ihb ...... . . i , " . . ; : ' ; I'LEIRFIELD EEPBBLICAM," ' " wmA. iir -1171 a -mnTinT TTW ,k TTK TT7, TVTT T TTK "IT IT n A TT BMTAULIIHBD III lBt. Tbe largea! cirelatloa r aay newspaper U North Central Pennsylvania. Terma of Suouoription, II mid la advance, " wllkln I months.... MI 1 odd after d brr ' """" - SO j( p.U tfler the eiplrotloa of month.... S UO Bates ot Advertising. T,Bill edvartltemeati, par tquare of 10 line, or i,.., I timet or lew -....$1 M voreab lobieqnentineertloa.. ft iJmlDiitraW"' ad Kaeoutort' Bolieee....... I at A.iiwn' aotleei I M Cetleotand Kitrey - 1 la Duttlatlou uoUoet 1 10 ProttMlonal Oardi, a Uaaa ar letl,l Jiw. i tt lottlnctloel, per line ........ la TEARLT ADVBRTISKMKNT8. Mn,re. tt 00 1 i eolumn ....$51 00 1 1,... ...oil .i.. rt aa lI!amZ!l...J M I 1 aolama lla 00 Pabllibcr. Jon pmnTino or kvkrt disomp lloa neatly executed at tkii oBoe. TT W. SMITH, ATTOBNEY-AT-LAW, tl:I:TS ' Clearfield, Pa. T J. LIXGLE, AITOBNII -AT - LAW, 1:11 Phtllpeburt;, Centre Co., Pa. y:pd TOLANDD.SWOOPE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Curw.oirllle, Clartld county, Pa. oct , 78lf. 0 SCAB MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLEARFIELD, PA. Ir-OBca la tbe Opera Hoate. ootil, '7811. Q R. & W. BARKETT, Attorneys and Counselors at Law, olbarfibld. pa. January SO, 1876. TSRAEL test, ATTOKNKY AT LAW, Clearfield, Pa. a-OBoe la tha Court Hoaia. t'yll.'tf HENRY BRETH, (OHTRRD r. 0.) JUSTICE OF THE I'EACE poa aaLL Towninir-. M.J 1, Wl-Ie yjl. Jf. JicCULLOUGFT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLKARFIKLD, PA. Oft.1, la Moronic buildlag. Second otreet, op po.ite th. Court Houia. JJ6, 78-tf. C. ARNOLD, LAW & COLLECTION OFFICE, CURWKN8VILLB, .ta Clcerftold Couaty, Penn'e. T6y s. T. BROCK BANK, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ' OLBARFIBLD, PA. Oflloa In Opera Houta. JAMES MITCHELL, ap JS.fMy aaiLia ta Square Timber & Timber Lands, JoU'71 CLBARFIKLD, PA. J. F. SNYDER, ATTORNEY AT LAW, CLKARFIBLD, PA. OIBee in PU'l Opera Houta. June 20, 'TStf. WILLIAM a. wai-lacb. a. oar r. wallaub. batio L. aaaaa. joaa w. WBISL.BT. WALLACE & KREBS, (Suxeeiori ta Wallaoa fltldlBg.) ATTORNKYS-AT-LAW, J.aHT ' Clearfield, Pa. p. o'l. area. , . a. a. baiaii. BUUli dkliRAH All It AH AM. ITOkNIl'S AT LAW, . olbaboiblb, pa. All l.fal auilaooa promptly attended to. Office la Or.hem't Row reotaa formerly oeeapied ay II. B. owoopo. Jal7', '78-tr. frank Fielding.. W. D. Biglei....S. V. Wllfoa. jielding.bTgler. WILSON, ATTORNEYS AT . LA V, OLIARFIKLD, PA. ar-Offiea la Ple'a Optra Hou.e. mot, a. bubbat. ereoe obbob. JJXRRAY k GORDON, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, OLBARFIBLD, PA. Bt-mce Ib Ple'a Opera Heaee, aaaood loor. :!l'7 juoapB a. a aaALLT. DaaiBi. v. a'aoBDr. jpENALLY i. McCUKDY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, Claarllold. Pa. FfLfil bejaiaee. attaaded ta promptly with) J.litj. OCee ob Saooad Itreat, aboro tbe Flrit Mltonal Bank. jaa:l:ra (i. KtUMBR, ill ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Real Batata aad CollaetloB Afaat, CLBARFIBLD, PA., Will prompll7 attend to all lefal bailneii aa trotted to hit aare. Sr-Offiee la Ple't Opera Hoata. JaaHO. J P, McKENRICK., . ATTORNEY AT LAW, OLBARFIBLD, PA All legal bnalBett eatraited to kit oara Bill ra eetra aromat attealloa. Oloe appeilu CoarlJIe,le Maeoaia Belldief, aeeona auot. - -j JJR. B. M. SCHEURER, IIOIKBOPATHIO PHYSICIAN, Oaaa la reeldraee oa FirH at. April H, 1ST. ClearSeld, Pa. TH W. A. MEANS, PHYSICIAN SURGEON, ' . LTJTIIERSMJRQ, TA. , WIUatUadBrolaoalaaalaallapreaiptir. aaglt'70 yjn. T. J. BOTEK, tUYSICIAK ANDSDROKON, Olea aa Market Street, Clearleld. Pa. (-0ea koant to l a. bl, aad I U I p. at. JR. J. KAY WRIGLEY, BOMfRPATHlO PHYSICIArT, afOira adjalalai Ike reetdeaee e( Jaa.ee a r.jley, tea., aa eVeooad at, UMarava, ra. ial,ll,';a-at. JJR. H. B. VAN VALZAH, CLEARPIEI.D, PEN H A. OFFICII IN KBRIDBNCI, CORNRR OP FIRST AND PINK 0TRKICTB. M Oloe Boara-Froa 11 u I P. M. Mar II, 107e D ,R J. P. BURCH FIELD, , AS Ian kU frfa.MUul ttrTiMt W IkttttlwM i-arBiCaBtJ, k at U ITARKY HNYDKR. A BARBtl AMD BAfRPRBJtSER r aa Market St, appeal! Oon Baw. A aleaa bowel (at area BaXoam. I H KkUa at AltaoU Clearleld, Pa. PUlr. a-atLl. LLJjiAttJVJLjjjjjl) mSS ItM'UBJLlLA.V GEO. B. QOODLAUDEE, Editor & Proprietor, PRINCIPLES, NOT : MEN. TERMS-$2 par UMun in Adraetj. VOL. 53-WHOLE NO. 2,619. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1879. NEW, SERIES-VOL. 20, NO. 17. SPEECH OF Hon. William A. Wallace, OF PENNSYLVANIA. ON THE ARMY APPROPRIATION BILL, IN THE Senate of the United Slates, MOJ'DAV, April 111 A, 18T9. Control of Electlona by Federal Gov ernment la;Prpelualion of WarPow r.Th SUtna Alona Vetted with their Control.-The Leglalatlve Power Cannot be Coerced by the Executive. No President ever vetoed a bill re storing rights to the People. Tli Benete, i It Commlllee of the Whole, h.rlnn andor aontldaratlon tbe bill (U. R. No. II uekinf eppreprlatloua lor Ibe tupport of the Armr for tbe natal year ending June SU, 1SSU, and for other parpoioj Mr. WALLACE said ; Mr. President: This bill comes from the Committee on Appropriations ol this body, It does not come, as bus been asserted in this Chamber, lrom a secret conclave or caucus. It comes from the authorized organization of mis tnamuor, the Honato Committee on Appropriations; and X rise now to speak simply because I am one of its members charged with that duty. As one of that committee, I rise to Bpoak to the purposes, tho causes, tho reasons that piompted that committee toafrree to the insertion ol the clause which is contested, by tho Sonator from Maine. This bill came through tbe Senate door by the usual channel of communication with the House of Representatives, in tbe bands ot its Clerk, to this bod v. It went to the President's desk, and thence to the Committco on Appro priations, and it came back to this Chamber lrom that committee in the usual manner. Nay, more, slr.His the bill almost in word and lotter that was adopted by the committees ol confer ence at the last session of Congress, agreed upon by tho committees ol con ference of the two House, and which but lor tbo disagreement between those committees upon this single section would tiBVo been paused liy that Con gress, litis bill, so tnr lrom having been treated as measures that como from' a committee of conference usu-l ally are, baa been debated and contest ed again and again in committee, in the Uouso, and in the Senate Chamber. Tbe declaration that it is tho edict of caucus is more idle wind ; such a ttlato- ment bas nothing whatever to base it. This is tho bill upon which tho two Houses disagreed in the last Congress ; it is the bill that came from tbe House, that went to the committee, that came back to turn Chamber turouirh tbe regular committees ol this body, and it is now put upon its passage with the torma and In tbo customary mode adopted in such cases. ihis bill contains