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" Our prices for tho printing of Blanks, Handbills, otc aro reasonably low. THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE, WASHINGTON, Dec. 3, 1867. Fellow Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives : " The continued disorganization of the Union, to which the President has so often called the attention of Congress, is yet a subject of profound and patri. otie concern. We may, however, find some relief from that anxiety in the reflection that the painful political sit uation, although untried by ourselves, Is not now in the experience of nations. Political science, perhaps-as highly perfected in our own time and country ,us in any other, has not yet disclosed any means by which civil wars can be absolutely prevented; ail enlightened nation, however, with a wise aed ben. eficent Constitution of free government, may diminish their frequency and mit igate their severity, by directing all its proceedingsin accordance with its fundamental law. When a civil war bias been brought to a close, it is mani festly the first interest and duty of the State to repair the injuries which the war has inflieted,• and to secure the benefit of the lessons it teaches, as fully and as speedily as possible. This duty was, upon the termination of the Rebellion, promptly accepted, not only by the Executive Department but by th,fs, insurrectionary States themselves, and restoration in the first moment of peace, was believed to .be as easy and certain as it was impossible. Disappointed Expectations. - The-expectations,- however, then so reasonably and .00nfidently 'entertain ed, 'were diaappointed - by' legislation from -which I. felt,constrained, by my obligations to the Constitution, to with hold, my assent. It is, therefore, a source of profound regret that in com plying with - the obligations imposed upon the President by . the Constitu tion, to give to Congress from time to time information of the state of the Union, lam unable to communicate any definitive adjustment satisfactory to the American people, of the qbes lions which, since the close of the Re bellion, have agitated the public mind. On the contrary, candor compels me to declare that at this time there is no Union as our fathers understood the term; and as they meant it to be un• derstood by us. The Union which they established can exist only whore all the States are represented in both Houses of Congress, "where one State is as free as another to regulate its con cerns according to its own will," and where the laws of the central govern. ment, strictly confined to • matters of national jurisdiction, apply with equal force to all the people of every section. That such is not the present "state of the Union" is a melancholy feet, and we all must acknowledge that the res toration of the States to their proper legal relations with the Federal Gov ernment, and with ono another, necor ' ding to the terms of the original com pact, would be the greatest temporal blessing which God, in Ms kindest providence, could bestow upon this nation. Our Duty It becomes our important duty to consider whether or not it is impossi bible to effect this most desirable con summation. The Union and the Con stitution are inseparable. As long as one is obeyed by all parties, the other will be preserved; and if one is destroy ed, both must perish together. The destruction of the Constitution will be followed by other and still greater calamities. The Constitution It was ordained not only to form a more perfect Union between the States, but to""establisb justice, insure domes tic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity." Nothing but implicit obedience to its require ments, in all parts of the country, will accomplish these great ends. Without that obedience we can look forward only to continual outrages upon indi vidual rights, incessant breaches of the puplic peace, national weakness, finan. Mal dishonor, the total loss of our pros. perity, the general corruption of mor ale, and the deal extinction of popular freedom. To save our country from evils so appalling as these,_ we should renew our efforts again and again. To me the process of restoration seems perfectly plain and simple. It consists merely in a faithful applica tion of the Constitution and the laws. The execution of the laws is not now obstructed or opposed by physical force; there is no military 9r other necessity, real or pretended, which can prevent obedience to the Constitution, either North or South. All the rights and all the obligations of States and individuals can be protected and en forced by means perfectly consistent with the fundamental law. The courts may be everywhere open, and, if open, their process would be unimpeded. Crimes against the United States can he prevented or punished by the prop er judicial authorities in a manner en• tirely practicable and legal. There is, therefore, no reason why the Constitution should not be obeyed, unless those who exercise its powers have determined that it, shall be disre. garded and violated. The mere naked will of this government, or of some one or more of its branches, is the only ob stacle that can exist to a perfect Union of all the States. On this momentous question, and some of the measures growing out of it, I have had the mis fortune to differ from Congress, and have expressed my convictions with out reserve, though with becoming deference to the opinions of the Legis lative Department. The President's Position trnohango4. Those convictions are not only un changed, but strengthened by subsel ducat eveutA and farther reflection. .