M HOHMM1IHN. . TECH OF HON. JAS. BEOOKS, ! OF NEW YORK. !l..n. Tliail.h u HftfiK, from the i t C.iniiiiitl"f Hi'UJc'i.f H.pm..-nlll, li4i,(, on Iiwml. IS. ls7, reported till, ,-', to rtmn the majority of all renlered vote., in tin Pontile Slate, into nnJuril.T nf tin ! voter! on lha JT 1'i'ii'tUiiti'in. were v . teil upon ; en.f, In " seven if llio Southern !4r ten morn rtepreiient.tive. in Conirre th.n inter llio apportionment of ISM; and, tAi'rrf, to :i member, of Confront on ths dT on which !) Cuoi-iiluliontwera voted upon ; ami theecond trniitiaB having horn williilrnwn, on ihoearoenl i .pofitii-n oT Mr. Bingham, uf Ohio Jlii. Hrooks said : Thin question o! reconstruction, Mr. ' pvaker, like Hanqno's ghost, can never bo laid. In the ominous ides of March, just before the opening of this, the 40th Congress, (not to go ,ay further back1) we had a bill for reconstruction. In ,Jnly Inst, in the winner solstice, an extraordinary session of Congress was enllod, for the purpose of again "enacting" "rceon btruftion." And now here, among 1 he very earliest measures of the pres ent session, we have brought beforo us t he third bill to "reconstruct." The- Southern Kcffro Man to have mora ; Iteprewutatlun thau the Y eatcru YY hlte - MaUi 'Thoy who have reported this Bill " ave already, at the vej-y outsturt, struck it a fatal blow, by exhibiting a division in their own ranks, as the result of which, it became necessary, for the gentleman from Pennsylvania, to withdraw one of tho most import ant parts the section to increase the number of negro representatives in Conirrese from tho South. In defer ence to tho protest of a member of tbeir own organization, trom a west ern State, the proposition to give ten additional representatives to the slave holding States 1 mean w hite slave holding States, no longer negro slave holding States has been withdrawn, because such negro favoritism would have startled the great white-growing West. The State of California, which, though its population has immensely increased since the last census, has Dow only three representatives on this floor, with a voting population of Il'0.000 a representative population, then, of over 500,000. Tho people of Iowa, with a population of bi 4,000 by tho last census of 100, now have, by State census, 107,000. The people of Michigan, with a population, accord ing to the last census, of only 1)00,000, Bow have probably 1,000,000. The people of Kansas, with a population, by the last census, of 100,000, now have 400,000. Tho people of Minne sota, with a population, by tho last census, gf l:i,000, now have 400,000. The Committee of Reconstruction, tlind to all this white increase, report ed un increase of ten Representatives in Congress for tho negro States, but no increase whatsoever for these great while-growing communities of the "West! It would have been an irre sistible argument, then, before tho white people of tho West, to say, "Con gress has increased tho negro repre sentation of the South, while it has allowed nothing for the million and a half increased population of California, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota, and Kan sas." The Reconstruction Committee reported in favor of all this, but the ;Ionorablo gentleman from Ohio hit it on the head, and affrighted the Honorable gentleman from Pennsyl vania (Mr. Stevens) out of thfs iuiqui ,tous inequality, thus discriminating .against the whites, tho moment it was liiirlv shown up abovo water. I Overawed, for once, by opinion, he ; abandoned his negroes una stood by i bis own race and color. Tho will was j there to start tho iniquity, but the pluck has failed him to carry it out. ! The white people of this country, l thus, thank God, are, at last, recover ing, in some small degree, their proper consideration, if not respectability, among certain members of tho llouso. To I Jiahle the bare majority of a Minority forever to (.overiu Sir, the first proposition now bo fore tho House is to change tho or ganic law, as it is called, of reconstruc tion, to abandon the c.-tablished prin- : fiplo of tho March and July acts of Congress, that tho majority of all tho registered voters shall vote for a Con stitution, by limiting the vote now, to voters only on the day of election. Tho object of this change is not ntall apparent, a concealed object being to disfranchise more and more of the white population, and to enable a ' a bare majority of an actual minority to fn.tne the organic law of the State. It was not enough, under tho two last Reconstruction bills, that they dis franchised thousand, aye, tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thous ands of while voters, while tliej on lranchished tho wholo black popula tion, who were as deep in practical rebellion as their masters, for this bill now disfranchises thousands and tcne of thousands moro. It invites now and enables all the negro-constitution mongers of the South to disfranchise whites enough in every Southern .State to secure the governments there of to tho negroes. The Constitution of