The press. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1857-1880, September 19, 1864, Image 1

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    THE PRESS,
717 1 / 1 1:0 11 D DAILY,. (817NDAY8 EXCIPTID 3
BY JOHN W. PORNBY. .
of/lOL No. 111 SOUTH roma STUNT.
THE DAILY PEEKS,
to City Sttbseribeie, is Tan Domain Pea Armor. in
Advance; or Twiny CENTS PER WEEK, payable to
the Carrier.' Mailed to Subscribers out of the city.
jTIFS DOLLAIE PER ANNUM: Four+. DOLLARS AND PUTT
CINTSIOII 131Y.BIONTE9; Two DOLLARS AND TWILNTr.
FM CEITE Etoll:PßE.Eit MONTHS, invariably in advance
for the time ordered. •
Advartleenteuts inserted at the usual rates.
TRIER TRI.WERILLY ,PRESS,
Mailed to Sobsoribero, FIVE DoLLEas PEE AASUM, IIL
cAvancs.
EDIICATIONAL.
MRS. BEECH . AND .DAVWEITER
Will re-open their Academy at the elegant Bill
Room i southeast corner of BROAD and SPRING GAR
DEN Streets, on SATURDAY, September 17. where they
will continue .giving lemma every 'TUESDAY and SA
TURDAY,,at 2 P. M. when all the most fashkonable
European and Amerleha Dances will be taught. Refe
rences to the first familieh in this ckty, who have placed
their children under their charge.
PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT:"-Tn connection with
'Which, they will introduce Dr. 'Lewis' far-famed Light
Gymnastics. for the full development of the Lungs and
etrengthening the . Muscles and Spine. Those objecting
to Dancing can receive lessons in the above ceps ateli.
with .Walking, Moving Introductions, Ste. Lessona
giVen in Schools and private families: Evening Class
now forming. Residence No. 1431 North TWELFTEI
.
Street. sel7-St*
EYEING INSTRUCTION AT THE
QUAKER CITY BUSINESS COLLEGE. See adver
tisement elsewhere In Oda paper.. eeti-St
- -
TO NOTING MEN. THE BICBT. WAY
to - mimed in business is to prepare: for it in the
best manner, and the moat valuable investment you
can make is to sectire a satires of lastntetion at
TB It QUAKER BUSINESS.COLLEGE,
N. :E. CORNER TENTH AND CHETINUT Streets.
an Institution affording advantages of the very highest
order, being conducted upon a system of
:. ACTUAL liiThINEBI3 TRAINIMG,
origivat and. pre-eminently prod - teal, • under the
management of gentlemen of education and ektengiva
experience In business.
The. system of instruction combining THROAT and
TRAOTICE in the most perfect manner, Presents and's-.
pitted advantages over the merely theoretical methods
of ordinary Commercial Colleges." •
This Inetitntion has been Ihe pioneer in
4 , • tUDERN IMPROVEMENTS,
and now 'Offers in the substantial and practical value of
its course of instruction, and in all its appointments,
unequalled inducemeste to those who would Insure *ne
ctars in any employment or business, by the best prom.
ration for its duties.
INSTRUCTION IN
Book.keeping, Penmanship,n Commercial Calculation.s,
Comnierolal Law, Engineering, Survey tog, Nistiga.
lion, Telegraphing &c., DAY and EVENING.
TELEdRAPHING BY SOUND,
and all the ditties appertaining to Telegraphing as a
profession, is pracheally , taught 'by • au •operater• of
eleven yearge•experience ;students being allowed after
come practice to work on the wires ex teading4k-vari
one otherotticee in and out of the city. In this Mariner
they are fitted for the regular duties common to - tele
graph lines without another day's practice on any line,
and are ready to sit down at the operatingttable and
Bain a good eaten'
Nowhere else-In the world can such advantageabe ob
tained. Call and read letters from our graduates, who
are.now scattered all over the country. •
Call or send for an Illustrated Circular. •
sel7•3t • L. FAIRBANICS,.A. Af.. Principal.
A CADF;MY OF THE PROTESTANT
• L ' A. EPISCOPAL CHURCH, LOCUST and JUNIPER
Streets.
The Autumnal Seeeion will open on MONDAY, Sep.
tember fi, 'Applications for admieeion .may be made at
the Academy building. on and after Monday, Atrial ,
2,5, between 10 and 12 o'clock A; K.
JAMES W. ROBINS, A M.,
tul6-mwflBt i . Head. Master.
'TTOMCEOPATHIC MEDICAL
LllOll CM PENNSYLVANIA, . FHILADELPRIX—
&AIm' of 1111144 begins OCTOBER 10. , •
FACIILIY.—(I. Bering, M. D., practice; LfAsk,
M. D. , mat. med. ; H. N. OnernseY,obst. ; C. G.
Kane, M. D. diagnostics; G. R. StarkeVlS.D.
M ,, gml.
Wilson,.. D. , anal . ; C. Heermann, sporgoi.
Prof.'.litephens. chemistry.
Address C. HEERMAN, M.D.pean.
Me 1• f w ISt , 1105 FILBERT Street.
VCICENDORFF'S MILITARY AGA:-
-■-• BEVY will reopen on MONDAY, 19th lust:, at 4
o'clock P. hI. at the CITY • IN6TITUTB,.N. B. corner
EIGHTEENTH and CHESTNUT Streets. Fdr Circulars
apply to HOlt T & BROTHER, TEN TEI an d CHESTNUT
Streets, or to major O. BOKENDORFF, 1903 'COATES
Street.. " Belo 8t
VILLAGE .GREEN SE M Ili A R
MILITARY BOARDING SCHOOL, four miles from
MEDIA, Pa. Thorough coarse in Mathematics; Classics,
:Natural Sciences, and English; practical lessons in Civil
Engineering. Pupils received at any time, and of all
agog, and enjoy the benefits of a home. Refers to John
C. Capp dc Son, 23-Sonth Third street; Thos. - J. Clayton,
Esq. Fifth and Prune streets, and others. Address .
'Rev. J. MERVEY.:BARTON; A.
eels.tocll Village Green, Pennsylvania.
• •
M ISS BROOKS • AND MRS.
HALL will Reopen their BOARDING AND DAY
ECIIOOL, tor Young Ladles, at 1.211111 WALNUT Street.
on WEDNESDAY, the 14th of September. an3l.lm*
WEST CHESTER FEMALE SEMI-
I NARY, WEST CHESTER, CHESTERCO.,
_PA.
This Institution, under the care of Mies P.. 0. EVANS,
assisted by com petent teachers, will be opened for the
reception of PuPile on THURSDAY, the 15th of Septem
ber next.
Circulars containing terms and other information cle
ared, can be had on application to the Principal.
an3l-18t
A IRS. BADGER HAS REMOVED - TO
N 0.1633 SPRUCE Street, where she will resume
the duties of her . Institute September 19.-
A large room has beeuiltted•up for healthful exercise
during recess. • • •
Circulars obtainid siher residence.
fIENTRALI N - 13 T I T:Cr T Fe, TENTH
and SPRING GARDEN Streets, will reopen
Rept. sth. Boys prepared for any Division of the
Public Grammar Sehoole'
for College, or for &miasma,
Riedel attention given to small boys. • - •
an2s.lm• B. G. MoGISIRE. A. M.. PrincinaL
- BELLEVUE FEMALE INSTITUTE.—
A BOARDING-SCHOOL FOR GIRLS.
This 'institution, healthfully and beautifully located
on the northern limits of Attleboro, Bucks county.
Pennsylvania, will open its Winter Session, Tzwrg
/Bourn let, M. For detaila, obtain Circular, by ad.
dressing the Principals, Attleboro P. 0. Bucks 00.. Pa.
ISRAEL.,J. ORAHAHE,
JANE P. GRA
Principals.
an3l-3m
iILABBICAL AND MATHEMATICAL
SCHOOL, 1008 CHESTAUT, Street. Number Ot
Pupils limited. The Sixteenth ston will companies
on 110104 T, Sept. 6. WM. FEWBMppa. principal.
au27-Im'
miss .3. T. .BROVTIVE.
FOR. T 01730 LADIIIB, 1003 3PRlno . l3treters'
Intll open on 3103D1.T.311PT311333 anl2.lmo
ItirADAME MASSE :AND . M'LLE.
1 MORIN'S INOLISH • and FRENCH SCHOOL kii
Young Ladies. at No. •134 SPRUCE StreeL•Phlladel
telda,willreopen on WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th.
PHILADELPHIA
. • •
HILADELPHIA MILITARY
SCHOOL, (Conrtl and Saunders' Institute; THIRTY
mI is TR and MARKET Street ) reopens September 6th.
_Address Professor E. D. SAITI4DERS, D. D. att2A-lm
D -CLASSICAL
School for Boys, No. 11 WEST PEN* SQUARE. Du
ties resumed Sept. S. J. DAVISON, Principal. an29-Im*
MARY P. ROBESON WILL OPEN
her School for Yonne Ladies at 1613 FILMSET
Stree on the 12th of Ninth Month (September). •
an tool
A CIALDEM FO
t Y R
ttes BOYS, 142
ay NORTH
Sieett.Dti resumed Mond, Sept sth.
au24-1m .T. BILINTLY LANGTON. Principal.
'YOUNG LADIES' INSTITUTE,_.S. E.
corner of MARSHALL and SPRING GARDEN Sta.
Panes rearmed Septemberl2th. E.NuCH H. SUPPLEE.
A. M., Prtucipal.
you Ne. ADIES' SCHOOL AND AD.
VANCED CLASSES FOB ROME STUDY. 903
CLINTON St. Formerly Pros. C. D. Cleveland's. Fall
Term begins Sept. 16th PLINY OEIOIE, Principal;
A. K. Jones, A. 'V. Ennui, Aerociates. ang•i-lmo•
THE CLASSICAL • AND ENGLISH
SCHOOL of R. D. GREGORY. A. St. No 1108
NAEICET Street, will re-open on MONDAY. '
a Stmt. sth,
ta3 lEts
MISS ELIZA. W. SMITH'S SCHOOL
FOE YOUNG LA_DIES, 1210 SPRUCE Street,
bill be reopened on WEDNESDAY, Sept. 7th. The
Boone embraces a thorough Drawin g , ducation, with
Latin, French, German. Music. Patntingoka.
au2l)-Itss
ABACHMANN, PROFESSOR OF
• MUSIC, and Organist of the Fifth Surest Church.
returns his lessons September let. Rests ence;
RiPRING GARDEN Street. . ..sita3.lrn•
r`HE HANNAH MORE ACADEMY
WILMIHGTOB, Delaware. _
The Fall Session.will commence MORD&E, REPTEM
DER 6th,Tilet. For particulars. apply.to the 'Principals
CHARLOTTE and ISABELLA . ORIBISHAW,
• EIGHTH and WEST Streets.
MISS HOOPES -WILL REO PEN HER
BOARDING nnd , DAY SCHOOL for Young Ladles,
r.t 1409 LOODST Wont, on WEDNESDAY, the 14th .
September. ' an22-1m
r,ERM.A.NT OW N FEMALE
NARY GREEN Street south of Walnut lane, will
reopen WEDNESDAY, 7th.
Circulars, setting forth the Coarse of Instruction,&c.,
ko., may be obtains& at the Seminary.
Prof. WALTER S. FORTSSOUE, A. M.,Print:4ll.
SEIDENSTI.CKER'S CLASSICAL
• INSTITUTE, 127 N. TENTH Street, will reopen
, ONDAY, Sept. 6. All Engliitt branchee. Latin, Greek,
irman, and French Wight. Call for a Circular.
tu20•11o*
lEBTNUT7STREET FEMALE SEMI
DUEY. —Mtge Bonney and Mies Dative will re
in their Boarding and Day School at No: 1615
tESTNUT Street, WEDNESDAY, September It
atteulars from simian. . anlB-tool
;ROOL AND KINDERGARTEN AT
Ninth and Spring Girden will be REOPENED
Member 12th. at 1.914 MOUNT 'VERNON Street.
GERTRUDE W. FULTON.
HARRIET B. DARLINGTON.
MARY E. SPEAKMAN. ' '
DLAND szMINARY •.8
-WOOD
, . 0 • • -
LAND TBREACR; WISEST_ PHILADELPHIA.-
. HENRY ;BEVIES. A. NI, 'Principal, (late of the
mberabing Seminary.). Senator' opens September
. A Day And Boarding School for Young Ladies.
niamed Teachers; instruction eolld, choice, and
altaulara tent on application.
