenlienls you per ae interest ra xem parties agreed {m disfranchising the negro—to keep Sagres iS mae not the repeats rik bim from participating in or exercising thé rights itl pee iuio anemenaoh gore oe of civil government, I am not in the habit of | 6VeD tike erveubeoke tix hou peneeh tat pandcring to the hates or prejudices of the demo- | me 10 take gi — wig cratic party on the question of the negro. I leave | that paper money shovid bo a tegal tender, more te hc eet HO tity | Sot gelato mas ne saree Owes hia Gat nose and ebon shins to the alangwhangers of the | On “An fie enuce far tho goose 18 eauee for the game fe What is left, and in large pot es De olifieal fruits of the policy of the past.seven years are seen in the contrast between Ihe teriae of voltlament olfored. by President Lincoln on the 4th of March, 1361. in his first in- augural nddress, and the terms now proffered by Congreas in hidden from sight when the fog lifted, and those they admired to “rough it;” loving a spauking breez: the act of July, 1807. 1¢ Jucoin's poace offering had been | built aud has red hair. The wound ia the head rece! democratic party, who prefer that style of argument, GERM Ga tet cetecerteen tren, aa ‘Awe Sheet ASd'a Aowing baa, . x] sosepiods tan wealth, wecssents aeemeieee mbciberieens |. br bins in the perugylo ber eneseteesarn eee ree, | anaratte Bary, 3 kind betonging 10 tho republican | 42. By, calling im these bonds and paying, them of it Ca» as ‘And a wind that follows fast, would hive remained unimpaired, and ali the sacrifices of a | to ronder hia:very weak. No cause is known for the | varty. 1 say to you if T believed the negro was capable | Sreenbacks, you save at Sa ros pee plans mel peed hr Plz ad and S pnd nba vei qulescenss now 1m the measures provided by Cong-eas to | SOmunission of the deed beyond the faot tnat Reantroe | of assimilatlog with the while race there is noshing | Yeer ia taxes, and this ts just ice as afuch 9s the ‘Pity, the shore was lined with ladies, with hero and SOUTH CAROLINA rettore Sranquillity and extabtion State overnite ia rr Nea drinking freely and was much excited by the bert aes ‘¢ ae oy Pad cee cig A — ~ mm 4 Boag nt Pah eerie ans The propeal . sored " " st rom ‘poli | years @here » gentleman, all eagerly watching a Little contest pga te Se ‘and reoe'ved amnesty, | immediately upon the news of the occurrence reach. | cal righis aid privileges. It le nor Decaren of cry Or toe ise tana. demneerntanarey ta aes Shee ae etwoen the Alice, Phantom, Palmer, Flour de Lis and ntless, presenting to them a scene of animation. Of ee’ Point the scene between tleso yachts was also of brilliancy, and down to Charlestown inlet was a pleasant Hvaly~ waters around Point Judit! t slowly al as For at most it can only be sald that the measures of Uou- eee impose upon the rangulabed the institutions of the vic. lore, And if tt be true that antagonistical inet tutlona made us enemies in war, then without homogeneous institutions we cannot trust, even in pence, to ba friends, 1. may bo assumed that no disabihty will be removed from 0 resist, Oppose oF discourage recone: in, 1D every State where the offered Rice rere shall be ted ft is in that neeforth pol ther al iitted to ing New Brunswick, County Prosecutor Herbert visited New Market for the parpote of ascertaining the facts of tne case, Tho house bas two rooms on the frst floor. The rom fronting om the road is calied the sitting room, and ws occupied by Mrs. Roantree, The room back of this is occapied by Mr. Harrie and wife, aod bas ap entrance from the back ‘a; thus Harris’ room may be entered by the front, ugh the Toom occup:ed by Mra. Roantree, or by the rear door, STATEMENT OF MRS BOANTRER, ing made Communication from General Sickles te the Charleston Beard of Trade in Reply to a Romonstrauce—The Present Position of South Carolina Discussed—The Causes that Led to Blilitary Rule—The Only Hope of the State in Speedy Reconstruction. The following communication has been addressed to a committee of the Charieston Board of Trade by General uliarities commoaly attributed to the negro that I Mould exolads him. Neither do 1° propose to discuss ands. shell be, paid. in. tage! sears noe iene whether the negro is the equal of the white race, Upon | Pople pay oe a aD ee irae & z i escape & large {hat my ooinlen ta feed by sindy and redection—axed | 9°05 “aaa''ta "the soeeches of the other sae ~ wisest men who have inv. ‘the subjec;—fixed | WDat was saveipeies Pee clamor to be because up to the present time the negro b23 given no | Tsised evidence ot capacity for scltcgprornmieat. I 40 1 not pro- ee the ier. oe a pose se tl juestion, care not w! er is our equal fatellectually or not. It matters. little to me. | Sverything—nationsl binoer a4 oly cae notre ve bee! terms of reconeifatign now offered the promiers o repudiating .one dollar, of the yachts at anchor and their respective | Sickles: — will seoner or later ‘ind