The New York Herald Newspaper, June 11, 1871, Page 5

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NEW YORK HERALD. SUNDAY. JUNE Ii, /1871.—QUADRUPLE SHEET. 5 S Sa ee ee rankliin mod. | the markets throughout the werld js known honrly his seeptre was broken—nis power had @ and afapted the train of wheels to the rate of move- | shoia ne onr leader on tms occaston in paving a | loves to rorgginn ar how ner eitzen b 4§ | ment required for tie ribbon of paper.” | just tribnte to one who Is bis friend, and who, like | estly passed the portais of the temple of electrical | ab the great centres of trade, and the lest dectara noleon wanted alone the electnic telegraph to BY THESE MEANS, \ ‘If, has, from the pursuits of private life, cast | science; a Soatuern city how her citizen Widpey | ton of the statesman and ihe newest thought of make himaneme ant fame whieh would ha 1 ‘ and by a multitade of other rude contrivances, he | real anc eudaring lustre upon the American name! developed a cotton empire; a Western city { the sehoiar are borne to the ends of the earih si Jone in the annals of war, fe said Dimself erfected his tustrument, and, as is now well | (Applause.) how her citizen McCormack presented to | almost a$ soon as uttered, 1t must be the industry he 1 have chonged the face of the world but nown, after great tronvle, trinl and vexation of | UNVEILING THE STATUE. | spirit, he succeeded in laducing Congress to vote an | s the Govervor resumed his seat the band played agriculture its greatest ~—_ boon, aoa ad: and thought of the worid which rec 0 he was in egypt. ‘ jucent Eastern cities gracefully recall how thetr | largest stare of our atiention. Under cult Nothing in history better iliusirates the almost ms appropriation Of $30,000 for au experimental ine | the “ster Spangled-Banner” as Governor Clafiu and | citizens Morton and Jackson biessed humanity; Tribute to the Ge- | trom ba how Ellas Howe lighteved the toil of the poor, and , vation like this the popular deinand is that | suj t aperiance tel ph as aa tnstru- i of these Americans changed the atmos- | cisive, and that peace shati ve long and honorad! ives the — for tue capture of his feet wal ort and « Deut of war than the The Children imore to Washington, Duriug his years , Hon. Willan Crtoa mounted on either side of we wa, if tt comes at all, shall be jol@om | Nothing 4 oceasioned by lack of means himself and sratne, and, finging off the flag, displayed the sta- | the geniu shows better than (how almost ater helplessne-# nius and Moral Greatness of oi inielligence and interest im Congress, he tue to the admration of ali present. A tuyultnous © phere of social luc, which now 18 notin any aspect | And then, sir, What a worud-wile (raterulty this con — of the great commander wathous the ald of the tele . was very sorely trted. That he” dnaliv aud prolonged cheer burst lorth as the veuerable the same as tt was ro-ghe order generation of this | stant communication natarall, aves! ‘The chit. a | ages have endeavored ta Thei . Ad t 1 BE: thi 5 succeeded, however, Is well known, avd the result atures met th gaze, ‘The statue has already been , Union, | ‘their. 67.48 vlessed food, raiment and | ling miluences of time and distance are ail pone. roviem of eleyraphy. Tae Roman nein ACdOpLed aiuer. of his success 1s every day shown to the civilized bed in these columns, Tae cloak whteh hangs on | locomotion. UP Sew York cherishes more proudly | Yesterday's disasters, wherever they may have ¢ com ated by “means ef diferent rid, ‘Thus suecessial, after untiring efor, right ara 18 somewhat cumbroas-looking in its | aud gratefully? thought that the genius of her curred, thyt!! and pati us to-cay, as a message of pred fires, ‘The tadians on their war pal) eom- as genius giways Is, le yesterday sund tue position of the right leg is not very | citizen Morse put all those inventions into woril- | sorrow Irom our nearest neigh) Al mystery and = manicated by beacon Ughts from monntam top to he honored among the howoved, and was easy, but taken a'together it is a credit to the young — Wide Service, and ts fas) bringing together all the — doubt with regard to passing cvenis and Weir mide meuutala top. the luv n of the occur, are received, electric teiegraph : val corps of our jinainomentwe own army employed Sars by day and torched Hou from Gow and people with ano- — artist, M eit, When the applause had sub- eoples Who Were dispersed at the ‘Tower of Kael. | enc s are eaced; the events Ne In its portent that it canuet , sided G * iloffman introduced the orator of | The city of New York pledges hersel! to the donors, , weighed, set down ina mowent, A Testimonial of the Tele- | rnket ny the voice aa fude and can Bever be taken away. the day, Mr. William Cullen Bryant, | who make her their trustee, to guard with pride (is pass on to Lue Next, Nations sre pight toeach by night to conyey inior pst to post. graphers of the World. H MR. BRYANT'S wa statue of her honorea ‘eliizen—ol hiut who other's ihvesiolds—and Ambass dors ean uttereach Ail now koow that th ric Words “ALL ts qu are two lines in the poom of Dr. Jobnson on — achieved indeed eminence among her arusis, and day the voice of the government to widen they le. slong tie Potomac,” si transinitted oy m TH SIGN 2 RV, 3s dur g the day and by lorches ai uient— lite before t the Vuuily of Human Wishes which have passed Won respect aad love in her sot yay long, and communteate the repiy fom that to whieh Oo: 0 { Mountain, in) vee ‘ ce He into a proverb:— awarded thos U honors Which the civilized | they’ are sent. The bounda ad fron Sugar Leat Mor 1 F " fF £ Something like five " ee : ‘oun, slowly. wi nt} ly just, ; World now im, aut wheh this day's cere. empires may remai the sau esmiay to ile seapita’ we Words canie lo be ued in HONOR UNTO WHIM HONOR 1S DYE, | somemnine uke ave nuntren teicgrapn ope To buried merit rola the tardy vuse, | montes 89 ap, euphasize. (Applause.) afer, their soctal and civil conditions vary; bub levisy, but the simple taformation was awat!ed with 2 Claas sae Oe | and about a dozen ladies responded to the invitation } APHIC LERT unived as they are ninternatioual community, ausious hearts ab the capil. The first practieal Tt is our good fortune to escape the censure im- | of the Messrs. Tfilotson to enjoy a trip on the river pled in ti x i v The Unveiling of the Statue of, honor of wa @uy. At one o'clock one of me free ee yras W. | intimate wita Wis und Hecessities and Mss of Le telegraph La war during the O-jial- how can they long remain aulagouisiey tin war, In whieh Cre Frenen were the alltes of the juarrels between nations are fast becoming — ialiaas, and it Would not be too much bo say th the udvantages waned by the aliies were thro wh tne . CuarvaN amnounce? tha lines, We cowe together on the oe: | pte announc Palsiug @ State Hot to buried but to Fle would read @ nuuber of despaicne t—tua great discoverer who yet sits Yeeelved. he had | Javonta terryboats, which had been engaged for gyy¥: ituess ors tel 2 but ti Mr. FIELD on rising was received with three | family quarrels, attended by ali the rukvaud mistor Professor Morse. | che cecasion, came to the toot of chambers street est frul's ot that ample harvest Myiieh tis memory | Cheers. aud satd:—Pronsor Morse lesiied at Mor — tune which Mouully follow such mhappy