Alabama, tho first framed by the negro conven tions, unfolds tho meaning of this act, and shows how Anglo-Saxon white States are to be converted into Afri can Slates tho declared intent ami moaning of that so-called constitu tion being to disfranchise every white man in the South w ho has any respect Jefl for his own noblo Anglo-Saxon race, and who will nut forswear him self, forever to securo in perpetuity tho superiority and reign of negro Hood. Til Krjrro Tent Oath or Alabama. Under that constit ution of Alabama, ever voter is compelled to tiroir that ho will nrvrr, under any circumstances, have it so amended ns to prohibit ne gooos from voting. No one is allowed to bo a voter who will not commit himself, forever, to tho principle that negroes shall bo tho rulers of tho State. Tho provision I allude to, is embodied in tho new constitution, nr ticlo 7th, section 4th, in the test oath there: "That I aeecpt (he civil ami political equality of all mm (nirru mrn. midline i mhI of women !i and Affr-T nut to all nipt to d- pro. anr peron or per.on. nf anr ra-e or eolor. on ee.utit nf pre iuuii j finilitinn. of anv political or rivil ri cl-1 rivil, gr or immunity enj-ved l.j anv oihir eta.. of ram." Jlcfurc any pet sell tan Vute then in c GEO. B. G00DLANDER, Proprietor. PRINCIPLES-NOT MEN. TERMS-$2 per annum, in Advance. t , . VOL. 39-WIIOLE NO. 2053. CLEARFIELD, PA., THURSDAY, JAN. 10, 1868. NEW SERIES-VOL. 8, NO. 2-h tho Stato of Alabama, under that con stitution, ho is bound to devoto him self by oath for all tinio to negroes and negro voting, to fellow-negro soldiers, to negro jurymen, to negro and white mongrel schools and school houses, to mongrel cars, to mongrel taverns, to a complete mongrel social existence from the cradle to the grave. JS'o niiin can vote unless ho takes that unnatural, that horrid oath, and thus forswears his own white race and cul or. 1 appeal to the State of Minnesota, to Wisconsin, to Kansas, to tho great North West, that have just been vot ing Negro Suffrage down to Ohio, to Pennsylvania, to every Northern State which has refused suffrago to the Negroes among them, who are ten times moro intelligent than the ho 'sotted, just freed negro blaVes oflllC Southern country, who scarcely know their own names as thoy vote, and 1 ask them, all, "Will you trust to such Negroes in eleven States the right to govern tho wholo country, through their representatives upon this flour for all timo to come, now and forever, whilo you reluso tho right to vote to your own people of African descent, ten times more intelligent than theso just freed slaves of the South ?' I.veu YYhltc Itadiral Alnhamlana to be Out-voted by Nfgroea. Apart from nil this, too, tho Con stifution of Alabama has been deliber ately so framed as to disfranchise or misrepresent a largo portion of tho while people of the northern part of that State. The Stato has 5'J coun ties, and isapjiortioiied off in this new Constitution into 100 J'opresentatives, and that Alabama Convention has de liberately otlixed an apportionment in, and upon tho Constitution, so that 1:(J,.'!'.15 persons in Southern Negro Alabama are entitled to 15 iieprosen tatives, whilo CUl,414 persons, in Northern Whito Alabama, nearly three times tho number in the Negri counties, aro given but ii5, when an equitable apportionment would have been 42 nearly 43 Representatives ! So that by the very apportionment organic law of the State, tho whito people of Northern Alabama are crushed out by the negro vote of tho Southern part. The Constitution apportionment table is us follows: xauao ALimaA. Coun- RepreMnt I'opula- Xo. of Rrpre-ai-oUlivi-k tiiin, 77.047 nifnt. U, IS while. each 5 14 lr.e.r.ui wairi iLimaa ( J0.I'.' white. "J t 1 lll.liV aegroe. f ( J91.H1 J Si l 111,1.1V ucgiuv 35 lou liave not been content then in j-our two previous Reconstruction acts, in so arranging eight millions of Southern w hite men as to enable four millions of negroes there to govern them ; but here in such constitutions as that of Alabama, you nre cheating j our own whito Kidicals, and subject ing them to irrecoverable negro do minion. Sir, the object of all your three bills, their real intent and mean ing, is for all time, so tooiganizo this government that four millions of ne groes in tho Southern States shall hold a balance of power in tho whole United States there, enslaving eight millions of whito people, to counter act tho politically divided voting pop. illation of the twenty-four millions of tho North, and thus to govern the whole. laTliln.orta It Nut. t Y". lil'.e Mati'a f:nv ei iiuient I My objection to this bill rises fur higher than any mere details ; it is to tho wholo principle throughout from beginning to end. My theory, my, principle, and 1 believe, tho principle of tho Democratic party, is one beforo which all other issues tariffs cur-rene-, taxes, armies, navies, all mere questions of the hour dwindlo into comparative insignificance. They nre hut passing questions, which livo to day and die to-morrow. Tho only real living issue towers