themselves without 8. ‘The County Prosecutor, havi an examination | He may be the superior of the white race. He cer- | of Grewen anote. The swift hecled Eve tae ene Haavavanrans, 8200n Mitrrany Disrnict, Without franchises, and na longer the per of the humblest | of the premises, obtained the following statment item | teloly 18 to some eaembers of it T know of, Wren es ee tee eee ree beer poked ny ve, followed by the other sloops, then the schooners Assistant ADsUTANT’s G) ‘3 ao citizen of the republic; and then wil tue rebellion have | Hannah Roantre., wife of the prisoner:— man tells mo the negro is the equal of the white a bi h gacane is Tt: Day ihess bonds 07 with. You have pao, Fuser Fleeting, Sappho, Rambler Magie and | serge, wncssn avert Web, Nabe own Rees A. | Uae aN SN TN ees own Impres: |” Daring the war my budband” sent. to we $800, to be | taom, {never enter ito ah argument wih. Bim because | {88 00d enough to pay thee. brads of with You have he rest of the fleet, Their wolcome was of the most Tare, A Costa and &. W. Mansnazes Gomu:tiee of tne particular grounds of complaint suggested in your re- | deposited ia the bank io his namo; but I invesied the a io pouene be eames know, taxing bimeott ss tho | Nave got your wheat in the bara, and soon will have aus oi ater ther ber A d n nf og G os ee of ea, of Shermer ioc Gemmmtonn. | ken tain’ aun tesa VII. of General Orde: aes flay eante nay cue tae Gualegtens aed Sse ncvindlegty Pacer Fr tben C : ose other grain... Welt, when von go to sel itdo you gee ry moment arrival, and, w! snore, JENTLEMEN—I ain instruct ¢ Major Gen ou take exception to 4 1 ders 78 seom A rf 4 the ladies took barge of the broazed mombers, Inviting me 9) which declares that oertsia contracts if hereafter made'| a eoarce of ann vance to bm, and ho ofion threatened | isthe superior of ou race, will if there ie an ieooens | gold for 10 No, certains: not; you must tke your pay mauding to communicate to you the results of his careful cot in greenbacks. The democratic pariy ideration of the remonstranco of the Board of Trade of Sem to & promenade in the grand halis of the howls, my life in consequence; when be returned from the war | bitity of assimilation or amalgamation. it is @ sufficient = by dealers in intoxicating liquors, spall be deemed and eee ar A Fras being bold Tae nants uns Owening, whore e fait | fat in dram proper to defor tna reply to four sorints | ey: aso paragraph 1X Genera} Orders a ening dae | Ye Ved with mein tls bouso; my father, John Harrie, | barver made by the Alghty himelt to prevent woat | ea0slty. But when'yo0, cove bere 4a peers held. Thus until late © Deuuty and | nication untilafter the actiog of Congressupon the quest-ons | tross for rent aud eubst'th and my motner, bis wite, came to live with meon the | ts now being pee. patton te represented ia | tied of money as tho, 90. lon of Nowport the gay young sailors enjoyed them- | made in relation to the authority of the commending officers 25-h of December, 1835, and lived with me this cor —the Dutch, the Irish, the th ves, ry mun, of cont of that, That fis the kind of equatity we like, fide, asihahe stay a Sttgean fs | fark mie ee open tates = @ontributed to the population here. They have married | he came upto the help of the gover t+ and intermarried. ‘There is uot a man among you who | °F need. i oR HE Na eae we not intermixed in tis descent. I have the blood of | His sonst No. He loaned bie. been easing that time; Roantree, my busvand, often to move, bat 1 would not tet br hang a of my own iite, and I would not alone with him; my father and mother revtied of me one room and collar of this house, and paid me for it $2 per: mouth ; Wy Maer OAS Tad no partioular uiffercave with Roantree, except about seven dollars which my wher joaned to him to buy carpenter's tools with; her frequently asked Roantree for it, but he said he of military districts, In bebaif of the Board of Trade you complain of the ac. bon of the commanding General upon certain subjects of Jooal administration as Unconstitutional, unwiee, unjustand Inexpedien ‘rhe present occasion seems to bea ftting ‘one to remore some of the miaapprehensions entertained in relation to the origin and sanction of the raikiary authority Row exercised in the Carolinas, South Carolina in 1861 renounced her relations with the Uniied States, asserted her independence, and by military for tho little inconveniences they had encountered sailing hither, * ‘TUR OLAMBAKR, ‘This pleasant featuro of the cruiso cams of on Friday Mount Hope, opposite Fail river, as 1 telegraphed you would. The avitation to the squadron was extended Captain E. Dodge, owner of the fleet and preity 10; aud in compliance with his wishes Commodore fs focling well repaid by the night’s hearty recep- ired by that while it la the province of commerce to direct the max terial resources and onercies of the country into channels of enterprise that nourish material and moral developmen yet commerce itself 1s depondent upou domestic ascuriiy ‘0d contidence, and tho productivenss of labor in the de races Duwt man has got his pay airesdy. po wasn totally ‘and absolutely, and fag —— money to the government at ten Fineon He people. If the negro was capable of this intermixturs | #60 and took a promise to pay for 100. 