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Six lines or less,.. .1 50 $3 00 $5 00 One square, 3 00.......... 5 00 7 00 Two squares, 5 00 8 00 10 00 Three squares, 7 00 10 00 15 00 Four squares, 9 OD 13 00 20 00 Half a column, 12 OD 16 00 ...... ....24 00 One column, '0 00 '3O 00.... ...... 50 00 Professional and Business Cards not exceeding four lines, one year, $3 00 Administrators' and Executors' Notices, $1 75 Advertisements not marked with the number of inser tiona desired, will be continued till forbid and charged ac cording to these terms. `',9 olitical. SPEECH OF HON. STEPTIEN A. DOUGLAS, Democratic Candidate for President, Delivered at the Great Barbecue held in 0707105' Woods, N. York, on Wednesday, 12th inst., in the presence of over 50,000 People. FELLOW-CITIZENS OP NEW YORE. : I appear before you to-day, for the purpose of making an earnest appeal on behalf of this glorious Union. [Loud cheers, and cries of "Good boy."] There can be no Disunionists—there can be no enemy of this Union in the Empire City of America. [A voice—" That's so," and loud applause.] New York is not North ern, nor is it Southern, nor is it Western, nor is it Eastern—but she is Continental and Metropolitan. [Loud cheers.] New York is the great commercial centre, the great monetary heart, of the American continent ; and as such, every New Yorker ought to sym pathize with every State, with every Territo ry, and with every people in the whole Union. [Applause.] Now, I ask your attention as to the mode in which this glorious Union is to be maintained and perpetuated forever to our posterity. There is but one mode, fellow citizens, in which this can be done. There is but one mode in which this glori ous country can be permanently preserved. That mode is by maintaining inviolate every provision of the Constitution, as our fathers made it. The Union, under the Constitution, and in conformity with its guarrantees is the greatest blessing ever transmitted to a free people. [Vehement cheers.] I care not whether you like or dislike all its provisions, yet every American and foreign-born citizen rests under hereditary obligations to fulfil its provisions. Every naturalized and adopted citizen has taken an oath of fidelity to the Constitution ; and he who is not willing to carry out, in good faith, every clause, every word, every letter of the Constitution ; is a traitor in his heart to his country. [Bravo, and tremendous applause.] I tell the Aboli tionists that they are bound, as honest men, to carry into effect that clause of the Constitu tion providing for the surrender of fugitive slaves, just as much as any and every other clause. [Cheers, and "That's so."] A Voice—How about secession ? A gentleman in the crowd asked me about secession. I will answer him. I tell you that, when you have performed all your du ties under the Constitution, when you have carried into effect every provision that the in strument contains, there is no excuse, no pre text whatever for secession. [Applause.]— But I am prepared to return a more definite and specific answer to the inquiry. When I landed at Norfolk, Virginia, the head of a Breekinridge electoral ticket propounded to me the question whether the inauguration of Abraham Lincoln as President of the United States would be a justifiable cause for break ing up this Union. [Shouts of "Never," "never. , "] I answered him thus, as I will an swer everywhere in America where I may go to address my fellow-citizens the election of any man by the American people according to the provisions of the Constitution, is no pretext for breaking up this Government.— [Loud cheers. I should regret the election of Lincoln, as a great national calamity. [Applause, and a voice, "So would I." 1 I know him well— very well. I have had good reasons to know him, and he has still better reason to remem ber me. [Laughter and loud cheers.] A Voice—" Douglas you're not gone yet.— He will know you better by and by." [Ap plause.] Mr. Douglas. I have no word of unkind ness, or of personal disrespect to say to him, [Mr. Lincoln,] but I do believe that he holds political opinions which, if carried out, would be subversive of all the principles of the American Constitution. [Loud cheers.] I was also asked at Norfolk, Va., and oth er places, whether, in the event that any of the Southern States should secede from this Union when Lincoln was elected, I would go for the enforcement of the laws of the United States. I tell you, as I told them, that who ever may be President, he is bound by his oath to carry out the laws to their faithful execution. I also tell you that it is the duty of every law abiding man, I care not what may be his politics, to aid and assist in the execution of the law. [Cries of "Good, ",good" and applause.] And if Lincoln shall be elec