U • • • - • - , . • • . • . •- • .• " • ... • . ••• • • • ;• • • _.• - • .' . 7:77-77:- • , .. • - _ . • ' .• „. - • , • - - „ , -75 7 . ; • ;a te • • • , • • IA • 9 = o . • ......VritTnE MI 1 EMIT 'itOrtKr;:o LODI P V2 A . . • • • . :• • •,• • , • • . . • 7* - 1 ,•? • Alt . • A. K. ItHEW% Editor & Proprietor. VOL. 6i. TERMS OF PUBLICATION The CARLISLE lignatai is published weekly tin a large --- Whopl7 - Colrattithig twenty Ig t enlumn and furtitiThed __to_ subscribers at 450 if paid strictly inadrance. 611.76 It paid Within the year •:ir $2 in all coons when pay moot Is delayed until alter tho expiration o the year No subscriptions received for a loss period Plan six • months, and nano discontinned until all the orrmirmrur bra poll, unless at the option of the publisher Paper, Rent to subscribers living out of Cumberland coutify must ho paid for In advance. or be payment assumed • by some respons'bie porstm living I Cumbedand county. These terms will be rigidly adhered to in all MHOS. A DV E It TI SE M E NTS Advertisements will ha r barged 1.00 per square of twelve lines for three hoertions. and 26 rents fie each übsequernt insertion. All a Ivertlsements of teas than twelve lines rousislered es a square. Advertisements in •erted before Marriages and deaths 6 cents p,r line for first Insertion, and 4 ce•ets par line for subsequent insertions. Comm urinal ions on subjects ot limited or Individual int-re .t will be charged:, ceni.s per line the Proprietor will not be resp'nustbil int de magee for errors in advertisements Obituary notices or Marriages not exceeding live will be Inserted without charge. JOB PRINTING 'rho Carlisle Herald 30,8 PitlN r] NO OFFICE is the largest aad 'nest rompletd estahlihsment in the county Four good Presses. and a general variety of materials suited fir elaln and Fneu•y Work of every k Ind enables us to do 'lob Printing at shortest !10th... and on the most reaassahle terms. Poraons In wait of 111 is. Blanks or anything in the .lobbing floe, will find It to tbdr Interest to give us a rail. BALTIDIOAE LOOK HOSPITAL. ESTABLISH ED AS A REFUO E FRO NI QUACK EBY TILE ONLY PLACE 'WHERE A CURE CAC RE 011 11 , 11. D 1D the ,un !!,t j c!Vri l t i l I N ] sSp:ln‘•!(.l);\lllldhloanSiy discoveredetl,•t tint reun•dy i n th. world f•r all private weak liens !il the het. or limbs, •.trietures :itrietions of the tiiJueys sad Had dar, illVOluntary dis•barges. imp !toner, tv, nervous,, ss, dvspepsy, languor. low spirits roan slop ur Ideas, palpitation of th • heart, timidity, trem dlings, dimness of sight or giddiness. !Ikons!. of the head. throat. !lulu, or skin, affections of the lire!, lungs, stomach or has els—l h ine terrible disorders arising Irmo the solitary habits of youth—those , curet and solitari practices more fatal to their viz time tons the s.dig. of Syron:: to the Marine's of Ulysses. blighting their slant brilliant hopes or auticipsiiiins, rendeting marriage, imp,sible. VOUNG Loped who have become the victims of solitary viol), that dreadful and destructive Illllit whh•h annu ally swoops co an unthsely grave thou,ands of Voting .Men of the in ea exalt - 4.1 talen tn and l•riltiant Intellect, who night ”therwine-liiVe entranced !intoning ,tinates with the thunders of ebmuence or inked to ocidany the living lyre, stay call wfth full confidence. VElirl'3.lii.GE Married persons, or young Ines eontemplating mar- Hag, being aware of physics, weakness, organic debil ity, doiormities..te . speecTil, cured Ile who places himself under the ears of Pr. I. may rellAouQly con We In his lion, as a gentlemp, and confidently rely upon his skill as a ph. aiCiau. , ORGANIC CAME N'ESS Immediately cured. and full vigor restored. This din trussing affection—which renders lite miserable and marriage int pos•Ptle—in the penalty paid by the victims of improper ludo' nor cos. ionog persons are too apt to commit tcees,es front not being aware oil the dreadful consequences that may ensue Sow, who that under stand • the ..uojem will pretend to duns that the power of print-route... is lost sooner by those fulling lota im pr p tuna+ thin by the pin lend Ite , tides being 110 pets _the pleasures 1.1 healthy enepeing. the 111051 serlot, and deetr active symptoms to both body and mind rhe system hecones derangedathe physi cal and 1.01 tal functions w 4,100. loss of pro , reative power. norvoun d spepsia, palpitatit 11 01 the heart. indLrestion, constitutional debility. a went tug of the frame, cough, consumption. decay and death. ICIFICM.I - 70 7 SOUTH ramErs =cox fv - zaz3T. Left hand side going from Ilartinuwe street, n fete doors from the corner. Fail not to nir..orve mane and number Letters uum.t be paid and contain a stamp. Thu Doe toed Diploma, hang in his olllee. OURE WBRRATED IN TWO DRYS No Mercury or Nauseous Dritzs.—Dr..lohnaton. mein bor. of .t he ltol loge d ..'nrgeeitli• den .Braid oa to front one of he. mo-t eminent rod gee in the I) ni e,l States. and the greater p of whose isle hat been spent In the hospitals of London. Paris. Philadelph , a and elsewhere, has effected some of the most. tonishing cures that were ever known: ninny troubled uith ring- Bead:and ea• it when asleep. grffat nervous nets, being alarmed at sudden sounds, bashfulness, with frequent blushing. attended sometimes glib de rangement of mind. were eared immediately. TAECE PARTICULAR NOTICE. sddresses all those who have inj need themselves by ImprOper I odul.zenve and solitary halMs. whit h ruin both body and soled unfitting them fin either bus liens, study, society or tea rrht-(0 - These are sonic of the +ad and melancholy effects produced by early hal. to of youth, viz: %Venkre•as of tae hack and limbs palm. In the head, dimness Of sluht, loss of in u4cular power, palpitation of the heart.dyspen sv, nervous irritability. derangement I the digestive functions. general d,dillity, symptoms of ...onunijoion. MKNT.U.I.T.