The New York Herald Newspaper, December 22, 1870, Page 5

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4 NEW YORK HERALD, THURSDAY; DECEMBER 22, 1870.—TRIPLE SHEET. oe the Ww ennreananroonaahtan land ve de: er a gow wb part from | Western homiiphore, to shall have prepared tho | this moiment, soloumly waralng us. leat, in the | Rev. J. PB. Tompson, 1). D., of New Yor: ar Mts Hoye where oon ae ally. reekorit, y Pi rr uinpaon, Withont much saduess of lieart gud many i be i wey ae tke Lord and of fiverty. Taey come wih phias of our treedom and fadependence, we forres «The compaet of the Mayfower the first written | 44 the beautttul creatures biusued aad turned pale OS Med charter o Mtospiretioa, They come with a ano menesnieiint-eneenerm soe on - . —— are age eens nner) of retigion in furnishing a eafe and tho world—witt ever be seen aud recognized the | and almost all things, except mere porty disioyalty, | fror the Pilgrims,” The answer to thie sentiment | Just as ” 7 1870 unchutage 1a eo Many “saray mes when | mon Wio.n We comuenorate to-day the Fityrisa | vealal, in your Stwio Gud va'ional eaprtise? Was mado in an appropriate poem by on. Wiibaa prides Ay a nanngc® fp bom b gm or ¢ Sie ° the minds of mon wee “towed to and tro, | Fathers of New Bagiand. No herstd announces HOW THEY WOULD WARN U Everett. le down comforinty ant ‘ aud carried avout with every wind of dootiae,” i | tex approach, No pomp or parade attends tieie | Can we not hear them at tts moment rolemnly The past orators of this annivereary—they have | Wailing the commencement of the proceedings nt ~ is vice, us hearbly aa any Consregationsiat who | advent. “> uieldod and helmed ‘aud we ‘poned » ti | warning Wa lest in the pede of our prosperiiy and | added Inetre toudoy airsady famoasin tie avails | the alarm of fire wag raise, and in an instant that stend tome, Wat our Pilgrin Patkors wore sopa- | the truth,” no visible guards are around whem, | greatvoss our Learts be lifted mp to Bayo) for bine | of our hisvory.” Lins goutunent called up bir. George | when but & mo:aent n man ratist. I rejoice, too, thas tig Vurtan Fashers of | either for aonor or défence. Bravelf but hamubiy, | self, “My power and the might of mite hand hata | 8. £ilard, Who entertained the jarge company in t previous was order and ap. p 1) FA i fi i} R N p AY Mussachuscits, WhO followed them to these suores ape Aimest unconsclously, they aesumeE their perils | govlen me this Wealth,” While tae great lesson uf our | his ustal felicitous sanger. parent harmony now became a sceno of the greatess teva Y Uyak # | ten yours afierwards—tuough, to the lasi, they | O44 posta as Pionvcers of an aivanee whtek fs to | scwardsiip to Lim to whom we owe it ail ja “The charavter aud iceas of the Pugrims the | turmoil and excitement, t 7 “gsteumed tt (helr Bogor to call the Oa urcs {- | knew no backyard sleps, unl, throughout thia | forgotéen or neglected? Can we not hear thoin,.at | mouldiag forces of the nation.’ Kesponded to by ‘ying! PILE! SHNERKED HIM LADIES ADIES, vt “ene iberty we are to stand Cit with tho i constitution thatthe world ever saw, the founda. | with a rapidity that waa Perfectly apoailmg. Pater Her’, WW) ha De nite ‘ or antes ‘ t ab tt ety | he put Y Zo0ds, : re otug rifth Jubilee i ep; | Were, if not technically and profeeediy, yet to all | Nothiar out tu their hinds, leading n | hazatd oot outy.of our goods, but our lives, If need | Uon sione of free governmenta, the fret efectual Y mad a Fifth Jubilee of the Descendants of tho | were, if nor teounteally and, profossadis, yet (0, alt | nothing bot via opos man fegsdoam, which | 02, 1a. te liberty for frat city which is good, Just | eounterpoise in the sealg of hutwan riguw.” Hon, | Mia luowed around im anxtoua torzor for the Churcn of Engiand woud never bavd been | ghali goon until cme slail pe no more, If only thas | and henest,”’ and not a tiverty to be used asa cloak | Henry Wiluon respouded, Bacety of his wiie or daughters, While some maidens Hote Plymouth Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock. | the noble charch 16 bes pinte beoumd had | Bivic shall remain oped, 4nd shall be dccepicd aud | of maiciousness aud licenttousuess? Can Wo not} — “Piymouih avd Jamesiown—the Pilgrims and the ut th 1 nid y there been no seasonable protest digals-b1t3 corrap- | reverence) by ier ieoadants as 1b was by theine hear ‘thei, at this moment, fron yonder hill of Cavallere frocdum aud ieee end on the ao, bear Pegs Nee omar matey | ee bs toma, tts exteavayeut lormedtnme aud its overdear- | selves, as tho Word of God | | eaves, solemnly waraing ns, leat, ia the pride of | field of Geitysbure wnd.fresdom couiered.” Lfajox | CVerY seat out of the gangwoya snd gesisied jag intolerance. Tie earliest separatists were Lose Yos, the cpan idle was the one ani all-suMctent | our svisnce, An eclipse of fain be suxerea to steal | General O. 0, Howard replied to tie sentient. tne more cldcriy to escupe towurds the doorway; Peat phe at Grand | tore tehn's disposition was tunitened fe tous | lodeed indeed: tor olnor und. greater retemnatins | {mpsroepubloand itsend veyond celoulasn? Obs | rendered eaaeapiains of uverty, whogracefally eur. | But a perfoct deadlock was soon percelvabie ta tng * 2 6 Wee more than C81G. an Look eed, FORMA ONB mn i cal rendered the: on ’, 3 = Dovotiona XOTCL8A8, Tan towards toine, Ia alinoss every iio x90 98 he aoe | tn roi Ht a cua aug W aie ahr or Calvi had ae. | lor us wear and leod weve waruings of tle athe $ won. = AMBION AAR: AOE, NIGKORN A paged ofesit, Many persons who had witn + nowledgement of i Ly Bupro: other | couplisuéd or advocat ; bul ey 100! lor them | to io Dy ae ey com ays A letter me Witt rh Banquet and Ball, separation could Not uave Deen, ongne fo hayes to come frem a better understanding and a mors | enforced now onty' by alt the precious memories of | response to this toast Brera Gasman wenn roe fe VOLUMES OF 8MOER beenavoided. A serious renowalof §uch manifes | careful study of the Holy Scriptures, aud net irom | their fatth and piety, thelr virtues and sacrifices and ie Noyes, of Canton, sa: g Mrs, Homans’ hymn, | pnshing from the building into Twenty-third ” Is at buis day, I need noc fay, om) Ri re ti yy Inglorious haman Wisdem or solentif@e inves- | sutormys, but by all tuo lessons and experiences of | “The Breaking Waves Dasaed Hitgh,” la effevtive et mei iy Bt; enaiiogs A : mi cf os ot a a} ke Giger tate te yuna, ie a4 iy uve ie need fred lois (ber pia and, knowlug that their friends were inside, rasheg .