ted, which God Forbid [loud cheers, and cries of, "He never will be"] if Lincoln, say, should be elected, be must be inaugura ted according to the Constitution and laws of his country ; and I, as his firmest and most strenuous and most irreconcilable opponent, will sustain him in the exercise of every con stitutional function. [Applause.] But if, after that shall have been done, he shall at tempt to subvert the Constitution, violate its provisions, or make war upon the rights and interests of any section of this Confederacy, I will aid, to the full extent of my power, according to the Constitution and laws, in hanging him higher than Virginia hanged John Brown. [Tremendous cheers.] I had supposed that there were no loyal citizens—no friends of this country—who could find fault with these sentiments ; but I discover in the newspapers of to-day a pro test against my Norfolk speech, signed by Mr. eitt, of South Carolina, and some forty or fifty other disunionists, declaring that these sentiments must be repelled and resisted, and calling upon the American people to repudi ate me in order to repudiate those sentiments. I mean no disrespect to the gentlemen who have signed this protest, but I have as much reason to protest against their treason as they have against my loyalty and devotion to the Constitution. tLoud cheers.] They assert in their protest that I treat the Union as a perpetual bond, to be acquiesced in and obey ed in all future time by the weaker section towards the stronger. They misapprehend totally my position.— My position is this ; that this Union is a per petual bond, demanding and requiring im- 81 50 75 50 WILLIAM LEWIS, VOL. XVI. plicit obedience to the Constitution and laws by every good citizen not by the weaker seec tion towards the stronger but obedience from every honest man to the Government under which he was born, and which he has sworn to support. [Loud cheers.] But they assert in this protest that they have a right to se cede from this Government. 1 . tell you, as General Jackson told the Nullifiers in 1832, that secession is but another name for revolu tion. If these gentlemen combine together to break up this Government, and are determin ed to carry their treasonable projects into ef fect, let them take upon themselves the re sponsibility of their conduct. I tell you that revolution is never justifiable until the evils of submitting to the laws are greater than the horrors of civil war and disunion. These Disunionists, who protest against my Norfolk speech, who have such a horror of the gallows in the event they carry out their purposes, talk in their protest about me making war on the sovereign States. I desire them to understand that sovereign States never commit treason. [Cries of" Good" "Good," and cheers.] Individuals may do it —but States, never. It is a principle in this Government, that the laws have to be enfor ced against the individuals who violate them. Why these nullifiers and Disunionists seem to think that we are still living under the old articles of Confederation. That old system was abandoned in 1787, merely because it proved impracticable. The great defect in the old system of government was that the Federal Government had no power to execute its own laws. They abolished that Govern ment, and adopted the Constitution under which we live, conferring on the Federal Government all the power necessary to carry its own decrees into effect according to the Constitution. Whenever any one of these Abolition States set up their unconstitutional laws as an excuse for resisting the Federal authorities, we will hang them higher than Haman for treason.— And, my fellow-citizens, it will not do for the Abolitionists to set up the plea that we are making war on the sovereignty of any State of this Union, merely because we are carry ing into execution in good faith, the Consti tution and laws of our country. So on the other band, when the State of South Caroli na, in 1832, attempted to resist the laws of the United States for the collection of the public revenue, Old Hickory told them that they must and they should obey. [Tremen dous applause.]l wish to God we had Old Hickory now alive—[loud cheers]—in order that he might hang Northern and Southern traitors on the same gallows. [A scene of great confusion here followed. Hundreds of Democratic voices shrieked for three cheers for Stephen A. Douglas, our next President.] They have determined to make the election of a Black Republican President that pretext and hence the real Disunionists favor the election of Lincoln, so that they may accom plish the dissolution of the Union. If Lin coln is elected it will be brought about by the agency of those who are now opposing the regular Democratic party. [Cheers.] In other words, his election will be brought about by the influence of those who seceded at Charleston, and again at Baltimore. Now, my fellow-citizens, I was about say ing to you that there is a scheme to break up this glorious Union. A Voice.