The New York Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1867, Page 6

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6 NEW YORK HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1867. . —_—— a as Fas ordained to try men’s goula There was no | they say was once so strong, has fallen under the ban, | them of equal rights, It is only another reason why | fairer wtionment of the cireulation among the P 0 L ITI C A L Tide course. ‘ke "Douglas well said, every | and has become @ hiksumg anda by-word among men. | we should give an equal chance with ua And, | States, 16 iatrengiton the socurity required for circua- OBSEQUIES TO GOVERNOR WRIGHT. e mab was elihor a patriot or a rebel and trai- | Ibis because they departed trom every principio of ro. | fellow citizens, there are special ressons why we shoul tion, and fn time to make a national centre of redemp- ed tor, Where was Thurman? When our nation lost | publicaniem, Why, brother Thurman, on the prince! plos tow the colored people to vote in Ohio, and why there- | tion or clearing house. ever was much ofabank | Appropriate Services Yesterday=Sermou by aa ~ ~ ® battle @id be moura over it? No, be gloated | you advocate today, if you gam a@ victory, you must | publican party, which has been the bulwark of our coun~ by but while such agencian one Aamament, as they aro Bishop Janes. over it with the same exul u that Jo Davig or apy | piant you! erties very high. You must storm the | Uy during its rovent history, ehiould cheerfully extend in ail new countriee whord capital is scarce, I believe the Th uies over the remai: of th G THE CAMPAIGN IN OHIO, | etter renei aa When vniea twismpived hi | Rebestopol of the Almishty, end: ehell him from bs | this right, Pueir exclusion is ihe remnant of the barbaric | present aystom is far better han we Lave évor had, and 1e obseq) ins of the late Governor . * * | veart samk within him, because be wished (he rebel | throne before your princrples cam predominate, (Groat | influence of slavery, amd should fail with the reat of better than for the United States government to | Joseph A. Wright, of Indiana, recently Minister of ihe cone vail. Will be get any of your votes? Ia | applause.) Ho will wre 208 no belp, You are warring | the infernal system. But for slavery it would never | assume directly the banking operations of the people. United States to the Court of Prussta, took place yester- have existed, The word ‘‘white” was inserted in the TAXES. constitution of 2802 because the framers of that constitu. | And sow, fellow citizens, a few words as to taxes, and | “8¥, at St. Paul’s Methodist Episcopal church, corner of tion being mostly —- slavebolding States were anxious | Tamdone. The general principle of our tax laws isto | Twenty-sccond street and Fourth avenue. A large num- the benevolent design of tbe inst Oxnmipotence ition, and your puny priaciptes of Almighty as to this pi partiality will be trampled under foot, and be more es purned Vallandigham when be was a ¢ for Thurman, a rebel of a lowor the 7 pid man rather than a sneak, God Speeches of Old Ben Wade and | (1) A. facta mane choice between the two I | scoifed and jeered at in future genorations than you are | to exclude Degroes who were debase’ | collect as much as possible {rom duties om imported ate P Knot? prefer tho bold, convicted. traitor Father than the | now, While you, tay ropublirad friends, you that have | by lavery, Oblo was among the first to exclude negroes | goods, The reasons are, that such ‘axes are seems enoty | ero pened wee ip See with the, remaining Senator Sherman. slimy, bie tool of traitora, as is the man Thurman, | stood s0 like ® rock against all those inundationa | from the right of su ‘and this was soon followed | Collected in the seaboard cities, and mainly at the single | ™eubers of his family, assisted in theso last rites of ro. by an infamous code laws. This code was ed York, They are mainly on articles of | spect and affection. and all that is left of it is | luxury, such as silks, broadcloths and wines, and are | ‘The remains of Governor Wright, having been en. if States articles thet may be manufactured balmed at Berlin, were brought to this cou! and de~ ia right she should be the first to retract it, We | here, they our own industry, and thus diversify | posited in the church, where they have since remained. have borne our share in the struggles and sacri- Seen lucteiat ear wees are ete Yesterday tho coffin was tastefully abrouded in a silken ta flees by which slavery bas been expunged from our | taxesin gold because Pal A with ample means | “Stars and Stripes,’ and covered with acrowa of im. But those pegroes are too ignorant to vote, Well, a great mavy that now vote are more ignorant than I wish they were 1 am so myself; and the great numbers who come to the polls right from across the ocean, from Negro Suffrage and the Nationa) | vacer tho reels of dospotiam, with every sontiment of manhood almost crushed out of them—most of tnem of siavery and wrong, and in report and evil report have Dever swerved trou Pour in- tegrity, in future history you will bea praise to the name of the nation, and your cniidren and your grand- ebildren hereafter wil! rise up and call you blessed. You must look at these great revolutions and see to what end they tendon there was ever a more glorious cor Bank System, knowing no Ve he ou r government than the horse 1a would give them the right to mmatic Y great political controversy than | system. In this great and work wo have ‘and we are Te peer it Ag petty was whic yntuate in atriking the shackles from | trampled under foot the social’ habits and customs Imterest of our debt. Now, in levying other | mortelics and several wreaths of camelias. ed people, You have taken by over Ona The dol- | At three o'clock the officiating clergymen, followed born among you; who has heard discussed trom boy- fi @ld Ben Wade’s Speech at Marietta, Obie, hood up thé great questions involved in our govern- | the hand the poor and the n you have encouraged Aw them to labor, have taught them righta and placed them on the firm rock of your government, to partici- pate in and be part and parcel thereof, You may search the history of human revolutions, and you will tod wothing so dazzliogly glorious as this in the history of Thie ie the achievement already attained, We got almost to the end, We have all but placed taxes, | by the pall-bearers