but a single dis puted section. To that the Senator from Maine addressed himsulf ; to that we address ourselves. There is but a single issue presented by this bill, to that I shall try to con6ne myself. All that hear ma and the country know that tho convulsive throes of a great people in a tremendous oivil war have caused many departures from those vital principles that lie at the base of all civil liberty. Tho history ol our race and tbe precedents of the past point them out as essential elements n the preservation ol our own iree- dom, and its most earnest struggles ever have been and ever will be made tor tbeirsaloty. The nocossitiec ot the hour may cause a tree peoplo to bear for a time tbe subjection ot the civil to the military power, the suspension of habeas corput or the presence ol armed troops at election polls, but these must pass away with tbe neooasity that gave them birth. They can never be crys tallised upon the nocks of Anglo- Saxons. This tingle issua involved In tint bill is, shall tbe executive arm of the Government longer possess tbe power to placo troops at the election polls ? Their presence there or the power to place them there is equally a menace to tne people ana a aepariure irom tue right of tree elections. That is the issue, the sole, tbe only issue that is in this bill. We make no other: we will be diverted not from this. The mere presence of armed troop at the polls is a menace to individual liberty, inesnaaow 01 toe power 01 armed men is in itself a threat, and no free peoplo will bear it. It was one of the struggles between Charles I and his tlixt three Parlia ments that he hould yield to them tbe nubt be claimed to quarter troops upon the people. Parliament refused to give him money and he was accus tomed to send troops into tbo country uitlriuts and oompel them to be quar tered and supported by the people without authority ol law. I ho Lorn mons placed it in their bills; they for mulated and orystallicod it in the pe tition of right, and they mado the king yield to their just demands in behalf of the people. This right and privilege is registered in the bill ol rights of Dearly every constitution in all this land, Tbe power to quarter troops upon the people was wrung from the kingly power of Great Britain by placing it upon bills under which he was voted supplies to carry on a war for tbe Palatinate with Spain. Before they would yield him those supplies they compelled him to agree to a conretmon 01 in is great rignt, ana tbe right to be free from such intrusion became fixed and certain. Tbe cor relative right in regard to tree election and the absence oi troops from the polls is found still larlher back in En glish bitlory. The menace ot armed troops at tne pons wat pronioiiea dv a statute in the reign of George II, and it recites the existence of the riirht to be free from this menace as old as the. time of Edward I. In the thirteenth century, nearly six hundred years ago, the race from whom we obtain our liberty and law, from whose loins we mainly sprang, aseerteu vne doctrine that this right ol free election belonged to tbe people and ought not to be jeopardised. It was a right wrung, absolutely wrung, from the hand of nowor in the time of Edward I. It was resurrected in ths time of Goorge II, and then enacted into law in 1735. Let ns nee what was done. I shall not read tbe statute. A law was passed in 1735 which forbade tbe presence of armed troops wHbin two miles of the election polls. Subse quently, In 1741, tbe executive power . . . .1 . t . i. : - lurgetalOg 111 exiaivill'v Ul wa mmw ate) DarlBf tbe serrupt adalaiitrallea tt Sir Robert Walpola, at aa eieoUee kaid far Ike el(T of Weataiiaelet, aadar aa ardor etgaed k, laree ...l.miH ef tka aoaatp. a Bodf 4 Braaed eel. dlere waa Banked Bp aad ettUoaad la Ikoakarek ? ard of ealar real, ueveM uaees w ue. tie. It.eltaeH'l " akB ia la. u mi 'BBaaa. tkav aaaaad a reeelalle. atlralai "thai tka prat.aee M teaiakar a4f tt -a ulllMi aa aa eAMUaft ad aaaakora la wra la PetHaaaaal k a ka tolrlaajeeaaat .af lat IlkartiaJ at tea BBtjaet, a aMalleet aieiauoo) of tba freedom of election!, aad an onea lUftanoo of the lawi and eomtltatioa of tola kingdom." Tbe high bailiff wae takea lata autlodr by order of the Jlouaa, and tbe three maiatretea who algned tbe eriler were brought to tha bar and reprimanded by tha Speaker, apon their kneet, at tka Houta bad d I reeled i and alter thlt tha Houta paoed a vole of tbanka to tbe Speaker lor nit reprimanq or tne delinquent., and dirett. edlha eame to be printed. BriM, Lnfi't (.ant ea AVMioat, OKI, tot. Sir, this right, thus vindicated, is a part ol our system. These privileges me pme ui uur own i roe iioertiea. Ihoy come to us with tho system of laws under which we live. Thov be long to us as an integral part ot our system oi tree elections, and wo would bo falso to our hiifhost duty if we should fail to protect them and assert tneir existence. 1 now quote Irom McCrary on Elections, section 418. Ho says : There ean. however, be no doubt but thAt tha law lookt witb greal ditravorapoB enylkiog Ilka aa inierierenoo ay. toe military wtta the freedom of aa eleetioa. Aa armed foroa la the aeighbor bood of tbe poll. It almottlof aeeeuily a meoaoa to tho volert, aad aa taterferonee with their free dom and Independence, and if aueb armed foroa be lo tbe haoda of ar under tbe ooatrol of tbo pertitan friendt of any partioular oandidate or Ml of eetididatet, ibe probability of Improper lonueooe oeoomea aim ttrouger. This proposition does not stand alone on the thought ot taking out of this section tbe authority for the prcsenco of armed troops at the polls under Federal law, but it goes beyond this and finds its reasons and its root in the right of the Statos to control this subject ontirely. Tbe control of froe elections, tho guarantee for their existence, doos not belong to the Feder al Government ; it belongs to tbe Slates themselves and always bas belonged there. The constitution ol almost every State in this country contains in its bill of rights a guarantee of froe elec tion. The States controlled the fran chise. With tbom, both before and tince tbe formation of the Constitu tion, was vested the power and the right to guard the purity and the free dom of elections. Lot the Senators from New England, and the Senators from the great West, and tho Senators from the Middle States and tho South take up the bills of rights of their respective States and Bee what is guaranteed. In nearly all of thorn tbe guarantee is that all elections shall bo froe. Here is the crystallisation of tho doctrine that comes to us from the time of Edward 1, which found voice in the time of Charles I and George II, and is now one of the privileges and rights of this paoplo. In r ennsylvania, as long as 1HU3, its rulers enacted this statuto : No body of Iroont. being regularly employed la tbe Army of Ibe tailed State! or of thlt Htatt. thall appear