Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1863-10-26 page 1 |
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TO CONTRACTORS. MAtJTl.RU DKPABTMKyT, I sSUttajmmma, Tui., gleaner H, IMS. J --rmkATOB THR rOLLOWTNO RprmcA-XI (torn will xam la all contract and pmrckaaM fNulea for tba Qiurtar-Mutar'l Departawnt : MhIm for taa waavn trains to ha aot las than .bar tee ( 14 aaaaa hln; aauiaa tar Ih aadsJIa, ml awla fur ta pack traioa, to be sot 1m Uiaa farteea u aoe-bair ( IW) naaoe mgn. , AJI mala ir tha Avy ataat ka w two of im atrona-. stoat, wll-dmloped ania.al lwo(l) JTMIS .mate; In full health, free from any bJemiaa or defect which woald uS ttm M- Nin work; a act neat have saad tha fuur froatolt's teat, aad developed th oorraafKmd-loK (bar permanent teeth, two Id aca Jaw. AU male imparted 4 aacpta wMWt ba brttlta with tha I tiara U. S. on tha arsw abualdar, and ob Ik aeek with tha Initials of Ota (Mncer pur-eaaeing . All Oflcarvavd Impeetor will be held to a strict itomd lability for their purcsiasw. Tha dlacovry in atraiaof any mala aot scaring tha above tootb-Btarka will ba cans for tha Inatant diatuiaaal of tha1 iMpaetor who pa ad it, aad lit purr lit ting Uflkar rill ha oallad apun Car axplaaaitun. All oOtoer rwceiviuic mule by tranafcror iDVoios, will, apoa receiving UMtm, and before eijrnins; re-wipta, iaapect them carefully, eiemiaing tha month f every mute; aad will anlar apoa their raoaipla tha coaaittoa of I ha animal whan reoeiTad, aad UU whataar aay of them fail to falBU ta Kqairemaol m ina eoova epeeincaiion.. anu WUMi, u at all, they ara deficient. when mule voflt forth service ara received, a foil report will ba mad to tba nest Bunai-tor Guartaa-. Master, and a aupy thereof will ba aent at tha aaaa Has to lb (duarber-maatar General at vYatilugUa. .... . M. 0. MfcH-rf, ortIO Qaerier-alaeter General. HAIR RESTORATIVES. Prof. H; A. De Munn's . . osilt . - k '"' Gonulno i HAIR RESTORER! i -' .ALBANY, N. Y. Cnre ani Prevention of Baldness! ! ' Tqtal Eradication of Disease ! DANMl FF FROM THE SCALP. YpE trricACT or this wondkbfTL mie- X HHVATlThaabMiutMtilUHlbyhaudr(KlaaDd thoiuaudi, not only Id thi city, but throughout tha ciaia. i am ouiy raceiviug irtiimouy umu ihjii-nuny relative to the cure whUh it uuOKtiDglD rake of Valdneaa, Daudrnfl and diacuct of the Kcalp. ' It act like magic," Is the exclamation of all who Die it, aod tbtir nuto to lioa. It would ba au perilous for ma to apeak of tba peculiar and beneficial proiertia of this admirable pixparaliou. It haa only to bo uaed, and it atluiulatlve and luvijj-oratlve power are at once perceptible aud appreciated aeoordliiKly. Tha would-be Inrtgoraiart, Ho-atorati, Uair Wuhee, and pmcrtptloa, which havo buan a drug on tha aiarket for many- year, bav bean uaed, fairly tea ted, aud their -alter worth-leaauea at onoe detected; they are caat into the treet aod a vuw made by the purchaeir never to pend another etmt for tha worthiest atuff. do out blame them. They pay out their tuouay for the artlola, they aie aaaurod by tliu vender that It i really a splendid article and will produce tha deaiml effect, when he know In hi own mind that it will do about aa much good a ao much diab-water. The purohaaer not only lose hi money, but what I jnat aa valuable, time aud labor. 1 it to be woudered at that they becom discouraged 1 1 aniwr, emphatic-ally, Nol Aillbat I aak ia that those who havo Un hambUKKed will give my prupsratioti a fair trial, and 1 will guarantee they will unit with the masse In prononncing It tha only preparation entitled to 4baappalltku of tha "Only Genuine Hair lteator-r." The follow I is hut a sample of the uunieruu Teetlnienlals I have In nty possesAioa, cerlifyiug to the wonderful efficacy of my llsir ltestort-r: The following ortiflreta il from the Kev. H. L. Olor, Ubaplaui Of the aeantaa's Bethel, Montgomery Street ; Alu NT, March 6, 1802. Gratitude urge me to perform duty to my ftllow B)fe In testifying to the effitai y of I'rof. lie Mutin's Hair Ittstoratlva, a applied 10 huasolf. My b ld-ce was partial, of fmrt' duration, hut still increaiinK fast. Like manyothm at my advanced time of lift, (over Hfiy yn), I t)uUKht no tplira-tfon could reatore my hair; thurufore I trii-d none until I saw the don rod effi-ct of the abovo-naniMl DeMunn'sappllcatliiiiuiicinalhi're. I thruforHple'd myanlf uudur hi care and lieatmeut, aud the roault ia, 1 have now a on growlh of young hair on the bald part, aud that which was weak aud falliug out Il fully strengthened. tUguedt) 11. L. CALDB. This I to certify that we, the underiiftniHl, lutTe ta,ken the Photographs of the above named gentleman when ha was bald, and when hi Photograph was taken the second time bis lid was covered with a flue growth of good and substantial Hair. Vt have the greatest ixmiMunoe in Prof. DrMnnn's ability to restore the Heir, and to perform all he I tvpoas to do. WOOD A 11 Ku., i , Photographers, over the Post Ufflce, Toil wonderful leiuedy is sold, wlioksale and retail, by the Proprietor, and by all respectable druggist throughout the Loyal fctatesand tha Canada. , PitoF. 11. A. DKllt'NN, , Inventor and Proprietor, nov7-ly Ko. 29 Orange litreot, Aloany, N. Y. niaiaffiwriai vvaiamuaiVi ; CLEVELAND Medical College, j BB1NQ THK Medical Department of the Western Reserve College. rtlfil TWKNTIKTH ANNUAL SESSION WILL X begin on the Urt Wednesday of November next, and continue seventeen weeks. KACULTT: .Ioiin DtLAMATfR, M. D., hh. D., Kmerttui, Prof, of Obstetrics aud Pathology. J Aiu P. Rutland, $l. 0., LL. D., Prof, of the Principal and Practice of Mrdlrine. J. Lang ('awiij, U D., LL. U., Prof, of ChomUtry and Toxicology. PaocioB TuAiEk, M. D., Prof, of Surgery aud An-atomy.. B. Klafta Cualimo, M. D , Prof, of Obstetrica and Surgery. Alliynk M atn a id, M. D., Prof, of Materia Medl-ca aud Physloal Diagnosis. David H. Hiott, M. V.. Prof, of Physiology and DissasesofChlMron. Jacob Lauv, M. 1., Pemonilrator of Anamy. FKK8; The Matriculation Kee is ..... A tin The Professors' Tickets are 00 ml Tha Demonstrator's Tickvt ll r......, 6 00 The graduation fea 1 ......,.... SO 00 MlHtavry Suxrcez-y. Hnrjreon McOLUKO, If. 8. V.. In charge of th Military Hospital In Cleveland, will give, by permission of"the Burgeon -Oeneral of the United State Army, a oouree of T.ecture In connection with the College, on Military Hygien. the pt-riillarltle of Army Hurgery and Diseaaee, as illustrated hy appropriate fiasoe In (he Hospital, and on the routine of dutle of tha Army Burgeon In the Field. (Undent will not Incur additional expense for this Course. sppw-dl m Starling Medical College! ri'HE SESSION OK THIS INSTITUTION BIG X OINSon Thursday, the 22d of October, 1863, d4 cooMqum nutll th. lat of Marcb, 1864. I. M. SMITH, M. P., . . FrofeMor Theory and Practtc FBANCIS CARTER, M. D , Fror. UImc. .nd VIm. Women .nd Children. JOHN DAWSON, M. D., rrofaMor Aottonij nnd Fhjtlologj. i. W. HAMILTON, M. D., Prof. Snrgvrjr, Ky. and Kir Surgery. 8. LOVING, M. D . Prof. M.t. toti. Jhernp. Med. JnrUp. TBI0. 0. W0BMLKT, M. D., Pruf. CbuuUiry mnd Toxicology. V. HALDERMAN, U. D-, Itemunitrttor of Automy. HnanTAL PntviLruu. The Due will h... .creai to CHnlc.1 Lectura. In tlm Ohio Penit.nti.ry Ho.. it.J .nd th. two Urge aflliuu-y llgapiuit ns thi. si.i. .or laiorm.tioa .uurna avUtnotl ' 8. M. SMITH, Deu. HOOP SKIRTS. 1 H. S. HAWKS, Maoufactttrer of Steel Hoop Skirts, OF KTKBT DESCRIPTION, t DRUBS 332n..XX3S, Real Whalebone Corsets, RUSCHE TRIMMINGS, CRIMPED BRAIDS, No xa ,rls. Pino e, SUB BXOADT1T, NEW YORK. e.p4-d:ti. Choice Apples. HA VINO PURCHASED TUS ORCHARDS OP Choice Grafted Fruit of Henry 0. Noble, Kaq.. 1 am prepared to rarnlah a superior fruit for Fall an winter. tuus. aaukksuk, ieaadi m U door BOTth of Kxchar DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL 1 HIHIT, iUE at .', rnfirltMn. MONDAY AKJHNINO, OlTOBBR l!H. iJIR. BEECHER'S ADDRESS, A meet in (t was held on Friilftv, Oct 'J, in the Free Trade llall, Matte heeler, itcconliiig to announcemcDt, "to weloonie Ute Ker. Henry iteecher on hit public appear nee iu ilii oonntrT." Tl hall vu extremely errjwded, nd there were probably 0;0OU peraoni present. It was supposed, from ilio paper war or plAcanis for the last tortuighi, that the meeting micht be disturbe by partisans of the Confederate -States. Ar rangement had, therefore, been niade for the prompt suppression of disorder; and notices to that effect were posted about the room. The chair was taken at half-past sit. by Mr. Francis Taylor.. At the saiue time the entrance of Mr. Beecher. tccom- panied by Mr. Bui ley, M. P., aud some prominent members of the Union and Emancipation Society, was the signal for enihusi- astia and reneated cheeriuir. Fa-Ire Ua- tsui wn inogie 01 tiie rcser?ea cu ueiov the ulatfovtu. The first row was occupied by 40 of the students of the Lancashire lu deoendent Culleire. Mr. Urceaing Having roaa aa auaress to Mr. Beecher on behalf of the Union and Etna ncirjat ion Society, The Key. Mr. Ueocher turned to the audi ence te speak, bot lor eeteral minuies lis was prevented by deafening cheers, fol lowed by a few hUses, which only provoked a renewed outburst of applause ; Mr. Beecher then said: Mr. lliairman, ladies and gentlemen, the address which you have kindly pteseuted to me contain matters both pergonal and national. Interruption. My friends, we will have a whole night session but we will be heard! Loud cheers. I have not come to England to be surprised that those men whose cause cannot bear the light are afraid of free speech. Cheers. 1 have had practice of more thuu 26 years in the presence of mobs and riots, opposing those very men whose representative now attempt to forestall free speech. Hear. Little by little, 1 doubt not, 1 shall be ermiitcd to speuk tonight. Hear. Little by Utile 1 have been permitted in my own county to speak, unt'l at last the day has coiuo there wheit nothing but Un utterance of speech for Freedom is popular.' Cheers. You have been pleased to speak of me as one connected with the great cause of progress in civil and religious liberty. 1 covet no higher honor than to have my name joined as one among the list of that great company of noble Englishmen from whom we derived our doctrines of liberty. Cheers. For although 1 understand there is some opposition to what are called American ideas, what are these American ideas? The seed-corn we got in England hear; and if, on a larger sphero, aud under circumstances of unobstrucliou, we have reared mi a tier sheaves, every buef contains the grain that Ime nutdo old Eng land rich for a hundred years. Ureal cheering. I am also not a little gratified that my first appearance to speuk on secular topics in England is in this goodly town of Manchester, for 1 had rather have praise from men who undertdnnd tlieiiiiuliiy prais ed, than from those who speak fit hazard and with little aomaiutance with the sut- ject, Hear. ' And where else, more thau in theae great central portions vl r.tigland, have tbe doctrines of human rights been battled for, and where else, have there been gained for them nobler victories than here? Cheers. It is hot indiscriminate praime tnereiore; you Know wnui you taiK uoout. ; Yon have had practice iu these doctrine ; yourselves, and to be praised by those who are illustrious ib praise indeed. Checre. ! Let me say one word, however, in the beginning, in regard to this meeting, and the peculiar gratification which I feel in it. I have ground and God is my judge, and bears witness to the truth of what 1 say 1 can return to my eountrymen, and bear witness to tbe cordial kiuduess of EnglUk-mon toward America. Cheers. There has been serious doubt, The same agencies which have been to work to misrepresent good men ib our country to you, have been to us to misrepresent good men here; and when I say to my friends in America that 1 have attended such a meeting as this, received such au address, and beheld such euthuBiasm, it will be a renewed pledge of; amity, Cheers. 1 have never ceased to feol that war between two such great nationalities aa these would be one of the : most unpardonable aud atrocious otl'enses I that the world ever 1ehcld cheers, I and 1 have regarded everything, I therefore, which ficedlctfidy led to this feeling, out of which war comes, as being in itself wicked. Cheers. The same blood is iu us. Cheers. We are your children, or the children of your fathers and ancestors. Yon and we hold the same substantial doctrines. Cheers, and cries of "Turn him out,' We have the same mission' among the nations of the earth. Never were mother and daughter I set forth to do eo queenly a thing iu the: kingdom of'OodY glory as England and America. Cheers. And if you ask why they are sensitive, and why hav we hewn England with our tongue as we have, 1 will tell you why. There is no m.iu who can oflend yousodeeply as the one you love most.' Loud cheers. Men point to France and Napoleon, and say he has been joint step by step in all England has done, And why are the press of America silent against France, and why do they speak as they do against England t It is because we love .England. Cheers. i have lived through a whole period and revolution of feeling. 1 reniemlrer very well in my boyhool the then recent, war of loin. before the cmbcrt kindled in the Revolutionary War of Independence, an almost universal feeling against the Britishers, as they were called, and 1 have seen that feeling little by little dying out, and, what with common commercial interests, with, reciprocal blessing incivility and in religion, with multiplied interchanges ot friendly visits, there has come to be a feeling in America most cordial and admiring of England. ror when we searcneu our principles, they all ran back to rights in English history ; when we looked at tnose institutions ot which we were most proud, we beheld that the foundations of them, and the very foun dation stones, were taken from your histo ry ; when we looked for those men that had Uustrated our tongue, orators, or eloquent ministers of the gospel, they were English ; we borrowed nothing from t ranee, but here a fashion, and there a gesture or a custom ; but what we had to dignify humanity that made lire worth having were all brought from Old England. Cheers. . And do yon Suppose that under snch circumstances, with this crowing love, with this growing pride, with this gladness to feel that we were being associated with the historic glory of Egland, because both you and we belong to a race to the Anglo-reason race uo you suppose that it was with feelings of indifference that we beheld in our midst the heir-apparent to the British throne. (Cheers. ihcre is not reigning on the globe a sovereign who com mands our simple, unpretentious, and unaf fected respect, as your own beloved queen In America. Load cheers, 1 have heard multitudes of men say that if there was nothms for the heir-rpparent. and it was their great joy and their pleasure to pay re spect to him that bis mother might know that throng n him mat, compliment was meant to her. Loud cheers. It was an unarranged and unexpected spontaneous and universal outbreak or popular enthusi asm : it began in the colonies of Canada, the fire rolled across the border, all through New-England, all through ."New lork end Ohio, down through Pennsylvania and the adjacent Stales; nor was the element quenched nntil it came to ifichmoml. 