and the family and friends of the: rest of joulty is im ascertaining the amount | deccased, entered the church, and having form: not forget that ‘during Gur-war the colored peoplo of | of tnoome: but aa the revenue officers become acquaint- | csasion, saved. up the aisle and aselimed thelr va Ohio have fairly won their right*to vote, Long before | ed with the business of our citizens this tax is more equi- The services opened with an excellent re: public opinion justified the formation of negro troops | tably assessed, and yielded us last year over sixty mil- | ing of the well known and beautiful anthem. “I in Ohio, they formed Somranies wm Obio and joined | lions of dollars, In d_ this ie the most uniform | a voice from ‘&c,’? A psalm was then *h waa cinpe more | and stable tax, and will be so here. Then we select for | read by Dr. Janes, after which abyma was sung. 0. ment; who bas bee faithful to the dictates of better » prceneise beyond any class of equal number I know. THR GPRAKER'S TEXT. f you will make a distinction, and make intelligence Thave ap old text, wy friends, which I have preached | the test, Mr. Democrat, do so, aud you will at loast be free from the charge o! lity and favoritism. But from for more than thirty yeara 1 never have varied | 1 hh th ignorance? Many Of those coloreé men 44, and I never expect to vary it, Exact and equal jus- | are ag intelligent as ourselves. some of them aro the ‘tice to all men, without reference to color, condition or | most efficient orators, who can discuss with any man, I | t! the rock of eternal justice and security. Will je sere | taxation Bech articles the consumption of which is not | Foster then offered an appropriate and earnest prayer, , 7 r . Te 3 ‘yaoe, is my political orced, which now for thirty years don’t care who, all tho complicated affairs of govern. Baa ae Ce’ PL ome apy man hues Carr bmn rey ries as tobacco and whiskey. To | and Dr. Holdich read the solemn and impressive Ment with as much justness and ability as the best of 3 have prociaimed from almost every stump in thie | Deano" are‘all grates of Intelligence among them a8 bis right to re in the future? (A Voice— “No such man here.”) You hat that the tax" preventa no harm ote Tallon ae aaa Tae was then read by These fate, and the people have stood by me during all that | among other men. In judgment they are vastly may we been and! nc ka long as J am faithful to she doc. | better qualified to discharge the full duties of citizons of | #0 educated that you at times fecl like it, service, fume, this government than the great mass, equal or but F believe you will be able to endure to the end. Tne birth, eine of shat text they will continue to stand by me 19} than they in number, who are permitted to volo. eat promise js mado that uot to him that besiss and tho strife : makes no difference whother things in the fature look | not f¢ ‘iking off any. principles do not carry ke backward, but to bim that in Any, ood and giori- bas been @ark or look cheerful. I stand by that because] believe | i> direction, because I hold that whether we are | ous work perseveres to the end, shall reward be. I ‘Deen pro- 4 will enable us to go through triumphantly under any norant or rich oF poor it is the dictate of eternal justice | know ekg will persevere to the end. It ig the last ac- end black, ud all circumstances. I bdeiteve, air, that this ia the @ man lives under government he should have the | count the dei areto have with ua You know when 8 favored by the Almighty. 1 bebieve that ne | Tight to participate in ite privileges as well ae they have been nibbling at the nets of the negro now to preaches from any other text will Bot de favored | 8m glad to know that in order for 9 man to discharge for twonty years. It been their capital in “4 * abode Dy Bim who ia the Father of us.all, duties to bis government right it is not necessary trade, Now, soberly, what is the d party try- ‘his n RD. THE ADVANCE STRP IN PROGRESS, should be profound jurist—that ne should Sea so Bat up ee SBS pees, © {San eee Tee Mo. rarah for our | to General Sheridan's recent order for ‘an election | Bishop Janes then ascended the palpit, anddehvered ‘There is a now element in our canvags now that causes | Rccomplieed statesman. If it wero #0 pe thas Jos. Kane 6 jen am Semnonras Neve lo, fellowcitizens, | ts roughout the state on the 27th and 2th of Septem. | the following funeral oration:— tho:e who opposed us to make.one more struggle for the | government would be absolutely im Bim ‘What is your plan?” Iask Judge Thurman. were driven to the on ‘Probation invests with interest ané importance human iu of . | Would bring you back to those pinks racy, | His anewer is, “Oh, you are tyrannizing over the se- Regro soldiers we were bound to — een ane one eee em eaitimate con | Tad in order to vole you would have to bringa certif | ceded State,” You want to let iggera vote, “You have la of en Ameren. |. suet shewsteet diulstees wit be. longety te feyow of [sentra tates teetue prea wiuceteel teas mee Gelored man 10 suffrage te but the legitimate and logical | cate from some learned doetor that you had intelligence | trampled the constitution under foot But what is manee Foe Comeod WER, Fg, can be no doubt. There remains but | attention at this boar! Our friend bas passed from our @eduction from what you bad done before. Is there any | Dough to vote. No, all that ie nocessary im our form } your plan’ Suppose we put you into the gubernatorial Again, fellow citiaans, & | very little active opposition among us to the reconstrac- | sight. In our thoughts we follow him to the spirit man so blind to what he was doing one year ago by vo- | of government to entitle him to vute is that he wears in chair, aod Vallandigham into the Senate, what will you ag! tion plan of ‘The radical party ‘of course, | world, We see him as he enters upon that felicity, ting to sustain the republican candidates then, that he | bis bosom an honest heart and knows the difforence | do when you get into power Y All he sald in his cd ‘er to forward the ‘scheme. conser. | which is not only to continue, bat to increase, eternally”. ean be induced to change his course at this time? What | between right and wrong. No man who enjoys | isagainst the poor negroes, to prove they are lower bed mevro suffrage for the South, a8 | vatives want the question setsled s , and the great of that destiny rises in the scale than