36 wo are and assimilation he would have just_as much right as } that wo owe to bm, and suc! as he ad gratit t eb. of be | Gratitude for whet? For paytog $100 for $00, and in- Stebbins gave verbal instructions that the squadron | ;, 4 of be v7 artn f avriculte nt Tact Bo far fro would not pay bim this o-curred qoite often, and soomed | the German, Frenchman, the Englishman or gheald weigh anchor at nine o'clock, which waspromptiy | scncte cf the Called Staten nd every gepreseitnive af the Sompl a of tomporary Haeanzenienons those, whose f = to oe tue oaly pont of diference between them; bare amerious vera fo Soeee rights one Drivieges of etizee- ba fier aging ied aerate thority of th 5 te ne Wilege it $s to control the curreney and capital of aeband, Ouse ‘enjoyod s nats Beaniy. "At times the wnile winged clippers wouil te | sndetentid war foliowca ct son Mr WETHONY. Along | Hhocse icy adoaid bowling frees Ser cular poe | totes weuly wi ontarasy reat Neve te ees emanates wo mand upoa'a plavorm’ of Jantons We Maud by the 1n 1866 the military foress of the United States completed the conquest and ovcapation of the territory of South hina and of her aliies, » Martial law ensued as the Ingitimato and necessary consequence of conquest and oecnpation. All local civil authority thereupon ceased. or, if subsequently exercised, depended tor its valldity upon the military author ity of the conque: viloges for the sake of promoting the productions of labor, fra which the profits of commerce are malaly devised, You object to raph Vil, of General Orders No. 32 besa base my oppos' rinciples of justice to ail nlike, and we foo! to-day like oat has eeunred a EN rg Migr) tie old democratic party of twenty vears ago,. But we what God has put asunder man hae no power to bring | af@ called upon to pay over im nse sums of money to her. Those marks I have indicated may be tho | the bankers of Phila eipbia and Now York, and the rich semblance of that which is within to denote that in. | en everywhere who mad» loans to the government. capacity for com ining that race and mingling itinto one | MY good old friend, what did you get for your son? Dunhsm's to wasn and received one dollar for it; I sent my titiie girl with the dotiar which I received aa wages to the store to get some pork and a loaf of bread; Roan- tree met his daughter on the road as she was going to the store, took the money away from her and sent word to me that be had taken it; I then went out to find him bn ge again they would sweep to and fro, weaving Sheir fair fabric of white canvas and fuely modelled into many closters, The wind was light, by no means sufiicieatly heavy for the purpose of affording She amusement of a lively race. It was a morning rae, Western 5 er, cons! ty the cus Hanors, and tho excise taxon dome Paid; and you regard it ag an act of injustice to those F dutics on foreiga © liquors, had been for ely holid ia, and cffectualiy it r. he oe a pea Bee Brery yacht caitied Wa fall sarheve recogatzed prlactples of pale law are announced | peld: sad you regard it as an act of, Pee e on Tim | 80d be ran into Davion’s' store; I then went into tue | with ours, and for that reason thore oucht to be no at- mpeg ome Lahn titties S| Tes @emplement of canvas, and wing aod wing they | fonowing lancuas eadiairiet ar cotiaty occupied | sald property neainct Gre, wnd aloo to vrotert the owners of | MOFO and told him to let _me have the dollar, as it was | tempt to raiso the negro to. political or civil equalliy, men Who ret weet ony, ané went motives, Qpprosched their destination, the Magic, Rosti by an evem ds, Jn consequence of the occupation, | said propery from collecting thelr just devia at common | the voly dollar 1 had; be said he would not give it tome, | Ho is aman as you are—I don't sav he is a brother. ine Eewae Gat eet te caoa Sit, tana Pahner and Alice, the first; but they awaited the arrival ead ran out; I foliowed him, and he turned round and isa man—God made him a man—bat it | kt nothing. Tt was not nntil the purcose @f the Commodore, Vice Laughter. ollows we that He made him of the more elevared race; | Was avowedly changed that big bounties had to be by no means. Yet, as a member yey Srey family | odered, Nin dime ee weet ores renee wal in this counicy or ce | ‘There ts SUM anotlive yz y0-oa 19 he enneltored, and much longer as he sees fit to live here without becom. | it isa very important ove, too. About five years ago ing a tities; as much protection by law as your wife | one Mr. Saimon P. Cras», of wnom you have heard and bas, as your daughter has, neither of