—They can't do it. The pretest for doing so is to be the elec tion of Mr. Lincoln, and those who are genu ine disunionists desire his election. [Uproar and cheers.] But silence, my friends, if you please. I do not charge all the Breckinridge men in the United States with being Dis unionists. [Cries of " Good," " Good."] I do not charge Mr. Beckinridge himself with being a Disunionist, but I do express my firm conviction that there is not a Dis unionist in America • who is not a Breckin ridge man. [Applause.] And now, permit me to inquire of them that while they put these questions to me, whether the election of Lincoln would be a good cause, of disunion, why do not they propound the same questions to their candidate ? My answers to those in terrogatories at Norfolk, Va. were published in Kentucky, and Mr. Breckinridge's special attention must fall to them six or eight days before his Lexington speech. In that speech he answered the charge that he was in favor of pardoning John Brown. [lronical cheers and laughter.] He answered the charge that he was in favor of self-government in the Terri tories. He professed great attachment to the Constitution and the Union. But I have yet been unable to learn whether or not he would enforce the laws against those who would at tempt to break up the Government. It is not satisfactory to me that a man says he is in favor of the Union. I have heard Barn well Rhett make the same declaration. I have heard W.L. Yancey declare his devotion to the Union. I have heard all the leaders of the Disunion party make the same protes tation, but they all admit that while they are favorable to the Union, yet there is a " contingency" upon which they would dis solve. Now, I desire to know of Major Breckinridge whether the " contingency . " stated by his electoral friends in Virginia in their inquiries to me, is the one upon which he would dissolve the Union. I am in favor of a cordial union of every Union man, every constitutional man, every man who desires the preservation of the Union and_the Constitution and the enforcement of the laws in every and all contingencies.— [Loud cheers.] If Major Breckinridge is in favor of enforcing the laws against Disunion ists, seceders, Abolitionists, and all other classes of men, in the event the election does not result to suit him, then I am willing— [great applause]—but I tell you that I am utterly opposed to any union or any fusion with any man or any . party who will not en force the laws, maintain the Constitution, and preserve the Union in all contingencies. Now, if my excitable friend wishes to know whether his man Breckinridge is inside of the church, he must get an answer from that gentleman himself through the Norfolk ques tions. [Renewed laughter.] When he an ewers, and pledges himself to enforce the laws in the contingencies named in the Norfolk in terrogatories to me, it will be time enough to talk about be and I fusing or coalescing.— [Three cheers.] Believing that this Union is in danger, I will make any personal sacri fice to preserve it. [Cries of "Good," and three cheers] If the withdrawal of my name would tend to defeat Mr. Lincoln I would this moment withdraw it [Voices—"You, shall not do it l" "No!" " Never !"] more especially if such an act of mine would insure the election of a man pledged to the Consti tution, the Union, and the enforcement of the laws.[Cheers.] The Democratic party is a great political party. Its proud achievements will be found recorded on every page of American history, and every great reform introduced into our civil policy has been mainly owing to its power and efforts. Every extension of our territory has been a Democratic measure, and all those great commercial enterprises for which the U. States have becameso renowned are Democratic triumphs. But still I ad here to the old Democratic party, within whose bosom I was born, more for its capa city to do good in the future than for its great achievements in the past. I believe that this Union can only be main tained by putting down all sectional parties. It is not enough if you put down Northern Abolitionism, unless you crush out and bury in the same grave Southern Disunion. [ "Go od" and cheers.] The great political question now involved is that of intervention and non intervention by Congress with slavery in the Territories. The Northern interventionists demand that Congress shall prohibit slavery wherever the people want it; the Southern Secessionists demand that Congress shall pass laws to maintain and protect slavery wher ever the people do not want it. Thus you find that both of them aro advocates