FM - - 4A161,111ts • N & MILTEHLF.It, rasrurross LX) PURUnuag, Itatlioare tired, Wawa fit and Mist ;7 4 it rums OF PUBLICATION: ;1 / 2 •Tw AND 1111 IV tel pliliallhOit 4414 4 =may afteruo4n; st "00 &Year In advance ; or 112.50.1 f not paid mid -the year. No sub.. ftriPiletut discontlased man all arrearages Pabi, Weis at the option of the publishem, • , :Asiviurrtsmoorrs are Inserted at reasonable gat4a6. liberal deduction will be made to per sons.=sing by the quarter, half year, or - notices will be inserted at Spedhd • rites, to be agreed upon. 0 "'The circulation of Tlktii avast AIM Atilt* mu. L one-half larger thou that ever attaistpopy any newspaper in Adams county; and, as ad vertising medium, it cannot be excelled. Jos Wont of all kinds will be promptly eti. edited, aid it fair rates. liand-bpis, Blanks, cants, Pamphlets, &c., in every variety and style ' Will be printed at short notice. Terms, Cant. grolosiatal Cub, - , , leollll.llMin, . lona H. =AVIV Attorneye . and courymuo r s. MCCONAUGHY has associatedD• JOHN IL ZIA [MIT, Lg.; In the pancake' of the law at bit PIS ono door. wait of Ilinutina's Dru Han, Clisiabosaa rg "tow. g Special satiation stria Italians, Collections and ileitis. silent of istatia. ill 1001 Wainer, and clas to s to 'Par siosi;Jloanty, Bset - pay,andllasoares against U. Natal, al all tlniso;prnasptly and *anciently attandod 'Lind warrants located, and choice Variant tor sale, la Jima snalstkaamaitifs Slake. - - Mart. - 27, f . . COVER, ATTORNEY AT .• LAW, will promptdy attend to collections and all 7 • °that Balinese endrentedlro ble can. Croce bettieee Yaluteetook and Danner and Zlitgler's etorst,.B4elinotit ate: imit„Gettymbnrn, A. [May 29,1867. :DAVID WILLS, ATTOIMEYAT Lkw,omes et his residence In the South-east cu• car ofeentre Square. Relbrenm—Ren.Thaddens Stevens, Lanceeter, Pa. May an, 1167. (AVID' A. BUEHLER,' .ATTOR . NSA ZAW .attend to e6liecti". andAll°Um butha•ot=h air.olllce at hle residence In the IhnZt re. building o poen' the Court Mne. [Gletlyabutig; May 29,1867 LA~M AGENCY...—,The under atgned will attand to collection of claims spin ft the C. 6. Govermnet, including Military Bounities:' Inlet Pay, Pensions, Forage, teopither in the Court Claims or before any of the Depart Numb at Washington. G. WoOltildity, May 29,1867. A. ttornay at Lair, Gettysburg, Pa . • nit. J. W. C. O'NEAL nu kisollice at him residence In Baltlmors street, two doors above the Compikr Office. Gettysburg, May 29, 18d7. jOniffs , LAWRENOBEVLti, Den tist,o4sce In Chsinbersbn rg street, one door west of the Lutheran Church, nearly opposite Dr. R. Horner', Drtug Storeorkers he laity be fband reedy aid .willing tq attend any case within the province of the Dentist, Persons In want of full lints of teeth ere iuvitq to call. Xay 21, IN T. DR. C. W. BENSON. ErA.B RllBllXib the Practice of Yadkin* in LITTLE& .1.1. TOWN, and offer& his writes to the public. Odke at his hones, Corner of Lombard street and Plaradry al. ley, near the tatiroad. Special attention given to akin Direasse. • ; [Ltillestown, 78ov. 18, 1867. gusto s t ads. JOHN W. TIPTON, FASIIIONA., Dug B BRUM, Borth:Mast eerier of th Diamond next doorto MeOlellan's Hotel,joettyebtul,Ps., where be can at all time. be found ready to attandto all new in hie Mae. Fre has skean excellent sseistants•ll will mare- natiefietion . Give Ito a all. May 29, 11167. •• . . OSCAR D. Mcitt.th.t.W, SURVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER: In tenasetiew with the above hp Hat all tlases pre pare( to attend to the ' WRITING OPDEEDS, BONDS, RELEASES, ART:I CIES OF AGREEMENT AND CLERK ING OF HALES. Plating bed aratliderable pra7.tiee In tits lb**, by striae. otitteptba to builnese be bopea to 'tit a liberal store 4 of ptibtle patronage. Charges reasonable. Iles Gettysburg, Pa. • [Jan. 22.14= • QURVEYOR AND LICENSED CON- N..; VEYANCER. The andaraignedi having taken out a poarepancer's Linens*, will. la adulictlon With the *Mee of °MINTY SURTZTOB,etteaS to the WRITING OP DIED& BONDS, AILIASZS, ARTICLIS OP AGBRIMIWT, CLERKING OP ISAIAS, SC. Having bid considerable experience la thli Hee, bebop.. to receives liberal share ot patronage. Batelailea prompt ly Waned to and charges reiuonabte. Post allot address /airfield, Adonis Go., Pa. ' J. S.WITLIBROW. OH 1 YES! OH! YES! THE undersigned having taken out. an Anctionnerle - License, offers hie sirrvlces to the pstolic,and would respectfully inform the public that he Is prepared toattend promptly to all business in this line, By strict attention to business helm.s teirender entire *addiction. 10.. Charges will be very moderate, and sat. 14 4 11 • 11 SitsrantlO4 la all A RAM AtBERT, Oimunpring.-Tork Ce. Pa. May 29, 1867.—tf, NOTICE. IWILL be in sett but with Fleur. Ac. every every WOW. DAY and FRIDAY is each week. Pero&As who may desire me to furnish them with either Flour er Peottataff, will leave their orders, either with John Orimisr or Dan ner & Zeigler, !gating the kind and InsatiVated, when the same will be delivered at their &eel by 800.25, 1867 . .-tf GEORGIC 0 Zi.L. NOTICE. THE subscriber has now thoroughly rivadred his ORM AND SAW MILLS, known as "McELHENNY'S MILL' on Marsh creak, and ivpaper ed to do GRINDING AND SAWING of writ" kind at abort batten. He Solicit' tba patroller' of the nelithbor hood, and Win vaniatea satlsliction. alas or a all: Jana12,18117.4t ' GDORGN GINGDLL, fatiutt waking. TO THE PUBLIC. THE undersigned take this me th od ionhforming the public that they still carry on the Cabinet-making Busirkess 7 In all Its yariedbninwhea; and that thoy now hal* on hands larxelmortemat of BUREAUS; BEDSTEADS, Tables, Corner Cupboards, Safes Oinks, Stands, Dressing Bureaus, Chairs, of different kinds ; in short every thing in the Cabi net-making line. ALSO, READY-MADE COFFINS, AND COFFINS MADE TO ORDER. All of which will be lie t ished promptly.* the old stead on &oath Balthnturwatrme. apposite Winehtennees Taw =oooTtor nodereigned Miriam had ever SO years ex- In the boalaem, Intim themselves that they out make as good works@ any others, If not better. New beghanan smother/ will find it be their adreittagirte call Mal bay from as, aa we are determined to sell an hew se peasibie,to suit the tier Dee. IS, 1U7.-{m FURNITITRE. SIIEAFFJ & BECKER PEII6O . MUM, (Y. 8.,) PENILL , Are prepared to offer to th•Pittrlio, anything In their line as chop as can be bad In the county. will do well to all 4nd =Amino our stook beets buyiag einstant. " FURNITURE sails to ardor. lidos Wag dose neat, &sap sod wfth "r Pao. ze, isea.-tr •4 0 / 1116 1• • GETTYBBRG FOUNDRY 111Iwhieriber woehl Wont hisenstown mid pairs t be a.au asimailactaling Wads ot.Cles thosivaimkilllactittamomatle to ordWati witleemieh T&sliers and . Powers cnoverwed Kailas ° sad Oon Malin giat lagersters,Ooralbadir out , ianvir, - lila lay mums, Proailts, flak ao too plosoikiyargaar liesaglu4 814•41/1 and Clot! Pkorglui; • Wire-syrim H_prse Rake s , y . h•-imist takpoesmist: ski WOW gen *or did,: Proses, Ira. Rallis; kr 0411110611 i le or grass, with oyorythlat oleo dr kis Ilso, an at looloriabo. jPOIC rl aair. lIALS—A light ? variant WilD AMSaamTh, a ' Osi4terse wCpa JOB PRINTING f " • •7 mar sascipmj! NieukTLY A.ND 01:11APLY jigAncro AT TRU OT)UM GARLACH k MAXIM, T 3 TE: 3 Air 11 - 41 FET* CO- 18 SEWING MACHINES, • Tii • 699 :BROADWAY, 'Nzer YORK. • 1 ere World-renowned Sewing 'Bta teigor.r.r._-.10 , the HIJT ittentsim at the ortei fir , in Los~and , six t Prowthwas Albs N. T. State Pair of 1866, and are oe ebrated for doing the best work, luting a much mallow needle kr the mustethreed than as 'other machine, and by the intro duction of the mod approved .maahlamy, we are new able to supply the Very best machines In the world. • These maiddn *remade at (Krakow and spectene. • . no -my at *May u gler the harisidiate • super Ma at the Pei/Went of the Company, ELMS nowa, r,, the original investor of the Sewing Machine. They are adapted Is aU 'kinds of Tuallar ats, witutd , to the use ofiltionnuosies, Dress Makers, lawmen of Shirt, Oolima t Skirls, Cloaks, llantUhdi, Clothing, Hats, Caps, Corsets. Boots, Moos. Hamm, . daddies, Line.