— SPEECH OF HON. A. V. LARRIMER, Delivered before the Council Bluffs Demo- cratic Association. (SATURDAY EAENING FEB 28th, 1863.) It has been said that any form of govern- ment is better than no government at all. Since the wants and fears of individuals first suggested the necessity of some form of governa.ent, different theories have Leen tried ; some have succeeded, sorue have fail-, ed, often from the system dévised, oftner from the manner of administration. “With us the executive, legislative and judicial offi- cers of the government hold their respective places by virtue of our written, ratified and established Constitution; By accepting those © respective places, for the performance of a public trust, these different officers of the Government acknowledge the supremacy of our Constitution, and before entering upon their duties, take an oath to support all iis provisions, The people when acting under the Consti- tution and laws in selecting execulive, legis- lative and judicial effizers, so act, with a view that their public servants will faithful- ly discharge the several trusts to them com- mitted, and those trusts to be faithfully ex- ecuted, are, simply, to consummate the ob- jects for which the Constitution was ordain- ed and established. The ends for which the government was instituted ani the Constitu- tion adopted, are not left to us enshrouded with mystery or veiled in uncertainty. We have it all in the preamble to the Constitu- tion—s0 plain that he whe runs may read, and not only read but understand—and it is this: — «+ We, the people of the United S ates iinerder to form a more perfect Union, es- tablish justice, insure domestic tranquility, progde for the eommon defense, promote theygeneral we'fare, and sccure the blessing «of liberty to ourselves ana our posterity, do asain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.” hat Constitation, to which this is the preamble, provided for three great depart. ants of Government- -the Legislative, which was to pass the laws, the Executives which was to approve aud execute them, and the Judicial, which was to expound and enforce them. The Constitution so framed, was submitted for ratification to the Con- ventions of the States, and after being rati. fied by the States according to the terms on which it was submitted, became the sppreme law of the land. By the terms of the Con- stitution the powers delegated to those three great depart: ents of government were clearly expressed and defined. Under this Constitution and theory of government, the legislgtive power can pass laws, but it can- not approve nor execute them, neither can it expound and enforce them, for this would require an exercise of executive and judi- cial power which it does not have. The ex- ecutive can approve, and execute laws only after they are passed by the legislative, and after they are approved. The executive can- not expound aud enforce them, for this would require an exercise of judicial power which the executive does not have, The judiciary can only expound and enforce such lawg as have been passed by the legis lative and approved by the executive. Under qur theory of government, a law is the written will of the legislature, which has received the approval of the Executive. There is no warrant under our Constitution for the legislature to exercise executive or judicial powers, neither is there for the ex- ecutive to exercise legislative or judicial powers. The exercise of powers by one department of the government belonging to another is a crime and misdemeanor, for which the party offunding is Liable to im- peachment and punishment. The written will of the executive, assuming to prescribe rules of civil conduct, by which he com- mands what he believes to be right and pro- hibits what he believes to be wrong, has no validity whatever as a law, for it is but the will of one individual, expressed in defiance of law and in utter disregard of the Consti- tution. If the executive is to judge when he may exerpise legislative power, he may also determine when he may exercise judicial power. If he may exercise the one power upon any exigency, he may the other, and thus consolidate in one department of the government, executive, legislative and judi- cial powers. But the framers of our Con- stitution wisely provided against such des- potism by dividing and separating those dif- ferent powers—creating a different depart- meus of government for each, and placing it b¥ond the power of the executive, under any pretence whatever, to unite them. We cannot believe that the Amerigan peo. ple, naw or hereafter, will yield up without a struggle our present system of govern- ment and accept another which contemplates a centralization of power without any lmi- tation whatever upon its exercise, in utter disregard of the aims and objects had in view by our forefathers atthe adoption of our {onstitution, } As | said before, these are clearly set forth in the preamble to our Constitution, And now let us gee how faithful or unfaithful the party in power have been in administering the government for the objects for which it was instituted—who have been for the gov- ernment pnd who have bsan against it.