1 said, and many said the past of enmity and prejudice is now rolled away down below the horizon of memory, a new era is eome, and we have set our hand and voices this week as a sacred seat to our cordial af fection and co-operation with England. Cheers. Mow (whether we interpreted it aright or not is not tne question) when we thought England was seeking opportu nity of going with the 8oulh against us of the North, it hurt ns as no other nation s conduct could hurt ns on the face of the globe ; and if we spoke some words of intemperate heat, we spoke them in the mortification of disappointed affection. Cheara.1 OHIO It haa been supposed that I have aforetime urged or threatened war with England. Never. Cheers, followed by a few groans, in reference to which the speaker remarked : " 1 have spoken on the prairies where buffaloes bellowed before." The observation provoked loud laughter.! This I iiawe aaid aad this I reiieat, now and here that the cause of constitutional gov ernment and ol universal liberty as asso ciated with it m our country was so dear, so sacred, that rather than betray it we would give the last child we had that we woum -ejotrclinquisu thia con met mougu other Htates rose and entered into a league with the South aud that, if it were neces sary, we could maintain the great doctrine of representative government in America against the armed world against England and France. (Great cheering, followed by soni disturbance, in reference to which the chairman arose and cautioned an individ ual under the gallery whom he had observed persisting in interruption. Let me be permitted to say that it seems to me the darker days, in so far as embroilment between this country and America is concerned, ara past. Cheers. Tba speech of Earl K usee 11 renewed cheering will go for towards satibl'yiugour people. Understand me; we shall not accept his views of the past, and the doctrines which he has pro pounded. Cheers. But the statement of the present attitude of the Government of Great Brittain, and its intentions fur the future, coupled with the detention of those armed ships of war that will takeaway the ating trom the minds of the people. Hear, hear. And although we diner from i you in respect to the great doctrine of belligerency,- the time is past to discuss that except as a question of history aad civil war. ne Jiave united so faraway from . the period in which it wus of any uie to discuss that, and the circum stances or tbe war, and your circumstances have so far changed that now we can no longer stop to discuss whether it was or was not right for Great Britian to assume this position she has assumed. She has for years acted unou it and will not c haute it; and now all that we oati ask is Let there be a thorough neutrality. Loud cheers. I believe there shall be one. Resumed cheers. If you do uot seud us a man, we Uo not ask tor a man. it you ao not trud us another ponud of powder, ive uie )j to make our own ponder. Laui'liUr.l It you do nut send us another imukct nor another cannon, we have cannon thai will carry five miles ulruady. Laughter. We do not ask for material help. Wo shall be grateful for moral sympathy cheers, but if you cannot give us moral spinpatby we shall still endeavor to do without it. But 11 that we say is. let France keep away, let England keep hands off; if we cannot man age this ltebellion by ourselves, thou it shan't be managed at all. ICheers.l The question of war, under the circumaUnvCM in which war is now carried on in our coun try, is simply a question of time. Cheers. The population is with the Norlh. The wealth is with the North. CbecH 'the education is with the North. limcrs.J The rightdoclrint'S of civil government uiv with the North. Cheers, and a voice. Where the justice? 1 it will not be lonir before one thiug more will be with Uie North victory. Loud and enthusiastic rounds ot L'heers.J Men on this side are impatient at lie long uoiay; but it we can bear il, can t you.' Langhler.J ion are quite at ease "Not yet' ; we are not. You are not materially artectcd in any such degree as many parts ot our owu laud are now. Cheers. But it the day shall come in ono year, iu two years, in ten years hence, when the old stars aod stripes shall float over every Stato of America. Loud cheers, and some disturbance from one or two. Oh, let him (the chief dis- urberl have a cliuucc. flAuirhter.! We will tuke a turn about; I will say lie sentences, and you shall make the responses. Laughter. 1 am a Coup ruga tiuna list, but 1 can muke a vory good Episcopal miuieler tot. Loud laughter. 1 was saying, wheu n?errupted by that ttoinid from the other side of tht house, that if the day shall come. n one or nvc or t,;u years, in which (ho old honored and historic hnuitcr shall float again over every fctate of tiie South ; if the lay shall come when that which was the ac- cursed cause of this dire and atrocious war slavery bhall be done away cheers if ho day shall have come when through all he Gulf States there shall be liberty of speech, as there never has been cheers it the uay Bhall come wuen there shall be iberly of tbe frees, as there never ban been ; if the day shall come when men shall have common schools to send their children to, which thoy nevur have had in the .South ; if tho day shall come when the land shall not be parceled in gigantio plaulationj, n the hands of a few rich oligarchs I loKd checrn, but shall bo parceled out to honest tanners, every man owning bib utile renewed cheers ; iu short, if the day shall come when the simple ordinances, Uie fniitiou and privileges of civil liberty shall prevail iu every part of the United States, it will be worth all the drcadlul blood, and tears, aud woe. fLoud cheers. You arc impatient; and yet God dwelleth in eternity, ami has an iiitiuite leisure to rullfurward the affairs of men, not to suit the hot impatience ol hose who are but children of a day, mid cannot wait or linger for long, but according o tbe infinite, circle on winch He measures time ami events. He expidstcs or retards as it pleiuei Him; and if Ho heard our cries or prayers, not thrice would the mouths revolve but ieacc would come. But the stroug crying and prayers of millions have not brought peace, but only thickening war. We accept the 1'iovidence; the duty is plain. Cheers. So rooted is this English people in the laitii ol nnerty, mat it. were an utterly hopeles task for uuy minion or svmpa-ihizer of the South losway the popular sym pathy of England if this English people be lieve! that mere wa none omer man a conflict between liberty and Slavery. It is just that. Loud cheers. 1 am here to be sure, in some points lo cite history, but for the most p.irt I staud a witness to testify what I have seen ol things, with which l have in timately mingled, which have been common to me since my boyhood things which I do know, and which history will establish beyond all peradveuture or controversy. uut let me go dbck a nine oeiore my time, for I am not yet iw years old. Laughter. Slavery was introduced into our country at a time, aud in a ninuner, when England nor America knew well what were the results of that atrocious system. (t was ignoruntly received and props guted on our side ; little by little it spread through all the thirteen States that then were, tor slavery in the beginning was in New Eng land, such as it now is in me ouiborn States. But when the great struggle of our revolution came on, tbe study or the doctrines of human rights had made such pro gress that the whole public mind began to think it was wrong to wage war lo Uelenu our rights while we were holding men in slavery, depriving Uiem or theirs. It is an historical fact, that all ihe great and re nowned men that nourished at the icriod of our Kevoluttoii were Abolitionists. Wash ington wsf; so was Benjamin irankliu: so was Thomas Jefferson; so was James Monroe; so were the principal irginian aad Sou Uie rn statesmen, and die first Aboli tion society ever founded in America was founded, not in Uie iNortu, but in tbe Mid dle and a portion of the Southern States. rCheers.1 Alter the Declaration or Inde pendence anu i tie auoptiou oi our constitution, slavery began to cease. It never had bee ii a very abundant institution in New England, because the habits of the people and their conscientious convictions did nol make them great friends of slavery. It has been said they sold their slaves, and preached a cheap emancipation to the South. Slavery ceased in this wise in Massachusetts: Huit was brought fr the service of a slave, and the Chief Justice declnrcd the declaration of Ihe equality of all men and their right to life, and liberty, and tbe pursuit of happiness was equivalent to Ihe bill of Emancipation, and he refused to render back that slave's services. At a later period New York brought an Emancipation Act. It has been said that she sold her slaves. No slander was ever greater. The most careful provision was made. No man traveling out of the State of New York after tho passing of the Eman cipation act. was permitted to have any slave with him, unless he gave bonds for his reappearance with him. As a matter of fact the slaves were emancipated without compensation on the spot, to take effect irmduslly class by class. But after a trial COLUMBUS. OHIO. MONDAY of half a "core of years the people found this gradual emancipation was iu tolerable. Hear, hear. It is like gradual imputation. They therefore met together, and by another act of legislation they declared immediate emancipation Thearl and that toxk effect; and ho Slavery perished in the Btate of New York. Cheers. Substantially so il was in New Jersey, and in rentlsylvania; substantially so it may be said, in respect to the Northern States, that there never was an example of nations that emancipa ted slaves so purely from moral conviction of Ihe wrong of Slavery. I know that it is said that Northern capiial and Northern ships were employed in the slave-trade. To an ex lent it was so. But is there any community that lives in whic! there are not mis- creams wno vioiaie mo puuuc moling: Cheers. Then and since, the man who dared to use his capital and his ships in this infamous traffic, hid himself, and did by agents what he was ashamed to be known to have done himself. Hear No man in the North who had part or lot i: this infamous traffic in slaves, but would have been branded with the mark of Cain. Cheers. It is true that Now Y'ork port has been employed in this internal traffic, but it was because it was unfortunately uu dor the iuflueuce either of that Bcuiooratic party that is in alliance with the Southern Slavery hear, hear or becauso it was under the dark political control of the South itself, ror when the South could appoint our marshals, when thd South appointed. through the Administration, the becretury of tiie Treasury, and the olhcers of the Cus tom-Houses in all parts of the oountry, when everything by tho political machinery jf the South wai favoring Slavery, it could not but ba tiiat there-should La lhe-.uu.uing of the gauntlet in our ports, and that the slave-trade should be carried on; but it was by tho immense majority of the people ab horred, and 'the men who did it were de tested. tbuers- there, was one Judas is Christianity therefore a hoax ? 11 ear. There are hissing men iu this audience are you not rcspee table f t huem and laughter. The folly of the few is that light which Mod cauls to uradiuto the wisdom ol the many. Hear. But wheu the Constitution itself was formed there was such a feeling opposed to Slavery that you are fa miliar with the lact that Mr. Mudisou aud Mr. Uandolph refused to permit the word "servitude' to go into that document, and on this express ground, that the time would come when Slavery was to end, and that they would not have the memorial ot snch a disgrace remaining in tbe great char ter of our liberties. Cheers. So the word was changed from "servitude ' to ''service." Hear. And let mo say one word hero abou the Constitution of America. It re cognizee Slavery as a fact, but it does not recognize the doctrine of slavery iu any way whatever; it was a (net; it hy before tho ship of state as a rock lies in the chan nel ot the ship as she goci into harbor; and because a ehip steers round a rock does it follow that that lock is in the ship? ''Hear," and laughter. And becuubo the Constitu tion ot the v nited CttaU-s made some circuit lo blear round that great fact, does it follow i lull therefore slavery ia recognized in the Constitution us a right or system. No. Sec how carefully tlmt immortal document word ed itself. In tho slave laws the slave is declared to bo what? expressly, and by the most repetition phraseology, he in denuded of ull Ihe nttributes and I'lmracicrUticH of manhood, find is pronounced a "chat tie." Shame. ) Nmv, you have just thai natup word with the h leit out "cattle. Hear, hear. And tho dillereuee between cattle aud chat- tie is the difference between quadruped and biped. Laughter. So far ns animate property is concerned, and so far as iniiniiiuilc properly in concerned, it is just llie differ- uce between locomotive property aud sta tionary property. Hear, bear. Now, nil the Slave State etand on the radical principle that a Blavc is not for purposes of law any longer to be ranked in the category ol human beings, but that is a piece ot prop- perty, and to be treated to till intents ana purposes as apiece of property; and the law did not bluh, nor do Ihe judges blush now-a-days who interpret that law. Hear. mitbow lsii mat me constitution ot the United States, when it begins to speak ol these very same slaves, names them? DoeB it call them " slaves JJoes it speak of them as in "service?1 It litis itself up ns if consciously inspired with the grandeur of the thought and dignity of man, and nys " 1'crsons hem to service. I Hear and cheers. Go to South Carolina, and ask what sue calls slaves, aim if says " things; and the old Capitol at Washington sullenly reverberates, "N,o persons f Cheers. Go to South Carolina, and her fundamental article says she looks upon slaves as things;" and again the Constitution echoes "No persons. Hear. Go the charter ot Louisiana with their Constitution, or to the South Western Slave States, and still that i doctrine of devils is enunciated it h chattel," it is "thing. Looking upon those for whom ChriHt felt mortal iiugiiish in Uelhaenmne. ami stretched him Belt in death on Calvary, their laws call them still things, ' and "chatties ;" and still in sup pressed tones of thunder the Constitution of tho United States says' ' persons." Cheers. What was it, then, when the country had advanced so far toward uni versal emancipation iu tuc period ot our national formation that stopped this onward lido? Two thing';, commercial and political. First, the wonderful lemand for cotton throughout the world, coupled with the facility for producing it, arising from the invention of the cotton gin that introuueed a new ciemeut oi vuiue. SInves that before had been worth from SHOD to $100, began to be worth gotH. That knocked away one-third of our adherence to the moral law. then afterward they be came worth f TiHl, and half the law weut cheers and laughter; then y00 or gWO, and then there was no such thing ns moral ' law cheers aud laughter; then Sl.OtMJ or jJlJOO, and Slavery became one of the beatitudes on the mount. Cheers and laughter. 1 When Moses wrote his laws, delivered by the Highest, he wrote them on tables of stone; but when the devil, through his minion, wrote his laws, he wrote them on silver. Cheers and loud laughter.) Their pocket ia their Mount Sinai encore and laughter;! they are the lineal descendants of those who before worshipped the golden calf. Cheers. The other cause which prevented the progress of emancipation that had already so suspiciously begun was the political cause. The policy of America has been shaped by the essential spirit of slave-holding Southerners. All the aggression, the filibuster; oil' the threats to England, and the taun tings of Europe, and all the belligerence our Government has assumed, have becu under the inspiration and under tbe almoHt monarchist sway of the Southern oligarchy. Loud cheering. And now, since Britain has been snubbed by the Southerners, and threatened by the Southerners, and domineered over by the Southerners "No !", yet now Great Britain has thrown licr arms of love around the Southerners and turns from tho Northerners. "Nol' She don't? Cheers. 