above all theso and that is, Is this, or is it not, a w hite man's (iovcrnmcntf You havo deliberately framed a bill to overthrow this whito mini's gcv einment of our Fathers, und to erect an African government in its stead; and it is because you have done this that I resist and protest against it, again and again, and from tiie begin ning to the end. The Segro la nut the r.cinal of the YYhlte Man. Tho negro is not tho equal of the white man, much less his master, as your liill makes him, and this I can demonstrate anatomically, physiologi cally, and psychologically too, if neces sary. Volumes o! scientific authoritY- establish thcliict; I niighf'Pile 1'clion on Ossa to demonstrate it, if this were a ball of Science, for such dis cussions, or, if thero were timo for such discussions here. All that 1 have opportunity to do here, is in the fewest words possiblo to sot forth scientific fads. The negro man differs more from the white man than a whito man from a white woman, mid tho differ ence is essential, organic, throughout, from the crown of his head to the very solo of tho feet. The negro is a different creature, with a different brain and different structural organi sation and in every respect inferior to tho white governing man. The Hair or YVoul of the Srjcro. The very hair which crowns his head is not hair, but it is wool, wool, and wo'd only. (Laughter ) Ho who will take tho trouble to examine it through tho microscope, micrometer and microtome will see that its struc ture is that of wool and not of hair. The hairol'a whito man is cylindrical; tho section under the microsome an- penrs peil'eclly circular, and provided with a medullary canal, while the wool of the tivgro is flattened, eo that its! 711 171 B section exhibits an elongated ellipsis, in the axis of which no medullary ennui is seen.' It is this lateral com pression which effects the peculiar frizzling of tho buir, owing to its not taking place exactly in the direction of tho longitudinal axis of tho hair, but ascending in spirals, so that tho hair resembles a spiral spring, which alwaj's ret urns to its shape when drawn out. (See M. Prunor Hey, dt la chew lure comme caractcrisque den Jiacet llumancs, Carl Voght, et alius.) The Kkull, the Neck, the llraia, the l oot, etc Tho difference is not only in the hair, but it is in the whole anatomi cal structiiro of tho head, inside and outside. Tho negro's face projects like a muzzle, and the teeth are obliquely inserted, so that their edges meet. as at projecting angles. J he develop ment of tho jaw (prognathism) is in direct relation of proportion to the intellectual capacity of a people, tho firognatbous being confined to tho owesl races of men, among them the negro. Their carnal capacity is dif ferent. Tho volume of un American or English head is in cubic eenti metres 1 572 IT), whilo that of a Negro, born in Africa, is only 1371 42, and the place occupied in relation to curnitl capacity and cerebral weight cor responds with tho degroe of intellectu al capacity und civilization. The weight ot the white man's brain is greater than that of the negro. The convolutions of the bruin are differ ent. Tho anterior and frontal lobes of tho whito man show a far better mental development. All these asser sertions are maintainable by high German, French and English, as well as American authority, but this is not the place nor the hour for metaphysi cal or psychological discussion. Every feature of tho whito man and negro differs. Tho noso is different. The nostrils of a Caucasian foiui two near ly rectangular triangles, the liypolho ii uses of which arc turned outwards, whilst the septum of the nose forms a perpendicular lino common to the two triangles. On taking a similar view of tho negro, tho nostrils present only a transverse aperture, or the figure of a horizontal eight united in tho mid dle by tho nasal septum. Tho form and size of tho mouth, the shape of thd lips and checks are very different. Tho apish chin of the negro differs very essentially from that of tho whito man. The facial angle of tho distin guished writer, Camper, amounts in the negro to 70-75 deg. it may sink to (5, whilst in the Caucnsian it is rarely below M), and frequently a a few degrees higher. The negro's skull is thicker than the whito man's: tho cervical muscles more powerful ; and hence tho negro carries his bur-1 den on his head, and, liko a ram in a fight, uses his skull. Tho negro's shoulder differs from tho whilo man's. Tho negro's hand is larger, bis fingers long and thin, palms flat, thumb balls scarcely prominent. "All tho charac ters of his hand (says Carl Voght) de cidedly approach those of the Simian hand." The log, tho calves of the leg, all differ fiom tho white man's. "Tho femoral bones, as well as tho fibula, seem curved outwards, so that the knees aro more apart from each other than in the white." The pelvis is or ganically different. "Tho foot of tho negro," says llurmeister, "is, in every thing uglv, flat, of a ju-ojccting heel, a thick, tiubby cushion in the inner cavity, -with wide, spreading toes. The middle part of the loot does not touch tho ground." Vought, tho Ger man physiologist, calls it "tho foot of the Gorilla, or, if you plcasa, tho pos terior bund." I cite these facts to show that it is not the skin alone that parts the whito from the nero ruce, not the dermis, or epidermis, or pigment therein. 