__ aul6-tf
, lIE MIBBBB OABRY - ds Mite: BEEBE'S
ENGLISH . anCTRENCIT BOARDING Rea DAY
TOOL, No. 1704 WALNUT Street, EIt•OPEN
WEDNESDAY. the 14th of September. an4-3ut
11,ADELPHIA.1 DOLLEGIATE
STITTITE FOR YOUNG LADLES, No. 15.30 ARCH
~treet, Rev. OHAS. A: SMITH; D. A., 13 CLARENCR
SMITH, A. K. Principals.
Ninth Year. Three Bagmen:tents: Primary, Acade.
Into, and Collegiate , . Fall 'college course in Classics,
Mathematics, higher lingliehornd Nataral Science, tor
those who graduate. Modern Languages, relneic,Patid.
lag, and &locution by the best masters. For straiten',
apply at No. 1530 ARCH Street; or address Box 2811
P. 0., Philadelphia. •
tem
TilLere n ext session will commence' n MPNDAY
ap`4, Sono
lPth. •6111* •
TEE ENGLISH AND OLASSICALr:
SCHOOL, N.W. corner CHESTNUT and,
TWELFTH Streets, will reopen on MONDAY, Septum
bar eth.
Number of priPils limited to forty.
Price of tuition same as last year. •
For references and particulars see Circulars, 'whine
May be had at •M.r. Flassard's Drug Store or at cheSohool
Rooms, where the Principal, (successor to Charles Short,
A. M. O may be seen every morning between 10 and 11
o'clock.s A. B. SHEARER,
acts.lut No. 1301 ARCH Street.
M ISS a; A.. BURGIN'S .SCHOOL FOR
YOUNG LADIES, No. 1.03 Y WALNUT Street , .
Sclll REOPEN on THURSDAY, Sept. Uth. se7-Iras
R. THUNDER, 280 SOUTH FOURTH
..."L Street, has_yeenmed Plofiesional:Practice.
At home from Ttlll 4 o'clock d ily. . ees-Im.
GEO, W. 'PETTIT WILL RE-OPEN.
hie Studio for the reception otPupile in the arts of
:DRAWING an TAINTING, et No. 100 North VINTIi
Street, on the 16th of Septem ber. • • at124./In*
1 1 , LASSICAL INSTITUTE, DEAN
`•-• Streel, below LOCUST. Dulles rammed • sm..
MBES. 5. J. W. FAMIB,D. D.,
_ i_n26-2m• "Wind *
FpIICA.TION: -SCHOOL FOR :PRI-
vats %strut:lon; N. W. sorrier TENTH and ARCH
2 .
—a mdareoitiens Sept. 2; • R. STE WART,
*4l-A• Principal.
THE WEST CHESTER ACA.DEAIY
AND MILITARY INSTITUTE.
_ The scholastic year of ten months commences on the
TORSDAY, the Bch of September neat, and closes
on the Ist of July following'
Boy" and yottnrm enprepared for College or Batifilt3llB
in 114
b v a ri ous requirements.
N. 6 wodorn languages are taught by native resident
t )",,c, o n i e . r% veno have no 'connection with any other
catzlegues and full information apply to . •
WM.' F. WY E RS. A,
Principal.
MINTER WORRALL, A. l PiL'D .
gavosiate Principal.
Wain CHatiVia, Puna.
. . . ,
._____ 4r 1 r4 , 14 4 , •
. . .
..
. . .
• .-.., , 0 . 1, , ,';' -• ' • - 4 , ,, , . C4 " Viiil7/7 'LL I
1. 10, • /1% Pat. .tr.; * 144;1#4.• •. .
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VOL. 8.- , NO. 43.
SEWING. atAcunrEs.
THE FLORENCE:. • •
THE FLORENCE `
THS nommas . .-•• • . • • •
THE 'FLORENCE
• • TEM .FLORENCE • •
•
THE FLORENCE .
•
THE FLORENCE •.. •
THE FLORENCE
SEWING MACHINES.
SEWING MACHINES.
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES,
SEWING MACHINES;
SEWING MACHINES,
690 CHESTNUT STREET.
930 CHESTNUT. STREET,
630,CHESTNUT.STREET.
030 CHESTNUT STREET.
630 CHESTNUT STREET.
630 CHESTNUT STREET.
000 CHESTNUT STREET.
090 CHESTNUT .STREET.
CURTAIN GOADS:
E. • WAVAA.,v7kiv. •
•
SUCCESSOR Leo w. H. . CARRYL,
MASONIC . - ..HALL • •
No. 419' . .0 ETN:IT T• T
• .. • • • ; :.!-,
Hat now open - his ••• • t ." •• : •—•
FALL STOCB
• .• • " '; • - '
MATERIALS;.
Consisting. of ' "-- •
FRENCH SATINS, • ' - • •". •
•
RICH BROCATELLES,
COTLLINE, in colors,, - • •
TERRY, Plain and Bordered, " •.' •••
ALL-WOOL ANDIINION REPS. - . •
.• FRENCH SATIN .DE LAINES,
ENGLISH ANDHERbIAIQ.DAMASICB,
FRENCHIPRIN . TED
CORNHIN'aItirDIBAINDEI, •
. . . ,
And even' description of CurtattlEiterlal:
WINtOw SHADES, .
In the newest designs and colors.
. , •
•
LACE CURTAINS,
At one-third less than the teiniiii:eost ofbnooitation;
• • ..WALTreAVEN'S,
. , . .
-„• • craiti canzfresds • •
sels No 719.;,OESSTNVT ;. STREET.
SILK & DRY GOO.DS J,
FALkt . S rr4 ; ll3K
31804, ROW; IN STORE.. (3064.
DUD YARD & CO.,
Kn. en o . hesinitt and .814 Jayne Streets,
II[POFTEB4I . AND .JOBBERS Or
MKS ' AND YANcY . DRY -GOODS).
,LINENS.
AND . 'Mrlit E 11-0 0 D'Ele•
A LUNT AND wriiKwz sroca l or
. ..DRESS .GOODS:
YELL LINE OP FOIMIGX AND DOEDISTICI
J3A.I,3IOIELAMS,
INOIAMINO,BAUNER% AND OTHERWM
COMMISSION MOUSES.
HAgAJID &
~.I.IIITC.g.INSON,
• '
.#?..I:I2OIIESTIRIT STREET‘ .
COMMISSION MERCiaANT.S.
FOR-TEtSALII .07
071-503 POILRDV.LTRIA-MADE GOODS
CLOTHING.
EDWARD P. ICELLY,'•
JOHN. KELLY,
TA - 3=
612 CHESTNUT STREW,
Have received their FALL STILES, and a largd stock
of FAIL and WINTER GOODS, including choice
AMERICAN G GODS, all bought before the rise in prices.
Which Mei will make up iu the best styles at moderate
Deem
TERMS—NET CIASH
BOYS' CLOIREING.
A LANGE ASFOITNENT OF
, •
ITO ItraDT4ILDE Bar 70110'filING
.• - -
ON :HAND AT
F. A. gLaYT B.RO 'B,
8. W. cozaerTßNTH•aadOHESTNUTStreets ,
Aigiorsia . BurtmNes.
GENTS'.:. WEBbIISHIN6I ,GOODS:
'M
• ABM BTRIOCT.
ELEMOVA.L.
L A. HOFFMAN,
TRH ISZEIVIII 10111,T AND WRAPPER
MANIIIIIIiITO'II,I% AND GENTLEWA'S
FURNISHING EMPORIUM;
REDSOIIO PECK 606 ARCH BTERNT
TO Tlitrigrir BTORE.
825 ARCH. STREET.
jelD•femwem • •
•
IMPROVED PATTERN • SHIRT,
• :•• ••, •‘• •-••.:•• •
WARRANTED •TO PIT AND, ,caInkB4I I 3FACTI O 4 ,
MADE BY A • • • - :
Nos. 1 AND B NORTH •13=1 STREET,
MANUFACTOirIit:i4 D . 4411, IN*
SENTLENEA'S FINE 11JRNISHD11 GOODS:
CONSTANTLY ON HAND, • *
LINEN. MUSLIN, and FLANNEL SHIRTS and
DRAWERS. COLLARS, STOCKS, TRAVELLING
SHIRTS, TIES, WRAPPERS, dus., M.,' • • -
OF HIS•OWN MANUFACTURE. • •
ALSO,
HOSIERY.
GLOVES, . .
SCARFS,
bIISFENDEES, • ' •
_HANDKERCHIEFS,
EHOULDER BRACES, &0.,
Bold at reasonable pricey,. aplii Gra
D VA , 4 WAIAICIVIAIP;9q
OIL; -1/1114ING, COAL, AND OTHE
NEW CODIPANIYA., • • •
We are prepared to furnish New Corporations with
the Books they require, at short notice and low Prices
of first quality. All styles of Binding.
STEEL PLATE CERTIFICATES' Of STOCK.
" • '
LITHOGRAPHED
TRANSPER,BOOK,
ORDERS OP , TRANSFEE,
STOCK LED6ER,
STOCK LEDGER BALANCES,
REGISTER OP , CAPITAL STOOK,
BROKER'S PETTY LEDGER,
'ACCOUNT OF SALES,
DIVIDEND BOOK. .
MOSS iSc C 0..,
BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS AND STATIONERS'
B J. WILLIAMS,
NO. 10 NORTH MST* STRUT.
• Manufttetrdei of •
VENETIAN BLINDS
AND
WINDOW ISI-IA.DES.
11:1P . The Largest and 'Finest Assortment in the city a
the
LOWEST PRICES. .
• S 1 Repairing attended to promptly.
Sir Store Shades Yids and Lettered.. seB-1m
•
LDOSING GLABBEB.
JAMES S. EARLE tit SON,
818 CHEVIOT ST,EKET,
,ave now in store a Very fine assortment of
•
LOOKING GLASSES,
of every character, of the
/In BEST MANI77ACTIJEZ AIM LATEST STYLI&
OIL PAINTINGS, EL~TGHAVINGS, •
. atfs PICTURE ANA.PRoTiMILLPH TBAYBK:
NW MESS MACKIREL--100 KITTS
iew /demi store arid for sale by
IaINNEDY, STAIRS & CO.
.014-iir • 1 , 39 awl 134 iignk WiIARYWit
Vrtss.
A Lyrical Effusion. Oie.:Jite State of P.
litical Affairs, to ire:Zither Said Or
Sting.
By CORPORAL LOPTUS 0 1 13i1IMPIN, 'a TEE 97 . 11.
' SHAMBOO:
ph, Trenton eity , s the finest village•
For thrade or tillage or dhroivint flime •
That o'er was Oondjured from sea to land , ard ;
The wild Sandspaniard is there quite tame.
No situation in all the nation ,
'For'vailation'Oftll with it Compare.:
'TO on an oiland of sandy soil, Mind
BBulrushes .
stilitbrlous air.
Far misdemanor or crime
with St. Helena this isle is mate,
For there his had braia
• With water Melon and . potato swate. •'.
The dragon Stantin,.for galllvantini;
With an eye to - phintllV, he put him there
To be Dictathur and King o' Nathur, .
Or Pdedicathur to inspect the air. • :
Och! tarp; and trenches he digksjdwltliy*gfail4.3.-e,
'FLIB . Mike inventions too grand, 1,6 !conie s
With liuttio'ss, bistion, snelyiebiretustion s ,
' 'And more Pd cast in; but you kait , ,,theiame
Ooh 1 how the marthyr did proteotthe
From inhuman slaughter and Invasicin by lay ;
He kept the salther as m ijd as porther,
And, nothitt' shorter, the writer at bay.
But ool; ! 'twas hainious, though extemporaneous,
That martial janius to mile to Spain ;
And more's the dolin!, there's no consolin'
My young Napoleon, it's turned his brain;
'Twas bloody Jackson, with many a Paixhan,.
The murtberin' Saxon that shpoiled his case;
But of all ingradients the beePs obadfeitce,
And the worst expadience is a change of base.
Not I the tool to trajuce you cruel,
No, no, my je*el, you're a lion fiat !
By James retratin', we were raver baten,
We've too much consatin , , to acknowledge that!
You led us onward from Malvern downward,
The cannons tondhered when we won the day ;
We foil back blazin', with murther crazin 2 —
Sure, you were gazing from a vessel gay !
vr,
'Twas thin victorious, we sailed back glorious
With joy uproarious to help John Pope :,
Fitz• Porter thunderin' despoised his blunderin',
And left:him wonderin' wid his telescope!
Sure, as Pope's a Papist, that joke's the rtted,
But not the chapost, my gallant Fitz :
You have a morbus for habeas corpus, •
My jolly porpoise, when court-martial sits I
Thank Fitz, the pandher, me young commandher,
Or Pope, the gandher, would have been our chafe
O well ye bate 'em at bowld Antatem
The rebels (defate 'em !) till they Came to grafe
Such marchin' nivor was heard of fiver,.
We crossed the river in a thrice of days ;
With &ten' tragic, we purshooed like magiO, .