he is, But I want a better E B 75 3 g é 8 5 2 s the right to vote would part with it Who would waa the issue last year? It was on the Consiitutional ‘on. | Bot brand the manas infamous who would attempt to | witness than he gives, They say the republi- | refuse it at the North? After the gravest considera- oxthirds and more of Con’ | Goprive bim. of tf, Why? Because’ he knows’ te | can Tarty Uns not done a einglo thing yet. “When | tion we sam no snfe basis of reconstruction in ihe | tadin kicuing agaiaet, tho price, “A soitioment of our Jou will adopt thet amendment you may come into Con- | existence and protection of our liberties depend ba tortlbly extent ext ee aio . mete . great politcal question is more important to the welfare 3 : upon it, Why is it not so with the colored man? A pet ~~ my eet on say he does not know as much. So much the ‘Were these bard ter my nds ? elf more necessity for hfm to have the power to defeat tyrannical in that? apything that your crafty schemes against him. ‘ou need not man,could not do? We wanted no traitora in the coun- | sympathize with the millionaire, becauge be has wela of our nation, and by the favor of God we | li he wants It is not the intelligent and in- mever will have them. [Cheers.) Now, what fiuential that need the protection of government guments did they put forth on the other side a, most, it is the humble and ignorant. If you tbat constitutional amendment, that our legislators in | Want to know whether government is worthy of aheir wisdom and intelligence proposed to their consti- | #upport or not, don’t look to those who are high in the Auents inst winter? Way, the constitutional amendment | !aod, but to the weak, ignorant and humble, If gov "was this, that if the seceded States would permit the | ernment bas thrown around them the means of ir; but now we have the simple fact that we, with the will and power | O,cotjane ‘ban anyiuing cleo, Just Dow tage of @ conqueror, engrafted upon the registry of votes, | iatitude an “longitude. We want to make a 700,000 black men who had recently been slaves. We | trom somewhere. We must get into a qualifies us for this Penal ies wether ‘and for the whole country port ina storm” rust be our motto, Whi ‘ermines our eternal destiny, how grave are ali our ac- a ar ie yal basis of government, and to | reat and havea chance tolook about us a little, we shall | tions, how important our conduct, how immense the re re wars and rebellion. Shall we | goon be able to take gare of ourselves, For the present, | interests we secure or forfeit! Ob, who ean trifle with pe when the — on affects our own registry, refuse | sound discretion advises us to take advantage of the only | eternal things? How momentous is that event which to insert soven thousand men of the same color—mea | winds that are permitted to blow. We shall lose nothing | cuts ua off from all further opportunity ofmiaiaian par wi we — born mare A us, who have always been free, | by voting for # convention, don or transformation, and after which he that is ia who are far more intelligent than the new citizens of the Of th bers of from | Shall be Oithy still, and he that is boly holy still; South, and very many of whom have fought our ‘TExnmene. — alley isha Congress which arraigns ¢ subject before bis eternal Fy 2s pay them. why they said to everybody, * Don’t you put a dollar in there. If you do, you will lose it all.” And now I ask him what is their plan to eave the nation? He answers, “Ihe negro ig not as good as the white man. This 1s a white man’s government.’ This is al! you will get out of them. They say, ‘‘You have freed the negroes; you must not go apy further. Leave him free.’’ You €an’t leave him free in a nation where he would not have the power to protect his freedom. They, too, would endanger the freedom of the whole mags, You can’t do & wrong to a class of men that will ot rebound upon all ged P us loyal men who love H BS Be colored men to vote, then they might have r ta. | Protecting , themselves, you need ask no further | Others connected with them. We all did wrong in per- | battles with courage and fidelity? Ican only say, my | Tennessee tho following account is given :— . How solemn an event is this! How perfect should Sion based upoo thelr pumbers, If they thrust them | questions, "It is @ traly democratic government, | mitting slavery to exist, and we have all sore] fellow citizens, that if T thought the people of Obi John Trimble is by far the ablest, He belongs to the een preparation for. it! Glow \arribie. the irretriove- @ut and would not permit this meod of justice to prevail, | Those men for whom I advocate the right to | from itin the war. J tell you that national si could be guilty of so grave an mnsistency— of the South, isa man of Nboral culture, high | ble disaster of be:ng overtaken by it unprepared; how thon thoy should be restricted to what they had hereto- | Vote as a class, were most faithful when our country was | ¢d by the Almighty upon nations grave an | injustico—I- would not represent | social positionfand of considerable wealth. He is deeply | blessed a resul: when it finds us ready! Tbe principles as he visite individual sins upon heard of colored men betrayiug ®0 fore. faa there anything wsong in that? Is there any | in jeopardy. Who them with that faith .and confidence it has | read in German philosophy, cherishes the most liberal | we bave thus briefly stated were aoeeray. impres- pr ur deceased wan here who wishes to give a to traitors by | tbe country’s cause when she was struggling with the | Let us continue io the right, a9 we have | been my pride to feel for them. The logical conse- | views of societ; regard sively illustrated in the life and death Mag home a preston Kucabor of vepreseniatees Vy | encany in the heat of war? Ate there soldiers here that | begun, Let ua give those poor ‘men that which | quences of the great events through which we have | loophor.