The New York Herald Newspaper, May 14, 1868, Page 11

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NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY. 14, 1868—TRIPLE SHEE‘. y a -. which the Miniatry are placed is this—that can- intoxicating drink should be made punishable as & Resolved, That no action of the great body of the | becanse the ificent industrial interests of the E U R fe) P E ot and will agt recommend hee Majoeky vo take the THE ANNIVERSARIES, | crime. ‘ticitesorpuninnent for drunkenness was | American Church gives any suicisut evidence of 60 full of brains. Now the South naver e toner steps at which Mr. Gladstone's resolutions ane ridiculous, for the drunkard inflicted greater penal- | vigilance or Christian principles on the great ques- | had any of these brains. A judge in my own State ” point. Uniess, however, ay de the resolutions best ties upon himselr through his error than the power | tion of the hour, wile the unconstitutional gurren- | said to me the other day, when twenty years ag a R whita 2 wili be entirely therefore, dues of the law could ever do, and would risk and | der of the Boston Tract Socle! teacher not Understand i crit manner Itr."Disraelt can sacrifice in many instances, ine Hwselt under ‘the | inaster affords snd evidence ‘of ine existence of tie | git im. the melipiication ot fractions, and ‘aflee The British Constitution én| {<xijichmatetan wieetut",are | Proceedings of the Anti-Slave~ | Waist? ween sac chu fe Wha | UhauttantathiatetnaaPte yaanaine | ecuador” atk ful R 1 nish him with the means of holding for a further ict: dealers, do more to break down the trafic in rum | critical hours ing Defore us suinmon doelicionlats learn frsctionss I will hire Ps Yankee to multiply Peace: evolution. time the reins of government, ry Society. than any punishment of drunkards could effect, and ) to renewed and, if posaible, more dovoted oforts, to | for me.” (Latighter.) ‘This i4 a symbol of the The London Star contends that Ministers have no the puni ‘wn the national conacience the absolute need | state of the Southern mind up to the present hour, ment would then be laid upon the right press oF right to stop the course of legisiation from reasons shoulders, Within four months after the enactment | of still stro tees for all the rights which | In 1861, th ired brat 1 bi themse! and peculiar to their own of the Maine liquor law he visited four county | the war has si own us the necessity of teomgnlzing in teen ination oct ohtar the Quixotic erusad je of to French Agitation Against the Bonaparte- | visws. wien ‘arefuot those of & majority of the House Speeches of Wendell Phillips and Others jus in that sinto: that had previously” been | the Negro race, and to extend the circulation of we | endeavoriug to iv om am isolated fondaliam tn tha of Commons. tolerabiy filled as all times and for them nineteenth century. It starved, The Senate said ‘The London Standard confesses that if the object empty. The York count lhe also visitec Resolved, That weakened as our ranks have been | South is ves; r Cobden Trado Treaty. of the iiberais be not so niuch the destruction of the on National Affairs but did not and tt conte Hee ens toun Tiguot by what ‘lg how most clearly shown to be the tis. | they Reeeded, "Hasentialty speaking. the, pts Church as the overthrow of the Ministry they can le deaters confined there for violation of the prohibitory | taken confidence of some who once stood with ua | seceded from the hospital. (Lau: ) They, oe AS oth lginiy render it impracticable for mini simply Jaw, and another prison visited by him had been | here, our labor should be all the more abundant to | starve. Iam endeavoring to al ze.for you u 2 pass hist the Me Church question and expedite turned VA the Jailer into a hen- In the course | hold up the hands and arreagthen the pubile suppor sentlal conditions of this problem. r Disraeli on the Anglo-Papal ' i gt ons for an appeal to the new constitu- of his address the speaker frequently reverted to the | of those statesmon who understand the nation’s im. | tt. ‘The white race put its ‘They can move a vote of want of confidence; The Impeachment of President fact that the Maine Liquor law. 14 en enforced in’ | minent peril and are treading under foot every party | cated; so will the bi a8 a or they can go on defeating and harassing the a/l- Maine, and was benelicial, and it would also be | and personal eration to marshal it on fn the Mr. G: Religious Conspiracy. ministration il bosh fis own dignity and public enforced 1n this Bate Letvre long. pean colng ‘that the war is, not ended | Alabatnas ane interest renvler endurance no lo! ble. Johnson the Duty of the Hour, Rev. James B. Dunn and other gentlemen then ad- | nor is eulancipation itself safe till tie citl- it? Andthat Is the Haigh yy Aes from tag Ss a aps eee ” pei oe audicnce brieily, after which the meeting | zenship of every ‘ native, savant sastrage, ng” inistries heard . common school system every “Zhe Hapsburgs and Bourbons in | {!¢ (Mostuniucky. Weak in itself, composed of men and a land homestead for every family of the negro 'y good thing, But the holding radically different opinions, discredited by Mr. i race are tirm the constitution itself, ag | laws of polliteal economy and of God's raell’ Wholesale ciation of Chief Justi THE ANTI-SLAVERY SOCIETY. anchored in the 4 7 # Council ‘With the Sultan. Disraeli’s incessant blunders, and’ with no kind of Denun: on ice ° Well as hearty accepted by the conscience and con- | “Begin to live; earn your own bread th real power in the House of Commons, it had, as it Chase, General Grant and the Anti. ea victions of the domiuant majority of the nation, We | thoughts; stand on your own fee! : F ipo : Tad aotene7 one madeniabie: seat OF arvemay Ts ase, d Thirty-Afth Anniversary Exercisee—Report, | SJ, therefore, to all our old fellow workers, “Up, re- | White raco that has beer Up in ho} ‘The Cunard mail steamship Australasian, Captain | ime vender care of Lord Derby. AU of & suaden this Impeachment Senators. Letters and Resolutione—Addresses by Wene | {a%,00,cilort, quicl Fee etna mnae ap fe tH080 Met | om that. black man’s tect. A. Comore ad Okep, which left Liverpool at three P. M. on the | friend and protector has, alt h in a triendly and : dell Phillips, Charles G. Burleigh, Mrs. | have fallen out of the ranks, and keep our time-hon- tain at Nashville for rations and @pd Queenstown on the 4 inst., arrived at | Protecting way, done his best to damage it. ree Mary Grew and Othbrs—Geueral Grant's | Te? fag flying till ail t ever meant is written onthe | portation. Said the Captain, “we cannot give eth early yesterday morning, bringing a mail re- |, 1¢ London Economist predicts that the value of ‘ Platform, nation’s