% n, > ef augiler would, under giailar cirenmistaaces, do It. op then anid he ata n ex on! events ol single year whlol 15. jus ‘the old town of Boston—t Plym ¢ ly up the stalroase, panting an tod—sone Prayers, Pork and Beans, Pumpkin | soceqir susro ita tats, “Provpvaias of human fae | yoto too muon tug lunportanes of tho trai Bi H 5 though Plymouth had | wildly up the 3 it a exc ne rf | losing—a yeor more mervellons in its manifesta- | ten years the start st 18 1s ” ) faitinlity noed not bo prociatined by an Loument: | In-Amertoun history and detalted whevariong prner | tious than slmort any whicn hus preceded it since | tencedia the rues tor Be KO ee eee site | calling out “Catharine,” pr «‘Luoy,’* or “Mother,#? to by Pio and Palaver. j Cal Couwell in order to bo guensive and abnor. faa ei by Governor Winthtop, Roger Wiilians | tho grea: your of our Lordja year wuose Cariste | wins ts au Old Colony boy.” Respond ws | with the hope of attracting thelr fclends trom 0] fia bi Augican Ohurca eaupder; e rent, Ib Qoes not require a concave dado in New England. He contlaued as | as, aias! 13 clowied by the contiauencs, in a laud Shurtiew, Mayor of Boston, which at th: ened to render Seennpbons and drecalioss ae ex: lo’ f . bonhd to us by the Memories not yet obitterated, of Religious toleration fret esate liffed in the treat. be ties 4 th ie hi iF ising hye cosumonreations odious. mVooutiong cone | aes A PROTESTANT OONFEDZRATION, a condict which must lil every Onristan heart with | ment or Roger Willams by Piyrcath Roce? | oes Who wore. within the bulding. Hi ) ‘ apt INTER Ventons, aud even 6)u0ds aod ou 1s and confer. |. Bat with the excaptiou of thess Rhode Istand | horror. We need not, { say, look beyond tho events peer by Chiet Justice Bradley, of Rhode | Of those, on the other hand, who were inside werd 1ON BY ROBERT 6, WINTHROP, | ences, wit answer just aa well, When so men of | Plantations, which wero sill very #mail and seaj- | of tila single !nJee year of the laading to duu evi- | Island, . rushing to yet into the street, and as they were on | the Giscipii f the Bugiish Vharch was devoted to | tered, New iand was then 029; one, nov dence of the vanity of all human ambition end the’) “phe o ef Cr ly Ss mactars bf 1osm aad ceremonv;. when spliituauiem | the multiplied states of our Amerivan Union are-oue | itasotenco.f ai human power, aud to see renewed | colony oF PpnOMA’ Dee ieee Lae eerie | gushing through ihe doorways orles of “On, dearit? sap a aan, 0/2 Was in aangvr of forgetung its frst syllable, aud of | ab this day, for civil, political and military pure | aud starcling proof that wile Was iusiened to anaiver, sent u iether regretuag ins | qlOW'e rush sol” “theto, my dress is Corn gh mpl’ . s 4 dee: erating foto an crapty ritualism, separation— | poses, but one, algo, bia unity to which our federal A thousand years.searce servo to form a State, Jaalbily to be present. eh eer Tanah. permerous | SHee nee with the Letters from John G, Whiter, General | calli schist, u you willi—was tie true resort and | constitution presoats uo counterpart—ono for the a uous may lay iin the dust. “Siyinouth Kock, te fonndation stone of Western | War igedyaythout and iho crowding from withias 1& . Dh . tho only remedy, preservation and propagation of religion: a uaton panceaon olviiiva fon.” Responded to by Mr. G. Partriage, |"Was-Qhg7me Wibuter tinpossinie to move elther Sherman and Others. ‘A CUARITADLE DIGREBAION, lor the defence and diguston of Dur brotosiant | te us mot be deat to the waraings of the Fathers, | President of the New &oglana Soolewv of St. Louis. | Que luge lam cae eae ae ee tee os Brent a8 I wonld not seem, too harsh towards those old pre- Chea | ich a8 the world iad hardly ever | 1»: us reaoive tliat no national growth or grundour, “Our sister historical aid antiquarian societies. | mast fore been tanporilied. ‘But ts 'was waite s a Church by whom Plgriins or fore and may hardy ever wi lates of the Ei ll bu vivid freedom or social prosperity or individual | The revered faithful chrouiciers of our | drama as regarded PLYMoUTH, Mess. Dec. 21, 1870. Puritans were perseculed, Bir Jaines stueklatosn, | again, It was @ grand experiment, oo success, shall ever ronder us unmindful of those | fathers.” THE ELDERS 0: 4 , has somowhere sald that if tue Unticd | and iretiiuted for the giory of God and “ z these sentiments were agrecal ersed WON. SEE FLATBORM, inee the two bundrodth anniversary of the | NetuerJands had exeoted wstatue to the real autuor | the wellare of man’s estate, y Bab o higher than batt cities geri apr cre ey HS an win eliguulun 1 atc, and rer : pened oft miltgottve foe an Paaae peiceee paniee landing of the Piigrims there has been a frequent | Of all their Liberties, ik Would have been to the Duke human power had long ago empliatioally declared, ve tlat whatever eise this nation. shall | agreeably to ull, everal Antere:ting at reviul | their hats as thougi: they Were susdeniy threatoned though anguat recogntion of te event aught wih | SL AWS, Qenane, avenge Tres, eoaded tho | Cay im fe nol of Au word aad if | bo, or, aad ail’ obey Ye ahal ual aud atways | Replies leis fivititan ware read from Drom: | with derirgcunn Oy’ ple sew us ey t er y “ J on — wine! CI uittou, hens c en im official a v such wondvous revults under advereo circum | hon, 1 um not guve that on tig principle New | atleast, tho lomporsl aad spiritual power were not | jesg ond tate slgaderuos Of that Motete tees, | {ue Wat of tne peovented tbe clan map fromread: | Sometimes represented scorcaed wp ihe enemies of Btauces, but never stace tho occasion when Daniel rye A yy Bina a ag 8 rend hearer Cy ee Lapeer are base Aud then, as sear aiter year stall roll over our lad, | ing. I select the foliowlng for puvlication:— souse of the word, and it scarcely seems consistent! ‘spoke sv happily has the Fiymouth Soclety | nover forget, however, tat aituost ull great move- | thrive together on Aimertoan fol. It remaias to | {wiles shall succeed jubilee, and our children byes ttle fa rr OO Withgood disclpling to desert tho stip in the first sits ¢ ation on so extended a geale tien 2r3, but ia renmtiat ‘of opposins forces; bo seen how loug they are to thrive togecher any- on eae ee to. caneraea tae Loin thick “ahs Box. We DAs ANh 0 cr Gomattes _ oe ‘ pose pratt Te iad sie cfinian of fear, oe , the two hundred aud Qfeth anniversary, d impre: Uy) jom tholr tual shape | waere, ght LAY, LRMER—I re iat At ix Impossible tor me to accept 4s - “* aha tale The" atteees “ye And divection, those who resist aro hardig less ef. PROGRES? OF PILGRIM PROSPERITY. or webster Ay Yoav: kao thor only Words vortuy | ZOU. leuatton co atkand the ceiabration of the south ana | they Seated invene open getting aut Of te Atter The day dawned br of tending Pilgrims at Pymonth, No one can ap. | SMe ten mtnutes had elapsed and the great por- the storm of Monday 2 ly than mysefthe noble qualities of | ton of tho audience lad succeeded in making tier | fective thau thosa who support and urge. But let T may not atisinpt to pursue tue tured of Pilgtin | to sia up the elotions of an hour like this, ax if Women of the tiayfower, It is not of escape into the etreot, contidence began to be re- night, which treated to | me not lonyer delay to acknewledze, ou this ocea- | htstory further on tims occasion, We ail know wat | geua them down uli Spa ‘Klug and biazing to the Te t tart id blight hopes 0; expectants, happily passed {| 8102, the coep debt which New England avd our | New England has been doing since the days