* iemec Mellen of whe Tk awirict, fo | fread. In life he attended 10. life's Gutios and ogress, because they had raised their accursed arms | Were in the Southern States? I ask did you ever appeal | belongs to them as much as it belongs tous. Let us | passed is to broaden the elective franchise—to strengthen | most ‘man, and he will mak® numerous sensa- | secured life’s great interests. Wo think, therefore, that deal out tothem the last morsel and meed of justice | the national government—and to harmonize its work- | tions in "He is about fifty years of bas tho | his destiny, and character and bay ap are worthy of our inst the best government in the world? That was | to colored man there who was not entirely faithful, the position that the democratic party, so called, in thia | 4nd ministered to your welfare to t Biate and in other States took. They said that while | ability? I bave talked with hundreds slavery prevailed, you had only a cerlain representation | our soldiers, many of whom had escaped from rebel for the enslaved, | Five shail count equal to threo free- | prisons, and all agreed that without tho colored men men in the representation in Congress. That was inthe | they could not have gone a mile without being over. id constitution as a compromise made at the time | taken. I never heard of a man who said his trust was when slavery prevailed throughout the seceded | betrayed. No! The celored man in that country would fiates and others. Now, we propose, since we have | aid our men in making escape, even at peril of their freed the slaves, a representation that of the | OWD liye, and yet these friends of our government, of Northern States for ev freeman. Then you must | out soldiers, faithful and intelligent as they must have give these freemen the t of suffrage, and if they are | been, how does the Democracy propose to reward them ? cy geod enough to vote they are not good enough io lot | Why, by permitting all their own ignorant followers to you that is demanded atour hands, As I began so! will end—equal and exact justice to all men, without regard to race, color or condition, THR NATIONAL DEBT, Mr. Wade concluded his g; h with a few remarks on the subject of the national debt, The democrats, he eaid, were endeavoring to persuade the people that they ought‘to throw off this burden which was incurred for the defence of the country. His great principles of justice would never consent to that. Ho would not vote to repudiate one dollar of that debt, He believed the democratic party would be buried so deep in the October election that there would be no resurrection for its in:quities, if there was for iis soul, ings with the principles taid down in the Declaration of . a te consideration, The Hon. Joseph A. W1 was bora in Independence, This amendment tends in the same mec aernc ltesi Agman theron Te eeiatenl rae Washington county, Pa. When about eight yearsof age direction, and I mien yeu todo as you wid during the | than to criticising rebels, and speaks off all occasions | he and his parents emigra' war, to disregard the sneers of a yey, that lives upon & | and daring all the time allowed. All the boys say “Hur- fay. improving t! potty prejudice. Let usdoan act of justice worthy of | rah for Mullins!” D, A, Nunn, of the Eighth district, | hie home and neighl the creat republican party by engrafting In our State | who takes the place of Leftwich, is a plausible, cour- | time at the Indiana Stato University, su Dimeeif constitution the general tab that whether a man | teous, sensible young man—a lawyer by profession. Me | by manual labor—the true way for every young man taal eared | Sanger untae iach tear ea achsigd | Me Meds nce be Sted eek fe ey rig! Privileges an . At the of nineteen he ent upon \y immunities, iu Pookiag rich M tal loko, Bray o7ed, Cold and SeO¥GD | CF tng nw. On admission to the bar he formed m Pert- ‘THE COURSE OF CONGRESS, It ts scarcely worth while for me to repeat the discus- ARxaness,—General Smith, commanding the sub-dis sions of one 7 Q the amendment and the two | trictof Arkansas, has issued a circular to the various measures t! it—I mean the Civil Rights and | poards of Registrars throughout the State, asking Freedmen’s Bureas bills, The with a unani 4 Tinos unezamplod. In our paltizal’ Bistoryietesea | Whother they will require any extension of the tigss be- = Ser aenttia We Dire, Btate perth pe yond the 3let of this month, as now directéd for the jason ‘s ware, agreed to the amendment. But, unhappily, the democratic party is Rags egret ot segeeaiies | seace manner, and if entices 10 bapdereg jand and gee =A Balt te tl with every rebel State, voted against | a JARYLAND.. timore letter writer says:— thus ter defeated it, If they had this amend- ve their votes by reason of their numbers, That | vote, and turning these men out without protec. ‘was all J asserted before. Their declaration was that be. | tion. Are they not entitled to something at our cause those men had committed treason and forfeited | bands? The man who says they are not, has not the we to hold slaves they should, therofore, by rea- | the soul of a man in his bosom. As to their intelligence, son of that crime, receive a larger representation in Con- | 40 you not know that all over the South the colored That the traitor, instead of being hung for his | people are organized into schools, and are doing more to crime, should bave greater infuence in that rovernment | advance themselves in education than any other class, Ihe sought to destroy than if he had remained a true and | Ye, more rapidly than apy other people in the history foya) man, All this Vallandigbam contended for Inst | Of the world. And let me say from personal knowledge Senator Sherman’s Speech at Canton, Ohio, en August 20. EQUAL AND EXACT JUSTICE TO ALL MEN. In addition to\the usual election of State officers, we in Ohio are required to vote foror against aa amendment to i jeer, Ihave no fear of such prevailing. that unless the “poor white trash” in that region, as ; agreed to Preside: H ve no fear of auch democracy, Tho true test of ay they are called, hurry up their cakes mighty fast, and | OUF State constitution, It is submitted to us by the | ment, the pathway to Tepresentation would have been PN Aged Be ‘ poe egal Dale veonls, 4 fore tbe iat nape node A rer, manele 1 Pere Thetoad, or negroes be the aaa cost FT BOL en aah wee in LG secured all eons hie | Sheridan and Colfer, Ben ae ee les itn | dent Buchanan, In 1852 he was ee on the privilege, un- fore, "we cer (I | vote fs counted against it, The question is, who shalt i pat ye to white | crate are turning their tion iclin a y crime, This is the essential element in | blush to say it), the men of our ‘own color will be the hereafter vote in Obio? ‘The amendment ides thas | °” black, loyal rebel alike. here I Bet candidates, Maryland would. Senator to the approaching canvass. There are no doubt mon here | ignorant class. They don’t seem to be actuated with the provides might rest my justification of probably cast her vote for Grant, % ‘ who have strong prejudice against the colored men, the | same spirit of !mprovement. bin ha Thope no man | every male citizen of the United States, of the age of | party, by saying that it had prescribed its ultimatum, enult of education, | Mem are act to blame for that, but wil] hesitate ta the sen, Weis eae obohiog stag ta. the } twenty-one years, who has the proper residence, may an bee deh | ed ap- prejudice y aeose nnd on ee oe nine anyon Fine. Weare making history, very fast, and the man who vote at all elections, unless he has borne arms against | hog held them by eilitary power until they sequieaced ARGUMENT AGAINST NEGRO SUFFRAGE, has been hap el country for some | the United States, or has fled the draft, or has deserted | in ourterms, If they can wait we can walt; or we phe record if he bas stood faith- | nis colors in the. Union army in time of war. In other | Might have followed the advice of Mr. Thaddeus Ste- One of the strongest arguiaents inst givi ears lm asele a ae pone tae bona | telly by blic in ing te advancement in the veus, and have given them mild confiscation. We cer- ignorant; but there is none so ignorant but they would | just principles of republicanism beyond what any nation | Words, it is universal manhood suffrage, unless the right | tainly were justified in other of recon- fang him for violation of law. The law ben Ht Jibs funk of God's earth has achieved. "We are looked to vote is forfeited by treason or desertion. This is the po RE ad our con- be affee- man onaccount of bis ignorance, and yet that would } to by all the struggling millions of Eurepe, You know |} same question that is now agitating other countries ag | stituents. This was my own con’ duty, and These exclude him from a voice in making the law that 1s to | fuW well that in the war through which we have passed | wellas our own. No more important one can be sub. | therefore at the last session of Congress I took no part with cor- punish him. Will this objection stand with the Ame- | that the despotisms of Europe all looked with great } mitted to you. it lies at the foundation of all | In new propositions for reconstruction until near the He was true rican people? Is it not the quintessence of monarchy | jealousy upon our course, retin fo and aristocrat ronments where the people have 3 = close of the sersion. Even now, if the South, with the all the interests of and aristocracy? A government is free in exact propor- | Was in harmony with Thurman, Vallandigham and Ran- | in tncir government, and is preliminary to all er | spirit that actuates General Longstreet and others, would Massacuvserts.—The official call for the Republicon fe, adopt the amendment, and elect leyal Senators and | state Convention, to be held at Worcester on the 11th members under i cir admission to representation x Salteuag i inte wid lee you is trae when | °f September, has beon issued. It gives each town and I deciare that a majority of the republican Senators and | each ward of a city one delegate in the convention, and mombers would have admitted any rebel State upon its adopting the amendment and complying with its terms, FINANCIAL QUESTIONS, Thero are some questions not specially involved in ‘ea it extends the right of government to its citizens, | uey. They were fearful the people, stimulated by our despotic power don’s permit’ any man to have part in | exainple, would throw off Site Fake. Tne seamenari? ‘the government, and free government is despotic in | Was sending emissaries abi to enlist despotism in exact proportion as It excludes citizens overthrowing the reptblican institutions of this country. ef government. Do you wish to adopt the Whore were Slidell and Mason? One in England and the British tories, who to-day aro struggling to keep | one in France, backed by hundreds of others, begging down the masses of citizens whom they have ground to | despotism to aid them. Could disgrace and infamy go Car for generations? I hope to God we shal! stand | further than invoking despotic Powers to assist in over- ce political questions. Who ebali vote in Ohio? The general answer would be that every person should vote whose life or property is affected by the laws. This rale is founded upon gen axioms that are the foun- dation of our system. i just governments are founded upon the consent of the governed.” “T: without representation is tyranny.” ‘‘All perso! equal before the law, and should have an equal voice in gE our true princi until we bave turning the glorious institutions we inherited from our | making the laws.’ All these axioms point to the | this canvass, but which arc very important. 1 can only salise whéee Inaven ino, aus arreaipal of 7 | fathore? Droadest suffrage; but as by patural law all’ persons cant | allade to some of them very Driody ‘and chiedy in reply ext Manteg to qgeaioen po Supe. RSS Bae caruestiy and’ oneally soughs the” public end the laboring men come forward every’ id TYRANNY OVER THE SOUTH, not vote, exceptions necessarily exist limiting universal | to what Judge Ranny said to you the other day, They | Convention, good. He was i bribery, Governor claim their just part in all that belongs to tl . This As tothe tyranny they say we arc imposing on the | suffrage. All exclusions from the right to vote should | are financial questions growing outof the war. Tho Wisconsix.—The republican papers are busily discuss- | Of Indiana a bribe of fifty th dollars was offered great issue depends upon the faithfulness of the repudli. | seceded States—frightful tyranny—Ewing, I biush to | be founded upon the strongest reasons. Whenever the *. ae ot iv B. ean nk tage Party, | ing the personnel of the State ticket to be nominated him if be would give his oMcal sasction to @ certai: wi is ent Lo cred! wonderful roed reason for exclusion is of doubiful force, the right to vote ought to exist. This amendment excludes all minors under the age of tw one years, for the obvious roasom that yntil a ce: age persons are not capable to take charge ren of their own property, Women are excluded bocause it is conceived ‘that family ties and duties ere inconsistent with the turbulence of political strife, and because they are suifi- ciently represonted by their hysbands aud kindred. 