$2 (0 . 1 00 Will. LEWIS, HUGH LINDSAY, Publishers. VOL, XXIII, The transcendent importance of the subject will be a sufficient excuse for calling your attention to some of tho reasons which have so strongly influ enced my own judgment. Tho hope that we may all formally concur in a mode of settlement consistent at once with our true interests, and with our sworn duties to the Constitution, is too natural and too just to be easily relin quished. The Late Insurrectionary States. 1 1 It is clear to apprehension that- the States lately in rebellion aro still mem bers of the National Union. When did they cease to be so? The "Ordin ances of Secession" adopted by a per• tion—in most of thew —a • very small portion=of their citizens, wore more nullities. If wo admit now that they were valid and effectual for the pur pose intended by their authors, we sweep from under ourfeet the whole groulid upon which we justified the war. Were those States afterwards expelled from the Union by the war ? The direct contrary was averred by this, government to its purpose, and was so understood by all who gave their blood and treasure to aid in its prosecution. • . It cannot be that a successful war, waged for the preseriation of the Union, had the legal effect of dissolv• ing it.. The victory of the nation's arms was not the disgrace of her poli cy i • the defeat of Secession on the bat tle-field was not the triumph of its law less principles; nor could Congress, with or without the consent of the Ex ecutive, do anything which would have .the effect, directly or indirectly, of separating the States from each other. To dissolve the Union is to repeal the Constitution which holds it togethet‘, and that is a power which does not belong to any department of the government, or to all of them uni ted. This is;(7o;:iYi.ta' it h --- - hOti;11 - -: knowledged by all branches of the Federal Government. The Executive, my predecessor, as roll as myself, and the heads of all the departments have uniformly acted upon the principle that the Union is not only undissolv ed, bat indissoluble. Congress sub mitted an amendment to the Constitu tion to be ratified by the Southern States, and accepted their acts of rati fication as a necessary and lawful ex ercise of their highest function. If they were not States, or wore States out of. the Union, their consent to a change in the fundaMental law of the Union would have' been nugatory, and Congress in asking it committed a po litical absurdity. The Judiciary has also given the solemn sanction of its authority to the same view of the case. The Judges of the Supremo Court have included the Southern States in their circuits, and they aro constantly, in bane and else whers,exercisingjurisdiction which does not belong to them, unless those States are States of the Union. If the South ern States am component parts of the Union, the Constitution is the supreme law for them, as it is for all the other States. They aro bound to obey it, and so are we. The right of the Fed ora/ Government, which is clear and unquestionable, to enforce the Consti tution upon them., implies the corela tivo obligation on our part to observe its limitations and execute its guaran ties. Without the Constitution we are nothing; by, through and under the Constitution we aro what it makes us. We may doubt the wisdom of the law; we may not approve of its pro- 1 visions, but we cannot violate it mere ly because it seems to confine our pow ers within limits narrower than we could wish. It is not a question of in dividual, or class, or sectional interests, much less of party predominance, but of duty—of high and sacred duty— whieh we are all sworn to perform. If we cannot support the Constitution with the cheerful alacrity of those who love and believe in it, we must give to it, at least, the fidelity of public ser vants who act under solemn obliga tions and commands which they dare not disregard. The constitutional du ty is not the only ono which requires the States to be restored ; there is an other consideration, which, though of minor importance, is yet of great weight. Object of the Late War. On the 22d day of July, 1861, Con gress declared, by an almost unani mous vote of the Houses, that the war should be conducted solely fbr the pur pose of preserving the Union and maintaining the supremacy of the Federal Constitution and laws, without impel' ing the dignity, equality and rights of the States or of individuals, and that when this was done the war should cease. Ido not