—The feardd effects on the mbso are HI ueh to be dreaded—AA of ins lmry, confusion os idea, de pression of spirits. evil torolodings, avert Ion" to society. self di-trust, love of solitude, Untidily, Sce., are some of the evils produced. Thousands of pnrsons of all ages ran now judge x hat Is tie cause of their declining besith. losing their ;- or. becoming weak. pith , . nervous and emaciated. having a singular appearance about the eyes, cough nod sy wp tows of consumption. 'YOUNG rirMN Who have I , ,ju red them...lves by n certain practice indolgod in whelylone. a habit frequently learned from esil ,mpanions. or at at hoot, the elfec,ts of which are nightly Mk, even a hen Asleep, and if nut cured renders martin:re impossible, and destroys both mind and body, should apply immoilately. What a pity th,t - a y /tong man. the hope of his coun try, the darling of his panel ts. should be snatched Irons all prospects nod enjoyments nt lifi., by the POTIPINuunLee of deviatin • flow the path of natio(' and indulging in a certain secret habit. Such persons oust bolero con temp sting MARRIAGE reflort that a Pound mind and holy are the moat lie ces,:itry requisitel, to promote ronnul•ial happi:koza without them,. the J.,urmhy through life becoui,s a weary pilgrimage; the pr sport hourly dnrlt , • n n to the view; the mind becomes shadowed with despair and filled with the melancholy rellerlion Ilya th e h app i„„ h , of another Meanies blighted %Itti our own. 11I$EASU..OF IMCEPRUDENcE When the misguided end imprudent votary of Ora. sure,tinds that he hem I Allied the seeds iil this painful disease, it ton often happens that an ill timed SlllO.ll of shame, or dread Ii covOry. diners him from applying to swish who. (ruin edurntln•t and respectability. can alone WI lend him. delaying till the constitutional symptoms of this horrid disease make their aprarancel swill as ulcerated sore throat. 111,111111 d wise. uorturna, pains in (,he head and limbs.ditoness of si.ibt. distfileSS • 110.1011 011 the •hie bones and arms, blotches on the head. face and extremities. progrekting with frightful rapidity, till st last the palate of the-mouth or the 1101101101 the wise fall in, and the victim of this u wftil disease bechmes a horri' object bf conimiseratlon, till death puts a period to his dreadful suffering., by send ing him to h that Undiscovered Country from whence no travel* returns." . . It la a melancholy hut that thousands fail cletima to thle terr.ble disease. maim; to the unakilifulness of i porant pretenders. who, by the use of that deadly.poi son, 'dummy, ruin the constitution and make the re. chine of life miserable. • • Trout not your lives, or health, - Ito the care of the many unlearned and worthless pretenders destitule of knowledge; name or character, who cops Dr. Johnstnn's a Ivertisenients, or style themselves. in the uowspupers. regularly ((located physicians, incaplide of curing, they keep you trifling month after taking th•lr filthy and p &annex compounds, or as long as the smallest fee canimobtainedoind to despair, leave you with ruined health to sigh over your galling disappointment. Dr. Johnitton.ls lite only Physiciao advertising. Ilia credentials or diplomas always Ding In his office. lillrentedies or trratnient are unknown to rill others, pr'oplyed Den u life'spent in tile great hospitals of Hu. rope, the 144. in. the.'country and it - more extensive private practice than any;at her physician in the world. IN DORSEM. P.NT OP TUE PRESS The many tbotthande cured at the, institution-year elm yelir, and .the neiheroue linportant-Surgical Opp Whine poternied Ify Dr. :folitiston.,. witnessed b y the retie; tore of the fl 1111," ‘• Clipper." end' many other mere, notices of which have appeareSt_egain- end again before the Lin standlatt ace gentlenan of character and teepousihlUty, is to etifilelent guarantee to the afflicted; SKIN. DISIDASECJi SIPEEDiLtit 011111:41, Pergeng writitig. 'should be particular tn . directing thuir lettere to tbialnatitution, In the following mon: nor: M of tho 13nittmoru Locic Hospital, iltiltimbru, Md Kay 2.1862-1 y . . • NEW - SPRING GOODS . • p.m.pow,ipoiviog afargo assortment of nosy and elegant ,liirlint IX9OjIB, to Which I respect to . y call the attention of my• old frionda and coat° more, alad•all•tn, want of handanme and cheap goods. ' Particulars . LW next - weeks . paper.,, I will sell as cheap as any . stetnin..the Borough— .. ' - .... , 1L..._-__ •' . • • -• • • . • 011AS:OGILBY Trustee...-_ ,April - 4, 166 . . , noorra, [ions t cheap reeelved nn aPsortment of ' tahlies, c lid rr ne ()Atari'. Booty & sheet pr the VOL' quali t .) Aud br.utle(p;i4 0910 r• .:; April 4, 1803: eriflilllll vtr j. - _ Lth.l HER ALD." To Isabel T. of Carlisle. Oh, ode, of vb.lA, deep! v blue, So fondly purely brittht; Sweet types ofgentleness and hue Of summer's ['situp, purple night! Beautiful, violet eyes. tivin stars of !lope I oh, shad on me Your axnaranthlne rays; For dearly eloquent ore yo Of fatherland and happy days— Beautiful violet eyes! Linea written on tho robelFon, at Fort Laramie, N T. Juno 15th, 18111. DEbDECTFULLT DEDICATED TO Mn g J. T Up! up I the hour's at hand, See ye, laurels strew the path before yru, Up! up, for traitors tread our land, See, the rebel rag to fluttering o'er you, lla I mark you nut that savage yo-11 That's borne around the walls of Sumpter? For bravo Anderson his honor would not Cell As he told the rebels in tones of thuuler, CliOrtl ,, L-Thell snores draw and In phalanx move (in, on, to death or glory, go men, And to eolith the soli )ou lore Take, take, the heart's blood of the traitor foemen What means all hie, this trait. roux horde? These tral or brodits together