1 am not so sure about the exclusion of women, for the recent discussions on this subject in England and America bave shown that the reasons for their exclusion are not so clear; but we can well leavettbis question stand as it is for the present. The ladies will make their voices heard in due time. Others are excluded for can party of the United States. If weebrink from our | Say it of him, wrote a lotter to the Philadelphia Joha- son Convention, announcing the abominable sentiment, Yhat at no time during the war could these seceded States, by their emissancs, be excluded from Poor old Tom! The hag plea I can make for him is, ‘that he is demented, or he ought to bedamned. Un- masked rebels to sit im the councils of this nation, while they were laboring and invoking foreign powers to aid them in overtural ite government! The man |: fool, but no bigger fool than Thurmaa, for that is ‘ani ty with the power to pro- | doctrine to-day. We are called tyrants in Congress. Wi Yect themselves in a government, who will look to their | have dealt harshly by these mon. In t! fees old princi- rights and save them from the accursed domination of | ples of Washington, who was not thought to be the aristocrats? Having followed the cause of the re- | much ofa radical, though if be were here to-day, he publican party in all ite great deeds thus far in the pro- | would stand where I Congress took into cons:der- grees of the last fow years, who is there that cow railroad He tl the bribe. succees of our financial measures, can best solve | September4. Thusfar no one appears to contest the bis last ffinoss bo said, ie there ie anything for w all new problems as they rise, or whether the | claims of Governor Fairchild for re-election or General | I than! ibe public credit can be safely committed to a party | alien for Secretary of State, By a coincidence, if not at some of these matiers, | custom, that bas prevailed for many years, says a jour- that deciaration, They talk of our large public debt. Very well, our | nal of that State, Wisconsin Secretaries of State are pro- llanthropy, feated interest +8 le Coe Sar 5? - — moted to Governors, and General Allen is probably Peppa a a pal 0086 war, W! 5 its inevitable incidents, debt and taxation, or, on the | reserved for that happy fate, All tho other places on | Christian. When bout twenty-six erg .” a! Spe? Te hn geo Prema, the ticket will find numerous aspirants, including gen- ee ce one Samrat al taxes - union. Did the Union party unnecessarily increase the | ‘ly the incumbents for re-election. scrle dieciple of two Lord Jeavs Carish debt or ey oo) unequal Or unjust taxes? On the con- trary, our financial measures were as successful as our HAYTI Private room, bam! himself before God, and im- military measures, while all the efforts of the democratic a“ gos mercy in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ. their government. If you idiocy, lunacy, or for crime, These are obvious reasons. But the material question is, whether It is just for us to Jeave them in this issue without giving the and pessed a faw di death and confiscation for ly impaired our credit, made it dificult to negotiate fore the break of day his earnest penitent prayers made freemen the power to protect th . | all men who should ey war against the government | exclude persons from the elective franchise morely be- prolonged the war and increased the debt. And | Plottings Against Salnave—Repert on were heard, and he rejoiced in the salvation of Divine Who would do so were never real republicans. | of the United States, Washington recommended Con- | cause they are wholly or in part of African descent? Is | now that the war is over, what party is likely to increase | gimances During Geffrard’s Reig: grace. The a a ee TE SH aise" “aa” cas 'wss es | Bopocnch tenet Seems Eeoain coer wep: | Roun ikea tat ReaeeSetesedsee | ry hr ant say pred sein tite | eundaa ‘Skiing cad‘ond pure Sas Ses eed opel 7 corrupt the wi mas. We mus pro- ou 7, wi any reason, be €: 2. relieve these mon from the accursed domination of their | visions of that law, had fallen into Washington's haods | all poiitical’ rights, the most sacred’ of which is the By tho arrival st this port of the brig Marguerite, | manner in which he died. masters, which was dragging our free republic down to | a8 President, how much would you have —— for their | rgbt to vote have iy to be taxed and from Port au Prince, Hayti, advices to the 3d inst. have At the conclusion of the 's addvess Dr. Durbin, ‘the bottom eee ‘Will you | scalps? We know what be would have General | are sul to our laws. Every burden imposed by Deen received. the Secretary of the American Missionary Society, gave @op now in w there is but one step | Arnold undertook to sell him out and ge over tothe | the State u other men must bear. The; some additional particulars as to the religious cbaracter are The blican subject to wilitary aut tae penlehes for crime o Hi ; | ¥ i i traitor, amd gaid to the M1 surrender unhurt Major | and offences, and ‘Stat Several arrests | A bymo fang, after which the benediction to mach he 5 Sten. and municipal rageninee ‘Thay have turihes to muy of iofwential. parte st toon sah, doth at Port au sr pronounond eg SE sought to betcay 1, deauht”? Eee penassens to which you are sabyect, vee. Prince and St, Marc, Some foreignore resident in Hayti wun peal tnd's deaghen, seguther'oten aome of the oon” er ap Fe ‘born en our soll, had been expreasing sympathy with the malcontents, Saas er te aid a ts, could ‘oe Cop a and these are warned by the government, through the am ‘ ui if 4 He i God “and “their country, (A paper, bas taken the most en-rgetic measures to insure Gey 67 yeana what they ought to ‘eave hed” the most eminent statesmen of the the maintenance of pablic tranquillity, and feels itself chissiensocbcattaemecbcatesidetsionicety and because it was |-clection to free ee Flee ce Meanwhile it 19 | (eine coffin tid bad been mecemarily fasened dow ered. it hae suffered as the | than black have by the with 9 series of Moancial messares which will | ine features of the deceased were not visible, mighty told them to do cer- | this unjust discriminati on it, lace great, Denon to all clasees of society, and which | ‘The remains will be finally interred to-morrow morn to execute his command. | in color, have heen ese bonds | Will be put inte execution with where Governor Wright meus, and wore reminded was nesrer white or blac State tax. |, The commitios He jot, of forme and ought to have died. When rae mee on made the pa a ho FAG oe which contains pa by Bog lnee Gon mee, and the law provides ‘but oure. In Great om some startling facts as to the way in which the public meg ee i ie ‘Acati Daniel ng but joes to | elections occur, more ot leas wach | MODey was squandered. From the report it appsare D ibe fanocent men have fallen bo- | in sone of them are men ox ‘of the Uaited | that 's official income amounted i all to no lees law and rove nol the ac a kine. Our Amer the United aera 000 jam, } = Rd be ‘Upen vrevolationizi ie - ey . ty, but really, while dealing lenlenliy with these | adopted an exclusion ot persons Ten smutade | @ar ia for eoteraining vitor af the sarioual” place, THE COURTS z . upom of | truth fa, 18 18 ail based apon a narrow prejndice of caste, that every judge that has | 404 he bed at his disposal, in addition, the sum . 