say that this declaration is personally binding on those who joined . in making it, 'any more than individual members of Con gress are personally bound to pay a public debt created under a law for which they voted. But it was a sol• emn public official pledge of the nation al honor, and I cannot imagine upon what grounds the repudiation - of it is to be justified. If it be remembered, this promise was not made to Rebels only. Thous ands of true men in the South were drawn to our standard by it, and hun dreds of thousands in the North gave their lives in the belief that it would be carried out. It was made on the day after the first great battle of the war bad been fought and lost. All pa triotic and intelligeht men then saw the necessity of giving such an assur ance, and believed that without it the war would end in disaster to the cause. Having given that assurance in the extremity of our peril, the violation of it now, in the day of our power, would be a rude rending of that good faith which holds the moral world together. Our country would cease to have any claim upon the confidence of men. It would make the war not only a failure but a fraud. Opposition to Military Reconstructfon. Being sincerely convinced that these views are correct, I would be unfaith ful to my duty if I did not recom mend the repeal of the acts of Congress which place ten of the Southern States under the domination of military mas ters. If calm reflection shall satisfy a majority of your honorable bodies that the acts referred to are not only a vio lation of the national faith, but in .di rect conflict with the Constitution, I dare not permit myself to doubt that you will immediately strike them from the statute hook. To demonstrate the unconstitutional character of those acts, I need do no more than refer to their general provisions. It must be soon at once that they aro authorized to dictate what altera tions shall be made in the constitutions of the several States; to control the elections of State and legislators and State officers, members of Congress and electors of President and Vice President by arbitrarily declaring who shall vote and who shall be excluded from that privilege; to dissolve State legislators or prevent them from as sembling; to dismiss judges and other civil functionaries of tile State and ap point others without regard to State law ; to organize and operate all the political machinery of the States; to regulate the whole administration of their domestic and local affairs accor ding to the mere will of strange and ir responsible agents sent among them for that purpose. These are powers not granted to the Federal Government or to any ono of its branches; not being granted, we violate in the face of a positive inter dict, for the Constitution forbids us to do whatever it does not affirmatively 'Avert by express words or by clear implication. If ,hew nnthOrity we desire to use does not come to us through the Constitution,- wo-.13an..9= ; _, ercise it only by usurpation, and usur pation is the most danprous of politi cal crimes. By that crime the enemies of free government in all ages have worked out their designs against pub. lie liberty and private right. It leads dircotly and immediately to the estab lishment of absolute rule, for undele gated power is always unlimited and unrestrained. The acts of Congress in question,are not only objectionable for their as sumption of ungranted power,but many of their provisions are in vonfliet- with the direct prohibitions of the Consti tution. The Constitution commands that a republican form of government shall be guarantied to all the States ; that no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of haw; arrested without a ju dicial warrant, or punished without a fail' trial before an impartial jury; that the privilege of habeas corpus shall not be denied in the time of peace, and that no bill of attainder shall be pass ed oven against a single individual. Yet the system of measures establish ed by these acts of Congress does total ly subvert and destroy the form as well as the substance of republican govern ment. In the ten States to which they apply it binds them hand and foot in absolute slavery, and subjects them to a strange and hostile power more unlimited and more likely to be abused than any other now known among civilized men. It tramples down all those rights in which the essence of liberty consists, and which a free government is always most careful to protect. It-denies the habeas corpus and trial by jury. Per. sonal freedom, property and life, if as saulted by tho passion, the prejudice, or the racaeity of the ruler, have no seenrity]whatever. It has the effect bf a bill of attainder, or bill .of pains and penalties, upon whole masses, including the millions who inhabit the subject States, and even their unborn children- These wrongs being ex. pressly forbidden, cannot be constitu tionally inflicted upon any portion of our people no matter how they may have come within our jurisdiction, and no matter whether they live in States, Territories, or