(leak, Umberdias, rarasels,'etc. They work ell upon silk, Gotten or woolen goals th cotton or Baia l threadinen,. May win allia• quilt, gather, hem, MI, cord, braid, bind sad loodDirs :ga,„lnrc.cibocial'a,Thf ma k ing bar's" Pulgmi , ed. The Stitch invented by Mr. HOMO, and wade as this Machine, is the mat popular and durable, and all dew ing Mathias are INDOd to the principle iaatated by him. Send kr Circular*. , Jake' telt a Ug A r staMti ". j a 85i7„1 4 f I. 'March 1 9;111111,—ly No. - 922 Want In, Pills ISE W - 4 /4kileA Oki lc Es 1 THE Gittontic.v.i3A.K.E.t. Taviamr.lN tip.. r ni. # Idsibitinil Jim itediat so wad icadatti Whist nista need basalt by Wily of main. 'iessiatim They lave takes the first premien at all the late State Pains. and aro aitiveassity,aslntsniadied tabu the 111111 T fa use by all who have tried thaw lib , • !. 1 ems, & NOW Stiglii i 4rariire passeWatt' i=tas Gat sew aad . flees liasidase iarestile r nee. Tbayareshaaa emotes franc: . ~ . - tisb,Hft oad are simp i t s Heir imas7l47 .-- ...".".. abatlet totY ehild ".7 . Dewy " il a r ailn s a sea. flispasecitteer thcpseectiar, lad suiand appointed Agent its the shove has 1 41 41/007 Al /41.6114 SAIWIWOW4I 4 IVI will _OWN lave so hand 4 supply. I=rmic.. H . ! i rn issessa s WalttklilOldlitifor 161.3liasdhea *Mitres! willaht : ' 44• 11 0 11 W 44 MP" - .-e4rf rai N s lt -•- . .. . ... . • -••---- , - - - ~- ,k ,- ; •, r ,-.- , '; • i _ . --- - . ' 2:1.4...1..÷-',.-..t.' " : 114°"8111 " 1111111 " 01 0 1 1 1, 1 1 1.1tadillItUhmate..4.-• • . „ • - 1 i , . • ' ~ • ~. ~.,.... ), ~r --, , i , it 4 - . ~,, . . _,. , .. • - . . ' ,'N ... - •,.. • . . ..Th I _ .I*li..'lf.tP - il •rf:!ri. . ' _.. . - .. . :. . ~ :., i -s- • ,• • . - • ~ • - . . ' i.. ,- .i . .., ' -i . _ „„--.. • - , • fr ,t ):4 i . - , " p ry , , . - '., - ~ • . . . • ~. • ,•,• . Tt.,.. Itlif i • 17`:: , ,,':;.1.:.;;;_. -- ! . , , . ; 4,1 : , ...,:•:r - ;.--•, , ,-. , -:- : • -,-',-. -', -.' 1 \' 7:1:1 ----- \, to )- . , .t, ~! • Ns----___---- .. • : \ ; . \ i I . \, , ~, •') ' , C i , .... • ;- i • • \ ‘ \ \ • <' l ..v..• .-,,,.-••. :,,.., ...- ~A,...,‘'..• .---.............. ' \ \\. ~ . : \ . . ' 4.4. LXVIII. ND. - 16 7 . ',:-.' ~. ;' - GP. T TVCIITTD•C± t, A 1•77-r,‘,....,-.-'.-__ __ • I.7fit'' I I, ? (I,l' . j ..• . 4 vo "t t'.: ; drat F r Holiffaitdi titterg AzTR trOOPLAND'S CIEIthIAN TONIC. • The Great lieirtediee for all Dimwit at um sfokyi eft, 'OR DIG.RSTIVE ORGANS. Hoofland's Oerman titters Is command or the intrejuiras (or , as they Molina's'. gaily termed, or of Roots, 114ba, and Eat* soa king a poinarrtlem highly concentrated, and nothrely fres/row taaokiiii * gintsirs of rift kind. ROOFLA.ND'S GERI4ADTTONIG', Jo anamblaitien of a the ' l ts the Ditties with tie iiiriaditat ' purest quality of &mkt r Run, Oranp Abs., our king one of the most yam* owl agr..ble • soloodbro‘ ever offered to the public. , Those a Medicine tow from A losholis admin. Mir 00 •14 1 •1 0. •T .` • • . . ROOPLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS. Those who have no objection to the combination of the Hitt .% "e•t•Pilli 11 .4 1 la ge • HOOFILAND'S GERMAN TONIC. They aribotli equally good, and contain the man medicinal virtues, the choke Between, the. two being • time batter oftaate, the 'rook being themoet palatable. 714 stomach, hums miof camel, as Indiges time,Dispepeia. Nervous Debility , etc.. fs very Apt In have its functions deranged. The Lim. -sylOpeAhdag as cloiely • r it does with the Skulimll, then beoollies Bated. therein:lt of which Is that tbepaltigit anifire Bus: several or more of the following diseases : Conetipetioliaattilenta,SnararfPiletlifsea of Bklod td thoi Wadi Achill, if "tlie fit , Luse% Heart-burn , Disgust for load. aloes' I or Weiht in the Stomach, Sour Sinkinz ' . .or Plekterfa Eructatig at ons, the Pft °fibs Stomach, Swirl - Me - log of the Head, Bar. ried or Difilcult Breathing, Fluttering at the heart, Choking or Snaocathig 414rmatkun when in • Lying Posture , 'Disnneas of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Bight, Ball Pain in the Bead, Deficiency of Perspire lion. Yellowness of the Skinand Ilya, Plain in the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs, etc., Sudden Flushes of Heat, Hunting in the Plash, Constant Jen "lo.Dfrolß, pfL mho, And: West Depriiikof of Spirits. The sufferer from these diseases should exercise tali greeted caution in the selection of a remedy for his umneamrchnnatoely thatishlib is aemtred from his investigetkm and Inquiries possesses true ,matit, is skilfully compounded, k free from foJerfoesltlivedlents. and has established for Itself. reputation for the cure of thews diereses, In this connection we would submit thaw' iseihknoini remedies— ROOELAND'SGERMAN BITTERS, AND HOOFLAND'S GERMAN TONIC ilissuieSD J'ACIfiON;. i. PHILADELPIEIIk TWiltsktprms rare ilicsilkey Were first Introduced Ain P:k this ouentrY frank Germany, daring whkh time they same walenb asn = perforapanmete Mk end benefited kuMiri yet) a greater extent,' than any other remedies known to thepublic. Mbetkrentediewwill.rdactnally cunt Liver !shit, JJaundice,. Dfispeptia, Chroek GeaToull Detaity Dkr Vin i selS° ar the 'K 14 4 4 0 1 4 and all Meeks arising a Naordereit /leer. litmus* or Intestines. DEMLITY, _ • • an Beau!tips fr om y, Value. whatever; . PROSTRATION OF TIIR SYSTEM; tidieed bilAavere tabor, Hard . „ships, F4poeure,.Fevexa, etc. Mire* neletedidne extant:toll to th remedka in each cam; A Mnisliod rigor is Imparted to the whole system; the appetite leafrengthinal, food le enjoyed. the etemach digests peotantly, the blood the com plexion benseeeen end healthy, the - elkm tinge le eradiated from Miro* a bloom le given to the cheeks, and the weak and nervime,lerralid taxman a Strong and healthy being._, PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE,: And feeling the . hand of time weighing heavily upon Um% stub ail its einstailint ills, wilt dad •be the use e. this MTN", eir th e TONlC;an'elitir that will instil new life into their 'tine, restate hi a comentre the amp and ardor of mom youthful days, hada up, their shrunk en farms, sat give health and happftemito their remain log pan. I NerileL ... It is a wellostablhdiedhct UM; fall,. OM-WI oi the ifekak. isortian 4Ourpnheldwoare maim is tl n l k ez lament of gooda ;""lor, Wane ibideoins imp "never feel well." They ere laoauld , devoid ogsij alms' gy, extremely nervous, sad hove no appellee. W ill espeoftitrvigram"""ear ituNsan WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDRE'N An wade strong by the mewl either wiNtliamteeinedien. They will cure every case of MASAN/US, withal& AM. Thousands of oertfikats have aesimenimad fin the hands of the proprietor, bat scam will e/km of the rib &Mimi of but a km. Those, it will be oboarrld, are men of nots and of such standing that they mai!, be be. !laved. TESTIMONIALS: HON. GEO. W. WOODWARD, Ghief Justia of the Msprass therri. W diasek., mites: Philadelphia, March 46, /48111. "I And Heolland's German Bitters' is a gooddmilc, neeftt in diseases of the digestive orypsus, and oil great beneAt ie cases of debility, and want of nervous leaks la the systmn. Yours, truly, • • GEO. W. WOODWARD." HON. JAMES THOMPSON, Judge of the firpreato 4140411/ linanayhassia. •r_ Philadelphia, April 28,!:1 4. "I aikido Hoolland's German Bitters' a r maticine la ease bf attacks of Indigestion or Dyspepsia, I an certify this f am My experience of it. Yours, witiar • • " 'JAHBB THOMPSON." .