and be pretent, either armed or aa armed, at any ptaoe of election within tbll State, duriog tne time or .aid election. This wholesome provision was re- enacted in 1839, and it is now a part of the law of that Commonwealth. The euactmont of this law followed the time of the alien and sedition law. The necessity had come for the people to enact it Jcllorson was in power here, his nartv web in control in that State, and public sentiment found vent in tba statute that protected at tbe noils the citizen from armed interfer ence or control in any way by Fedoral or other troops, New York crys tallized this right in her statutes as early as 1818, and prohibited the military Horn appearing or exorcising on election day, or during ten days preceding it; and the same is the Law 1 1 tyiBcuuBUl. juuesaeuuBUbia, maine, New Jersey, and Rhode Island forbid their militia from parading on eloo tion day, and imposed penalties for its violation. Virginia, by bor constitu tion, exempted tbe voter from military service on election day, and denied tbe franchise to every non-commissioned officer and private in the United States Army or seaman or marine in the Unitod States JXavy, while JIarylana prescribed that no oflloer should mutter or march any troops within viow of the polls on election day. I take the constitution of Pennsyl vania of 1873 and 1 read from the bill of rights : Bleetlont aball be fraa aad aqaal t aad bo power, eirll or military, ehall at aoy time later fere to prevoot tbe froe exerelta of tho right, of tuffrage. This is embodied, too, in the consti tutions of Colorado and Missouri, enacted since, almost In word and lot ter. , ' ; I But, air, the Fedoral Constitution has not a syllablo on this subject. Neither in its main provisions nor in the original amendments which se cured the liberties of the peoplo is there on word upon the subject ot free elections. The Fedoral Govern ment bad no control over tbo subjoct ; and they did not attempt to assert any riirht in reference to it. The control of elections and the guarantee for them belonged to the States ; there it was vested and there it is to remain. Prior to 1HG4 tho only attempt at its control here was when John Marshall, in the House of Representatives, in the year 1800, under tbe older Adams, reported a statute giving to the Fed eral Government control of elections bo lar as to prevent armed interfer ence at tb polls ; but when tne meas nre cam to the Scnato it waa detested It failed because the Federal Govern. ment had no control over it. There was no dream, do thought, of exercis ing this right by tbe federal Govern ment until it was done under tho pow er in the bordor States in 1802 ti3 64. Traons wore then plaoed at tbe polls lor the alleged protection of what waa claimed to be the rights of so- called loyal men thero. Ibe first ex ercise of this right by tho federal Government was under tbo war powor. It did not come from any giant from the oeoiile or the States, but solely and oxclutivoly lrom what was claimed as a war power, and like many othors of the same character, luroe wat its i sential element To escape from this and to restore to tbe people that which they had novor parted from witb their own consent, the act oi ioo was in troduced at th close oi tne war oy Senator Powell, of Kentucky, la its original form it gave security from in trusion and re-enacted wnat was in undoubted law of tvery State. Itwas not permitted to pas until it Was amendod by Republican Senators by tbe insertion of the word that ar bow proposed to be taken oot and tb guaiantce of fro elections claimed from tne federal uovernmeot auun became a means for intruding Its nail ed hand at the polls. Nothing but the abnormal oondition of tb country in 1865 and line eoald bar produced the xerosceoc that w oow propose to remove. The bill aa originally introduced (I have it bolore m) had do words au thorising, troops to be present either to repel th armed enemios ef th United Slate or to keep the peace at the polls. . A introduced th bill waa a ruaranle oi th right that existed ta th State, and a restriction ob tb power of th Federal Government, Brkioh waa then bainc Itad wramrfullr and oppretwlvely apon tb peopl of the border Blalet. . Th biU was seat to th Commit! on th Jadieiarr of this body, a Republican committee. It slumbered there for a number ot months, and then came back with a report by Mr. Howard with a negative recommendation. He holds that the right to exerciso the war power in letiO to prevent mon who were not loyal from voting was a Just and pro per exercise ot power, senator rowoii desiring to relievo his people trom wrongful oppression, pressed the bill again and again, nntil in June, 1864, it was pnt upon its passage, and then be agreed to the amendment that troop might be used to repel the armed ene mies of tha United Statos. This was adopted without dissent. Then Mr. Pomeroy, ot Kansas, Republican Senator moved to add tbe words " or to keep tbe peace at the polls." Upon that amendment tbe yeas and nays were called. Every " yea " vote was given by a Republican and every Democrat voted "nay." Keverdy Johnson, John r. It ale, and Senator Hicks, of Maryland, voted with tho Democrats. This provision which Is now proposed to be eliminated, "or to keep the peace at the polls," was adopted by a vote ot sixteen tie publicans against fifteen Democrats and others. Then the question came upon the passage of the bill as thus amended, and tbe Senator from Ken tucky, desiring to protect bis peoplo, was willing to take anything to save thorn trom the pressure that was upon thorn, and acceptod the bill in tbat lorm ; but oven then they were scarce ly willing to pass it No whore else in all the hintory of this Government bad this claim ot power appeared. Here, and here alono, Is tha only in- stance ot the iron clad arm of the Federal power appearing at the ballot box. Mr. BLAINE. Will the Senator permit mo to Interrupt bim just at tbat point r Mr. HALliALli. xes, sir. Mr. BLAINK. Does the Senator present the idea that tbe amendmont mt on that bill by the Kcpubiican Senators was to control voting at tho elections in Kontuclty by Democrats who bad a right to vote; or will tbe Senator accept tbe suggestion tbat it was to koep tbo rebel army tbat bad gojie from Kentucky to tight in tbe confederate ranks from coming back and controlling elections T In other words, tbey nero confederate soldiers when the lighting was going on, and they voted in a Union State when elections were bold. That was the wboloiot' the provision. Mr. jiuak. They were jjomocratic votors. Mr. BLAINE. They wore Domo- cratio voters who were fightig against the Union under Jen. Davis and who came back to control the elections ot the Slate of Kentucky. ' Mr. WALLACE. The Senator from Maine has interjeoted a spoeoh into the body of what I waa saying. He bas not asked a question, but in his usual manner ho has injoctod his thought into the midst