Districts. I have no desire to save from the proper and just consequences of their great crime, those who engaged in re bellion against the government; but as a mod of punishment,the measures under consideration are the most unreasonable that could be invented. Many of those people are perfectly in nocent. (Many kept their fidelity to the Union untainted to the last.) Many were incapable of any legal offense. A large proportion oven ()f e ttle persons able to boar arms wore forced into re bellion against their will, and of those who aro guilty with their own consent the degrees'of guilt aro as various as the shades of their character and tem per. But these acts of Congress con found them all together in ono common doom. Indiscriminate vengeance upon classes, sects, and parties, or upon whole communities, for offenses com mitted by a portion of them against the government to which they owed obedience, was common in the barbar ous ages of the world. But Christian ity and civilization have made such progress that recourse to a punishnient so cruel and unjust would meet with the condemnation of all unprejudiced and right minded men. The positive justice of this ago, and especially of this country, does not consist in strip ping whole States of their liberties, and reducing all their people, without distinction, to the condition of shi very. It deals separately with each individual; confines itself to the forms of law, and vindicates its own purity by an impartial examination of every ease before a competent judicial tribu nal. If this does not satisfy all our HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 11. 1867, k; % *.a. ';WS.IIk, • 4 ' s' - _ • -.;s7^ -PERSEVERE.- desires with regard to Southern rebels, let us console ourselves by reflecting that a free Constitution, triumphant in war and unbroken in peace, is worth far more to us and children than the gratification of any present feeling. Temporary and Perpetual Evils lam aware it is assumed that this system of government for the South ern States is not to be perpetual. It is true this military government is to be only provisional, but it is through this temporary evil that a greater evil is to be made, perpetual. if the guar antees of the - Constitution can be bro ken provisionally to servo a temporary purpose, and in a part only of the country, we can destroy them any where and for all time. Arbitrary measures often change, but they gen erally change far the worse. It is the curse of despotism that it has no halt ing place. The intermitted exercise, of its power brings no sense of security to its subjects•; for they can never know what more they will be called to endure when its red right band. is armed to plague them again. Nor is it possible to conjecture how or where power, unrestrained by law, may sock its next victims. The States that aro still free may be enslaved at any mo ment; for if the Constitution does not protect,hll, it protects none. Negro Suffrage It is manifestly and avowedly the object of these laws to confer upon ne groes the privilege of voting, and to disfranchise such a number of white citizens as will give the former a clear majority at all the elections in the South ern States. This, to the minds of some persons, is so important, that a viola tion of the Constitution is justified as a means of bringing it about. The mor ality is always false which excuses a wrong because it proposes to accom• plish a desirable end. We aro not to do evil that good may.come. But in this case the end itself is evil, as_wAlL nn Th'o''is'aTuBtaio7lof tbv States to negro domination would, be worse than the military despotism un di;riiiiletrtherare-no sulferin was believed beforehand that the peo ple would endure any amount of mili tary oppression, for any length of time, rather than degrade themselves by subjugation to the negro race. Thero• fore they have been left without a choice. Negro suffrage was establish- ed by Act of Congress, and the mili tary-officers were commanded to su perintend the process of clothing the negro race with the political privileges torn from white mon_ _- Negro Supremacy. - The blacks in the South are entitled to be well and humanelygoverned,and to have the protection of just laws for all their rights of personal property. If it wore practicable at this time to give them a government exclusively their own, under which they might manage their own affairs in their own way, it would become a ,grave question whether .we ought to do so, 6r wheth er common humanity would not re quire us to save them from themselves. But, under the circumstances, this is only a speculative point. It is not proposed merely that they shall govern themselves; but that they shall rule the white race, make and administer State laws, elect Presidents and mem bers of Congress, and shape to , a great er or less extent the future destiny of the whole country. Would such a trust and power, be safe in such hands? A White Man's Government. The peculiar qualities which should characterize any people who are fit to decide upon the management