swearing, It 011111 wear a crud., that. wears 11 SWOI d, For w hoot are the slave pens pt eparing? For you, yo Northr us, offl r you u 'bounded Iris and bravery, To sneb us you the mongrel crew, llow dat e they talk of slavery. -- Chorus—Then sabres draw &c. Weep for tour-elves, ye traitors no .7 A, d for the treasonous plots you scheme on 'lt-valid° for you, and they I Crow, NVill meet a fate you 11l tie dream on, Thou_th side by site before our eyes Fart to the earth our Northern heroes Oh! surely they will thence arise All sworn to whip thii bandit traitors. Chorus—Then sabres (Vary Lc. Still ye Northrons, still some merry show To the Union men whom the rebels hare taken, And forced to he your f;ye, For while they stike their hearts are brooking. But when the Loulsinn, Tigers y,•u meet Who tear the vonotry!s breast that bore them Then fling, Bing merry to t• e winds. For Freedom bleeds If p , ty spares them. Chorus—Then sabres draw ,te. Tread In the steps your forefathers trod, Alas! they now but live in story, Yet though their ITV are with Clod, hey've left wi4h us thoh dust, their glory. Jeff 's ans:lnus to survive them far Than share the shroud that doth enfold them Then ho t tho vatelt word of the war, Ily !leaven ! we II follow or uphold, Chnrome—Then rahres draw &c. Ohl Freedom, Freedom, 'IOM's thy.dv Fi g h t e id o liy side, with thy defenders, Bid victory high our st}rry,ilitt expose, 'or reeking steeds nud riders gory, And may the gash of dying toes Waft jay to thee, to the Unlnn's glory. Chorus—Then sabre draw Ae. pigixtllalaar.oat THE DOWNFALL OF ENGLAND ==l I= =l3 The following speech was received by us, with Mr Train's revisions and cor rections, per last steamer. r Train was under arrest. but merely had time, pre vious to the steamer's departure, to in form us of the fact, without giving its particulaN. This speech was delivered, upon invitation, before the Brotherhood of St. Patrick, in London. The tneettmg was a secret one, the notice of 118 gather ing being given by bills passed Flom hand to hand in the different lodges of the Brotherhood.—Bali. American. The large hall at Burton cressent, where the speech was delivered, was crammed as lull-as it could hold with members of the trotherbood, and the cheers and en• thusiatin with which it was received ex ceeded anything oldie kind in Mr. Train's experience in England. Allusions to Meagher, Corcoran, and other gallant Irishmen in the_linion.Artuy, were greeted with cheer on cheer from the audience, and at the close of the speech the follow. ing resolution was passed by acclamation : " Resweed, That we, the. Irish resi dents in London, in public meeting assent bled, 10 hereby tender our sincere a d heartfelt thanks to the citizens of the United States for the generous aid and sympathy they have always displayed to wards oppressed Ireland ; and beg to compliment George Francis Train for his manly and uncompromising conduct in the support of the rights of the people dorm , ' his residence in this country." \\ Idle numerous presses are rattling night and day in England predicting ibe breaking up and dissolution of Federal power, and the Mass is giving a daily. leader on the - downfall of A unction, it can hardly 'be wondered at that 31r. Train should feel like retorting and pointing to the downfall of,,li.,'ngland. Mr. ClialiAintVand Lishnien of the Brotherhood (I Saint Patric E-1. speak to you in the names of one kindred and fifty thousand or your county men;: arc now my countrymen as well, who are fighting the battleof your people as well as my people.y.^[Loud cheers.] Tht great battle.ot hutiamityirrthathighly-favored land, where liberty _means the common rights of human nature, and where human beings are treated - like men: [Cheers ] In the name of the Irish army of-the Mast, I ask you to cheer. for, the ,Union of Sweden 'And the Disunion `of Ireland trom - Great , .Isritain. [Loud cheers.] Those cheers - foreshadow already the bownfall-of-lilngland. [Hear.] English titeoure so busy plotting the ruin of America; predicting the death-knell - of the nation, and praying fqr die ,downfall of America, there",etin be no objection - to my changing the - tppic, and speaking loan Irish audience on, the 'downhill of Eng land:',[Cheers.] England is , supposed ,to be a Hibraltari._tock..Of . : strength,- so grand, so powerful, so:rich;that anything* ['might say wotilddail to . :,penetrate',her iron.,_ f , armortif:49qi om4ili.k'copper n ~ [ Laughterd I speak itr the aristocracy have‘all the; lawyera to 'speak , for them. [Hear" a.FIA,MtIa it'o2 THV2 IMPotwe and laughter ] Some day men will be considered men, and the simple annals of the poor will be heard in Heaven. - Shall crime bring - crime for ever,- Strength aiding still the strong ? Is It thy will, oh Father, %hat man shall toil for wrong ? No I says thy mountains; Nol Ihy skies, Mtn's clouded sun shall brightly rise, And songs be heard instead of sighs. God care the people I [Cheers.] When I allude to the downfall of Fngland, I mean the uprising of the people—[hear]—when men shall have votes, and not be called the Mob The rebellion is the World's rebel lion, and the life of America is the death of England. British statesmen have ac ted on that hypothesis. Ainerica will, live, England will die—such is the law of nations. Prosperity, then adversity. The antithesis follows verything in na ture, right, left, up, down—abuse a man, then praise him—strong, weak, pung, old. When a man is very ill he must get better or die. The runner at the top of his speed must slacken , or fall. So the nation that has mounted to the lust round of the ladder tutiA drop or descend step by step. [Cheers.] A freriea is goin2. up. England eoMing down. The downfall of England commenced file moment the gov erning classes laid their plans for supping away the liberties of the people.