dissensions. of the telegraph and ratiways, iy the hana gue NGRLaT the candctendoamaraibant will gacher in the ous yet to come, Tstown, N. J., and from theuce a despatch comes to | And these ielations are fast bec so intima’ jevinan War every Important event from and took on board the cargo of excursiomists (hh ites ieee eunnot congratulaie ourselves. nanis— that the doct dl Instiiations of the wisest ion of warto the declaration of peace ~~ ~ | and started up the North river some distance, thea on having » aiple of alaerity in this maui- | Witson G. Hust: \ best and ‘oas Must inthe end preva. L 43 diiouncer by the telegraph, and all the com. | turned and went round Governor's Island, taking !estition Of the public gratitude, [four illustrious |, Please preseut Ineore regrois to Professor Moray and | Deveve, as L know you ail do, that the suecessful bivitiows of Uie viesorious Germans were dyrected tie telegraph. But It was the gents of ow commryman here—(applause)—that enabled tors to accomplish those great resuits. yots wud breech-!oaders bus the deaditest In our own memo- Ji.eud, to whom we now gladly pay these houors, eam cor mitt luad not lived beyond the common age of man we the bay a short way. A fine brass band enlivened id Daye sorrowfuly laid Teindon te hey A Ce the spirits of those on board, and in the intervals & li what Lam about to say I snall not GLOKGE P.RANDOLPH, Governor of New Jerzey. 4 brothven in tie family of nations. But also b beteesn Aueupt to reate the history of tue electric | yhave another despatch from a neighuoring vie | WeVe,that We owe Much To Hie con slant MMterehan toe raph, or uiseuss the claias of our {rend to 2 | yage, London, dated Joti 19, tyvo minutes Of thought and interese to the daily intercourse Immense Gathering of the Peo Central Park. {vs Ham wsavlo to be present wwatny, | Valor of our sons om ‘the attic Beids of tue 1 home from the South. I should be de- | not only gi us a country, bub also wave Uh iu any Way to the honor 0. x9 greatand — eount:y power todemand right and jnstice from ' JA the gast river, coming back again and going down iiiguses and Claes ‘angerous in trun on of ail ts the telegra Bg = THE DIFFERENT EFFORTS ' . teizht . petween the leading mia ben Necetruamie, ENA LE layed & most jeknowled ced as its Mventor. I took up the otier M, (Lauchier,) it Dsoivad’ Het res tween the leading mia ls of Rnglosd and Amertea, © struggie the playe Mi r of the misiviaias ef pre ent gentiomen, * i M, (laughter) it was reserved ber IVE jor that condiion of mutual respect and regard otanb and patriot mitt The telegraph Address : TOME aE Ay nites to iv f 1 Nogetter "tug loyal. ‘states, uroused. the | Which has led her on to jus’ and us on to peaceable and lh nosabie avbitration, » Aud now, » President, i desive to express my thanks to 3 e Lor the opport have given ine to participate m these pro inspired thom wit with all their ussoctations, In the shot Them at last to vi 8 of Time atiotied to each one oF ns Lcould only | the stoanisilp we there for the first tine, but ter Upon Lae tureshold of ihe great thoi wove in the mogt pe manner tested as agents j signed me, I © be espl of warducng the rebelion, 1 mtgat venture to iv deserves by wa in ly, Peongrat say in the name of cer, im the army and late you upon tie great of tuts occasion; LE hav , they would > thelr protestation ate tae ety of New York thit to her tas pernal ait the government ree 1 te opportinity to 10 houor to a distine 1 from this ot from the imoment and falrucss, piled by Freuch authors, y alter the vame of Sainuel ivley ad the words, “inventor of the | 4, jot who had come there for the purpose, made orations suitabie to the occasion. Mr, Erastag #0) Humediat 00.8 reviewed the nlstory of tel dother telegrapu.’? Lam satisied with Uns de ' eosutoute | | phrely Americana imveations, He showed the effect | Seripuon. (apyituse.) It is made by & natton | instentan Oi the productions of the Yankee mind on the toreiga | Walt, Having no claims of iis, ova to the inv the world. Inthusiastic Demonstrati ; tion, ‘ts uatirally impartial. ‘Che words 1 nave | es a letter Enthusiastic Demonstration 2¢ pauons oi tue earth. Me eulogized highly the pro: yaven may be laken“as an expression of tne de | gpete Hi letts the Academy of Musi Jecsion of esol The people aniexeited in the hearts of sand soldiers the spirit of great achieve- an electric nerve which and courage and led ph, ratiroad and Presta village, Louy Branch, June pnic operator, aad recommended Nvetace Judgmeat of the world, A f shouid |g, (Cheers aud 3 isle t r ea | the members of that calling to pursue ther line with {S8"l ohay ane owe aninties ‘Mitcttat toeae, | JawES D. Ret, & A DEEP AND THOROUGH LN ST, MM demonstrating its wutn, As to the nistory of st in re! i thet been giv ‘The most Important event of the century found a as there oly another profession on the Coa. Wiis AnVeNOn IU is Ulat O. most great aiscoveries. hie lanorers to ba pre Satur ley Aiting voice yesterday im the Central Park. ‘Th tinent that could | t : Cotuly aud doubtingly Yr yed Qt first, Mts author | wext ab the finn aof the statue in honor of Professor | Hlulshed son of Massachusetts, bora beneath the fing Wi ‘ad upon at Fort | Sumter a entre . inent Liat could lead to the same goal. compebed to stcuguie With didicuities, to encounter | Morse. Vians uv lous ta tie recut of your inviae | Shadow of Lat shat which records the early valor Moment of tte survenderot the Southe Wis no booming of cannon, Ho torehlight demon- some vocal and imstrumental musie followel, negiect, to conicud wit rivals, 1 has gradually | Hon will prevea: m yiayes baedo not preveat my @ aid patriotisin of that anct-nt ¢ Ay and Ibis the work of the telegraph to abolise stration, no gathering of the criminal class for de gnd Aor, Charl 5 broucht forward balled "av pavle favor ull at feat its adopted | Predation of the serv 2g etioe Sud te Topneras Leer papas A he has mace to a Cie Woold, In worldly nastier 5 ere iy smo. non ; Uisougiout the civilized world, It now ta! Menace ron mens Ri garvaie o clievel 1 uy week on ceptive show; but there was the wndemonstvalive — to addxess tne assemble He said he had been @ | few yeuts of hail a century since [became acquainted | 2 Vas boner you mest, wait Upon bin, as mpon wi Ui condition of erie, rebound of victim will Simke from his erime, and ties crime, bis first gr . ‘he crimimal may boldly amidst the shadows which ful upow tue eventig of outpou Of those cltizens who are always, mall telegraph operasor himael’, and he felt a fraternal | Wiili (ie aan Whom this inventton has made $0 fa- | 4 tong prayer was lands, their country’s pride —aame! Ustelligent | interest im the craft. many years he hat , “0us I counties, He was then an artist, de alter whi » mu G re 1 A ev . vot to & proesston in whileh he vO tate and the moral section of tie population. ii every | worked the matrument i ho had now | Yaapuine tigi rane had he coarse A now recit WV. Sampson ade je he andience on egraph, Liverature Important particular the unveillag Of the given up the active pursuis sslun ho county and the worid, leit Lt for a pursuit in TRH DESVATCL FROM THH bY Ay 5 statue of the living Professor Mors9 yester | aiways kept ers By iad en wy ware cna oe me bs BO otal chad Mit i may corrupt the public. aa oF aeny the ne tages