1 have only to say that she has been caught in very suspicious circumstances. Laughter. But I have said it, perhaps, as much as (my thing else, for this very sake to bring out from you this expression to let you know what we know, that all the hostility felt in my country toward Great Britain has been sudden, aud I want you to say to me, and through me to my countrymen, that ik'se irritations against the North, and those likings for the South, that have been expressed in your papers, are not the feol- tuga of the great mass oi your nation. Great cheerirg, the audience rising. These cheers already sound in my ears as the coming acclamations of friendly na tions those waving nanancrcmeis are the white banners that symbolize peace for all countries. Cheers. Join with us, then.) Britons. ICheers.l trom you we learned the doctrine of what a man was worth; from you we learned to detest all oppressions; from rmi we icarneu mm it was tue noblest thing a man could do to die for a principle. Cheers. And now, when we are set in that very course, and arc giving our best blood for principle, let tbe world understand that when America strikes for the liberty of the slave aud of the cemmon people, Great Britain indorses her. Cheers. And now 1 come to the period in which l myself became an actor. Loua cheers. From that time to this time there haa been no important movement on the subject of public affairs in the connection or slavery, '.hat I have not either had a part in it or STATE MORNING,, OTpBER 26, 1863. benh a most Interested and Intimate ober-verof it, and I shall tell you, not a hat I be lieve, but what 1 know. Hear, beir.I it was extremely difficult to get the voice pf llie put-lie. inose mat nrsi Biaempieu u were made' well nigh martyrs. t I remember full well when Burueas Preal was mobbed in Cincinnati and dragged into the Ohio, fur no other reason than lor anu-aivery sentiments. I remember the early martyrdoms, and for two years, with my pookeis fiUed wilh uistols to the horror, 1 suppose, ol those peace-loving Slavery mea 4 patrolled the streets, made a special constable for the defense of these pour creatures, houses, i suppose it was very naughty to meddle wilh bre-nrtus; but then1 I was not minuter; (hen I was only a student fur the miniairy, and 1 did not lire the pisude oft' nce. Mr. Weld, Mr. Garrison, Allan rJitrwart now gone aud a multitude of men whom ought to have prepared myself to mention, that 1 might not, in mentioning the few seem to ueglect the many. These wore the pioneers. You have been pleased to say in this address that I have been ono of those pioneers. 1 unloosed - the shoe-latches of those pioneers, .and that is all -I was but little more, thau a boy, and 1 bear witness thut the hardest hhtivs and the most cruel sufferings were endured by men be fore J was thrust fur enough lutopupuc me ta taktf any particular share, and I do not consider myself entitled te rauk among ihe pioneers. They were better saen than 1. those noble men nui reeist tiu uowvwara tendency of the North. ' Tbeywore rejected by society. To be called aa Abolitionist excluded a man from reepectable society in those days. Jo be called an Abolitionist blighted any man's prospect in political life in thosd da vs. To be called AAbolitioiiist marked a man's store his very customers avoided him as if he had the plague. To be called an Abolitionist in those days shot up the doors of confidence trom him iw the church, aud he was regarded as a disturber of the peace. Nevertheless, thevMna in tam ed their testimony. fLoud cheers. Little by littlo they gained the conscience; they gain ed the understanding And as, when old Lu ther spoke, thundering in tbe ear or r.u- rope the long-buried treasures of the Bible, (here were hosts against him, ana the elect few, nevertheless, gathered little by Utile themaelvcB. Muny Luthors thundered Uod B trulh of human liberty, and they were fol lowed more and more for hulf a score of years, until they began to bo numerous enough to be an influential army iu the State elections. Cheers. In IBIS, 1 think it was. when that Buffalo platform was laid, it was tho first endeavor in tho Northern States to form a plutform that ebould carry rcbuko to the slaveholdiug ideas in theNorth. Before this, however, there was help given us from the South: and lean say that, under God, the South have doue more to bring on this work of emancipation than the rsorth itself. Hear, hear. First they began to leclare. after the days of Mr. Calhoun, that hey accepted slavery no more as a una forma', but as a divine bleating. Mr. Cal houn advanced tho doctrine which is now the marrow of seceMsion, that it was the luty ot Government not merely to protect States trout interference, but that it woe the duty of tho General Government to muke Slavery equal with Liberty. Cheers. These monstrous doctrines began to be the levelupment of future ambitions. Ihe South having tho control of Ourcrnmcnr, know from the'luhereut weakness of their stem that if it were confined U was as n huge flock of herds pasturing on small pastures, that soon gnaws the grays to the roots, and mitft have other pasture or it die. rCheors.l Sluvery is of such a na- u ro that if you do not give it continual hange or feeding ground it muni uie. I it o- newed cheering. 1 And then en me one after i another the assertions of the South of right m.'ver dreamed ot. rroin them came the Mexican war for territory; from them came Texas and its entrance as a slave State; from hem came that organized rowdyism In Congress that brow-bent every Northern man who had not sworn fealty to slavery. that filled nil the conns of Europe with minister holding slave doctrines; that gave the majority of the seats on ho Bench to slave-owning judges; and that gave, in lact, nil our chief of fices ot trust to either slave owners, or to men who licked the feet of slavc-hulding men. Loud cheers. Then on me that ever-memorable period, when, for the very purpose of humbling tho North, and making her drink the bitter cup of humiliation, and making them understand that Uie North was inferior and the South their natural lords, was (Missed the Fugitive Slave bill. Loud hisses There was uo need of that. 1'bere was already existing just as good an instrument for bo Infernal a purpose as any fiend could have wished. Against the tntamy my mil rvoltp.l. und these llns nrotcsted. andJ I defied to its face the Government and told them "1 will nave none 01 your utirigiiteous laws ; send to me that fugitive who is flee ing from his master, und 1 will step between liiiu and his pursuer." 'Loud aud prolonged choci'S. Not ouce, nor twice, havo my doors shut between oppression and the oppressed ; and the chhrch itself over which I minister haa beeu the unknown refuge of uiauy and many it one. fCheors.l liut whom the devil piouiieos he cheats. Laughter. That peace, that was the 30 pieces of silver paid for the Christ of man, turned into hre and burnt the hands thut took il. For how long was it utter this promised peace th:it- tiie Missouri Compromise wus abolished in an infauioua disregard of holy compacts. Loud cheers. it never ought to have beou inado; but, haviug been made, it ought never to. have been broken by tiie South. Cheers. And wilh no other pretense tnnn the robber's pretense that might makes- right, thoy did destroy it, that they might carry slavery farther North. That was what was needed to arouse the long reluctant patriotism of the North. I Cheers. iiy uie abolition ot this Compromise, another Slave State was immediately to have been brought iuto the Union to balance tho ever growing tree Territories of the North-Weal. Then it was that there arose a majesty that had no record thus far, and has had uo parallel, and, instead of merely protesting, young men and maidens, laboriug men, farmers and mechanics, all of theni sped with a sacred desire to rosette free territory from the toils of Slavery, and emigrated in huudredB and in thousands, that wheu the territory should come in to vote, it should vote aa a Free State. fLoud cheers. A more infa mous aud atrocious system of cheating uov er was practiced lhau by which the South sought, by perjury, by intimidation, by the prostituted use of the United States Army, to force a vilo system upon these unwilling uien who had voted almost unanimously for liberty and againat Slavery in that Slate. Hear. Hut at last the day ot utter dark ness had passed, aud the gniy twilight was on tho morning ot tbe homon. At Inst, for the first time, 1 believe, in tho whole conflict between the South and the Nurth, the victory wont to the North, and Kansas became a free State. Cheers. Kansas beeamo an impulso that was given to popular feeling, und iu 18641 Mr. Fremont was nominated tor the l'restdency. He came so near to being cleoted that, but for an enormous chesting in the polls of Pennsylvania ho would huve heeu elected; but, instead of Mr. Fremont, Mr. Uuchauan was returned. Hisses. We aimed at an eagle and hit a buzzard. Laughter. Now 1 call you to witness that, in a period of 2o or HO years of constant conflicts with the South, at every single atep they gained the advantage, with the exception of Kansas. What wus the conduct of tho North? Did they threaten Secession ? No. Did they threaten violence ? No. So sure were they of the ultimate triumph of that which was right, provided free speech was left to combat error and wrong, that they patient ly bided their time. Hy this lime the North was cured of its love of or iuditTer-euco to Slavery. Hy this titne a new conscience had been formed in tho North, and a vast majority of all Ihe Northern men at this lime stood fair and square on the doctrine of Anti-Slavery. Cheers. It went through all the quicksands of that iutaraous demonstration of four years, in which sen ators, sworn by the constitution, wero plot- ting machinations to destroy tbe liovern- meul, in which the members of the cabinet who drew their pay month by month, used their time and their official position tosUal arms, to prepare fortifications, to make ready, and in which the most astounding spectacle that the world ever saw was wit nessed our groat people paying men to sit in places of power and office to r9Vl'"t'n h hen rtT.' JOURNAL. betray them. Hear, hear. - During all those fbur years what did wa t we protes ted, and waited, and aaid:. "God give us the victory for it is God's truth that we ivi-Id and God's truth we promote, and with God, in his good time, shall be the giving of the victory; Ureal cneering.j in an this time we never made an inroad on the rights of tha South., Cheers. We never uked ftir. retaliatory law. We never taxed their commerce, or touched it with our little ti..s.r Wm rni-ied them none of theirmsn- ufactories; but sought to promote ibem. We did not attempt to anaie, ny twin wuw, their material prosperity; we longed for their prosperity, Cheers. Slavery we aLways hated ; the Southern men never. Cheers. They were wrong-' And in oar conflicts with them we have felt as all men in eonfiiota feel. We were jealous and so were they. We were in the right cause ; they in- the wonig. Cheers. We never envied them their territory ; aud it was in the heart, and it was the faith of the whole-North, that, in aeekiug for the abatement of it very, and its final abolition, . wa wore oonferriug upon the South the greatest boon which one nation, or part of a nation, could confer upon another. That she was to come down, and pas through the valley of hu-miliaUon during the progress of her iuslir tut urns till she passed from forced labor to free labor, I have no doubt ; but it was not in our heart to humble her, but rather to help and sympathize with her. I defy time and history to point to a more honorable conduct than that of the free North toward the Houth during all these days. Iu 18oU Mr. Lincoln was elected. Cheers. I aak vou to take notice of the oon-1 duot of the two sides at this point. For tnirir vears we bad been experiencing seo- n . .... ... ..v . i. - Cu.il... rional defeats at the bands of tht Souther ner. For thirty years and more we naxi seen our aona proscribed, because loyal to liberty, or worse than proscribed suborned ana maae suoserrionv ui.t.ij. w I... I ireu our'iiidecs corrupt, our minis- mnaiite. our merchants running head- loug after gold against principle; but we maintained our fealty to the law and Constitution, aud bad faith iu victory by lcgiti- uuuo means. But when, by the means pointed out by the Constitution, and ssnc-tloned by the usage of three-quarters of a century, Mr. Lincoln, in a wir, ojreu u.iu, was elocted President of the United States, ,11,1 il,. South submit? fCries of "Xo," and cheers ! No offense had been committed none threatened ; but the arrogation was that the election of a man known to be pledged against the extension or slavery was not compatible with the safety of slavery in ili. Month, and on that ground they took steps for secession. Every honest mode to prevent it, all patience on the part of the North all pusillanimity on the part of Mr. R,.i,.n.n. While ho eat. before his euo- oesaor came into office, he left nothing uu- done to make matters worse, uiu uoiumg to make thines better. The Korth was patient then, the South impatient. Then cauio the iteps. The question was put to the South, und with tne exception oi oouiu v.io.im., overy State In the South gave a popular voto against seoessiou; aud yet such was tho jugglery of political leaders, before a few mouths hud passed they had precipitated every Slate iuto secession. That could uover have been where there was common people. ' - hist all these facts it is attcuipt- od to make Eugland believe that Slavery has had nothing to do witn mis war. imugu-tcr.l You might as woll have attempted to persuade Nonb that the clouds had nothing i , iln wiih tho Hood: perhaps some man will attempt to persuade you that the palm trees nd orange trees win grown,, run unu Pole; perhaps some one will persuade you next that tliero is no sand in the great desert. It is the most monstrous absurdity ever born in the wouib ot folly. cnecrs.j .Nothing to do with Slavery 1 It had lo do with nothing else, t.'heevs.l Slavery was the mother of Kcbellion. Cheers. J the father of it was O, no, , never mention him. Much laughter. Against this withering fact against this dimming allegation what is their escape? The attempt is to my the North is just as bad as the South. Laughter. Sow we aro coming to the marrow of it. Cheers. If tho North is ns bud as the South, why did not the South find it out before you did? If the North has boon in favor of oppressing the black man, and just as much in favor of Slavery as the South, how is it that the South has gone to war against tho North because of their belief to tho coutraryf A voice "Slavery doeB not pay in the North." Gentlemen. I hold in my hand a published re port of tho speech of tho amiable, iutolli- gent, una oreouiouB rrcsiiieui, i uouim., or tho Society for Soutueru luacpenuence. rLauirhler.1 I have some ouriositieB in it. Laughter. That yon may know that Southerners are not all dead yet, 1 will read a puragraph: "The South naslaDoredUitueriouuuer too imputation, and It had constantly been thrown in die teeth of all who supported that struggling nation, that they by their proceedings wore teudiug to support the ex-istence of Slavoiy. This was un impression which he thought thoy ought carefully to endeavor lo remove cheers and laughter, because it was one which was injur-ous to their cause oncers nol only nmoug those who had 111 feeling of an Englishman of a horror of Slavery but, alBO, because strong religious bodies in this couutry made a point of it, and felt it very strongly indeed. Choers. 