4 “But,” say Thurman and Vallandignam, | not founded upon réason or natural laws, but the off. from 1819 to this time, bas | $20,000 per anaum for secret police. “oxtraor- + “you arrogate a despotism over those mea in not allow- spring of the same Intolerance and bigotry that excluded Bim, and each one concurs in "? expenses incurred for the personal surroundings UNITED STATES COMMISSIONER'S COURT. % to Congress to aid in the administra- | the Leraotites from all participation in the goverament principe is obvious, that the | 82d comforts of his Excellency amounted annually to — . ; tion of the government.” Did men ever hear euch | of the Kgyptians; the same prejudice that divides the borrow money is paramount and | Slmost as much as the secret ag money. oo for vubee’ sthaine eben tan hee dat othe that hy ey ~ M bonterinnes seh mane Senteneen Be Fe Es far are “ind vinods for. the e an Asiat! ropeans as barbarians; the rniture the Oabor ow tress begins to be respectable, aad ine ac. | feciing of prive and involerance which snatiia wae % ties $5, furniture and crystals, $3,226 erontdhcngesanpet or oe cursed scoundrels wao have caused’ the loes of | tocracy in Great Britain to exclude the laboring clas-os of furniture at the and | The United Staics ve. Elica Aitenheim.—The exami- hundreds of thousands of our bravest and best men | from all voice in their governeient. We owe it to cur char. Payment of workmen, $8,235; July 28, repairing of fur- | nation io this case was resumed yesterday, the prin- ; are not only permitied te go acquitted, but such men as | actor as American citizens to free ourselves fram such niture and twelve dozen glasses, $4,170; ber 10, thew 7 Thurman aud Valiandigham extend their aympathy. to | prejudices, ead to bo Just to owe who are born on our Topairs of farniture and pay of workmen in the garden, | “Pal direction of the testimony being to = or ‘S ‘A Geom cnt ny saey aro § reannized overt iH paew Tose, atl, share ‘nour burdens, and are only different from ’ ~~» ene od 26, lparckaee of lamps, bs nd defendant was the owner of the property in dispute, 5 guage can” w u ancestars came from wenty-four thousan: io one year. ln another same made 4g manly with traitors who have caused the death of so | God's world than ours did, What seasons 0 ote "placa we find a charge of $1,149 for sweetmeats; and in | \rUdé ® Feconveyance of ine Ang ad ry sia many of tne flow f youth. Jf you sympathize | cratic friends givo for keeping up this ban of prejudice Another the sum of $280 tor his Exceilency's coachinan, . oN. with euch men I have no part or lot in your commisera- | against the colored men? The real reasen, | imagine, It appears, too, that Gefrard was in the habit of specu- i ‘ > tion. Tt is the depraved working of your old demo- | ie because they have no hope of getting tho darkers to lating on a large scale with the public moneys. He would endant' " a cratic heart, hat never was wooly givaajto. the aap vote wiih them. But they tell us that are not | priv ke must deposit with the Treasurer of | borrow gold from the Treasury om the security of his Emolines (Mrs. Schwenkel=ae the party who or. 4 is repablieas of manhood and just principles. {am tot natural intelligent enough to vots, end yet thay de not propase | the Cnited States gorerament bonds excveding in | ®@lAty, parchage with the gold the depreciated papor | Scuted the deed, Tt was after this that he hetwd of snothen aaah eae tapocet” Soprecn‘eghs | Sse met iegas oname Ton ante ER RTT fe Egg a aT hag mat she eouranns Sheen ate 2 we ‘ ald my G exclude 3 who cangot und id our Ii jotlar, wi . and lool: !yto things of this xi rm vestigating the crueities of re! to the | They are not Willing £0 exclade either ignoreat or intel. rin Rn Bh ye m9 4 rd, who is at present in Paris | TePteeented, by Mrs. Schwenke to ~- Alteabeim, wit happened. it is because God ia just and ere, under appointment of Congress, that i | ligent rebels. They welcoms to theit’ embraces see Convertible cur- | 00 8 visit to the National Exhibition, is represeuted to | Ress inquired why tho deed wes not executed in Mrs travehied according to the dictates Tesolution into the Senate te treat their se hands are yet red with the blood of our kindred. | roncy, ‘mi hand ia lawfal money or | b¢ now a man of immense wealth. Schwoake’e, married, eames Sold the promnty Is ba jaid down by Him. You and your party | prisoners as they treated ours. I mean their | It ts enly a ger’ thoy would exclude. It is | groenbacks about twent per eont, not only of their okt northeastern districts were giving | Sud was inf Gas dented aavimale tr en tometer 4 the devil, and in che end idn’s come out iri. | avldiers, most of whom could wot do otherwise; but | mothing to thom. {hat the tsearn'” has so. our § Circulation, but of their oposite. They must pay heavy siderable trouble, being in much greater force than | Malden name, and Yt wes hoekhon Mutt te oe or tbe a Himphantiy. | This may ve areh expression, bat it is | their aprige of ariiocracy who uirred counter, hes wwe ‘woucded 13 OUF worvice; is intell- | taxes to ihe Hing ash year to lh Ding RO) Hone emeline Mery, were in ont, ths ly true, From w part; 0. I proposed to give them notice that we had vat, sober, " peaceful. je ni i \- ween them and the gove: 4 ‘ ized, Its numbers have cou tinusliy Inereaved, herr | taken so many of “theit mens aod would” treat | Sed iberefore Tutt have ‘no voles in public amu’ | iecion’ then areeenemean te eaien. About one hun, | fesembianee to each other. | At the close Of the