of Congres sional intervention—the one in favor of the South, the other in favor of the North ; the one for slavery, the other against it. They agree in principle, but they differ only in tho application of that principle. Democratic principles are the same in Geor gia as in New York, they are the same in Virginia as in Illinois, [applause,] and when ever the time comes that I cannot visit the land of my birth and the graves of my ances tors, and carry my political principles with me, I shall come to the conclusion that there is something wrong in my creed. [Cries of " good boy," and cheers.] I see it stated in one of the newspapers of this city, on the au thority of an intelligent correspondent, that a few weeks ago air. Lincoln told them that he was anxious to visit the_ grave of his father in Kentucky, and the grave of his grandfather in the valley of Virginia, there to explain his political opinions, but was fearful of personal violence if he did so. [Cheers.] I have very recently visited the grave of my father in a free State, and . the birthplace of my children in a slave State, and in both places I avowed the same opinions. [Cheers, "Good boy."] And I have done more. I have made a good, sound Democratic speech in the Old Tenth Legion of Virginia, close by the gravo of Abraham Lincoln's grandfather. [Cheers.] Enthusiastic individual. I hope you will make it over his own grave yet. [lmmense applause.] Mr. Douglas. My friend, there would be no more patriotic duty on earth more grateful to my feelings than to make one over Mr. Lincoln's political grave. [Tremendous cheering.] Ido not make the remark out of any unkindness to Mr. Lincoln, but I believe that the good of his country requires his de feat. [Cheers, and a voice, "I am there."] In my opinion the party of which be has be come the chosen leader holds doctrines sub versive of our Constitution. [A. voice, "So did old John Brown."] • He was the original author of the irrepressible conflict, having de clared that doctrine in his canvass in Illi nois four months before Mr. Seward made his Rochester speech. Hence I have appealed to you to-day to close up your ranks, and to all Union-loving men, and all men in favor of the enforcement of the laws in every con tingency, to rally to the support of one elec toral ticket and thus beat the Abolitionists. [Great applause, in which the Breckinridge interrogator was observed to join heartily.] But I conjure you, as you love your coun try, and as you wish to preserve your liber ties and transmit them unimpaired to your children, to make no bargain, no combination, no fusion, no compromise with the friends of any candidate who will not first publicly pledge himself to the mantenance of the Union, the inviolability of the Constitution, and the enforcement of the laws in all cases and un der all circumstances. [Thunders of applause, in which it was noticed that the Breckinridge interrogator did not join.] My friends, there are many eloquent champions of the Democ racy now present, and as I have neither the voice nor the strength to occupy more of your time, even if I desired to do so. I shall bring my remarks to a conclusion, in the conviction that the great and patriotic cause, in which we are engaged, will be better conserved by those great and gallant young champions of Democracy than by myself. Mr. Douglas here retired amid nine cheers, but returned to the front of the stand imme diately, with Governor Moorehead, of Ken tucky. Mr. Douglas at Auburn and Syracuse. SYRACUSE, Sept. 17.—Mr. Douglas spoke at Auburn, and in this city to-day. His au dience at this point numbered from 35,000 to 50,000 persons. He explained the difference between popular sovereignty and squatter sovereignty. The latter was outside the Constitution, and in rebellion to the Federal Government, while the former is inside of the Constitution, and in obedience to the Federal authority. He also replied fully to a ques tion put by a Republican, as to what were Jefferson's sentiments as to the ordinance of 1787, stating that Mr. Jefferson was minister to France when the ordinance was adopted in N. York, and knew nothing of it till after wards. He gave Mr. Jefferson's plan for the government of the Territories, as adopted in 1784, which was the fullest recognition of the right of the people to popular sovereignty ever made in tthe United States. -PERSEVERE.