With aim strategic a moightysways
Yin. - •
Ala, Mae, avournin , , bad , cess the tiintnt,
One' lovely mornin' ye went away • •
That haythen Hessian, the Admix:lB4W*
With murtheration, he did yoU
"0, let me lade 'em, my troops so natii i 'tiffei,
Or share their fate, then," I heard yet: cry:
Your eyes were swellin' with grief eacellint—
Och ! George DlcOlellan, why didn't you die 'I
Howid up, my hearty, my BuonyparthY) •
You've got the party you to nominate ; ,
You've named for President a New Jersey resident,
And you're not hesitant to accept that fate I
Mind that, owid Stantin, and stop your iantin' ;
Bad luck, you bantlin', hoar that agen !
Tho Dimmyerats spoutin' and the people shoutin ,
A:e yOu for floutin' bowld Mcelenagin
Mac ! yOu'e play-actor of high characther !
A noble faothor, and statesman wotse.
You'd save the nation by murtheration,
With conciliation, the best devoiSe.
State
- 7 1 :Fattelier - With furies, and thrlat by juries;
With Dasitel Voorhees - and Vallantligham..
Xt.
We won't get agars in pulling traygurs
To help the naygurs,- the haythen elves.
, tis their , nayturs, the ugly craythurs,
Against the traitorato help themselves.
Conciliation with perturbation
. And riotation layour design,.
-With insurrection for free proteettoM ;
Ooh! .that'o pesfection, my janiusline;
Ho 2 by St.'Jargo, you've laid embargo
pn all Ch'cargo, wid youT letter bright !
pcb—! tear•an-'ague Ws very vague,
It must have plagued you that same to writ* t
They're natur each Paoltloatur,
They, call you thraltor to the cause of Pace,
Qch milli& murdther, I'll go no furdther,
- "WitS aught absurdher than this'same case I
mar.
Whist! Mac! in private, what do you drive at
Isit•Pace you connive at, my son of fame
OW how you splutter, my young eye-shutter,
wouldn't utter, but I think it's mane—
You've been, defamer of that noble &trainer
Horatio Seymour and his joiant brood,
The grand Fernandy, the foine
Gham, he's the dandy'thatis opposed to blood !
525
132 CHESTNUT ESNs
MONDAY, StP,TEMBER 19, 1884
THE 10IINH:McOLELLIN.
•
Och ! bother, bother, will ye pat theitotbert
Are ye this or Votherl Sp . alFe plain, my boy!
For we are °resin to know if thraisin
Is in your raison, me jewel joy!
There's many quoiet who wait your foiat
For row or riot, or a bloody spray.
•Ye hear them dinnin "Whoroo! Mcelinnin !
"Sure, he'll be winnin on election day !
Not you, me Phanix your dioratrdos -
And monogramlos are moiglity good ;
But. you're no masther for that same tdasther,
The dorilis.plasther, Fernandy Wud.
Old "Uncle A.braham you would belabor , im,
But ye can't sabre 'tin out of the way ;
And all the Paces may go to blazes
Till this war cases; now, that's my say.
xv . r.
D'ye mobil! the blarney of Philip Kearney 7
He's gone his journey, the dailielknoight.!
Ah I Mae, my jewel, you're food for'fnel,
You've spoiled your gruel, my darlin', quite:
'Tie Grant's the ladir,'ai bold as Omar
Or Nebuchadnazur, that wins the day ;
Och! MaC, yon owel, you Mailiowld your jowel,
For be nry sowel, he's the min for me !
- •Svri. • •
I'M no preeislan or
But my proflshnill - 11 . 14 flefoine
'Tis Constitution wldont . Confusion,
Wid Resolution and . .TaTa.ius foine ;
For. Operation on every station,.
And Conflagration and War anbloime ;
Wid Subjugation_and I.Mancipationi,
And Pacification all the toime!•. •
'Twat' thus, while rattan', wid joy transfushin,
And much profooshun, I thought apace
The best of ingrailients if fit pbadience,
:.And the worst expod.ienee is a change of base;
WidTou, myjo, Mee, I idea to roam, Mac
By the.Potemao in . the'ifays,o , Ahree,
.And thus I th ought Wet the : fi eld c , slaughther
By ihe:pleasant wither. of.the Cbioltethominy.
• ARILT 'or PoToitiO, Sept. 12,1534.,
“Itepublietin invincibles.”
To the Editor of The'Tress
Sin: Can you inform me whether there has been
any,effort made to 'reorganize the famous orginiaa 7
tion above named, which took such an active part
In the great successful campaign of 1860 1 ."
•
I am - veil desirous that - a, reorganization'ehOUld
take place, and know of many whci are ready and
willing to take an active part. •My idea- Is that
they should be equipped, as in 1860—cap, cape, and
torch. As long is we have no organization of the
kind, and to make this the leading-club, I propose
that every member of 1860; as well as all other per
sons who are desirous of rendering yeemart service,
as did their brothers 01.1860, should address a
. note
to 1 . , 3. B. P,," Press office, "giving name and place
of residence, so that we could arrange to meet to
gether and mike. immediate preparation for an ef
fective organization.
Respectfully yours,
SST' TEMBHR 16, 1864.
Politics and Geogialtby:
To the Edtor of The Press: '
SIR : Whilst at Long Branch, this summer, I met a
resident, an Old man, who asked me whether Dela
ware was on the east or west side of the Delaware
Bay 1 and in conversation with various men, during.
this contest, I have usually found that they.
wore deficient in geography. And it is not by any_
Matins an evidence of a want of education; but the
active duties of life cover up most of theologies we,
learn at School. It is one of the stereotyped expres
wens with the Peace leaders, "it is better to let the
South go than to spill all this blood," Ste.; asthough
•it was a diseased limb, to be cut' off and throWn
'away.. It . is colitied,bythose who have its little un
&intending what I .‘ the South" is as had the Jersey
man., ,W'oul4l.l(nrit correct many false impressioius,
if. tie Union party.on the 'stump hive large mapeof
, the.conntyy..viiith .State lines, capitals, rivers, and
.mountainal and..have
.pasteboard, with maps On
one side, and on the reverse, or at thaside, terse sen
tences from the chief: Southern leaders and papers,
of the extent of their demands. I throw the sugges.
tion out. • I am,,truly, yours,- .
I3ouanoy,
PQTI Del., 18k, I
PHI.LADELPITLA.„_KWAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1864.
DEMONSTRATION.
TORCII•LIGRT i'DODAINiIONS AND FINEMORKS.
BI:ILLIANT •PAGEANT.
A OrtMA.' 'r-CrtYrrOURINGr.
The grand demonstration - of - the -Democratic par
ty,.after.Spyentl weeks,of preparation, tookplace_on
Saturday night; at - Independence Square, to ratify
the nomination_of_Gart-MeCiellan and George H.
Pendleton ? and to celebrate the anniversary of the
adoptionof tie =United States.
The various delegations from the wards were well
supplied with liiiiternriald - dtharinore elaborate
transparencies, and a variety.of ‘ mettoes, as will be,
seen in- this : report. ,:In ) one ofthe delegaiiOns,
small cannon was carried on - a
wagon., The weapon
was fired off at - laterivars, as' the ward association
moved along the streets.-,lt was also fired- off near
sixth and Walnut streets, much to the .. annoy - anis;
of the great mass of thilieoPle Present. There were
many displays prfireytorks,:sueiras rockets, Roman
candles, triangleibloin, wheels; bengola: lights, red,
white, and blue. The stars at times passed like me
teors through the trees aril
. ithwit - it - the clear blae
sky;this giving 'idedf to` the preiceediags.: hin Main
piece of fireworks•was iirelatiorate speoimen of the
art of pyrotechay.-- It was-.twenty-feet wide, and
about forty-feetrhiM.: It was an arrangement of
Of-different celOrS, red, white, and'hlie
prevailing, This was to have been - fired off at ten
o'clock, but it was twenty minutes before.eleven.he
fore the beauty of the scene imparted its brillianei ,
to the surroundings; - It - represented an eagle on
the top,.resting on,the apex of-an- arch, containing
in red, White, iirieblaii fire the'words-:
Beneath.this a likeness of General-McClellan I . p.
peered, the outlines Of the clothing being bluefire,
the liite'of the face white fire, with Yelloar the on the
aboulders. The effect.,as .pleasing. The appear
ance was hailed with the amount; of enthu
siasm. Still under this, or that 'which forined the
base of the display, were the followingWordeln.tri
,
,
colored fire :
M'CLBLLAIC-lIIS riaTronnt
,OUR cotrzerzy," THB
CONSTIVITIOII, AND Taxnnon)l-
' A mishap occurred. The whore display 41 went
off," except the word "our," so that the reading of
the motto" was confined to the letters "
. . . ,
' "STAR OF norm"
The word "our" took fire and burned most brilliantly,
in red fire, after 'the eagle 'had taken its flight into
the boundless region of the past, after the likeness
of NicOlellan' and the words below had ended in
smoke, and thus faded from view. '
The processions enlivened the* streets until a late
hour, and were arranged to suoh i - style as to make
the greatest possible show. •
There was not a continuous *cession •of all the
associations ; they approached the place of meeting
by divisions or wards. Some portions going around
Independence Square two or three times, seemed to
augment the numbers to a very liberal extent.
There was an immense number of small paper lan
terns, red ; white, and blue in color, containing the
words " hlcOlbllan and Liberty,” these words being
encircled by an olive-branch wreath.: The following
are some of the principal mottoes, which indicate
the popular voice :
Free Speech, Free Press, Free Figlit, or a Free
Ballot." • . •
A Fair Ballot or a Free ;Fight."
"No Peace Bari be Permanent Without Union."
"Equal - Justiee.” . • • •
liThe Union Must and Shall beTrissarired."
• "Four Years of Misrule Islnoug . h." .
. - :.,"say as little about Polities - •es' the Negro.—
McClellan. • • ' •
"Lost, a Gold Dollar. Two Twenty-six:in Green
backs will be given for its returrilhis Day."'
The next - on our programme is'a 'banner repro.
sentink-a prison; this is labelled "Lincoln's' Bas-
. Another banner represented a big cracked bell,
the clapper broken. This was labelled. "Sewardts
"From the Gulf to the-Lake
• " Our boundary shall be, - .
.• While our right tuid , otir :left hand.
Stretch out to, the iinti.,! l ;
"Gold and not paper--inegogistance nOt• the
Shadovr." . ,
"If I / esinnot hat% command of my own men, let
me 'Eharoi their fate on thei
"‘g the right of'aeyluin fOr White men."
—. t 4 lAfttie,Mac and - the Buckeye Boy."
"Little Mac's plan—the Union at all` hazards,
and peaCe l " as soon as possible. Lincoln's plan—
War fbr the nigger, subjugation, taes, and 500,000
r
" To wh - orn it may concern."
This motto was a banner , representing n,big, fat
well-fed black man with• a whip in his hand ; beforii
him a white.nran in a suppliant position.
"The Union is our condition for peace—we ask no
more." •
IM3
On a large square banner was the representation
of an eagle strangling a serpent ; on the reverse, in
large black letters, was the following motto: .
" No serpent can live in the cradle of liberty."
"Shoddy & Co." • ;
".Scotch Caps at a discount; Mac's the man."
"This is, n white sizadava country."
"Clear : the track Militias
-
"Little Briitolfixm in her ancient faith; the De-
mocracy of '16." ,
In the Sixth ward there was carried a three cor
nered • lantern; on one of its sides was a caricature
likeness - of Abraham -Lincoln, President of the
United States. The likeness was pretty well done,
so that it could not be mistaken whom it was
intended to represent. The figure's dressed in the
attire of a clown. It portrays the jester in.&
dancing mood. Over his head in black lettering
was this motto,:
"This jCker for President."
One of the,waxds carried four portraits of the fol
. lowing named.: Washington 3 ackson, McClellan,
and. Pendleton. Immediately in the rear of this
. ,
scene were four corn brooms.
. .
~ A bolition philosophy—handeuffs for white men
and Shoulder.straPs for negroes."
-" White,peoplo of the Third ward." •
)3111y.canIt -ring this bell," is the motto. on a
transparency. containing a human figure pointing
to A:big bell borne on a wagon.
THE GODDESS OF LIBBRTT. • •
• There Were in all this feast of lanterns three:
Scenes very remarkable. The first that came under,
oimnotioe was a large ,omnibus containing thirtya
four young ladies of the Nineteenth ward. They:.
were dressed in , white, and some wore wreath!' Of.
roses., Each young lady carried a guidon oontaW.
jug the,name of a Stite. In the midst -of this in-:'
teresting group there appeared one as the Goddert
of ,Liberty. She was very neatly and artistically!
enrobed, but had more drapery. on the upper it'd,
of lier person than the painters usually give to theit
.representation of the mythical form. The Goddess
. sang the Star• Spangled Bannei, the surrounding
members joiaing,in fall chorus. Their voices were
lost in the general noise incident to ii.politleal.pre
cession—such. as cheering, crowing like chickens
firing of Romen candles, huzzaing ,for Little Mao
McClellan, illeClelligan, and a thousand - tither. ex
pressions, as are usual during such demOnstrations.