• FROM RSV. JOSEPH H. EZEHARD, D. D., Rader qf Llas Tinth Baptist Church, Pkiladdphia v „ckrim,...„Mmr hOill fill/0110V l'Or• tO letttitOtirMy imam- wfth Mimminendatkuis Zlikn7,t kinds of medkines, but regarding the' practical as oat of my appropriateaphare, I have owe de. JiVaildit tut mkka *her proof in arks' ketatiesi and particularly In my own finally, of the usefulness of Dr. Saraband's Gannon Bittern I depart for owe frill my Tama Oman., to miLimp.p "wadi cowrictiostiaskor gar eral debility Vac triages; mad apeciadipAr HAW Om& Ptak; 4is a safe mod valuable pravaraion. In mete cam it may fau asaally, I Ameba sot, it will be vary beneficial to those who suffer from thorabove alum yoursortary reepectfally, . • J. #l. - RENEARD, Eighth, below Coates st. Mane Rtr. E. YENDALL, -Assistant Sdaor O7trtitiBai C e . Phirsdr4hia. I have derived headed benefit from the ass of Hoag land's Osman Rittsam and feel it myyarkAfge to mend them them as a stratahistds took, nilmboare suf fering from general debility or from diseuerarbkg from derangement of the liver. • Your. truly, • - • • A. D.'PENDALL 13IMIUMEI tAtrritiN.. Hootbutd'e - R•Oitedieg are ' counterfeited. See that the ahrnatvPi of C.•II.IACESON Os on the wrapper of each bottle. .ell adios are iounterkilt. Principald Illearlikowry at the Gorman Medi cine/tore, 114i.-EMARea stoat, 'Philadelphia, Pa. , . . MARL= M. EVANS, Proprietor, • Ferranti, eat. JACKSON EDO. . , ' . ... ' • . IlooLlead's Gar . en Billet.", mbottle, - $1 00 Threllead's Gera anTleo palmy to quirt bottles, $1 : ,per bottle, or abalf dolma foe 67 60. ' • • Allii-Dtimat forget to auk well the ectiele yew bey, in enter to pt . tbegeawies. • • Van. le, 1100114 y — Sae tale by all Dragging' eel deelerein siedielaes. )I;tuthig ylatitinto. the ,tax and cfftittinti. REMNSTRUCTION. GREAT SPEECH OF IiON. O. P. MORTON, OF INDLiNA. In the U. S. Senate, January 24, 1868, on the Constitutionality of the Reconstruc tion Acts. - Mr. PRESIDENT : If I had not been er fr.rred to my honorable friend from Wisconsin (*. Illeozems) in the debate yesterday I should-snot desire to speak on this question, especially at this time. I fear that Ishall not beer the strengaito say what I wish to. THE *MC LEITOLVED. The issue here to-day is the same which prevails throughout the country, which will be the lime of this canvass, and perhaps for yeanito come. To repeat what I have had occasion to say elsewhere, it is between two paramount ideas, each struggling for the su premacy. Ole 4 that , the war to suppress the rebellion vu-right and jest on our part ; that the rebels forfeited their civil and politi cal rights,- and our only be restored to them :rip= such conditions as the nation may pre , Scribe tar its future safety and prosperity.— The other idea is, that the rebellion was not sinful, but was right ; that those engaged in it forfeited no rights, civil or political, and have a right to take charge of their State govern.. ments and be restored to their representation in Congress just as if there had been no re bellion and nothing had occurred. The ins. mediate bane before the Senate now is be tween the existing. State government' estab lished tinder the policy of the President of the United States in the rebel States,and the plan of reconstruction presented by Congress. STATUS Or CLOSE REBEL STATES AT THE WAIL When a surveyor first enters a new territory he endeavors to ascertain the exact latitude and longitude of a given spot, and from that can safely begin his survey ; and so I will en deavor to ascertain a proposition in this de bate upon which both parties are agreed, and start from that proposition. That' proposition is, that at the end of the war, in the spring of 1865, the rebel States were without State gov ernments of any kind. The loyal State gov ernments existing at the beginning of the war had been overturned by the rebels ; the rebel State governments erected during the war had been overturned by our armies, and at the end of the war there were no governments of any kind existing in those States. This fact was recognized distinctly by the President of the United Stater in his proclamation under which the work of reconstruction was com menced in North Carolina in 1885, to which I beg leave to refer. The others were mere copies of this proclamation. In that prods maker he says : And whereas the rebellion, which has been waged by a portion of the people of the Uni ted States against the properly comitituted au thorities of the Government thereof; in the most violent and revolting form, but whose organised and armed forces have now been al umo Northst entirely overcome, has in its revolution or l delutred the people of the Carolina of all civil goverment State Here the President mast be allowed to speak for his party, and I shall accept this as ~..,,,,.....„„...,r- 1 - o rr - pan Slam : that at the end of the war there were no gov ernments of any kind existing in those States. THE OVESTITIMONAL PEOVISION Al TO Beene- LIOAN PORN Or GOVICSWICENT. The fourth section of the berth article of the Constitution declares that "the United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government"— This - provision contains a vast, undefined power that hes never yet been ascertained—a great stipervisory power given to the United States to enable them to keep the States in their orbits, to preserve theta from anarchy, revolution, and rebellion. The measure of power thus conferred noon the Government of the United States can only be determined by that which is requisite to guarantee or maintains in each State a legal and republican 1 . form of government Whatever power, there , fore, may be necessary to enable the Govern ment of the United States thus to maintain hi each State a ,republican form of govern , meat is conveyed by this provision. Now, liir. President, when the war *faded 4ind these States were found without , govern- Meets of any kind, the jurisdiction of the Unititifißater, under this provision of the Con ' stitution, at once attached; the power to re orgenize State governments, to use the com mon word, to reconstruct, to maintain and guarantee republic= State governments in - those States at once attached under this pro vision. Upon this proposition there is also a concurrence of the two parties. The Presi dent has distinctly recognized the application of this clause of the Constitution. He has recognized tim fact that its jurisdiction at taelitel when those States were found without republic= State governments, and he himself claimed to act under this clause of the Consti tution. I will read the preamble of the Pres ident's preclamadon : Whereas the fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States declares that the United , States shall guarantee to every State in the Union a re publican form of government, and shall pro tect each of them against invasion and do mestic violence; and whereas the President of the United States is by . the Constitution made Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy, as well as chief civil executive officer of the United. States, and is bound by solemn oath faithful to execute the office of Presi dent of the United States, and to take care that the laws be faithfully executed ; and whereas the rebellion which has been waged by a portion of the people of the United States spinet the properly constituted authorities of the Government thereof in the most violent and revolting hom, but whose organized and armed threes have now been almost entirely overcome, has, in its revolutionary progress, deprived the people of the State of North Carolina of all n civil government ; and where as b and to aim out and enforce theobligations pro o per f the people of the United States to the