of that | taciest pos.erity—shall bd repeate that 1, a descendant of the sect called 1 aI . eC of wah Eig hh ano gey 9 the Pilgruna ostablished on oursou. My whsleheart | her daughters, besides foundiug asd building | gioud, and wicre Island now, aot with any Jeepio | Persecution. A yenoration which caro afvor them, with ler TERROR AND AMAZEMENT, Golrag: ‘rom the enjoyment of the gocasion, | js ln sympatly Will tie Colebeation of tnia fublies to | UD noble insiitutions within her owa duis, | oxpedration or fuit’ring hope only, bub ain that Li icecninesett ets s cevactely Feepunarbietor the “HHS | comers it ip aga,” ssid one goeddoogiog olf Tho iste trains of yoslorday and early | bo held th nif native cty this ovenin the Con- | Lave sought homes in other parts of the country, | jym persunsion, that assured vrust'and faiih, with tree y rice any present chor tonshs) es aly ald emvieman, polluting’ toward tne Spot. where tue diols ¢eariicee: tea tied : sofparue | #tezatlonalisis of our laud, ‘wnoy " lave o | Rear and remote, aud how poweriuily their wiu- | \iich { adopt hud repeat icin ag the closing words illet for the reveucon of poster ty. Tf tuuy lost | Hannes were playing thon tas roof, aad Ne bey Dorping tela to-Gay broug.t thousands of parlcl | piggy 1a coiebrate It, and they” will cote- | guce aud enierprive have everywhere been fit. dt | Oi another fuuilee discut.se oii i aatlafaclory to remainper thot thoy sano | eters ny Tee ag cn tie Toor, and he began to pants irom a neluding many distin- | brate It as a day whose associativas aud indu- | muy sately be batd that there 1s hardly a stare ur | A’ iea,\heu, yo tueere Wo woud atora tinge with a rhetorle mors, sn SEE ee eS bie Uleme eattan eae bee natiy s ‘ ve ences have far olreacned everytit : couaty or town-or village on ibe Continoat in which | pas y, M4 ‘9 eo iitha | tan polite, A worthy New ingland deacon once deserted pict ie ete hing’ being guished ds of descendants 6: the | Cvervtitug seotlgnal, and Witich are as cowpreien- | New Bngiand mop and women are not carniug tiar | Dall You, a8 you riso in your iong sion ro CL th@ | @ broiner in the Qhureh a8 a yery good man Godard, | 89 Ainusingly chacted a most hughable incident oo- Piigrias va have become pilgrims to the | sive-as ine land they live tn, asd as ailcimbracing | faces towards Plymouth Rock to-day wit sone | Bice WwICI wo DoW Lil ani to q'eo0n Sol cteaity FipaLote tee MEL io ican toatioe ee | DeLee Ggnintuin wee alae toate se enat ards a ere ne ephor ; pede ; , on ssistence where we are atisluciorg stops been taken ia the latter dire: ene & wan shrine or Unat of thelr rovered an- j as (he Onristianity they proiess caerish, Vew | thing of the me onulo yearning of chil a human aa ebid y (oaat cineet thet I with @ ladder, a ors ‘. sh persons, If aay, Can hestate to a even & parental hou: ears.® galp look, though Mo / that no ‘ther sysiom of eli ugregationalism could lay wid at thay day. ue 8O miuch I towards an ancesi - greet and dogs broader | welcome to the ide: seusitive to temporal need, an How Buuglands We gros i gs oo ye Me | finhertanes wales we in eno, Ii has aboliellod slavery, BAVING PAL BEAUTIFUL HALL viCOaLe YoU to the biessings of good goverument | world old dogracation to eqhality with man before the law, | from estraction, shouted to the man with the Iad- V0 Wel Our erisatua! coves no loncer embody the maxima of barbar- | der, “Hi, hand tiai machine over gentlemen, quick, | Su oasis Hd Sie Ob AAT AG | Gur noi Hare caf aP te tate bul 8 Te | HONH.” 18 a amalane ine inades Was need ores me You ‘anscgndant sweeiy of domestic | FAS NOt oN Ag rm . ne ro” | toe 3 of the ped aad ihe ggatieman in gues. 4 a, 2 yiness ndre ‘orm and well being of thecrimanal, All the more, how- | 4; % he trial, We donot ial io | inte, the happliess of Kindred and par tion ran up to the spot wita all tie agility of s ever, for this armlable tendernces do we necd tho shed, wo | Temeimbder thas New Hapland [ed the mareh to mde and of tis Lathe: figo, whose hair was as ‘driven snow,” probably jeeling that the tue had come when he saowd gain some laurels vy fi all Know whgt coammbutions they haye ma besh successful in | Cause of education, of iearmng, of lier: her system could | scienc) and of art, Wo 4} Kagy What they nave no other sysiom | done Tor comiuerce on the occa and for ly, religious or | dusiry om tho land, vexing every sea with th civ red the way for | keels and startling every waterfall with ta wrated, and to | dudependent : sdent nacion. i Wo all kgiow what examples of patri } A ViSLiLE CHURCH LivOSssisLE. aad statesm ‘That work fully and Gpaliy accomplished, and | hour of co‘oaial or nations civitand rejig'ous freedom securely estab! orauve display are made, , tail, the streets ofthe good 3 ond pedestrians, and greetings of old | in; eb YOU Ages: We. we u meas 2 | coudterpome of ‘a. strong. ease” of justicn. With | Scioolboy, and faxing out bis pocket handkerebiet ; the limits of ovr countr waivers church on earta, recognt taed, Whose auch 5 art- | solence and Geeisive of every potat of faith or form, | in Lio great str ‘aad accepiad | bravest und best rushed forth—so many ef tte alaa! never to Biilars, Hon. ho buro, Von, Marsha itussell, How. gory Wash- ag yah gaat fs. “ ag “aris pee ae 7 s ®, the iiamortal Gope of | cur — rympath; for tho wrongdoer” we need | commeancd “dabbing” it Into te dames. ‘Thie NoTAst RoR he Inay ai bo wore than, conteni—we fll ought tO re- | poudends at Lexington nd, Consord ena Bunker ‘nity and the Light of oyerlasting trata the Oo furan | nd Guster niisce Pepa tions | lasted for avout vo miutes, when, finding thas n0ng the unmeror esta present were G es ant Of Jk wha a P cage cei Seah the bee ts Jon a puiclas ote loing. With our just tolerance of men and opini r re 083! hy orang 5 Araong the smuicy tests pre General | us advancement of “all who proicas and call thom- | With alnios: every soli on Wateh the batties of tie conclusion of the oration, when occupied | Feiious abhorrence of alae “Ail t9s iaore for tie awdet | Hsetiorts Were succeestal Onty In De Ne ee td o. oward, Hen. n H. Oliderd, Non, Ch ries | geives Curistiane.”” Let*those who will faduige in Revolution were Io 4 Sti leas gan wo iorget | an hour and three-quarters in its delivery, prayer | himantites end arlstiaa ecralisim which, In drawing en De he lowly d eided from bis lofty height Armiue dams. Hon. Henry Waison, Hon, George S, | the dseam or che: the waking on of asiagie | With what slacrit; heroie self-sacrilico Ler sibs vai ‘ihecsis y : nearcrtoeuch other, are increasing the ‘sum of social in- AOKS, Ke slowiy 4 . e Frauels Adans. Hon. Meny Waison, Hon, George S, a che h Of a single y Rorit Was offered by Joseph P, Thompson, D. D., of New | fhucnces for good or evil. We neo! tao bracing. almioapher With @ look of horror and dismay. 