Thesayoung ladies, towards the Close of. the meet.
ing, were ..introduced on the main stand, and were
gracefully received by 001. James Page. The inter
view between the Colonel and the Goddess of
Liberty was very interesting. .
THE GRAVE , OP THE UNION.
The next remarkable display that came under our
notice,was a. transparency, about six feet by eight
feet.. This was carried in a wagon by the delega
tion from the Seventeenth ward, where a majority
was cast recently in opposition to the soldiers
.voting. This transparency bore as its motto " The
Grave of the' Uatiaa." It was evident that the artist
who did . tlie work paid some attention tO the display.
It represented President Lincoln and his Cabinet
officers in a hearse. This melancholy vehicle was
drawn by the most Prominent generals in the Ame
rican army, now engaged in enforcing obedience to
the laws. The generals were represented as having
the bodies or forMs of jackasses or horses, - with hu 7
. man heads. Expressions, supposed to have ema
nated from the lips of each general, were , painted In
black letters, but not sufficiently 'distinct as to be
readily seen or deciphered. Beneath the figures
were the names of Lieut. Gen. C. S. Grant and
major. generals, President Lincoln and'Cabinet of
• fibers.
. General Grant was made to say, "I rind. roti
THE EIDE THAT PAYS BEST." In the foregiound
were two coffins, one labelld " Union," and the other
" Constitution.),
Another lantern or transparency represented the
figure of a soldier In uniform without fire or side
arms. In front of him was the figure or a femalci,
her head partly bowed down before him; this the
banner•bearer stated represented the. Goddess of
Liberty. The motto on this affair was "no bayonet
exercise."
. .
• The following make up the sum total of the most
conspicuous of the brief mottoes : . .
• 4, Little Mac our nest President' ,
"We will sacrifice our lives in defence of our liber-
ties."
• "Union and peace at all hazard."
" Loyalty without pay."
"General DlcOlellan the soldier's friend."
"Give us back our Constitution."
"The house our father built." •
"Personal liberty and the Constitution."
"State rights." • • : .
"Give us back our old commander."
"Tho Constitution as it la, and the L7nlon as
was." . •
J. H. P
The motto " A fair ballot or a free light" pr ,
♦ailed generally ; it was served up in various forme
to suit everybody,
On the route of the procession we noticed in un
dertaker's shop, illuminafed with wliat wire peph
larly supposed to he." dead l!ghts."....Thil was re
garded as significant of the„9Aylng_out . :7 of „the
Democracy in November,
•
' • "
There were four stands erected, three within tip
Square, and . one on the stelis-in front of Indepen-r
dence Hall, on Chestnut street. The main staging:
was erected immediately in the" rearof the Haiti,.
and a few minutes after 8. o'clock Alderman Wil•
liana McMullin, the chairman of the committee,
called the - Meeting to order. -
Dikeet• D9:01 1 4 "Galled tR 014:19/11141-
CRAM -PARTY.
"OUR STAICOP ROPE:"
THE PROCESKONS.
MMME
NO BAYONET .E.Y.ERCIB£
THE MSZTING
. .
Among the vice presidents are the following nained'
prOniinisnt residents of lihltadelphia: 'Messrs. Geo.
K. Zeigler, St. George Tuciter Campbell, Theo, H.
Vetterleta, Richard - H. Rush, H. 11; Shilling-
ford, SamAel Welsh, Geo. Childs, John' Rob
bins, Jr., J. T. Reed, Fred. Horstmann. Among the
nCretariesnotice the names'of Tatlow Jackson,
Geo. W. Hickman . , 'Chas. McAllister, Jr., A.. Op
penheimer. .
. The iesolutions - were read by eal. Ja•nso9 Page.
They wore unanimously adopted, with great enthu•
, • N NESOLIITIONS.
. •
ReSoteed, That the. Democratic Citizeiseeof Philadel
phia most cordially 'endorse the nomination of General
George le McClellan for' President of the United States,
and of Norse B. Pendleton Tor Vice President, ands in
• doing so they but echo the response already mede.by the
eopular volts: ' ' ' ' ' •
• itesolv , ed, - That we select for the occasion of this rat is.
fication the anniversary of the formation of the - COISEIti:
tetioni which is the 'chart Of Democraticsfaithethe errs'
mvereary of the Farewell Address of., Washington,
Which enjoins us 'To Wink and speak , of the'llonsti
tution its the palladium ofeour political safety tine-pros-
Perllei. and -the anniversary of the great- victory of
Antietam, by means of which, under Providence, oar .
•
nominee for President saved that Constitution, SiS , wetl
as -the' Union, from overthrow. The, patriot .soldier
' whet - Was 'then imptored by a terror-stricken. Adininise
tration to save theelevernment from desteict ion is again
'invoked by the people "to save both Constitetion and
Unitei; and it is feting that oar - response to that call
should:be made on this auspicione; day, The gratitude
and Praiee • se scandalously ;withheld; from General
McClellan by the paltry , politi mane •in rower is -gene-.
rouslyaccorded by the unpurchased people:' • '
.Resolved; That the nomination of. General- McClellan
for the Presidency : loone of most eminent propriety: 'ln
times of paten wfralreformeril the practice otiout • Po-
lifical 'artversaiiste nomin ate Alerts soldiers for. the
' Presidency, (melte there - oft fravallability;'•ebut'We. In ' •
these days of war e sehen both the military skillet the
accomplished general and the:wiedentest the statesman.
. are indispensable to theepublic safety . ,,place 11
in 01:11118.-
lion for the office of •Freeident ind"Corgernantierets
. Claire-of our artniessa .statesman-soldier, on the, high
ground .of absolute' !Reese for frthat frposidon: ,His well'
• knnwn letters to the President,:and,bisinteraotlons to
, theioniinandlng generals of our 'distant avmies - while
he was,General-in-Chiefeprove. that he, of atir others;
tlir:Man who most 'fully.dompfehends - the military
end:Political eituateoleof. the :00.u.ntry e land isimetable
_to deal with it • ' . • • .
;Reselve, Tb at: eticerdinifillreettlitler of ac
. catenate or General:McClellan, We: de cl ar ethat the
exiitepcepf more than one government over theaegion
'which 'once owned 'our flag is inconipatiblawith the
peace, the power, and the, happiness of the people.
The erasers:Alen' of the Union was the' sole, avowed
:object eorewhich the war was commeaced.• It should
shave - been conducted:for that object only. The re- es
tablishment of the Union in all its integrity is andmust
continue to be the indispensable condition of any sot
' tlement.. So soonethereforeeas it is - probable that our
present adversaries 'are ready for peace on the basis of
the Union, we should' exhaust the • resources of states=
manship e practised by civilized ; nations, eonsietent
with the Manor and interestsof the country, to secure
such peace, re • establish the Union, and, guarantee for
the future' the constitntionalrights of every State; and
whenever,any State is willing to return to. the Union it
• should'. be' received at once, with the fall guarantee of
:alllts.constitutional rights. ' • . • •• - • • - •
- RoOlved, That, in 'the language of the Chicago_plat
term, we _declare our unswerving fidelity to the Union
under the Constitution; and that the end and alas of the
Democratic part r is to preserv'e the Federal Union and
the rights of the States unimPaired..These are the pane
mount ideas of our orsalliZittioll: and our expreseed de
sire for a cessation of hostilities has for its sole object
Me restoration of the ' Union. under the Ceinstitution.
That is thetsupreme consideration, held to be such by
the Chicago platform, and must be first assured before
any cessation of hostilities can take place.. , - - •
Resolved, Tha t we -reject and
,repel, in the'strongest
terms. Lincoln • s declaration "T all whom it may con
cern." that the war shall go 'on until slavery is abo
lished. That declaration ''concerns" the-bravo men
in our armies, whose lives. are at stake, and it "con
terns' us, also, who beer the other heavy burdens of the
. war, to see to it that no such fatal policy shall be en
dorsed at the polls. We denounce it as a heartless
cruelty to our brave soldiers, whose exposure to all the
• petite of battle would .be indefinitely prolonged. and
• whose lives are thus trifled with as if they were of no
-value, ..We further denounce that declaration as aeons
Apituons instance of Abolition madness, and its an
*usurpatierfot power that will prove fatal, if we permit
ettebe carried into execution. • ; - • • •
Resolved, That we contrast with the foregoing inso
lent; bcartlese, and unwarranted declaration of Lin
' cola the noble sentiment, of General McClellan's letter
of acceptance, ." The Union is the one condition of
peace—we ask no mote." ' -
Resolved, Ttiat the tedniinistratiOn.has taken advari
tage orits temporary possession of power to overthrow
:'the lettled. policy of the people of the Milted Stetes on
`.allehe important questions determined by them-at past
• elections. • The people have, .over and over sprite
el own their emphatic condemnation of sedition laws ,•
of lawadefernctive of free , speech and of the:freedom of
the pros! ; te a national bank in all its forms; of a paper
currency that the Prices of the necessaries of life
and depreciates. the wages of labor.; of high protective
tariffsehat leave all prices to the mercy of monopolists,
and their repeated and' emphatic verdicts on these sub
jects had come to be considered the unalterable polies
of the Government. The party in power affected to
concede thire.anddeceitfully yielded up the contest upon
_those subjec:s by styling them " dead issues." ..By
that artful course they overcame• the jeering watchful
:nese of •the reople, and by.appearing to devote them
selves solely to the anbject of abo loon, they organized
apart", blinded by passion, which gave them the con
trolo the Government. Bat when they got into power
they at once revived • the dead issues," theyeleded
trestil of the people, they overthrew. the whole popu
'ear policy, and under the.. epe atop s plea of military no'
ceseity -they have, reinangurated' the-.odious sedition
; laws., revived . the condemned National Sank in its
worst formerestoied the debased and discard'edeaper
current:o'i and reinstalled the` reign of, high andprohi
biters, tariffs, so that the people are now suffering froth
''all the vices of bad admit! istration, againsevihich they
bad successfully straggled for generations.: ' Conduct
so perfidious. in an Act ministration has no parallel in
the bistory_offree government.. • fr
Resolved, -That the. profligate •waste of the public
moneys by the present'Aiiinthistration, its unparalleled
;corruptions; its efforts to"crush oat free speech, and to
destroy the freedom of, the press; its-unconstitutional
iiiterference with the' freedom of electionee its outrages
upon the rights of citizens gullies, of any offence oxcept
the exercise of their, inalienable rig ht•to oppose corrnp
. tern and despotism, should be p.uniahed by thapeople by
`disgracing the perpetrators of such: despotierand corrupt
acts, and beedrivingthem from power; ' If such crimes
,are permitted to go unpunished, free government is gone
•from us forever ' • • - • •
•t. Resolded,. That eerreseeresedenesiettee . ~sti •
char ;mi.' leas to preserve the 13n ,;
raj
dlelfl l e t remacy of the national Constitution an,
laws overthe allele country, and upon that beefs it
was then supported by a universal uprising of, the
North. But the Administrition perverted corrupt- •
• ed the war from 'its .original and mope teletxts', by ,
making , it; .the inetrument of odious party. schemes,
and it is only beelines. the Democratieparty,,and those
citizens Of ether miles wee. agree with it, reface to
follow the Administration in thus perverting end cor
rupting
the objects of the, wer e . that there is now a
divided North. The guilt - ere anchateiisien, therefore,
lies.onehe President- and- his . bad advisers, and not on
the Democratic party. " •
. Resolved; That it is our firin belief : 'that the' •
Admires
tration has deprived itself of the power of restoring the
Union They have diverted the. ar from its proper ob- •
ject they.have madeit .an-instrameneto enforce theft'
odious party schemes and doctrines; they have shown
a determined purpose'to violate the rights of the States
and .of she ;people, and to set the•Constitation. at
fiance,. end by teat coarse lave repelled the people and
the States' of the South instead of bringing thearback. •
lt, is; therefore, indispensable to •the restoration of, the
Unionehat such an . Administration shall be displaced,
Rekshed, That' we are equates' well convinced that
through.' the agency of :the Democratic party alone can
the Union be restored. Through, all its history It has' •
kept in view Washington's declaration that "the Con-
stitution •ws a the remit of a spirit of amity, and of that
'mutual deference ; and concession-which the peculiarity
of our political' ituation rendered indispensable.'' This.
has ever been the' nimating principle of the Democratic
party. By acting upon It. the Union was. kept unim
paired for sixty years,. and it is only by returning to
power the partylledding to that principle as a rale of Po
litical action that a - restoration of the Union is within
the scope of probabthty.