eas uae coumiiteny- Wins ther well-eaunten pies Noa aerate ty ard ca bacere irene tredgmer emer AY THE ACADEMY OF MUsi¢. rolls Sadto F. Cornwell sone the following deap-telt tha yole,raph is Is mortal enemy. Which No o proprictics of tne event have been any for old meaiories, ‘here were more mea in the | couspiewto Mls mind, as I vememper, was | Bain an instrument used on the Baltimore and Washing- | C2stfo. Ht ds ancortupis cs Of the demonstrations within tie recorded past. I | United states holding huh positions today who had SWB LAD ted to wualyze the, processes'of his aphits! Daspain! Kesponses— | ton ine many yeo re Caen ie eoae wheyee the very nature of the occasion there was nothing risen from the grade of te operator than’ jeduce them tos yong eres ane era Loreionene ! specehes by Gx. Lorin Brulee i ae ereeaon Morsn senus ate of the telegraphic | pact of the globe he tes it ounces to exelte the unlnteliectually vu gar. ‘The celebra- tere were trom any othe: ion in the coun- —delined causes, sous to put tt in the power of the | gad Oihers=?ro!essur Harowell | est peacd on eas and ee Son tate BE BBE Dapernes tlle certain pune tion of the discovery and perfection of telegraphy | uy. ‘The work reqnires a mau of tutelitgence, clear | HUStto produce thea at pleasure and With ver | Agarose, Professor Morse took the instrument and attached | a Soran i a nt vor Liberty, and Was not an occasion on which tue mass Of those neadedness and coustant watehfniness, well edu- | {je-eild, Oving. Lien toosoIuo uappy uecident or | ‘The graad demonstration which attended tho | MS signature to Lh) deroareh, as siven below. A ho hoped Tue tie will eo ae Yuen It will Hot be Who have become accustomed to derive theit ex+ Caled and ober, and IL was MOL astodisinng That some iasbnclye euorL oc which Ne could give NO | unveiling aut dedication of the Morse statue inthe | CeIvedIe eee OS WEEE S| ys an tho uteri’ at ptwvato: 34) Bate ot men fvequenuy soared above tbe commen gzgcount Tae mind of Morse was an organizing OM MILA AUK ts from the records, panishineat or gloritt- 1 niot Central Park in the afteraoon hada most fitting te peop 'e. . wr ae: : . i Mu aoWel Us ina remarsavie manner i ha feavane facinve the glory cation of erie were inclined to devote a day to Its | 4he following resolutions were offered b og ya. logether the artisis of New. York, | ACcompaniuient and glorious consummation at the | of dot t bciee Me nanatte Pacers. \"tors une atta tee ok lone wae »recozuition, More £0 yesterday than, Siover on the sieamer, und were alopte vi Ad oF musty young ose pro: | Acadet als cniigy) he pre pat lay ntteroih. the a heunwonihe soweln ene , deluling eVeuls merely, Wot long messages. Aphic excarsionists by acclamation:— ok Was lay iron being ROL Sate pow | Acateuy of susie in tue evening, The preparations | Yiiwiede; your inst have gone ont throughout all the | OWE cad D ree Without some ent in the on any previous day for many | ws menial New York, whether for the closing seaie which, ceremoules of the day were ona j carth and your words to the en loi the world, eluotton of fear or jo! annouacel, must bave Kept the ONBONY) FLA, wid ry of Gow, furnishes the Seu. reconciled he disagrecments wilen he lound exs Mong Uicm, ahd founded an association, to | solved, That onr fornd in | pilotson ¢'Co, for the eo: ttoM ary exci'si hieh this iaagic mos- empires, under howe the chamber of in enlist or on the bench 100 Ay Sion of tins faites be qauaged solely by themselves— ie Aesdemy of | s vho assembled last eventing 1 x OL the Gonel ihwenvoute ceiy fs of Profesaor 8. F. B, Morse, in the Teo enanwa unos ‘grown tosacn | “2oUsauds who assembled lust evening at the | v oniy greater than the glory of him wao has nade — the ocey egraph eivilizes, 1 the cobbler’s stall, weut out to a duty tt owed to and iiberai manger. 4 ’ | Academy in reserve jor the occasion, withholding Lining the servant of man, and thus we come to-ulgbt to do honor to the man of _ 1 x 1 That we recognize ia thig the evidence of Mr dimensions, and which has given to ti eae re : shen sap sanh oe W. 1, 1E1SS, General Superintendent I, 0. Cable Co. | AEN ENS ae as tO utivell the: gtatne of Morse. Without foyatty to the prof. ‘ot w Was for so | WCOASMeTALlOu 1a the COMMMUNULY Ler Aigner tian was | them froin aitendins ve statue ceremonies proper. be icripan eee TS a ahr eae cee eS aga te eae now! tins ey ‘ hove the sNee- d hours ” oueratie , belore COuceded iO them. ‘Lis inge: - | lew A tan ; yee! y , 1 4 ol We sage ‘y ‘si W Ol nker | $8 ingly gettins even asnude above the intelle pa eae eae bea. HONS | pera eee pete Ais ingenuity In organi: | Jn view of the inci, Known @ Week azo, hit | | The Montreal Telegraph Company rejolees that Pro with) which he. hag been charged, and ¢ of compini 2 HIVE eueCLs Mito as) 8 Teun acc togetier to a common e1 | he causes which ' corre H c 8 6 ack. I making | ticketa for every scat in tho spacious building | Morse ls securing in ils Michie, the acknow i had been disposed of itis neediess to say that the | May be long enjoy them. HUGH AL nents and tual atmosphere of Une mass of New York, we mean to declare that there has never been an occasion glory with which Morse has fulfilled 1, ' calls ior our praise and homage. ust and fortu. } hare man, th actorofl bis permitted to Tillotwon an’! sue Iso 1 3 are synonymons. | prod the attac! mitting & ay » Was not long Wie}, Without catch-trade incitemcut, there has beea a witeeward to be eXempiiiied ib a very remargable ane Ww: ar 2 large: 2 TROM TORONTO. ies aia gathering of oltizens—or men; wouien and aifsie"toralll.| manner: » Yoyage made by Mr. Morse, trom {| 8¥dlence was perhaps the largest, and,.In view of the so IFALOIRITY OFC Or enjoy the fruity of his Iebor, as le ts BLEUE to close ro Jes.of these) reastations % Havre (o New Yorn, Of Yourd (ue packed slip Suily, | EDject W ght them together, might be fairly | Morac, and trast that the statue t dimay proven | His career, may he fil the iniortality he so much farulened deserve children, Whether cilizeus or not—than was gathered sy be puvilshed in the fe dim the ycar iof2, marks au Luiportaat era la Ubs= | ss teliec r | incentive to jecius for ail time to cor ye puviehe y yea ) UKs r i | classed as the most intellectual, that had ever as- | Meentive to a Fall " terday, under a noonday sun, to see tue Morse | phe j tory Gf taventions, Im a casual conversation | samptea 1 tne | H. P. DW General Superintendent. | A pocin, written by John J, Watson, was then read tue unveiled, er } wata ne of the pass rs coucerning | Sembled wi demy, ae CANADA, | by Mr. Pope. ‘Then iollowe ! am eioquent address by ire 1 TWO AY CCUTRAL PARK, | covlain experiments Wwalen "slowed | tus wea”. day's Ww aoa et eR TE raat DN eXURAORDINARY OCCASIONS ‘tity of imaguetisu aud —eleciricity, — the + proughtt ‘ “Poi aie Applauc + Gs Ky , ~ : | ~ ick ‘ aatle and’ ster PPO UB Le to any Ces FROM CHICAGO, | telegraph operators, hexi addressed the meeting, we nye had complaints, ever acd anon, uiat | Lpetoven By: Gavesdok: Métmua; WHA OuIeY AUOETIOSTAgetrie ANCLLtioee WEG arkounie ee wi partic «1 in or Witnessed these Closing pro- A thous: and Aashing wires re | aenee Rtn caece se games D, Reld, “on, behalf tere was uo hal! large enough to odate the | Teh BEVRGIO AL, Cae ye daulins Goicdan NY ' yeaular, Continued