people of North Carolina in securing them in the enjoyment of a repubncan firm of government. I read this, Mr. President, for the purpose of showing that the President of the United Stator, lithispelicy of reconstruction, started out with a distinct receignitionof the applica bility of this clines of the Constitution, and that be hared` his system of resonstruction upesi it. It is true that he recites in this pro clamation that he is the Commander-in-chief ef the army of . the United States ; but st the same• time-he puts his plan of reconstruction not upon the exerOlse of the military power Which is called to Its aid, 'kites the execution of 1 thesusran ty prodded by the ulause of the Mien to which I have swam& H e ; snob* iii ChseenserAie Meth' Oirolina and *ribose other Ohs* *dike being idyll in its ,'but afiliary in its abets. This GatitracSr has thiptowier er oae.of tho dis trict commandos, and, in •thet, thr greater power thme imisthrild ulttmagmerill'ope orthmenliftherblisfrot ant grail is com stp.dtf rialltilati Ibrithilhrthirlgovided -Oat the adlitulooVitilt:iirt st/it gitZi g aol k - saisioec'ald=ht Un said auvarnor in carrying into Ef fect rocismadon. e ,;_ TaD3 GIIARABTT A LICRIMATITI ACT. We are then agreed upon the second propo sition, that the power of the United States to reconstruct and guarantee republican forms of government at once applied when these States were found in the condition in which they were at the end of the war. Then, sir, being agreed upon these two propositions, we are brought to the question uto the proper form exercising thlfpower and by whom Italian be exercised. The - Constitution says that "the United States shall guanintee to evaryState in this Union a republican form of government." By the phrase "United States" here is meant the Government of the United States. The linked States can only act through the Gov ernment, and the clause wonidmean precisely the same thing if it read "the Government of the United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of gov ernment." Then, as the Government of the United States is to execute this guaranty, the ques tion arises, what constitutes the Govenktnent of the United States ? The President does no tconatitute the Government; the Congrem does not constitute the Government; the ju diciary does not constitute the Government; but all three together constitute the Govern meat ; and as this guaranty is to be executed by the Government of the United States, it follows necessarily that it must be a leglida. tive act. The President could. not assume that he wits the United States within the meaning of that provision, without assuming that he was the Government of the United StateA. Congress could not of itself assume to execute the guaranty without assuming that it was the Government of the United States; nor could the judiciary without a like assumption. The act must be the act of the Government, and therefore it must be a legis lative act, a law passed by Congress, submit ted to the President for his approval, and per haps, in a proper case, subject to be reviewed by the judiciary. Mr. President, that this is necessarily the case from the simple reading of the Constitu tion seems to me cannot be for a moment de nied. The President, in assuming to execute this guaranty himself, is assuming to be the Government of the United States, which he clearly is not, but only one of its co-ordinate branches ; and, therefore, as this guaranty must be a legislative act, it follows that the at tempt on the part of the President to execute the guaranty was without authority, and that the guaranty can only be executed in the form of a law, first to be passed by Congress and then to be submitted to the President for his approval; and if he does not approve it, than to be passed over his head by a majority of two-thirds in each House. That law, then, becomes the execution of the guaranty and is the act of the Government of the United States. THY. POUR TO DZTERILINI TESTS IN OONOUSI. Mr. President, this is not an open question. I send to the Secretary and ask him to read a part of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Luther vs. Borden, as reported in 7 Howard. The Secretary read as follows Moreover, the Constitution of the United State, as far as it has provided for an emer gency of this kind,and authorized the General Government to interfere in the domestic' am ong ft it fil l tubt , trea t e d Gw yn , p( uAii i&m . the hands of that department. The fourth section of the fourth article of the Constitution of the United States provides that the United States shall guarantee to ev ery State in the Union a republican form of government, and shall protect each of them against invasions, and, upon the aptilication of the Legislature or of the Rxecutive,(when the Legislature cannot be convened,) against domestic violence. Under this article of the Constitution it rests with Congress to decide what govern ment is the establised one in a State. For, as the United States guarantees to each State a republican government, Congress must nec essarily decide what evatament is establiah ed in the State before it can determine wheth er it Is republican or not. And when the Senators and Representative of a State are admitted into the councils of the Union, the authority of the government under which they are appointed, as well as its republican cher acter, is recognized by the proper constitu tional authority. • And its decision is binding upon every other department of the Govern ment, and clink' not be questioned in a judi cial tribtmal. It is true that the contest in this case did not last long enough to bring the matter to this issue; and as no Senators or Representatives were elected under the au thority of the Government of which Mr. Dorr was the head, Congress was not called upon to decide the controversy. Yet the nght to decide is placed there, and not in the courts. MR. MORTON. In this opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, deliver. ed many years ago, the right to execute the guaranty provided for in this clause of the Constitution, is placed in Congrees and no where else, and therefore the necessary read ing of the Constitution is confirmed by the highest judicial authority which we have. MR. JOHNSON. Do yos read from the opinion delivered by the ChiefJusticef MR. MORTON. Yes, air ; the opinion delivered by Chief Justice Taney. He de cides that this power is not judicial ; that it is one of the high powers conferred upon Con gress; that it is not subject to be reviewed by the Supreme Court, because it Is political in its nature. It is a distinct enunciation of the doctrine that this guaranty' is not to be exe cuted by the President or by the Supreme Court, but by the Congress of the United States, in the form of a law to be pasted by , that body and to be submitted to the Presi dent for his approval ; and should he disap prove it, it may become a law by being pas sed by a two-thirds majority over his head. Now I will call the attention of my friend from Wisconsin to some other authority. As he has been pleased to refer to a Ammer speech of mine to show that I am not quite con sistent, I will refer to avote given by him in 1864 on a very important prevision. On the Ist of July, 1864, the Senate having under consideration, as in Committee of the. Whole, "a bill to guarantee to certain States whose governments have been usurped or over thrown' a republican form of government," Mr. Brown, of Missouri, offered an amend- Merit to strike out all of the bill after the enacting clause and to insert a subetittite, which I will ask the Secretary te rad. The Secretary read as follows : ' That when the inhabitants of any State swehmt have been declared ins State of insurrection the