of public affairs for a great State have seldom been combined. It is the glory of white "men to know that they have had those qualities in sufficient meas ure to build upon this continent a groat political fabric, and to preserve its sta bility for more than ninety years, while in every other part of the world all similar experiments have failed. But if anything .can be proved by known facts—if all reasoning upon ev idence is not abandoned, it must bo ac knowledged that in the progress of na tions negroes have shown less capacity for government than any other raco of people. No independent govern• moot of any form' has wren been suc cessful in their hands. On the contra ry, wherever they have been left to their own devices, they have shown a constant tendency to relapse into bar barism. In the Southern States, how ever, Congress has undertaken to con fer upon them the privilege of the bal lot. Yustr,leased from slavery,it may bo doubted whether, asaelass, they know more than their ancestors how to or ganize and regulate civil society. In deed, it is admitted that the blacks of the South aro not only regardless of the rights of. property, but so utterly ignorant of public affairs that their vo ting can consist in nothing more than carrying a ballot to the . place whore they arc to deposit importance of the Ballot. I need not remind you that the ex ercise of the elective franchise is the highest attribute of an American citi zen, and that when guided by virtue, intelligence, patriotism, and a proper appreciation of our free institutions, it constitutes the true basis of a Demo cratic form of government, in which the sovereign power is lodged in the body of the people. A trust artificially created, not for its own sake, but sole ly as a means of promoting the gener al welfare, its influence for good must, necessarily depend upon the elevated character and true allegiance of the elector It ought therefore to be re-. posed in ,nono except those who aro fitted morally and, mentally to admin• istor it well; for if conferred upon per sons who do not justly estimate its vai n() ana who aro indifferent as to its re sults, it will only serve as a means of placing power in the hands of the un principled and ambitious, and must j 7 . /7 7 eventuate in the complete destruction of that liberty of which it should be the most powerful conservator. I have therefore heretofore urged upon your attention the groat danger "to be ap prehended from an untimely extension of the elective franchise to any new class in our country, especially when the largo majority of that class, in wielding the power thus placed in their hands,can not bo expected correct ly to comprehend the duties and re sponsibilities which pertain to suffrage. Yesterday, as it were, four millions of persons were held in condition of sla very that had existed for generations; to-day they are freemen, and • assumed by law to be eitizens.'• It cannot be presumed, from their previous condi tion of servitude, that; as a class, they are as well informed as to the nature of our Government as the intelligent foreigner who makes our land the home of his choice. In the case of the latter, neither a residence of five years, and the knowledge of our institutions which it gives, nor attachment to the principles of the Constitution, are the only conditions upon which he can be admitted to citizenship. He must prove in addition, a good moral char acter, and thus give reasonable ground for the belief that he will he faithful to the obligations which he assumes as a citizen of the Republic. Where a peo ple—the soufte of all political power— speak by their suffrages, through the instrumentality of the ballot box, it must be carefully guarded against the control of those who are corrupt in principle and enemies of free institu tions, for it can only become to our po. litieal and social system a safe condue tor.of healthy popular sentiment when kept free from demoralizing influences. Controlled, through fraud and usurpa tion, by the designing, anarchy and depotism must inevitably follow. In the hands of the patriotic and worthy our Government will be preserved up 7,, on- the , prin el rites-cif th - ti Corie~ifu7inn ice= herded from our fathers. it follows, therefore, that in admitting to the bal. Jui,..ncAa-new-otass-of voters not quali fied for the exercise of the elective franchise, we weaken our strength in stead of adding to its strength and du rability The President on Universal Suffrage 1 ,yield to no one in attachment to that rule of general suffrage which dis• tinguishes our policy as a nation. But there is a limit, wisely observed pith• erto, which makes the ballot a privilege and a trust, and which requires of some Classes a time suitable fin• probation and preparation. To give it indiscrim inately to a new class, wholly unpre pared, by previous habits and opportu nities, to perform the trust which it de mands, is to degrade it, and finally to destroy its power; for it may be safely assumed that no political truth is bet. ter established than that such indis. criminate