and rapid moons, whieh 1 Soedtngs must iiave retived with the coavietion that i or the oe pene sonoludas by kissing on the wiudicnce desiring to ve p Th sno com- } rey, £3 iit * | be appi to machine Tor conveying ites: ; i H her i vaisineg forehead the rab’ orse, sae : . Sei At was weil (or (nein to ve chere—in raising a monn “ syne” wa 01 plant of that kind yesterday. ‘There was room | fd and Oiuers ? | fron piace to piace, aud insenbime tagin ona tabe |e te soak. SHAK WHOSE lela ex avca | auld Tange Sy ey rae. fen: beansltlly Aulgk ‘enotigh “ated iain WoTupave, DAC TLE Sak Gag nor, ‘ie glorious weather of yesterday aft let at the place of ‘destination, We can fancy tie , Ment to the real Puck, who, ta less than ev { ee ler of the programme was an enough, and rovim io spare, but thé car was not ae cate ec Ob0l lnventor, Wl Of Cus Lagugnt, as be paccd tue deck — fabled forty minutes, has puta ‘girdle round Aftection’a battery runs the line, The next on the order of q i si 1 0 rt i with its gemal warmth and cooling the Suliv . rth evi | cup" a telographe o oddress by Governor Homan; but he was called ranied for Lue work required by those in the onter 1 Of the Saly, or ray td ks berih, revolving 1a his i,” bringing into communication with each cup” a telogr 9 heart lines ; ve y {attracted many thousands to Cental Park. | ming ype fae ‘ at The Gartt,”” binging Into commun eaiion en stations there are none, during the day from the cliy. His piace ou the ines The addresses, givea below, were listened to | Thue. Gen ede. alee rags, tndos 1 W6 be etfocted, wutil higEAG ph other in leas than Unat time the most distant peoples ken flowa the electric #' ream occasion was very acceptably filled by Judge Daly, by ail who could hear, and never was there an occa: ; sph cogs BA eee gr grass, under dodinite shape Au his Mmagination, and he saw be and nations of the giobe. ist Usara goa thie ovensinl night who made a few remarks lit telegraphic brevity. sion when the compression of the human fort the trees, ainong tho flowers, aud enon down the | hima the counties of the civilized World Liter: | po comuiiiee oF Atanqenonts managed all tae | : NCHIGAGO OFF gave a more perspiring declaration of desire to hear; and never was there an occasion when tie superiority FROM Wasmtt May the Goa of Starms ‘bless yon nnd make your path on | _ Ptofeseor MoRsE, in vice ALCer thie Barth peac Judge Daly, sard:— ON. PROFESSOR MORSE'S ADDRESS. broad gravelicd walks, wey wandered, listening to | sected with iines of his electric wire, beating mes. | t | esponse to the remarks of the music on the Mall wit Justas mach unin. | Sages wy and iro wath the speed of ight. have als | 4 eens aD Sa ae Reanccer nae Saari ae a3 Fe i A this Invention met witli a tardy wel- | manner—the Academy, tron the opening Tae 5 VF of the HERALD over any human volce was more | “eT pted pleasure as if no very significant event RUSE vy Mee oie FRIENDS AND CMILDREN OF THE TELEGRAPI Years after (s—thatis | qgo:s, filing up to repletion without the slightest ¢ Brigatier General, Chlef Signal Servioa United States Army. . el e ference were taking place in their vicinity. Noone can founda means to den t : bens s Pec as ina ‘i * | When | was solicited to be present this evening, in clearly exemplified than in the difference to-day | quarrel wiki this exereiae of the privileges of the tne. | alral perceptible noise or interruption or disapyotannent | haat nod! Nicaea compliance with the wishes of tuose who, wita such eto tie pushe its practicability by a telograp' | Him whore lightnings hove enlightened the world, whose betiveen the millions who can quietly read what ' Coustracted on aii economical scale, and set up ai the tofany. Vor this per 088 | ve oe led r rd ‘s Y K § a yi ACE RETO a a a ae waithe onthe partofany, Vor this per } ‘gare inthe seo, whose patos are innmiany waters—To {| Zeal and success, responded to the suggestion of one Was spoken aud the tens who could hear what was , UVMdual, but the ca ual remark of a stroiling youag | Ney York Umiversity, Whict Tecofded messages ment Mr. Re!d 1s deserving of prom: | rare Nise leceurapliges of New Orleane ofr their songrate: | of your nuinber that a commemorative statue should Bald, { gentiman to his iriend he had just met, “They're | their place of destination, The public, however, | at le Prantl i ; lations, For che rrateruity, DAVID FLANNERY. j ne Geer Ce) be gg ig eg end be * 0 ? it SUN med mdifierent; tere Was none of the loud bh ees TRO PORTSMOUIM. this day been placed in position and unveiled, During all the time devoted to fitting orations | Mugurating a statue to somebody on the top of that | O HE eee ENEUEMLAREDNAMUaeceD NOR a hien i THE, PLATPORM | The Old Colony wenis you joyous aad kindly creeing, | hesitated to comply—not that {did not reel a wish rel Y green ne che memory of the | au person to return to vou my heartfelt thanks for hte hill there,” reminds one of the conversations | y{ now sectns Latural should attend the birt of 80 4 our frame as enturing as Olt i'lymouith Rock. | th1$ unique proof of yuur personal regard, Det truly CC. DOLEN, Mauager. | jvgmia fear that I could use no terms which would | amoug tbe gandins ow the boulevards during the | brilliant a discovery. 1 coufess that L was Bot Wile | prominent citizens, with Worthy rep:ese: P 37, 0 "4 vo outInY share in the general misgiving, andatthongh . ! pa : oe Parisian ¢m/rte of 1832, as reported by Victor Hugo ates, Men best Known tm the walk: Kanto, iene 1 LODISVILLE., KY. acentury since | adequaiely express my apy reclation of our kind- | st fall far short of ex- i ycesses employed were excceuingly carions — from other § e in Les Miserables. ly creditabie to the inventor, I vad my fears © trate, business and commerce, Whose interests are | ys. vindicated vour legal ue ler tothe ness. Whatever I may say 1 there was nol a single occasion upon which the speaker conlt ve fittingly charged with having violated the higher atinosphere of vere a was, of cours, occupled by some of our most Nay your lw the p tho august occasion. From the noonday tribute - vasiiy a ‘ “What's the news?" + tual the new telegraph might prove Jittie more than a , ad ne 7 9 peace 5 tom the Toventor of t ¢ aph, to- | pressing the grateful feelings, or conflicting emotions, altending we unveiling of the statue in Central most ingenious sclehutle pastime, easily getting our | Atmly Huked not only with tho peace and pros day 'p ices to kee tho wide civilized wocid In | Which agitate me on Aa occasion so unexampled In gimanner a trs ally. awa mankind. nt so tuanimonsly ent enthusiastl. | the history of inventious, Gladly would 1 have ng the a MILLE. | shrunk from this public demonstration were tt not Frost waamesanog, | tite eters oe ate aurapathy whieh T do not : ROM WASTE 2 might be constra athy whue 0) The capital of tie ni car the goers Of Ris par lee ema | tealrand Wioml SORE overpowering kindness would Soe A ee ee atbe tate ’Y | justly rebuke. But where shall thanks begin, 1f, . WASHINGTON OFFICE, | looking tarongh all intervening instrumenialities, the Great Autnor of the git of the telegraph to the ant , ” hobing ‘ ei adel IN le ELD | Of order m consequence of the dehcacy of 18 con of our own land, but which hinge in a v Notwithstanding the apathy of these butterfy | struction, not capable