of my argu ment, lit may nave that opinion or ol, just as he please. - Mr assertion waa, and it it, tbat the ns of this power, and tbat Senators, including himself, who undertake to sustain it follow legitimately to its conclusion tb argument that the war power mloen years alter tue end ol tue war ought atill to control tbe rights and liberties of this people. That is my answer to the Senators Injected speech. Manifestations or applause in tbe galleries. i he v uxjiiuuxyj ur riuji.it, mr. McMlLLlAN in tho chair.') Will th Senator from Pennsylvania suspend a momont ? The galleries must not ap- glaud under any oircu instances. The ergeant-at-Arms will see that the rules of tbe Senate are enforced. Mr. WALLACE. Wearedooewith the abnormal condition tbat oame from the war. This people ask to be re stored to their normal rights, whether it be in the South or tbe North. Just here 1 will tell tb Senator from Maine tbat at the election in 18G9 for Gov ernor of Pennsylvania, in the third precinct of tba filth ward of the city of Philadelphia, an armed body of ma- nnos wero brought to the polls ; that they took possession thereof and closed and kept them closed for an hour until they saw bt to open tbom and permit those to vote whom they thought ought to vote Sir, the mail clad arm of the Federal Government has shown itsolt In Broad atroet, Philadelphia, within three year. The peoplo of our State want no mors of this. 1 speak for my own peoplo. They want fre elections, without either tocshadow or the substance of military power, either State or Federal. They want the very essence of tb provisions of our Con stitution recognized in practice aait is in truth aa tbe law of the land. I am bora representing so far as I can that peoplo in asking at tbe bands of the Senate of tbe United States that this monane. this threat this assumption of right that does not belong to tbe Federal Government may be elimina ted from bor statutes and that the Statos and the -people ot tho States may control ibis question as tnoy outrht and of riirht ar entitled to do. In Mexico, even in poor down-trodden Mexico, whon our troops were at the the oity of Mexico is tbe war of 1816- 47, because there was a provision la their laws that troops should not be present at tb election polls tbe red eral Army was withdrawn therefrom in order that then might em to be no meoac or control, and Penay Pons was elected in tbe room ot Santa Anna The Fedoral troops obeyed the jaw of Moxico because it was part oi tne Mexican guarantee of civil liberty ,and because our Army, it officeft and soldiers, in those days recognized. the doctrine which w contend lor new, that the menace of armed mon at lb polls i utterly incompatible with free lections. - I W nroooa to tak oot tb words "or to keep tbe peaos Bt th polls," aad th statute will then stand as is the law of Pennsylvania today. Of the stceasitv for Ibis action, arising from practical experience, l aball not now . ..... speak. I contont myself with the as sertion ot the Droad principle tnai ire elections with troops at tb polls ar impossible. The right and tb power in tbe executive arm of either Stale or Federal covernment to place troops at tbe polls on election day is an otter denial or what it vital to toe ire exer cise of th elective franchise. I ear not whether ther b bat on soldier to ten thousand square mile or ob soldier to every acre in tbis broad country. Behind th power of ooe soldier acting under th authority of the executive command ol military power at tb porta stand forty million peopl. It to th obdieno of this peo pl to law, it is th recognition tbat taw I mighty and th aaaa with bis hlna coat and hie kavnnet ia a rerjrev sentatir of forty millioa people tbat nre potency anil majeany to an pras asKBi. . Whan foat plan bha ther as that reprwatouuv tb uae at a it was In tho precinct I have named In our own Stat in iob. Then all men bowed their boads in forced obedience. for the Fedoral power waa there to in timidate and control them ; they dare not attack it ; they must acquiesce law unlawfully asserted coerced obedi- euee. Tbis sentiment of obedience to law actuates all of our people, and it is be cause law and the power of law brings troops to tbe polls without necessity and In derogation of ono of our greut rights that we seek to repeal this stat ute, la my own experience 1 have bad to send an unarmed Sheriff to ar rest a crowd of men noting in vipla- tion oi law. When it was suggestod that we should have troops to aid th officer, I said no, a true and brave man acting in tbe performance of bis duty under tbe oommand ot law is worth a thousand Lroop.-nd so it proved. The teeble assertion that there is no danger of intimidation because there is only one soldier to a thousand square milos is simply begging the question. Behind tbat one soldier stands the power of a great people. At the polls Lo is under tbe control of bis officer and he may be directed to do what partisan aims or malignity may find lor bim to do. Such a possible use of powor is tbe deprivation ot that great right that finds its existence in every bill of riif.hu in this country, that be longs to the people, is a part of their ancient liberties, and to be protected and preserved even at the sacrifice of the blood ot Anglo-Saxons. lhere bos been in tbe past nothing of tbe kind, and its enforcement now takes away one of tbe greatest and dearest rights that belongs to this people. e propose to take away this power. We propose to stand by the American system of froe elections. That is our doctrine in this till. We propose to stand by the American system aa it exists in the bills ot rights of the Slates and as it was found all over this coun try until this exercise of war power in ibuz, ihoj, and iU4. IV e propose to separate tbe ballot from the bayonet V e propose to restore to the civil power it absolute control over all the ma chinery of government. A free system ot laws cannot tolerato even tbe possi ble use of force at the fountain-head ot power. It is a standing menace, a per potual throat. In the interost of the people, in the light of the plainest principle of civil liborty, in the per formance of a plain duty, in the exor cise of the legislative power of this peoplo, we propose to restore to th American people their own system of free elections. The Congress of the United States makes appropriations for but two years. 