- TAx.A- TiiiN WITHOUT H h PitbAtENTATION 15 BuiILIERY ! [Cheers ] Me I=l Ati I drop the tro.tchoroue, mask ! throw by The cloak which voled thine instill !to fell; Stand forth, th u base, incarnate Lie, Stamped with the i.ignet brand of Hell: At last we view thee ns thou art— A trickster with a demon's heart. [Loud cheers.] Revolution is catching —like laughter, fever, or speculation. One suicide follows another, and more mur ders hate taken place during the lost few weeks than the previous ten months. When an accident happens in the morn something, goes wrung each hour . in the day—uric man gapes and then the whole party open their mouths. [Laugh ter.] The French Revolution in Forty:, Eight inaugurated revolution in Italy revolution in Hungary— revolut ion in Poland, and two hundred thousand shop keepers ranged thetnselvei into line to stop revolution in London. Some revo lutions are silent—others noisy, the'Thir ! teenth Century Revolution was silent— ! the Norman overcame the Saxon, eliding the tyranny of nation over nation. The Eighteenth Century revolution -was also silent, ending the property in man. The Barons under the Plontagencts, Macaulay says, • (-graded the peasant, to the level of the swine and ()rot they touted. When England abolished the slavery of the body the governing clislie;FC'oninteneel 'ensla ving the mind. Their success may be seen by going into the 'mak country, and talking with the serf's-you find there. [Bear ] There are no such persons in America. Lafayette, when riding thro' the crowded streets of 80-ton years ago, saw the smiling faces and the well-dratt ed men that lined the road, and asked, " Where' are your common _peop e ?" "There," replied the Mayor, "are 111 the common people we have in America." [Cheers.] BEE The dwarfed tree of the Asiatic was 'made by continual wounds— the mam moth oak of the American forest was not tortured out of shape by the harid Orman. Liberty is a dwarf in England In Amert ea a giant. Columbia needs no heraldry, or strange, time-honored crest, TJ stamp her name and title clear, the queen of all the Went! The stars of heaven upon het f..hlold In sliver clusters shim , ; The wreaths of (ens that bind her brows, her tha,,kful minim s twine. [(:heirs As superstition is credence without evidence—as tyranny is the ex ercise of power without tight—so taxa: tion without representation is robbery Dead men ought not to legislate for live men. The founders of your debt are gone —posterity is prying for their blunders Formerly priests and .princes suffocated opinion, and smothered' thought wiry the faggot and flame, the dungeon and the rack. Nov ministers and nobles guillo tine the mind— thunibkre* the speech of man—ani torture his life away, by controlling the priesthood by place—the judge through his pockets—and the peo ple through their attimach [Laughter ] If toe working classes would look more into books, and less into quart pots— [laughter]—they would be wiser and bet ter able to cope with the clever states men wife keep thew in their serfdom [Hear, and applause.] God save the peo ple ! When wilt thou ease the peoplel Oh, 001.1 of Mercy ! when? Not hinge and lorile, but nations! Not thrones and crowns, but men? Flowers of the heart, oh 'God, ale they I Cat them not pass like weeds, away I Their heritage a sunless day! kLotig and continued cheers.) Over one. half the House of Commons, as is well known, is elected by 150 000 electors. The idea of.one town of a thou sand people having the save representa tion in Paiilitiment us Liverpool or Man chester, Or Birmingham, is not only..ab surd, but positively insulting to the com mon-sense of -HOW is'hmen. Who before ever beard of alittle village having the same legislative" Poiser as a great province? To-day, a dezetrretten bordughs, owned by the aristocracyi : Wield More power in the House of ,CoMmoirs .than . the, .great counties of Lancashire, Yorkshire, and Middlesex. There are six millions of able-Bodied men in England — whose . position is lower than the American slaves. Five negroes are allowedrYthree.votes by .the flea, which unilms'a negro threo.fifthe of a man ; but in;,England he is not counted . SO high tiS.;the,pattleOf the field, or the tree's Even the milliomof voters on the bists have .no actual 'repro _ They are .nought and sold as. fe , "kiiiikrly'les-corik•: - Orlieuip 'or iron; You can.kr, , •'• loolait ,the: share list, in the,Reforni and Catitoii?Clubs. They will tell you to riotitia the :cost of any rotten borough , in the America- is natural -L= 4.4o4lid,urtifiCial. • Clod was the CARLISLE, PA., SIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1862. of America's water-worlis—England less famed, employed tnart4' 7 qed-- was our gardner—man yours,-!let - - planted our . lures ts =frm an_y_o_u r_sQeesis_y_o_nr millions as our cotton fit.olshes them with clothes. Our institutioq_Cive your masses hope for better days; tatl: '. bur Revolution has furnishedyou with.