1 could not respect myself if I judged a race inferior to my own, because of its color only, for color may lie but an incident, or accident of tile. We have brunettes, us well as blondes, and both among the most beautiful of our race. Tho Egyptian is not white, scarco is tho Italian or tho Spaniard, in vhoso veins courses ilooiish blocd. The negro is no more of a colored man than Caucasians are colored men. I never use the absurd words, "colored men." Tho negro is a negro, and only a negro, of a type, it race id' men ns dill'crcnt from ours as the Hottentot, or tho Ilusbman. (rod has created us anatomically and physi ologically different in almost all ro sccts ; so far as wo can judge, never intending us to be equal or kindred men, and though of one blood, Ho has determined the bounds of their habita tions, nnd never, assuredly, determined, thut un inferior race from Africa should govern, as set forth in this 111, here, in America, a superior ruco of men. Anialcamatlitii ur MUror-nation In a (ov rrninriil-( ..partnership la Civeriiment (-! rtirliun. A Her entering so briefly and neces sarily so imperfectly upon tho anat omical and physical distinctions, that part us from the negro a discussion, which might hu extended to any length, I now ask tho attention of the House, in us few words as pnsnihlo to certain historical facts; for this expe riment of negro equality is no novelty in history. Wo aro not tho first nogrophilists who havo trodden over the old ground of amalgamation, and miscegenation, snd henco wo have nothing new to offer in it, or to expect from it. The experiment was tried hundreds ofyenm ago, and it has been tried in our own timo and in our own generation, too. I will not alludo to Hayti, where tho negro is so wise that ho will not admit tho whito man into tho government of thnt country, or even allow him to hold real estate! thero. I will not allude to Jumica, I where tho negroes havo managed their local government so badly that tho liritish uiilhorilies nt home have I .--V taken the power of self-government from thorn, und redeposited it in tho crown, through a liritish governor und council. Hut I will go a little further and show from tho great his tory of tho world that tho negro has not tho capacity of self government, and thut wherever or whenever the superior raco has shared government with him, destruction has boon the lot of both. The Mulatto with YY hlte Rlood lu hi Veins. I speak not now of the mulatto, because the mulatto with white blond in bis veins often has tho intelligence and capacity of a w hite man. 1'nit for violating a law of God, thut all are to be punished who indulge in a crim inal admixture of races, sn that beyond the third or fourth generation there can be no lurther mulatto progeny, I would admit llio mulatto to the right of suffrage if 1 could do it without violating that law, or without estab lishing a principle which would be fatal to my own raco. 1 recognize the mulatto's intelligence and capaci ty, with our whito blood flowing in bis veins; and I know that ho is often the equal, and sometimes tho superior, of some white men. The t uiigu Krgro, etc But the Congo negro, the Dahnmcy negro, tho Guinea negro, the negro of the Southern Stutcs, is no brother of ours, and God never made him for our brother. I do not say thut ho is only a higher speeieiof Ihv anthropoid upes as Bomo say. Hut I do say that the ourang-outang is as intelligent us many of the Hushiuen of Southern Af rica and thut the chimpanzee and the goriila, in their forms of creation, wonderfully represent tho ignorant and brutalized negro ; and I will add that, if wo uro to degrade this grout Government of ours into a Southern Negro Congo Government, it is ns well to take into partnership tho Ou rang, the Chimpanzee, und the Gorilla, us to go into this partnership with tho sons of Congo, Soudun and Daho mey tho native lands of them all, apes and men. I do not moan, in what I havo said, to refer to tho mulatto, or quadroon, or octoroon, wlroso intelligence I re spect by virtue of tho whito blood that runs in their veins, but to the pure Congo negro. admit him to lie a "man," but he is not a "brother" if ho is a man. and 1 will never consent to divide self government with him, or to degrade our own noblo, historical race to bis low level. The Ncro I nrlianpcd and I'lirhanjrablc. Tho negro is the sumo and has been tho sumo, for four thousand years. Whilo all other ruees our own race 'emerging from barbarism, have been constantly improving, the negro in Africa is to be seen now just as ho was in tho earliest periods of Egyptian record. In tho frescoes or amid tho tombs of Egypt, four thousand years old, in all probability, the