proceed. mn. ‘are therefore the anton, bil cnet ‘are inter. and fifty of them, driven out of Fort Biaeson by st the ofean and ton Pye tional gov- | We troops, had taken refuge in the Dominican territory, Smear | They absorbed and took the place of the pee ry bg me gt cig orey ment The , Gener exec Teta inlch wae aterty Gemicaciove to the | ccansien to aaneve Gainave of the frieedip. coomutan oF eeived am far from edmitting that there is such a marked infe- riority,-doog the colored people of Ohio as our demo- 3 friends seeert, True, where are worthless charac. becom per of which the fermer were badiy beaten, “4 ow @ more and mo Te tnd are cow | them as they did ours, Was ‘thie & ‘new thing? ey rest entirely upon national securities, and iy beaten, ‘About ove han. | Fesems 400a oer At the coe of the panes previews ag the ne Reovle Gee ot ey ae, in, 5 tas at from Ail. pablicits wise bad weition area fay, Con 4 oe iy ieit? Have the a on war, and T found it sanctioned and prac- them Sand reduced themecives to @ despot sm font auics they | ticed in the Revolutionary war, asd in the war of (12. elm, fhe cage ii Cannot release themselves? Who di‘mineer over them? | | of lation bad beea adopted I have -’ Detonal credit dori the war, furpished apd bids * Am T one of the number, your se vant, whom next hat @. qurrency without security.” rhe eet’ | the Dom ernment towards his administration, fair to bo a very protracted one, winter 4 can turn out into your stra 8? Call this des- United States could neither’ receive nor pay In conformity with an official order issued by the Pre- potiem? Ith 20th of June last, a Chamber of Com- ich insanity that these A \en spout at their deepotiem deena't on usin Obie If seceded out, They are convenient agencies in collecting | “deat, on PBST by Ah the people of the ea changes among | Merce fer the aly of Kort aa Prince had been formed. If these reasons Sco get sufficient to | It consisted of seven mwinders, and was to enter upon rig! Bates if Od friends and associates, Who du: Uhat they are 60 ignorant as to be uw astal ‘ayetem, ‘ewarma of State | the discharge of a functions {mmodiatety. the Jo ther for euppert for whan Vall * Geen! the right to govern themecives, banks witl oring tp egue. Syed teensuiom a0 f bam ent dows after being cond nned by & pte Ba ) through all thodw ran Of prejudice, give them Absorbed ar drove out of existence banks whore | New Yors Stare Cavs, Orricens.—The fo'lowine dust government for treason, to device ways \ 0d meang he might conquer the government (i's wae so | triumphs, and encouray®s Words, in regard to the auo- aggregate cireh lation was $190,000,000, whieh paid us no Seat the nage te mike, (ne companion cers run the Caual Depananeat:—State engineer aad COURT CALENDAR—THiS BAY. bd m taxes, ree facilitiae and potwoned ont fleancial | surveyor, with resid: jneere and . free and liberal a8 to allow him to escape with tis life, | cess of these great a i aeet one wo bave held } country—that Africa has never erodit, We poy basis which yields o# our eight mil- tesietaats: 7 Board C4 A ba Fe. Bomber, Surnewe Copnt, Cuampens,—Nos. 4, 26, 110, 117, The, Thurman being loft at bome to take care of (Mk redel | so long. such @ ep ee ae ras presented Atatermen, poste or mechanics, Weil, if that argu- | lions in tages, talde four bundred millions of our | and an Auditor of the Canal tment, appointed by | 158, 106, 153, il wounded and prisoners. While your brave by » | wortd before. Was ‘rauicate and stetiesinee mont ie good it ought to apply to families as | bonds, and two hundred millions of our tonder | the Governor; three Canal Comyniasioners, elected by Sar us to be brandy mag Be hee sts? Ha we! se ould it be fair to exclade a man from | notes, of which one. hundred and twenty millions are | tho peeple; a coutracting ‘consisting of these STRIKE ON THE MOBILE AND OHIO RAILROAD. Mt AO sata ‘power Wat 08 protomae | Medien secrets tal ssencttparegt te, camariog | wihut tora, “Tk ween ated, why aot nate thee | thre commiendners'~The Shaws Aouoeet and Su anne ’ Nnie innit for good? Why font the in reee bas deon groping it a name? | hundred millions of backs and retire t Yevor, and the Canal Auditor; a \ Board, compored St, Lov, August 22, upward so Rotes ?—won't we ereat by thie? We Cat do 00, bat we love the. ncarket for. @. ler of our bonds; we must ined provide for t Thiltions of out legal tondéys now sé0 Circulation vm the vauita of the Daa! G08 that yields Fiction is, that the national banking sy! And should not be tampered with except so secu! of th hi de: a reflect on that which has debased them to digham and Thurman, who want your votes to-day? | wothjs and dull us up? It is the great spirit of They were ministering to the rebels at Thurman's house, | rigs | eens Permesting the great party that you have she headquarters where he shed not crocodile but real | 9 A by 00 gloriously, We ed hever flinched. Fx. tears over their condition, He ie an enemy to this gov. pt ene year since the republican party was organized @xoment, there i# no use mincing matters, God knows, Me Met with nothing wut victory. But these mon bat ius great war (rough which we Dave pase~ | C9? wodersaad way (ue glemogratic party, which slowly thst we can't sot ourselves far above other races withoyit the same presumption for which we sneer at the Chinés®. All races are descended from the same stock, if we Gin beheve all iio Bibles, except Nasby’s, All differences «te the result of climat® and opporiu- nities of ctvriia nn. Bren if our race ia betiet than the neero race, that», 00 rensen Why We should deprive 0 ity! Lieutenant Gov ee ef Bune, Comp- The strike on the Mobile and Obio Raliroad |: - o Treanurer, Atorney General, wate Bogner aud | sumed formidadie proportions. Tho employes, many of andred | Surveyor, and ths Canal Commissioners; Con’miesioners | whom have not been paid in eightcen months, assem. iy retired from | of the ¢ | Fund, consisting of the Lieuten*at Gor. | died at Jackson, stopped ail the a A company and we kill the | ernor, Secretary of State, ptrotier, Breastsver and | gf military bi jen ordered 10 point, and the Ny con- | Attorney General, bowdes numerous minor oMelaie | agents of the road fear that Governor Brownlow wii The duties of these various boards aod officers cad be | t _— Of ail that portion Of the road in Ten- ended from their designations

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