of betng used to advantage for | upon international comity ail over the world, Bourbons at least ten thousand persons gathered | xreat distances, and fog ort ones Oaly BULLAE IO Recognizing in the mveution and applic * “i a messages in their most abbreviated form. ‘The around the stands erectea by the pedestal of the iiventor, however, saw furlier. than we all, | tion of the telegrapn the world’s great mediator statue to see the bronze presentment of the great , aud I more never lost courage, Yet i re- | and paciieator, no wonder Uiey assembled mventor unvelied. It had been brought in the mot wen that some Uiree or four years alte nor » distinguished Ameri sone: | sare aaictie Riacrtu GN RENT GaNEH'G cl this he said to me with some despondency:—"Wheat. | {0 do honor to the distinguished American Whose | Gy y ena" of this onee allow mo ty consratulate you and ing from the foundry, at bulf-past seven o'clock, And gions in Englaud and Steiner ia Bavaria, Who have | genius vas done so neh towards and bids fair to eo upon the succes of I'rotessor Morge's feat, | world be nos first of all acknowledged? “Not unto us, placed upon its pedesial. It s!ood 10 the angle ve- | their electric telegraphs, ave aiforded the’ meaus of | yeanze the Divine promise, “Peace on cartn and | It passe! South onevery wire, and I have two registerel not unto us, but unto God be all the glory.’ e 6 age : led staken In presenoe of the whole newspaper. repre- doy that He who rut ° 8 he two small stands for the invited gu ) Dringing iorward their methods, While to my miven- | - fe 1 iF : 4 When L consider thal ie who rules supreme over tween ti gues's, | Hon uf earlier date than vets, my country seems | 00d Will to man.? Une that happy sentatives gapial. CrArTINKE | he ways and destinies of man often makes use of and was wrapped m the folds of the Stars and to stow no favor.” He perseve however, aud , when the sword wil not be posticaily only, but In | T9 General a seiettbray cial icoges: | tie jeebleat Instruments to accomplish His benevo- Stripes. As before intimated, it is erected on an ine doubts of those who hesitated were finaily dis- ity, turned into the reapin it Wil ever be | . olenaer Jent purposes to man, as if by grandest contrass to Vark to the conciusion of the later evening demon- s'rations there was nothing whieh could warrant the declaration that the occasion had been used Jor ulterior effect, The addresses from Governor Hoffman, William Cullen Bryant, Mayor Hall and the others were purely pertinent to the great ocasion, | and were therefore well recelyed, At no time have the deservedly prominent men of the clty and country Jound themselves tu attendance upon a public oc- casion when they could move fittingly have said, “I > arrives, r—Provessor Morre—famous in am here as a duty; the dignity of the occasion finds aN : 4 n he world’s great ben! ageing i its assertion not in my presence, ut iu the event | eu'nence, & ttle south of the Casino and felled tn Ist hy the ousting eae pte heros com Ag hold che mon of war aiding in the eng aNd OO EAT BOCARDUS) Previagote” | Foe ee ane noatiuily take my piace O& BOTT which caused it ta be.” And all thatstill but speaks | near the Drive, Tt faces toward Fifth | France and other countries ou the Kuropean Couil — great Work which 13 lo make peace permanent and | E. L, WiLsox, Secretary. j est seat of tis Tootstooh “It. is His “pleasure, hows to work by human instrumentatity. You have Pest of | co to impersonate, in the statue this di the North, | erected, the 1veution rater than the inventor, any avenue, and stands a litle in advance of a huge | nent soon adopted lis mvention and vied wii! FROM CHARLTSTON, & ©. elm which furnishes an agreeabe background, The other m rewarding bia with honors, ih» inditier. each | Impos-tble. Among many allant generals aod ing nature, touched by art, could add to the appro- From the far Priateness of the demonstration was but the clean ence of his co which he could not b t rs who weie on the plattorm was to be seen ' oye fatier in te cut sward the rich, green spruce, the oak and ex- | ban d from Governor's Island was in attendance, acutely feel, gav ew pride m his growing ing a tront seat, as No had often been seen in {praise to | ivis of no small significance that m the attitude so and piayed a eelection of national airs, Upon the | same, and to-day we express Our adnuration for his sachuseuts. center. | ; Well chosen and so admirably execuied by the ta- | Jented young scuipior, whose work presents hima piit He Nas con. sv proniinently and so isvorably before you, he hag ng his state, Ir Near + OHN D, KAS otics pow flourishing there; aa evidence that genius and our gratitude tor ti Nature’s hand was upraised in the work, ana that | Platform to the left of the statue were about fifty | Torveg upon tie world by cre ee rao (. Davis, the wile springtime bloomed aud was glad. ‘These were the | l#dles; on the one to the right were gainered @ © may be said, 1 know, that the civilized World anc comaander of the old Fourieenta Army corps. | tors or the crpital of the Dominion congratulate #iVel permanence to that pregnaut atid just een- conditions, these the associations, these the sur- number of prominent gentlemen, among is already full of memorials whieh sp VHB RECKPTION | the Father of the Telegraph on the inanguration of hia statue, | levee Which was the first public witerance of the : | whom ma. be mentioned Governor Hoot | Me,RicHtof our iviend and the grandeur and nutty : ‘ | unit irust he may he svared wany years to look wih just | toiegraph, “What hath God wrought.’ roundings which marked the event of yesterday, y of his in Every telegraphic ctation is suen given to the vene e Man m whose honer Me | paid: an thai token of the esteem ad af ction of his nime- | Littie did that young friend, twenty-seven years Touts te raphic chitiren, THUNE, Manager. | PRO" BAN PRANUISOO. era of the Pacific const send greeting and the atulations to the Father of the Teiegraph, go (and whore presence here to-uigut 1 most cor- lly grcet), In the artiess innocence of a devout ; heart, dream of the far-reaching effect of that first | teleatam which she maited apon him who trans- se day's demonstrations were heid was as entlusiastic MOM HE | ge wweit coud be Ch in cre wind, | Waving of white nandker SAMUEL FINLEY BREESE MORSS, wan end stam, General McQuade, General | a memorial ; every mossaye sent Irom one of i 3 f Johuson and Colonel Ward, Governor Claf- | Stations to avotuer mity ve cou ‘ Whose name 1s now 80 thoroughly ile itided, asits nor Claf- | honors patd to his panie, very te inventor, with the American Electro-Magnetic Tele- | 10, of Maseachusetis; his Honor Mayor Hail, | i, as 1b hun $ from the gentiomen and iters by the ladles greeted 0 telegraph hearilest co strung trom post top graph, was born in Charlestown, Mass. on the 2vtn | William Orton, Judge Charles P. Daly, Peter Cooper, murmurs. lis Ye (Applause) every sheat jor pumas he entered, aud Unese were Kept up for& | ainonor to the inventor of the electric telegraph, He Whted it. While as if by inspiration she siruck the Of April 1791, Kora time reaching far beyond the | BH. Pickett, Marshall ©. Roberts, Commissioner; Wites | in the veep gee, CodpaUg | Walhote 6 wble Hine, In the Front of (he platforas was + meets io moram ut OF brads