and all embracing extension of popular suffrage must end at last•in its overthrow end destruction. I repeat the expression of my willing ness to join "in any plan within the scope of our constitutional authority which promises to better the condition of the negroes in the South, by oncour ar,ing them in industry, enlightening Sew minds, improving their morals, and giving protection to all their just rights as freedmen. - 13ut the transfer of our political inheritance to them would, in my opinion, be an abandon ment of duty which wo owe alike to the memory of our fathers and the rights of our children. The plan of putting the Southern States wholly, and the General Gov ernment partially, into the hands of negroes, is proposed at a time peculiar ly unpropitious. The foundations of society. have been broken up by civil war. Industry must be reorganized, justice re-established, public credit maintained and order brought out of confusion. To accomplish these ends would require all the wisdom and vir tue of the groat men who formed our institutions originally. I confidently believe that their descendants will be' equal to the arduous, task before them, but it is worse than madness to expect ttha negroes willperform it for us. Cer tainly we ought not to ask their assis tance until we. despair of our own com petency. The great difference between the two races in physical, mental and moral eharacteristiesiwill prevent an amalga mation or fusion of them together in ono homogeneous mass. Mlle inferior ob tains the ascendancy over the other, it Will govern with reference only to its own interests—for it will recognize no common interest—and create such a tyranny as this continent has qevor yet witnessed. Already, the negroes are influenced by promises of confisca tion and plunder. They aro taught to regard us an enemy every white man who has any respect for rho' rights of his own race. If this continues, it must become worse and worse, until all order will be subverted, all industry cease, and the fertile fields of the South grow up in a wilderness. Of all the dangers which our nation has yet encountered, none aro equal to those which must re sult from the success of the effort now making to Africanizo the half of our country. Cost of Military Reconstruction. I would not put considerations of money in competition with justice and right, but the expenses incident to re construction under the system adopted by Congress aggravate what I regard as the intrinsic wrong of the measure itself. It has cost uncounted millions already, and if 'persisted in will add largely to the weight of taxatidn al ready too oppressive to be borne with out just complaint, and may finally re deco the treasury of the nation to a condition of bankruptcy. We must not delude ourselves. It will require a strong standing army, and probably more than two hundred millions of dollars per annum to main- . , i, ~...:. -,'..-,- . k 74. 1 Ik .- '? , `:' , , . . ... .-. ..., ..i . ::-.. 1% . .• TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. tain the supremacy of negro govern ments after they are established. The sum thus thrown away would, if prop erly used, form a sinking fund large enough to pay the whole national debt in less than fifteen, years. It is vain to hope that negroes will maintain their ascendancy themselves. Without military power they are wholly inca pable of holding in subjection the white people of the South. I submit to the judgment of Congress whether the public credit may not be injuriously affected by a - system-of measure§ like this. With our debt, and the vast pri• vote interests which are complicated with it we cannot be too cautious of a policy which might, by possibility, impair the confidence of the world in ours , roverument. That confidence can only retained by carefully inculca ting the principles of justice and honor on the popular mind, and by the most scrupulous fidelity to all our engage ments of every sort. Any serious breach of the organic law, persisted in for a considerable time, cannot but create fears for the stability of . our in stitutions. "habitual violation of pre scribed rules, which we bind ourselves to observe, must demoralize the peo ple. Our only standard of civil duty being set at maught, the sheet anchor of our political - morality is lost, the public conscience swings from its moor ings, -and yields to every impulse of passion and interest. If we repudiate the Constitution we will not be expec ted to care much for mere pecuniary obligations. The violation of such a pledge tie was made on the 22d day ofJuly;lB6l,.will .assuredly diminish the market value of our promises; besides, if we now ac knowledge that the'national debt was created not to hold the States in the Union, as the tax-payers were led to suppose, but to expel them from it and hand them over to be governed by ne -STMARIPICHAgI7. 