- HUNTINGDON, PA., SEPTEMBER 26, 1860. GREAT SPEECH HENRY D. FOSTER, At a Mass Meeting in Philadelphia, on Monday ]Evening Sept. 27th. FELLOW-CITIZENS OF PHILADELPHIA :- A few months ago I did not anticipate, and could not have anticipated,that I should have the pleasure, under these circumstances, of addressing so large a concourse of citizens. I did not then dream that I should be select ed as the standard-bearer of the party to which I have all my life belonged—that I should be chosen their candidate for the Gov ernorship of the great State of Pennsylvania. I never desired it. I was always willing to fight in the ranks with you, and the rest of my fellow-citizens of Pennsylvania as a pri vate and not as a captain. f Applause.] Gentlemen, seventy-three years ago, on this very spot, by a little band of bold and patriotic men, a great work was performed— a work that has challenged the admiration of the civilized world. A system of government wad then adopted by those patriotic men, re presenting the States of this Union, the equal of which the world has never seen, and you are here to-night to attest your fidelity to that organic law which they framed, and to say whether any ruthless arm shall tear it down, and expose us to all the horrors and the de structive results - which might flow from it.— Gentlemen, you can maintain inviolate that Constitution which spreads itself all over this great country, and protects all men alike, in only one way, and that is, by inculcating the spirit of those who framed it. Keep that spirit alive. Never let it die out ; for if you do, you will find your personal liberty, your security, your rights of property, and every thing that you value, without safeguard and with out protection. What is the danger, then, that this state of things will bring about? and from whence does it come ? There is now in this country, I am sorry to say, a great political organiza tion, the tendency of whose principles, what ever its members may say, is to sow dissen sions between the States, and to destroy our Union. They declare that they are opposed to the extension of slavery in the Territories. To prevent that extension is their avowed purpose ; but let me tell you that there is ly ing .behind and underneath that purpose something deeper and far more destructive— a principle that endangers the existence of the Union itself. They declare that their purpose extends no farther than to protect the Territories of the United. States from the spread of slavery, but .1 tell you that the statement is delusive, and by it many of their own party are deceived. Who is the great head of that party? Mr. Seward, of New York. He is it head, and soul, and life. He gives its laws ;he shapes its destinies. And he has not yet disguised the fact that the purpose of this organization is to go far beyond what they now declare to be their object—to prevent the extension of slavery into the Territories. Mr. Seward,in his Rochester speech, has declared that there is an " irrepressible conflict" between the sys tem of free labor and that of slave labor, and that the United States " must and will, soon er or later, become either entirely a free-labor nation or entirely a slaveholding nation."— Gentlemen, do you believe that? [Voices— "No, no."] Again, speaking in the Senate in regard to the progress of the anti-slavery sentiment, Mr. Seward said, addressing the men of the South : " You may, indeed, get a start under or near the tropics, and seem safe for a time, but it will be only a short time. Even there you will found States only for free labor to main tain and occupy. The interest of the white race demands the ultimate emancipation of all men. Whether that consummation shall be allowed to take effect, with needful and wise precautions against sudden change and disaster, or be hurried on by violence, is all that remains for you to decide." Is it not the meaning of all this that you must pass the limits of the Constitution of the United States; that you must go into the States where slavery exists and wipe it out, regardless of all the the guarantees of that instrument, and of the rights which it se cures to the States ? Such is beyond doubt the real tendency of these doctrines, although such may not be the sentiments of all the members of the Republican party, because I believe that many honest members of that organization would give no countenance to such doctrines, if they conceived their real result. What have been the fruits of this sectional agitation upon the subject of slavery? As the result of that agitation, we have seen an armed invasion of the State of Virginia, and innocent men have been shot in order that slaves might be made free. The Republican leaders-may tell you that they do not intend any such results. Let me tell you that the leaders preaching the doctrines which they do, cannot control the results. The leaders could not control John Brown and his party when they made their assault upon the arse nal at Harper's Ferry, when they invaded the dwellings of Virginians, dragging them at midnight froin their homes. EA voice— " Gov. Wise controlled them."] There is but one way to secure the tran quility and safety of the States, and that is by maintaining