ResolVed, That the llethociatic part r now. as
through all its past history, .holds the , soldiers of the
country in -the highest regard and esteem ; ' sympa
thizes with th em in their privations , mourns the loss of
the 'gallant dead dna, cherishes the memory of their
heroic 'deeds. It looka with con fidenie to their , vote. in
• favor e 1' the principles set forth in these resolutionseand
.cemande of the Administratton , that the choice or. the
soldiers shall be free, that there shall•be ne dictation,
undue exercise of power o t authoritrlo. restrain.them
from a free expression of theireatill, or any other inter
ference by the Administration or itsagents; and they
further demand thatethe , voting shall be lawfully '
'guarded, the votes honestly counted,. and the returns
honestly made up and•forwarded to be finally counted
according to law: : •••• - • •
Resolved, That in a grave crisislike the present, it is
of the highest importance that' 'our elections 'shall be
free from any interference of either
r_ fth A inis trati r the
f c
i i t v s i taogr military
t Pwe any att e mpt m to letrodu n e into this city or State tnd
arbitrary and unconstitutional measures resorted to in
.the late electionsin Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky,
.and Miseou re will he resisted to the utmost extremity.
Resolved, That the pretended. sympathy of the Abo
lition party for ."our brave soldiers" is shown to be
only a sham for political effect, or else such of them as
are now in prisons and :'adder fire" in the South,
would be exchanged,• but the Abolitiernearty . prefer.
they should suffer all the 'horrors et - imprisonment,
rather than - abandon. their onlyasoliticAleprenciple, -
negro is equal to a white man.,"
Resolved, That the Democratic efirty: regards with
humiliation the abandonment of the traditionary: fo
reign policy of the . United States, which guaranteed an
inviolable right of 'asylum - to the exile, and warned
European Governments against foroing•theirsmonarchl
cal inst tutions upon: the States of the - Werth Ameeican
Continent.— .- : - • •
Resolved, That our. nominees for. Congress and the
'Legislature, and foresity, county,-and ward offices, are
entitled to our earnest support at the Ootober election,
now close at hand and no effort should - be spared to
achieve their triumphant success.
The; venerable . chairman introduced. the- .lion.
- •
Hiram Ketcham, of New York.
.
SPEECH OF HON.- HIRAM KETCEIA.II.,
Hon. Hirai= Ketoham, of New York, witil,then
introduced. Ile spoke as follows.: :
Fonnow.otTizzus I shall not, detain trite:this
evening by any introductory. remarks, lint come di
rectly to the point in hand, and endeavor to;didettsi
It with,aa much clearness and candor as I am able
to do,. You must not expect of a'man past-three
score and ten years of age that' he will deal much
with figures of rhetoric.: I shall;deal with facts and
arguments. The question is, gentlemen, shall Abra
ham Lincoln or Gen. George B. McClellan be our
is ext President lOries of ' , GeorgeS. McClellan;
we want a white man."]. This is the :question we
are to discuss to-night. We "are all agreed upon'
one thing ; that is, that the Union must bo preserved.
[Cries-of ".That's so."] Now, I know there are a
great maneole who say (and I President
Lincoln is am o n g the number) that, believe
the Union must
be, preserved. The
.Constitution defines what the
Union is and must be, and he who tramples upon
the Constitution, and who violates its'-provisions;
and persists in violating it, is a traitor, 'whether hts
name , be Jefferson Davis or Abraham Lincoln.-
Gentlemen, Abraham Lincoln has presented
himself as a candidate to the people of the
United States for the office of Preaident.,There
are a great many men who .will tell you that
you mustn't say anything against the President,
and if you do you are against the Government, and
you are a Copperhead._[Laughter.] When a man
presents himself for te suffrages of thei people we
nave a right to discuss his cause. Tfhave nothing to
say of the President, but I have to apeak of Abraham
Lincoln, a candidate for the next Presidency. The
question is How shall we best preserve the Union 1
[Cries of "Put Little Mac 10.'] I say so too. He is
the unconditional Union candidate. [Cheers.]
Abraham Lincoln is the conditional 'Union candi
date ; he says .that . , Union shall be preserved if
slavery in every State p destroyed. That il3 his
condition ; and now, gentlemen, that we may be
sure upon this point let us refer to his last procla
mation on this subject. Hear the words of Mr.
Lincoln: "To whom it may concern. Any proposiL
tier which embraces the restoration of peace, the
integrity of thd whole Union, and the abandonment
of slavery, and which comes with authority which
can control the armies now at war against this
United States, will be received and. considered by
the Executive Government or the. United States. "
Now, gentlemen, what does that mean? Does it
not hold as a condition for the perpetuation of the
Utoion that slavery must be destroyed before he
will make peace I On the other hand, George
33 McClellan. is an unconditional Union man.
.Ile was born here in the city of Philadelphia. His
Inothtr was a Philadelphia woman. His ther was
a descendant 'of a Whig of the Revolution. He
'sucked in a love for the :Unidn with his mother's
:-milk. • He:was bornhere in. the very cradle of the
-.Union, where it was formed and- signed by George
:Washington, - and as he . walked these streets In
his ',boyish days, he 'drank in the very atmos
phere of 'Union. Ile went from here to West'Point,
where lilS'ears were greeted - every morning and eve.
'ping with the-national airs. He then went to Mex.
fee In the service of his country, and his record is
before the country.;,frotti there he went to the .West
Indica:and into civil life, whence he was nailed by
thiGogeinorkif the' -State of Ohio; and he resumed
pleCein the army,- not:for the purpose of extin
4Puilbilig;slaverY. but of.restoring obedience to his
~..emuitay.arklite lats. "Onkel his, first acts when lie
' Wint - tnte,Vesterif,Virgiiiii was • to tar we people
*of tilitreniititiltliat'lie didntt come tirinterfere with'
aheivinktituf ions, .bnt sthat he vvould ! do; ell Ms 0
power,i4on t s,qttain x their„lawa. ,Thli ; guarantee
,atarnps.his cliaraiiter,,ds, Vtilbit isiarOtiod he ‘ cs Ts
" ItiOre 'ene:dge'froiriiiiat than We teiip'ard vizi change
I wids.spoteArit lie able slfin.eA nevepfelt, so
rzgielit•a:desi.wst%have this oljniens snataingd,en,l do o
this very nisht, fpr if there ean e fa,oiiiyila i l d linipn
between thoep_invpvikion And bie - that ate
what tile ednsequeSS 1 Why, gentlemen„ '
aliEtinglAitelialfered beyond men - are by the eir--
C lia " llC92 Q t. Waraldiail 4191fil'&911k0AYSila Vas
•
proweso fel arms of both ri - cittc,and &lath, and *a.
shall be, r! united, the first nation of the weird, on
: the land. ce. , .on the sea, .and no one will need a
' prouder boast/ than to be able tie say a I am an Amsa
rican citizen'." If there is a cordial Union thou
sands and t errrof thousands, and hundreds ohe's
'Banda, will Lief/la:Polar , shores, and with.theirf t
strong
arms they will develop the resources of our, country,
and we shall. AMY it easy to pay our national debt,
enormous as ft is: ' 'Let it be understood that there
mill be s cordial rnton • i and the •dteparity in value
between paper money and coin will decrease, and it
:wilt cost - us corres.nmadingly less to pay for our
• - provisdone .ami, our • clOthes. Which, titan, will he
the best way to preserve this Union I - II say by the
electkin of. , ,Little Mad: [Great•cheertas.j. What
does his opponent, Mr.. Linsoln mean! He is for a
1 conditional - II akin ; the condttion is that slavery be
abolished. Ifou•ha.ve abolished - slavery here, and it,
has beettab,olls.hed inNewe''Jeltey and Delaware.,
I and it is "the.right, - the , reserved, the originar, the
constitutional ~right of tho people in every State to
abolish Bravery or to 'continue it, as they'see lit. It'
isn't for us , teaosty - that we• don't like slavery It
isn't for New 'York or New,England to say they,.
don'elike - eleivery.-' It is a- matte- for the Stated
each- for ,iteef :to decide: -:.But.. what does Mr,
Lincoln and' his ,to.
regulate They insist oadt
• that!the blaek"man, the'deseendant 6f Africa, shear•
be raised to an. equality with the white , man, and'
they are not - to be satisfied till they have the blaels
man in the jdry box; on the benoinan Congress, and'
in the State,Legbilatrore„[Crissof" 4 :wever i. never.'9 . :
That's what they mean,- and , I say we are
not ready for that clt. is, true= Mr,. - Lincoln
took his scat under very trying, eirrumstances.
I felt deeply for. his situation. - I would do all I
could to relieve that sitnation. I satin• this hall in
a. convention composed of delegates from' he several
. manumission_societies of the United States, and in
that &invention "were such men as William Ramie,
' Roberts Viiiix; Abrm. Pennook, and-Riebard Peters,
and my opinion on' that subject has never changed
from that day_te this; .but ,I am &what° man ; my
race, and blood have the second ancy inmy. heart,
and they always shalt have.- I will 'do , what I can
for the colored e man in•his place, but - that It not -by
my side, and his blood Shill never be mingled with
Mine, and we shealitoot besnade a flag-Streaked'and
speckled popediklaork,,
Zvoil s eay,anything. , to wound
the - feelings , :pranymolortea, an - -in the community;
but I stand up -foranzy race-and blood. Inow.come
to the next point, and that is to arraign Mr. Lincoln
for - the conduct of his Administration. I shall do it
fearlessly,. I shall , do it honestly, and if -I 'show that
he is not again entitled to our contrdence•you will
not allow him to taker that-place again: Hircatati
into deice under circumstances of, great embarrass l
ment.• The first Misfortune- to our arrny'was the
battle of Bull Run. I wlll not dwell °Tour country's
dishonor and shame; you , know the result of that
battle. If - we hadfbeen conquerors, instead of eon:
quered, , peace would nave been established and the
Union saved, but we were conquered; and why?' be
cause that battle was prematurely fought. And• why?
because Mr. Lincoln waapressed by his friends oat
side, his zealous Abolition bloodthirsty friend& to
fight that battle. Ho had not the nerve to resist them,
and he commanded the battle to, be fought. .What
wasthe result? Our army fled as a• mob back upon
Washington. • Let us weep over it.- And if the
enemy had known his strength he ' could have
marched - that day into Washington. • That was a
mistake. Is there anybody that says that was not a
mistake?' But the people said: Mr.Ltneoln, this is-a
new and delicate situation and-we pardon you-, and
that pardon would never have been revoked If he
had not been making mistakes ever since. '
When he presents himself as a candidate for the
Presidency it is our duty, as it is Mir -privilege, to
criticise these his acts. - Immediately after •the
battle—withinten days afterwards—George 13. Me
. Mellen was called to command' the army, and he
found it nothing but a disorganized mob, and he
began to reorganize it. He worked night and deli,
and he did organize it. It:was well drilled and
ready, to light, and ho had the affection of the whole
army. He was often pressed to fight, but- he was
not to be-diverted from his purpose tilLhe knew he
was ready.. Let me tell you, George B. McClellan
has &will, and in that respect he is like oldGenertil
Jackson, and, like General Jackson, without the
oath, he has said the Union shall...be _preserveda
What said- Gen. Scott? 'Don't. you fight nor move
till' you are ready. -He didn't do it.'- When he was
ready he prepared to go to Richmond: How should
ho go ? The President hadhis plan and, McClellan
had his three Plans ; they didn'tagree ; what was to
be - done ? I have been a lawyer for fifty years, and
was a volunteer in the army for three menths in
1t12,_ and I don't knoW anything about military
matters, but I know as much.as Abraham Lincoln.
He was a lawyer on the prairies, and a good joker:
.fLaughter.] , Well, he said : General, WS is your
plan and this mine. A. council of war was held, and
they said MoOlellan's was the right plan, and that
was by the Peninsula. Althonghthe President was
=overruled, be got it into his head that because he
was cOmmandeelie chief he should be a general.
The Constitution said he was commander-in-chief,
and he didn't knew how to shoulder a musket. He
was commanderin.chief of the navy; but he might
just as well try to tell Farragnt how to sail his ships
2s to tell MaClellan how to tight his army.