2 and the beantifal hyn, by William ¢ healthful If” austere, of the old moralities. - fadividaal WATER, WATER,” ; fal yd, Uy Wilata 'Obtlen |) se spocinl <dutien’ caro’ Qals cae e Seperanaa howe lores itis next cry. At this time 'a great number of | to te eye Of God, Indeed: sachs church 1m aniad syant, begioning id wes the Day, tho Wintry a Re oi ” they 4 vee, minut ay, ‘épe i i io | jadies and genilenion lini again collected veneatl ns, | . - 2 ripe “a Sea,” was res d a ate ooks ant enforces yennlttes no . c! Tpit 21 Visible, even now, in “the ‘biess2d company of ail OUTEREAK OF NEW RNGLAND 3ODES¢Y. Sea,” was read by Rov. TE. St.John and sung by | fonser admissible, It well tha. stocks, whipning posteand | We gallery over which tho dre had emanated, ang } faitaiul poopie,’ Ww: jou they may But we are nog here to-day to boast of our gia ox- | tho choir ahd audience to the tune of “Uld Hun- | ducking stools ars now only matters o} Traditiow aut the | WexO ti ently a 1 ae eee ee oe a | dwell, with Whatever o uon they” MI pioits, or to deal with tue eveuts of our own day. Jt n.” The benediction, by Rev. Froderte N, | 522s! Feprobation of vico and crite which they symbolized | Movable panorama Ties el eats Gane ted, with Dua as tue head, of erto remember our orn shertcorn- e 4 asics is NN. | shonid by no means perish with them. Tae true life of a | the ladics comumicnced shouting, “Ol, dear, dear, )¥ the ‘who family in earth” aud | Ings and our own unwori ous from “Il Trovatore,” by Gil- | pation is in tts personal morality, and uo excell fcon- | the water will be worse tian the fire.” The * a { ngs v : 5 . wy. | stitution end laws can avail auch If tho people lack purit} und ate sit And ‘ay in some grand | lune examples of pisty, end Dand, concluded the services at the church, | ani integrity, oul ure and refinement. Care for our oma cont | GHuS® Oh Wis, Was ab cthedtacaneis ot turo—for Lae deieace of tho U iggie which has so receutly terus a ev, Hon. N, B. hen Salisbury, Hon, Onslow St atice Liadley, of Rhode ah Quiney. ARATIUNS POR THB RY i tie Dustis of preparation left, 1 Hon, ? ‘2 | Which were exaioited by those “holy and numbic : nM end the various plices of | orchesira, hundreds of periormes, each 4 Were listened to with great interest, fort and ‘that of others are all well; but traty, 7 a] ou dine his owaostvament and nis own esperate score, | med of heart” by whom our colonies were pla z THN PILGRIMS" D " honor, ererence and fidelity to duly ate fadepen- | ENO supposed destructive | conflagration, | and 2 strike Widely variant notes, and produce sounds, | We sometimes assume to sis in judg.nent upoa Next caine the Pilgrims’ dinuer, witch took place | stele. The Fucrims were” right in atirming tho } 80e tons ae hers feo iv rm bd invited gu i 8 sion aud Somettnes at | thelr doings. We oiten eritictso then fauits 1 | Inthe now Dassenger, depot of te Oid Colony Rarl- paramount force of the law of God. If they errodin seeking | Upon the purning embers rom the outside, while 3, hoard alone, would scom | failings. There is @ special prongnyss of a, which was closed fn, floored over and warmed | (ot aushoritative law, and parsed over the Sermon on the | two fivemea were piaylug opon the roof from the hike method or me oay, | ty deride thei superstiiions and denounce terr straints 6 ie cp Ramer Mae Br od garde tom Bice Pie Tee, Of fot dack. eee. Be ‘are iownd deilghting (is | tolcrance, And certainly we may weil rojo.ce that v ef thio | willing to acrépt tie wetness and ght of the good Wdings-— j had tho Drenien worked inal ta soul with @ dood of magati- | ths days of religions bigotry and proscripuon | Botier country, and wreaths of native green hung _| Jet us hot forget that it was the mistake of men who feared | ladies a pe Te: ere pre tie tia were evon so, ib may be, Unt from the aif | ave over in our land, But 13 {% not even more | at iztervais aroand th8 spacious hail. A model of more, than they dared to ‘hope; whose | estimate began first to trickio and then rough tha r for the purpose, ‘thy decorations coasisted matt, of the American colors, bleaded wiih tho: Mo | sling to PROCESS o'clock @ pro tL At about cley headed by ! t eg descendants of t fien socutingly discordant at this hour than when no lesa bora the Pilgrims? mouumest adorned the platforin near | fy ee eg eee oe ee ate ey Gy AND OCPIOUS SHOWER. meh papain me Be he pivine Pars en Arent ooo ira Be ap Re cee ee nowt aud all the arraugelents were compassion. and whose dzend 08 avd wae 60 Brent that It was reaily ‘a strange sight to witness ‘the ladies a r ich i iv vi ), thal ANPCH ast in @ jngaheir hearts against {t they sometimes shut out | qgugi “¢: SOU) thing: th be x 0 x an eh oa e ry % 9 d miaacy hav ft 1s i a > jodging and stooping: some putling up thetr hoods Btreets to the Vaitarinn et sslby Uno ig ever lo uyblned and gio- tous teclings and prejudices of our iuiaucy have Whon ine exercises m the chy Was over tho | the good. “itis well for us, if we have learned to listen to | Oy Tockoed rikerciiets to keep Gif ihe water. mot prayer and Bat to hwnan | wleration, 1 a refurmed od to the dining | thesweet persuasion of the'beatiindos. Bat (here are crises re—ladies 0 the emphatic “Thon shait “On, this splendid edifice wiil be ruined,” sald Dy of nore a y of doctrine bordering upon tie «. tiinber of over tarco | 1 ail Hyes which require als a notte tak A harmonies ave Not youchsafod, Absolute a * ” ane or 4 ri * ” ¢ “Weil, now, docan't It r ormity, @3 poor indus ba (aye 2? hundred having pre ‘and ti eats assigaed | Bot," OF the decalogue w ie founders wrote onthe | one; another ejaculated, cll, "7 cuaitn ean hato oh d Dut to ay 6 the caus f Se a a 73 them-—plates were Laid tor 7 rn . | Rate, posts of their Commonwealth, Let us be | secin as though it wes tobe sot’ while a third, o browd to get into t d but too certaiuly be the cause, if WHAT WOULD THE PILGRIMS THINK oF Us? pla! € iy pe antennae Wei ‘ed per: hankfal for the assurances which the Yast few | grumbilng, disazreesdie old buy, evidently a poll ence, of absolute rell- May it aot be wise aud well for us all scmetinies | Sen: aud all, wi wi th i a i nam ¢ se hee ond slagnation. ZING AT x 3 it x years have edorded us that the pilgrim spirit | Bi red fi ' g 4 NGA ct what judgment Would be prononneed upon | Up. | Mr. W Davis, Vice Presi #e not dead) but walks ia noon's broad light, We have seen Hern Sara. iat bert 4 chose tovteanteal ae vionsty | t ed to the voyage of the Pil- | us by our Pilgtim and obr Purkiaa Fataers could hls eye gis uf the ieact, ocenpy [rh Stl petrol jg gt ell oernerprerenber rysteed epinean a A : ady ticket uitie and 1 pera and priva- | they be periaitied to behoid tne grand expansion } lolty-backed chair, the property of the frst Governor | ty herole seli-sacrtice, in entire consesration to dut ¥ ‘ ‘i i cider bt . d davelo > At nd 7 aly) ’. 