* latform for your t Revolution. Parclnto 'ljt3 . cif no use— the bayonet has a shor( :point than the i Petition—Parchment is 'f;no use in our ft.:;, i., , ; day—the people must . .04, t4;'. loz populi vex Del. ,:.. . '''; 1 7 When wilt - Una save flat ifaople 1 Oh, God Of Blekeyiivh(qll.!. The people! Lord, the pepple I Not thrones and'enikiltilt, ut men I pod! save the people! thille they are, 'thy children as thy angelaltdr; Save them nom misrule anti despair! God In t ro the people. (Cheers.) The dawnlallot E, grand is rapid when her colonies full off. '1 he heart of loyalty must be feetrie when its ex tremities decay. The cnbAties of England, 1 for their own proteetionOill - iae obliged to shako of the incubus oftbe old country Canada already is rolling .off the reel. The Tinges prepares tho' way. Let her slide. She is useless now We can .do without her. Lord Palmerston hurls a sorer 11l e says—ll they:were men they wonl,l (UM th,mselves Ilsayil -they are men they will declare their inthpendence. (Cheers.) '(he Lords are equally (I . ( fiant Sour grapes grow thick upon the English - tree of despotism. • Give Canada money and she is loyal stop' the supply and 'she stops the Militia Bill. Canada taxes England's manufactures, and England pays for her artitY, flow long -will the hardworking inen of England sub m it to be taxed and pauperized to please the. : aristeeracy ? Before the e'lection of anot her American President Canada will b.i a na. tion. (I lleers ) As a dependency she is a pauper. As a nation shots a thilliona;re. 1( pear.) Ten minutes after her Declare. Lion of Independeime -America will ac I know It dge Canada as a sisteVState. ( [hear) lAre there no statesmen in Canada equal to the opportunity ? Itithmen, I call upon you it r three hearty cheers for the i ler:public of Ganadct ! the first President 'the Irish Hebei, Thomas D'Arcy McGee. (The.eall was loudly lestiOnded* to with additional cheers ).• , .. Australia may he loyal -now; but the war between America andj:rtgland will expose her to i danger from t eur Moni•ors. Seeing this, up will go theAag, the five star:flag that wat'raised ov& the Eureka stockade on the Ballarat in':lBsl., when Captain Wise and forty soldiers were shot by the diggers, under LtilPy : anA MeGilt: merchant at Melbourne.. One; hundred thousand tons of shipping were t onsi;med to my house in 1853-51 r The leader of the forces on the Ballartit offered me the Presidency of the Australian Republic, in the name of the Diggers, of the Revu- Fufion. (('lieer:s ) I was a man of corn- I coerce then. . 1 declined. Colt hint lice one hungred dollars worth of revolvers ;1 the diggers wanted — them. "1 - itfu - s - ell "to sell ; and while theie no one can say that I I was not a good colonist. The Irish there were my friends. In 1855 I was a guest, when the Brother:4oo of Saint Patrick gave the parting Vanquet at. Mel bourne to Wm. Smith O'Brien. (Loud cheers.) That distinguished Irishman and lover of liberty toasted in eloquent words America, and.gave - my name tkereWith. I replied, and those Irish cheers still ring in Any remembrance.. (Applause.) And Irishmen are-always welcome when I think of those cheers and the Irish brigade who are fighting the battles of liberty over the sea. (Cheers.) 0 I (Cheers.) Twenty years ago O'Connell was at the zenith of his thine. I allude to the time when - he forded from a tory ministry CatholiCenritifaipation—(choers.) when lie opened the city corporations to Catholics, and' - was elected tfie first Catho lic Lord, Mayor of Dublin. This was the time lie swore that Ireland should have her [louse of Peers and House of COIll• mons. His repeal 'speeches are monu ments of energy. Ile shocked where £l,• 200 000 were expended to buy rotten boroughs fur English representatives, where £l5 000 was openly-,paid for a bor ough, and .E. 8,000 for one vote, or and office of £2,000 a year if the vote could nut be bought with gotd. • These were the, days when twenty peerages, ten bishop rics, sev'en judges, and whole regiments were given to officers of the army and navy if they would repeal tbetnion. -All this came out and more. showed how 700,000 had . petitioned- against repeal, and only 3.000 for it ; but then England had 130 000 soldiers in -Ireland ) so says the history of 1800 -- O'Connell spoke all these truths twenty years -ago. Be show-. ed the injustice of„ making Ireland , . pay interest on the . English national. debt; which he called making )"Cilandpv fear the knife lath IMO?, Lord easgerea;jll. tlit 4:4 throa4. Sir Robert Peel and the Duke of Well= ington stated .that they brought in the Catholic - Ematicipation - Bill - tn'tiveit:eisia war. -- • -- • .off with 4ifiguiso iviViaiter.noq God Bare the people hearla aflame Shall buFa - wlth_hato thou moot not tati.lol (Tromondoua cheers,] 8 ;17 8 , 1 25; she would have: .With 'usual .inercese of populatiOnAooo 000 ip end0',200,00,0 1802: sho had bnt- - 6,515 . DTI in.. 1841, dial* thon 6,000 000. now; wherc.hair,e they gong ? go iibk .the. grove-yard of :the Irialt -poor. The balance have fled to. - Ainerico,,where: abundsnee 'aw.dts• themil and ;OR cheers on their Paid . laher. .(Uhe,ers.): o acs I look &wit upon'. the loved, ep well , dud grant,that in:tinbroken truth h'er !children still tro.7 dwell: . Stand together, brothers . Chime together. close t .gether; lie Ireland's might a brazen wall, Close up together, tight together. Peace, no noise, but hand In band: Let cabin resolve pervade your band, And wait till nature's God command— Then strike together, strike together 1 . To rubpi lionotlfthou wOUldiCat;rlkb' , !jot blushes up tho Auguiabtd bniivr• And tnurciliir fame and vrougib, alike, .` lament for her, Itheti,,they stall see the Nor while the grilse grows on thn tam and streams flow through the role ' smoke of her burnitig . The merchants May they forget their fathers' faith, or In their cove• sant fall I of these things which. were' made rich by . Cled_keep_thefalreat, nobleat-laUd thatiles-beneath-the her,- sliall-statui-afo--ff,-,for-the-lear-of ?as- her torment, itreepihgand4ailing. And every shipmaster, and all the company in l 'ships, ancrsailors, anti* many as trade by sea, stood afar off. That great city, whereby were made rich'all that had ships in the sea, by reason of their 'costliness ! for in one hour is she made desolate." These remarkable words_ have an um mistakeable bearing on England. Her decline and fall must be near at, hand.