— Have the teachings and practices of the Re- publican pa ty, from the time of its organi- 2yjign jp to the present been “in order to A a A TNA ait an form a mgre perfect Union?” &c. No! They proclaimed their sentiments of disu- nion from the first and sought to array orfe portion of a common country against the other. When the Constitution was runnirg the gauntlet of adoption before the conven- tions of the several States, no human tongue then condemned it, because it proposed a union of States, which when thus formed would be part slave and part free—no, it re- mained for disloyalty to the government and treason to the” Constitution nearly three quarters of a century after 'ts adoption to proclaim it as a ground for the dissolution of our-Union. As a result, that country —once the land, of every land the pride —is now rent with civil feuds and drenched with fra- ternal blood, ¢: Establish justice!” Their rule has exiled justice from the land. Our courts no longer dare expound the law or enforce their decrees. “insure domestic tranquility !” When or where will we look for domestic tranquility ? Alas, the votaries of frenzy, fanaticism and hate, are the ene- mies of quiet and repose ; they rejoice over civil war and would add to it the horrors of a servile one. * Provide for the common defense !"' The strength of the nation is rap- idly being exhausted, by the inconsiderate slaughter of its sons io fruitless battles, while other nations are willing spectators of the national suicide, ‘* Promote the gener- al welfare!” Why. every calamity that war can entail upon a nation, bears heavily upon ourhopes and efforts to exist in peace even as the part of a former nationality. Individu- al welfare and self aggrandizent, have been the ruling passion of thos: in power, white the public welfare has been wholly discar- ded. ln addition to these objects, had in view by the framers of our Constitution, there was yet another, and that was to se- cure the blessing of liberty to themselves and their posterity. Yes, we who live in this, the latter part of the nineteenth centu- ry, are that posterity fur which our fathers thought, by the adoption of the Constitution, they had secured the blesrings of liberty be youd the reach of despotic and arbitrary power. We should have been loth to be- lieve a few years ago that the liberty of the citizen would ever depend upon the will of executive ministers; we should have scouted at the idea, that a time would ever arrive in our history while we were pretenamg to live under that constitution to which is at- tached the names of Washington, Hamilton, Franklin and others, whose memories are hallowed in our affections ; ‘when American citizens would be hurried off to loathsome prisons by the minions of arbitrary power without any charge of crime being preferr- ed against them, or any other warrant than the wili of those who had taken a solemn oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution—which declared in letters of living light that no such crimes should be perpetrated in the name of liberty. With a free and enlightened people the exercise of despotic power is of brief duration, for t e consciousness that man has rights which no despotism can extinguish, which no tyr- anny can take away, soon applies the rem- edy. The people may suffer their rights to be invaded, but that inyasion will not be of long duration. There is a principle in man which will ever be at war with the exercise of despotic power, and that war, when once declared, will ever be triumphant, In days gone by, this principle has been the moving spring ot revolutions, has moved the foun- dations of mighty thrones, has accelerated the downfall of empires, has sounded into the ears of despots and tyrants the fearful moanings of coming storms, and it will ever go forth at ita gppointed time as the bright angel of God, to unbar the prison door, suc- cor the needy, relieve the oppressed and pour a flood of light and love into the dark- ened and dreary intellects of those who have felt-and suffered from man’s inhumanity to man. It is a truth verified by the history of other governments, that no State can ex- ist without being soon exhausted, which maintains over the one hundredth part of its members in office, in arms and in idleness. It cannot be expected that our govern- ment will be an exception to this inexorable law, which, when once violated, must speed- ily result in exhausting the means and re- sources of our rational existence, We see swarms of public officers in cur midst eat- ing out the subsistence of our people, near- ly & million of men in arms under the pay of the government, a part of the memal population supported at the public charge, with a command from the President to the remainder of this latter class, to no longer serve their masters, but become a burthen to the people, as sre those now fed and ration- ed by order of the Administration. That this state of things will bankrupt the nation, if it kas not already, is a ques- tion which no reasonable mmd for a mo- ment entertains a doubt. A government: hke everything else, has its price; it is more. But the price of government is the reverse of the common standard. The bet- ter the government the less cost to the peo- ple ; the worse the governmenc the greater the cost to the people. If principles of right, questions ¢f interest and pomts of honor, require extraordinary expenditures and sac. rifices of human life, 1t may be well ; but when the Administration disregards the rights, the mterests and the honor of the | government as. well as the people; - the peo- | ole have no other alternative left, than the establishment of an order of things, which to them will seem most likely to effect their safety