the guarantees of the Consti tution. This Union is not to be preserved by armies and navies ; it can be preserved only by cultivating that spirit of fraternity under the inspiration of which our Constitution was framed. If that spirit be'not cultivated—if you excite sectional prejudices, and alarm citizens of sister States for the safety of their property and their lives—the Union is prac tically dissolved, the heart of the Union is broken, and nothing but the bonds remain. Gentlemen, in this contest, you, the descen dents of those patriotic men who have given to us the freest and the best Government in the world, are to determine whether this great legacy, which you have received from your ancestors as trustees for posterity, shall be handed down untarnished, as it was be queathed to you. It is for you now to deter mine whether this great instrument under which we have lived, and under which every man's rights have been secured, shall now be torn in tatters, and the Union broken up.— [Cries of No, no, and applause.] I tell you, gentlemen, that is now the issue which, dis guise it as you please, is forced upon us.— Now, let me say one word in regard to the slavery question. It may be, perhaps, dry and uninteresting, but I wish to speak of one of the planks in the platform of the Repub..' bean party—that in reference to the exten sion of slavery into the Territories. That party contends that Congress has the power to do, what? Not to legislate generally upon the subject of slavery in the Territories, but that they have the power and right to legis late upon one side of that question—that 7 they ought to say to the Southern States, " although you are joint owners, 'with us, of these Territories, you shall not go there with your property." The Republicans demand that Congress shall prohibit the institution of slavery in all the Territories of this Union. Where does Congress derive any such author ity from ? What part of the Constitution gives Congress the power to legislate upon both sides ? If they can say slavery shall not go into a certain Territory, they can say it may go there. I say that Congress has no right to interfere with the matter at all. [Cries of "good, good." and long-con tinued shouts of applause.] There is no such power in Congress, and I will tell you why. The Congress of the United States legislates upon all questions under express grants of power contained in the Constitution. 'Wher ever there is no grant of power Congress does not possess the right to legislate at all. Now, I challenge any man of the Republican par ty to show me where, in all that instrument, Congress is authorized to say that Slavery shall not exist in the Territories; No such authority can be found. Bat it is argued that a Government having the right to acquire territory, either by con quest or by purchase, the right to govern that territory is incident to the right to acquire it. I agree that, in ordinary cases, this is the fact, but it is only so where the power ac quiring a territory is supreme—where there is no limitation upon its powers—but when the Government of the United States acquires new territory it will not be contended that the Congress of the United States has an un limited power of legislation over that territo ry--an unlimited sovereignty. It is by vir tue of their sovereignty that they acquire the territory ; but, so far as concerns legislation in regard to the territory, they are restrain ed by the limitations of the Constitution un- Now, I maintain that the clause of the Con stitution which is claimed as bestowing on Congress the right to legislate for the Terri tories does not confer this power in regard to slavery. Our opponents urge, as their au thority, that clause of the Constitution which declares Congress shall have the power to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory and other property belonging to the United States. I could, if I had time, exhibit to you the views of some of the ablest minds of our coun try, all concurring in the opinion that that clause of the Constitution treats the Territo ries as property, and does not give to Congress jurisdiction to govern the people inhabiting that Territory, and to control their private property. The words of that clause are "that Congress shall have power to dispose of it." Now, it cannot be maintained that they have the power to dispose of the people, as they may of the land. Congress may sell the land, may control it, may give it away, if you please, but they cannot the people or give them away. Upon this subject we have the highest authority in the country maintaining that the power of Congress to legislate for the Territories is not deprived from that clause of the Constitution. Our opponents are com pelled, then to fall back upon the idea of the sovereignty of the Government that organizes the Territories, and when they are driven there, they have no foundation for the position that Congress has the right to legislate upon this question in the Territories. I say, then, gentlemen, that this is a question not politi cal, but judicial. The tribunals constituted by the Constitution must determine these questions; and Lin common with all law-abid ing citizens, am willing to submit to the final arbitrament of the tribunal appointed by the Constitution to interpret that instrument. Now, gentlemen, if I have not detained you too long—(Voices "Go ahead.")