United States by proolmostion the President, by force and virtue of the act entitled "An act farther to provide for the collection of duties on imparts, issd-hr Ober purposes," app hererobyved Julyl to B, 1881, they shall be, and are &mimed be, of*haft any vote for electors of or Vice rred of the United States, or of electing Senatens . ec ftlin t k it m Bier* until said ht Con imomo. in add State is eoPlremed or abandoned *ad said inhabitants have returned te their obedience to the Gov erment of the United States, and until , each return to °beams shall be declared ley proo- Lamtion of the Primmeas, boned by "'kW , at an act of Congress ng hereafter to be Pallead, thorhd the MUM - MR. NOIMON. The honorable Senator . from Wisconsin voted far that dosernitme of the Whole and on its final paliw . I een attention to the conclusion of* smondennet, t which *Clone that slow era Incapa 9r ble 90 of en vote for deft= of rrtteldefit 71 Of 0 Stain or of electing Senators or Representii tires in Cou Do dd insurrection in said State is abandoned, and end inhabitants have returned to their obedience to the Government of the United States, and Until such return and obedience shall be de declared by proclamation of the President, issued by Of an act of Congress here after to in passed, authorizing the same. Recognizing that a state of war shall be re studied as continuing until It shall be declared no longer to exist by the President, in virtue of an act of Congress to be hereafter paned. lam glad to find by looking at the vote that the distinguished Senator from Maryland (Mr. Johnson) voted fisr this proposition, and thus recognize:lth* doctrine far which lam now contending: that the power to execute the guaranty is vested in Congress alone, and that it is for Congress *Lone to determine the the status and condition of those States, and that the President has no power to proclaim peace or to declare the political condition of those States until be shall first have been thereunto authorized by an act of Congress. run= or INS rOwSR. I therefore, Mr. President, take the proposi tioa as conclusivelrestablhind, both by na iad and authority, that this clause of the Con stitution can be executed only by Congress ; and taking that as established, I now proceed to consider whet are the powers of .Congress in the execution of the guaranty, how it shall be executed, and what means may be employ ed for that purpose. • The Constitution does not define the means. It don not say how the guaranty shall be executed. All that is left to the determination of Congress. As to the particular character of the means that must be employed, that, I take it, will depend upon the peculiar circumstances of each c a se ; and the extant of the power will depend upon the other question as to what may be required for the purpose of maintaining or guarantee ing a loyal republican form of government in each State. I use the word "loyal," although it is not used in the Constitution, because loy alty is an inhering qualification, not only in regard to persons who are to fill public offices, but in regard to State governments, and we have no right to recognize a State government that is not loyal to the government of the United States. Now, sir, as to ate use of means that are not prescribed in the Constitu tion, I call the attention of the Senate to the eighteenth clause of section eight of the first . article of the Constitution of the United States, which declares that : The Congress shall have power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carryinginto execution the forwing powers and all other powers vested by this Constitu tion in the government of the United States or any department or officer-thereof Hens is a declaration of what would other .wise be a general principle anyhow : that Congress shall have the power to pass all laws o necessary to carry into execution all powers that are vested in the Government under the I Constitution. As Congress has the power to guarantee or maintain a loyal republican gov ernment in each State, it has the right to use whatever means may be necessary for that purpose. As I before remarked, the charac ter of the means will depend upon the charac ter of the ewe. In one case it may be the use of an army ; in another ease perhaps it may be simply prepenting a question to the courts, and invingit tested in that way; in another W I , Cry roonuald„u or use Government itself. And! now propound this proposition; that if Congress, after delibera tion, after long and bloody experience, shall come to the conclusion thatdoyal republican State governments cannot be erected and maintained in the rebel States upon the basis of the white population, it has a right to raise up and make voters of a class of men who had no right to vote under the State laws. This is simply the use of the necessary means in the execution of the guaranty. If we have found after repeated trials that loyal republic an State governments-governments that aball answer the purpose that such governments are intended to answer—cannot be niccessest ly founded upon the basis of the whits popula tion, because the great majority of that popu-, bairns are disloyal, then Congress has a right to raise up a new loyal Toting population for the purpose of establishing these governments in the execution of the guaranty. I think, sir, this proposition is so clear that it is not necessary to i elaborate it. We are not re quired to find' in the Constitution a particular 'grin of power for this purpose ; but we find a general grant of power, and we find also another grant ,of power authorizing us to use whatever means may be necessary to execute the first ; and we find that the Supreme Court of the United States has said that the judg ment of Congress upon this question shall be conclusive ; that it cannot be reviewed by the courts; that it is a purely political matter; and therefore the determination of Congresa, that raising npl colored men to the right of suffrage is a means necessary to the execution of that power, is a determination which can- not be reviewed by the courts, and is con clusive upon the people of this country. THE PRIGIIIMNT'S POUCY. 'The President of the United States, swum- lig that he had the power to execute this guaranty, and being his proclamation upon it, went forward in the work of reconstrue don. It was understood at that time—it was so announced, if not by himself, at least form ally by the Secretary of State, Mr. Seward— that the governments which he would erect *wing the vacation of Congress were to be erected as provisional only ; that his plan of rsconstnaction and the work that was to be dcine under it would be submitted to Congress for its approval or disapproval at the next ses sion. If the President had adhered to that determination I believe that all would have, been well, and that the present state of things' would not exist. , But, sir, the Executive un dertook finally to execute the guaranty him- NU without the ' to-operation of ConfAvs& — Ile appointed 'provisional /overarms, giving to them unlimited power until such time as the new State governments should be erected. He prescribed in his proclamation who , shotdd umbel tire right of suffrage in the election of delegates.