1 never like to epeak behind a roan's back I like to apeak right to men'B faces what 1 have to say and I could wish the higher felicity than that which has been accorded to me to-night might huve been given to have the Lord Wharuclitle present, that I might address to him a few simple and artless Christian inquiries. Cheers. For there ran bo no question that there i" a strong impression that the South has had something to do wilh Slavery. Cheers. Indeed, on our side of tho water there are many persons who affirm it. Laughter aud cheers. And, as his Lordship thinks that it is the peculiar duty of this now agglomerated and agglutinated association for Southern independence to do away with that impreeeion, I beg to submit to them that, in the first place, thoy ought to do away with four millions elavos in llie South; for I, for my own part, cannot but any that I think there are uncharitable men enough living in this world to think that a nation that has four million slaves in it has a good deal to do wilh supporting slavery. Cheers And when he was done that, it might, perhaps bo pertinent to suggest to his Lordship that there should be a little something done to tie Montgomery Constitution of the South, which is changed from tho old Federal Constitution in only one or two points, the most essential of which is that it introduced and legalized slavery, and makes it unconstitutional ever to do away with it ; and they are under that Constitution. Now, I submit that that wants scrubbing a little. Cheers. Thou I would rosueotl'ully lay it at his lord ship's feet inoro boautitully embossed, if I could, than his address to me is tne speech of V ice-Proaident Stephens" hoar, hear " in which he declares that all nations have been mistaken, and that the subjugation of an inferior race is the only proper way to 1 maintain the liberty of a superior; in which he teaches Calvary a new lesson in which he gives the lie into uie lace or tne Savior himself, who came to teach us that by as much aa a man was stronger than another, he owed himself to the olhsr. Loud cheers. Not aloue are Christ's blood-drops our salvation, but Iheso word-drops of sacred truth which cleause the heart and conscience by ihe emrcBsiou ol precious trams and prin ciples, tneuiselves are our salvation as well as the atoning blood; and if there be in the truths ot Christ one mora eminent than another, it is " He that would be chief, let him be the servant of all." But this audacious hierarch of infidelity, Mr. Slcphens,iu tbe face of God, and before mankind, in this day of universal Christianity, declares that the way for a nation to have manhood is to cruxh out Ihe liberty of an inferior aud weaker race. And he declares ostentatiously and boastingly lhat thefoun-dat ion of the Southern republic is on that corner-stone. Loud cheers, "No, no," and renewed oheers. L beg leave, when next Lord VYharncliffe speaks for the edification of this delighted hnglisb people laughter I bee leave lo submit that this speech 0! Mr. Stephens requires a little scouring. T Annlause.l And then, if all Uie other alle gation, and evidences that the South are NUMBER 102. upholding slavery are to be the peculiar work of tha SeiiLhero-IndepeaiWace Association, not Hercules in his palmy days had such work and wages before him as they have got. Loud cheers.' We shan't be troubled with them. They will be knee-deep and elbow-deep iu their business of scrubbing and securing, and Lord tt a ra tline may bid farewell lo the sweets of domestic leisure and lo the pursuits of the interests of state, and all its amusemeuta hereafter will be scrubbing and scouring. Loud cheers. But there is auother- precious paragraph that J will read ; 'Jle believed that the strongest supporter of slavery were the merchants' of New York and Boatou. He alwava nndnnrt.1 and had never seen the statement contradicted, that the whole of the ships fitted out j for the transport of slaves from Af- rica to Cuba were owned bv NoHhnrnv." luoau lAuguter.j Hi. lorJhin. if fa. -ill .1 .1. lo road my .peecli, shall liear it contradicted in llie nioji explicit ternu. There have been enough Northern thipa engaged, but not 1jt any means all, nor the aioat. Baltimore haa pre-euiuence in that, matter; Charleston, and Nei, (Jrleauj, and Mobile, all of them. And those nhipa fined out in New Vork were jtrat aa loach despised, and loathed, and biased by the honouble mer-obants of that great metropolis, as if iliey had put np Uie black flap; of -pii acr. Loud cheers. Koes it eondm-e to good- feoling between two nations 10 make em-h atrocious slanders a these? His lordship goes ou tossy; . 1 ' -- " m.o wfuvr "That in the Northom States the slaro was plncsd in even a vorse position than he was in tbe South. He spoke from ex- i pensnce, nariug yisiicu tne country twice.' r .... ...I ... ... . .111 iuuii iuijiiw.!, .uo yvi gi.uueu, lo learn that Lord Wharnclifle speaks of the Buffering of the slave from experienoe. Laughter and checre. X never was aware that he had been put in that unhappy situation. Has he toiled on the sugar plantation? Una be taken the night for his friend, avoiding the dsy? lias lie sped through cane-brakes, hunted by hounds, suffering hunger, and heat, and cold by turns, until he has made his way to the far Northern States 1 Cheers Haa he had the experience ? The grammar is good. It is the word experience I call attention 10. If hie lordship says that it is his observation, I will accept the correction. I meant to hare said a good deal more to you than 1 have, or shall have time to say. "Uo on." I havo endeavored to plaoa bo- lorc you tuosc laots wnion go to snow tnat Slavery was the real cause of war, and that if it oame to the citation of facts whether North or South were the most guilty in this matter, thrro could be no question, I think, before any honorable tribunal, any jury, and deliberate body, that the decision will be that the South from beginingto end, for the sako of Slavery, has beeu aggressive, and the North patient. Since the war broke out, the Nortk ba- been more and more coming upon the high ground of moral principle, until now the Government has taken around for Emancipation. Groans and countor cheers, and a Voico, "Go homo." 9 no suppuBO Hint it is wise la scpornte tho interest of the slave from the interest of the other people on the Continent, and to inaugurate a policy which took in himalono? He has got to stand or fall with all of ns hear, hear, and the the only sound policy fur the N'orth, of the South, of the blacks and of tho whites cheers, and we hold that the maintenance of the Union the fun damental principles which aro contained in the Declaration Of Independence and the Constitution that this is Ihe way to secure to the African ultimately his rights and his best estate. So thut. in this way the North did come into this oontlict with the prayer, tue nope, miner tunu, 1 nad niuiost said, the expectation, that God would bless their endeavor to the perfection of liberty over all our continent. Loud cheer. The condition of tho North was that of a shin carry ing passi-ugvi-s tempest tosed, and while the sailors were laboring, and tho cuptaui and officers directing, some grumblers would come up from among Uie passengers and say. "lou are all the time working to save the ship, but you don t caru to save the passengers." I should like to know how you would eavo tho passengers so well as by takeing care of tho ship. At this point the Chairman read to the meeting the telegrams, relative to the seizure of the rams at Liver pool. The effect was startling : Ihe whole audii-nco rose to their feet, w hile cheer after oheer was giveu: 1 have aaid thut tt would give me great pleasure to.uuswer any courteous questions luui uiigui ue proposed to lue. it 1 cannot answer them I will do the next beat thing tell you so. Hear. The length to which this meeting, has been protracted,: and the very great conviction that I seem to have wrought by my remarks on this Pentecostal occasion in yonder Gantile orowd loud laughter I, admonish me that we had better open some kind of "mooting of inquiry," lleuewod laughter. . It will give me great pleasure, as a gentleman, to receivo questions from any gentleman fhcar, hear), and to give such reply as is in ni.y power 'n.n .au.Mn ....... 1. ...... :! .1 ........ .uu .wv.uuu Htu,l.mu 1VUMIIIVU BlUUU- ing for a few moments, as if to give tho opportunity of interrogation, but no one rising to question him, he Bat down amid groat cheers. The speech lasted Hourly !l hours. IHE KEMOVAL OF GENERAL ROSECRAXS. fSouie of ill Governiuont'a stannous for lire Step. Wasiiisoios, Wednesday, Oct. 21. Tho romoval of Itosccrans is tho Bubicct of much and contradictory comment. Tho more correct understanding of tho causes that led to it iB that charges were preferred against him by Gens. McCook and Chittenden of unoflicer-liko couduct on tho battlefield, of a pauic-strioken flight from Ihe field to Chattanooga, while tho battle was in its orisis, and of his unsoldierlv and mis. chievous conduct in publicly reporting, on v.B,,aUvuj lu UvU' UUiUeil BUU men, that the day was lost. Superadded to this is alleged Governmental resentincni of his disobedience of positive orders not to risk a general engagement by advancing beyond Chattanooga before he was reinforced ; also, its impatience of his disposition and handling his troops ou the fluid. The reputation for courage that ha won at Stone River is plead in bar to the imputation of cowardice in his abandonment of the battle ground, and his friends attribute it to a mistaken lmpreesion that his army had been wholly whipped and was wholly on the retreat. The replication to this is that such a mistake is a complete disqualification for command. The statement acnuiring growth that he had an attack of epilepsy during the battle, anu tnai ne was suDject to that discs so, is untrue; but that he was constitutionally aud by education subject 10 tils of religious depression of the profoundest character, is correct, though he was au austere Roman Catholio, as is woll known, lu conuection with this if may not be unsuitable to add that it is understood that tho fourth epeciff-oation of the preferred charge is an exces sive uso of opium. The relations between General Rosecrans aud the General-in-Chief, Hnlicck, have been bad. A sharp correspondence took place between them after Uie battle of Chatta nooga, and befora that the Government had found fault with his military conduct on several occasions, and he had retorted by sharges of neglect by the Government and want or support. Ilis removal has been in contemplation for Borne time. Tub Mtruouior Coniehknci. Asn x Kt- ponTEB. At a nicetiug of the Mutl-mliat (Jonlevence, iu Illinois, a reporter lor itie St. Louis Republican aud I he Spn ug UcUl. t 111. ) Jfiyufer (an imng mhos lit sheet) w.gespeuea from the meeting by a unanimous vole, for giving a garbled account otthe pi'oceeaiugs of a previous meeting. Ami though the re- solution of oxpulaiou wa a withering rebuke, .... ' . . . he failed to "aee it in that light, whereup- on two of thoeltloraiuiormeUnioj, iu a man ner he oould appreciate, that it was one thing to pass a resolution, and another to put it in force, ri tt armny if need be, and, seeing preparations on foot to that end, ho walked out to return no more. Twas well, for 1'bter Cartwriout was tJipre 1 BOOKS & STATIONERY American Flags, ; If atllB rUvff. BaaHna- Fla, sstk Vlaga, .- avaaUl aaa ducm.i j ia aa uj-a ana aiaoa t - (tar, of tit aacat aulora and Uat ataka. ,c . . PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS. Tbarlaat,ftaaplartaat Mock a K and vary chaap. Card Pictara fur aajaa. ' hpWHU aoUrUu, tha laraaat aut tat FIXE STOlTriCTTRES! -... Am1 rratuas t Mulch, at . f .U.k aa k of SHirPINO BOOKS. 4,tl i to au? nod of UDsortatUa, aad of th bt ataa-I tuactura. M, A A. , GOV. JOHN BROUGH. Tbr lt Likne of thi dlMlngubhed avaa nt.' Mian. I'Hc-tai.oi). rWt Can. Ptc torePrice 2V. A llbaral d(coBm to beak-r. ' " - . I -A. T 33X1. TPIA.3rm .. , Something Xewl " ') 14U1&. OB Bound Stick.. Beutirnl Colon, om I l-l-r-wll im. .uou, .un - .a, j nor iipiN p run 10c eiuaiy; 7fe ir dot., and 16.50 per 100. feud ordure lo KiXDlU tl ASTOVfla att10 lo South Hlh St , Cwlambo, O. GOVERNMENT LANDS. Government Lands in Ohio. Nutk;e is hereby given that certain Lauib tiiaatrd iu the count la of PanldiDtr, Pa-fUaoa. finnan, Van Wart, Usury, Aualaisa, bLelby aud WyatiJ -t, in tUtt Stat of Ohio, eoihraclaf In tha aagrofatf, 2,t23.i7 aire, (inoatlr io tha Brat masi ll jaej i-t'uuiy), winch hare hamtofora baa wltohald from market, will l laid opn to ! at tha Land. Ottlc, at CWLUi-MUli, on , : Monday, the 2d day of November next, at 92M rr ntr. th minimum prio tzd by law. Tlutao LaDd. wilt U vn to aal aiui fra compotl-tlon fur a period or tj wwki from commtiolDaBt of aula, aad ail lucb tract aa ramaln uoaoUt at tha end of two wtka, will It aubjvet to ordinary prlvBta utry at tha approi-rd minimum nf f2 Au par acra A acbflulu panic utility deMrlbiiig th lodlridaat tract, will Im ojjun fur examination at tiia dlttrtot ottica at I hllllootW Ohm undur my hanJ. at tba City of WaablDftllt thi 25th day ot AUkcnit. A. D., liWB. , J. It. tBMUUDS, t'oromlitilonur of th Ocncral Land Oflk. CLOTHING. THE PROPRIETOR 1 EW YORK Clothing Store CuugrfetulatM hioiMlf that til. former ffbrt to meet th want of hid customer hav bean appreciated, and with eitra aatlafactlon he cell to attan tlon of all hi old etu tumor, and any on wanting the BEST and mutt to bis atock which be U dally reclTiog. aortmaut of French Cassimeres COATINGS liave beeu talattad with ureal cat ; and wa think wa do not k-poak at random in saying, ao handsom a lot of Good were never brought Into the city of Oolnna bu as wa open to lntpoctlon. In order that our liouse uay ooutlnue to take aha lead In making the most . Fashionable and Stylish UUB CCTTIH, J. H. PARSONS, 1 (Who hitherto staud nnrlTalUd In thi olty for ant-ting good fitting garment) has visited New York, that he may know tha newest and latest style, anil wnaguaaaniM that any garment leering this Establishment ahajl be perfect In Ot and or th latest tyte. Our stock ol - i Ready-Made Clothing1 1 ol better make than usually kept by Clothing olerchaut ; most of them arc Custom make, equal In quality and make to our Custom Mad Goods. Knowing the need of a good assortment of - Wa offer for Innpeotlutt tho largest assoi tmant aver brought Into this city, which will comprlaa Boy Suits and Overcoat 1, from 3 to 20 year of age, and la fact everything for Boya wear. i Fatigue Suits and Uniforms . For Officers, made a usual tn a superior tuauaer from good which retain their color. A. larg stock of Gents' Furnishing Goods ; Always ou hand to all of which w cordially invite Impaction. F.D.CLARK, J 121 South High Street. CoLt-Mnrs, September, ISflS. wpt-tj oneg-M mui WHOLESALE i CLOTHIERS, JMK'HTtKS AND DEALERS IN Foreign and Domestic Dry Ms, 10G Pearl st, north side, and 117 West Third st. Between Vine aud Itece streets, oiisrai3r3r-A.Tip o. Particular attention paid to order. A1o, Pealera in Gents' Furnlflhing Good. novW'03-dly MERCHANT TAILOR, Corner High & Town Sts., (Oj.pi.He th. Culted Bute. Hol.l,) AVISO U'ST RKTUBNETJ FROM THK CAST th a laree stock of Good In mv line. I asa ' generally, Iftrgains equal to any establishment la now irt'iaii!(i iu uiier w my j-nnuu auu ma puuiio ; '"ij;k0Bib f y grade .nd.tyleaofih j ins coops TV THK MARKET roB OKN- iLlvWKfc d WKAK, 0f Ukh 1 tu'iteau examination. My prlcw are a low a can be offered by any other I n. . . i.. ii,alit. 1 nava nmnlMMul .nwrt.. " ' r aud Good Artistic Cutter from Philadelphia, and will warrant the beet of. flu ami th bfst of workmanship. E-pedsrt attention I paid n Military Oflom work, and a good stork nf Umxls in that line always on ht nil. Respectfully, septf-dtf P.BOSaJ.
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1863-10-26 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1863-10-26 |