36 Of the relic: @ lived iu thefreons, Mave we not all known the As soon as order could be sudiciently restored te proce ith the incidents of the dirst jand- | and development which we now W!tadss of tue in- | Of the ily olouy, And one Of the relics Of the ad Brewaiora, tho Ssitonstalia and Sewalis of | permit of aby & Cuarles eame forward sued s— stitutlons which they pianted? Could they descend | Mayioy c cided ab last, at sixty-six days of | among us at this moment, in bodily pre- Kev, Henry M. Dexter asked tho Div! re) Hryaraines si ra bidding 4 inal | sence, ad swith «organs — enpab ol Gin ano the si ap ee provided, eae ih 7 it receding shores 0! ety dc. aokns et u fu ere tho 4 jurther cerenony the lars party pr assed has taaght ua how much we orve to the aca and wor 1 om ti 2 : eee ere DHGR. <-Amnt | Tha good Hines. nek’ DEORE: eaten Bien of the Plymouth Getoay, feat anestty thay ever | W9 shail not now ino tue pleasure of hearin the ee: wines oes erg ae understating, 6 everything : a people looked back to. with love lecture to Which we Pave wil looked forward with so Mt ¥ THE PAND, ay Weut down, uiter the briciest cir- | complisied on tnis wide-spread Continent, since | the tirsc course, enceseded wy the botled and roasted then, to the Pilcrima, Let much pleasure; consequentiy that pleasure mast bé , Peosident of the Pilgrim Society, | Cuibor the year, New Lagland liad a place and a | they wore witudrawa irom those earthly acenes and | Series, Wilch ieluded Most and fowl of all kinds, ‘Truly, your friend, a deferred.” nalue—a permanent place, a never-to-ve-obiitorated | eatered into sale, Pyne would thoy tainky | With vegetables 1a thelr ore Peres creas LETTER FROM GENERAL SHBRIAN. “No, 20,” Shonted two or three dozen voices, “to nie i fa Grbervatortsl chard, Ja logistetive halls, { On ihe pluttorm aud suid:—“Ladies and gentiemen, er camp lures, 1 U9 el migma of priso8 | in consequence of The graat sir. through which we have THIS UNFORESEEN DISASTER ‘The revenue ¢ ning lay ia the | ofing, g: decked with buating, and eaiuied tbe | @ ble’sing 1 without id to cal Mr. B.S. Tobey pated with the orator and oMemting cie was sJ- | Hamé—ia the history, as Well as in Lao geography, of | what would tney si tis not dificult toimaging { and the modern dinner settler “ ” 7 men, The exerst-es wore preceded with the ‘Prayer | clvilized Chrisilan ynan, eS - fhe surprise with which they would contempiata f Fepast in tho most approved gastronomical manner, HRADGUABEERG: 4 BHy EarOe Dee eet RESHMA ete a soypt.” by "3 hands PLYMOUTIL ROOK, he existing condition of New: England, aa Wirerav T. Davrs, Beq.i— ~ ; + troup Moses m Bayys” by Giraveey éndyy Then I ywill not say that the corner stone of New Eng- | of tho nughty nation of which it ‘forms e ancient colleagues, the same geatieman announced oy t of reuson. It was opens t. ; Was opened | Duan sre—t carta rete Tete erence, and only | that after ail they Would not be disappointed, as Mr, followed the r: bares and otier devotional exercises, afier whick dial of an ue, rerdlig of the Scrip. for the d: Vico President prestdicg tm the followlag | regret u Jnnd had quite yet been lad. But its syisbol and | @ part. It ts not difficuls to imagine tho er adbsone: Soares Emerson had consented to deliver his oration on at Kind, and i tual syponyme had certainty been found. | astumishmeat With which they would regard the | remazks: iy have been mo! oning nex Mr. Rovert C. Wiathrop deitvered the followin; what one grand rock—even ten Without lis fellow | great inventions and improvements of einodern Soxe axp Davarrens ov run Prucniss—Why | Suiicd decay wiuid boimprepes tor ms te komt oe Leip ee 1 dial i igs ' (ayaa ps shia floug te shore, and destined to be without its | times. Itis not difilcult to imagine the cager and | are you gathered here to~ AL hag brought | goons ket cae. teneeis i maurt, sia: hive Abe | qr tee ee Ute ee OnATTO There can bo no true New ve throughout che world—Nature | Iucredulous amazement with witch Mules Standish, | you from your homes under a whaler sky to thus | Stator Monday, the 1th, & ball aiven'for the benedt of bh ple he Beas ech LIMON Tear Eace x f New England coast’ No summer landscapo | the poor, of which Mra, Sherman {sa patroness, and I am at 5 ze BO | nowbeot aaaimanagee. Lmustleareeay next Morning for | SOR Deon iD tlaiaes, and the most disastrous con. ‘ato attend the openmg that evening of Ri sequences might have folowed. The ire was origl ret laid It—tne architect of tue untverse iiad laid | for instance, would listen to the click of # little t oe when ae ities hag pene pogetion: aid ali | chit a als nS his Onn oid coey, Vase sonia aye ara laat fa ee ane oi ae rie pe nie America seus of God shouted for joy.” There jad | supply him daily and hourly with the latest phases At an ikow ft he shore. No " ts eu of rt on 1 itself swebliag | reposed, unseen of human cye, the storms | of tue big wars in Europe. It is not dificult tocon- | gentle breezes from tie verdant hills ten macit polure of Gettystery in bt psc ey al flere gantrgnr aenpaeag gl BRL lf more fervent grativate to Cod, aad a@ more pro- | And Moots of centuries beating aud breaking | ceive the wonder of Sdward Winslow, as be | heated brows. Tae chill northern blast sweeps | yitation f would have to hurry away in order to reach Piyat- ‘Phe oration oil badeliverel oan eine: evening at found veveratioa ior the Pligrim kat | uponit, ‘There it had reposed, awaiting the slow- | should see some novie ship traversing the wide diy through the branche: of our leaftess woods. | outh by noon of the Ylst, then at five P.M. hurry away Steinway Hall, when no tickeis of Tammie wate morning’s sun has risen Above tue b coming tect, which, guided and guarded by no mere | Atlanite, from Land's Bad to Cape Cod, with unde- |, What charmed word has gone, like Scouand’s flery | to ¢o ton in time for the train for New York, where, | 160 nirg, Z ers? our consecrated jubiice. | human power, Ww how to mako it famous for | Viating regularity, without salis und against the | Cross, ever hills ald plains to summon you to this | on the ae I would bare to dino out and go straight to the rt le ¢ reflect ou the induches Which nas ‘owed, | ever. ‘The pligrimsyrod tt, as it Wonld seem, uncon- | wud, in jar izes time tuan he could nave relied on | Spot? No batiletled Mot the war, with its stlont | Now Hneland dinver et Deimonico’s, at niue &. Ml. Now. 7 and ts still flowing, in eve h aud ceaseless iy, and left noting but authentic tradition to | crossing from one livtie island to another of the Ga- | graves gud sacred memories, stretches out before | lax 5 pa ipod. weakened by aby. year YACHTING. | i | Iollow on any ah | | work, ought to axe at {and Bireaws, from youd r | Identuy it. “Their rock Was not as our rook.” Their | rivbean sea before he sunk so sadly beneath its | your fect, caliing you toa new consecration to your | would 1 not be likely to reach the feast of the wits of ons age | thovgits at Laat hour were upon no stone of earthly | waters, itis not didicult to picture the bewiluer- | Country and your flag. No monument to} New York a dill gucst? I must again ask 5 hey of at all What was beneath | ment of Brewster and bradford as they should listen | the immortal “dead years its shaft aloft } your kind tadulgence to spare me such arace after pleasure; | Mtnuch of the New Yacht Exchantress=Do- it may Indeed have helped them stil | to tie raitlag and whistling and thundering, by day | awalting ita dedication. No battledeld did 1 | for! kuow vou respect me too highly to wish mo to attempt | scripti¢n of the Crait. 