1 be I resident of th United States cannot enlist a man or pay a dollar without an appropriation by Congress. Congress makes rules lor the government of th land and naval forces, and these short appropriations and this limited authority ot the Ex ecutive over tbem are th very basis of our system. We proposo, as I hat said, in th execution of a plain pur pose, following precedents and practice and law and organio law to their legit imate results, to restore by tbis bill to the American people their own system of free elections. Why should we not do this 1 Who denies the right to free elections? Has the Senator from Maine donied this right? Will any Senator deny this right? Will any gentleman attempt to argue that tbe right to fre elections does net bolong to tbis peo plo as one of their great cardinal rights 1 If so, why not restore it ? Tbe answer is much narrower than the concealed bat real argument Are the people not entitled to free eleotionsf Why is it tbat Senators do not riso in their places and assert that the people bave not a right to be tree lrom ex ecutive interference? Th argument of tha Senator from Main is tbat you will oot be interiered wilb, no troops will interfere with you ; thoro are only so many troops bore and so many there; you are not being interfered witb. But tbe Sonator forgets tbat upon the statute-books of this country there stands a law which gives to tbe Executivo tho power, the right to do this thing, and that in partisan bitter ness, in the control of elections by one party or tbe other, a standing menace may become an aotual, a terrible fact in the future as it has been in the past. Aie we met with a frank denial ot the value of tbis right or of the right of this peoplo to be freed at the polls from tha monac ol armed force? I venture to say that no Senator will put his argument upon tbat ground. None so bold as to assort that in tbe beated partisan contests that occur in the elections of this country the presence ot armed troops, controlled by tbe ono or the other po litical party, conduces to tree elections. Either the substance or tho shadow of military power at the polls it dostruo tive of the essential element contem plated by almost every State constitu tion in this country in its express guar antee ol tree elections. ! Another argument is used. Lot us see wbat it is. First, we are denied the powor to mold legislation. Tbat is the first argument The two Houses of Congress, tbe legislative power, is denied the right to mold legislation in its own way. Second, It Is said to be a revolutionary practice and coercive of the Executive ; and third, that our intent is (that is tha drill or tbe argu ment made by the Senator from Maine) to break down tha Goveinment. My colleague in tbe House, the oldest In sen-vice there, who trains with tbs other sid, who does not belong to the Democratic party, treated this talk about revolution and coercion very well when he said itwas "revolutionary in a Pickwickian sense." There Is ao revolution nor coercion here. This is an attempt to play upon words and upon passion in order to get a response from the peoplo in antagonism to th assertion 01 tbe pcople't plain right. Tbe form of legislation i (ustained by precedents without number. The prooessos that we pursue are the modes ol tb tjonstitntioB. vt e neitnnreea to coerce, tbe Exeobtiv nor submit to b coerced by him. We follow th line of precedent and the mode pointed ontliy the Constution in very partio ular; there ta no departure, ine la bored argimsnt of the Senator from Main tbat tbi is th dictat of a Dtro oc ratio caucus is aa entire error. No Democratic caucus ever saw tbis bill, no agency but tbat ot the Senate and House and tbe committee of tb Ben ate and the House ever saw this bill and passed upon It It is her a a re sult ot th right ot tha representative ot tbi people to mold legislation tnro th recognised constitutional bodies. Mr. BLAINK. 1 said, if tb Sena tor will permit me, that the Senator trom Kentucky ltr. uocaj aiataxi oa tb floor tbat a oommilt ol tb uem no ratio canrnt Waa preparing! the measure. That ia what I said. If ther ataa MM of Aast 4t isbtw4 th Senator from Panacylvaaia aad th Senator from Kentucky, not be- twoen the Senator from Pennsylvania and mytclt. I have it here: Mr. BICK. At ko la ehalrmaa of a commit tea- Thai is, the Senator from Ohio, Mr. TburmanJ that la con.idarlng all tboee quo.tioaa, and at wo oeii.ro ma uemooraue party win aal wisely, e Then follows: Mr. CONKLINll. Will the H.n.tor allow mo ta anderttand him t To wkat committee doea ka refer at oaa of wbloh tka Deflator from Ohio Le ohairmaa f Mr. BKCK. A Demooratlo oommlttee bow ooe ttdorlng bow It It beet for thlt tide of the lloueo, wka kara tha retpoaaibillty, ta act ta detemtBe hew wo oaa beat preeent tba maaturet fairly and properly. And then, before any IIoqbo com mittee was appointed, before thor wat any instrumentality ot a parlia mentary character through which tbey could be launched, these measures came out full-fledged from- a Democratic caucus. Mr. WALLACE. Mr. President, I repeat my statement. The Sonator from Maine and the Sonator trom Kon lucky will settle that issuo botween themselves. I repeat that these bills came through constitutional processes in tbe mode and through the channels tbat ths Constitution and the prece dents point out and tbat no Demo cratio caucus or committee of a Demo cratic caucus ever considered this bill or ever agreed that it should be re ported. It is said tbat we are trying to co erce the executive. There is no at tempt bore at coercion. Where do you find it in tbis bill ? It exists only in tbe lively imagination ot tbe gen tlemen who assert Sir, we will not coerce, nor will we submit to coercion, notwithstanding the finely-rounded periods with which the Sonator from Maine concluded his remarks a tow minutes ago in tbe effort to produce coercion. We bave our rights under the Con ititution, and we propose to follow tbem to their legitimate conclusions. The Executive has bis rights, and our performance ot our duty will not be by one jot or tittle in the way of bis perluruiaace of bis duty as he thinks right to perlorm it under bis oalb and tho Constitution. In tho exerciso of a plain duty imposed upon the legisla tive power, which Is vested with the power to rait armios, to make rules for their government, and to enact all laws necossary to carry into execution tho powers granted to it, those bodies are about to pass tbis bill in accord ance with law and precedent. There is no provision of the bill violating the Constitution, and no pretense will be made that any does. Its disputed clause relatos to the employment of tbe troops whose pay we vote. We have no issue with any other branch of tbe Govern ment We seek to make none. In tho exercise of the rule of th majori ty we follow practice, precedent, law, and organic law to their legitimate re sult, as we judge our duty calls us. We will not be driven into any issue with any other power. Each of these bodies mutt portorm lor itseil, under tb oath that it bas taken to support tb Con stitution, its clear and plain duty. When tbe Bon a tor taunts us witb the exorcise of the negative of the Execu tive he undertake to coerce th rep resentatives ot tba poopl and oi tbe Statos, the bodies vested by tbe Con stitution with the legislative power. rt. i 1 . . , : l.l ... 