Searchable Date | 1863-10-26 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000025 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1848), 1863-10-26 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1863-10-26 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3914.33KB |
Full Text | TO CONTRACTORS. MAtJTl.RU DKPABTMKyT, I sSUttajmmma, Tui., gleaner H, IMS. J --rmkATOB THR rOLLOWTNO RprmcA-XI (torn will xam la all contract and pmrckaaM fNulea for tba Qiurtar-Mutar'l Departawnt : MhIm for taa waavn trains to ha aot las than .bar tee ( 14 aaaaa hln; aauiaa tar Ih aadsJIa, ml awla fur ta pack traioa, to be sot 1m Uiaa farteea u aoe-bair ( IW) naaoe mgn. , AJI mala ir tha Avy ataat ka w two of im atrona-. stoat, wll-dmloped ania.al lwo(l) JTMIS .mate; In full health, free from any bJemiaa or defect which woald uS ttm M- Nin work; a act neat have saad tha fuur froatolt's teat, aad developed th oorraafKmd-loK (bar permanent teeth, two Id aca Jaw. AU male imparted 4 aacpta wMWt ba brttlta with tha I tiara U. S. on tha arsw abualdar, and ob Ik aeek with tha Initials of Ota (Mncer pur-eaaeing . All Oflcarvavd Impeetor will be held to a strict itomd lability for their purcsiasw. Tha dlacovry in atraiaof any mala aot scaring tha above tootb-Btarka will ba cans for tha Inatant diatuiaaal of tha1 iMpaetor who pa ad it, aad lit purr lit ting Uflkar rill ha oallad apun Car axplaaaitun. All oOtoer rwceiviuic mule by tranafcror iDVoios, will, apoa receiving UMtm, and before eijrnins; re-wipta, iaapect them carefully, eiemiaing tha month f every mute; aad will anlar apoa their raoaipla tha coaaittoa of I ha animal whan reoeiTad, aad UU whataar aay of them fail to falBU ta Kqairemaol m ina eoova epeeincaiion.. anu WUMi, u at all, they ara deficient. when mule voflt forth service ara received, a foil report will ba mad to tba nest Bunai-tor Guartaa-. Master, and a aupy thereof will ba aent at tha aaaa Has to lb (duarber-maatar General at vYatilugUa. .... . M. 0. MfcH-rf, ortIO Qaerier-alaeter General. HAIR RESTORATIVES. Prof. H; A. De Munn's . . osilt . - k '"' Gonulno i HAIR RESTORER! i -' .ALBANY, N. Y. Cnre ani Prevention of Baldness! ! ' Tqtal Eradication of Disease ! DANMl FF FROM THE SCALP. YpE trricACT or this wondkbfTL mie- X HHVATlThaabMiutMtilUHlbyhaudr(KlaaDd thoiuaudi, not only Id thi city, but throughout tha ciaia. i am ouiy raceiviug irtiimouy umu ihjii-nuny relative to the cure whUh it uuOKtiDglD rake of Valdneaa, Daudrnfl and diacuct of the Kcalp. ' It act like magic," Is the exclamation of all who Die it, aod tbtir nuto to lioa. It would ba au perilous for ma to apeak of tba peculiar and beneficial proiertia of this admirable pixparaliou. It haa only to bo uaed, and it atluiulatlve and luvijj-oratlve power are at once perceptible aud appreciated aeoordliiKly. Tha would-be Inrtgoraiart, Ho-atorati, Uair Wuhee, and pmcrtptloa, which havo buan a drug on tha aiarket for many- year, bav bean uaed, fairly tea ted, aud their -alter worth-leaauea at onoe detected; they are caat into the treet aod a vuw made by the purchaeir never to pend another etmt for tha worthiest atuff. do out blame them. They pay out their tuouay for the artlola, they aie aaaurod by tliu vender that It i really a splendid article and will produce tha deaiml effect, when he know In hi own mind that it will do about aa much good a ao much diab-water. The purohaaer not only lose hi money, but what I jnat aa valuable, time aud labor. 1 it to be woudered at that they becom discouraged 1 1 aniwr, emphatic-ally, Nol Aillbat I aak ia that those who havo Un hambUKKed will give my prupsratioti a fair trial, and 1 will guarantee they will unit with the masse In prononncing It tha only preparation entitled to 4baappalltku of tha "Only Genuine Hair lteator-r." The follow I is hut a sample of the uunieruu Teetlnienlals I have In nty possesAioa, cerlifyiug to the wonderful efficacy of my llsir ltestort-r: The following ortiflreta il from the Kev. H. L. Olor, Ubaplaui Of the aeantaa's Bethel, Montgomery Street ; Alu NT, March 6, 1802. Gratitude urge me to perform duty to my ftllow B)fe In testifying to the effitai y of I'rof. lie Mutin's Hair Ittstoratlva, a applied 10 huasolf. My b ld-ce was partial, of fmrt' duration, hut still increaiinK fast. Like manyothm at my advanced time of lift, (over Hfiy yn), I t)uUKht no tplira-tfon could reatore my hair; thurufore I trii-d none until I saw the don rod effi-ct of the abovo-naniMl DeMunn'sappllcatliiiiuiicinalhi're. I thruforHple'd myanlf uudur hi care and lieatmeut, aud the roault ia, 1 have now a on growlh of young hair on the bald part, aud that which was weak aud falliug out Il fully strengthened. tUguedt) 11. L. CALDB. This I to certify that we, the underiiftniHl, lutTe ta,ken the Photographs of the above named gentleman when ha was bald, and when hi Photograph was taken the second time bis lid was covered with a flue growth of good and substantial Hair. Vt have the greatest ixmiMunoe in Prof. DrMnnn's ability to restore the Heir, and to perform all he I tvpoas to do. WOOD A 11 Ku., i , Photographers, over the Post Ufflce, Toil wonderful leiuedy is sold, wlioksale and retail, by the Proprietor, and by all respectable druggist throughout the Loyal fctatesand tha Canada. , PitoF. 11. A. DKllt'NN, , Inventor and Proprietor, nov7-ly Ko. 29 Orange litreot, Aloany, N. Y. niaiaffiwriai vvaiamuaiVi ; CLEVELAND Medical College, j BB1NQ THK Medical Department of the Western Reserve College. rtlfil TWKNTIKTH ANNUAL SESSION WILL X begin on the Urt Wednesday of November next, and continue seventeen weeks. KACULTT: .Ioiin DtLAMATfR, M. D., hh. D., Kmerttui, Prof, of Obstetrics aud Pathology. J Aiu P. Rutland, $l. 0., LL. D., Prof, of the Principal and Practice of Mrdlrine. J. Lang ('awiij, U D., LL. U., Prof, of ChomUtry and Toxicology. PaocioB TuAiEk, M. D., Prof, of Surgery aud An-atomy.. B. Klafta Cualimo, M. D , Prof, of Obstetrica and Surgery. Alliynk M atn a id, M. D., Prof, of Materia Medl-ca aud Physloal Diagnosis. David H. Hiott, M. V.. Prof, of Physiology and DissasesofChlMron. Jacob Lauv, M. 1., Pemonilrator of Anamy. FKK8; The Matriculation Kee is ..... A tin The Professors' Tickets are 00 ml Tha Demonstrator's Tickvt ll r......, 6 00 The graduation fea 1 ......,.... SO 00 MlHtavry Suxrcez-y. Hnrjreon McOLUKO, If. 8. V.. In charge of th Military Hospital In Cleveland, will give, by permission of"the Burgeon -Oeneral of the United State Army, a oouree of T.ecture In connection with the College, on Military Hygien. the pt-riillarltle of Army Hurgery and Diseaaee, as illustrated hy appropriate fiasoe In (he Hospital, and on the routine of dutle of tha Army Burgeon In the Field. (Undent will not Incur additional expense for this Course. sppw-dl m Starling Medical College! ri'HE SESSION OK THIS INSTITUTION BIG X OINSon Thursday, the 22d of October, 1863, d4 cooMqum nutll th. lat of Marcb, 1864. I. M. SMITH, M. P., . . FrofeMor Theory and Practtc FBANCIS CARTER, M. D , Fror. UImc. .nd VIm. Women .nd Children. JOHN DAWSON, M. D., rrofaMor Aottonij nnd Fhjtlologj. i. W. HAMILTON, M. D., Prof. Snrgvrjr, Ky. and Kir Surgery. 8. LOVING, M. D . Prof. M.t. toti. Jhernp. Med. JnrUp. TBI0. 0. W0BMLKT, M. D., Pruf. CbuuUiry mnd Toxicology. V. HALDERMAN, U. D-, Itemunitrttor of Automy. HnanTAL PntviLruu. The Due will h... .creai to CHnlc.1 Lectura. In tlm Ohio Penit.nti.ry Ho.. it.J .nd th. two Urge aflliuu-y llgapiuit ns thi. si.i. .or laiorm.tioa .uurna avUtnotl ' 8. M. SMITH, Deu. HOOP SKIRTS. 1 H. S. HAWKS, Maoufactttrer of Steel Hoop Skirts, OF KTKBT DESCRIPTION, t DRUBS 332n..XX3S, Real Whalebone Corsets, RUSCHE TRIMMINGS, CRIMPED BRAIDS, No xa ,rls. Pino e, SUB BXOADT1T, NEW YORK. e.p4-d:ti. Choice Apples. HA VINO PURCHASED TUS ORCHARDS OP Choice Grafted Fruit of Henry 0. Noble, Kaq.. 1 am prepared to rarnlah a superior fruit for Fall an winter. tuus. aaukksuk, ieaadi m U door BOTth of Kxchar DAILY OHIO STATE JOURNAL 1 HIHIT, iUE at .', rnfirltMn. MONDAY AKJHNINO, OlTOBBR l!H. iJIR. BEECHER'S ADDRESS, A meet in (t was held on Friilftv, Oct 'J, in the Free Trade llall, Matte heeler, itcconliiig to announcemcDt, "to weloonie Ute Ker. Henry iteecher on hit public appear nee iu ilii oonntrT." Tl hall vu extremely errjwded, nd there were probably 0;0OU peraoni present. It was supposed, from ilio paper war or plAcanis for the last tortuighi, that the meeting micht be disturbe by partisans of the Confederate -States. Ar rangement had, therefore, been niade for the prompt suppression of disorder; and notices to that effect were posted about the room. The chair was taken at half-past sit. by Mr. Francis Taylor.. At the saiue time the entrance of Mr. Beecher. tccom- panied by Mr. Bui ley, M. P., aud some prominent members of the Union and Emancipation Society, was the signal for enihusi- astia and reneated cheeriuir. Fa-Ire Ua- tsui wn inogie 01 tiie rcser?ea cu ueiov the ulatfovtu. The first row was occupied by 40 of the students of the Lancashire lu deoendent Culleire. Mr. Urceaing Having roaa aa auaress to Mr. Beecher on behalf of the Union and Etna ncirjat ion Society, The Key. Mr. Ueocher turned to the audi ence te speak, bot lor eeteral minuies lis was prevented by deafening cheers, fol lowed by a few hUses, which only provoked a renewed outburst of applause ; Mr. Beecher then said: Mr. lliairman, ladies and gentlemen, the address which you have kindly pteseuted to me contain matters both pergonal and national. Interruption. My friends, we will have a whole night session but we will be heard! Loud cheers. I have not come to England to be surprised that those men whose cause cannot bear the light are afraid of free speech. Cheers. 1 have had practice of more thuu 26 years in the presence of mobs and riots, opposing those very men whose representative now attempt to forestall free speech. Hear. Little by little, 1 doubt not, 1 shall be ermiitcd to speuk tonight. Hear. Little by Utile 1 have been permitted in my own county to speak, unt'l at last the day has coiuo there wheit nothing but Un utterance of speech for Freedom is popular.' Cheers. You have been pleased to speak of me as one connected with the great cause of progress in civil and religious liberty. 1 covet no higher honor than to have my name joined as one among the list of that great company of noble Englishmen from whom we derived our doctrines of liberty. Cheers. For although 1 understand there is some opposition to what are called American ideas, what are these American ideas? The seed-corn we got in England hear; and if, on a larger sphero, aud under circumstances of unobstrucliou, we have reared mi a tier sheaves, every buef contains the grain that Ime nutdo old Eng land rich for a hundred years. Ureal cheering. I am also not a little gratified that my first appearance to speuk on secular topics in England is in this goodly town of Manchester, for 1 had rather have praise from men who undertdnnd tlieiiiiuliiy prais ed, than from those who speak fit hazard and with little aomaiutance with the sut- ject, Hear. ' And where else, more thau in theae great central portions vl r.tigland, have tbe doctrines of human rights been battled for, and where else, have there been gained for them nobler victories than here? Cheers. It is hot indiscriminate praime tnereiore; you Know wnui you taiK uoout. ; Yon have had practice iu these doctrine ; yourselves, and to be praised by those who are illustrious ib praise indeed. Checre. ! Let me say one word, however, in the beginning, in regard to this meeting, and the peculiar gratification which I feel in it. I have ground and God is my judge, and bears witness to the truth of what 1 say 1 can return to my eountrymen, and bear witness to tbe cordial kiuduess of EnglUk-mon toward America. Cheers. There has been serious doubt, The same agencies which have been to work to misrepresent good men ib our country to you, have been to us to misrepresent good men here; and when I say to my friends in America that 1 have attended such a meeting as this, received such au address, and beheld such euthuBiasm, it will be a renewed pledge of; amity, Cheers. 1 have never ceased to feol that war between two such great nationalities aa these would be one of the : most unpardonable aud atrocious otl'enses I that the world ever 1ehcld cheers, I and 1 have regarded everything, I therefore, which ficedlctfidy led to this feeling, out of which war comes, as being in itself wicked. Cheers. The same blood is iu us. Cheers. We are your children, or the children of your fathers and ancestors. Yon and we hold the same substantial doctrines. Cheers, and cries of "Turn him out,' We have the same mission' among the nations of the earth. Never were mother and daughter I set forth to do eo queenly a thing iu the: kingdom of'OodY glory as England and America. Cheers. And if you ask why they are sensitive, and why hav we hewn England with our tongue as we have, 1 will tell you why. There is no m.iu who can oflend yousodeeply as the one you love most.' Loud cheers. Men point to France and Napoleon, and say he has been joint step by step in all England has done, And why are the press of America silent against France, and why do they speak as they do against England t It is because we love .England. Cheers. i have lived through a whole period and revolution of feeling. 1 reniemlrer very well in my boyhool the then recent, war of loin. before the cmbcrt kindled in the Revolutionary War of Independence, an almost universal feeling against the Britishers, as they were called, and 1 have seen that feeling little by little dying out, and, what with common commercial interests, with, reciprocal blessing incivility and in religion, with multiplied interchanges ot friendly visits, there has come to be a feeling in America most cordial and admiring of England. ror when we searcneu our principles, they all ran back to rights in English history ; when we looked at tnose institutions ot which we were most proud, we beheld that the foundations of them, and the very foun dation stones, were taken from your histo ry ; when we looked for those men that had Uustrated our tongue, orators, or eloquent ministers of the gospel, they were English ; we borrowed nothing from t ranee, but here a fashion, and there a gesture or a custom ; but what we had to dignify humanity that made lire worth having were all brought from Old England. Cheers. . And do yon Suppose that under snch circumstances, with this crowing love, with this growing pride, with this gladness to feel that we were being associated with the historic glory of Egland, because both you and we belong to a race to the Anglo-reason race uo you suppose that it was with feelings of indifference that we beheld in our midst the heir-apparent to the British throne. (Cheers. ihcre is not reigning on the globe a sovereign who com mands our simple, unpretentious, and unaf fected respect, as your own beloved queen In America. Load cheers, 1 have heard multitudes of men say that if there was nothms for the heir-rpparent. and it was their great joy and their pleasure to pay re spect to him that bis mother might know that throng n him mat, compliment was meant to her. Loud cheers. It was an unarranged and unexpected spontaneous and universal outbreak or popular enthusi asm : it began in the colonies of Canada, the fire rolled across the border, all through New-England, all through ."New lork end Ohio, down through Pennsylvania and the adjacent Stales; nor was the element quenched nntil it came to ifichmoml. 