heart and statute books alike.” (Applause.) | We havestopped that thing.” “Well, what ai 1 t riser she 0 igure money will probably soon rise, from the co-operation | Approaching Dissolution of the Re- : Resolved, That the death of our venerable co- | dof? he asks. Said the oillcer, “io doy of our cabie despal ihe 2d in- | of severai siuall causes. For one thing, the demand > A rather smail audience of ladies and gentlemen | worker, James Mott, one of the earliest laborers in | levee, volunteer on a steainboat to hand day later. Ath a mats for capital has a little increased, As to English bul- | * ua) ‘. assembled yesteria, the fleld, always carnest, vigilant, tireless, devoted, | the wood station: nd they will o of Turkey lately witnessed lion it is not likely to be tronched upon. Neither the P . y morning in Steinway Hall {oF | nding In pood Works, taker one of che mos de. | 8nd feed you des.” The atc i pkey Mone @ represen- | United Statessnor Russia, our largest creditors for Bets obese dae the purpose of witnessing the thirty-fifth anniver- | Voted comrades from our tanks and in iim. the | looked Into ‘the officer's a moment got up expressly for him at the Italian theatre | corn—are likely to requiré builion; and though ocher sary, exercises of the American Anti-Slavery Society. | negro has lost one of his heartiest and most eiiclent | “Stvanger, I never did do a str * Selections from “Le Barbier,” an act of | Nations may require some, there are considerable ; revailin; e zZ friends, But falling m hi t ag fa my life,and do you think I will t a: enone (ooh eee ree eee | General Grant's Platform as Lald Down by | Prevailing lack of Yutcrest seemed to characterize pe ach ite Ri Ere bagnee it " ‘anst” wer " Supplies to i ’ wise and kind Providence which lifts himto a higher | (Laughter.) Now, what is the fauit of Au oy oq heady ra Prk eraren The | Australia, ‘the cotton drain of bullion has now be- os ga the meeting, very few salient polnts presenting | sohere, and offer to his famlly circle our tenderest deny Wij, tis 12 the evil—that when Grant, hav accompanied by ‘acha, Pacha, | come triffing, and, therefore, we cannot expect that an Abolitionist. themselves to awaken any enthusiasm, except when | and most respectful sympathy in tueir great bereave- | throttled “Lee, had opened the anel by wh J Pacha and several other Ministers and high bere demand for ouilion 1s now likely to haye much in- ‘ impeachment was discussed, Among those present |«Ment, , Applause.) schools and the nineteenth century were to be intso- perad of the empire, . uence on the London money market. was a solitary American citizen of African descent, REMARKS BY CHARLES G. BURLEIGY. peraienay hens oes Petit winwackeott nae pie ap ; ‘the Londoa Beonomist points one moral of the Count de Chambord has left Constantinople for | Abyss! 1 expedition—the value of Angio-Indians. AMERICAN TRACT SOCIETY. who, however, disappeared shortly before the meet- CHARLES G. BurLEian, after the reading of the | it, The kee is the cant term which jm aed ’ Syria and Athens. ‘The grand danger of Euglishmen, Americans—and ing was opencd. On the platform, besides the | Tesolutions, said there was occasioa to rejoice at the | Dirase represeuts the nineteenih century-odnd ~ M. Outray, accompanted by M. de Béarn, Secretary | Provably oue may add Germans—is a tendency to - speakers, Were Miss Susan B. Anthony, Mrs. Lucy | Progress of their cause in the past. Yet, a‘ter all, | Suersy, brains, a carer, an equal chaswe toe of. Legation, and Liente: 2 “ fi Ype capacity, to produee an ever increasing ‘The forty-third anniversary of the American Tract a body, That is the Yaukeo. ‘The So . Legation, Lieutenant Rousset, interepreter; ver of dustruments, all very nach alike. India iokinest one UR thealdem relcione ovrenisatiniad Stone, Robert Purvis and Henry S. Wright. this triumph had not been achieved on the ground | agalastit, She thnks sho can suc 1, She MM. Gustave de Montebello and de Tascher de la breaes,, 08 tie a ,gdmintseration is ‘conperned, ees was Ma atea canted a ioe aie n The services were commenced at half-past ten | Of the thorough acceptance of antl-slavery principles, | be ang she nas pou mailed Lig shay 6 Pagerie, attachés tot uch Legation at Japan, | hese of responsibility, the spirit, which in 1852 | occupied by the Fifth Avende Presbyterian organ, | ociock by Sigismund Lasar, who performed a volun- | Statesinen and politicians did not reach as far as century, "and : that, sive fh oft Marseilles on tis 261 of Apili to rejoin the Min- | indnced a mnarciaing leulenant to iasue a manifesto | PUyh SS A sil Presbyterian organ- | tary on the organ, those who alm at the desirable. By that means | ja breathing) in. an exiustedsirecclv@r, ister. declarmg a siuall dependent State “annexed” to | Watton, the anniversary exercises opening at | “ywrropvoroky ADDREAS BY WRNDRLE Primates, | MOVs could the attainable be seenred. it was in | smothered in her ovine And __ British dominioa—which act te governinent were | nine o'clock ia the morning with a business Mr. Wer > i that spirit that they had addressed themselves to the | the great treason of the President | ENGLAND compelicd silently io coufirm—would in Eucope de- | mecting for the election of oificers. A. R. Wet- 2 ELL Patitstes, president of the society, | work, Their principles were desirable because they | triuinph of the Nort bdisi , stroy discipiine; but in Asta it ts occasionally very | ove y, Spe a hee delete then spoke as follows, by way of introduction:— were right. It was @ matter of present political ne- | by which schoo's and the Ya nn od benedetal t ean oillcer, lke Sir paar’ Napier, “ig m0 praident of the society, pr We are assembled at thirty-tifth anuiver pmills corse = ferro flee ag curing, She down like a b ag and take pos “Phe Old and New Constitution—Victoria and | W2% having fuliliied the object of a war, dare stake | Dr. Stevenson acting as secretary. The Rey. Dr. | sary meetin, American Anti-Slavery r the Emancipation Proclaination was @ military and flood it with t jes Of} z . ” his success agaim upon a further atiempt—venture | senad opened the meeting with prayer, after which Ith the events ripening around | BCCessity. | There can be no peace in this nation un- | garden, then Johuson, Disraeli. i of his own motion to offer a King the aliernaiive of norte Shee priheard aan ce ie | | us, decisive w ity by which | ut the laws, lnstitutions and usages thereof (are | unt looking out ou t bis (From the Londou Owl, April 29.) surrender or capture, reports in the form of aildresses were offered by the | any organi sned for the protection. for the | B&sed,ou sound prinelpics, and anti among officials | couquerors, “spare our lives and tabs ‘Things are rapidiy tn