— Mark the strange scene in the House of , Commons. The lords and the merchants hurry up from the country to pass the Game Bill, for fear that some poor Lan cashire Wretch may pick up a hare or a pheasant on the Qt..en's highway to keep their wives and litilF6nes from starving (Shame.) For Babylon, I say, read London. Notice the cry of womanhood l and manhood from the factories. Why is that, after years of prosperity and plen ty, of cotton, the operatives have nothing !laid up - f,ir a rainy day? (11car.) Can it be possible that the workmen of Eng land work at starvation prices, in order to make fortunes fur the landowners, the miljowners, and the bankers ? (Hear.) There are 451,000 operatives in the 2,Boo.cotton wills of England, and they receive but 10s. 60. per week, or Is. 6d. per day, out 6f which they have to.pay Ithe taxes and //be. It is too expensive in Eng'and td die . Already one-fourth are, lout of employment. In six weeks more une•lialf will be. In six months all will he cast, adrift. Yes, the nobles laugh; and ti,e landed gentry pu-s game bills; and the army and the navy get up.Lails ;- and /hi Ministry cot' their white bait ; and Lord Palmerston avails himsel/ the gaiety of the day, to insult every Iwo est man in I ny.'allli by his course :peech wilinst the cliumiriun rf 14. people, Richard Cobden, th , lover of the work. ng man. (Loud cheers fur Cobden ) Mark well the handwriting over the hall door of the minister, and or: the gild ed wall of the noble. See how they laugh over the wine—see than bring down the birds and call the people the mob. 'They forget that the vices as well as the virtues of men arc registered by the clerk who keeps the Books of God. The rate in aid becomes a loan in Lan cashire; but how unnatural is the laugh of the ministers when the costly wine went round at Greenwhich Our country, our wholo country, and out country °Ter one Join bands and be a nation. Unite to free your fathers' rod, It matters not to me— At different shrines you kneel to Clod— Cannot you all be tree? Cannot you jot to break thaeheine, To strike for s,nbond's rlrlit 0 yes, you'll r 1 te . 4lllllro slave ' remain— For Irelantreial l e ,unite [Ch ee re.) Look at America,--our army is yours. Union is as essential to you as to us, Ire land forever. Three cheers for the land of the bravo. The spirit of Ireland is again alive. You cannot crush it. Nino times England's confiscation edicts has thunderlopon her people. Seven eon Curies of continued injustice, outrage tour- Iler I yet Ir 4 eland lives again in the 150,- 000 Irish soldiers in the American army. (Loud cheers ) The Sixty-ninth still cheers for Corcoran. The Chicago Moot .goinery Guard still cheer fur Illinois and the West as they fought at Lexington— Shields was Inlcked by Irish at Winches ter—and the Irish Brigade at Fair .Oaks stopped the Rebels in their advance. The Massachusetts Ninth and the Pennsylva nia Sixty-ninth were Irish reg.inien(s. (Loud cheers.) All hail, then Irishmen, as you live your lives over again in the arwy of the Constitution (Loud cheers.) Our army is your army. Let Catholic and Protestant comhiMe for Union.' , do 'not inquire, when the Irishmatr 'inter's, whether he be Protestant or Catholic.—(Cheer's.) tieitr, and y the famine grn•es, By your sires' sacred dust; You shall not, will not, long IT slaves— You'll break your chains accursed. The tyrant Bacon soon ♦hall quake At banded millions' might; The time Is nigh; arouse I awake I For Ireland's sake unite. " England's downfall commences when America closes u . p the ranks, and peace cements Union, and perpetuates republics and universal suffrage—when rank is but the guinea stamp, and a man is a man for all . that These cries must shortly come into fashion : Canada for the Canadians; Australia for the Ausiraliani, and Ire-. land for Irishmen " (Loud cheers.) What distracts your country ? s hall I tell you ? (Yes ) Well then; it is a fire. brand that England knows him to use— a firebrand thrown into your ranks when ever you talk of nationality. (Name ) That firebrarfd is religion (Hear and cheers Now, dray ideni.s..thavo lima as. fitilibith'irthrs bone of contention to dis tract your council, so long you will remain in i-liivery, and be what O'Connell told the Parlianii•nt---alien in ITIHIITICI 9, alien in language, alien in religion, and alien in tie very land that once belonged to Irishmen. (Loud cheers.) Whenever you speak unity—of nationality—you nim.t omit that word'religion. Drop that, and Q . p tOI 4.Tt P.totestatvill h an ds, any Ireland will be a Queen among the nations of the world —[Cheers.] When will you coupe this minion Wife, The scourge of Inninfull; Bane blogtry, and party strife-- The Gael 'gnlnst brother Gael.: 9 once, your coun'ry, nobly Join Together in your might; Forget old Limerick and the Boyne— For Ireland's sake, unite (Cheers.) MarK we'l the eloquent words of Arch bishop Hughes at Dublin. (Loud cheers.) Ile said he had seen but three great things in the world—the Falls of Ning• ara, Saint Peter's at Rome, arid that glo rious demonaration of Irishmen at Pub lin on the laying of the foundation of the Cat, olie University. (Loud Cheers.)— He says the Irish soldiers are only drill. ing in America, and that they do not in tend to lay down their belts—(applause) —and I do not hesitate to say that it' England interferes in our domestic mat-' ters, that glorious Rebel of '4B, Thomas Francis Meagher, will be back again in Dublin with a body guard of ten thou• sand veteran Irish soldiers from the bat tle fields of Richmond, (Here the whole audience rose to their feet, and the hail resounded with cheers fur Shields, Mea gher and Irish nationality.) In conclusion, let me ask you to read the second chapter of the book of -Daniel and the eighteenth chapter of the' Book of Revelations. Fur Bakylun read Lon. don. " And ho erred mightily with strong voice, saying, Babylon the Great is fallen, and is become the habitation of devils, and the hold of every foul spirit, and a cage of every unclean and hateful bird." I sit a queen, and am no widow, and shall'seo no sorrow." "'I heretore shall her plagues come in one day, death, and mourning, and fain. ine ; and she shell be utterly be burned with fire." Death has come. Mourning is in the Palace. Fdmine is knocking loudly at .the door.