whom cao vote or | Tread, invented a scheme of natina! banks for supplyog b office, ive him these same rights, I would | the country with currency. Daniel Webster said, a great. give them to him, and I would give to nim another | many yearsago, tat tho ingenuity of man never de- Tight, which hae been denied to some of us—the right | Vised anything 90 successiai for piunderiog men as of trial by jury and the right to testify in courts I | Paper money; but oven ve nover dreamed of such a ma- wonld give bim a fatr trial when accused of an offence, | Chine for the purposo of plunder as Salmon P. Chase’s and convict or acquit him accorting to the laws of ths | Dational banking system, Loox a: it, and thea ponder land. But the ques#pn of political rights lies far deeper, | Upon the charac.er and capacity of toe man who could This country was settled by white men and devolopod | invent snch a system. What is the modus operandi? by white men, and the impossibility of mingling these | The government authorizes these banks to issue paper races, the utter failure of guch attompts of the kind as | money, A ceriain number of mn get bave been made, is a sufficient argument against the | aud purchase the bends of the United Proposition now before the people of this State. The | They put in say ono bundred thousand Degroes of Haytt are wiser than their republican brethren | 19 greenbacks, and by purcna-ing bonds of the of the UnitedStates, The negro in Hayti has forbidden | United States for that amount they acquire the the white maa to vote or hold oftice, and Sambo is right, | Privilege of issuing paper money, they Issue a cortain He anderstands the laws which govern the haman | Amount in notes, and their notes take the piace of the family better than those who preach negro equatity | leeal tenders. They aro equivalent to the legal tenders. bere He is in the vast majority there, and wiite | !0 ail respecte asa circulating medium, except that men are in the minority, He knows are not compelled to rece.ro them in payment for man ought not to be allowed to mingle on | Let us look at these various kinds of money and see how terms of equality with him, and hence all oMceholding | this system works, That is tho sort of money (holding and all suffrage are confined to the negro thore. I re- | UP ® $2 60 gold piece) that we at ee eognize the superior wisdom ot this, Iam in favor of | wader @ democraitc adiunistracion, That Rogro equality and negro suffrage ia Africa, bit I'am op- | mero representative of vaiue. It is vatagitself. Seven to it in the United States, I ain opposed to allow- "ts ago that was worth $250. To the white man to hold office or vote in A’rica, and I 60, Now look at this, (Holiing up « $6 Treasury am opposed to giving thoes privileges to the negro here, | note.) What is that worth? 1 was worch five hundred But Africa ts the negro's country ; this is ours; that’s | cents when it was tasued; to day it ts worth three huo~ the difference, The mm is now presented by the | ‘Ured and sixty cents That ts the difference. Hore is republican party of Ohio to introduce negro equality | your legal tender, and bere (hoidicg up a na and negro suftrage by striking the word “white” out of | tional bank note) is your oational bank curency. the State constitution. Thus at last it has com law.” You will dud by referring tothe paragraph in ques. tion, that It has not the retrospective opecation compla:nod of. “It dors not taterfare with eontracts of sale, storage or insurance already made when the order went Into operat on nor does It prevent the sale of such liquors by a properly Licensed aealer who conforms to the prescribed regulations rorhe obpect ted to h TX. of je objection you to para; of General Orders Xo. So aballahing. distress for’ rent bas been repeatedly rejected by the courts of the country. To forcement of eontracts dove pot . In several of the Siaies of the Union the aboltion of distrest for rent bas bean enacted without rezand to existing lenses, and the Reopriety of such tectststion haw been Faticiniy eancuioned, hile approving the moasure at larce, you base your only objection to tt on the erroneous suppositinn that parties making contracts bare a Fight to demani that thore ahall be no change in the principle or policy of the code of Procedure during the existence of such oontracis. As the duration of contracts lp ordtnarily within the control of the contracdag parties you will percelre that the effect of your Proposition would ba to anbject the public Laterests, con. cerned in the administration of justice. to (he interests aad even caprice of individuals, In proceeding to consider, your objections to General Orders No. 10, staying certain remedies for tho o0.lection of dovt, it will be proper frat to notice your statement th Lecfsiatare of South Carotina passed «law for the parpose, and Which, as you observe, was declared by the Court of Appeaia unconstitutional, Tile cireumstance