—l will advert to a question in which the people of Philadelphia, as a manufacturing and com mercial people, feel great interest—a question on which they have the right to know the opinions of the candidates presented for their suffrages. In this very city, not more than ten days ago, the captain-general of the Re publican party made an assault upon me, de claring that I am a free-trade man ; that the record of my life, public and private, exhibi ted the fact ; that I am and always have been in favor of free trade and against protection to American industry. I refer to the speech made by Col. A. K. McClure, chairman of the Republican State Committee of this Com monwealth. Now, Mr. McClure is doubtless a gentleman of veracity, and this mis-state ment I can attribute to nothing but profound ignorance of my history. Mr. McClure charges that, from the earliest period of my political life, I have been opposed to the doc trine of protection. He charges that I have voted for free-trade Governors, free-trade judges, and free-trade Presidents. Gentlemen I had the honor of being in Con gress in 1854. We then had a tariff satisfac tory to the manufacturing interests of Peiih sylvania. It was a highly protective tariff; it was just the sort of tariff demanded by the industrial interests of Pennsylvania. In 1844, whilst I was in Congress, a bill was intro duced to repeal or modify the tariff of 1842. When this great question of protection to Am -Actin industry thus eame up in Congress, there sat beside me, in that body, no less a man than Hannibal Hamlin, who is now the Republican candidate for Vice President of ! the United States. Whilst I recorded my vote for the protective policy, Hannibal Ham lin recorded his vote against it! [Laughter and applause.] Editor and Proprietor NO. 14. Col. McClure charges me with voting for free trade Governors ; and, on that subject let me mention a single circumstance. At the period to which I have just alluded, one of my colleagues in the Congress of the Uni ted States was David Wilmot, who, a few years since, was the Republican candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania. Mr. Wilmot watzt, the only member of Congress from Pennsyl vania that voted against the protective policy ! Yet that gentleman, when running for Gover nor of Pennsylvania, was voted for by Col. McClure and. Col. "Curtin, and all these zeal ous advocates of protection [Laughter and applause.] They voted for a free-trade Gov ernor, and now they ask you to vote against me because, as they allege, I am for free trade I Let me state another fact on this subject_ At the period I mention (1844) that bill for the repeal of the tariff of 1842 did not pas';_ In 1846, the proposition was renewed, and then it was that the law was passed striking down almost entirely the protective policy, because it substituted ad valorem duties for specific duties. Let me tell you that the great question in regard to this matter of the tariff, is between specific duties and ad valorem du ties. The moment you abandon the principle of specific duties, there is no protection. In 1846, when the bill came up repealing the tariff of 1842, and adopting a universal ad valorem principle, Mr. Hamlin and Mr. Wil mot were still members of Congress. That bill was passed ; and both those gentlemen voted for it, while I voted against it ! [Laugh ter and applause.] Yet, I wonder whether Col. McClure and his friends will not support Mr. Hamlin for Vice President of the United States. I wonder, also, whether they will not vote for Mr. Lincoln, whose opinions on this question neither they nor anybody else know any thing about. There is no record of his public life that af fords any knowledge of his views upon this question. (Applause.) Mr. Lincoln is held up as the friend of the protective policy, yet you cannot find a vote he ever gave, or a speech he ever made, wherein he favored the doctrine of protection at all. My record on this subject is that which was made years ago, when I no more dreamed of being a can didate for Governor than I dreamed of being made a cardinal. (Laughter.) You cannot find a word or vote of mine, during the whole period of my service in Congress, in which I did not advocate, with all the zeal and ability I possessed, the doctrine of protection to. Americanindustry against foreign competi tion. (Applause.) Yet Mr. Hamlin is a bet ter tariff man than lam I (A voice, " Over the left.") Let us examine the position of Mr. Hamlin a little further. In 1855, a proposition was made in the Senate of the United States to remit for three years the payment of duties upon railroad iron in bond at the custom. house. Our Senators, Messrs. Bigler and Brodhead boldly and fearlessly charged upon Southern men and New England manufac turers a combination between them to strike down the iron interests of Pennsylvania.