-1 And allow m for one moment to refer to that. He says in his proclamation : No shall be qualified as an elector, oreh Ibe eligible as a member of such con ned subscribed tbs oeth he shallhaof amneve previous sty, ly as set taken and forth In the President's prockunation of May 29; A. D. ifte&— which mistimed on the sante day and was a pert of the same tranisotiol— And is I votorgodided as prescribed by the constitution sad kws of the State of North Carolina in farce immediately before the 20th day °Man A. D. 1861. The mom bad the right to vote must have Outright to vote by thslaws ofthe State, and meet, in addition to that, have taken the oath ofairmesty. ; TIM President disheneids ad, In wiling fin Adepten to °parentless, from toe hundred and My thousand to three hundred *me* men. His distnmeldeo. Dant was ihr Oman than that whkh heehaw &DIV Ormgromm In the proclamation of sonamply be mn: Tbit dallatgag thamps of Mum ara =apt ad !ken tits IMO* Of this lavallunlikin— • than gamma: el a:Metes° classes of par sons-- Ail VP? Fc qarOA hays been pretended civil or diplomatic officers, or tutherwise do mestic or foreign agents, of .the pretended confederate government. • • • • ix. All per:sons who have voluntarily - par ticipated in said rebellion , and the estimated value of whose taxable property_ is over twen ty thousand dollars. And twelve other classes, estimated to num , ber at the least two hundred and fifty thoni and or three hundred thousand men, while the disfranchisement that has been created by Con gress does not extend perhaps ,to more than forty-five thousand or fifty thousand persons at the furthest. These provisional governors, under the authority of the President, were to call conventions ; they were to hold the elec tions, and they were to - count the votes ; they were to exercise all the powers that are being exercised by the military cominanders under the reconstruction acts of Congress. After those constitutions were formed the President went forward and accepted them at being loyal and republican in their character. lie authorized the voters under them to proceed to elect Legislatures, members: of Congress, and the . Legislatures to elect Senators to take their seats in this body. In other words, the President launched- those State governments into full life and activity without consulta tion with or co-operation on the part of . Con gress. PRESIDZET'S POLICY ILLROAL AND A FAILURE. Now, sir, When it is claimed that these go ernments are legal, let it be remembered that they took their orgin under a proceeding in stituted by the President of the United States in the execution of this guaranty, when it now stands confessed that he could not ex ecute the guaranty. But even if he had the weer, letit be further borne in mind that those constitutions were formed by conven tions that were elected by less than one-third of the white voters in the States at that time; that the conventions were elected by a small minority even of the white voters, and that those -constitutions thus formed by a very small minority have never been submitted to the people of those States for ratification.— They crane more the constitutions• of those States today than the constitutions formed by the conventions now in session would be if we were to proclaim them to be the constitu tions of those States without first having sub mitted there to the people for ratification.— How can it be pretended for a moment, even admitting that the President had the *met to start forward in' the work of reconstruction, that those State governments are legally form ed by a small minority, never -ratified by the people, the people never having had a chance 1 to vote for them They stand as mere arbi- ' trary constitutions, established not by the peo ple of the several States, but simply by force of executive power. • And, sir, if we shall admit those States to 1 representation on this floor and in the other 1 House under those constitutions, when the thing shall have got beyond our keeping and they are fully restored to their political rights, they will then rise asp and declare that those 1 constitutions are not binding upon them, that they never made them; and they will throw them off, and with them will go those provi , alone which were incorporated therein, de daring that slavery should never be rester ed and that their war debt was repudiated.— Those provisions were , put into those constitts _u....... v..... - the people of those States, and they will cast them out as not being their act a n d deed as soon as they shall have been restored to poli tical power in this Goverrunent. Therefore I say that even if it be conceded that the Presi dent had the power, which he had not, to 'start forward in the execution of this guaran ty, there can still be no pretense that those governments are legal and authorized, and 1 that we are bound to recognize them. The President of the United States, in his proclamation, declared that those governments were to be formed only by the loyal people of those Stales ; and I beg leave to call the atten tion of the Senate to that clause in his procla mation of reconstruction. He says : And with authority to exercise, within the limits of said State, all the powers necessary and proper to enable such loyal people'of the State of North Carolina to restore said State to its constitutional relation, with the Federal Government. Again, speaking of the army : And they are enjoined to abstain from in any way hindering; impeding, or discourag ing the.loyal people from the organization of a Stati government as herein authrwized., Now, sir, so far from those State govern- 1 silents having been organized by the loyal peo ple, they were organized by the disloyal ; ev ery office pulled into the hands of a rebel; the Union men had no part.orlot in those govern ments ; and so far from answering the purpose for which governments are intended, they fail-: ed to extend protection to the loyal mgn, ei ther white or black. The loyal men were murdered with impunity; and I will litank any Senator upon thlatioor to polutto si single casein any of thatebel States where a - tehel has bees tried and. brought to puniahmene-hy the civil authority for the murder of- s Union man. Not one caee, , l tun ! told, can be fbund. .Tbose governments Utterly failed in answer: ing the purpose of civil governmente; anffnot only that, but they returned the colored - pee' pie to *Condition ofgicasi slavery ; they mad them the-slaves of societylnstead of being, as they were ibefore, the slave's of htdivitinak—: l Under various forme of vagrant laws they dik." prived them of the rights. of freanen; and paced them under the power and 'control of their rebel masters, who were filled with hatred and revenge. THE POLICY OP CONGRESS. But, 20. President, time passed on. Con gress assembled in December, 1865. For a I time it panned. It did not at once annul those governments. It hesitated. At last, in 1866, the constitutional amendment, the fourteenth article, was brought forward as a basis of set tlement and reconstruction ; and there was a tacit understanding, though it was not em braced in any law or resolution, that if the Southern people should ratify and agree to that amendment, then their State govern ments would be accepted. But that amend ment was rejected, contomptuonely rejected. The Southern people, counseled and inspired by the Democracy of the North, relented that amendment. They were told that they were not . bound to submit to stny cemditiont what ,ever ; that they bad forfeited no delta by re bellion. Why, sir, what did we ".propose by this amendment? By the first section We'de chund the; all men botia upon our sniff *ere - citizens of the United fibstes--a thing - that had long been recofigdzed by eiwy depatit of this Iked. Scott dieldnn wits made in . 185 t. second sectimlpro. Tided that where alias or ram of trOn were excluded from thecrightitfildfraiskieYAKll4 .not b ! ( M al/ MO i nttiM /M 4 of M 4,1004 --- anetrirto*iiiiiike that 119 'tamable man for a umenent could deny ; that if &tn. milli& .peopie dole* fibtedi Were:to hare tio ehdfhwe, the men Liyhtliiii s *inildat and nine:446oot O*Y ad depsivieg,,therri of . all polltket should nobliatte members orpoiyorts,.. 