4 nic or hat would he hart work Instead of n pergoual gratifheation 4 than ete Wet dae fo mpaelt or to my nents, Thope Tihay iva for avother | Ata{X minutes before nine o’clock yesterday morte ;? and may hive more frelgat haa Would have easiaied that whole | Which yeit love this day trod, Agincourt, Auster. | Goze went Wonis beh rea et OO Sth voy fepot | Wg Mr. George Loriutard’s new yacht, Enchantress, : ome oss salma walch ve q population for a winter, not merely from Boston in od Soe ont ieee Fan go pote miei’ witeu they eps. ; received her briny bapusmal from the yard of Mr. hey may nave ry icd-—"Frow the 6nd or tite e re than an Nour, bat from the shores of uy ar ty’s pages, as winons sive ith gre: L Samu >) q 1} vi '. iL ery onto t muy heart is overwitel min not much more. thin week! | batiles of (he world, sink into insigntiieance by the ~'t, SHERMAN, General, } Samuel H. Pine, ab the foot of Noble. girect, Green: * than 1” sy (0 Conceive the consternation of them all | élite ef the battle which our fatnors fought along the Mf CHARLES SUMNER. point. There were congregated about the ways es ones conn they see thi wri sembiy, by an almost in+ oe AOha Wr athee holo aE el ayn NO ax hed Fayners Baan several haadred persons who witnessed her grace ing Was completed, | stantaneons fash of su ape 4 med Ss with shint elniet anc ving plane f Pty thio’ wa 0: A vi time come, ana the pinca ound, | withan¢ aro Lordi coh met here 1m batiie array. No tcumpet sounded t whore Lam for n day, it te with great rovret that ful exis irom land to water, At the time the wind OF those Who were forever to | of ancient or modern art could never nave reached, | Cuts. No warriors Inuce ov, bristling sieel a cmente ce Washington make i iapossiiefor mato be | MCW stronsly trum tue northwest, and tho eran é time aud that piace were | Iv is easy to conceive their rapture should they wit- | the opposing toc. No royal hand crow? The Senate wilithen | presented & fue appearance in her dresa of Wierd We are now gathered todo | ness the iutense physical azonies of tie human | Victerious cilel. No new divis f regal power, nd I ne: Mtoleavoimyeeatun- | yarong colored buuliug as she moved “like a med to sicep by the inhalation of the | NO readjustment ofr imperial lines, uo Hat of poter jon. in this I try to tmitate the Pil- ; + ae few drops of et t is easy to under | tate or prince depended ou the iséuc, But in thas | f SS thing of Ifo” into her destined element stand how ustoun ond De, NOt Merely | EE eT ea ee ot the rintee ot MEIC Ee ad saaelsou teins RULE mt, | mld the cheers of | the apectators thas jeurmiog tat all those phenomena o/ the ce! : Bis ~ | ters wore we AUREL Ae gt ed Ler dee he pl oa ce fd SO ofled perplaced att cocatat | man stood Up Agatast the domination of kings. The | President 0: fiton Fish, Secre- | luted her deck aud the plers adjacent, On board of discovering ow familiar to every sc haman consctence fought to tree itself trom tie | Boutwell, Delang and Belkuap; Sir Edward | were a few ladies, anoug them Airs, Fish, wile of colonies, 1g ally inforiaed tha’ sliadiktes of gervirade, ‘This was the pattio whic : . Religious | should ce a great ectipse of the se f jathers fought, and nelthor hunger nor hard- —tiese, and | paris of the world though hardiy visible here; that | Sip, wor (ho tercbie uacertaintios of the facure, Dor i W auliaate and | the precise instauts of its peginning and of ity end | the aburemonis of thetr distant home, nor pestilence | Akern larance of all the toils | had ton: ago been caleulated, ané that science PUA) ject bie SUE Geaue cay oc wen Gib TOE Pig: pereede Op Ae ‘prise tavoived. Let | had organized and sent out expeditions co man; farth. | Wil bat rae = erlain, of Maine; . Morton Melitenael, Mayor |. se, Georg y & viton that if the ouraer stone of New | distant lands to observe and Tooord all its pases rent lost—with cne-balf thoi numaver sleeping in thelr | oi fuitadelphia, and othe | Steers, Mr. iH. Lawrence, George aud ‘Thowas Row: cd by the Pilgriua Fathers two | incldeuts! Wecau readiiy suppose that sueh marvels | Graves, as if to stimulate a trust which they feared V2 GRAND BALL. land, Wiliam Folks, E. F, Williams and Thomag ro to-day, it was im the cause | es these would not be taken in by then without re- | Might fade, they went their only refuge back | The grand ball this evening tsa grandafiair, The | gtack. As ihe trim iitle craft doated out from shore ; and W. er others may | awakening comething of their old superstitivas fear | across the seas and sought with a serener confidence | decorailons are elavorate and exceedingly appro- | Onptain Fish broke @ bottle of wine over her vow may bulld Upow it bere- | and awe, aud we fight expect to ticar trom their | the gutdauce and protection of their God. Historl- | priate, Portraits of the prominent pioneers of the ap tal ited i “4 Z, hui on Uvs waniversery tie foun- | lps some exclamafions about “wonders and more | alls Fecord aud Poets siug thatthe Saracens of old | colony, taken from Pilgrim Hall, adora the walls, ; Md valled der | a, Wonders of the invisible world.” But we need not | Gostroyed their ships when they janded for conquest | and ‘the names of Carver, Bradiord, Wins: A moment later aud the tug Cleary ran alongside RE URS. resort to these mirac fscionce and ert inorder | On tho coast of Spain. Lue those Moslem hosis had | jow and Standish, the governors “of R Bedurad ins Sailless barks taking ber into doc! ck ever go cursory on the great pro- | to tilustrate the suri With which ourfathers | #90d on the shores of Africa ‘hisiied with victory, | tho | colony, axe ‘enclesed in evergreen | and secured tite saliless bark, fasiind DOr tite dhl Cail Ditory, us IU starts trom youder | would contemplate the condition of thetr posterity, | Sigitag for new lands to conquer, and they knew | over the orchestra On the opposite balcony are | rae se how oes Hie tie water line, Hor id Oi and on to the present @ mere extent, population and power of our conn: | their arms were invincible. A brighter prgo wid & | the names of Aiden, Brewster, Chilion, White, and | feet on deck, over ail, Ane ioe fs bite WATE ne Ae way niany other scenes, many | try, ics great States, a magnificen: cities, ita vast | BWeeter Song will proclaim to nations yet wabora | facing each other are the dates 1626 and 1870, A | ery inches, giving hor @ measurement of about 2 ors, Fomote aad recent, In other parts of | Wealth, its commerce, Its crops, Its Industry, 13 | 83 the nubiesi typiileation of faith in God | Jange and brilliaat company 13 present aud all are | fool 4 Moho BCI evo rle Yaclit Club. the Union a4 Well 44 In our OW, Of the highest | education, its freedom—no longer a slave upon’ tig | thateublimer incident in Christian Nistory—the re- | indulging in the igazy dance with a vin worth of | tous by the rules