— Mr. Hamlin, then a United States Senator. arose and inquired of Mr. Brodhead what he meant by that declaration, " for " said he, " I am a great deal of a free-trade man myself, and I intend to vote for this bill." And he did vote for it Let me give you another instance illustra ting the insincerity of that party on this ques tion of the tariff. Under the tariff of 1846,. although our manufacturers languished, still they lived. The_ laborers received employ ment though tncir nerative as they ought to have been, because the profits of the manufacturers were greatly diminished. But in 1847 a bill was passed which still further reduced the duties of the tariff of 1846. How was that bill passed ? Mr. Banks, of Massachusetts, was then Speak er of the House, a Republican of the blackest dye. (Laughter and applause.) On the or ganization of the House, he appointed a Re publican Committee of Ways and Means, That committee reported the bill of 1847—a bill more destructive to our industrial inter ests than any that ever passed the Congress of the United States—a bill that affords no protection at all to the manufacturing inter ests of Pennsylvania. How was that bill passed ? There were fifty-six Republican votes cast in its favor, and it passed the House of Representatives. Going to the Senate, it was amended and sent back to the House. The amendments were not concurred in, and the bill was sent to a committee of conference, whom Mr. Speaker Banks appointed on the part of the House. Did he appoint a single man who was in favor of the protective poli cy ? No, not one. The members of that com mittee were Lewis D. Campbell of Ohio, Mr, Do Witt of Massachusetts, and Mr. Letcher of Virginia—all of them Republicans, and the whole three known to be in favor of the passage of that bill. Into such hands it was sent. That committee, jointly with the Sen ate committee, reported that bill, and it was passed. It is now the law of the land, and while it remains the law, let me say, your manufacturing interests never will revive.— They cannot revive. More than that, William IL Seward, the captain of the Republican party was a member of that committee of conference, and signed the report. Now, gentlemen, I wish you to understand my views upon this question. I said before that, there can be no tariff beneficial to our industrial interests, which does not proceed upon the principle of specific duties. The meaning of that is this : If a ton of foreign iron is imported, it pays us so many dollars and so many cents according to the spe cific principle, but according to the ad valo. rem principle, it pays so much per cent. upon the value of the article abroad, according to the foreign invoice. Under this specific prin ciple the American manufacturer has exactly what he wants—steadiness in the market, steadiness in the duty—which he does not have under the ad valorem, principle. You will observe that the act of 1857 proceeds en tirely upon the ad valorem principle. The duty is levied upon the price of the foreign article abroad. When that price is high, the duty rises just at the moment when the Amer ican manufacturer does not need the increas ed duty, but when the price of the foreign article falls in the foreign market the duty goes down, just at the time when the Ameri can manufacturer needs a higher duty on.the. imported article ; therefore, I say that there is no protection without specific duties. Let me now say a few words in regard to this slavery agitation which so distracts the country. This agitation, gentlemen, must be stopped or the Union must be dissolved.— They make an outcry about slavery in the Territories. Why gentlemen, there is no ter-. ritory now belonging to the United States where slavery can exist. Talk as you may, there are laws higher than acts of Congress higher than the Constitution, that control and regulate this question. Wherever free labor' can go with advantage, slave labor must re treat before it. But the Northern man can not go into the rice swamps and cotton fields and sugar plantations of the Southern States ; the white man Cannot work there and live ; consequently the cultivators of the soil must