oF Veouze to perret Keyages Or HG. TiS Tow ante Ghie keraok eae : r W 7 % | e1 } es c i sl “ * nein: Tow. live ite the clectrie t la keeps j tpon roue, ic Be J a ck e! memory of most of onr readers he was poor and | Agnew, Wilson G, Hant, Cyrus W. Field, Gomera T. | Heyer pri unl Curving the eectrie pulse, , tie speaker's stand, on either std> of wien Was a | Witte FYLESBCRG, BAL, | pouding chord within this bosom, which sult vibrates yy proud aspiration unknown to the world at large. His father was a | T- Eckert, William Culten Bryant, C,H, McCormick, | charged iea oF huanan thougt, Itoi hicent vase of flow | SenoM meuente, {to teniper with its ringing no : i mid : J 4 G, Wilson and Kev, St 4 | | conunent atue old worl fo Uis pote ae) Ag ancient Fepyt necredi ed to nnon the fisiness tai, uucheci might be disposed m —Ohariestown, The _Rey, | General Jame: ephen H. TyDg. | How, 18 & testimonial to lis re these THe OPENING. | poetic conor of ivi alting he ty exclatm:—la Hot this great Paby.oa Which Lhave Sun in his coming with modern Me of Intellis that are to Mempliis. ation of th f swectest: melody, w shortly after four o'clock Governor Hovrman yaguig im the soutude Of Jedediah Morse, D. D., aided to his clerical cuties the prepaiation of @ geography, which is | 4708e and made the following remarks in a full, lines We breaduit of Our continent, ChmUine — the Chatrinan, Mr. Orion, opened the proceedings fdentified to-day witu nis name, The work sold | Clear voice:— puldbs quently ptociainn tie greue disoprery antl tis ling on the Rev. Howard Crosby, who ofere well, as it deserved to sell, and when we find that GOVERNOR HOFFMAN'S SPEECH, !g en How there a brief prayer. the author was enabled to send his now immortal- LADIES AND GENTLEMEN—We are met to witness ure plans for putuny a girdle of telegraphic stauions Mr. Wrrraat ORTON then came forward : s¢ - nd ite Whion th all provaotitiy wilt ever ; ized son to Yale College commencement, we are at | the completion of a statue erected in honor of an disused.and’ will conver” bee er adel Uf vis livered the introductory address. raphe Pxoctly at the hour set down ia the programme the might of ny power Yes, litte aid built b, that young friend dream that she ad thus termshed of tue Land. ‘Pele ibsianlial retreat Irom lie cunftcung ele- « Which public and private praise at home and { ihe gratuiations of foreign nations str into activity Ti the human heart unless is kept in just prominence i ile Supreme Author of tae git. Mas de ice that Professor “you nave chosen to impersonate In my humble rit the teleyr: i ¢ you, eir, on the inaugui Orla. { MS COLEMAN, Suverintendent, Kd ee hoerty to suppose that that abilty came from the | Aterican citizen who 1s Gre living. In the most clams on thegrauinde of mankind to millions win | Da. LORING'S ADDRESS, a eenieas, yarel macy seary | etigy an invention which, ¢ wudled’ Upon te ocean, p ‘ conspicuous and the most beautiful of the public | Will never see the ue erected W-day. ‘Tis ine ', LORING mn delivercd aspcech, fro! nich the future triamp!s of the “art coro: yeee’* had its birth im an Ame ship. 1t was nurses sale of the geography in other Btates, Father than | cronnds of the chiel ity of tis Western hemisphere | Latin inscription in the | Not St. Paul, WL Lebaig alec tot Bi ee Ae ene BPE ete PORN CINAAE RATOR. id cherisied not So imuch from peisoual as froin preaching the Gospel in New England. Professor | jhis statue of Samuel F. 1. Morse shall stand for don, reterriug to Sir Chirisiopher Wren, iis archi. | We make the following extracts: | ro ITAy atrlonie pride. Forevasting ity future, even at its Morse graduated at Yale Callego in the class of 1810; | ages. Theenduring material of witich tt is m ieeti—wif You would Dehowd ls monment look | | Mu. Puesivmyn DAVIES AXD GENTLRMEN—IA at | AL PRorrsson Mow TAN cab Cts nt 7 may, in the long lapse of time, crumble; yet bis | acound you,” may be applied In a tar more compre- — tempting iv disclarge tie duty whic your coinmit. | thr 1) ali the perils and triais ot ts early days - an then mineteen years of age. His first indication | Tithe win not be lost to the meinory ‘of may, heusive senve 10 our friend, sihce tue great glove | tee has assigned Me this evening 1 am oppressed a ue #e sirve deriquile | they Were neither few nor insignificant—was the of preference for employment was a love of paiut- | By his own works he hay secured for if itseil has become wits monument. (Applause) Ail and weighed down by the magnitude of the occa. | } ae ee pene Tee | thought that it mast mevitobly be world wie tn its ‘cation, and, moreover, that tt would every where be holed «8 a grateful American gift to the nat.ons. It 18 in this aspect of tne present occasion that [look | upon your proceedings as intended, not so much ag ize. | homage to wn individual as to the tuvention “whose B® ARANTANE. | j.nes’ trom America “have gone out through ail the THE TELEGRAPH AS A NATIONAL DEFENCE, { earth, aud their be gindhyarang Ba of the Ase gf In senera c | (he carrying out of ony plan of improvement, how- by ali cael being called upon, advanced to | over grand or teasible, Lo single individual could « the front of the platform and proceeded to address | posstiiy accompilsh it without the aid of others, i | the assemblage, He said:—ihe First Emperor Na- | We are, hone of us, 40 power'ul that we can dis- poleon had been Gereribed by one of his contem pense with tie assistance, In various departments ing, wntcn induced his relatives to give hima | immortality. So long as vet i lasts it; this may be said, an lait this Would ve andentably . sion and of the subject set apart for my couside season in Europe for the perfection of his studies | will be spoken and honored. ie facuity | Ute; but our natural lystinets are nol thas satisiied. | ton, This is nol an hour for disensston, but for con- in the art to which he inclined. While abroad he | of speaking 1s the gift whereby God hi Li is not the name Of A beneiactor merely, it 1s tke | gratulation rather, for joy, for gratitude to God that met with some success, mostly 1n classical subjects, | favored man above his other creatures. By it w Person that we cherish; Aud we require, Whenever | He has endowed one of his children with tacultie for one of which he secured the gold medal, with | are enabled to utter to our neighbor our wapts, our | it is possible, the visibie presentment of his face — cupable of untoiding the mysteries of His creat complimentary declarations, from the Society of | suderings, our sympathies, every idea and feeling aud form to aid us in Keeping the tea of his , and of calling upon the great hidden forces of na. Arts. Having gratified his desire for travelling he, | which arises within us. Anxious to pay to his | Worth before our miu Who would willing'y | ture to do man’s bidding, In the nigh and holy work tn returned to bis native land, lo» | memory its highest honors, tne world has sought, | dispense with tic image of Washington as we | ofadvancing that intelectnal and moral caced in Boston, where, finding apprecia- | during all history, to discover the name of the 1) have iin painting and seulpture, aad consent that | teriai condition Which. whea secured, will tion of the fine arts somewhat dull, he | veutor of the alphabet. By means of it we were em. | it should be