1 ue rigtii, vu place- jcgisiauua upuu money bill belongs to tbe legislative power. It la nowhere denied in the Constitution. Th proprioty of the exeroise ot this right is to be judgod of by the two Houses, and by them alone. No other branch of the government can object to the bill for this reason. We are tbe sole and exclusive judges of this question, and when we aot our judgment cannot be impugned by either the executive or tbe judiciary, ibe subjoct-mattcr of tbe legislation may be criticised, but the torm ol lis enact ment is solely within our own discre tion. Th bill ot last year conoedod all that is asked by this bill. In conced ing the posse comitatut clause every thing that is in this bill was conceded, and yet wa have tbis "tempest ia a teapot about nothing, so lar aa the powor goes, at least It is the removal cf a monaco, a threat upon the people, and the ohjoction lo lis lorra was utter ly and absolutely conceded away in the legislation of last year. I affirm theu, first, tbat th right to place legislation on money hills for the protection of the civil liberties of the people belongs to tbe legislative power and cannot bo donied to it by any other branch of the government ; sec ond, that the exorcise of this right is sanctioned by practice ; third, that it it sustained by precedents as old as the time of Cbarloa 1; and, fourth, that thia legislation is constitutional and necessary and violates no provision of tbe federal uonsiitulion. Xiet us see. This powor has been very frequently exorcised by Congress, and the prece dents are numerous and well-known. In ordei to ascertain wbat propor tion of legislation concerning tbe Army of a general and permanent nature bad been enacted previous to 1874 upon ap propriation bills 1 made an examina tion ol the uevisM statute oi to uni ted Slates, passed at the first session of the Forty-third Congress 1873-74 which "embrace the Statutes of the TTnliMf Rlales. froneral and permanent in their nature, in foro on the 1st day ef December, 1873, as revised and oon solidated by commissioner appointed under an act ot Congress, l bese laws are lound under title 14, "1 be Army,' and include section 1094 to 1361, both inclusive, of the Revised Statutes. The number of soctiont under th title of "Army" is two hundred and sixty eight Of these ainety-two were da rived directly from appropriation acts, including act appropriating for th support ol tb Army, sundry civil, con sular and diplomatic, Military Acade my, and fortifications, Thus it ap- pears tbat more than one-third of tbe general aud permanent provision of law regarding uae Army were enaoieu upon appropriation billt prior to 1874. But. in fact, th proportion was much mora than one hair, because many other sections were derived from aot consolidating th ttatulet In relation to tha Army, irataed lrom time to time, beginning at an early day in oar legis lation, which statutes were derived in great part from provisions attached to previous appropriation bills, l nese Crrmanent and- general provision of w derived frooa appropriation bills were passed npoa such in tbe years 1832,1840,1844,1846, 1851, 1852, 1853, 1856, 1857,1858, 1B59, I860, 1861, 1862, mii loci lopd or?9 ion tana 1fi7A 1DOJ, lOOtf, 1000,1001,1000, tOMB, .u,v, 1872. and 1873. and the greater part of such legislation on appropriation bills ooBcernmt- tb Army wa naeiea daring tb ml of th Republican party. Second. I assert that this doclrlb I (attained by precedent as old a tbe time of Charles I. Tb difflciltiea, a I have already said, between ths Bra Vara larUaaMM 0J kia reign and the King grew out of efforts on his part to obtain supplies tor the war lor recovering tbe palatinate lrom Spain without concessions of any part oi what he regarded as bit preroga tives, and on th part of the Commona to make tb supplies the conditions of concessions in lavor ol civil liberty. Now I take from English history tbo following: The Commons House of Parliament in tb year 1511 (third year of Honry Ylli of sanguinary memory) lacked several aot ot attainder aa "amend ments" to simple bills. These, of course, were leveled at certain Lords. The Commons never knew any limitation in that regard except such as they de liberately passed upon in tbeir own right and these assertions ot tbe peti tion of right were a mere enforcement of their ancient privileges. Charles I. levied ship-money because rarnament . included in "money bifia tbe guarantee - ot political right. Everybody knows tbat tho resistance of the King was not against the asso ciation of tne items. The puerility of separation or tba Items was not thought of even by a Stuart I It wa great cardinal principles upon which tbe Commons stood, and It was tboso the King resisted. He was compelled to yield, and bis subsequent fatuity lost him bis bead. William III., soon after bis acces sion, made large grants to his favor ites. These were under the law, and made with the consent of the council. In Parliament they were doemed ex orbitant and prejudicial to the publio good. Hence tb House of Lord made the mater a subject ol mild official re buke by resolution in the year 1700, but tbe Commons went further and tacked to a "money bill" (for the sup port of the army and navy) an amendment called tb "resumption act," whicb annulled all the grants, knowing at the lime tbat tome ol tbem had been told by the grantees. The Lords resitted long ; tbe King at first resolved to stand by them, but he final ly yielded, and the "money bill" pass ed with tho unpalatable amendment let the Uommons ol that day were particularly scrupulous In regard to "amendments" and precedents. In the year 1702 tbe Commona passed an act ot attainder against tho Pretender (just then recognized by Louis XIV.) when was war imminent, arising out ot tbe Spanish succession. The I.ords put on an "amondment" including the name of the Pretender' mother, (Mary of bate, widow ot James 11., who bod re cently died after declaring Mary as re gent,) but tbo Uommons would not al low it, declaring that any amendment was improper on a bill of such import ance. 1 hey were reminded of prece dent! in the time ot Henry VI if., but the Commons would not yield. As tbo right ot tbe Uommons to put amendments on "money bills" was un questionable, the Lords would also ex eroise tbeir right! so a short time be fore tbe death ot the King tbe .Lords Araofeee', Nerer ta pat. a money biff with aclauee tacked that wat fereign to Ike body of tka kill. This Is the case to which th Sena tor from Massachusetts Mr. Hoar re ferred in his argument of tb 20th of March, in reference to legislation on appropriation bills. Hut see tbe re sult Only a tew months earlier for eignors had boon disqualified by act of f arliament lrom holding high omoe. William III. died ; Anne succeeded, and in the same year, 1702, the Tory Commons voted her aa annual allow ance ol 100,000, tbat is, tacking to the bill an "amondment" providing for tho retention of Prince George of Den mark, (the Queen's husband,) in his omoe Lord Admiral and Generalissmo