If James Madison bad gone out - to give command
,he would have been laughed at, and he was an able
niaii: ' Gentlemen, President Lincoln never was sat
isfiedwith that decision. ;He brought McClellan
Away from the 'Peninsula, and he has been deter
mined ever since that his plan should be tried. He
.removed McClellan and put in Burnside:and said
' , Row, General; try my plari.” He did so, a,ndWitat
Was the result? He lost from fifteen to .twenty
thousand brave men.- He then said to Gen. Hooker
titry'my plan." He stepped ;into- Burnside's • shoes
was whipped at Chancellors's - 11lb andloet 'fifteen or
twenty thousand more men. Then he saps to Grant,
"you: area major_general and a good commander,
suppose you try Richmond by the way that I pro.
pose." o , n..Grant said—and I now state to yon a
fact which' I have on such good authorlty.tha.t.l. af
:firm the fact to be so- 1 .1" wish to' attack Richmond
by,'way of James river and City -Point." He was
Overruled by Linc‘ln and Halleck and compelled tz
; fight his way over landeand what's, the - cense.
:alliance? Ho has burled one, hundred•thoasand good
and , truii men-in the attempt: Now,- I Charge this
, • 'a-Abraham Lincoln; "nave neottdrat to say about
erialitlifildlebutliffirintlittrhiept 7 te'Spor , • • -
*vania and then he took' as snort a cut as he could
to the Peninsula. Nowigeetteinen, will you:make •
that man the Presidentof the United 'I [Cries,
• “Never !"] ' It; is time new that we- use groat free- •
• dom of speech. •The actionle-the President's. He
is.responsible for the loss of these men, and, wemust
hold• him accountable. McClellan went down -to
the Peninsula, but before - he went down- it was der
termined what number he should take with him; and
that number was agreed upon, for, he knew that he
was fighting the enemy on their own soil and behind
.their own entrenohnsents.. After it was all agreed
upon' about the number he should have, about
•the first of April of 1862, the President said: •
General,.l must take • Blenker's corps away
'from you. - Why so? • Oh, I don't know, there 1
;Is a great - cry about) Fremont 'wanting 'men,
but I shall take no more away from you. Well,
"downldeCiellan goes to the Peninsula. When he '
Aarrives at Yorktown he hears that McDowell's force
Asi.not to be sent down to him. In that the Presi
t dent:broke faith with McClellan, and his force was
, thereby reduced to 60,000 men, And why Wee he
deprived of McDowell and his forces ? Because the
President' said it was necessary to' have them to de
fend Washington. Gen. McDowell himself said he
- could do no good at Washington and he wanted to
go to Richmond. Lincoln thereby, gentlemen, de
prived McClellan of taking Richmond and ending
the war. If 'the President wanted men to defend
the capital there were thousands here in the North
ready and anxious to go to defend it. I don't know
that. Lincoln wanted McClellan to'be - deleated,_but
those around Lincolu'did.• They • didn't want
McClellan to take Richmond and end the war.
' The blood and treasure spent from that time to this
. is' chargeable upon Lincoln , and his advisers. 'I
. could prosecute those matters farther. .I now come
down to the Second battle of "Bull Run - and Antie
*tam, where. McClellan prevented an- invasion- of. 'Maryland and some _off the cities of your interior. ,
.Let us colic to the main point' in hand. We 'shall
have to fight hard to defeat Abraham. Lincoln. Very
' much depends upon the election to be held in Octo
ber neat.: Remember-they haveatiorganized.band
of oftleaholders, the largest number by far that ever
existed in this country. ' The people must rise In
' their majesty, - nr they cannot defeat these fatted of
• flee-holders. r I come-from .New York, - and the en
thusiasm for McClellan knows no boupds in, that
' city, -The'oitY of 'New York will give a larger ma-
Jod y for McClellan than it•ever gave to any. man
before. Can we say that for Philadelphia? [Odes
. of "Yds, yes."]:. If se, there is no , doubt of the re
sult of the election._.
SPEECH
SPEECH. OF HON-EMERSON 'ETHERIDGE.
' '. FELLow-orrizaws : 1 would ask this intelligent
• and vast meeting to indulge, Vie with its silences. I
am a stranger to arou. _I ainnot a. strong man. -I
came this night to mingle lin .• your rejoicings, and
with you - to - ratify - these nominations, -- upon - which
' alone depend the salvation of our whole country. and
the Union of these States. If the spirits of the
.good
'arid great men of the past could' revisits the earth
and draw near to us now ; if they , could-.return. to
tne spot from which, seventy - years ago, they pro
mulgated their Constitution to the world, that Con
stitution which, from that day to this, has been the
only bond of 'Union among a free and glorious pee-
Iple [applause], where would they be? Were they
' to appear within these classic precincts; they Would
leek approvingly' upon you; assembled ' here.
They would smile upon the majesty, of,-this
great, occasion, .when their noble ‘oonstitation
is to be vindicated before all peOple throughout 'the
world. [Cheers.] - But, sirs, no-one of these- noble
-spirits would , be ,at Washington among ~painted
. courtezans r greasy contrabands, and showy shoddy
contractors. [Renewed cheering.] No"one of them
' would smile at the smutty jokes of him who sits there,
but they would be here - to-night with 'earnest hearts
imploring you to save the slip of State, and preserve
their labore - for the happiness of-the people. [Bois
" lerons cheers and !shouts.] - (My friends, I am a
feeble man, I love, to speak to you, but I beg . you
m
will not interrupt e. I ask again your silence, so
- ,that I; may make , myself heard without difficulty.)
[Renewed shouts ] You have heard in the discourse
of•iny 'distinguished friend preceding me—let, me
call himvenerable friend—for , on his head the frosts
of' three.score years now. rest. - With me, you
'thank him* for his able exposition of •the ;questions
mostimportant to the country. [Assent.] He has
told yon that Abraham Lincoln was a conditional
Union man. That, is the only expression in
dulged in -to-night-to ,which I must _express my
'dissent: I say he is not even that. 'Heis a usurper
and a despot! (Loud cheering 'and' clapping of
handl.] Sirs, he - told you truly when he said that
no Union man, no good citizen, no child of the Fe
dorsi Constitution, no intelligent supporter of Abrila
halt•liineoln, can support his acts without being,
not firdegree,:but in kind, as vile a traitor as Jef
ferson• Davis. , (Applause.] No intelligent man can
be ,a Union` man and support Abraham Lincoln.
[Renewed a pplause.] I censure the honest man, in
pretence or really honest, as the enemy of both the
South and - this Government, who teaches and un
derstandingly takes occasion to support Abraham
Lincoln, as one who knows little or nothing of the.
Constitution - .of this country. [Applause.] Sirs, at
this very moment, both in the North' and ,- Seuth,
there, are rival ,despotisms—results of a departure,
from .that 'Constitution which: to-day universally ,
corn - Maids the. respect of every loyal-heart. [Ap-,
plause.] , The-Republicans talk to,you about loy
alty--such loyalty as they possesa! Sirs; loyalty in
the Republican :party is the loyalty of a- cring
ing slave-to the command of an imbecile master.
[Great .Cheerieg.) -It is not ,loyalty,to ,the law or
obedience. to. it. The sacred pledge you consider
les altfis nota heirs - it is loyalty to President Lin-i
eolre-z•the , loyalty of LLs,.or Loyal Leaguers I
or. Eta we translate it in Tennessee, Lincoln laiara:.
• [Uproarious.laughter] SLis, ask - these men what
Loyalty is, and, sirs, they are as dumb. as oysters'
' and know no more ' orloyaltY , then 'they know o
treason, -- Their loyaleVlEK not - that which is aeons
! tomed 16 boldly'faca'death !on the battle-field; like
that of better men: ,What is loyalty? Sirs, it is a term
'which hasno proper application in this Republic and
- age. Under a republican form of government It is
%hard. Ao, discover its .orlgin or define its presence:
I The moat - 103 al man in this country is he who has
the • greatelt. regard. for ~its Constitution and its
laws. jCheers.] I care not who deprecates
' the remark , when 'I say -that when Abraham
. Lincoln," - or" anybody else, opposes - the Constitn
-1 Aiiint and' laws of his country, he is:a foul and
~ tainted ,. traitor. ..[ Applause .), Such a one is the
; 'enemy of every element of liberty throughout
when - world:' What said Junius under a monarehy, wh
spiaking of loyalty? He thus defines lt i :o n yal l ;
. ty in the right understanding of Engi sh"Le m , i
a, rational' attachment'nn - the -guardian of the .
laws." = Sirs,' -, is .Abraham,:Linooln the "gear.
I ,..dian,of..the :lears'i• in this country?. [Applause,
and ' repeated - aria '' of ' a No sir."]- He is the
If giardian..of -_the laws "as - t he -vulture is. the
„guardian of the dove, or as the .wolf is the pre- I
1•
tectoeof the lamb. [Assent and Itighter.) Abre,... ;
ham Lincoln is a, deceitful man. 'Ehose of us 0
the frontier_know that, during the last few moat h f i
he wrote &letter to,a g-eatleman in Telmessee,whie
'contains assurer ceif of' his own shame, of'his Wen- i.
ution-ito rioltitektlikiOonstltution for tho± , purpose or.
n preservirig it... [Jeers and laughter.] What do his.'
4 00010,1 St s' offerAroliiii =favor 1 , -They tell Inn off ai
man its feleg 94 . the 998titi4441;k1 49% Uldelatigilik
II:.
FO CENTS;
. .
Is ; not in favor of the union of the States se it is de
lined under that sacred instrtnerent, but he thinks
it and they.ought•to be. /will.not- further pursue
that theme. - It has, been presented to you try the,
gentleman whohasprecedest mei. One ortwa topics
are, however, left home. Yon must be impressed
'with the fact that only by the election of George Ef;
McClellan and George H. P.ondleton may this
! Union be preserved. Let me tell you, gentle
men;that in my indgntents if 'Abraham Lb:tooth
:be re-elected ,by the fosee•• or , fraud—he 'can be
`elected in no other way-4f he 10 proclaimed Pre
sident; from that day forward there is no hope of
preser,ving this, country. ramers and applause.;
But the fah' 'verdict of the' people,- In November
:-next, when the people of the North; unaided by the
people of the South will rescue- themselves ,froul
`the hinds or the traitors, will give ushope) for the
,Union.••Wherr that announcement issmade the work
is largely done, for the' news will ,be gashed upon
the Worldlnat enthralment is broken. Therhloody
work of Warwillbe nearly over: The breath of the
'Neferithergaleswill have wafted the Union farm its 'j
vrayibto a port ' of safety and refuge. 'LLoud cheers.]iii
indulge ate with your silence.
There are Some things I would say to you that can
then be bettersaids. Please s then, be as • composed '
es you. car. I. Was proceeding to tell you of.the Mtn. •
gars of Mr. Lincoin'ere-electlon and net it would
,be fatal to our peace in its- effe cts. [Voices : "1-To
won't be•plected,tliongl," "We won't have Neon
niingled With shotits."l. My friend says he "won't
; have him." ...Well; to will is-to do. It will-not be
needful, and thisi promise will be fulfilled before the
4th of March'nexes [Cerritised voices : ".That's so?' •
"If we can do it, it will?' etc.] .I.knoyr it will be
20. Why, sirs, a broad aare of men are herestrefore •
me to-night, resolved; wills-strong arms and - willing'
- hearts, to save the Obnit'eltution ,of the cenntry.
Phothuelastic cheere.ll OwSaturday heard' from'
the Tenth Legion ; they send a .greeting to the ef
feerthrit they intended•to keep the ballot-boxes open'
fora' Week; [Laughter and cheers.j, - And there
was a message, too, from: 1 1 ,forthurnberland, God'
blase her! to the - men of 'Philadelphia, telling
'them-that they would' keep•the ballot-boxes open
'until , they got votes enough:. [Great Meeting.]
Felicity-citizens, all that thus tell you'isthe truth.