of tite Sow A puffercd, and stil: more of the ajas wud ends of | interest and {mortance, There are Conant and | goil—all, all of all races, equal before the law, what | turn of the Mayfower to England. | Welcome, son@ } the sires of the Pilgrim Fathers, She is forg and alt schooner rigged. Hor foremast il tbett doinge and aus Te 1s an ond Blory, cott, with thelr litle Fudhwental plantst.oug ut | else could they deeiro to compleve aud crown the | aid daughters of the Pilgrims, to this hallowed fleld. fo #4 feet the peck, malnmudss 87 ieets fore i ts trae; nerd are some old | Cape Awn and at Salem. There is the elder Win- | vision of glory voucnsafed to them? Fe Tey arate ycuiellccinnen ae Wale Gat oY f PRP ATION TD “api | mast, 42 leet; muihtopiaast, 40 160%; ‘main boon, 744 Blories which ar: forgotten into newness. | Uuvop, Wih tie Massachusetts charter, at Boston, WHAT THE YILGRIMS WoULD Say TO UB. Fp geet tit Ao tl geri cause, ine | POE CELESRATION IN NEW YORE. main gad, 33 feet, and fore gatt, 80 feet, The bows enuly to life thelr eyes to Him who had | and by night, of cars briging more passengers than | Say? Ah, more sa 3 the shadow or a | the whole vepulation of Plymouth ia their day, and | OF Modern histo; ’ owed by their respect, your fri gt Li Jom to the remot Hd be & t every emotion oF ¢ not to hail ti b anentsettlement Yes had iatied. 2. Adonts EVot, ol Harvard, and Wools | tno coustructor of the yeszel, aud the wife of Bir. ere Hy wie Fagnaes eee Mat | Pine, Autong the gentlemen were Vaptain Hish, Mx. Bs irae George W. | S. A. Pine, Pierre Lorillard, Mr, Douglass, owner ol vernor Olam | ine sappho; Mr, Babcock, Mr. Livingston, Mr. Henry principies, Jand inven’ remote or reves 4 32, as Progress’ —aa the grand aad glorious | a In wich they were he p. rs of this aay are | due, Once int we imay well refresh our ren i nd in it 10 advance apon a ‘here is no longer an excused for doubt or unc bere is the youngpr Winthrop, nov tar behind, Oh, my friends, have you forgotten, or can you | hae with fullest breath the atmosphere of this inty as to aby Substantial rtatement Telating to ie | with the carter oo (Connecticut, ao whose innagine shat toy woul forget for ait Tostant, “he ae eaehatiosteera jong tae Pacer ee 2 Ghee dp Cae i Serta aa a toot Pilgrim Faihers, 81 abilee of ihe Wil. | separate colonies ooker wai BNL ase iu Which they came here iD you believe y' a t “4 N 2 is fou 5 : grins was celebraic diy years, ago, pious aud fs ud Hston aud Daveaport aud Lud. | that they would be so dazzled and bitided by the | with no hoast of re lineage om a with Ralph Waldo Emerson Does Not) ee pe heated Uli ge stele, rae yon palusiaxing students have A‘ infaned witha | low had lad the foundations. There is Roger | giare of mere temporal success, or by the grandeur | the vow recorded in your hearts. your- or baa elk ET a FoR I rbd nt cl v : p ue determine whether they top, wherey @ found, In tie Gd | beea eniled, witd the charter of Rhode Island. | and philosophical achievements, as to lose sight and ; Monumental xcts as well as monumental j actual sailing can alone f Wortd aa tell ay in tho New. iu the Ud | Prerois the brave @ud-generous Beuyvesant, of tue | thought of shac which auimated their wholemortel | eaitces, and even when the eee ae arene Re ruta SMR Re eRe ‘ihe speaker then traced forward the histor Kew Netherlands. There are the Cathoite Calverta | existence’ Can we not hoar them inquiring eagerly, ; Will Shail in the fulness Ge) bof) lel Ha A OT RA Rg ant very pcs yen tahoe Terk wae a ‘at Hh of at is | oud Youngy iv Sis. ath - pee pelaies a rcdiaree Welles RC aa Conary ResplOE pass with ‘ts mate. 1 ainen tet ant mmelnber hat fidelity to. duuy—duty to Axociation Hall Filled with Ladies, Gentlemen, | onio winie ouk; tie frame is oak and heckmateck; ve aneasane | feu and petiaa 4 solont & | Ourselven, ntry : God—will be’ th i the celling and deck Same 14 of white pine, with an e te | trou and phiitntiropy. ‘There 1s the benevolent aud | rial progress? Tas religion matntained the pl ourselves, our country and our Wil he Fire, Smoke and Water—An Unoxpested Flow Le Celling ai i pine, Benga, Been ey ae \ ee Ogelth ip assisted by Whitelleid and | we asnghed it as the corner lone of all yearn } noblest monument which the children can rear in ts P outside pianking of witlie oak. The bottom keel ta ew veal to investigate U rim tack, footsion | Willams, “ine apostle of soul freedom,” as he has | of intellectual triumphs and seiontilic discoveries | 8e!ves worthier soos of noble sites. Thero aro Deliver an Qration. bane ed \ rifles of the Pligr of Common Gaa Puts an Extoppol on an Ex- tho water line is copper fastened; above the water non nok NO note of theirde- | the sainted Wesieys, planting his Moravian colony | stituiions? Ye the Bible, the open Bible, which | mcrory of tie virtues und sierities grin 2 Pe! a y i‘ 5 ‘ England at eae ee sand. seacesiven and { nee ‘There is rank, it ns first pro: | we brougne over | in oe Sins stl reves | Fathers ol New England. pected Flow of Uicommon Gas-"The | line geivanized ou. eens treonaliod taro n a tw appresiaie the | posal a Coatluen ial on, at count rence 0 ou ss AM yon ol 1 / . Sathese 3 cane ownion 30 pemapoution ee entartuie | snvertiens in polities! a8 well 8 physical | Ja the Lord's Day silt respected aud od- THE TOASTS AND BESPONES. | Ate Latter to Flow on Fridey. hatches are of cheiry, and all her arrangements are b= q ised, , to be of the finest Kind. The tints of the cabins | and saloons 13 to be plain and substantial, and a ‘tke cost of ‘here is James Otis, with iis great argu. | served as _@ day of religions rest, as we observed “The Pilgrims of 162 is e " pie | MeRL fguinst Wrlis of assistance, snd Sawuel | it on that desolate island before our feet had stepped | they conquered a Continent; they are revolution- Esa ae, coe | \ . r " Maa ae ea ee demmine those plows, bume | Adams, With his inexorable domand for the romoval | upon yonder consecrated rock? Are sour houses of | WZiug the world." Itesponded to by E. 8. Toby, | Raiph W. Huuerson ald not deliver hts oration last | FABIY OF the most approved puticru. bie, simple-learted men aud wonich, as taey stood on | of the pee regiments from Boston. caners worship propertionate to Your popniation ? Are bap oti the eee nage AM ram, from Prest- | ight. her constractioa mee 3 #5 she deos ot OT a tT or | senikee ie’ Fort bit, and Warren, notes: | AN tho houses which, Nyow Kove! gy A i dent Grant, conlainmy tne following toast:—“Our | Instead of oratory his andicnce recelved five and | ave arranged on a pian furuished by ar. Stueler, cugnty cnores receding from thelr motstened eyes— | ing himself as the Proto-nartye on ’ Banker ples of false prophets, no organized communities of | Pligris eaters sy Tae Sie Wire aj pure | water, aud Association Hail not only narrowly ¢s- | Sue Eitcpain canel Work Lee oe ne aootog Ustle did they tmagine Wat the scene of that embarka- Mul, There is jefferson, with the Declarauen of In- | jtcentlousness, under the color of