had great Weight in tke promulgation of ‘the order in ques. fom. The action of the Logialatare was regardot as proof that in the belief of the people at large, the public sf ha measure, The Major ry, wands, i under the martial law of the invading or occupying army, whether any proclamation declaring im f has been iss country conalats io th authority, of the civil and criminal law aud of the domestic administration and goveroment in tho occupied place or territory, and in the substitation of miktary rule and force for the same, as weil as in the dictation of general laws, as {ar an military necessi:y requires this cuspsnsion, subsiitu- tion oF dictation.” **The commander of the forces may pro- clatm thai the administration of all civil and penal laws shail continue, elther wholly or in part, as ia time of peace, unless otherwlse ordered by tae military authority.” In pursuance of the foregoing matructions for the quid. ance of the military for ving the theatre of war, military government was instituted fn South Carolina, Martial taw has over alnce and dotined cot ions to civil forms of authority. In June, 1885, Mr. Perry was appointed oy the President, of is authority as Commander-in-Chief, Pro: al Governor ef South Carolina, Under martial law jor Perry proceeded to remo.iel the institutions of the d revive certain forms of civil adminstration. A d oath of « no® ainnesty or ® spacial pardon Fendered persons eligible to ollce and the enjoymeat of civil rights, ‘Un the 12th of January, 1804, command!ng officers were required by the General-in-Chief to protect persons from prosecution in State or municipal esurts, when charged with Offences arising out of the enforcement of the military or- ders of the President or other competent military authority ; also to protect from prosecution and poaalies all occupants of abandoned lands and all persons holding property by the military authority of the President; and iso to protect colored persons from all penalties not imposed on white rene. Pn March 1 1868, « maflitary quarantine was established on the tea gomay ofthe enagaored territory On July 6, i military arrests wore ordered of all offend- conquered territory, whenever the civil courts or refused to proceed agalast such persons for ie offences, Pon July 1% 18%, certain elviane prdergoing sentence of military Coutts were, by authority of the President, ordered to be held in military custod, On the 16th of July, 1488, Congress, by an act entitled Act to sontinue in force and to ‘an act to establish = struck me twice in the mouth; he theu ran into Israel Cor- foli’s store and sat down; Mr. Vasil, Mr. » cGraw, Mr, Ticts- Worth and Sir, Coriell were there; they asked bim to give up the dollar to mo; he said he would not, but they might take i away from bim if they chose; these gen- tlemen made up the doliar and gave it to'me, because my children were starving; Roantree came to the bouss about sven or eizht o'clock in the evening; I saw bim by the fromt wind »w stooping on the ground; I went to the window, and woeu he saw me he ran towards an outhouse, whica he entored, aud sat down and pretended to be asieep; I went up to bim, shook him and asked bim for tue dollar; he said, “If you touch moe again, I have 4 six shooter, and wili fire and sboot the whole of you;" I then left him and he followed me into the bouse; he eat down in achair; I was sitting ina ohair when he got in; he said, “Curse you, you are sitting low, but I'li seo you sit lower to-nignt;”’ be then went around the room grinding bis teeth and muttering; he shook bis fist under my nose; he had one hand ia his pocket; he raid, “I'll biow your brains and the thing to do ft with I have im my pocket mow;” he came forward tw me and caught hold of my hatr; he let go and went out and ast.ga the door slit; he odiied bo wf? father, applying an ‘opprobious epithet to’ him, “Where are you going” Uhet is all the conversation he had, and went away; between eleven and twelve o'clock be came back; all oor family wero in bod except Catha- rine; she was undressed looking out of the window; she saw Roantreo coming along the road by the house; jast as eho saw bim he fired a pisio!l; he m2 came in the gale, and as he came through he fred the agaia; be then went up tothe front door and A Open and fired into ‘a bedroom; the door ot father's bedroom stood open, and he fi at the bed in which father and mother were lying; the shot entered tho woodwork; I started to run to ighbors for help, aod he fired at me; the whole c! lodged ia ‘and Rear Commodores, and dor not.” * Stari at gee the spatter and dato of oars by bard men noted its ready compliance, route to the sbore reces wero improvised, aiordiog ite satis.action to the participants, —- at the base of the eastera slope of Mount Hope, and proceeding some d.siance up is verdure cov- aide, through clusters of applo trees casiing re- hing shadows upon the merry group arsembied, the out mouniainecrs