and happiness. worth just so much, and it is worth no. We do not believe that mortal man could devise a better rorm of government than the one we have, and when we speak of the g.v- ernment we do not mean the administration; but 1f the administration has so disarranged and broken up ‘he machinery of the govern- ment so that it can never be put into suc. cessful operation again to serve the ends for which it was established. the sooner we cast its broken and dishonored fragments aside, and estat lish a new order of things, giving to each peculiar people whose interests are identical, a government by themselves, the better. We cacnot sce that the toiling mil. lions of our people are likely to receive any corresponding benefits for the sacrifices they have already made, and that they will be required to make for all time to come, by the crusade carried on against the institution of slavery by the administration, under the pretence of admibistering the government. Neither can we see onc single ray of hope for a Union of the government by a contin. uation of this policy, The present administration by acting in disregard of our Constitution, perverting the war, from a war for the restoration of the Union, to a war for the emancipation of slaves, may have gratified the hate and granted the demands of those who desired the state of affairs now existing in our un- happy land, but by so doing it has rang the death-knell of the Union There is no man- ifested feeling of Union cither at the North ‘or the South, the East or the West, but there is a feeling of hate not guided by rea- son nor restrained by law, which looks to the prostration and ruin of all things. It is darkness, frenzy, fanaticismand hate.— ¢ Of all things including therein, the upper saps which it exccrates. It does not under- mine in its hideous crawl, merely the social order of time—it undermines philosophy, it undermines science, it undermines law, it undermines human thought, it andermines civilization, it undermines revolution, it un- Cermines progress. It gues by the naked names of theft, prostitution, murder and assassination.” It 1s frenzy and hate desir- ing chase. For moral power it appeals to ignorance, for physical power it appeals to arms. Sirs, when the administration of this Government was placed in the hands of those who sought to administer it with the S0je VIEW Of WIaKing vvery HICivor ana culls sideration yield to the single ohject of de- stroymng the relation of master and slave. the fountains of society, law, order, justice, humanity, were broken up and the end is not yet. The historians tell us that when Mark Antony was returning from ‘he Par- thean war, his soldiers about the base of the mountains of Armenia ate of a certain herb from the effect of which they were de- prived of memory and judgment and became possessed of the single idea that beneath the stones scattered over that country there were immense treasures which would make them rich and happy. They had no desire for anything but this imaginary treasure— they forgot that they bad & country to de- fend, a standard to honor ; ne threats could induce them to return to duty, Their minds were in twilight ; reason had lost its lordly hold ; conscience nq, longer pointed out the duty they owed to themselves or their coun- try, and day after day they were found prone to the earth upturning the stones in search of an imaginary blessing, until death or the Parthean arrow put an end to their suffer- ings snd their folly. If the unexpired term of the present ad- ministration is employed in upturning, the social order of time—undermining Consti- tutions and laws, establishing chaos and an- archy, under the hallucination, that we must have liberty to the slave or death to the Union ; we may look for its fate certain and deplorable, as that which was inevita- ble to the soldiers of the Roman general, when maddened aud crazed by the love of gold. We may destroy the Union, but we may not liberate the slave. We may subju- gate our own people to peonage, and fail to subjugate those who ware in arms against us as a separate and distinct nation- ity. 4 we are to judge the futme by the past, the prospect of subjugating the South by arms, is rather remote and contingent.—A people determingd on Independence, and a nationality, are but seldom subdued by arms. England was never able to smhjuzate Scotland, although she had the numerical strength, and overran the country with an armed soldiery. As soon ais her army was withdrawn, Scotland was again in arms, and 80 it continued until the battle of Banuock- burn, when the Scots under Bruce, with 30,- 000 men, defeated an English army treble their number, and placed Bruce upon the throne, with England willing to recognize their Independence. Poland, dissevered and shared out as the spoils of nations—tao- day is still Poland in arms. Hungary, bear- ing as an incubus upon her heaving bosom, the weight of one-half of Europe, is still Hungary determined to be free. Italy, af- ter six centuries of disintegration, has at last thwarted the purpose of the French Emperor with one hand, and Austgia and Russia with the other, and to-day stands forth to the world as Italy united and free. I do not pretend to say by this, that the preponderance of manhood is with the South; but if they continue to manifest as brave hearts and determined wills as they have al- ready evicced in the cause which they as a people believe to be just, the historian who