ting towarts apeacepul revo- | 4 The traite Bee oa raya pn si United King- | Rev. Dr. Thomas D. Talmadge, of Philadelphia; the | aid of the 10. Hanging in bn ag eg there is £ sorsinnee, to ve this | eb runs up his dag a od ord on : z i i ~ | dom amounied, tor the week ending April 25, Rev, Jo? all, DD. N vin tees é the balan fepende NT aauie: pa win, was necessary to push Andrew Johnson he defeated men, but the ¢ tution, Tho schoolmaster 1s abroad, Old lines are | 13,228 milles, to '£i22,38% and for Lie correspon aan dpe ep eack dl "3 oI tial beet pete By JH. 1 the comfort, if not Ho eee ante: of the wuars | fou the chair he had desecrated becuuse he was an ted element—eries out, “Don't give up, 5 being gradually wiped out from the slate and new | Week of last year, on 12,913 miles, to £723, ssup, D.D., of Syria; the Rey. Mr. Reilly, of Mexico, | forthe next ten or twelve years, We are passing | acle to the attainment of this condition, The | your feet like men; ! will yebsaye tins wile figaresbeing inscribe !, ‘There is an evident want of | $8 an increase of 313 miles and a decrease of £6,570. | and others, The Rev, Mr. Rellly was very sanguine | through that hour which, in all human probability, | Sives ae tte owed ior thetmte tes 4 the | government, this a fe gome order of thins better suited to the times than SEREE in his report concerning the condition of Mexico, | 18,0 give color and complexion to the politieal phase | {ime result, Haug rights and simple jusice to alt | of a gentienan.’ Bh pc é { Our Old constitution, Theories of government shouid FRANCE. and stated that Catholic priesta even were reading | 9 She one or tyfo SdINIGIESraROnE.,..f1 te | TLC otenem ane sin eee eee a i ee engi. DUE. mala who, Ould » be adapted to existing . ‘the Ovol is so fully sh . ef cowardi party—1f the scruples of individuals— €! did not do anyiling, but a Who eq ‘aware of this that, taking actual circumstances as iis hh Basan Retna health and being instructed by the agents of the American | jf the interests {a other courses—if the absorbing ‘the ADDRESS BY WENDEL PIIELIPS, ier uot do anytiin (Laughite ay guide, tt proposes co the natin @ skeleton scheme:— | Industrial Agitation Aguinst English Latereste— | Tract Society, and that he felt no hesitation in pre- | ruption aud the great Presidential canvass turn parte mpeling Wom, gala, AdGrongRe Uy; FRM MERE) |) SNe ae In Oe Fee soe Hen on Oa ane ae OLD CONSTITUTION. NEW SCHEME. The Cobden Treaty nad Ite Repentower | Ueting that inten years the majority of the people | the present movement—no man can prophecy where |” "Ttixnow some thitty-tt rly thirty-t Se ag ae te ONY, da centaalt tore we 1, Mr. Disraeli Premier Jebel aty and Its Repeal—War | of yexico would bé in favor of Protestantism. @ shail stand in another twelvemonth. How large | gince this society was oreadioed, nad den Ie wad | uae he could not work, and It the neato. as iong as the Queen likes | Preparations. ‘The annual report was full of interesting facts, It | Will be the effect on public confidence, on the domi | Greciney pee Was organized and when it was | that he could not works ane leon wo, ‘ represented by tle Hoxse him, waether the House | The London Jferata of the 1st of May remarks:— | Was therein stated that the society had spent $50,000 | nant party, tis status, on the great questions which | tainiy did CHT Dolan ant AGG ttinnint, boa! eee I I eee erin hapraloient of Commons, which las of Commons likes him or | An agitation of the utmost importance to th in furnishing gratuitous religious literature tothe | the War seems to have decided? We ure bound to | Wore dovoring career eee an tbolltionts| FR ie reba ell eb iaaglthe OE pete righ confidence in’ him. not, which at present it agi f the utmost importance to the manu- People, The number of persons at tho Soutn and | Ye member, tha: tramphant as the loyal masse seem | Hozro. ryce; Ftc alan Chotedain’ ceing Rie ely ay Salt pepe Nag Mell Gy. > ong A don't. ? facturers of this country is gaining ground and as- | West, readers of the society's publications might be | there are five millions of unxppeased and unappeasa- | magnanimous a avOu ab, a 7 fees h hi ara der it naetara sont at rr ander; 4 we zie i 2 A Promler who does nt au edministration | suming formidable dimensions in France. Itis one | Counted by millions, most of whom were supplied | ble eneinies, watching the nation’s course, deter- | shield of the Datiow'a strength over & viceimed ex . Sar dott dtevarel “Till give you back property. ‘obe beaten ova that does not depend on gratuitously. It was reckoned that thirty millions | mined to take advantage with vigilant malice of | jut God has shown us in the providence of thirty | 1 will bring to the froat your defeated Ieaders, 1 w division. theaccldent ofa majority, | 14 by the industrial communities of Roubaix and | of spanish and Portuguese in Mexico and South | every opportunity to recover the lost cause. We | y cri but on the will of its | Rouen against the Anglo-French commercial treaty, | America were supplied with religious literature by | have always satd on this platform that it would be rine ipoallty been, patelotiemn, Maia the inbor witeh | tious gguinat tke Malvanolug’ waves, et it do waa civef, who is not particu- | conciuded, virtually, by the Emperor, by Mr. Cob- | the society and its missions. Aun interesting collec. | # marvel in history if one revolution, one decisive | we nave expended to shield the negro has in its real Ouinoak taoaant could be done, [will put you ime lar. den, by thé Minister, M. Rouher, and by M. Michael | 02 of statistics was adduced to exhibit the present | battle like that of the last flve years decided fnally | significance been a toil to save the nation Itself tion and 1 wili save you from the vigor of 3, Bach branch of the — 3, Asuperintending up- é yy M. Michael | magnitude of the operations of the society. In 122, |.the relations between nations on this Continent, Beery HhoMgliTOl, IRAN AnD. OORT Reon trey eee | eee So nen bald We inae Duld a Chinese Legislature indepeadent, per house that initiates | Chevalier, This convention, unless renewed, expires | so states tho report, the total receipts of all the tract | the issue 18 as happy as we wish, if when we next | will kee in’ the who course of national ‘airs wail Detwixt tie ener y of this Yunkee race and owe and initiating its own nothing, but, wherever it | two years hence, in the summer of 1870. It will be | 80cieties in the United States were only about $2,500 | mect together and four years hence ail that has been | no matter where she ores back the source and | effete civilization or 1 ath swallow us up? And mehsufes, subject to the cau, puis its finger into | remeinbered that, when its provisions were originally | 1 legacies and | $4,000 for salos, while for the | gained by the war is rane it will be @ record | the cause, that we have been gradually gravitating | this stupid muddle we dug up frou the mud of Ton jention of the otiier. the’ Commons’ pie. It | discussed in Parliament, eatreme sifess wos laid us. | lst the donations” and legacies to the soctety | unpara‘teied in human history, It would be | towards a social anda political corruption witel | uessee (lauguver) sald, “i will do better lor you; £ fo interference, howey must not be a matter of | on the fact or assumption that our piece goods, | have amounted to $118,000, and the sales to | # tribute to the progress, ‘the energy and ‘ et ent; ci 2 Allowed with their inter. sollcitade whether any | ycnen ste gr aasuinption that our Dlece goods, | $105/009, making a total “of "$518,000. ‘The num- | the virtue of democratic government, such as no | {inPanae ora erhor utes gener e NGS Tet oe ie aS re ein SI ei aivs fon tho nal arrangements respect- attention is paid to it or | so high an esteem by the French consumer that we | ber of volumes printed during the year has | epoch in any clime can show. We can hardly bape the weakening of the people and strengthening of | money. 1 will give you back railroads, 1 will retusa eae aan ne were opening for ourselves an immense and most | been 1,072,780; the number printed for forty-two | for it. We have no right to expect tt. Only by the | what were called the higher classes. To ald popular | the confiscated property. I will set you afloat aga under the title of First lucrative inarket. In France ft 1s asserted that such a | Years has been 22,977,879; the total number of publi- | Most arduous toil and the most tireless vigilance | education, essential democratic institutions, uaiver- | with ail the resources of the nation, and you siull e Treasury, is a market has been found by England ; but our own | Cations for the same time has aggregated the enor. | can we expect to save even a large portion of what | sal suffrage, the actual and entire presence of every | fight another battie for fifty years, and you may win member of the Cabinet, trade circies do not tell the same tale: We are seli- | Nous figure of 206,803,887. The mouthly circulation | the war seems to have gained. How large that por- | responsibie being in the government are elements | 11.” ‘That is the meaning of Linpe: ‘The ede ty. ing, certainly, to our neighhors; but we are, at the | of the american Messenger has averaged for the year | tion shall be, this week, the coming thirty days are se genplan ‘presence and the retatton | cated negro of tie Carolinas says to the educated remore — 4. The chief ruler not to | same time, buying from tiem in'an even larger pro- | 164,000; of the smaller journal for Sunday school pu- | to determine, And it seems to me that no gathering 0] ns ‘ ang “Let + or less to the tenets which be a member of any par- | portion. Thy, however. (or thelr manuiacturers | Pils the circulation has averaged 50,000 monthly, | of abolitionist watchmen on the advance towers, en- Cesta omponraee he ill ‘be became in the aout | bremerk.” Mie aitco white men. py Decne their title impiies when ticular cabinet, but to be | rather), urge that our purchases go i ection— | While that of the Botschafer (German) has avei deavoring to guarantee beyond a doubt the position a1 is construed graihmaticaily, @ relired ininisier, who | to bencht the wine growers—-whille our colnpetition | $2000. This makes a total monthly circulation of the | of the colored race on this Continent, ever met at a peter el seth rhea pithy sinte. years | Une Seg aaiays ths divorer, (Langhicr.) Weis aoe Bs Conservativesfvom “0 comes out in public when | invades every seat of French industry. * * * it | three periodicals of 546,000. ‘The cost of the various | Moment more vital to our history. I congratulate | ago, «ine ireedom of this nation is owing to the acci- | politics. A prominent democrat saul of impeachmeat, vonserve;” radicais from it sults him and his gout, | is perfectly evident that upon this subject a serious tuitous distributions of the year has been | you that whether Presidents declare or Senates fall | Gent of separate colonies.” So in my view to-day would tiirovtle the ian in twelve hours!” Suid 56,606 83, The financial budget for the year stands { of their duty no one can doubt the progress of popu- | the preservation of republican institutio meer u C1 ns, the vigi- that democratic doctrine?’ 1 don’t know, lar principles. The great nation is sound at the core. | jance of popular Rhough, the education ar he replied, “but 1 am a manager of twenty milli “root and brauch re- and gives directions in | controversy between the economists and the indus- form.” the intervals of his at- | trial interests of the two countries will before long | 98 follows: tacks. He retires home | arise. There is a battle to be fought in France, Receipts by donation.. $118,773 | (Applause.) And before this great moral work is rth the cont “ hich I je, and we before the effect of his | ‘The event of the day in Paris politics was an Receipts by sale........++ , 053 tins te Americans will reap justice and tncorpo- Fondency here will be owi Sea the edetation erites [st Se ree Teenie tor bolineas is out of inal seed article in the Journal des Débats on the peace or ——"— | rate it into thelr constitutional law. God has set | the antcelavery cause has given and to tie necessity | the way." Let Johnson remain at the While House 6. Adignified and tem- 5. Parties to adhere to | war question, whi Total...... perate mode of ald:eas nothing but to place, and | fromthe rusuor of Sts being: the Jone promiaon | Balance ii tie Treasiry. when discussing pubiic to use their titles more to | of M. Rouher and M, Michel Chevalier. It appeared agairs in the Senate. conceal than to mamifest | under the signature of the Secretatre de la ftedac- | Total of moneys during the year . bers not to be vitu- their tenets. Their tities | tion, and was evidently communtcated frou some | , AD abstract of the year's operat by name, but by must be construed in a pecullariy well informed source. ‘The Debats says:— | 10 the sabjoined schedule:— 18,827 this great nation on the great tramp of inexorable which the war has im) ‘on the American posed people. | and the shock will not be felt at the Union Cluby 16 oT tee re hare athe hands of laws infinitely more | ‘There are a class of people that go about now with | will be felt at Wall street, Washington is deal Hetieva that in oerday we mini see 6 ae faith | white lips, saying to each other, “Would to God we | with impeachment as a Presidential question, 1 believe that in our day we shall see a flag floating | could wake up some morning and find every