• The Raven is still croaking evernaire. These three prophecies are fulfilled. The last is fire, and that comes when the scenes of 1780 and '35 and '36 Inv on the stage again. • (Cheers.) Who their can saw the corn ricks ? . Who then can qtotf the ravings of the hungry? Damn - the people said George shoot them clown, ilee•monctrehy will • last my lime.. (Shaine.) That game is played out; oneshod drop of blued, and the French: ltevolution will, commence in. England:* (Loud cheers.) • • If AmOriCaus fight Americans,. as they; are doing, why should not Englishmen . - tight Englishmen when starvation stares them in the face, and_ tin rioliare ing at:thetable of the king. (Applause.) TIM Daniel has •oorne .to judgment. The king turns pale. • - The 'mystic' words on the wall were. told hint.. .The Merchants trembled 'as well as tlie„nobles.•• Read ReVelatiens an the . crowned • heads,.•and Linde - ay' arid thrOecession merehants And the !mini - :ants of the earth 'are Warred rich through the abundance of her .delicacies: And •the kings of the earth; .who' have committed fornication and The moods of mkth and feastlug are madly borne on high: While do th, a gust unbidden, site watching allently, 0 lucl:hso crow andyllot t your halide with blood are • t Ted, And in your souls Is lying a secret, guilty dread! downhill of England was certain when the rich began to starve the poor. (Hear ) Ihe aristocracy and inonidoc .racy have a foodotne:er for the people.— They can tell to a petty)? Low much bur den they can bear and exist. The ocra cy that rules in England dwells in Pall and I will christen it Iv the name Ulubocracy,- -- ((heces ) — The - poor ye have always with you. What serfdom— what slavery—no hope—no education— no religion—nought but desaoltion.— l and despair - . What have the people done to be denied air and water and light even ? Think of 8,003 families living in Scotland in one room with no window ! The statistics are sickening-2'7 000 families live in one room—with ttne win dow and 250,000 fitthilies in two rooms with two windows ! Think of 4venty two per cent of the entire population of Scotland living ip ftmilies of from fouri to eight persons; in only two rooms, with only two windows ! And this is freedom) I call it slavery. What immorality'.— How debasing to the mind. The monarchies of Europe, like garru lous old men, are propping each other up with the hope of the downfall of America. lleAr them chatter, and try to stand firm 4tn their weak legs—sans eyes, sane teeth, sans everything. (Cheers.) Each say ing to the other, Republics are dead.— iserere Dotnine ! America is divided —the Union is gone—but I am with the people. (Cheers) I believe that right aright, since God is God—and right the day must win. To doubt it would be disloyalty; to falter must be sin My lecture is ended'; my thoughts arc now your thoughts ; •and let liberty burn within your breasts. Remember the les ions of history. Flow the oppressed Ro mans burst asunder their bonds under the ltieuza, the tribune of the people.— Ilow the Tyrolese sprang to areas when Andreas Ilofer sounded the alarm bell for liberty ! now the hepublican moon= taincers grasped their cross-bows when Tell hurled defiance to the tyrant Gesler ! (Cheers ) flow the North ruse up to protect their national flag and fight 'the battle of t itian ! (Checrg) So Ireland Must find some Garibaldi to remember Wolf Tone, Emmet and Daniel O'Con nell, and cry Union in America and Lib erty in Ireland ! (Tremendous cheers and great sensation, the audience esYcort ing Mr. Train, with loud cheers, some Way into the street) PETER FRANCISCO. The present century has known mapy men of extraordinary physical strength, among whom we may cite William Thompson of Chicago, who latelZ won a prize. of $2OO for fitting no less a weight than .2106= pounds; Dr. Winship, who can shoulder a 219 pound barrel of flour ; gra. Day, of-Florida, once tined $5OO by the Circuitcourt of Lauderdale county, for, throwing a Mtistriag pony and his ri, der.over a ton rail .fence; and TN:46as op tam, said to_ba the strongeit-n.aniu. modern England. ' The latter has .perfortnecl, in public , feats evincing an . almost super-humap strength ; such as' rolling up a .'peivict dish of seven pounds as a . man.rolls sheet of paper ;; - IMltlini - ii — pliwtee 'gum , " at arrde:iength, and - squel ia azi nd nga ii h lm i e'ai t dt together like ,an eggshell hundritl -weight with "his--little finger, and, moving it gently over his head.. tr,;;la mne occasion. he broke rope fastened to the floor,:tbat would sustain twenty, hunk St %O per annum In advance t 112 00 If not paid In advsmcb dred weight, arid lifted an oak table six feet long with his teeth, though half a hundred weight was attached toikAle also struck a routufbar of iron, one inch in diameter, against his naked arm, and at one stroke, bent like a bow; and blis head being placed on one chair and his feet on another, beheld up on his body four heavy men whom be heaved at pleasure. None of these modern Sampsons. how ever, have earned so extended a faite as that giant of the Western Hemisphere, Peter Francisco. Having lived in the stormy days of the Revolution, and pee. formed deeds of extraordinary valor as a soldier, ho has been looked upon by many' as a hero„ and his name used as a syno nym fur bodily vigor and manly endur ance. lie was born in Portugal, subsequent