4)- 7 1 nitTligr' e t ee'm so, for I do not admit that this or any other argument in favor of repo. diction can be entertained as sound; but its influence on some classes of minds may well be apprehended. The financial honor of a great commercial nation, largely indebted, and with a republican form of gcivernmerikadmin istered by agents of the popular choice, is a thing of such deli3ato texture, and the destruction of it would Ire followed by such unspeakable 'calamity, that every true patriot must desire to avoid whatever might expose it to the'slight est danger. The great interests of the country require immediate relief from those enactments. Business in the South is paralyzed by a sense of general inse curity, by a terror of confiscation and the dread of negro supremacy. The Southern Trade From which tho North would have derived so great a profit under a gov ernment of law, still languishes, and can never bo revived until it ceases and be bettered by the arbitrary pow. er which makes all its operations un safe. That rich country , the richest in natural resources the world ever saw,' is worse than "lost, if it be not soon placed under the protection of a free constitution. Instead of being as it ought to,po, a source of wealth and power it will become an intolerable burden upon the rest of the nation. " Another reason fur retracing our steps will doubtless be seen by Con gress in the late tnanifestationsiof pub:. lie opinion upon this subject. Wo live in a country where popular will al ways enforces obedience to itself, soon er or later. It is vain to think of op posing it with anything short of legal authority, backed by overwhelming force. It cannot have escaped your attention that from the day on which Congress fairly and formally present ed the proposition to govern the South. ern States by military force,. with a view to the ultimate establishment. of negro supremacy, every expression of the general sentiment has been more or less adverse to it. The affections of this generation cannot be detached from the institutions of their ancestors. Their determination to preserve the inheritance of free government in their own hands, and transmit it undivided and unimpaired to their own posterity, is too strong to be successfully oppo. sed. Every weaker passion will dis appear before that love-of liberty and law for which the American People aro distinguished above all others in the world. . How far the duty of the President, "to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution," require him to go in op posing an .unconstitutional act of Con gress, is a very serious and important question, on which I havd deliberated much, and felt extremely anxious to reach a proper conclusion. Where an act has been passed according to the forme of the Constitution by the su preme legislative authority, and is reg ularly enrolled among the public stet, utes of the country, Executive resis tance to it, especially in times of high party excitement, would be likely to produce violent collision between the respective adherents of the two bran ches of the Government.' This would be simply civil war; and civil war must be resorted to only Is the last remedy for the worst of evil. What ever might tend to provoke it should be most carefully avoided. A faithful and conscientious Magistrate will con cede very much to honest error, and something even to perverse malice, be fore he will endanger the public peace; and he will not adopt forcible meas ures, or snob as might lead to force, as long as those which are peaceable re main open to him or to his constitu ents. It is true that eases may occur in which the Executive would bo com pelled to stand on his rights, and main tain them, regardless of all consequen ces. -If Congress should pass an act which is not only in palpable eonfliet with the Constitution r hitt will certain ly, if carried out, produce immediate" and irreparable injury to the organic structure of. the Government, and if there be neither judicial remedy for the wrongs it inflict; nor power in the people to protect themselves with:- out the official aid of their elected de fender; if, for instance, the Legislative Department should pass an act even through all the forms of law to abolish a co-ordinate department of the Gov ernment—in such a ease the 'President must take the high responsibilities of his office, and save the life of the na tion at all hazards. The so called re+ construction- acts, though as plainly unconstitutional as any that can be imagined, were not believed to be with in the class last mentioned. The peo ple were not wholly disarmed of the power of self-defence. In all the North ern States they still held in'their hands the sacred right of the ballot,.and it was safe to believe that, in due time they would come to the rescue of their institutions, : It giVes me pleasure to add that the appeal to our' common constituents wus not taken in vain, and that my confidence in their wisdom and virtue seems not to have been mis placed. NO. 22. Enormous Frauds. - • It is well and publicly known that enormous frauds have been perp#tra ted on the Treasury, and that colossal t fortunes have been made at the publio expense. This species of Corruption has increased, is increasing; and