negro | ticiaas untu after the 4th of November cannot ations Gas -clae ees Suscanaemy eaibanal ‘saatinn 00 Ore to | pianched white, Then we should have a happy peo- | to tell you any truth. It is @ Presidential chess py impartial justice to every | pie and a halcyon scene.” But fifty years hence his- | board, like that picture which the German painted te tative non-natural sense by hel, ne money demnandsof the Minister of War have ex- | Colporteurs in United St and Canadas. race and to all the people. (Applause.) of sitions. This was to In- of a dictionary, which is | perienced resistance in every quarter, on the Of ious meetings held oy 3 wuthivon tory will look back and see that the only chance God | us of the man playing chess with his angel i wa ® nin, Sood Provided by their’ chief | Public opinion as well as in the counciin of the gor. | Family vielts made... 254,862 ae Speers ee eee tet nena ae cea aie men Tice kine oven Noun sasoepvesiogse is 3 reed % A prayer was % “f . | old shape, at least in your d. p canteens eid! eceoetor, ernment and the great State corporations, ‘That re- | Conversed or pray 109,117 cau here olfered .by Rev. John T. Sar- | the Srotence at the Sotith of 3,000,000 of esacntial and | Disappointed ambition, as one of our human mu ed With sistance the Minister of War has combated, often | Protestant, familles found geant, after which Mr. Aaron Powell read the re- | {nevitable loyalists, Without them 1 aflirm there | tives did not die. with Aaron Burr of Beuedict Are embers of thesame 6. The flat, stale and | witu success; but the struggie continues, and M: means of grace.. orts, lettel id. uth cabinet—atany rate when unprotitable tameness of Niel carr =) ar | Roman Catholte fai P ts rs and resolutions, never would have been a probability, and no | nold, Besides tuat there are certain persoas dw Whey speak on the same Tormer times 0. be re- | deoprewnviction. anc Witte the gue garnestness of * | Families destitute of rellyious boo From May 1, 1867, to May 1, 1898, the amount re- | history shows us the possiolifty, of the héuling of | cussing woman's rights. Woman owsnt i have hee night—to hold the same piaced by more vigor and | qualities whicn belong to his mind and temper, it | the exception of the Bible...... celved from subscriptions to the Standard and do- | caicitant white race of the South. In other wf she had her rights. You know it was # views on imperial ques- point. “You,” and 2 | often happens that he falls into exaggerations which | Without Bibles........... nations was $7,492 76; from the subscri - a f 5 iption feati- | words, my friends, the more the future opens belore | cu et jiled on a lady's tons. Eurust of the forefinger, | injure his cause far more than they serve it. The | vith considerable, Industry the secretary hae as | var at Boston, $2,428 60; pledges paid, $756 16; le- | Us the brighter begomes the question. in which our | Anne's court taat-upset the Duke of Mariborougis t substituted for the | marshal Is no pontieas: but he looks upon himseif | Collated the statistics of twenty-seven years of the di “! ¥ sympathies have been enlisted. Frederica Bremer | and saved Louis XLV. his crown. it was woman in- Hi uonorable Taeuber, for as the head of the French ariny, having received Locate, of which is exhibited | gacy, $300; through agencies, $300; amount ex- | said twenty years ago, “The romance of your history | directly that crushed Kobespierre, aud woman’s cap- ip m the Emperor it - Ne i ender * e ney . e Me e y e e, mere ‘lance of the eye. | parting to _ KPa Ss Preah onto pre Months of lavor-for one man pended for publicajon of Standard and oltice ex is the fate of the negro race.” And when the future | rice that ilited Bonaparte to the throne, aud if tae The lie direct cannot ‘be | tent and solidity which the general situation of the | Volumes sold... eifectively given to any | country and its'resources admit of. Volumes granted... Oue among the trammeis | ‘The Journal de Paris learns from an “excellent | Retigious meetings held of obsolete formalities, source” that Turkey Is concentrating near Schumia | Famuly visits made. 50,942 ‘ r moa) enses mn this city, $11, Scott shall choose his border land and his romance | wifes of Senators ure judicious to Mra. Wade why 8,837,008 seaae Pa ty $11,381 18, and balance to new | Dots from the archives of American history, it is io | should not that lauy keep Andrew Johnson in tue Ser ers SCQOUDE, Si,are Oe. doubt a fact that he will flnd no more fruiiful treas- | White house and Wade out? (Laugiter.) We 9, ef Two letters were read, one from Lucretia Mott | ure house than this relation of the races. But more | see at Washington the likes of the new partics are ease | and the other from Lydia Maria Child, expressing | tan that, constitutional history slows us that every | drawing. ‘The demmocrauc aames are fading oul uke 7. “The Queen can do 7. Secretaries of State | an army of 35,000 men, with.160 guns—rather a large | Families conversed with. ‘ «eee 5,214,107 song no” wrong.” “There‘ore, necd not pay any atten- | proportion of artillery, a 8° | protestant famjlies found in deep sympathy with the purposes of this society ana | STEAL deste 00 te t00re ote eae ey gaat disloyal sicey of the one Sito the Sovereign accepts, ton to what ther col | | The Parly Putrie denies @ statement that the pecs omnes eitte ss. its present meeting. debate which by iis associations has become’ histori- | goats on tue other. (Lauglter.) ‘the reyabucpm through her minisiers foF leagues have sal fyen | French military mission in Japan had takea part | ftoinan Catholic families do ENERAL GRANT'S PLATFORM. cal, has grown out of the negro race—notning else. | party is breaking, and belind this faction tu tue he tline being, the meas; fen ininu‘es Vefores but | with the Dalmios against the Tycoon. Families destitute of all religious books, be arerrot ges 2 . ‘The tirst great Congressional encounter in *92, in | seuate which is’ hiding Andrew Jounson (rom Eber are demanded 19 be prepared, If itsults | France is largely buying cornon the Lower Danube Bitiies excepted... ...... oe + 8205) The following letter, dated Washington, D. C., | which the chiefs of revolutionary fame crossed | jusiice [ ee the Chief Justice, with the Fresidenay yy the majority of We na- thei , to Acon- | for the army. ‘Ten tiiousand empty sacks, with the | Protestant /amiues without the Bible. 