were found preparing tue princely ‘The scene was one of pete. Pans with heated feceived thousands of clams, redolent in the Sweetness of their coral hemos; busheis of de- 48 Corn, nutritious potatves aud onions, all covered with the whitest of muslin, and again completely envol- with almost @ ton of rock weed, waa there, Mouths wed by the old and young watered at the dolights in @ore for them, and many souls were Gliea with ol) sium Mt the anticipated pleasures of the bake, While the delicious morseis were baking the members jushing water that flows trom and lietened to the Gtory of proud King Puilip, the red.skinned warrior, ducky queeua, and tooxed ions of the ro-calied tion of evente quite <1 uld mot fail to see that many thousands of families, jeep misfortune aud destitution, were menaced with utter rain by the aiderate and cract f creditors; nor could ho, with. out betng tnsensible to the general appeal of a su! . Tefuse to afford some measure of adequate relief. At the time when the Orders No. 10 wore issued the people Of the Carolinas, and more especially of South Carolina, Were-exposed to overwhelming disaster from the sefeure and sale, under judicial process, of all the means they pos., placi sot from bis turf oov- Mound for friends or foes. The reminiscences our “red brethren” were given with pathos and 4; and catching the inspiration of the moment, in clear, crystal uid, the memory of the Kingly chief, bis good deeds, was drank by a body of men but seen collected together under similar rand. The clams melted away upon naught but pleasant remembrances situation com: 7 Dureau for nd refi; and for TT ty stores si thet f * load + | wolt our doors, 1 recol rT nk note a pay eix f cont Mako the fesity’ of that character if | ginee Purposon provided forthe exefcon of mista fur: | Routaiv‘t furpicare” and fuss er imoiomeats of ba | mother tea sald, “if you'are going. to Lil, kii'ed | ayo; we prostalied ‘tint’ tual farts was sierra oak | ou the, bonds upon wiles its txtey, und azood deat ih the Kaown reputation of iis promoter | fi fay. Nunathecouauered trvtory, wal dbeeame shoxid | bandey” saved from the weesk ofthe ind try wore coats now; he sirick her on the top of the head with | toward this vory doctrine, how wo were met with con- | more, 100. ‘There is a dank In aie se wees Profusion. It was a euccess, apd an ditants duly represented in the Cougress | ii able value to the population, Time and opportanity | the batt of the pistol, knocked her down and knocked | tradictions and denials; the lie was thrust into ocr | live, that recently doclared a dividen Sixty-one por il in after years recall a thousand piea- ni given, industry would recover from paralysis, deapondency | the li nt ont father then started te go out of the rear door, tent and wo were denounced as standerers, | Cent. Who pays that exorbitemt profit? You its ces among its participants. jongress declared that no 1 State | would be overcome bs he creditor wou'd be ntres went out the front door towards the gate; | As le as two yours avo they bitterly denied | the people down at Ham/lion pay it. Look at the cir- ex! in the conquered territory, Including ; dirided the territory into mune: districta, a aon My Sais ae u domy tt ointment of a military commander for @ach district; declared a! civil government therein to be sub- feelin All respects to the military commander, that all interference, under eolor of State authority, with the exércise of military authority, should be null and wuld, Congress, tn the exercise of its paramount authority announced also, the eondivions on which nis might be restored to wernument of the United ing shown the nature of the authority that South Carolina and traced its origin to the law of wi to the government of (he United states, it may not be wi out utility to show that this exercise of power is authorized by the consittation. on yachts weighed anchor to reura to Newport at Tbe ultimately pald, and the aad condition of an impoverished | he met father as bo was going for ‘assistance, caught thats past nve, where, with « pleasant breeze from the ~ Beople amnctiorated. To arvuseand stimulate the euergies | hold of him, took the butt end or. the platel and sureck Of the people—to inspire the that he'would reap the traitsof hig labor—io assure him | Bim over the head with it, and then stabbed. bim; that be might rescue himself and familly (rom want—and | Mother wished to help take care of father, and Roantreo haunts of dissipation and idleness those who | left father and went to mother; he knocked mother ore by Mt 4 contribute touch | down with the batt end of the pistol, then yp oy over ‘to the b ¢ tothe public poacn, securhty and order the Commandl * fatty General is exotcied to maiutaln. Ta_the success of thew | eke fence and ran away + “pe and sat on a chair; ho did not say anything during the Ot the couutty. 