011 tlieiai t Y thijniticifoffiS S&L' and 'chin* has never been successfully hn- Pagnsd by any tirgoment, I care not how in (/o1 It It ma i ! I C* WWI was the Ohl clause? ,Itwas that the leaders of the South, those men who had once taken an official oath to support the Constitution of the United States, and had afterward committed perjury by going into the rebellion, should be made in eligible to any office under the Government of .the United States or of a State. It was a very small- disfranchisement. It was Intended to withhold Power from those leaders by whose instrumentality we had lost nearly half a mil ' lion lives and untold treasure. The justice of that disfranchisement could not be disproved. ,' And what was the fourth clause of the amend- I ment ?-- That this Government should never assume and pay any part of the rebel debt; that it should never pay the rebels for their slaves. This was bitterly opposed in the North as well as in the South. How could i any man oppose that amendment unless he was in favor of this Government assuming a portion or all of the rebel debt, and in favor of paying the rebels for their slaves? When the Democratic party North and South opposed that most important, and, perhaps, hereafter to be regarded as vital amendment, they were committing themselves in- principle, as they had been before by declaration, to the doc trine that this Government was bound to pay for the slaves, and that it was just and right that 'ye should assume and psytherebel debt. ' This amendment, as I have before said, was rejected, and when Congress assembled in De cember, 1886, they were confronted by the fact that every proposition of compromise had , been ected ; every half-way measure had " beened by the rebels, and they had no thing left to do but to begin the work of re construction themselves; and in February, I 1887, Congress for the fine time entered upon the execution of the guaranty provided for in the Constitution by the passage of the first re construction law. A supplementary bill was found necessary in March, another one in July, and I believe another is found necessary at this time ; but the power is with Congress. Whatever itehalideem necessary, whether it be in — the way of colored suffrage, whether it be in the way of military power—whatever‘ Congress shall deem necessary in the execu-, tion of this guaranty is conclusive upon the i courts and upon the States. WET. COLORED lIEN WERE ENFRANCHISED. Sir, when Congress entered upon-this work it had become apparent to all men that loyal reliublican State governments could not be erected and maintained upon the basis of the white population. We had tried them. Con gress had attempted the work of reconstruc tion through the constitutional amendment by leaving with the white people of the South the question as to when the colored people 1 should exercise the right of suffrage, if ever; but,when it was found that those white men were as rebellious as ever, that they hated this Government more bitterly than ever ; when it I was found that they persecuted the loyal men, both white and black, in their midst : when it was found that Northern men who had gone down there were driven out by social tyran ny, by a thousand annoyances, by the in security of life and property—then it became apparent to all men of intelligence that recon struction could not take place upon the basis of the white population, and something else must be done. New, sir, what was there left to do ? Ei ther we Must hold these . people continually ny military power, or we must use such ma chinery upon such a new basis as would ena ble loyal republican State governments to be raised up ; and in the last resort—and I will I say Congress waited long, the nation waited long, experience had to come to the rescue of reason before the thing was done—in the last resort, and as the last thing to be done, Coa -1 greselletermined to dig through all the rule bish--dig through the soil and the shifting' sands, and go down to the eternal rock, and I there, upon the basis of the everlasting prin ciple of equal and exact justice to all men, we have planted the column of reconstruc tion - and, sir, it will arise slowly but surely, , 1 and "the gates of hell shall not prevail against lie': Whatever dangers we apprehended from the introduction to the right of suffrage of seven hundred thousand men, just emerged 190 - slavery, were put aside in the presence of, a greater danger. Why, sir, let me say frankly to my friend from Wisconsin that I approached universal colored suffrage in the 1 South reluctantly. Not because I adhered to the miserable dogma that this was the white man's government, but because I entertained fears about at onie entrusting a' large body of men jest-from elaverye--to whom education had been denied by law, to whom the mar riage - relation had been denied, who had been .the most, abject' slaves, with political power. And as the 'Senator has referred to a speech which I made In Indland in 16415, allow me to shine the pritielpie that then actuated me, for in that speech I-said : Di regard to 'the question of admitting the i,freedmen of the Southern States• to vote, 1 while I.admit.the,equal rights of all men, and Ilitat In time all' men wlll have the right to i 'tote, wltlicnit distinction of color or race, I yet believe that in the (else of that million of slaves, just-freed from bondage; there should Lbe a. period of _probation and preparation be . fore they are leyought to the exercise of polit- I lealpo*er, Such teas my feeling at that time, for it had not Mei been determined by the bloody ex ' perience of the last "ilie years that we could not reconstritet upon the basis of the white IMPulatline and such: was .the opinion ; of a : great 'majority of ,lie" people of the North ; and levels =Candi a year and a half after that time that Congrees same to the conclu sion that there was no way left but to resort to colored suffrage and suffrage to all men ex cept those who were disqualified by the com mission of high crimes and misdemeanors. • - WHO OPPOSE RECONSTRRCTION. - Mr. President, we hear much said in the 1 &arse of this debate and ithrough the press, about the violation of the Constitution. It is I said that in the reconstruction measures of Congress we have gone outside of the Consti tution, and the remark of some distinguished statesman ef. t/afkikepablican, party is quoted to that efra3t. Sir, it any leading Republican has ever said so; he , spoke , only for himself, not for, another. - I deny the statement in foto.- I insist that thettereconstrnction meas ures erg „se hilly within the powers of the Constittgien as any legislation that can.be hed, not only by. Reason, but by authority.