502,572 | say 12, 1868, and addressed by Colonel Charles £. | swords with each other, were tie slave clauses | on lus brain, looming up us a candidate, The pivb trory line at five minutes’ | ojticial mark, have arrived at Or: Grants of money for foreign lands. . $10,000 notice, ‘This will concit- | "Tae French government. purchased about one | The Teport also contains another important point | Moss to Rev. A. M. Powell, was also read:— ate all parties, and tius | thousand horses at the late fair at Lincoln, England, of moral rather than statistical vaiue, in the form of Tell our friends at the anniversary that impeach- strengtien the Ministry. | ‘The prices ranged from £20 to £120 each. articles of agreement between the two existing tract | ment is sure to be successful in spite of the treachery ‘The ‘Queen don’t like | A letter from Paris of the Ist of May says:—Some | S0cietics, which it is hoped may work — good | ofa few republican Senators. The vote is post wiat is wrong. There- | of the truest friends of the empire look on the present | t® botl institutions, By these articles the | poned until Saturday on account of the sickness of fore, her name is used | state of aifairs, internal and external, with feellags two societies are made co-operative. ‘The Boston | Senator Howard, We shail on that day have thirty- largely, though secretly, | of great anxiety and malegivings as to tive future, it soclety is to withdraw all collecting agents from the | six votes for conviction, and that secures its suc- and her opinion of its | is to be hoped their ay preheusions are exagzerated, field and discontinue all personal and other appeals | cess. There is a tremendons excitement at the wrong ts whispered, in | but it is undeniable that they exist and there issome | fF funds, becoming more distinctively a publishing | capital, more intense than that which prevailed at order to oppose a meas- | foundation for them, At home they tell you that | COTPoration. ‘The New York society is to occupy the | the time of the adoption of the im- ure which the mass of the | there is nothing but confusion, that tne advisers of Oped thus relinquished, and to carry forward dis- | peachment resolution in the House of Re- country demands, This, | the crown are at open or secret war with each other; inctively its great work of colportage and beneyo- | presentatives. I have never before seen anything thousti dangerous, is ef- | that the Minister of Finance, the Minister of the In. | lent tract distribution both at home and abroad, to compare with it, The tinprecations heaped upon fective for a short time. terior, the Minister of Marine and the Minis:er of The New York society, in consideration of these | Trumbull, Grimes and Fessenden are bitter and —s War are banded together against the ever-increasing | 3T@0'8, will discontinue its depository at Boston, | emphatic, and I do not envy them their position. Disracti on the Anglo-Papal Conspiracy. preponderance of the Minister of State, and that the | While the Boston soclety will discontinue its depost- | They bid fair to be classed with the Arnolds and In the House of Commons on the 20th of April, Mr, } Minister of State, relying on the Ministers ot Coim- tory at New York, and each will act as agent for the | other traitors to the cause of freedom, Disraeli, in concluding a brief speech in opposition | Merce and Justice and upheid by the Empress, is sale of the publications of the other. General Grant is worming hard with his friends to to the adoption of tue first of the Giadsvone re- doing his utmost to bring back M. de Lavalette to ‘This report concluded, the business meeting, which | secure the conviction 6f the President. He says his eolutions on the Iris Church, said:—Sir, 1 would | tt binet. had been postponed for the hearing of the report, | acquittal will result in bloodshed. His opinions willingly have sat down tits moment on! that would M. Beimontet ana M. Martel, Deputies, have pro- was held, and resuited 2s follows:—Assistant Secre- | ought to influence republican Senators to remove be discourteous to an honorable gentleman who wed tothe French Legisiative Committee on tne | tty of the Treasury, Kev. G. A. Sherman; Publish- | the only obstacle in the way of peace. spoke early in this nigut’s debate, and spoke, too, at | Budget to set dowa amony the receipts of 1869 a sum ing Committee, Re De Witt, D. D., Ke By the way, General Grant the past three weeks has some length. I refer to tie honorable ronet, the of 64,776,132f. Tic., a8 due to Franae by England, in W. R. Williams, D, Villiam Adas declared himself in favor of universal suffrage and of the constitution. The next great debate | which saves Andrew Johnson is a plot ¢ was in 1807 and 1409 on the same question. The great | eocted under the ermine of te Supreme Court, shock of the Missouri compromise that nearly effect- | Whatever Mr. Chase dves he does deliberately, ed a severance of the Union was a negro question. | but | am not so sure about Fessenden and ‘iru ‘The great debate of 1829 and 1830, in wich Webster | I think we ought to be very gory with (hem—vosy and Hayne crossed spears on the Territorial question, patient. My own opinion ts tuat if impeachur ‘was @ negro question; and ever since that day every | could have iasted six montis they would have favored salient point of Congressional history has come from | conviction, It takes about six months—just about the relation of the negro to our politics, until at last | six months—for a statesman-iike idea to penetrace Fort Sumter made him master of the situation. {| Fessenden’s brain, (Laughier.) It took always say to-day that the President whose right hand | about six montis for ‘irumbuli and Fessenden to get signed the charter of the emancipation was put into | into line on auy loyal measure, Siduey Sait saad the White House by the slave, and if Andrew John- | that to get @ joke into a Scotehman’s brain required gon, the first American President, is deposed from | a surgical ition, (Laughter.) So it does Wo get his chair of State, it will be the hand of the negro | a joyui measure into Fexseuden’s brain. We have that drags him down; for it ison the question of the | been too fast for him. If we will have a Lule patiouce status of the negro that the President has defled the | and postpone napeachmon’ until next vecember urpose of the loyal masses and staked his magis- | 1 gucss fe would be all right. (Laughter) Lie Tate’s existence on that fssue. Wherever you | would ripen entirely. (Laugiter.) He is only siow. go, therefore, wherever you touch American his- | J don’t think him jacking, lie is only slow. (.augu- tory, no matter in what point, everywhere, at every | ter.) The President did everything in his power te mouient, God has marked the Telations of this race | remove Mr, Stanton, and thereby be violated a law. to ourselves asa test of American moral life—as the | If he thought the law unconstitutional he could issue fulcrum, the lever of American political progress. | what is called a quo warrando in the courts, Evecy ‘Aud the cause in which we have been engaged for | loyal man sees gullt upon that point, To come dowa : 3. OL a1 virtue of —conventious ante vat | Rev. J. Cotton Smiti Rev. W. 1. Bude é res that must be the ruling idea of his adminis- “ r # theory of Mr. Groesheck Presidous seereable and clever speceh, wulch’ I’ may descrive | Powers of Enrope, Guaranteed by tue great | Hh, and Rev. James O. Murray, D. D.; Distributing | trationif elected in 1868, Radicalism will, in spite | tlonguty We Te eee ened ie ba princtnic, ‘we | may disobey s Iaw in order to test fe when tis thinas #8 an amiable invective against myself (a laugh), BRAN os Committee, Alfred 8. Barnes, 8. 