.And.riow• to resume. I have lived all my life among
.thepeople of the 'Southern: Stateir: ' There' halal
. "spent my childhood ; my youth; ritY, maiihoodi , VThe
vigor 01 my life has been snentnutong them;
toll you that in Missouri, Kentucky,And. reiniessee
alone there are 1,000,000 of .men • and women who
are between eighteen and ilfty-years of aget Gen
tiemen—yon framed and brought umin the'sehools:L
you have learned-what were their duties- and their
rights. • Now, throughout this wart how have- these
people respected Government., They hays resolved
to stand- by the .Constitution and the Unitas, and
locik for endisisement and protection- from their
brethrip of the free States of the North: [Cheers ]
They Wait with patience the result of the popular
verdict inNovember next'; they wait whit yore will
do. If, by-terse. or .fraud, Abraham Lincoln lore
elected, and be is thereby permitted four years-more
of his ruinous policy, fatal to the country r to the Con
stitution, they willknow that all Government is gone
forever. ' • -
When the time. comes when it 'is- announced to
,them, they will look around for their ,own 'safety,
and in-these: times, in view of rebel) pretensions, it
would not be hard to tell where- they. will ge;
I• do not' say where they . ought. to go s 'l' only
tell you where , they- will go. Mr: Lincoln can
never invoke throughout the whole:world men or
money enough to subjugate, exterminate, disgrace,
and enslave them even in unequal combat, in this
age of the world, [Applause.] In my State we
will have no vote. And why Just because Abra
ham Lincoln has used the army, and navy of this
country for two years and a half to keep us out of
the Union, and disfranchised sixty or seventy thou
,sand citizens. I to-night arraign Abraham Lincoln
as the best' commissary, the • best reeriliting officer,
the.best friendthat rebeidom ever had.- Sirs, that
man is Arresting citizens for discouraging enlist
ments! tell you Abraham' Lincoln has not•dis
couraged enlistments, but has encouraged them,
south of - the Ohio. river, for the rebels: I will tell
you more that he hal doxie. .He has stifled more
Union eentiment,since,the begintring_of the war,
than any fifty men in Richniond ! and he has done
less - to ennoble and more to disgrace the human race
than any creature that walks this earth. [Cheers ]
Fellow-citizens, 1 speak with no fear of power,
-and say. only whit :1.-know. When this war broke
out, a large majority of the people of Tennessee,
Kentucky. Louisiana, :and Maryland were opposed
.to the rebellion. The large majority ; belleved in the
voice of the ballot-box They believed secession was
madress in policy; in war it was a crime. They
stood by the law and the Constitution. What were
the prouilses made us 1. Sirs, Abraham Lincoln ,
never made a'promise but to break it:; [applause
never made a single effort to maintain law, .or to
protect the people after he had deprived them of all
ppwer of defence.. • [Cheers.] When this war broke
out, the issues 'were sharplY defined: There was
War ' intestine war. • Questions of boundary. the de
sire,for the success, of the. rightful Union, and the
restoration - of the supremacy of the law--againat
all these the South took afirmatand, in a revolution.
What is revolution? It is resistance to the law;
and in that attitude Jeff Davis stands to-day. ' His
Confederacy was organized for the. purpose of over
throwing this Government. - Ltnooln tried to meet
the issue. He knows men came to his call in a far
greater number than he wanted. You may talk of
'the populace springing' to arms with wild ardor.
=You know-that one million of men rose against him,
and that ,he received . two millions of soldiers,
'mere men than he' got votes in the last Presi
dential 'election—more than stood by at the polle.
Vhat + did he do? In the first Congress he
.pledged : himself to the people .of. th.e North
that this War should. be pr_osecuted for . the sole
-pirjobse 'of pitting down the rebellion,' enforcing
the laws,. and.. maintaining the supremacy of the
Constitution. This was his pledge ;it was for this
-purpose you, all took your arms, for this purpose
your sons L andyotir brothers, and your fathers went
'into the field as-a 'soldier or buckled on the sword.
,[Cheers; long-continued.] Gentlemen, please keep
_quiet. I catinOttirik in this uproars ...As I was say
.lngi.GeD.l.Etuellsiad Gen. George B. liletilellan or
.genisedour armies. A whole year .was spent in or-,
".: 20 Lo
New Orleans proclaimed the triumph of our arms.
•We rested in our career of empire—an important
,- of• the-rebel country Iwas, ours.,. In the
summer of 1861 we-were flushed with our prospects
'tifsuccess. • The rebels were beaten, and had lost a
sgreat part of Kentucky; and in Missouri,-Tennessee,
- and Louisiana the rebel power was on its way to
:disintegration. Now; in 'the midst of the general
7rejcliCiDgS. of. tha time I went to the State of Ton-•
'nevem with Special instructions from Mr. Lincoln,
to make them certain pledges and promises. I went
in 1862, and men and women from fifty miles around
came to meet me. I made to them proposals found
ed on the assurances of Lincoln and the orders of
McClellan and Buell. More than 7,000 of my neigh
-hots', in ten days took the oath of allegiance,
, glad of the chance, and went home, believing that
this war was over. • Mr. Johnson,_ candidate for the
Tice Presidency' on the 'Abolition ticket, went to
Tennessee. He made out a programme, and pre
-tended to offer a full amnesty, to be granted - on con
7dition.of affiliation to the Union.. This the people
of the State accepted. [Here the auditory com
• menced swaying 'about;' crushing each other, the
crushed ones crying for room. To- this confusion
' was added the music of a band, which began is
•
-tune unauthorized and unasked. The voico of the
speaker was drowned but, by exPostulation, he at .
' last obtained a hearing and proceeded.] Fellow-
citizens, I. know you can be quiet. As •I was saving
--[confusion • renewed, and again 'silenced by
expostulation.] As I was sayings they accepted
-.the amnesty of Mr. Lincoln. , The. State sent
ten thousand, and more soldiers into Ihe•Federal
• army. When this was done, Mr. Lincoln changed '
the issues of the war, against which the military
forces of the country had been- directed, to "meet
armed rebellion, and commenced• blotting out some
01 the States from the map of the world, changing .
the entire policy of -the war, thus making, the war, •
from being a war for our liberties, an unholy:war
-a war upon 'the Constitution and the Union of the
States. - Now, gentlemen without going : further
. into details, instead of following the course he at
-first pursued; he adopted a new line marked 'out by
. a political psuty. I will mention that hew, only a:
week before, his satrap, Andrew Johnson, with a few
little lackeys ,proceeded to subvert the State Govern-'
ment,to throw away the results of hleCiellan'a order,
• and forbids them to vote unless they will take oath
'that they will oppose the Chicago- platform. They.:
may, not , oppose amnesty, they may not oppose
peace, but they must be sore to oppose George B. •
McClellan and vote for Abraham Lincoln [Groans.
A voice "They can't stand the"truths of the Demo
cracy,"] as ifilrmly. resolved toget the-State out of
the,Union, after the Presidential election, or else
obtaining • its -.voice through a bogus emotion
and fraudulent votes.- The other day a con- •
vention of 'delegates met at Annapolis. to
make a Constitution far Maryland , to make laws
for Maryland. Not content with the Constitution as'
it now exists, - an. election is "held to supplant the
. Constitution and. laws ; it is elected by : Lincoln's
They..
bayonets._ The met last week; ' they submitted +.'
: , the frilit'of their constant work, not to the.people ;
".
no, gentlemen, but . they submitted to such per
tion of. the people to vote upon ' as they saw
proper. Instead of allowing all to vote for the Con
stitution or against it, those against it were given
:few opportunities. They decided that the' former
•.might vote,• those who disagreed with them might M
,not. vote. Maryland" Louisiana, nand ' Kentucky •
have contributed 75,000 troops to the Federal army..
They have earned on many a battle field imperish
able renownfrom Murfreesboro, Shiloh, and Chicka-
Mauga. - , Why; Eire; the other day the people of
' Kentucky undertook to elect Judge Newhall Chief
Justice of that State. The little man who represents •
Lincoln' therein command s and a military commas-!
' der, ordered that Judge Newhall's name should be
stricken from the poll-liook-he is the most distils
guished jurist of that State. In its place was pat.'
the name of Taunton. The people of Kentucky,
conscious of.the dange - tof twenty-six - years of au
.
thority in such' hands. selected Judge Robinson a
lawyer, a patriot, 1," Christian, and a gentle
man. [Cheers and confusion. During-most of the
above remarks- the confusion was so great that the
words of the speaker could scarcely be distinguish
. ed.] . No, if there could bo an electionheld in Ten
nessee to-morrow, ninety-nine out of every hundred
votes would be Oast 10T Georr B. McClellan
and': George H. Pendleton. Cheers.] . When
I say. this speak the truth. Abraham Lin
-'coin'-and': Andrew Johnson in Kentucky, and
Tennessee have not a party as large as the Pennsyl
vania party of the Penitentiary. [Laughter.] And
I would here state that.they are not a whit more re
spectable... [Renewed boisterous laughter.] There
is not an honest man in my State, not a man of in
telligence who was in it before the war, who will
vote for Abraham Lincoln even if it wore' to save
• his life ! [Cheers and laughter.] I feel glorified,
_fellow citizens, in - living among people wholnot only
repudiate and scorn the treason of Jeff. Davis, but
bear no' love to the servants of Abraham Lincoln.
[Cheers.] • He talks of-restoring the Union by force.
Do they think that men will believe their simple
nonsense.• In three years the rebellion has been on
its last - pair of legs, it has been starving all along,
the last boy has been conscripted, the last old man •
sent to the front [laughter], that „stark famine
brooded.over the land. [Renewed laughter.] How
long have you heard this yet still more of-the.
people are asked, [a voice -500,000 motel; yes, and
still they want 805,000 more. [Laughter]. The
spirit 'of the Southern people is still unbroken,
although we every day.hear of their stavation. Only
500,000 more ! What, to add those to the million+
at least. that have already gone into the field I;
What, 500,000 more ! Closer overran and conquered;
Gaul with ten thousand men;
_that great man,!
Pompey, was victor at, Pharsaa with not more;
than ten thousand. The patriots of, the revolution`
fought out their war with half that number. - ' I amt
sick of this still , ++ five hundred , thousand. more. 9 ';
[lmmense cheering and great confusion.] Gentle
-men, I have said to-night many bitter things against•
the rebellion, but cognizance of wtokedness is found
as well in this region. I might repeat and reaffirm
'everything I have said, but there are worse things
in this world than , rebellion. I would rather be
Called a rebel than a -thief. The character of a.
rebellion depends entirely . upon its success. But we
desire.. that Lincoln "shall not bere.elected. • Shall
:b e . [Emphatic cries of ." Never, never," front the
auditory.] • Then, sirs, . swear ,•.swear as liamilcar
'swore, Hannibal, upon the altar Of . his country
off'
..the
swear ye this night eternal liatred to the enemies of
..the liberties of our country, - [This most -of the
`auditory with' hands Uplifted.] :.There` , are
.i.801138'':W011313•.thillgIS,•13114 ,than. ; rebellion, though
S.this Ise wicked rebellkin against - popular govern'.
.litient, l against ` the' verdict -of , : the: ballot box. , I
Gam,
the no, apologist of , ,Jeff , Davis Ishon I add that
„thkiiriceirofnoy country's 'misery are not confined
Lite the Sbutli. ',Abraham Lincoln,,Salmou Chase,
tgfilarles, Sthnner, John P. Halo, .itid oznegenws,
'have'Prated treason and revolution ;:for 'forty. years,
; [Cheers.] There,are-Northern traitors se , well. as
Southern rebels. [Cries of that's se.'" Our
anwslirnmeie;land• Beechen wele .a co ci n i ten in t: toal e o n i
( fan& tallr.- ! tree : Both- atd -t49 1 1 1 1 .
for - the treason
pew% :'too : - cowardly . '. to
...g
+preasthed.The , Southern people, the South %
oressmen, the Southern Jeader,s-.yrere.
noMP OI2 .- -- • • 'gad , 'arid on' many a battlelflelil:
core in what, they I
diehiterßthe!bones:pf some of the moat diStingulehed
fittilt get4lo9l4lliiiii nottlitlat
4.l.ttit y,
' Tiro WAI , pruoss,
4 -1F118L15.82.0
Tim W* Pass Will be sent to enbearibers be .
snail (per annum in advanoe)
Three copies:..." 5 Or
Five copies • 800
Ten cordee 15 00
Larger Clubs than Ten will be charged at the ea=
rate. $1.50 per copy. -
rne money must attempt accompany the order. an 4
in no tnetance can theee terma.:be deviated from. ar
Mel/ Adrord very tittle more than the cos of paper.
IlKif - Postataetere are reenested
_to 'act 84 agouti fee
TRH WAS Passe. .
Sig- To the getter-ttp.of the Club of ten or twenty. an , "
extra copy of the Paper will be givies.-,
. •
lug their cause to be just and• that:of their great
States. In their issue they.were as sincere as great
—I say great because-they .died in defence of .a
&nose they believed to, be right: Oar Congressmeo
ea' me only to vote. They are found only in company
with. Government contractors and-=-SaMbo. [Bois
tereus laughterl, They are caught talking with
achooimasters of n egroes in a ftiPpant way, offering up
long p'rayers for the contrabands, and if called upon
they even sing -Psalms. [Renewed boisterous
laughteA] They, are always invoking (i-od to be on
their.side; and I supPote when Ganes no other bu
siness. He May possibly attend to them. [Laughter - 4
This is the obaracter of the Northernrebels, the men
who do not lur for peace and the restoration of the
Abri.‘ ant Lincoln is 20 more favorable to
seeking 'peace and the restoration of the Union
than Jeff.. Davlis. lie will not submit to the old
Union 'when there can't be any other.'and to the old
. Constitution; Why is thin?' Lineoln says, "I want
terms; I will Only bave. pectee on our constitutional
conditions.". To show you that he is 'determined
that peabemust.come to hint ire haveonly to' know
(and they are well known) his
_policy oaths question
of slavery. Now compare the policy of Lincoln
•and Davis. Abraham .Lincoln says "yonmay come
back. with an unconstitutienet conditon." Jeff
Davis saysit "I want.-tchave my own way." - Now
which is • the. greater traitor, of .nie. two, Lincoln
of-Da v is?'l Load shouts of PrLincolnt" Lincorit!" and
cheers.] Very . good and' I'D tell you why, Jeri Davis
was true tolls enangements;rhe cello/upon themen
of the' Southlo volunteer and' give the strength of
their- stout 'hearts and strongr- arms,- same of them
from •under this - Governmens. Abraham Lincoln
called 'upon our young . men, and two •zdllions or
men of war: ararr to fight the Isl,ttles of liberty, a .