1 said, and many said the past of enmity and prejudice is now rolled away down below the horizon of memory, a new era is eome, and we have set our hand and voices this week as a sacred seat to our cordial af fection and co-operation with England. Cheers. Mow (whether we interpreted it aright or not is not tne question) when we thought England was seeking opportu nity of going with the 8oulh against us of the North, it hurt ns as no other nation s conduct could hurt ns on the face of the globe ; and if we spoke some words of intemperate heat, we spoke them in the mortification of disappointed affection. Cheara.1 OHIO It haa been supposed that I have aforetime urged or threatened war with England. Never. Cheers, followed by a few groans, in reference to which the speaker remarked : " 1 have spoken on the prairies where buffaloes bellowed before." The observation provoked loud laughter.! This I iiawe aaid aad this I reiieat, now and here that the cause of constitutional gov ernment and ol universal liberty as asso ciated with it m our country was so dear, so sacred, that rather than betray it we would give the last child we had that we woum -ejotrclinquisu thia con met mougu other Htates rose and entered into a league with the South aud that, if it were neces sary, we could maintain the great doctrine of representative government in America against the armed world against England and France. (Great cheering, followed by soni disturbance, in reference to which the chairman arose and cautioned an individ ual under the gallery whom he had observed persisting in interruption. Let me be permitted to say that it seems to me the darker days, in so far as embroilment between this country and America is concerned, ara past. Cheers. Tba speech of Earl K usee 11 renewed cheering will go for towards satibl'yiugour people. Understand me; we shall not accept his views of the past, and the doctrines which he has pro pounded. Cheers. But the statement of the present attitude of the Government of Great Brittain, and its intentions fur the future, coupled with the detention of those armed ships of war that will takeaway the ating trom the minds of the people. Hear, hear. And although we diner from i you in respect to the great doctrine of belligerency,- the time is past to discuss that except as a question of history aad civil war. ne Jiave united so faraway from . the period in which it wus of any uie to discuss that, and the circum stances or tbe war, and your circumstances have so far changed that now we can no longer stop to discuss whether it was or was not right for Great Britian to assume this position she has assumed. She has for years acted unou it and will not c haute it; and now all that we oati ask is Let there be a thorough neutrality. Loud cheers. I believe there shall be one. Resumed cheers. If you do uot seud us a man, we Uo not ask tor a man. it you ao not trud us another ponud of powder, ive uie )j to make our own ponder. Laui'liUr.l It you do nut send us another imukct nor another cannon, we have cannon thai will carry five miles ulruady. Laughter. We do not ask for material help. Wo shall be grateful for moral sympathy cheers, but if you cannot give us moral spinpatby we shall still endeavor to do without it. But 11 that we say is. let France keep away, let England keep hands off; if we cannot man age this ltebellion by ourselves, thou it shan't be managed at all. ICheers.l The question of war, under the circumaUnvCM in which war is now carried on in our coun try, is simply a question of time. Cheers. The population is with the Norlh. The wealth is with the North. CbecH 'the education is with the North. limcrs.J The rightdoclrint'S of civil government uiv with the North. Cheers, and a voice. Where the justice? 1 it will not be lonir before one thiug more will be with Uie North victory. Loud and enthusiastic rounds ot L'heers.J Men on this side are impatient at lie long uoiay; but it we can bear il, can t you.' Langhler.J ion are quite at ease "Not yet' ; we are not. You are not materially artectcd in any such degree as many parts ot our owu laud are now. Cheers. But it the day shall come in ono year, iu two years, in ten years hence, when the old stars aod stripes shall float over every Stato of America. Loud cheers, and some disturbance from one or two. Oh, let him (the chief dis- urberl have a cliuucc. flAuirhter.! We will tuke a turn about; I will say lie sentences, and you shall make the responses. Laughter. 1 am a Coup ruga tiuna list, but 1 can muke a vory good Episcopal miuieler tot. Loud laughter. 1 was saying, wheu n?errupted by that ttoinid from the other side of tht house, that if the day shall come. n one or nvc or t,;u years, in which (ho old honored and historic hnuitcr shall float again over every fctate of tiie South ; if the lay shall come when that which was the ac- cursed cause of this dire and atrocious war slavery bhall be done away cheers if ho day shall have come when through all he Gulf States there shall be liberty of speech, as there never has been cheers it the uay Bhall come wuen there shall be iberly of tbe frees, as there never ban been ; if the day shall come when men shall have common schools to send their children to, which thoy nevur have had in the .South ; if tho day shall come when the land shall not be parceled in gigantio plaulationj, n the hands of a few rich oligarchs I loKd checrn, but shall bo parceled out to honest tanners, every man owning bib utile renewed cheers ; iu short, if the day shall come when the simple ordinances, Uie fniitiou and privileges of civil liberty shall prevail iu every part of the United States, it will be worth all the drcadlul blood, and tears, aud woe. fLoud cheers. You arc impatient; and yet God dwelleth in eternity, ami has an iiitiuite leisure to rullfurward the affairs of men, not to suit the hot impatience ol hose who are but children of a day, mid cannot wait or linger for long, but according o tbe infinite, circle on winch He measures time ami events. He expidstcs or retards as it pleiuei Him; and if Ho heard our cries or prayers, not thrice would the mouths revolve but ieacc would come. But the stroug crying and prayers of millions have not brought peace, but only thickening war. We accept the 1'iovidence; the duty is plain. Cheers. So rooted is this English people in the laitii ol nnerty, mat it. were an utterly hopeles task for uuy minion or svmpa-ihizer of the South losway the popular sym pathy of England if this English people be lieve! that mere wa none omer man a conflict between liberty and Slavery. It is just that. Loud cheers. 1 am here to be sure, in some points lo cite history, but for the most p.irt I staud a witness to testify what I have seen ol things, with which l have in timately mingled, which have been common to me since my boyhood things which I do know, and which history will establish beyond all peradveuture or controversy. uut let me go dbck a nine oeiore my time, for I am not yet iw years old. Laughter. Slavery was introduced into our country at a time, aud in a ninuner, when England nor America knew well what were the results of that atrocious system. (t was ignoruntly received and props guted on our side ; little by little it spread through all the thirteen States that then were, tor slavery in the beginning was in New Eng land, such as it now is in me ouiborn States. But when the great struggle of our revolution came on, tbe study or the doctrines of human rights had made such pro gress that the whole public mind began to think it was wrong to wage war lo Uelenu our rights while we were holding men in slavery, depriving Uiem or theirs. It is an historical fact, that all ihe great and re nowned men that nourished at the icriod of our Kevoluttoii were Abolitionists. Wash ington wsf; so was Benjamin irankliu: so was Thomas Jefferson; so was James Monroe; so were the principal irginian aad Sou Uie rn statesmen, and die first Aboli tion society ever founded in America was founded, not in Uie iNortu, but in tbe Mid dle and a portion of the Southern States. rCheers.1 Alter the Declaration or Inde pendence anu i tie auoptiou oi our constitution, slavery began to cease. It never had bee ii a very abundant institution in New England, because the habits of the people and their conscientious convictions did nol make them great friends of slavery. It has been said they sold their slaves, and preached a cheap emancipation to the South. Slavery ceased in this wise in Massachusetts: Huit was brought fr the service of a slave, and the Chief Justice declnrcd the declaration of Ihe equality of all men and their right to life, and liberty, and tbe pursuit of happiness was equivalent to Ihe bill of Emancipation, and he refused to render back that slave's services. At a later period New York brought an Emancipation Act. It has been said that she sold her slaves. No slander was ever greater. The most careful provision was made. No man traveling out of the State of New York after tho passing of the Eman cipation act. was permitted to have any slave with him, unless he gave bonds for his reappearance with him. As a matter of fact the slaves were emancipated without compensation on the spot, to take effect irmduslly class by class. But after a trial COLUMBUS. OHIO. MONDAY of half a "core of years the people found this gradual emancipation was iu tolerable. Hear, hear. It is like gradual imputation. They therefore met together, and by another act of legislation they declared immediate emancipation Thearl and that toxk effect; and ho Slavery perished in the Btate of New York. Cheers. Substantially so il was in New Jersey, and in rentlsylvania; substantially so it may be said, in respect to the Northern States, that there never was an example of nations that emancipa ted slaves so purely from moral conviction of Ihe wrong of Slavery. I know that it is said that Northern capiial and Northern ships were employed in the slave-trade. To an ex lent it was so. But is there any community that lives in whic! there are not mis- creams wno vioiaie mo puuuc moling: Cheers. Then and since, the man who dared to use his capital and his ships in this infamous traffic, hid himself, and did by agents what he was ashamed to be known to have done himself. Hear No man in the North who had part or lot i: this infamous traffic in slaves, but would have been branded with the mark of Cain. Cheers. It is true that Now Y'ork port has been employed in this internal traffic, but it was because it was unfortunately uu dor the iuflueuce either of that Bcuiooratic party that is in alliance with the Southern Slavery hear, hear or becauso it was under the dark political control of the South itself, ror when the South could appoint our marshals, when thd South appointed. through the Administration, the becretury of tiie Treasury, and the olhcers of the Cus tom-Houses in all parts of the oountry, when everything by tho political machinery jf the South wai favoring Slavery, it could not but ba tiiat there-should La lhe-.uu.uing of the gauntlet in our ports, and that the slave-trade should be carried on; but it was by tho immense majority of the people ab horred, and 'the men who did it were de tested. tbuers- there, was one Judas is Christianity therefore a hoax ? 11 ear. There are hissing men iu this audience are you not rcspee table f t huem and laughter. The folly of the few is that light which Mod cauls to uradiuto the wisdom ol the many. Hear. But wheu the Constitution itself was formed there was such a feeling opposed to Slavery that you are fa miliar with the lact that Mr. Mudisou aud Mr. Uandolph refused to permit the word "servitude' to go into that document, and on this express ground, that the time would come when Slavery was to end, and that they would not have the memorial ot snch a disgrace remaining in tbe great char ter of our liberties. Cheers. So the word was changed from "servitude ' to ''service." Hear. And let mo say one word hero abou the Constitution of America. It re cognizee Slavery as a fact, but it does not recognize the doctrine of slavery iu any way whatever; it was a (net; it hy before tho ship of state as a rock lies in the chan nel ot the ship as she goci into harbor; and because a ehip steers round a rock does it follow that that lock is in the ship? ''Hear," and laughter. And becuubo the Constitu tion ot the v nited CttaU-s made some circuit lo blear round that great fact, does it follow i lull therefore slavery ia recognized in the Constitution us a right or system. No. Sec how carefully tlmt immortal document word ed itself. In tho slave laws the slave is declared to bo what? expressly, and by the most repetition phraseology, he in denuded of ull Ihe nttributes and I'lmracicrUticH of manhood, find is pronounced a "chat tie." Shame. ) Nmv, you have just thai natup word with the h leit out "cattle. Hear, hear. And tho dillereuee between cattle aud chat- tie is the difference between quadruped and biped. Laughter. So far ns animate property is concerned, and so far as iniiniiiuilc properly in concerned, it is just llie differ- uce between locomotive property aud sta tionary property. Hear, bear. Now, nil the Slave State etand on the radical principle that a Blavc is not for purposes of law any longer to be ranked in the category ol human beings, but that is a piece ot prop- perty, and to be treated to till intents ana purposes as apiece of property; and the law did not bluh, nor do Ihe judges blush now-a-days who interpret that law. Hear. mitbow lsii mat me constitution ot the United States, when it begins to speak ol these very same slaves, names them? DoeB it call them " slaves JJoes it speak of them as in "service?1 It litis itself up ns if consciously inspired with the grandeur of the thought and dignity of man, and nys " 1'crsons hem to service. I Hear and cheers. Go to South Carolina, and ask what sue calls slaves, aim if says " things; and the old Capitol at Washington sullenly reverberates, "N,o persons f Cheers. Go to South Carolina, and her fundamental article says she looks upon slaves as things;" and again the Constitution echoes "No persons. Hear. Go the charter ot Louisiana with their Constitution, or to the South Western Slave States, and still that i doctrine of devils is enunciated it h chattel," it is "thing. Looking upon those for whom ChriHt felt mortal iiugiiish in Uelhaenmne. ami stretched him Belt in death on Calvary, their laws call them still things, ' and "chatties ;" and still in sup pressed tones of thunder the Constitution of tho United States says' ' persons." Cheers. What was it, then, when the country had advanced so far toward uni versal emancipation iu tuc period ot our national formation that stopped this onward lido? Two thing';, commercial and political. First, the wonderful lemand for cotton throughout the world, coupled with the facility for producing it, arising from the invention of the cotton gin that introuueed a new ciemeut oi vuiue. SInves that before had been worth from SHOD to $100, began to be worth gotH. That knocked away one-third of our adherence to the moral law. then afterward they be came worth f TiHl, and half the law weut cheers and laughter; then y00 or gWO, and then there was no such thing ns moral ' law cheers aud laughter; then Sl.OtMJ or jJlJOO, and Slavery became one of the beatitudes on the mount. Cheers and laughter. 1 When Moses wrote his laws, delivered by the Highest, he wrote them on tables of stone; but when the devil, through his minion, wrote his laws, he wrote them on silver. Cheers and loud laughter.) Their pocket ia their Mount Sinai encore and laughter;! they are the lineal descendants of those who before worshipped the golden calf. Cheers. The other cause which prevented the progress of emancipation that had already so suspiciously begun was the political cause. The policy of America has been shaped by the essential spirit of slave-holding Southerners. All the aggression, the filibuster; oil' the threats to England, and the taun tings of Europe, and all the belligerence our Government has assumed, have becu under the inspiration and under tbe almoHt monarchist sway of the Southern oligarchy. Loud cheering. And now, since Britain has been snubbed by the Southerners, and threatened by the Southerners, and domineered over by the Southerners "No !", yet now Great Britain has thrown licr arms of love around the Southerners and turns from tho Northerners. "Nol' She don't? Cheers. 