remover! from the walls of ourdwellinzs | tue subiime design, xe! wien He created turned from the classical faces of the | powered to speak (o the eye as well as tothe ear, | aud from all pubite piaces, and that the calm coun- | blood ail men to dwell on the face of the ¢ ancients to those of the Boston men. He met wit a | and to transport to the most remote parts of the | tenance and miajestte presence with which we asso- | There is neither Wisdom nor knowledge nor elo- rand be ice equal to the simple fact be.ore us—to that | Taries as sitting under a cover during ine Operation oi the Work, Of those Whose experieace and civilzacion magores daa de inmare ktiilus de! prosresy humanidad rectbn py | clon que en uombre del cuerpo telegeayitc cheering success, There were many wealthy men | earth the utterances of mind and heart, in visibie , clate so imany virtues shi qui in Boston, and nearly all of them preferred paying | and lasting form. Hours, days, weeks, months may | utierly and forever forgotic vill deny that | achievement of our own day which sends the | Of one of his great campaigns with bis watch tn one | knowledge must sopply the needed ata of a good round sum for their own face tothe very | elapse before that which we would have , by means o! these resemblances of nis person wi thought and sentunent of this assembiy tuvobbing | hand, the other deep inthe pocket appropriated to | their expertness It is pot sufficient that a Uy reminded of the reverencs So, in the present instance, in ao instant throughout the civilized World, and) his suud, hia whole soul absorbed in re. biiiant project be proposed, that its calls avound the distingui: muitituds, of every kindred finest angel with wings that Professor Morse could | spoken to our absent friends, if at our side, | are the more lreque aint. AS @ portrait painter he was a success, but | can reach its destination; but, thanks to the alphi We owe To fi having @ taste for “high art,’ he, in 1524, dete bet, itreaches them, at last, fresh and in perfect | We are not willing it our Lea Of Morse saould be mined to locate himself in New York and pursue his | keeping. The Creator biessed man by giving him | reduced to & mere abstraction. We are so consti- | under neaven—a congvegai calling here, Soon alter his arrival lis love tor art | the power of language; and through the alphabet ) tuted (hat we insist upon sceing the form of that | nu The Moat appro } induced him to form a how greatly bas the blessing been expanded! By it | brow beneath Which an active, resiess, creative | the iivention—the invention stilt d how itcame | wortant position had been gamed, an outpost c je plan. The Chief Justice, in delivering ux DRAWING ASSOCIATION, the dead of ages past speak to us to-day,in ther | brain devised the mechaatsr that Was to subdue the | to pass; the most delightinl spectacte is the | red or a prominent height won by the corps des. | decision of the Supren e Court, says:—"lt can Lake from which grew the present National Academy of | written utterances; and by it we speak to genera- | most way Wa of the clements to these:vice of venerable form of Morse himself, calling ignated, on receiving Wiieh information his watcu ho diverence whether he” (the Inventor) “derives bis ‘a Design, a now flourishing Institution here. Por | tions yet unborn. Centuries and centuries passed oman and make it tis obedient messenger, We res | not on us mae, bot adiuiring millions about | Was returned to his pocket, he discussed lis snuff, tiformation trom books or from coaversaiion with many years he continued to be its president, and, in | away, and tits great expanston of the means o: ine — euire to see tie eye (hat gilltered with a thousand him; the most eiequent word is the cick talked pleasantly, even jocosely, with his officers | meu skilled in the seieuce;’ and “the fact thas iszi, he delivered the first course of lectures’ on | tellgent communication was all the tmprovement laity hopes, wien the great discovery was made, and t litle institiment, Whose voree goes hence to | and waited with perfect confidence the result of the | Mor oUgHt and obtaine| the necessary informa. the tne aris ever delivered here, But it was | to which human invention was equal. Inourday a Une Ii, sbcured with a smile of triumph when it yund furthest Ind, aid prociaims wall who , contest. The fortunes of the day had been thon and counsel trom the best sources and acted while a student of Yate that is mind ree} new cra has dawned, Again for the se one via that tae lightning of the clouds | he ears to hoar every new-born joy and sor- | deciied, the battle won, the enemy annib | Hpenit neither impairs his riguis as an tn*entor colved the incitement which terminated in| ond ttme im the history of the — world | would become tractable to the most delicate touch. | row, and victory and defect, aud converung acon- | lated ‘and the victory’ completed at the | nor deiracis trom bis mertis.” ‘The tuventor must the rand invention with which his name | the power of language ts Increased by | We den first styung the | tinent into a Mere pleasore und for friends very moment he Nad pliced the troops in the | seek aud employ the ski mechanic is combined, Under the lectures of Professor Ben- | human agency. Thanks to Samuel F. i. Morse, by Whose means the slender currents of the whom no distance can now divide. Siy, | wonld | position assigned to them, It was said that Napo- workshop, to put the invention into pre jamin Suliman he became familiar with ail that was | men speak to one another now, though separated | tric Mul Were taught the alphavet of every — not expect too much. bub i ask this disiinguisned , leon should be classed after the great captains— | fori, and for this purpose some pecuniary then known on the sudject of electricity and electrt- | by the width of the earth, with the lighting’s speed | living language—the hand which poited them to assembiy wie with meon us platiorin, men | Alexander and Harnibal—the tiird on the Hst of | ure required, as weil as mecl cal movements. Even then, however, but litue was | and asif standing face to face. (Applause) If tie | the spot where they were to inscribe and leave » who have given our country a higu renown in avis, great captains, Thiers, the histovian, places him , these were at han. Alfred known. The only batteries were the ‘pile of Volia, | inventor of the alphabet be deserving of the highest | their messages. All this we have in the statue » scienc and lettere—1 ask ihem to remember — second oniy of Cruikshank, and the Cowroune des Tasso, | honors, so 18 he whose great achievement marks { which has this day bee A wuveiled the eager | ti power of great attainment Learaing all that was to be learned from Sill | Unis epoch in the history of langnage—the inventor | gaze of the public. aud in which the aruist bas | atiention, aud win the atecton of mankind according fo ihe military tdeas of the age, when min he subsequently attended a course by | of the electric telegraph, We intend that, so far as | so skilfully and faithfally fulfilled his task as to sat- | How tie sciolars and philosophers of the ancien every Corps Was an Independent boay, With separate editably to agprear by the Congress of the Proiessor Dana, im which ail tbat was known | in us lies, the men who come after us shall be at