writes the history of these times and of this contest between the North and the South, BELLEFONTE, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1863. will but re-write the history of England as to Scotland, Russia as to Poland, Austria as to Hungary, sud the Italian history, if this contest be of much longer duration. FEng- land was unable to terminate the war of the Roses by crimsoning her soil with the blood of the best citizens of the realm, and it was only by a union of the Houses of York and Lancaster that the Government was restor- ed, peace established, and a termination ef- fected of the horrors of that civil war which had deluged England with blood for near a century. This aaministration and govern- ment peculators may desire war, but the people desire peace, and with peace a resto- ration of the government, which can only be accomplished by a cessation of hostili- ties. He who would calm the troubled ocean in- vokes an abatement of the storm; he who would have peace and a restoration of the Union, asks war's sad havoc to spare the precious heritage from final destruction, I believe there is a power more potent than the sword for the preservation of Constitu_ iional republics —and that power is the re- sult of reason and thought directed aright— with the concession of equal and exact jus- tice to all parts and sections of a common country. The present administraticn came into power avowing hostility to the interests of one section of the country. As the first fruits of that disposition to disturb the peaceful relations before existing, about to be con- summated by the exercise of Federal power, the President elect steals into the Federa' Capital in disguise, and in that city bearing the name of Washington, surrounded wiih glittering bayonets, is inaugurated Presi dent of the United States. No President elect had ever before approached the Feder al Capital in disguise, or, as executive, had taken the oath to preserve, protect and de- fend the Constitution of the United States, surrounded by an armed soldiery ; for none before had been elected to that high posi- tien, pledged to the pursuit of a ‘policy, having in view the destruction of the Union, and the untold miseries inflicted by the con- summation of thatobject. Disguise, stealth and force at hand, are befitting precautions 10 one about to beeome the doer of dark and evil weeds, The people plead for peace; LUCY UCard tae formed solllnga SAR —— ing storm, but there wasno hand to save, Republican loyalty demanded blood — it de- manded plunder, it demanded a dissolution of the Union, it demanded ¢ freedom to the slave or death to t“e Union." We have had war that these demands might be grant- ed--one which has been accomplish’ng its work of destruetion and riveting chains of slavery upon our people for nearly two years, and to-day its authors are unwilling to acknowledge the true cause, cr tell our people why it is that numerical strength does not prevail in this contest, supported as it has been with everything that a free and prosperous people had at their centrol at the commencement and during the con- test, as the result of constitutional govern. ment previous to Republican rule. The best form of government ever devised by man is but an experiment, and like every other ex- periment, from some canse or other, may fail. That our Goverpment should have been an exception to that decadence which, sooner or later, overtakes every work of mortal man, was the hope, not only of loyal citizens here, but of the friends of human liberty throughout the world. When our Govern- ment was at peace with the world and at peace with itself, the sweat of an honest man’s brow only being exacted to provide food and raiment for himself anc those who by nature had claims upon him, with the additional exertion required to support le- gitimate government, which was no bur- then, all loyal citizens of this Government of ours, said it was well, When we enjoy- ed such prosperity as the world never be- fore had witnessed, when the Emblem of our Nationality was respected in every land and on every sea, wherever its broad folds were unfurled, when we were justly proud of the position we occupied among the nations of the earth, loyal citizens desired no change, and said it was well, With the enjoyment of individual and national prosperity, some of the States of the Umion maintained the institution of African slavery, which had no existence 1a some and had been abolished in others : a relation and condition of society which the friends of revolution, the enemies of law and order, declared should no longer continue. We must become all one thing or all the other —be all slave or all free States. Such was the language of disloyalty, nor was it long in manifesting itself, in many of the States already alienated from the Con- stitution and Federal Laws, by the passage of what they terined Personal Liberty Bills, which was in opposition to both. The dis- position to disturb the existing order of things gave itself form and shape by the or- ganisation of what was called the Republi- can party, the leading snd fundamenta] principle ot which party was hostility to the institution of slavery. Men of profli- gates lives and desperate fortunes, with those who were craged upon the question of slavery, united their efiirts to place the Federal power in the hands of thet party which in advance of the Presidential elec- tion, had declared its infidelity to the Gov- ernment: It was denounced as revolution- ary and dangerous to the peace of the coun- try, by a large majority of the American’ people, in the Northern states, misled and deceived, together with a desire of change of Admnistration, committed the execntive authority of the grvernment. to an expo- nent of this radical revolutionary party. — What we have already experienced of Re- publican rule, attests the fidelity of that party toits promises before the election ; not ta preserve but to destroy, not to protect but to assail, not to defend but to utterly disre- gard the plainest provisions of our Nation- al Constitt tion. If loyal citizens, before the presidential election, rightfully and trathfully denoun- ced this party as hostile to our national Government, as yot they have no ground to change that opinion. [If ther theory was wrong then, their practice is wrong to day, and cannot receive the endorsement of those who would be consistent. Ifit was wrong for a political party asking fcr the administration of the Government, to de- clare hostility to State institutions, is it wrong for that party when in power to ex- er ise that power in waging war against those stitutions, We believe with those who pledged their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to the cause of American Independence, and attestad their sincerity with their blood on every battle field. of the Revolution, that Government derived their just powers from the consent of the governed. We do not believe that a minority par- ty, obtaining power under false pretences, have the right to disregard the expressed wish of the majority, and that party and its minions of power will yet find that there is a terrible retribution for all who prefer- red and brought about the state of affairs now existing, rather than the institution of slavery should emist in some States ot our former Union. While we acknowledge hostility to slavery, asa principle of the Republican party, we do not forget that the leaders of that party, as a general thing, were more thoroughly imbued with dis- loyalty to the Government, and a de- sire of sclf-aggrandisement upon the ruing of their country, than they were of ameliorating the condition of ther fellow man. Philanthropy does not demand, for the success of 1ts purpose, a dismemberment of Government, or that a country like ours, * An la. had “hala be drenched with fraternal blood, It does not derrand the infliction of a greater evil upon the hu nan family thaf the evil sought 10 be remedicd, nor as great. Tt does not demand that the sworn eonservators of our State and national authority should violate their solemn oaths of office, by trampling upon and disregarding the plainest provis- 10ns of those Constitations which they had taken an cath to support and defend. Tt does not demand that twenty mullions of American freemen should be made peors, the slaves to debt, which is slavery in its most horrid form, for the purpose of libera- ting from servitude three millions of negroes or that the sweat of a white man's brow should be exacted to provide food and rai- ment for those negroes after they are liber ated, as is now being dune by the order of the Republican administration at Washing- ton Neither does it require as a contrast to this, that American citizens should be arrested withont warrant, tried without ju- ry, and be committed, without process, to loathsome prisons. The philanthropy of the Republican par- ty may require all this and more, but that philanthropy which teaches peace on earth and good will toward all men, from the be- giming Las denied the orthodoxy of the Re- publican theory, and condemned its practice as a stupendous iniquity sought to be im- posed on moral and political principles.— A majority of the American peeple con- demned Republicanism in the beginn‘ng,and if wgong then, it is wrong to day, The con dition of our eountry at the time of the or- ganigation of the Republican party, and its condition to day 1s a sad commentary upon true politieal policy, if the policy of that patrly, is the policy on which eur Gov- ernment should be administered. We be- lieve that when men violate tho laws of their eountry, they should be punished, and with us the law has provided a penalty. We believe that when the exceutive transeends the rule of action prescribed for him by the supreme power of the Government, he should be punished. We believe thai when public servants violate their trusts, and persist in such vio- lations they should be made to know and feel that the people are eonscious of their infidelity. With us the people sre, or rather have been, the beneficiaries, and it ia their legitimate province to sees to it, that their public servants do not destroy the aims and objects for which the Government was in- stituted. The advocates of the administsation say that our executive is an honest. man ; that the policy he has pursued was with a view oi aceomplishing good ; others justify his acts. It has eyer been thus; every wale- factor who violates the law of his country, when brought to trial either justifies the act, or disclaims any criminal intent, but that crime may not be committed with im- punity, it has ever been the policy of the law of every well regulated State to hold the offender responsible when he aots withoat legal justification or excuse. If there is no legal justification or excuse, for the action of the present administration in a wanton AMEE rete Been ate at disregard of