of tbe torces, the aotual commander being Marlborough. Tb Lords they wero Tories too made a stand, but in the end gave way, notwithstanding their solemn "resolvo" whtcn was hardly six months old, and that seems to bave been th last attempt to limit tbe Commons in shaping bills. Air. UUAtl. rt in the sonator irom Pennsylvania etato what he means by the Commons of England making an amendment to a money bill?. Mr. WALLACE. Tbey placed upon that bill a provision that was foreign to the body ol tbe bill ana which had nothing Whatever to do with it it was an amendment relating to succes sion on a money bill far th support of tb Army and Navy. Tb Lords re sisted it for a time, but finally gave way. This is in fact the law of tbo realm to-day. The Commons are ab solutely masters of every subject of tbis kind, in their oaaraoier as tne representatives of the poopl they have entorccd tbis and other groat rights at the expense even of the blood ol kings and the forfeiture of their thrones. The safety of tb oivil liberties of th peo ple la above all price. JSo leaser mo tive should causo or ever, has caused them to us this great power, uor should nor does any lesser on prompt us to use It now.' But it is asserted that this is revolu tionary and oooroiva. - Th first an swer to th argument upon this subjoct is tbat wa have no right to assume in regard to thia bill that any feature in this bill will meet disapproval any. here. Why should such an assertion bemads? Coercion is not asserted in the bill itself; it ia not asserted by th oommlttee ; and why should th legis lative branch of th Government, th immediate representative of tb peo ple and of the States, b charged with coercion and told that their measure are revolutionary ? Tbe practice or twnty years apon appropriation bills and tb precedents thai 1 nave civea aomomiraie idm una ia aot a revolutionary measure, but tbat the processes are constitutional methods and In accordance with pre cedent It at amid wa deny suppiMt lo coerce agreement with us. Ther it no such threat in thia bill. . W grant supplies, but we connect tb grant with a provision that th troops who ar t o supplied snail obey tba law mat wa enact. According 'ta thia. argument our sole bower is to vol snnpho aad to tax the people tor those supplies, but we are denied th power to say now tbe Army shall be used. W ar de niod any control as to what shall bo done with the money w vote, or if w seek to do o w are accused or boiag eoerc ana revolutionary. Tb ar gument ia that wa deay supplies and tbreaten Coercion. - . . - . i Sir, let a look at this sabieot . Con s-res bas lore branches, uacn one independent in It sphere. Each branch of Conrrem hat a aeg-ativ on the other, and that tact la a vital ntot in ta preservation of tb liberties mis people. Tb English tystem of sepa rate branches Is our system, and It ia vital In it that th Senate thall have a absolut negativ upon th vrowed. tag of tb Hon, and th Hons shall bar as abaoluW nagativ upon tha proceeding of la Senate, , But be cause th Senate refute to but a bill thst ha Wiatter In it thai the SebataJ. will aot agree) ta whan H stmrn ftoat th Uoom, aad rem i paa.iu because of that matter, i tbe Senate revolutionary ? Does that follow ? It is tbe plainest proposition in the world that this is a constitutional right and invaluable a a check. It cannot be dispensed with as a part of the govern- mental theory of tbi country that each House is to havo an absolute neg ative upon the other. And tho nega tive of the Executive is a check upon th legislative branch, limited by the two-third provision. The txercise by either House of it right to retuss to pass a bill because ot denied matter in the bill is the exer cise of a plain, clear, constitutional right Tbe txercise of tbis right by tbe Senate is by no means revolution. A 1'resident bat tbe right to veto a bill. It is by no means revolutionary that be should veto a bill ; yet be un dertakes by the exercise of his qualified negative to require ns to do wbat be wishes. That is the part of hi clear right ; it DelongB to him under consti tutional authority, and I would be tb last to attempt to take it away from bim. It is vital here as it is in the leg islative branch. But when the Execu tive vetoes a bill and wo pass the bill by two-thirds, we are practically cooro- ing the Executive. That is the inevi table conclusion, bnt this Is constitu tional coercion. The Executive, in pursuance of hi qualified negative given to him by th Constitulion, re turns us the bill with bis objections, and two-thirds of tbe legislative branch es pas the bill over hi veto. We are coercing tbe executive powor, but are we revolutionary ? Wo are exercising tbe legislative power of this Republic, and it is neither revolutionary nor co- oreive. But suppose the bill comes here and we have not the necessary two-thirds to pass it over bis veto, what follows? We undcrtako to pass the bill, we put it upon reconsideration in accordance with the Constitution and it fails for want of two-thirds, wbat then ? Are we lo be coerced in regard to our leg islative right ? Are we to say that we must pass the bill in tbe form no wishes because tbe Executivo has vetoed it? The right of non-action, the right to decline to act under such circumstances, is as much the right of tbis House and of t he other Uoute and of the two Houses acting in their legislative ca pacity aa it the right of the President to veto a bill. We may decline to act and go no further ; we need not initiate the legislation anew. If we could bt compelled to do this, then the independ ence of each branch and tho independ ence of the legislative powor it abso lutely gone, and yon have no longer a majority rule tor President, and the minority can coerce legislation and thus the minority becomo tbe majority, and with an unscrupulous Executive cohering the power of the minority patronage ana place yon have your Government revolutionized by with th minority usurping and controlling the power of the majority, in which, under our system, it is vested by the Constitution and the laws. This is the inevitable result There ia no such power anywhere. It belongs to the legislative bnujcla tw wuo u. to Jwelino to act When it doos decline to act, it is exercising a plain, clear, constitu tional right, and it must act, as most tb Executive act, in full view of its re sponsibilities lo the people. That is where tbe responsibility comes at last. The power to do this is with us, but wo must act in the view that it is ulti mately to be Judged of by the lost trib- nal in this country, the tribunal ol the people, and it we are not standing by doctrine and measure which the people will approve, if we are not main taining the rights and the liberties and th ancient freedom of thia people, tbey will not sustain us, and they ought not; but it; on tha contrary, we decline to act, in obedience to our clear constitutional right, in defense ot