8, Constant, Dr. of the timidity and treachery @f republican Senators, | nave divided right ana wrong here for thirty years | it unconst.tutional. Grant, for the purpose of the offered some very severe but courteous comments on TURKEY N. Biakeman, H. P. Marshall and A. B. secure a perfect triumph in 1868. It will rule thé | on this platform. We have discussed ethics, we | argument, that if Massachusetts disobeyed the ex. my life and career, and made some observations which i Financial Committee, R. T. Haines, Moses Alien, f. | next administration and dictate the policy of the na- | have summoned the Gospel, we have endeavored to | bargo law In 1x12 and sent Sam Dexter to Washing- J ought perhaps tO answer. But there was one which — ee ©. Doremus, G. N. Titus, 0. E. Wood and Samuel | tion’ hereafter. Notwithstanding clouds and dark- | jmpress conscience, and during the war tine we ap- | ton to argue it, that Andrew Johnson has @ right to Jam clurly desirous of noucing, bocanse twas | Royal Visits from the Hapsbargs and Bour- | ©°!#ate. The Executive Committee was re-elected in | ness now obscure the political horizon light and sun- | pealed to the national patriotisin and the chivairy of | disobey @ law and take it before tie courts. Grant ame ce Seelichink heel det T an cetrec ie | wenestanpeetal Cameses a body. Messrs, E. Storer, of Cincinnati; M, Hl. | sine will on Saturday next gladden the hearts of | fhe nag. Andon these two wings the great cause of | it, what then? Why, If like Hampden’s resistance Geannening on 6 suagonsgtiCn en 'kis pert and ue—imperial Compliments to Austria—The | Kyerson, of New Jersey, and W. 8. Gilmore, of New | the true and the good men of the nation. By work- | anti-slavery has been borne upward for thirty years. | to the ship law, if the court that Is se6 on that of his friends. The honorable and learned Sultan in his European Programme. York, were added to the list of Vice Presidents, and | ing hard until next Saturday our deliverance will be | Bat, ax I said to-day, a moment ago, God has placed | to try his act deems the jaw unconstit gentleman seemed to be otfended because I described | By way of England we have mail advices from | the list ame he Fa soorenigg he eg Pen oe ge an vine some honorable gentlemen in this House as “itoman- | Turkey dated in Constantinople on the 22d of April. | Siearns. work out for good. us this hour in the hands of more inexorable laws | tional, his act is an honor and he wail than Congress or the republican party, We are to- | out lauded for having vindicated the constitution. day in the hands of justice, we are to. in the | But if the tribunal set to try his act thinks the law iste’"—4“hear, hear’ from Sir ©. O’Loghlen)—and an x hon le gentieman who spoke last night said that 1 ‘The papers furnish details of the visit of the Austrian a THE RESOLUTIONS, hands of political economy, ‘The great seitish forces | was constitutional then he 1s @ guilty sinner and has had given him @ nickname because I had called | Princes and of the Duke de Chambord to the Sultan, NATIONAL TEMPERANCE SOCIETY. The following resolutions, drawn by tie Executive | of the nineteenth century have grappled this negro t to be punished. No one of the counsel has ever him a Romanist. or no intention in usi events announced some days back by the HERaLp | committee, were read and held over for the v question, and I know that the negro’s place Is safe, jenied that on either side. After he has been brought Sees werd te sey anything Chat sould be Id the lense | canag tes eeauaeuaemate ‘ommittee, ea over for the vote of | that he Nas a better right than any other man to fold | up, and the tribunal who tried him says the law i ogres offensive; and I rather think that the honor- cnadngeod Addresses by Neal Dow and Others—Interent- | '\¢ society:— his hands in content and serenity, because the lips | constitutional, then he is to be punis Well, how ‘baronet, who has great litera uirements | The Levant Herald of the 220 ultimo ways: “The ping fice Resolvéd, That we congratulate the friends of the | Of Providence proclaim to-day wo the American | much? These two words “how much” are the gist negro race everywhere on the vast stride the ques- people, “omy be just and you will be strong.” The | of the whole im} ment question. 1 affirm, with- ‘The National Temperance Society commemorated | tion has taken and its gratifying triumphs in so my te t juestion to-day is a question of business, Recon- | out th of contradiction, that the ttruction bas got beyond politics. Whether acom- | agers and the counsel realize this. It is only the rade sits there and makes card houses of paper con- | words, “how much.” The case i# the commonest im titutions or not is not the easential question, Ten ppose you and I own farms alongside each other and we do not a Sade '@ mistake, I hayeeit have reed toss ortue | {rchinhes Charles Ferdinand, uncle of the Emperor great writers in magno certamine utriusque ecclesie, | Of Austria, and Ernest and Regnier, cousins of his | its second anniversary last evening in the large hall | many ways during the past year. Confident th: and Lbelleve I remember the time when the word | Majesty, reached Constantinople on Thursday from | Pine Cooper Instivate, Bull ~ Mr Wika a. | though betrayed by Its Chief Magistrate, and if be. “Romanist” was first introduced. It was introduced | S™Yrna, and proceeded, ie Austrian —em- we ding, Mr. William A | trayed by ita Senate, the nation is still sound at asa of conciliation because there is another p29 gy M0 5 A been the | Booth inthe chair, Several prominent gentlemen, | joart, understands the crisis and is equal to it. ‘word which is connected with odious associations, bed on | im addition to those ted toad- | (Loud applause.) where the dividing ine lies. What do accompanied the ambassador, they had an Brenan, were expected to Ltn e th cen we do? ¥ down @ stake Audience of the Sultan at Dolmabaktche, His Majesty | dress the meeting, but failed to appear, and | Resolved, That while in the legislation of Congress d discordan * 4 ou ip irder to aseert a claim, and & Teceived their Highnesses most cordially, and inns the