the Constitution and laws it is certainly neither virtue, loyalty nor patriot- ism, 1n any one tc undertake to shield it from the odium and guilt of which it stands convicted to day before the world. Before this administration came into power, every Joyal man. declared against the radical and revolutionary policy proposed by such men as Wendell Phillips, Greely. Sumner, Beech- er ard that class of men, yet to day when the national or rather Republican adminis- tration is undertaking to do precisely what these fanatics and disunionists said it should do these abolitionists and their converts cry ont Joyalty, - Loyalty to what? to tho Government? No ! to the Constitntion? No! to an economical administration of the Gov- ernment? No ! to the Union? No! for loyalty to any of these ohjects is treason to aboli- tion rule. The original and genuine aboli- tionists have one virtue, if you may call it such, to which their converts cannot lay any claim, and that is consistency ; they are advocating the same doctrine to day, they ever have, and that doctrine to day, in- volves as it ever did, disloyalty to the Gov- ernment, by a violation of Constitutional rights and obligations. That the chief ex- ecutive of our Government has become pros- elyted to the iraquitous vagaries of abolition ism, is our misfortune. not our fault. “The first converts to the Wendell Phillips theo- 1y of administering the government, more zealons than their leaders, were desirous of dividing the people into two clases, and by changing the acceptation of certain terms they and their leaders such as Greely, Beech- er, Phillips, and such like, were to be call- ed patriots, all others traitors. Now so far 28 & mere name is concerned, we will call them anything they like, but we fear the scent of the nigger will cling to them still. The mouidering 2shes of Clay, Webster, Calhoun and others, may fret in their cof- fins when we begin to call such men as Ho- race Greely, Wendell Phillips, and their followers patriots, but if they will only re- nounce their treason, support the Constitu- tion as it is, and the Union as it was, we will do it. This class of patriots formerly known as abolitionist and secssionist, are now divided, each following the skeleton of a representative Government, but if to day they will unite with us, we may yet give peace to this distracted country, But we Baoan on dil me aan of Congress relieving the President and those acting under his authority from ail penalties attached to the violation of the laws, and the assurance by Federal harpies that the President is an honest man, the votaries of frensy, fanaticism and hate, pur- sue the evil tenor of their way. The Er. glish Government made it a fundamental maxim of their law, that their King could do no wrong, but the English people at times have thought their King did wrong. Charles the I, by dispensing with Statutes, which had long received the assent of the English people,assumed the Supreme suthor- ity of the commonwealth, and, by the ex- ercise of the proclamation power in utter disregard of the will and wishes of his peo- ple, lost his head. Yet, there were those who claimed that Charles was an honest man. Robespierre had the character of be- ing an upright, honest man, but he deman- ded too many victims for his bloody puillo- tine—the people became sickened and hor- rificd at his honesty of purpose, and invited him to a realization of that refined instru- ment of death with which he had shed the be t blood of France. It has ever been the part of wisdom, to be governed to some extent, by the history of the past, and this Republican Abolition par- ty who took control of the Government with the avowed purpose of destroying it, would do well to take timely notice and govern themselves accordingly. They can accom- plish nothing but ovil, in the policy they avowed before they came into power, and which they have practiced since, for the simple reason, that in the pursuit of that policy, they have violated every principle of our Constitution, have inflicted evils ten thousand fold greater, upon every man, wo- man and child in the land, than the evil they proposed to remedy—nave extorted blood und treasure, to establish a despotism, and gratify hate, which will soon, if it is not already, be as abhorred at the North, as 1t is at the South—they have inflicted a wrong upon eur Government and our people, which no human power ean remedy, and if they persist in their mad carcer, Birnam Wood yet may come to Dunsinane. A Congress called together, by the President of the United States on the 25th day of July, [861, declared that the war was not waged for conquest, or subjugation, or for mterfering with the rights or established institutions of the Sates, but to defend the supremacy of the Vonstitution. with their rights and equal ity under.it .nimpaired, and as soon as these objects should be accomplished the war ought to cease. The people relying on this solemn assurance. were willing to make any and every sacrifice for the Government they loved and adored. It is needless for me to say, that the ad- ministration from the first to the last, has violated this solemn assurance given to the people on the part of loyal men in Congress who intended what it declared, as to the ob- jects of the war, but which has been used to cheat and delude the people into the sup- port of a policy, which would not bear an avawal, at the time men and means were wanted, to carry out the policy