negro there exhibits tho same pictured life he lives in now. His tough skull nnd strong muscles of tho nock aro carrying the same burden that he curries to this day. He was then tho servant of the Egyptian man the yclhw man of Egypt just as ho is tho servant of the Caiicasiun now. As Virgil do scribed the raco some two thousand yours ago, when be wrote of on "Aunt Chloo" of his day even so is the negro now. Afra ffrha., tola patrinln tr-'tantt fifrura, Tnrta conain, labrnftie tutix-u., el lusra colorem ; I'tH'tura lata, jat-rn. tiKitnmift, niinprciiicr alvn, ('ruritnix nihil, pputioi pnnliga plnula; Cuntiiiuiii riiui. ralranc. sci.p ri)fi-!aiit. 1 quote Cowpor's translation and I trust you, Sir, will the more enjoy it as coming from an old Abolition friend, who would have not u slavo to till his grounds. "from Afric sli, the pwnin'd mile aorvinjr maid, M hnw fni-r ami furtn alike Iir birth Wtrnriil; With wiHilijr l'k, lip. tuiniil, nal.lr nkiu, Wide Iki.uhi, uililcr. fliiorid, In-lly thin, !eff. plrn'liT, hnmil and tiiut nmnhnpra f.-et, CliKppcd into think, and pan-bed with rolnr In at. That is tho description given by Virgil two thousand years ago; and that is tho appearance of tho negro ol this da). In his own native land ho has not improved, and be never will improve, save ns ho comes in close con tact with civilization, and is forced to exercise his natural i mi tali to powers. t'li titration and Christianity have not Chaiigi'il him. Four thousand years then ho was exactly what he is now, A nno llomini, 1M17 and "vhnt ho ever will be, save ns ho comes in contact with thoeivili zatiou of a superior race. Tho Egyp tians whoso genius created tho pyra mids, tho Sphynx, tho obelisk ; the Carthngenian, whoso soldiers under Jlannilml surmounted tho then horrid Alps rolled over the Cuinpagnii of Homo, nnd tho plains of Capua ; tho Roman, whoso arms and whoso arts embraced the wholo world all, have brought their civilization und their arts before tho negro race, hut all in vain., Tho Church had holy founda tions in Carthage, in Cyrono, In Alex andria, throughout all Egypt, and fur, far tip tho Nilo, and ascetics front upper Egypt, clothed in tho wild rai ment of the Himtikl, wandered forth in sheepskins and goatskins, and dwelt in deserts, and on mountains, in dens and caves, to bring tho negro to Christ, but all, all, in vain. Pagan, savago, cannibal even, tho negro in his own nutivo homo, for thousands of years, defied all civilization, all christi unity and only w hen in close indi vidual contact with tho superior race, is tho negro then improved or improva ble. Ho clings to his gris-gris, jujus, fetiohisin with as much pertinacity as he did. hundreds of 3-ears ago. Hut a wonderful imitative genius is that of tho negro I It displays itself sur prisingly in niusio and in a variety ot our culinary arts. Whon associated with the white man, the negro, through his faculties of imitation, becomes in miiiij uieiioiiuuici inmost uiu equal 1 of tho w hile man. Hut w hen left to his own guidance, ss in Hayti, in Jamaica, or in upper Egypt, he returns to Ins liarliane tastes, Ins gris-gris, his jujus, the fetich, etc., etc. So icgro I'im-I.. ArihllerL, no CJrcat Merliauii-a, etc. Where, oh tell mo whero, sir, has tho pure blooded negro, unassisted by I some thirty or forty beautiful Circas tho while man, exhibit any of the tri- siaus and Georgians of his harem, kis uiniihs of genius? Where havo we: sing tho hand ot u eunuch, un Ethio found that raco producing a Homer, pian, n negro selected from the interi u Phidias, a Praxiteles, a Socrates, a 1 or of Africa, 11s tho custodian of these Demosthenes, a Virgil, or a M ilton, or I women, and w ho thus had become a Shakespeare ? Whero has it pro-1 their master. The moment tho Turk duced tiny great architect, like Michael : lb us associated himself with the negro, jAngelo!' Where any great poet, where lany heroic soldier like Alexander, I Cicsar, or Nujioleon whoro'airy won- I dorful mechanic? Whut negro of j.'tire I blood ever started a steam-engine, or a spinning -jenny, a screw, a lever, the wheel, or tho pulley? What negro has invented a telegraph, ordiscovcred a star, a satellite, or an asteroid? tl I . . I I nai negro ever constructed a paia- tial edifice like this in which we are assembled these eorinthian columns, these frescoed walls? Negro history makes no mark in the great world's and they will see what a fatal step iii-ogress. That history is all a blank, hUey are taking now in equalising blunk, bluiik, sir. The negro can I unnatural races, or rather in subjoc novcr rise above a certain range of ting tho superior white race of the intelligence. Tho children of the ! South to negroes from Africa. Muley negro, up to ten or fifteen years (r lnniaol was Emperor of Morocco about age, may bo as bright und as intclli- ji;so, und be had a negro us well us n gent us white children. They acquire Georgian wife, between whom and knowledge us rapidly, but after that others, were born from him, the his early age-the negro youth does not t,-ian