proceedings, taken collectively, were rather | nd its attempts toward an amendment of the con freallunionkedand struck Gavel Ga tas caer Taye and wee ye eure Well, if you only pat course of a somewhat lengthened conversation ex- | uninteres ¥, stitution, the political status of the negro is still un- | stratum than where the Senate to-day. The | down a stake and give me no taconvenience, do not pressed his desire to cement sull more closely the ting. Temperance in New York is, beyond | settied, ‘and while terror reigns throughout the | question is whether the South shall eat bread or mat me to no trouble, even if the relations of cordial friendship now existing detineen | ® Goubdt, rather below par; and though the | South, we consider the naked right to vote atthe | starve, The question is whether the nineteenth cen- no right to put it there, the Auseria and Turkey. At the, close of the interview | subject of tteelf possesses merits which should make peril of fe almost, {not altogether, @ mockery. and | tury shall build up those ten States or leave them in | damages are Redhat th oa a on its support more general fled las night. to draw | fv tis priout condition at, pubie ats aad tis| fort gx Anarew dohonn vo chick the results of ine | Sua ian Lina sas and shortly after noon, his Majesty re. | ®large attendance. Of course the inclement weather ciagrace ° Sen ee. (Appiause.) turned the visi, vine proceeding {0 the émbas takers. had s great deal to do with the fact that not more |. M thay oxtinos a. Gan wk sha a jf, ee of Austrian col- than two or three hundred persons participated: in | ho is guilty; Le ig grr to him as disloyal lege his was salut by @ double | the proceedings; but if the audience had been larger | and as of the committed to its hands row of La J of the establishment, of | there would simply have been a ter number of | in cold i, a8 he had done in hot and drunken Dosh, sexes, ,/Mtaplea” | persons disappointed, and it would be to the advan- pession, | Grud applaces.) into Turkish by the director of the His Ma- of the cause, perhi Apa, Ressived, That we demand of the republican party feny at the embassy for neatly hal ‘an | tious generally were imade moreinteresting than iney | @t Chicago a man who represents the most rudical alter whieh he returned to Dolmabaktoné, at- | are, and advanced of the loyal people, and that tended as before. Later in the afternoon the Arch- | _ It appeared from the annual that hevsand ona platiorin which sal faarnniee to the teeta seaiy af iieamarmrae tee | CQPbtnaarthayare ony at rae | coed ocean tt wt en of Fuad Gt ogrand déjeuper at Kis Yall at Kem. | nnoe acconnte ise of the National Temper- | Sii'secure him & homestead of land. | (Applause.) ance ihonner, ‘72, ne Bae tracts e08,a00 Car Resolved, That we repeat more and more Count tracts, 12 new books pamphieta, 26 four Dees of Parina and Modena, a Pad eign which shall secure citizenship for every person born and six eervanta, also arrived ron ark iy | Cntaee Teter meme oe ere cnaraperenice, Sn the soll, and Impartial surage in Theveection of last isle Fo one Tho fanancial vatoooet ‘was as th and farbidding all proscription or inequality of politi- from publication department cal rights on account of race, color or previous con- jon. s t Resolved, That the so-called democratic party, which for #0 many years defended siavery, slave hunt- ing and the extension of slave territory, and which now seeks by political int ‘and unscrupulous opposition in the North at terrorism the : . a i 3 roe hich brains more et those biac! valties more trained, book Mixing of the white Face, Southern white man born | # y, could euteuiot puuld a Fal reed or his punishment be? tion, bul aniah me: ran it, There. has’ hot been a white man | to just thac extent that will born at the South within thirty years who | from doing any harm in the time to come. That ia could b mercantile house. That takes | Impeachment. “Impeachment lingers to-day tn the by the South always hired its brains, | Senate because tie weak men of that kody do ao6 4 million bushels of | yet sve John Hancock under @ black Prin, 1 would to mov Tey ye feet ke the Cy eles Now Cyan to os of i I or | liinot ea brains. icture of a President ¥ oug! 1) be tmapeacied Fa ee oe eaten pit of to-day 18 second rate | gud the likeness woud be thay” Anarew Youneoa ‘a8 compared with one hundred hy ago, why col- | And there is not alawyer in t7_ senate who could lees are tame ad edliorial are diuuid, is | pais a victure of @ Presiyg, wu sould Le lum - sels, The opinion, wi beter f the Geputation ta, mete re 0, 0 { ‘Tho Situation, Political, Military and Finans | ‘ines in favor of ‘a piece of government land near etal. Selvé, on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus, opposite 7 South to prevent altogether the equal enfranchise- ‘The London News maintains that if Mr. Disraelt mm dere. oa os . 5,211 | ment of colored citizens or to subject them to invi+ consents to allow the second and third of Mr. Glad- ‘amik Pacha arrived on Sunday from Alexan- it would seem that there is an | dious tests of education and property, merits the atone’s resolutions to pase without serious oppost- | dretta by the Izzedin, which landed his exceliency | excess in the disbursements of about $1,700 over the | severest condemnation and should be repudiated tion, and advises ner Majesty to permit the introduc. | at the palace, where he was at once recetved by the | receipts for the past year. aud denounced by ail friends of justice and inpar- tion of a bill based upon them, he will be a safer and | Sultan, He then proceeded to the Porte and took Neai Dow, the Maine Liquor law apostle, was intro: | tal su »_ (Applause.) more trustworthy adviser ‘of the crown than the | his piace in the Council of Ministers as Seraskier, | duced by the chairman and made a ver: lengthy ad. Resolved, That we point to the somewhat success. heedless and irresponsible councillor who from his | and later in the afternoon had another and longer | dress in his usual agreeable style. In the course of | fui attempt to revive the wicked scheme of coloniza- Jace in the House of Lorda adecta to dictate both to | andience of his Majesty. As already mentioned, he | his remarks he claimed that there was nothing in | tion as strong evidence that the pro-slavery poison peat, aud to the House of Commons, brings with him several fine Arab horses for the | the suppression of tue liquor trafic which militated | still lingers in the veins of the nation, and that the ‘The London Post remarks that the difficnity in | Sultan and a large parcel of specie for the Treasury, | against the ltvertios of the people and the selling of 1 nowro race Is stul in dango, aa

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