no | Isfy those who are the hardest to please, the most | days dvew ai) wen about iiem, and made their age supports of ariilery and cavairy, There was | nation. Yo thes#\sew Jersey friends ig due the first by experiment, and al) that a mind talented | loss to discover his name for want of the recorded | ttimate friends ot the origtial. But long may tebe, | Immortal! iow Raplael and Michael Angelo set | but one ehief m is army, His army | important ad im the progress of the imveation, + im forecast could jndi-ate, was learned | testtmony of hs contemporaries, In dotng niin, | my triends, very long, before any such roseuibiaace | an age Oo! art! How Shakspeare wud Milton fixed an; Was In fact but one corps, with ats aruilery and Auied, aso, by the talent and selentifiy skill of Pro. by Student Morse, It was here, as is declared, that | during ~ his life, the extraordinary honor | of our illustrious iitend shail be needed by thos era of jetiere! How the Puritan planted ms great | cavalry, which, at the critical moment, he hurled , fes-or Gale, wy esteemed colleague m the Univer. he saw the first electro-magnet ever shown in this | which we are met this day to make | who have the fadyantage of hia acquaintance to re- rotest on the shores of Piymouth: and how there | as a thunderbolt awainst the iwon of the enemy, sity, the telegraph appeared in Wastington in 188s, country, and Which is now in his possession, After | complete, we contribute tittle to his well earned | fresh the Image of his iorm aud bearing as tt exisis | has sprang Up generauon alter generotion of men | ‘the improvements made by Napoleon i: the science — a supplmnt for the meaus to demonsirate its power. having had M8 mind thoronghly imbued with the | glory; nevertheless, the people of this great city, | Iu their mings. Long may we keep with us what ts | from his time to our own, W Work in estavlish- | of War as practised by Alexander and Hannit Vorne How. F.O.3, Smith, thea chairman of the subject, Ne, in 1829 visited Europe a second time, | represented by their Mayor, and the people of two | better than the siatue—tne noble original, Long | ing aiepubiic of human freedom and equality has | title him to be rauked as a discoverer i the ecieuce , House Committee of Commerce, belongs the credit yeturving in 1382, While on bis return voyage Slates—the State of his birth and the State of his | may it remain among us in a healthful and serene | warmed the hearis o: the peopie and weaked the | Of war. His genius as a genera! was almost — of a just appreciation of the new invention, and cf a THK INVENTION OF TELEGRAP adoption—uniting in this ceremontal in the persons | old age. Late, very jae, may fle wo gave the mind — grasp of ihe tyrant! Tt cannot be possivie, then, | supernal, and yet im the execution of tis + zealous advocacy of an expertneutal essay and the “1 inventor a grateful | ceiving reports and giving orders, tll the | modes Of accomplishment are foreseen and ind name and tongue | eritical ioment when ms troops moved in, properiy devis here are, m every part of te en- nN which no man cau | me direction he had ordered, and he received | tcrprive, other mmds and other agencies to b jate topic to-wight 1s | the Information his soul so coveted, that an tm- | sulied for imermation and counsel to perfect . + RS nical ¢&ii. Bota 1, of Morriscown, oO Hannibal, but certainiy the greatest N. J., With iis ialier and brother, came to the to secure the | soldier of ms age. His armies were not organized | heip of the wnclotied infint, and wit their fands and inechanical skill put it inte a condition first occurred to bim, and he deve 13 mind and | of thetr chosen chief magistrates, find great grati- | to which we owe the graud discovery to-day com | That the achievements of scicntitic iuvestigation, ap- | plans he frequently exmnbiied the capacity — inciting of an admirably written repott in its favor, time o it during the entire period of his | cation for themselves in this Opportunity to testiiy | memorated recail it to His more immeriate press | plied to man's mental and material condition, and | Of ordinary men. It was his universal Sigued by every member ef the committee. It was homeward trip, and when ne had arrived | their appreciation of the honor “and the | ence, that it may be employed in @ higher sphere | especially to haman intercourse, can fi oceupy | practice to inspect his forces on the eve of | nevertheless thrown aside among the unflnsked he continned the study with an intensity | bencits which he has conterred oa them | (1 in A KL] More Leneficii activity. (Applause) | his best thought and call for the hi endeavor. | great occasions. When able to do this, bis armies — business of the session; and now commenced days The CHAIRMAN how arose and said that the Hoa. | Winie every important pubiic event reac tly | Were invincible; but when unable to do this, then of (rial Years of delay were yet before i, It was and deeat instead of | not Lill 1842 (hat tt Was again submitted to Congress. of application. It was not then, as now, thas | and on the country, (Applause) The Gov. ihe clectromagnet could be found for sale—for in | ernor of Massachusetts, . native State of | A, Oakey Hail would now accept the statue for Wie | tie popular ear and a popuiar response ts as in- | his armies were mmperiiled 8 fact, pe saya, that “to form my electro-magnet twas | Morse, will now nnvell U and then Wiliam , city ol New York. stantly given, the general mind must be powerlutiy | Victory awaited him, His Victories were won onty | Ferris and Kenneay and Winthrop and Aycrigg, under the necessity of procuring from the black: | Cullen Bryant will speak to you as he only can speak. MAYOR HALLS SPEECH. drawn towards those things which concern most | When his armies were commanded by himself, | McClay and Wood, and many others inthe louse, sith a small rod Of tron, bent im horseshoe form, | How Utting that hé who—having before him the let- | | Although Morse lives New xork enshriues him, | Immedtaiely the weifare and prosperity of thecom- | When he entered upon the campaigns of — fur-secing statesmen, rallied to its support, and at ‘aud of purchasing & few yards of copper wire, | ters of the ancient alphaoet which Cadmus brought | She commemorates him as the scicntitic associate of | munity, For the benefit of trade, commerce, inter. | Egypt and Spain and Russia st power length, bya bare majority, the bill that was neces. » and of Winding upon it, by hand, tis cotton thread | into Greece, has, by his great transiation, enabled | her departed Fulton, whose staine must berore Jong | change of thought, all the aris’ o! peace, are tie waned and his empire was overthrown. He — sary was carried through the ordinary forms aud /nauiation, before | could construct the 1 helices | all Engilsh-speaking men to realize to-day, m their | from youder observatory hoight overlook the rivers | great inventions for transport and communication | no longer warted watch m hand counting the | -— of Wewagne!. | purebased a cheap wooden clock, { Own tongue, the power And genius of Homer— - first conquered by steam, One Middle Stace city ; eapecially designed, and so long as ihe condition of , momenis When his eagle sadvanced to victory; ; CONIIVUED ON TWELFiH PAGK

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