records, SOU children, the last advance as does tho white youth While 'he white man is increasing in knowledge till the day of his death, the negro reaches before the age ol maturity a point bey o .id which he cannot well advance, in any thing savo in tho arts of mere imitation. Mr. Gahfim.I). Will trio gentlcmuii tell us who Euclid was? Mtt. llitooKS, Joes tho gentleman mean to intimate that Euclid was a negro ? Why, sir, ho had not a par ticle of wool on bis head. Mr. (aitn.i.ii. Jle wus only an Abys sinian. The I.rsann. of l ife The Arab. I'imt. Mit. Huooks. Now Mr. Speaker I am about to show further that where- ever there has been an admixture of a superior race with tho negro, the utteJ- deterioration und degeneracy, if not tho destruction, of the domi nant race bus been the result. Eook ut the history of tho MiddloAges, when tho men of our nice wero in volved in mental darkness, when even tho priest could not read or writo, and when books wero not printed. At that timo tho Arabs hud almost all the knowledge and learning in the world. Under tho banner of their prophet, thoy started from tho holy city of Mecca, and swept along tho wholo Northern coast of the Mediterranean, by Alexandria, Carthago and beyond the pillars of Hercules ; aye, currying over the Sierra Nevada of Spain, into tho beautiful valley of tho Grenadian l.u Vega, their wonderful arts, nswell as their victorious arms. They con structed tho magniliccnt Alhamhra ; they created tho Alcazars of Seville and Cordova. Our countrymen, Irv ing, in glowing prose, with thoughts that breathe and words that burn, has pictured their man lies and conquests, and their arts as well as their arms. The whole Christian world shrank and trembled before the mighty genius of this Arab race, whilo it wus over running Spain and threatening Eu rope with downfall. Hat in un cfil hour they who hud planted the noblest banners ol poetry, und prose, ot phi losophy. nnd of history, in the front rank of tho icun.ing of tho world, 1 imprinted tho holy classic names of they who had invented tho science of old Spain upon the now goldeu inotin notalion, snd taught us decimals, j tains and wine-covoicd valleys of tho thoy who hud created algebra, ami Stato of California. They climbed given it tho Arabic name ; they who j the snow clad Cordilleras, and planted had measured tho heuvcsiis in their , their banner 011 every liill and every astronomy, und given tho very names , valley of Mexico, Peru und Chili, wo now uso to the stars, and constelhi- They drove Montezuma from the halls tions.thatsparklein the sky; they who of his Aztec ancestors, und under bequeathed to us the Arabic nnmed Al-1 Cortez und Pi.arro, Peruvian, Mesi-ffiiiuii-, (tho Diary) the little work'ean and seiiii barbati.in civilization now indispensable in every man's ' fell before tho mighty prowess of their house, ti Inst, they mingled tiie blood of their heroio race, wiih the Nubian, the negro, w ith tho inferior and do graded races of Africa, all about them, and Ihey rapidly fill from their exalted position into tho degraded pool of races with whom thoy j later from the shores of England und had eominnglod. These unco he-' landed 11 port the rock of Ply mouth or roicJArabs wero driven from Grena- j upon tho flats of Jamestown. Tho tin, ami lingering awhile upon the i Puritan himself, trembling over bis coast of the Mediterranean, they re-! rock for a whilo in terror id' tlio toiu fled into Africa, dishonored, degraded, I ahawk, ventured ut last on what was destroyed, by forgetting their Arab 'then deemed gigunlio heroism, lie nobility, und becoming N uuians, tie- groes und other inferior races of Af rica. The Ottoman Turks Vrvt. Years afterward there sallied forth from Asia, that great storehouse of nations, tho Ottoman Turks, under llio banner of the prophet, nnd their Crests-tit swept over almost tho same breadth of territory that the Arabs had gono over before them. If they paused nt tho Pillars of Hercules in tho West, their sciinetars flashed in tho East under tho walls ol Vienna, nnd swept olf every living man that showed himself on the open plains of ' Austria or liolieniui. Hut alas ! they 1 entered upon the same degraded crime t of amalgamation and iniseecenution, and thoy soon emasculated theso onco j heroio Turks, tho approach of whose Crescent hud made the Christian 1 tremble iu every Court in Europe, j and upon ever)' navigable internal sea. In their harems, the thick-lipped wooly headed negro woman was mixed un with tho beautiful Circassian und I Georgian, and children of all hues, and colors, ami races, wero tho pro duct of this hateful miscegenation; and God even tho God of Mohani-incd--has punished the Moslem by disown degradation and hisovorthrow for violating thut first law of nature tno preservation ol tho purity of CAN. J I race. The Crescent no more waves j in terror under the walls of .Malta, a. pnuto, or corsair, 110 more aliriglits on the Adriatic, or the Danube, but trembles in doubtful existence on the sou ot Marmora. 