VOLUNTEERS. 



By the President, General Dearborn: Lafavette— ' Without 

 fear and without reproach;' the illustrious Champion of Liberty in 

 three Revolutions. 



Bi/ His Excellency Gov. Lincoln. The vine, under the shadow 

 of which Freemen dwell securely— May its ncio growth be pro- 

 tected in that country, where it requires rather training than 

 heading. 



By his Honor the Mayor. New England — May every farm be- 

 come a garden, every garden adorned with vines— and may it be 

 the boast of our posterity, that their Fathers did not eat sour grapes. 



Bij the Chief Justice. Education — The culture of the mind, 

 which always requites the faithful laborer with the sweetest flowers 

 and the richest fruit. 



Bij Hon. B. TV. Crouminshield. The Apple and Plum — May 

 we never eat of the apple of discord, and have plums enough to 

 make smooth the way of life. 



By the Rev. Mr Picrpont. A Garden— The primitive and 

 perpetual scene of all that makes man great— labor and serious 

 thought ; in which, having seen the smile of God in the heat, he 

 may hear his voice ' in the cool of the day.' 



By Judge Chipmnn, of New Brunstcick. The city of Boston — 

 May it preserve its high character and its public spirit. 



Communicated by the Hon. John Lowell. The Massachusetts 

 Horticultural Society — May liberality, without a tincture of jealousy, 

 and cautious and scientific scrutiny, be its distinguished charac- 

 teristic. 



By Zebedce Cook, Jr. Esq., Ist Vice President. The Press — 

 Charles X. and his ' travclhng Cabinet ' — the best modern com- 

 mentary upon its power and influence when exerted in the cause 

 of civil liberty and the rights of man. 



By the Hon. Edivard D. Bangs, Secretary of the Common- 

 wealth. Agriculture and Horticulture — Pursuits in which compe- 

 tition excites no jealousy, and where ambition is often crowned 

 with success. 



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