ly taken to Ireland, and while yet a boy brought by a sea captain to this country. On the breaking out of the •Revolution, he joined the army and was in active ser vice during the whole contest. Such was his strength and personal bravery that no enemy could resist him. He wielded a sword, the blade of which was five feet in length as though it had been a feather,, and every one who canto in contact with him paid the forfeit of. his life. A Stony Point he was one of the "forlorn hope" which was advanced to cut away the abatis, and, next to Ma jor Gibbon, was the first man to enter the works. At Brandywine and Monmouth . he exhibited the most tearless bravery, and nothing but his inability to write pre vented his promotion to a commission,— ransferred to the South, he took part itr most of the engagements in that seethan„ . and More than once exhibited, in a strik ing manner, his remarkable self-cons deuce and courage. On one occasion he defended himself succes-fully, by strategy and prowess, a gainst nine British troopers ; and during" an attack upon a dwelling near which he' was resting, lie killed two assailants, a soldier and a mounted dragoon, who came suddenly upon him. Francisco possessed a finely developed frame. lie was.six feet one inch in height, and he had been known to shoulder readi . - ly a cannon weighing elbven hundred pounds. lie could carry a man of 195 pounds on his right atm, and lift him up and down in the air, as ordinary people sport with children. His wife was a wo man of medium size, but he could easily bear her about the room at arms length,. and could carry her up and down stairs on one arm. He would. lift a barrel of cider by ',he chimesond take long draughts • from 'the Iming without any apparent crtion ; but it must not be supposed fronx this latter feat that he was an intemperate than; on the cont-ary, he was universally respected for leis abstemious and frugal" habits. Although unedubated, he was a person of strong natural sense, and of a kind, amiable dispositiOn—it is said his strength was never used to the injury of any one except for. self defence, orfor the -protection of others. He 'died in '1836' and was buried in the public burying ground at Richmond with military honors. A Sensible and Patriotic Speech. At the Cincinnati War Meeting, Thursday last,, Hon. Mr. Pisa, Lieut. Governor of Kentucky, made an excellent speech. We take the following pithy extract : • You then are fighting for independence--- for liberty, fur your homes, fur national ex. tstenee and power. If the Government is idefeated, the National domain severed by this war, we stand before the World a fifth- rate power, impotent, imbecile, disgraced; incapable of keeping the pence at home or 'of vindicating our rights abroad. The world could almost get along without us, hut, uni. ted with this great element of streligth-iv part of us, this rebellion put down, our old order of things restored, fanaticism dead, reason again governing our counsels, we will (be the heralds and champions of civilizat Can this rebellion be put down ? Yes. Can it be put-d Own with the pr..sent idea, and the presentyneans_ of the Adminietration N.). Send fewer school nouns to look alter the negroes, and mote soldiers to dispose of the rebels. Call down upon this rebellion at once all the military resources of this great people., Send out valiant men sufficient to make it an easy job. That men enough are going will make enlistmentS .easy ; but, to dloe out insufficient numbers and send them against a superior force to be repulsed and crushed, is disheartening. It was a goes. Lion of conciliation. It is novl , a question of power, That power we have, end that pow er c 11 exerted. If the President will call for it, organize and permit it to strike. The Government has been handling the traitors with the tips of its fingers, and gloved at that. Now let it double up its fists of iron and let it come down with crushing force, „trpon,ihe armed head of this rebellion. `l , -',Liet not the Government heed thifNorth. erri:'sympaillizers of the traitors, who coin. plain of the harsh measures being takcM. and threntened against the rebels ; but let it lay on, till the loyal men of Kentucky cry. hold; let it lay on till the patriots of East Ten- nessee, sey your meatkuritti are tocrsevere. Let these sympathizersiceaee to live, move and bre the within Secession intluences,.and go up nearer the Cerulean, and be inspired. With a new life, a higher courage, a nobler ambition, whence Andrew Johnson and ~ Brownlow, of Tennessee, Gene. Boyle and. Rouseau, of Kentucky, draw their inspire,' lion, and assist, themto . preserve the'Repub - - lc. What our Government cost'what it bee dune fot. this people ; what has it done for the oppressed of other nations ; ,what.is it -- worth, you all know. The great pressint question is, will you porrnitlt to be destroyed forevelq If you answer, Not . .You must ` make that .ans.wer_ good_ by. Jtu adequate' force—an. overwhelming. force,,,immediately • put into the field. The rryal men. of. Ken tucky are with you; sons are ' now hr the thirty thousand •of het ; others 'thousinde ere ready to go: We are besetby oes_wi in: :A.toed. treason, assails .To all , who -catne.,to-curaid-in,our-recent:paril,-Kentno-„; ky iefurntr lfer thahlre.: Vre.pinst all 'go war. for ft brieffipape suspend the thoni3y- - - making spirit, 'arouse the 'pritrinildin :Or the of the 'nation,, send" a into the Geld, and make ailed'. Mirk'cif.thiarebelk. lion. • Proud - will;he the day . .Wheii..the end glorious heherAd:Will be:the iiamea Of all those who bear erne in ite.:oterthrow:- , Viikr3 W.Q thowitiod ipio hundred of gieltebel erieoners CaCamp. , proteettit spiral, being 'iiebii*e()_, , --, , ilVey , begin to like the Yaiiltes.lockfe etavina. NO 3 5