1 myself, have seen, 'n Constantinople, around a Mosque where the Sultan was nt prayers, , or tiegrcss, und recognized him or her ! cither us brother or sister, from thut j hour the Turkish Empire began to I crumhlo until now it exists only by tho tolcranco of tho Christian Powers of Europe. I The Moors snd the Kcgrora it. Lt gentlemen, then, but study the history of tho Arabs in their mixture . . ..... of races, let them but study the bisto ry of tho Turks, let them but study tho history of Morocco, if they will ever tako tho trouble to study at all. born when bo wus nearly Hi) years of age. This .Muloy Ismael, in order to do what you in this Congress are do ing, that is to enforce a military des potism upon his people, neglected the Moors, and enlisted an army of 1 JJ 000 negroes, obtained from the coast of Guinea. Through civil war and bloodshed, and for over 101) years, as you will find in tho history of Moroc co written by Chciiier, the Moors were in the most miserable condition a peo ple could bo in, almost all tho timo under tho power of theso negroes, theso Janissaries, these Pretorian Guards of tho Emperor, and they nev er ceased in" their insolent demands and pretensions. It was not till 17S'J that theso 100,000 negroes could be got rid of by nny device, and then, through Sidi Mahomet, by cunning and fraud, they wero reduced to 1.1,0ii0 he hire they noted their weakness. It took a hundred years for tho Moorish raco to ret-over itself from tho fatal crime of Muley Ismail and it will cost a hundred years to recover from your Legislation, if tho peoplo-ontin-ue you in power unother election. The I.af ln-upanl.h and the Ancloatoii It are aa Hcttlera 011 the American I on tilil'llU Hut I need not go to tho Mediter ranean. I need not cross the Atlantic to show tho fatal stop you aro taking by this Reconstruction Hill in going into thin co partnership with negroes. Our continent has been settled by t o classes of men, Anglo Saxon, Celt and Teuton in the North, nnd the Spanish I.atin race in the South. God never made a nobler raco of men than the old Hidalgos of Spain, who, under Columbus, in a little caruval of forty tons, started on the trackless Atlantic in search of the then unknown Amer ica. God never made a nobler raco, I repeat, than these Hidalgos of Spain What did thoy do? They ran all along the Gulf of Mexico, from Flori da 011 tho North to Capo Horn on the Southern verge of South America. They settled Mexico and Venezuela, New Grenada and Chili, and Peru, and coasting ull tho Northern Pacific arms. Their heroic deeds, their lofty chivalry, their Christian loyally now rend more like tho romances of u FroisMirt than ns they are, the truo records of History. Our Aii'do Saxon fathers started crossed tlieH onnoclieut und the II ud- son and slowly crept up the Mohawk mil halted for years and years upon Hakes Erie, Ontario, and Huron. The cavaliers of Jamestown threaded their; way up the river James, stealthily I wound over the pass of the Alioghon-i ies.Cnd looked down nt last wiili us j tonisliinoiit nnd nfl'right upon lit lullei ren-re of Ohio. Hut all this time these ' heroio Hidalgos of Spain were spread-1 ing tho mime und tamo of (iusiile und An. 14011 throughout llio whole Amor- j ican continent, from Florida on tho 1 North to Capo Morn on tho South, nnd from Cupe Horn to California, whilo our Anglo-Saxon race stood shivering upon tho Ohio nnd Lake Erie without tho courage to advance further. What, sir. happened then ? What has produced this dilloivuce be-: 1 ween us und tho lofty Hidalgo ? ' Why uro the)' fallen, those men of , tho Armada, so exulted among nil the nations of the earth, who made our! ancestors in t ho days of (jiieen Eliza-i both, tremble cm llio llnvnui ' Whe n as u mm 111 1110 .Mexican war 0110 regiment of our Anglo-Saxon, Celtic, Teutonic blood, again ami again, put wholo regiments of these oneo noblo Hidalgos of Spain to flight atChnpul- topeo, tho Guritu mid elsewhere 1 1 will tell you why, sir. The Latin, tho Spanish race, (rood from that instinct 1 ol I'llH, Whb ll ll!'!i", u'l Itthl Id NUI-ll- 1 taiiiutiii, tevi led in s Uully leinpt j mi' 11 luiixliiiv '-f bio.) I indnl.'" f in am ml nnd governmental copm I in I jshipwilh A .lee", liidi.ni, lie :r"", ' one and nil. I be pure bbio-l, the n.nro I blood of tho old hidalgos of Spain, ! lost and drained, dilioinrrd snd de I graded, bus dwindled into nothing, I while llio pure blood of the Ai'-jh'-S.inoiis, the Cells, the Teutons, ubhor I ring all Midi ii-mk i.ilion and ama lign um I ion villi iic'-ro, or the Indian, hm leaped over Lake Eric, crossed lull,: nrii rr, the great Father of Witters, the Mississippi, crowded llio un 111. lain Hisses of Colorado, I' tali, Nevada, and Molilalia, rolled over the Km ly Mountains, und spread for hundreds!)) inileson thc'Pucilic Ocean, carrying not only there, but every where, triumphant, from tho Artie to tho Antartie, the glorious flag of our country, thut emblem of a puro race, land ever contrasting the glory nnd honor, tho prowess of that raco, with tho degradation