2 snore concerned than the commerce | Sirurcie: Roantree pounded mother on the head wih You have yourss!ree described the pistol; he stabbed father through the right side in that existed. You observe that “at the opening of the | the rght lung; mother was badly cut, pomunenced | A number of other witnesses of the occurrence cor. Foborated the above statomont. The revoiver mentioned in Mrs, Roantroo's statement ‘was found during the morning on the edrce of a well ear the place, as though the alleged assassin io! en- avored to throw ft dowa tho well, Tho kal snot te been found, but a search for ft has beon ins . he maa was geen to load a pistohduring Mondar nieht St Nelson's Hotel, about one hundred yards from the house where the bloody tragedy was enacted, and had it. Why, Abraham Lincoln, wir some heathon | cumlocution there fs about it. Here isa bond issued, men, quite 8, are not willing to worship as a | Men get hold of it end start a bank and commence god—(and they have illustrious oxamples of that sort of | issuing currency, This nie in mv band says, “The work now)—Abrabam Lincoln preciarmed in 1858, not | National Bank of New London, Coovecticat, will pay $5 asa mere temporary matter of policy, but he gave as a | On demand." It wit pay, will it? © No, it won't, o reason why there should and could be no negro equality | & lie right on the face of it. Payin what? In this— in this couatry—no nogro suffrage and no negro office | this gold? ~~ tadecd. No, that was under the olf holding—that there was a physical distinction between | Constitution, which Thaddeus Stevens says is at an end. the races which forbade that tho negro should be the | Ho issuos these prom’ses to pay and gets interest, six equal of the white man. Willlam Dennison, Iately repub- | per cent in gold on bis bonds Now the dewocratic ican Governor of Ohio, denounced universal emanci- | of Oblo proposes that instoad of this clreamlocution pation in 1862, during the war—at the end of the firet | shall wipo out the national bank currency, and year of the war, when thoy wanted soldiers to enlist | government shali ‘csue i's own currency, under pretence of fighting for the flag, and not for the | save annually twenty millions of aterest eer. Hoe denounced, not ouly emanc'pation, but negro | paid to the national backs. I would hike suflrage and equality, and prociaimed that it was not | republican editor to answer that araumeat the intent or purpose of tho republican party tomdvocate | Why what I have been sucgesting should not or carry out either, So, too, the present Governor of | out. Will any one heve tio andacity to tell the State, General J. D. Cox, @ scholar, a man of reflec. ice in paying out $20,000,000 @ year f tion, a man who thinks upon subjects before he speaks or ks, when we can have government ¢: writes about them; a man who studied this particular | that amount? These national banks are Se eee mary, as , think and breathing jes ng breezes of the bay, are war, to de. ae tho political territory. The comprenenaive war powers found somewhere in every Efameot are given by the coustitution of the United Bidtes Congress, The Siates that mate war apon the Union set up government of thelr own and renounced ali their rights Huss That “A.owed BS2Q) B owed O GAL and t roney, That “A owod B $2) 8 owed and #9 on to the endof the aiphabet; but tt le rer ah Uador our constitution. The United States ma ‘ar, not | ment for the stay law could not have bern deon heard to remark that he would “break the | question, and who bas the courage to spoak hia mind—I | « year for supplying a currency ioe the purpose of comasinng the bectie & et ee ea eee Cane ee ee ttaidation | damned sot up.” He has two or threo smalt childron | refer to him in these terms because ho deserves it, not | another currency only, We have $90) EAT gh TS he con. | you have elucidated was se inlerchanes | living at tho hous, Blood ie seattered all over the | for any mero partisan purpose, though when provoked, | backs and §200,000,000 of national bank notes. All I uthority of the United Minton, MC wis frente suit wee | fauamt take place, Tt, le pres say law aforlé, | promises, two years ago, to speak of him in plain Anglo-Saron | want is that Instead of these two we have $960,000,000 nd Hot for the wrong doer to say whether the | that witinn @ briat period the fnancal diteuitios at the ~ 2 a vernacular, on account of a falsehood in relation to my- | of greenbacka. Here it is—a greenback: Hi Bas Bet got % : ould ever be restored to the Senta enay bo cessive with a sum of money insiguificantly TAR ABORTION CASE IN SPRINGFIELD, ER a 1 oe — ecsneh eee ie faye] conquest, absolute authority over all their enemi Let ws see on the other hand what would have been the nin oe ‘a letter eddreased to p Ea called Ober. | @ different loaking Woman. There isan bmw} ag pe em ANT) Cock of refusing thle allowance of time, Whes General Iin—you have all heard of that piace, I sup; in that | Goddess of Liberty on this gold plece—that's