if not diminished will soon bring us into total ruin and disgrace: The public credi tors and the tax payers are alike inter ested in an honest administration of the finances, and neither class will long endure the arge handed ,robberies of the recent past. For this discreditable state of things there are several cau ses. Some of the taxes are so laid as as to present an irresistible temptation to evade payment, The great sums which officers may win by connivance at. fraud create a pressure which is more than the virtue of many can with stand ; and there can be no doubt that the open disregard of :constitutional obligations avowed -by some . of the highest and most influential Trio n in-the country has groatiy weakened the moral sense of those who serve in sub ordinate places; The - expenses of the United States, including interest on - the publio debt, aro more than six times as much as they were seven years ago. To collect and disburse this vast amount ,requires 'careful superviF ion as well as systematic vigilance, The system, never perfected, was much disorganized by the "Tenure of Office Bill," which has almost destroyed offi ,eialaceountabilitv.ThePresident uu buurouguly euliviuueu - Ouzo, asu is incapable, dishonest, or unfelt& ful to the Constitution, but, under the law which I have named, the utmost he can do is to complain to the Senate, and ask the privilege of supplying his place with a better man. If the Senate be regarded as personallyor politically hostile to the President, - it is nature!, and not altogether - unreasonable,' for the officer to expect that it will take his part as far as possible, restore him. to his place, and give him a triumph over his Executive superior The offi eer has other chances et impunity aris ing from accidental defects of evidence, the mode of investigating 'it, and the .secrecy of the hearing. It is not won- - derful that official malfeasance should become bold in proportion as the des. linquents learn to think ;themselves safe. T am entirely persuaded that under such a rule the President cannot perform the great duty assigned to him' of seeing the i laws faithfully executed, and that it disables him most especial ly from enforcing that rigid accounts% bility which is necessary, to the due ex ecution of the revenue laws. Th,o Constitution invests the Presi dent with authority to decide whether a removal should be made - in anygiven case; the act of- Congress declares in substance that ho shall only accuse such as he supposes to be, unworthy of their trust. The Constitution makes him the sole judge in the premises; but the statute takes away his jurisdiction, transfers it t 6 the Senate, and leaves him nothing but the odious, and some times impracticable duty of becoming a prosecutor. The prosecution is to be conducted before a tribunal, whose members are not, like him, responsible -to the whole poople, but to separate constituent bodies, and who May, hear his accusation with great disfavor.— The Senate is absolutely without any known standarcrof decision applicable to such a case.. Its judgment cannot be anticipated, for it is not govetintid by any rule. - The law. does not define what shall be deemed good cause for removal; it is impossible even to conjecture what may or may not be so considered by the Senate. The nature of the subject forbids clear proof. If the charge be incapacity, what evidence will support it? Fidelity to the Constitution may be understood or misunderstood iu a thousand different ways;, and by vio lent party men, in violent party times, unfaithfulness to the Constitution may oven come to ho considered meritort. ous. If the officer be accused Of dis honesty, bow shall it be made out ?, Will it be inferred froth ants uncennee ted with public duty, from priaate his tory, or from general reputation? .Or must the President avymt. the ,comnals sion of an actual Misdemeanor in'offiee? Shall he, in the meantime, risk- the character and interest, of the nation in the hands of men to whom be can not give his confidence? Must he forbear his complaint until the mischief is done and cannot be prevented? If hie zeal in the public service should impel him to anticipale the overt act, must he move at the peril of being tried himself for the offense of slandering his saber. dinates ? In the present circumstances of the country, some one must be held respon sible for official delinquency of every kind.' It is extremely difficult to say where that responsibility should be thrown,,if. it be not left whore it _bag' been-placed by the Constitution; bet all just'men will admit that the Presi dent Ought to be entirely relieved from Snob responsibility if he cannot meet it by reason of restrictions placed by law upon• his action. . The --unrestricted power of removal from of f ice is a very great one to be trusted even to,wmar istrate chosen by the general suffrage of the whole people, and accountable directly to them for his acts. It is un doubtedly liable to abuse, and at soma periods of our history, perhaps, linn been abused. Continued on Fourth Pagel