of Republi- ronan frm manhihame - can rule We believe that more can be Rin i NO. 13. done to unite the Union by peace than by war. No Union has ever yet ‘been formed fo continue, when united by so unnatural a bond as hatred, and the Union thus formed is unworthy of preservation. The people of the North may be willing to support legiti- mate Government, but we much doubt whether they would be willing to bear the burthen impo ed by governing 10,000,000 of people against their consent. So far as [ am conoerned 1 have never felt that interest in the people of the revolted States, that f would have imposed upon the people of the Notth, the bondage and servitude of debt, to extend a Government over them, against their consent ; nor has the relation of mas- ter and slave been so abhorrent to me, that I would at any time dnring the existence of the Union, have disturbed the peace arid harmony of the Government, a single hour, to have liberated every slave in the land. — 1 have no more kindiy feelings for those who are dictatorial, proud. and arrogant, from whose skin is white, than I have for those who are dictatorial, proud and arrogant, from wealth accamulated by the labor of one whose skin is black. It may be l.ss offensive, to those who would be the cham- pions of freedom, to call the one an opera- tive and the other a slave, but hers. where you ard I have cast our destinies, we: do not eat our bread from the sweat of opera- Lives or slaves, nor do we expect, for all time to come, to pay tribute to the demands of those who do, If the South valued sla- very more than the Union, and New Eng- land valued it less than the liberty and the political, and social equality of the slave, we valued it more than either, for we made neither of these demands upon it. We would have avoided the war by compromise and conciliation ; we would terminate the war and restore the Union by the same means, Failing in this, I know of no better policy to pursue than that proposed by Mr. Conway, a Republican member of Congress from Kansas. It was that both houses of Congress, should adopt the following reso- lutions : “ Resolved. By the Senate and House of Representatives, §c., That the Executive be, and is hereby requested to issue a general order to all commanders of forces in the cavar:l military di nartmonte of tha Taitad States to discontinue offensive operations against the enemy, and to act for the future entirely on the defensive. Resolved, Thatthe executive be, and is further requested to enter into negotiations, with the authorities of the Confederate States with reference to a cessation of hos- tilities, based upon the following proposi- tions : 1. Recognition of the independence of the Confederate States. 2. A uniform system of dutics upon imports. 3. Free trade between the two States. 4. Free nav- igation of the Mississippi river. 5. Mutual adoption of the Monroe doctrine." A prosecution of the war may be profita- ble to New England, but we are not New England. Our cup of misery, has already been filled in order to gratify those who de- sired and demanded the inauguration of a war as necessary to have been ccmmenced, asit isnow for jt to be continued. If it must continue in order to gratify cupidity, party strife und blina ambition, we have no furcher interest in its prosecution, and would infinitely prefer a Government of our own providing against African Slavery on the one hand, and against the poli-ical equality and citizenship of negroes on the other ; and thus constituted without the African elo ment either as slave or free, with the de- portation to New England,of all in our midst who claim that they are the political and social equals of the negro, and for whose opinions in matters of this kind we enter- tain the highest regard, enter upon the race of empire, with the South and East as our competitors, having no fears as to which would ultimately triumph. Sirs, if I thought the policy of the pres- ent administration would restore the Gow~ ernment, would give us a govermmens off unity and peace, my voice should be for war, but I do not 80, believe. I heheve this Government is dying and that before the ex- piration of ‘this administration it will be dead. There are things in the physical world that seemingly div and pass away—but. re. turn again clothed anew with the emblems of immortality; but & Government is not one of these—whem once dead, it is dead forever. The frosts of autumn have destroyed the veg- etation of summer, and winter left no trace thereof, but the rejuvenescence of spring, now near at hand, wili again clothe the earth with verdure and beauty, and all ap- pear as once it was, but for you and I, there ia no such hope for our Governmens.. We may invoke the recognition of our Con- stitution by those who are in power, and a prosecution of the war te defend its suprem- acy with the rights and equality under it unimpaired, but thst invocation will be in vain, in the fature, as it haa been in the past. A war prosecuted against the 'Con- stitution ag itis. and the Union ag it was, is a war for the destruction of both, and if: continued will ultimately succeed in the des- struction of both the Constitution and the Government. : [77 A tiger got out of his cage and took. a leisurely walk in Oincinnati lately, budly frightening 8 woman by trying to get into + her kitchen. ec ria 077 Some of the drafted men in Detroit * Lad to be taken to camp in®chains. wesltn accumulated by the labor of one - ‘s