of the raco of these once noble hidalgos of Spain. Sir, you nre on the eve now of an association und coparliier-bii) with a I like inferior race, which, if the people j do not drive you from this capital, will be destructive of us ull, us bus been a like co-partnornh'p to the Span iards, the Turks, the .Moors, and tho Arabs. I have recalled theso sacred lessons of history, und 1 hold them tip to you li r your udmoiiilioii and warn ing. Heed, oh, heed ! Strike, but hear! Now, sir, this may be the last timo In this Congress, when I shall havo an opportunity thus ut length to ad dress u white audience upon tho floor of this House. (Laughter.) Aye, you are so hurrying up this reconstruction, us you call il, that the African will soon come down from your galleries, and make his nppearuneo here upon the floor, side by sido with you, as a man nnd u brother. He is soon to bo within you, und part of you, a rcpro seiitutive upon this floor. 1 tell you, gentlemen, that you muko u fatal ptditicul mistake, tor it will not bo acquiesced in by the Northern people, und your violent, revolutionary acts hero will be resisted in the cleetivo Tribunals, elsewhere. In order 10 obtain u few additional negro'reprc seutalivo votes upon this floor fiom the South, you aro jeoparding the domination of your party in the great North and West. The Northern peo ple ure sound 11 pon the suoject of race, and whore Ethnology is discussed sci entifically in the primary assemblies of the people, they will become more und moro sound; und become ir.oro und more converts to the principles I havo been hying down to-day. Hut I know, t.ir, that it is vain for mo to invoke the majority of this Houso to pause. I have too often sent forth vain invocations here, and appealed to the majority of this House 111 vain. Hut thank God! my voice and tho voices of the few bold compatriots around 1110 havo gone beyond this Capitol und been beard among tho people, w ho have responded by rolling up majorities in our favor, such us we did not dream of, so early, ufterour vuin appeals to you hereon this floor. Hut if you blacken this Houso this session of Congress, it will soon bo whitened by tiit Dcmocrucy of tho North and tho West. It cannot bo that God inspired Columbus to tho discovery ot this great new World only to drive out Poqiiods, Chippewas, . Mohawks, Pollawatomies, Cheyenncs, Sioux, to substitute here a government of Congo negroes from Africa instead. It cannot be that Almighty wicdoin has gathered here the best blood from ull tiio nutions of Europe to be over whelmed ns Spanish blood has been, by thcjacst mixture of Aztec, Indian and Congo ifegro. Hut to you, pledg ed, manacled to party, and loving party more than you love country, or God or.inan, I know I speak in vain. A Voico even from the dead would not now change n single opinion here, but we shall bo heard und heeded else where. Posterity will vindicate our foresight. History will do us justice, while u grateful country is already sending in ils plaudits of "well done, good and fuiihlul servants." If anything iu tho world will make a man let ! badly, except pinching his lingers in the crack of a door, it is un questionably a quarel. No man ever fails to think less of himself alter it thun before. It degrades him in tho eves of others, nnd, w hut is worse, blunts his sensibilities on one hand, increases the power of passionate ir ritability on the other. The trnth is, the more peaceably and quietly -wo get on, the better lbr our neighbors. In nine cases out often, the better course is, il a man cheats you, tako care that nobody will believe him. No matter w ho he is, or how ho missuses you, the wisest way is to let him alone ; for there is nothing better than this cool, calm, and quiet way of deal ing with the wrongs we meet with. Mismnr.cTLD I.kttkus. According to tho Postmaster General's Uoport, not less than a million letters were mailed last year, without signatures, nnd misdirected, or so badly directed that the address was totally unintelli gible. These wero destroyed. Moro than a million and a half others, 1,01 1,. list!, wero restored to their writers by the care of the dead letter oflieo. Thus it seoms that nt least two and a half million of mistakes w ere made, in an operation whit h one would think likely to enlist the si.l'lcicnt care of the writer, the sddrcssinir of a letter. These letters contained nearly 81, "(, (H'0, in money, bills of exchange, deeds, checks, .Vc, to the value of over 8-"),mni,(HHi, und over 40,000 contained photographs, jewelry, Ac. - - 4. Wo should act with as much energy us if wo expected everything from ourselves; and wo should pray with as much earnestness ns if we expected everything: Ironi God. "The ocean speaks eloquently and forever," says Hoocher. '-Yes," retorts Prentico, "and there's no uso iu tel ling it to dry up." Is a man who turns up his nose nt a boarding houso dinner necessarily "fair" becauso he's "abovo board ?" Prentico thinks that l'lidicnls in Congress assembled would do well ta deny the soft impeachment.