•
cause In whicbthy felt — the Saco` ipiereat as oar-
Iv_
ee. f CheenjV When theseitere trikbn for the
comae of thr • - • _ _
...be 01 -ne .I.Thioa, he proclaled his .spollation
pulley, be suspeaded.the habeas• eorpas, and pro
eeevoell. In this .way 'until all tter men swath or
' the Ohio river weimiiitady to light to the last
Afteh• [Applause.l.l IT not all, at' leant nine
' tenths will do It,. [a Yoke—" That's right."]. If
1 Tow 'avant to terminate the war, sleet George
[Enthuginetic elieeringr] I said; a
illttle svhilaego, that there were meaner things than
- rehaliffnis. -:The man whC , attempts to nee the army
;20-r, eetpresirve the Conatitntien—.[tha remaindee
1 , fifth's - Sentence was lost •::: - .•*;ithipreiailink-ciamor of
fifth's-Sentence
band.] and this is - what ouryoungmen arc •
to ,go- re, the wars for? take mord - than the
wlfolotarny now in the fieleagainst the rebellion to
00 awry out the present projecto 5. but are we to in
plhe the Slave population te. turn themseiivi loose
ma the defenceicos women and children in cider to
effect a reduction of the rebellion 'I Gentlemen, nil
note' wa.v a wilderness when Nerth Carolina , was a
member ell an independent.Uafon; giving hereenti
meats in The Corislitution. no, State in which
'Lincoln Was horn was no paT,aly' to that glorious
contract. Re is called "Honest' Abe." • When
ever you ass a woman walkin'ge and flailed as
!'honest- ry," you have a
( etry <dear idea of
her characoar. When you fin ran "holiest John"
you naturally mean to be carefOL. Thtts, if we
speak our suspicions of "honest 'Abe," we knew
there Is not an honest Impulse. - in , his heart.
[.Cheers.]- . In' my judgment—and - I , think I know
him.,-he has- never told -She truth who:ma lie would
stibserve his Purpose ! [Lanahter.] ram speaking:
of Abe liineoln;.the candidate of the 'Republican
party,.andotherain the shape.of feends of contra.
bands: EA•voice—"No'; Niggerhead'.;4ll . : Illy friend
speaks of " Niggorheads." (Confasion,liewhich the
speaker remarked - something about tha"negro..l as
has clad them in the uniform of the American soldier,
and made:them I hetompeers of the la dips and gentle-
Men of Philadelphia,. [Groans.] .* **"..Crowds of
greasy negro wenches are wandering through "the
- National paipitol, and a few weeks ago aicrowd of
negro women were there, and several white women
were trying togetont. But they could nc4 and they,
when compared with the negroes, looked :Ike jewels
in an Ethropl.ear. [ - Laughter and apple:Else.] Why,
sir,last New Year was celebrated in the city of
Washington. There - was an introduition , to the
President, and he treated them a little liko , friends:
Why, Dr; Antooha and lllrs.-Antocha were there,
and Lincolnwent to-see them, slobbering upon the
scene before him-like the imbecile 'fie is:. [,Great
laughter and applause.] " Well" said Ito my
informant,- "what did he look: like!" • " Fie
looked ;like Davenport's steer!"- "What," raid
"Davenport's E Leer 1" " Yes, said he,'" he looked
over the rails •ab the 'calves in the pn. and - said;
Is is my work.)" - Let me tell you when you ask
"willthe Southern States come back into the Urinal"
that they.will never, under such rulers;•come back
into the •Union. [Tremendous noise, confusion,
shoving among the audience, brass bands of ap
proaching clubs adding to the din.]
His speech was cencluded by'the arrival of thirty
fotir little girls, representatives of the Nineteenth
ward. -These were clad in white, one, the. eldest,
representing the' Goddess of' Liberty. A wreath
was presented to the president 'bearing the , inscrip
tion : "Restore to us our country as you received - it
from' oar fathers."' They then sang. the "Star..
Spangled Banner," and the meeting adjourned,
The meeting on Chestnut street waepresided ove r
,
by Colonel Wetherill Lee. An' old man attempted •
toeing "The Star-sPangled Banner" on this stead:
• but he broke down.: Addrestes were :delivered, by
Messrs. Josiah Randall, Edward Murphy,
Staggers, and others.
The meeting at theloitheinit stand
president Color el :William. Bradford:.; 5P000.110.1
were made here by the presiding officer, Mr:Baziks,
Mr. Greenback, Theodore : H. Oeldschlager, Er; A.
I'L Burton, Henry GeOrge
Mr. tenton. > ,
. •
The meeting at the southwest stand,Wasloresided
over by . Colonel William loCandless.;. Speeches
made here by E. R. Weil, A.F. lIIU (a etip pled
soldier), Rufus E. Sharfley, John Coohraii, - Ciptaiii
E. W. Power, J. P. Montgomery, and others.
In English View of Alim!rlcan.
IFloMthe'LozdOi Times, Sept. 3
.Though it, .would be imprudent to. Predict the ft&
' •'t dincia,46s4.laPlifigiaNe*,4X9A-Ci4Sl4.--
tency andiniportance: Whatever may be the issue
of the political movements now in progress,- whether
Mr.. Lincoln be re elected with his old platform;
or with a modified and conciliatory platform;
whether he be , defeated and a peace Democrat
chosen, or a war Democrat, or arr.armlatice and
_convention Democrat, who will shape hls.course ac
cording to, the turn ot events, the present Phase of
national Opinion will be . equally remembered as re
markable. Perhaps the Virsinian campaign_woald
not have , been suffielene in itself to disenchant the
North, :and depreciate the ourrendy another, third
of its value within six months, if it ,had not been
that the Ndith was already prepared to anticipate
the werst. Gen.- Grant's - failure :rather strength
ened former conclusions than produded an original
change in the popular views. But though-the ten.
.dency has been peacewards for a long time, recent
events have increased the movement, and made it,
it would - seem, almost general. No one can say
how far it will extend, or. what effects It will pro
duce. But the whole Northern people are at least
discussing the propriety of some negotiation with
the, enemy„ They may doubt the possibility of re
conciliation ; they 'may consider teat they are too
far pledged - to - a certain policy to give way; they
nay believe that two confederations cannot remain
in peace on the same continent, and that the - warTif
now ended, would begin again before they are many
years older; they may think the difficulties insur
mountable, or look with shame onthe concessions
.demanded ; but with all this they discuss the ques
tion. and allow themselves to ask-L." Shall there be
a:rmistice 1 Is it possible to renew the Union by
common consent I What would be the consequences
of a peaceful separation, and could the ill•effects of
it be prevented by any kind of international tree-
Mal"
Clearly this . is a great ohangelaom the temper
which prEvailed a year ago, when the War Chris
tians thundered - on every platform, and no man's _
liberty or, goods were safe if he raised his voice
against the dominant party. There is, after all, no
- despotiam possible in such a country as America,
•except 'the despotism of the majority. President
Lincoln could only dispense with the Constitution,
Mr. Seward could only touch his tivo bells, by-which
at one instant he was able -to imprison a man in.
Maine and another in Kansas, because the mass of
the people really believed in the war, and were wil
ling that their leaders should carry things with a
'high hand. As long as' the' Government was sup
posed capable, of crashing the- "rebels,a Mr. Lin
coln's dictatorship and tar. Chase's; credit- system
had the adhesion of the great mass 'of the people,
and opposition was stilled by.their general acquies
cence. 'But now the lack of success which hoe-at
tended the Federal operations takes away trona the
overnment the authority on which it could rely in
-transgressing the letter of the law: There are so
many ready to find fault that it la .impOsaible to re
press criticism. '
Of course the interest of the diEcuision is greatly
increased by the practical consequences that may
flow - from it. If. Mr. Lincoln had two or 'tares
-yt era of power left there might be a call for-peace,
but the nation would know that they bad a Chief
Magistrate almost desaotic and solemnly pledged to
war. Bat in six months more Mr.-Lincoln's term
of office expires ;-in three months he will be ren
dered powerless- if a successor of 'adverse views be
chosen. Hence the energy and bitterness of the
contest. The Democrats want 'to gain office, the
• Republicans to' keep it. - . Besides the good of the
country, there are the private" ambitions of nu
- retirees politicians; and the interests of hundreds of
place-hunters. The Democrats desire a President of
their own - party, who Will oust their adversaries from
aevery post of Minor •or emolument, and they see in
thetnereasing desire , for, • peace, or at. any rate for
negotiations] the means of furthering their cause.
The—Republicans; on the contrary, wish to keep
Lincoln ..ina or to substitute for him a man of
their owriparty, and they consequently maintain,
-for the most. part : theexpediency of a war policy.
The letter. from Gen. Seymour and ahe_speeoh 'of •
Mr. Vallandigham maybe taken as the. expositions
of two advocates -:each anxious. to ; influence that
great mass of undetermined opirlion - whicla lies be.
T,ween the two political. parties. GeTl..Seysneur's
one argument is the exhaustion of the. Confederates,
and theampossibility thatt.het csaixesist the -more
populous North.• ButrataHrealdent Davis is said
to have asked, In a recent conversation, Ia it sup
posed that there are twenty millions of people at
the North really determined - to crush, the . Confede
rates It would seem from the accounts' we have
of Federal recruiting and' the enlistment of Irish
paupers as substitutes for the gentlemen -of
Boston that there is no very fervent spirit of
patriotism • left existing, and that the South,.
thoughammerically inferior, may be- able to keep
armies In the field strong enough to maintain its in--
dependence. Mr. Vallandighama speechisaqually,
eloquent on the other side. He speaks of defeated
armies, incessant but useleas conscriptions, and:
ruined finances. The dollar Is worth only 37, or at
cents, and the Confederacy is still unconquered. •
The campaign in Virginia is not the most unfor
tunate part of the war. Stal,worse is the spectacla
of territories wrested from the Federal grasp after
being once held. "Not a foot of aalississiprac: he
sayo, (la ours, except a few miles around: Picks urg
- and Natchez; none of Louisiana:, except about New
Orleans. The* wholefited river was lost by the
failure of General Banks' expedition. . Arkansas,
with slight, exeeptiona, is again in the hands of the
Confederates.. They have regained more in the rear
than we have obtained hy the onward march of
• General ,
Sherman'sarmy." In these sentences Ur.
Tallandigham touchea the weak point of the Fede
ral policy s - and his words can hardly fail of effect.
Yet it-may be thatnt the last moment the Repub
licans will accept 'something of the policy of their
opponents for 'fear of running too much counter to
tne new tendencies of the public.. While the Demo
crats are divided bettieen peace andwar, and no
one can exactly predict the proceedings of the Chi
cago Convention, it maybe that the party in power
— La y, ai r . ra nea an himself --may endeavor to take
• the wind out of their Sails byes accepting the armis
tice and Convention. Strang things have haa.
p „ a a i n A mer ican politics, and in time of war,
when so many good things are to be had, a pasty
will do much to keep place. and power. The end
time will show, but it can. hardly be doubted. that
this is a Tory important period in the politic:: of the
Union.
STATUE 01' PRINCE ALBERT.--.-011 tllO 20th uit. a
statue .of Prince: Albisrt was inaugurated at Perth
in presence of the Queen.
r The correSpon
nont says
"The site chosen"for the. statue is on. the. North
Inch of Perth, in•the corner.nearest to the Bridge of
Tay. 'The figure is set upon a. pedestal thirteen feet
high, making the whole height .twenty-two_ feet.
The ,pedestal , is octagonal,,approached by four oc
tagonal *Thanated z stops; and is .stirrounded b3r
' circular rallingfpf ,bronzed malleable iron, of .a star
cross and doral' pattern. The railing was beadtl
fully festooned with a series of wreaths and WjLh
mottoes. Over the whole was the Prince's motto,
Treu undfest, , and underneath were the chaplets—
namely, ffrst, the cyprus, emblematical of d,
. with the words Multis,elle fiebitis s
th ,econ the
'the set - steak; symbol' of immortality, wi.
sc ro ll ",',Non , crmnis mariar and, third,. the olive,
significant, - of peace; with'the motto, WOO* tra
bettl; Skiligettga 911r118-1 •
- .