religion, in your | in motive, ag patient caped being burned fo the ground, but threatened to | ROB Te et by DARE ways ud Boor o a dependence tree from hia own pen, with John nay Are there nove amoug yon who ‘seu to | } i Som bemee Chetan in rte ice intl yea 3 close at bis side, a8 its “Colossus on the nk that have familiar spirits and moto Wicaras: i bar e following were then given:—'-The "ie burn some human beings also, In the place of order | pieces of tessciated Lgit and dark woods, phoul Udhe Rotundo of aie American Capkol, but | foor of Congress.”” ‘there are Hamilton and Madi- | that peep and that mutter—for the living to the | of the United Siates—the represeniative of forly | ang quiet an exciting drama was enncted, which at | He maluinast, an tho starvoard side, Is tho come ents of the Rot yf a g the | sou aud Jay bringing forward the constitution in | dead? Are you doing your full part in onrrylng | mlilions of freemen, sheltered by the branches of mandet’s room and staterooms; on the port side en j a ity, Among the | tei united arms; and there, leaning on wielr | the Gospel to tue Heathen; or are you Waiting unt | the tree Which our fathers planted.” Responded | One time bid falr to end in an unpleasant | two stutcrooms, btlicoum, &c Aft of | these 1ame' sf { i 5 shoulders, and on that constitution, but towering | the heath n shail have come ‘over into your | toby Mfr. Thomas Russel, Oolleccor of the Port of | tragedy. For upwards of a fortnight the members | is the Jatics’ caoim, about thirteen feet a! ky UaODAESeL Senne uicceapreie Se whe abeve them all, ts Washington, the consummate | inheritance bringing, their idols with them) to | Bosion. of the New Fngland Society have been busily on- | lengti, elegantty upholstered = and fitted. ree 5 bes amd! a «6 connive and wink | Cemunander, the incomparable President, the world | cheapen labor, aud to dilute your own elvilization “fhe nuptials of 1692, the union of Maseacnnectts to dtacibeicding tenet mm av direc for | Forward of tie mamas is the io oer gepareates” USYS, ‘ar ed that such @ pic. | honored patriot. There are Marshall and Btory as | and Otristiauity? Are your schools andj collo and the Old Colony—their children inhabit eve: waged g tte ery rion | cabin, nineteen feet long, ana forward of this th at thelr departure,” have dream at ») the : spounsers ‘of the eonstiiution, and Webster as | still dedicatea, as we dedlented at least one of them, | zone; no quarrels have ever alienated them, no di- | adminsion to a decture which was to be de- | capiaiu’s room, On Me siarboard side, and the ier augcesuors, Bs OLE eae ppropeiaie, aoenek, its aeiender. ‘There 1s John ie Adams, with | %o Christ and the Church? Ig thore no tear that | vorce can separate tem.” In the absence of GOV: | uvered before them on the 2Ist of December (iast ; #@ward’s room, om the port side, with the mies nt apon ler, But tho fie Was to cone when England | scienc Jourt in Petersyurg, V9. On Saturday ordei the whippiue-post Lo cs P bhshment ot} Cars of petit lares Ye understans at convert iting our jail vin this class of criminal Ets avo the lash adininisiel 1K Convicted OF these DEty reriul and for the sacred | o sentimental, senaational, licenttons literature ia | ernor Claflin this toast was answered by General " a | reoin between, Still Lurtler forward gro the mate trem along Sircagtne grand, gitleries 6 sede Tene oF. petition, ‘There is Jackuon, witM his pro- | sapping the ihorale of your ohildrent Are your | Underwood. bas Raw Chak night), by Mr. Ralph Waldo Emerson. ‘The lecture \ rooms, adjoining tue captain's, and the panty, ad- * y the throne or the Episcopal beach, | clamation against nullification, There is Linoela, | charitics, public and | tend numerous and noble In announcing the toast to the orater the chair- | was to be entitled the ‘Pilgrim Fathers,” and a3 the | Jotning tue steward's room, with storeroom a ite their places on the ee tne ralne ‘oral and | with nla ever memorable preciamation of emanci- | as py are, aitogether commensurate with your | man happl alluded o 8 tong journey made by Gov- | present is the two hundred and fifueth anntyersory | els, and the culiuary departiaent, Forward 0 in that by henng ‘tata, Ps pation. And there, closing for ihe moment that | wealthy Or is the larger half of your surpitis in- | ernor Winthrop, through o wild country, to visit the a deeds i ee aie | foreiast is the forecustic, nineteen feet jn feagtu. Peet eee Ot a a ION HAS ropession of the dead fori presume not to mar- | comes absorbed in @ cankering end devasiag | Plymouth colony. ‘ihe following Was the wenti- | of the establishment of the patriarchs on American | ““Ahout uirse months aud @ half Have been occa. , Ww (rat cr bred a had the H the vig i cieotae Peabody, with his world- | iuxury, destructi aike to the physical, | ment:—‘The Orator of tue Day his Puritan an- | soll, together with the fact of the attendance of so | picdim butiding thts yacht, and tt 1s beleved sie F aren of a between {bos ana oso been what. | wide munificence and bis counties Densisedons: sae ere aun Beka CP RC gee Ree hg ch Andiang to AveMK | able w lecturer as Mr, Kmereon, at least a thon. | Will bo rigged ready for sea by tue doth 0: February. resent themselves to other eyes | who wi re vn an virtue | words of a } —— Ris tonday and its nopa pag orcblahape auch in Other Agured 19) Peres unroled, Otuer igares | enthroned in your hearte aud hotest ‘Have | lowod today tho tral of is ancestor and speken | sind persons presented themselves toy admission | ice taas ih eiinisron.— Tre five ilie and tn spirit 85 $hosy We rowater aud Apatford ae iat ee inte’ view aa that great procession ad- | they Tecoguided, und unoisputed “eoveretsuty | words of wisdom and eloquence w, Wel descend | eyoud the accommodating capacity “of the builds | 4, Srmv Bac ave leit lace and on the exchan; auis.”” Respouded to by Robert ©, Winthrop, 4 A son fee ee VANCO im PILGRIMS IN THE FRONT RANK. rare Vice ant crime | mnking wot @ Few | > suc interests of learning always recognized by our | Tie | ally). Stabrcasen” Shi corrsies then were lob oe ng But pee proieny a8 we prey God it may be, | days dark, and not @ fow nighis hideons, in your | fathers as a prime necessity of tho State.” Responded | were crowéed by about a ‘qnarter past ak 2 srere fount equcanon, pid wariuly | even “to the crock ot doom,’ avet and foremost, | ervirded ities? Js there panty and principle and | to by J. Ht, lidora, nese OF ino Bosrd of | even o'ciock, and all were evidently looking for- | Sead o the foisn in which I wae | 8 a Of preeion Ayrante, but rejoie, | and intrigua end fradd threatening a ako Davo +A distin, on of tho orntor of 1624, moro } ‘Ward 10 w wroat a: the expenso of the aforesald lovers - <= b intrigue make bavoo eat ibe cause oS Se tarts of treedom ‘droughout ot your ie iustitutigns, rendering eilngs vanal, forwungte than, fa(ner Ju Wacing Lia dgacenk | patriarchs, Mats Uhoinmne probose et Dicu gispese | tacts,

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