1 have only to say that she has been caught in very suspicious circumstances. Laughter. But I have said it, perhaps, as much as (my thing else, for this very sake to bring out from you this expression to let you know what we know, that all the hostility felt in my country toward Great Britain has been sudden, aud I want you to say to me, and through me to my countrymen, that ik'se irritations against the North, and those likings for the South, that have been expressed in your papers, are not the feol- tuga of the great mass oi your nation. Great cheerirg, the audience rising. These cheers already sound in my ears as the coming acclamations of friendly na tions those waving nanancrcmeis are the white banners that symbolize peace for all countries. Cheers. Join with us, then.) Britons. ICheers.l trom you we learned the doctrine of what a man was worth; from you we learned to detest all oppressions; from rmi we icarneu mm it was tue noblest thing a man could do to die for a principle. Cheers. And now, when we are set in that very course, and arc giving our best blood for principle, let tbe world understand that when America strikes for the liberty of the slave aud of the cemmon people, Great Britain indorses her. Cheers. And now 1 come to the period in which l myself became an actor. Loua cheers. From that time to this time there haa been no important movement on the subject of public affairs in the connection or slavery, '.hat I have not either had a part in it or STATE MORNING,, OTpBER 26, 1863. benh a most Interested and Intimate ober-verof it, and I shall tell you, not a hat I be lieve, but what 1 know. Hear, beir.I it was extremely difficult to get the voice pf llie put-lie. inose mat nrsi Biaempieu u were made' well nigh martyrs. t I remember full well when Burueas Preal was mobbed in Cincinnati and dragged into the Ohio, fur no other reason than lor anu-aivery sentiments. I remember the early martyrdoms, and for two years, with my pookeis fiUed wilh uistols to the horror, 1 suppose, ol those peace-loving Slavery mea 4 patrolled the streets, made a special constable for the defense of these pour creatures, houses, i suppose it was very naughty to meddle wilh bre-nrtus; but then1 I was not minuter; (hen I was only a student fur the miniairy, and 1 did not lire the pisude oft' nce. Mr. Weld, Mr. Garrison, Allan rJitrwart now gone aud a multitude of men whom ought to have prepared myself to mention, that 1 might not, in mentioning the few seem to ueglect the many. These wore the pioneers. You have been pleased to say in this address that I have been ono of those pioneers. 1 unloosed - the shoe-latches of those pioneers, .and that is all -I was but little more, thau a boy, and 1 bear witness thut the hardest hhtivs and the most cruel sufferings were endured by men be fore J was thrust fur enough lutopupuc me ta taktf any particular share, and I do not consider myself entitled te rauk among ihe pioneers. They were better saen than 1. those noble men nui reeist tiu uowvwara tendency of the North. ' Tbeywore rejected by society. To be called aa Abolitionist excluded a man from reepectable society in those days. Jo be called an Abolitionist blighted any man's prospect in political life in thosd da vs. To be called AAbolitioiiist marked a man's store his very customers avoided him as if he had the plague. To be called an Abolitionist in those days shot up the doors of confidence trom him iw the church, aud he was regarded as a disturber of the peace. Nevertheless, thevMna in tam ed their testimony. fLoud cheers. Little by littlo they gained the conscience; they gain ed the understanding And as, when old Lu ther spoke, thundering in tbe ear or r.u- rope the long-buried treasures of the Bible, (here were hosts against him, ana the elect few, nevertheless, gathered little by Utile themaelvcB. Muny Luthors thundered Uod B trulh of human liberty, and they were fol lowed more and more for hulf a score of years, until they began to bo numerous enough to be an influential army iu the State elections. Cheers. In IBIS, 1 think it was. when that Buffalo platform was laid, it was tho first endeavor in tho Northern States to form a plutform that ebould carry rcbuko to the slaveholdiug ideas in theNorth. Before this, however, there was help given us from the South: and lean say that, under God, the South have doue more to bring on this work of emancipation than the rsorth itself. Hear, hear. First they began to leclare. after the days of Mr. Calhoun, that hey accepted slavery no more as a una forma', but as a divine bleating. Mr. Cal houn advanced tho doctrine which is now the marrow of seceMsion, that it was the luty ot Government not merely to protect States trout interference, but that it woe the duty of tho General Government to muke Slavery equal with Liberty. Cheers. These monstrous doctrines began to be the levelupment of future ambitions. Ihe South having tho control of Ourcrnmcnr, know from the'luhereut weakness of their stem that if it were confined U was as n huge flock of herds pasturing on small pastures, that soon gnaws the grays to the roots, and mitft have other pasture or it die. rCheors.l Sluvery is of such a na- u ro that if you do not give it continual hange or feeding ground it muni uie. I it o- newed cheering. 1 And then en me one after i another the assertions of the South of right m.'ver dreamed ot. rroin them came the Mexican war for territory; from them came Texas and its entrance as a slave State; from hem came that organized rowdyism In Congress that brow-bent every Northern man who had not sworn fealty to slavery. that filled nil the conns of Europe with minister holding slave doctrines; that gave the majority of the seats on ho Bench to slave-owning judges; and that gave, in lact, nil our chief of fices ot trust to either slave owners, or to men who licked the feet of slavc-hulding men. Loud cheers. Then on me that ever-memorable period, when, for the very purpose of humbling tho North, and making her drink the bitter cup of humiliation, and making them understand that Uie North was inferior and the South their natural lords, was (Missed the Fugitive Slave bill. Loud hisses There was uo need of that. 1'bere was already existing just as good an instrument for bo Infernal a purpose as any fiend could have wished. Against the tntamy my mil rvoltp.l. und these llns nrotcsted. andJ I defied to its face the Government and told them "1 will nave none 01 your utirigiiteous laws ; send to me that fugitive who is flee ing from his master, und 1 will step between liiiu and his pursuer." 'Loud aud prolonged choci'S. Not ouce, nor twice, havo my doors shut between oppression and the oppressed ; and the chhrch itself over which I minister haa beeu the unknown refuge of uiauy and many it one. fCheors.l liut whom the devil piouiieos he cheats. Laughter. That peace, that was the 30 pieces of silver paid for the Christ of man, turned into hre and burnt the hands thut took il. For how long was it utter this promised peace th:it- tiie Missouri Compromise wus abolished in an infauioua disregard of holy compacts. Loud cheers. it never ought to have beou inado; but, haviug been made, it ought never to. have been broken by tiie South. Cheers. And wilh no other pretense tnnn the robber's pretense that might makes- right, thoy did destroy it, that they might carry slavery farther North. That was what was needed to arouse the long reluctant patriotism of the North. I Cheers. iiy uie abolition ot this Compromise, another Slave State was immediately to have been brought iuto the Union to balance tho ever growing tree Territories of the North-Weal. Then it was that there arose a majesty that had no record thus far, and has had uo parallel, and, instead of merely protesting, young men and maidens, laboriug men, farmers and mechanics, all of theni sped with a sacred desire to rosette free territory from the toils of Slavery, and emigrated in huudredB and in thousands, that wheu the territory should come in to vote, it should vote aa a Free State. fLoud cheers. A more infa mous aud atrocious system of cheating uov er was practiced lhau by which the South sought, by perjury, by intimidation, by the prostituted use of the United States Army, to force a vilo system upon these unwilling uien who had voted almost unanimously for liberty and againat Slavery in that Slate. Hear. Hut at last the day ot utter dark ness had passed, aud the gniy twilight was on tho morning ot tbe homon. At Inst, for the first time, 1 believe, in tho whole conflict between the South and the Nurth, the victory wont to the North, and Kansas became a free State. Cheers. Kansas beeamo an impulso that was given to popular feeling, und iu 18641 Mr. Fremont was nominated tor the l'restdency. He came so near to being cleoted that, but for an enormous chesting in the polls of Pennsylvania ho would huve heeu elected; but, instead of Mr. Fremont, Mr. Uuchauan was returned. Hisses. We aimed at an eagle and hit a buzzard. Laughter. Now 1 call you to witness that, in a period of 2o or HO years of constant conflicts with the South, at every single atep they gained the advantage, with the exception of Kansas. What wus the conduct of tho North? Did they threaten Secession ? No. Did they threaten violence ? No. So sure were they of the ultimate triumph of that which was right, provided free speech was left to combat error and wrong, that they patient ly bided their time. Hy this lime the North was cured of its love of or iuditTer-euco to Slavery. Hy this titne a new conscience had been formed in tho North, and a vast majority of all Ihe Northern men at this lime stood fair and square on the doctrine of Anti-Slavery. Cheers. It went through all the quicksands of that iutaraous demonstration of four years, in which sen ators, sworn by the constitution, wero plot- ting machinations to destroy tbe liovern- meul, in which the members of the cabinet who drew their pay month by month, used their time and their official position tosUal arms, to prepare fortifications, to make ready, and in which the most astounding spectacle that the world ever saw was wit nessed our groat people paying men to sit in places of power and office to r9Vl'"t'n h hen rtT.' JOURNAL. betray them. Hear, hear. - During all those fbur years what did wa t we protes ted, and waited, and aaid:. "God give us the victory for it is God's truth that we ivi-Id and God's truth we promote, and with God, in his good time, shall be the giving of the victory; Ureal cneering.j in an this time we never made an inroad on the rights of tha South., Cheers. We never uked ftir. retaliatory law. We never taxed their commerce, or touched it with our little ti..s.r Wm rni-ied them none of theirmsn- ufactories; but sought to promote ibem. We did not attempt to anaie, ny twin wuw, their material prosperity; we longed for their prosperity, Cheers. Slavery we aLways hated ; the Southern men never. Cheers. They were wrong-' And in oar conflicts with them we have felt as all men in eonfiiota feel. We were jealous and so were they. We were in the right cause ; they in- the wonig. Cheers. We never envied them their territory ; aud it was in the heart, and it was the faith of the whole-North, that, in aeekiug for the abatement of it very, and its final abolition, . wa wore oonferriug upon the South the greatest boon which one nation, or part of a nation, could confer upon another. That she was to come down, and pas through the valley of hu-miliaUon during the progress of her iuslir tut urns till she passed from forced labor to free labor, I have no doubt ; but it was not in our heart to humble her, but rather to help and sympathize with her. I defy time and history to point to a more honorable conduct than that of the free North toward the Houth during all these days. Iu 18oU Mr. Lincoln was elected. Cheers. I aak vou to take notice of the oon-1 duot of the two sides at this point. For tnirir vears we bad been experiencing seo- n . .... ... ..v . i. - Cu.il... rional defeats at the bands of tht Souther ner. For thirty years and more we naxi seen our aona proscribed, because loyal to liberty, or worse than proscribed suborned ana maae suoserrionv ui.t.ij. w I... I ireu our'iiidecs corrupt, our minis- mnaiite. our merchants running head- loug after gold against principle; but we maintained our fealty to the law and Constitution, aud bad faith iu victory by lcgiti- uuuo means. But when, by the means pointed out by the Constitution, and ssnc-tloned by the usage of three-quarters of a century, Mr. Lincoln, in a wir, ojreu u.iu, was elocted President of the United States, ,11,1 il,. South submit? fCries of "Xo," and cheers ! No offense had been committed none threatened ; but the arrogation was that the election of a man known to be pledged against the extension or slavery was not compatible with the safety of slavery in ili. Month, and on that ground they took steps for secession. Every honest mode to prevent it, all patience on the part of the North all pusillanimity on the part of Mr. R,.i,.n.n. While ho eat. before his euo- oesaor came into office, he left nothing uu- done to make matters worse, uiu uoiumg to make thines better. The Korth was patient then, the South impatient. Then cauio the iteps. The question was put to the South, und with tne exception oi oouiu v.io.im., overy State In the South gave a popular voto against seoessiou; aud yet such was tho jugglery of political leaders, before a few mouths hud passed they had precipitated every Slate iuto secession. That could uover have been where there was common people. ' - hist all these facts it is attcuipt- od to make Eugland believe that Slavery has had nothing to do witn mis war. imugu-tcr.l You might as woll have attempted to persuade Nonb that the clouds had nothing i , iln wiih tho Hood: perhaps some man will attempt to persuade you that the palm trees nd orange trees win grown,, run unu Pole; perhaps some one will persuade you next that tliero is no sand in the great desert. It is the most monstrous absurdity ever born in the wouib ot folly. cnecrs.j .Nothing to do with Slavery 1 It had lo do with nothing else, t.'heevs.l Slavery was the mother of Kcbellion. Cheers. J the father of it was O, no, , never mention him. Much laughter. Against this withering fact against this dimming allegation what is their escape? The attempt is to my the North is just as bad as the South. Laughter. Sow we aro coming to the marrow of it. Cheers. If tho North is ns bud as the South, why did not the South find it out before you did? If the North has boon in favor of oppressing the black man, and just as much in favor of Slavery as the South, how is it that the South has gone to war against tho North because of their belief to tho coutraryf A voice "Slavery doeB not pay in the North." Gentlemen. I hold in my hand a published re port of tho speech of tho amiable, iutolli- gent, una oreouiouB rrcsiiieui, i uouim., or tho Society for Soutueru luacpenuence. rLauirhler.1 I have some ouriositieB in it. Laughter. That yon may know that Southerners are not all dead yet, 1 will read a puragraph: "The South naslaDoredUitueriouuuer too imputation, and It had constantly been thrown in die teeth of all who supported that struggling nation, that they by their proceedings wore teudiug to support the ex-istence of Slavoiy. This was un impression which he thought thoy ought carefully to endeavor lo remove cheers and laughter, because it was one which was injur-ous to their cause oncers nol only nmoug those who had 111 feeling of an Englishman of a horror of Slavery but, alBO, because strong religious bodies in this couutry made a point of it, and felt it very strongly indeed. Choers. 