as she wae a Ff The principles governing the relations of 1 Order 10 was promulga there were p ing Jn the eourie SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE HERALD, State forty auits for debt. By the last cen a fos thare wore ouly fons Unousune white vorszote ~ Sraivorinuy, Mass,, Aagnat 13, 1867, h caso, ae the a of o'Clock B. fea, expenses, lost time and depreciation of values by The Coroner's Jury in the case of Elizaboih Nut! Uquidation, ae yp Ta f dollars #8 th® | the you: ‘oman who died in this city om Saturdi See ree allekaanth being etouna se iy night under suspicious ciroumstances, have returned @ peculiar process known to the Board of ev Verdict that ber death was the result of an abortl letter to the Oberiinites he takes ground against this | whon we had her ata reality; bat here she attempt to equalize the races, —, and social ¥ t eabust, dressed like a Now York beile go! say socially, for thore ie the philosophy of what fre- | tall (Langhter,) There ts aot ferred to ® moment ago. If you would bring the races | would not a3 soon take that greenback A equallty, you must lay aside ail distinctions | national bank note, eine =e rg wang oy are race, . gets mad jou upon ere must De interwar: ae for fs Congress te lavas i 8 Q se 2 4 5 ease arose out of the cong r by the Cniied Baten, The ¢ rt hed that Occupation * armice eo Unix Biaten threw the existing civil goverament, al:inug one i relat of porso iy A riage Mingling of the races, 1 a notes, 000,000 foree, except od" thece, taigut contravene the cmnaiaticn | Sieseboet Gaced by Dr. Willian HL. White, of this city. Der White | aware that {t dose noufolisw, becsuse ety sin we greenbacks and save tbo $20,000,000 gd and laws of the United Siates or the regulations for the You 14 to observe that "if every execution had been | was arraigned to-day before the Police Court, and son belongs to the white race, he shall there. | want that issue made next year, when are going to rament of the inhabitants established by the Com: the pgragate wealth of each district or couaty would | pleaded not guilty, Kto ‘was ordered to give $8,000 bail. Tore. be at liberty to marry the dacghtor of any | elect Congressmen, aud I want men who are candidates ee eccerans, trdskbel ce ns of mated earay had, aloo owner,” “Surely Tris veto matter ef eran | ote, 10 procare it, was lodged in jail to await bis | white man on the continent. Nevertheless, they are | for Congress to explain teir position on this qoostion, Pfister thin Sk ts es o pS aneagac———- eoclin tits ene ibe Fann Wak wn preva | mamepe” Way ben macht pape my wil fou the cession of the territory to the United siaies The. ra. constables-—not lo speak of the vultures AEGISTRATION IN NORTH CAROLINA, tos and blacks from in ing. It ia utterly im- | have out when you save $60,000,000 of sow, bolding that General Kear. judicial onan, ati ‘ — that there should oo Ee caealiyy in this souns than py Ap] ae 360,000,000 q ke y's regulations beving been competent to the local transactions of Chariesten, ‘Tawctox, Anga consisten: order armon and 000, ational c: re ‘accords rere. Lea | force until repealed by t thority bt thes eredivors Feeiding tbe id a =. Registration retarns ten wardens phn ae Het in the competion mune you comes ths senioan 10 the best of the arithmesto ‘has I tearned down power from Congress. fu the cane efleds the ced the Dusigoas of the cigs wor iw aty alutyiigly tobe | SB9% sixty thousand votara, the majority for tbe blacks | Four equal. socially as well an poliucally: ‘Thay *avumt | New Lisbon, that $660, 000,000 te $000,000,000, of the United states sanctioned the principle juced worthy ot oompaenes with the manifest fasitities ‘being fix thousand si hundred eovontythree. In | many sod be given in marriage as @ rosult of that politi- | in ap ee same diee in by a ia Congress, Tits that, over tory 8¢q) “ atorded to agriculture, which the wade of Charlestoa re a ROE Seen Tee Gly tal eee ape etality must mecamsartly oe \onb Guages Sense bomens coe aioaehe — tates, ther! retu vi handed in come, Tne silly talk about democrats atraia shall not forget Sambo, because he is forced Hele eaperardy ibe logaitine power of Congress, and | You will not fail to observe that the suspension of number of whites have not registered, ce het daughters will negro huebands, or thelr e008 They used to accuse. the ‘democraie. parvy of spitating ‘hat the Gh Fy KY tine 1s contued to enuaea of ection arising between the when the reterns come in from a’! ihe Regre women, be with arf ‘Megro question, but they can't do thas Congress, and do sot ‘upes the of Decem| eee ee ee ot aareean ee are, white voters will bave @ majority at cone thane deserves. 1 dan opeaking of history uaa pik aod eraerg art orig nh Is Ree boon cated ter tue robal Piston tha) they are ox- | Sosornsanetioas Wer sbi slestaner eoiek iryir ens | Wmouaay cwben I Well ven volition! equality means ta, Wo intend to vote upon thes wed