— And who.are the men that are talking so' in* about the vielation.of the Constitution, and who 'pretend to be the especial friends of that instrtuasuit-t ..The great mass of them, only three years ago, were' in rant to over turn-the -Constitution and establish that of lientgomery in its place, or were their North arn.ftriende, who were raiding and sympathi big in litsikundertakflig.i -- --, • /had ocaudest the other—dsy to ispeak of what-was described sac Constitetional,Union man--a man living inside of thit Federal 'lines durhirthwiterreitapendsh* Yqtit t h e rebel!kes, idehrbir t endisivered to tdd the te- Inhlttbit the ti iiudtre ' lasehelieeposeif iftippresidni it wed al•iloht itilheettheVenstitalten of the 13nited Wei& blow, these men who claim to be the esiieciat Mends of the Constitution are the men' who have sought to destroy it by force of arms, auk those throughout the country who have -, . w+t+ws~ w given them aid and comfort. • 6ir, you will 4tmeinixt`that once a - celebtate4 French wo-, than was ls;inidiagged to tie watud, and as she passed the-statue of Liberty the exclaim ed : "How manyesimes have been committed in thy name!" and I cm. say to the Constitu tion, bow • many crimes against liberty, hu manity, and progress, are being committed in thy name by these inert *fie, While they loved not the Constitution,•imil sought. Its destruc tion, now, for party purposes, claim to be its especial friends. My friend from Wisconsin yesterday com pared what he called the Radical party of the North to the radicals of the South, and when he was asked the question ,by some Senator, "Who are the radicals of the South ?" he said, "They are the Secessionists." Sir, the Secessionists of the South are Democrats to diy," acting in harmony and concert with the Democratic party. They • were .Democrats during the war who prayed for the success of McClellan and Pendleton, and would have been glad to have voted for tiled; and they were Democrats before the war, and the men who made the rebellion. These are the radi cals of the South ; and my friend from Wis consin, after all, is voting with the radicals. TR& cRY Or NEfiRO EWPRIMACY. The burden of his speech yesterday was that the reconstruction measures of Congress are intended.to establish negro supremacy.— Sir, this proposition is wilhout any founda tion whatever. I believe it was stated yes terday by the Senator from Illinois (Mr. Trumbull) that in every State- but two the white voters registered out-numbered the col ored voters ; and the fact that in two States the colored voters outnumbered the white vo ters is owing to the simple accident that there are more colored men in those States than there are white men. Congress has not sought to establish negro supremacy, nor has it sought to establish the supremacy of any class or party of men. If it had sought to establish negro supremacy it would have been an easy matter by excluding from the right of suffrage all men who had been concerned in the rebellion, is accordance with the proposi tion of the distinguised Senator from Massa chusetta (Mr. Sumner),- ia-his speech at Wor cester in.. 186.5. He proposed to exclude all men who had been concerned In the rebellion and confer suffrage only on those who were - left. That would have established negro-su premacy by giving the negroes an overwhelm ing majority in every State ; and If that had been the object of Congress it could have been readily done. But, sir, Congress has only sought to divide the political power be tween the loyal and the disloyal. It has dia -1 franchised some fifty thousand disloyal lead erd, leaving all the rest of the people to vote. They have been enfranchhied on both sides, that neither should-be placed in the power of the other. The rebels have the right to vote so that they shall not be under the control and power of the Union men only, and the Union men have been allowed to vote so that they shall not be under the control and pow er of the rebels. This is the policy, to divide the political power among those men for the protection of each. Sir, the charge that we intend to create a negro supremacy or colored State .governments is without the slightest foundation, for it would have been in the power of Congress to have easily confbrred such supremacy by simply excluding the dis loyal from the right of suffrage—a power which it had the clear right to exescise. Now, Mr. President, allow me to consider for a moment the amendment offered by the Senator from Wisconsin, and upon which his speech was made, and see what is its effect—l will not say its purpose, but its inevitable ef fect—should it become a law. I will ask the Secretary to read the amendment which the Senator from Wisconsin has proposed to the Senate. The Secretary read as follows - Provided nevertheless, That upon an „election for the ratification ofany sonstaution, or of officers under the same, previous to its adoption in any State, no person not having the qualifications of an elector under the C'on stitutioa and laws of such State previous to the late rebellion shall be allowed to vote, un less he shall possess one of the following qualifications, namely; 1. He shall have served as a soldier in the Federal army for one year or more. 2. He shall have sufficient education to read the Constitution of the United States and to subscribe his name to an oath to support the same; or, 3. He shall be seized in his own right, or n the right of his wife, of a freehold of the value of 4 ;250. Mr. MORTON. Sir, these qualifications are, by the terms of the amendment, to apply to those who were not authorized to vote by the laws of the State before the rebellion—in other -words, the colored men. lie proposes to allow a colored man to vote if he has been in the Federal army one year, and he propo ses to allow a rebel white man to vote, al though he Etas served in the rebel army four years! He proposes that a colored man shall not vote unless he has sullicient education to read the Constitution of the United States and to subscribe his name to an oath to support the same; whereas he permits a rebel white man to vote who never heard of A, and does not know how to make. his mark even to a note given for whiskey. [Laughter.] • Again, air, he propos:es that the colored man shall not. vote unless he shall be seized in his own right or in the right of his wife of a freehold of the value - of $250, a - provision . which, of course, would cut off nine hundred and ninety-nine out of every thousand color ed men in the. South. The colored man can -not vote unless he has a freehold of 4%2.10, but the white l ebel who was never worth twenty five centli, who never paid poll-tax in his life, never paid art honest debt, is to be allowed to vote. Sir, what would be the inevitable effect of the adoption of this amendment P To cut off such a large part of the colored vote as to leave the rebel white vote largely in the ascendency and to put these new State governments there to be termed again into the hands of the rebels. Sir, I will not spend longer time upon that. • My friend yesterday alluded to my endorse ment of the President's Alloy in a' speech in 1865. I never endorsed what -n ow called the President ' s policy. In lirsuniniev of 1863, when I saw a division coming betive& the President and the Republican party, and when I could not help anticipating the direful consequences that must result from it,l made a speech in which I repelled certain state ments that had been made against the Presi dent, and denied the charge that by inning his proclamation of May 29, 1865, he had thereby left the Republican party. I told that he had not left the Republican party by that act. I did show that the pqle - yie•that proclamation was even more milt* than that of 3fr. Lincoln. I did show thitAt WM more radical even ,thart the Winter DillriN bill of the summer of 1864. But,-sir, It was all upon the distinct understanding that what ever the President did , that his whole policy or action waslobe submitted to Congress for its Censidetatien. and decision ; and, as I be fore remarked, if that had been clone all would have been well. I did not then advo cate'univerital colered suffrage in the Soutli, and I halm tiefons given my reasons for it, and in dein! that I was acting in harmony With the-great body of the Republican party of the North. It was nearly a year after that time, when Congress passed the constitutionak amendment, which still left the quest* of Suffrage with the Southern States, left it wills . . tie' white people; and it twasitnt r itylll a pear; grid a half after that rime that, Clcu?girsea copal, ibliiirs. ,to the conChislon that we 0104 : nos, v AK :the guaranty of the Constitt . Volllti . :,ing up a new class of loyai votent. TES WAR A GREAT 'MEGATON. ' And, sir, nobody concurred in •that icault [Concluded 974 4th pnge.] ===l El CI D