1 never like to epeak behind a roan's back I like to apeak right to men'B faces what 1 have to say and I could wish the higher felicity than that which has been accorded to me to-night might huve been given to have the Lord Wharuclitle present, that I might address to him a few simple and artless Christian inquiries. Cheers. For there ran bo no question that there i" a strong impression that the South has had something to do wilh Slavery. Cheers. Indeed, on our side of tho water there are many persons who affirm it. Laughter aud cheers. And, as his Lordship thinks that it is the peculiar duty of this now agglomerated and agglutinated association for Southern independence to do away with that impreeeion, I beg to submit to them that, in the first place, thoy ought to do away with four millions elavos in llie South; for I, for my own part, cannot but any that I think there are uncharitable men enough living in this world to think that a nation that has four million slaves in it has a good deal to do wilh supporting slavery. Cheers And when he was done that, it might, perhaps bo pertinent to suggest to his Lordship that there should be a little something done to tie Montgomery Constitution of the South, which is changed from tho old Federal Constitution in only one or two points, the most essential of which is that it introduced and legalized slavery, and makes it unconstitutional ever to do away with it ; and they are under that Constitution. Now, I submit that that wants scrubbing a little. Cheers. Thou I would rosueotl'ully lay it at his lord ship's feet inoro boautitully embossed, if I could, than his address to me is tne speech of V ice-Proaident Stephens" hoar, hear " in which he declares that all nations have been mistaken, and that the subjugation of an inferior race is the only proper way to 1 maintain the liberty of a superior; in which he teaches Calvary a new lesson in which he gives the lie into uie lace or tne Savior himself, who came to teach us that by as much aa a man was stronger than another, he owed himself to the olhsr. Loud cheers. Not aloue are Christ's blood-drops our salvation, but Iheso word-drops of sacred truth which cleause the heart and conscience by ihe emrcBsiou ol precious trams and prin ciples, tneuiselves are our salvation as well as the atoning blood; and if there be in the truths ot Christ one mora eminent than another, it is " He that would be chief, let him be the servant of all." But this audacious hierarch of infidelity, Mr. Slcphens,iu tbe face of God, and before mankind, in this day of universal Christianity, declares that the way for a nation to have manhood is to cruxh out Ihe liberty of an inferior aud weaker race. And he declares ostentatiously and boastingly lhat thefoun-dat ion of the Southern republic is on that corner-stone. Loud cheers, "No, no," and renewed oheers. L beg leave, when next Lord VYharncliffe speaks for the edification of this delighted hnglisb people laughter I bee leave lo submit that this speech 0! Mr. Stephens requires a little scouring. T Annlause.l And then, if all Uie other alle gation, and evidences that the South are NUMBER 102. upholding slavery are to be the peculiar work of tha SeiiLhero-IndepeaiWace Association, not Hercules in his palmy days had such work and wages before him as they have got. Loud cheers.' We shan't be troubled with them. They will be knee-deep and elbow-deep iu their business of scrubbing and securing, and Lord tt a ra tline may bid farewell lo the sweets of domestic leisure and lo the pursuits of the interests of state, and all its amusemeuta hereafter will be scrubbing and scouring. Loud cheers. But there is auother- precious paragraph that J will read ; 'Jle believed that the strongest supporter of slavery were the merchants' of New York and Boatou. He alwava nndnnrt.1 and had never seen the statement contradicted, that the whole of the ships fitted out j for the transport of slaves from Af- rica to Cuba were owned bv NoHhnrnv." luoau lAuguter.j Hi. lorJhin. if fa. -ill .1 .1. lo road my .peecli, shall liear it contradicted in llie nioji explicit ternu. There have been enough Northern thipa engaged, but not 1jt any means all, nor the aioat. Baltimore haa pre-euiuence in that, matter; Charleston, and Nei, (Jrleauj, and Mobile, all of them. And those nhipa fined out in New Vork were jtrat aa loach despised, and loathed, and biased by the honouble mer-obants of that great metropolis, as if iliey had put np Uie black flap; of -pii acr. Loud cheers. Koes it eondm-e to good- feoling between two nations 10 make em-h atrocious slanders a these? His lordship goes ou tossy; . 1 ' -- " m.o wfuvr "That in the Northom States the slaro was plncsd in even a vorse position than he was in tbe South. He spoke from ex- i pensnce, nariug yisiicu tne country twice.' r .... ...I ... ... . .111 iuuii iuijiiw.!, .uo yvi gi.uueu, lo learn that Lord Wharnclifle speaks of the Buffering of the slave from experienoe. Laughter and checre. X never was aware that he had been put in that unhappy situation. Has he toiled on the sugar plantation? Una be taken the night for his friend, avoiding the dsy? lias lie sped through cane-brakes, hunted by hounds, suffering hunger, and heat, and cold by turns, until he has made his way to the far Northern States 1 Cheers Haa he had the experience ? The grammar is good. It is the word experience I call attention 10. If hie lordship says that it is his observation, I will accept the correction. I meant to hare said a good deal more to you than 1 have, or shall have time to say. "Uo on." I havo endeavored to plaoa bo- lorc you tuosc laots wnion go to snow tnat Slavery was the real cause of war, and that if it oame to the citation of facts whether North or South were the most guilty in this matter, thrro could be no question, I think, before any honorable tribunal, any jury, and deliberate body, that the decision will be that the South from beginingto end, for the sako of Slavery, has beeu aggressive, and the North patient. Since the war broke out, the Nortk ba- been more and more coming upon the high ground of moral principle, until now the Government has taken around for Emancipation. Groans and countor cheers, and a Voico, "Go homo." 9 no suppuBO Hint it is wise la scpornte tho interest of the slave from the interest of the other people on the Continent, and to inaugurate a policy which took in himalono? He has got to stand or fall with all of ns hear, hear, and the the only sound policy fur the N'orth, of the South, of the blacks and of tho whites cheers, and we hold that the maintenance of the Union the fun damental principles which aro contained in the Declaration Of Independence and the Constitution that this is Ihe way to secure to the African ultimately his rights and his best estate. So thut. in this way the North did come into this oontlict with the prayer, tue nope, miner tunu, 1 nad niuiost said, the expectation, that God would bless their endeavor to the perfection of liberty over all our continent. Loud cheer. The condition of tho North was that of a shin carry ing passi-ugvi-s tempest tosed, and while the sailors were laboring, and tho cuptaui and officers directing, some grumblers would come up from among Uie passengers and say. "lou are all the time working to save the ship, but you don t caru to save the passengers." I should like to know how you would eavo tho passengers so well as by takeing care of tho ship. At this point the Chairman read to the meeting the telegrams, relative to the seizure of the rams at Liver pool. The effect was startling : Ihe whole audii-nco rose to their feet, w hile cheer after oheer was giveu: 1 have aaid thut tt would give me great pleasure to.uuswer any courteous questions luui uiigui ue proposed to lue. it 1 cannot answer them I will do the next beat thing tell you so. Hear. The length to which this meeting, has been protracted,: and the very great conviction that I seem to have wrought by my remarks on this Pentecostal occasion in yonder Gantile orowd loud laughter I, admonish me that we had better open some kind of "mooting of inquiry," lleuewod laughter. . It will give me great pleasure, as a gentleman, to receivo questions from any gentleman fhcar, hear), and to give such reply as is in ni.y power 'n.n .au.Mn ....... 1. ...... :! .1 ........ .uu .wv.uuu Htu,l.mu 1VUMIIIVU BlUUU- ing for a few moments, as if to give tho opportunity of interrogation, but no one rising to question him, he Bat down amid groat cheers. The speech lasted Hourly !l hours. IHE KEMOVAL OF GENERAL ROSECRAXS. fSouie of ill Governiuont'a stannous for lire Step. Wasiiisoios, Wednesday, Oct. 21. Tho romoval of Itosccrans is tho Bubicct of much and contradictory comment. Tho more correct understanding of tho causes that led to it iB that charges were preferred against him by Gens. McCook and Chittenden of unoflicer-liko couduct on tho battlefield, of a pauic-strioken flight from Ihe field to Chattanooga, while tho battle was in its orisis, and of his unsoldierlv and mis. chievous conduct in publicly reporting, on v.B,,aUvuj lu UvU' UUiUeil BUU men, that the day was lost. Superadded to this is alleged Governmental resentincni of his disobedience of positive orders not to risk a general engagement by advancing beyond Chattanooga before he was reinforced ; also, its impatience of his disposition and handling his troops ou the fluid. The reputation for courage that ha won at Stone River is plead in bar to the imputation of cowardice in his abandonment of the battle ground, and his friends attribute it to a mistaken lmpreesion that his army had been wholly whipped and was wholly on the retreat. The replication to this is that such a mistake is a complete disqualification for command. The statement acnuiring growth that he had an attack of epilepsy during the battle, anu tnai ne was suDject to that discs so, is untrue; but that he was constitutionally aud by education subject 10 tils of religious depression of the profoundest character, is correct, though he was au austere Roman Catholio, as is woll known, lu conuection with this if may not be unsuitable to add that it is understood that tho fourth epeciff-oation of the preferred charge is an exces sive uso of opium. The relations between General Rosecrans aud the General-in-Chief, Hnlicck, have been bad. A sharp correspondence took place between them after Uie battle of Chatta nooga, and befora that the Government had found fault with his military conduct on several occasions, and he had retorted by sharges of neglect by the Government and want or support. Ilis removal has been in contemplation for Borne time. Tub Mtruouior Coniehknci. Asn x Kt- ponTEB. At a nicetiug of the Mutl-mliat (Jonlevence, iu Illinois, a reporter lor itie St. Louis Republican aud I he Spn ug UcUl. t 111. ) Jfiyufer (an imng mhos lit sheet) w.gespeuea from the meeting by a unanimous vole, for giving a garbled account otthe pi'oceeaiugs of a previous meeting. Ami though the re- solution of oxpulaiou wa a withering rebuke, .... ' . . . he failed to "aee it in that light, whereup- on two of thoeltloraiuiormeUnioj, iu a man ner he oould appreciate, that it was one thing to pass a resolution, and another to put it in force, ri tt armny if need be, and, seeing preparations on foot to that end, ho walked out to return no more. Twas well, for 1'bter Cartwriout was tJipre 1 BOOKS & STATIONERY American Flags, ; If atllB rUvff. BaaHna- Fla, sstk Vlaga, .- avaaUl aaa ducm.i j ia aa uj-a ana aiaoa t - (tar, of tit aacat aulora and Uat ataka. ,c . . PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS. Tbarlaat,ftaaplartaat Mock a K and vary chaap. Card Pictara fur aajaa. ' hpWHU aoUrUu, tha laraaat aut tat FIXE STOlTriCTTRES! -... Am1 rratuas t Mulch, at . f .U.k aa k of SHirPINO BOOKS. 4,tl i to au? nod of UDsortatUa, aad of th bt ataa-I tuactura. M, A A. , GOV. JOHN BROUGH. Tbr lt Likne of thi dlMlngubhed avaa nt.' Mian. I'Hc-tai.oi). rWt Can. Ptc torePrice 2V. A llbaral d(coBm to beak-r. ' " - . I -A. T 33X1. TPIA.3rm .. , Something Xewl " ') 14U1&. OB Bound Stick.. Beutirnl Colon, om I l-l-r-wll im. .uou, .un - .a, j nor iipiN p run 10c eiuaiy; 7fe ir dot., and 16.50 per 100. feud ordure lo KiXDlU tl ASTOVfla att10 lo South Hlh St , Cwlambo, O. GOVERNMENT LANDS. Government Lands in Ohio. Nutk;e is hereby given that certain Lauib tiiaatrd iu the count la of PanldiDtr, Pa-fUaoa. finnan, Van Wart, Usury, Aualaisa, bLelby aud WyatiJ -t, in tUtt Stat of Ohio, eoihraclaf In tha aagrofatf, 2,t23.i7 aire, (inoatlr io tha Brat masi ll jaej i-t'uuiy), winch hare hamtofora baa wltohald from market, will l laid opn to ! at tha Land. Ottlc, at CWLUi-MUli, on , : Monday, the 2d day of November next, at 92M rr ntr. th minimum prio tzd by law. Tlutao LaDd. wilt U vn to aal aiui fra compotl-tlon fur a period or tj wwki from commtiolDaBt of aula, aad ail lucb tract aa ramaln uoaoUt at tha end of two wtka, will It aubjvet to ordinary prlvBta utry at tha approi-rd minimum nf f2 Au par acra A acbflulu panic utility deMrlbiiig th lodlridaat tract, will Im ojjun fur examination at tiia dlttrtot ottica at I hllllootW Ohm undur my hanJ. at tba City of WaablDftllt thi 25th day ot AUkcnit. A. D., liWB. , J. It. tBMUUDS, t'oromlitilonur of th Ocncral Land Oflk. CLOTHING. THE PROPRIETOR 1 EW YORK Clothing Store CuugrfetulatM hioiMlf that til. former ffbrt to meet th want of hid customer hav bean appreciated, and with eitra aatlafactlon he cell to attan tlon of all hi old etu tumor, and any on wanting the BEST and mutt to bis atock which be U dally reclTiog. aortmaut of French Cassimeres COATINGS liave beeu talattad with ureal cat ; and wa think wa do not k-poak at random in saying, ao handsom a lot of Good were never brought Into the city of Oolnna bu as wa open to lntpoctlon. In order that our liouse uay ooutlnue to take aha lead In making the most . Fashionable and Stylish UUB CCTTIH, J. H. PARSONS, 1 (Who hitherto staud nnrlTalUd In thi olty for ant-ting good fitting garment) has visited New York, that he may know tha newest and latest style, anil wnaguaaaniM that any garment leering this Establishment ahajl be perfect In Ot and or th latest tyte. Our stock ol - i Ready-Made Clothing1 1 ol better make than usually kept by Clothing olerchaut ; most of them arc Custom make, equal In quality and make to our Custom Mad Goods. Knowing the need of a good assortment of - Wa offer for Innpeotlutt tho largest assoi tmant aver brought Into this city, which will comprlaa Boy Suits and Overcoat 1, from 3 to 20 year of age, and la fact everything for Boya wear. i Fatigue Suits and Uniforms . For Officers, made a usual tn a superior tuauaer from good which retain their color. A. larg stock of Gents' Furnishing Goods ; Always ou hand to all of which w cordially invite Impaction. F.D.CLARK, J 121 South High Street. CoLt-Mnrs, September, ISflS. wpt-tj oneg-M mui WHOLESALE i CLOTHIERS, JMK'HTtKS AND DEALERS IN Foreign and Domestic Dry Ms, 10G Pearl st, north side, and 117 West Third st. Between Vine aud Itece streets, oiisrai3r3r-A.Tip o. Particular attention paid to order. A1o, Pealera in Gents' Furnlflhing Good. novW'03-dly MERCHANT TAILOR, Corner High & Town Sts., (Oj.pi.He th. Culted Bute. Hol.l,) AVISO U'ST RKTUBNETJ FROM THK CAST th a laree stock of Good In mv line. I asa ' generally, Iftrgains equal to any establishment la now irt'iaii!(i iu uiier w my j-nnuu auu ma puuiio ; '"ij;k0Bib f y grade .nd.tyleaofih j ins coops TV THK MARKET roB OKN- iLlvWKfc d WKAK, 0f Ukh 1 tu'iteau examination. My prlcw are a low a can be offered by any other I n. . . i.. ii,alit. 1 nava nmnlMMul .nwrt.. " ' r aud Good Artistic Cutter from Philadelphia, and will warrant the beet of. flu ami th bfst of workmanship. E-pedsrt attention I paid n Military Oflom work, and a good stork nf Umxls in that line always on ht nil. Respectfully, septf-dtf P.BOSaJ. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84024216 |
Reel Number | 10000000025 |
File Name | 1049 |