the rights and liberties and privileges of a froe people, they will sustain ns, and this Congress will write upon the bis tory ot this poople an ineffaceable rec ord that their representatives in the Forty-sixth Congress wore true to the liberties of th American people. Sir, each must be responsible lor iu conclusions and its actions, to tb peo- le tbomseivos, and each must act In 'nil view ol that ultimate tribunal. Tbe power of tbe legislative branch to raise armies ana vol supplies is to D oxer cisod as that legislative branch judges j wise, i bora is no power to control, to direct, or to coerce it If tbe Execu tive differs, his negative controls un less two thirds overrulo it. If not, the bill falls, but his negative does not com pel us lo act air, that mode of coercion never wo intended lo be used upon Ibe .legisla tive branch. There is nothing in the Constitution or in Ibo history of this people that can be construed to mean that the legislative branch shall aot at th dictation of th Executive; it is not found in our system anywhere, and it cannot be cited to deter us trom that which is a plain, clear duty. The independence or the legislative branch and the rights of tbe people are often to bo preserved best by this de fensive power of nonaclion. Tbe Sen ator from Maine read from Mr. Clay., Let mo read wbat he said In 1819, up on a qnestion ot constitutional inter pretation upon an Army-bill, an issue between tbe 1 resident aud bim as to wbat should be put upon that bill in regard to internal improvements. Mr. Trimble bad moved an amendment al lowing troop to be need to mk a road and appropriating money for that Durpoee. , This involved lb question of internal improvement. Mr. Clay, bo wa then speaker, when lb House waa in Committee of the Whole, aid tbi i !t ' Mr. Clay koped lb. I tkil Button would sat kt 'u.hHed oa. aad. ifiasiated oa, would not areralt The ebveet la vtow erae ta prmat tka atmpla, aa mlied propetiliaa whether Ihe Iteeatiee bea tha power le employ tbe ajoaey af the aoaatry ia eoeilraettog iwade I If eeeeoWled wilk Ike Bona- Beay propotod, (the amendment.) II weoiu mate tho tenet of tkeaommiltaaoo,airaal aa aba tnj. Bortaat aaettioB aroetaltd k Ibe motioa af Mr. Trimble. For tbol motioa, Mr. Clay laid, ka eaooet la tola. It woald deelere By a loraaal act tbat It waa ttmpeleat, hp la graate ef power, far ingre.t to aeiBortio each worse. Mr. uay rata ko tbwgbl Oougfoo. Bad Bees waanag IB It. da- op doleytor aa leua le legielele B BhU e aaieel. II wet proper to pate a bill aad preeent it ta the PratUeaL aad If ka roraeed to eaaMlaa av Ibe Mr. Cloy deelarad, ka kad aa keoitattoa aa avew laa he should bo ready la araoeod to boatlliUet wiik Ika Pteeidee aa Obit aotat, aud wllee.ld every epproprleuefl aaui Be oaneeao Ike petal That was in January, 1819. Anoth- er argument baa been made use of in regard to tha exarciae of tb negative ol tb rresidout, wbnb it teems to tat m without foundation : that it, tbat be bat the right to judge at all time and under all circumalanco or th Charac ter of the legislation that he shall veto. Where this power ta mm apon a pi u that he jade to be uaoonatitattonal, or it hasty, nwi, or improper legnv latton, than It I vary clear tUBA a baa this right, aad h ought to bav it. But when in the history of this Gov emment was he ever called upon to er did any President ever veto a repeal ing ttU? Whea, where, analer what arcmUnoaa, an tvtiat ooadiltoaj of affairs, did th PreauUotof th Vni- ted Stale over veto a Mil that repeal, ed a law whloh olothed bim with pow er and took it front the people f When and where did any President of the United State ever veto a bill to repeal a law that gave him control to send troops to the place ot election with tbe power to coerce the people and tak from them tholr right ? When and where ha the President aver ve toed a bill giving lb peopl ot this country any of their liberties, or re pealing a statute which took trom tbem their right ? There are none such, and tbe people will never sustain such aotioo. The Executive negative practically refers th question to th people, and to them we and he mutt appeal. Tbi power nover wa intended to be used to keep a yoke on tbe people or to de stroy a repealing atatula. Ordinarily the poople auatain vetoes. Why ? Be cause or the refusal by the Executive to accept power wrung trom th peo ple; but suppose you revere this and by your repealing statuto give to tb Executivo more power, which power is wrung trom the Stale and tb peo ple, then thore-oomes an entirely dif ferent question; and I tell Senators that wo can face tbe ultimate tribunal of the people in denying lujiplie to th Kxoculive power on a Bill which give back to them a great cardinal right. In such a case we will bav th old quostion of kingly prerogative against popular right : ana upon that Issue we can go to tha peopl witb perfect con fidence ana safety. But is it not a strange argument that the legislative power which controls the purse, and through that the sword, baa no right to say how troops are to be used ; that the legislative power is ' not to have any control over tbis sub ject ? It seem to me this is a very singular argument 1 be pane was given to the legislative powor to con trol the sword, and they go together, aud the right and th liberties of tbis peopl are to b taken care of by their immediate representative and th rep resentative of the State in this Cham ber as the legislative power of the country, and when an attempt ia mad to coerce them from an effort to restore to the people their plain, clear right, a new issue is mad up, and one that we can very well plac ourselves upon. air, in veto power never was in tended and never ha been used to de prive the people of fre elections or to strike down any other of the cardinal rights or a free people. When it is used for such a purpose we may witb implicit trust await th verdict of a betrayed and outraged people. If it be to such a result in such a cause the American people are invited, the legis lative majority in Congress will aid in writing upon the pages of our history a now ana startling proof of the proud dotermination of American freeman lo deleud and maintain their own system of free elections. Sir, we were never called to a plain er or more imperative duty, and we should bo faithless it we faltered in its fierformance. The restoration of the iberties of tho people, of the landmarks ot civil liberty ; the removal of tbe burdens that bave come to this people from the changed condition whicb tour years of oivil war brought upon them ; a restoration to them of tbe rights that that changed condition doprived them of, is our sole purpose in tbis bill. We bave no other. We should not bo true to tho people if we had any other. No department of thit Government baa the right to resist cur constitutional de mand for the repeal ot tbi menace to free government, which it is, as it stands upon tbe statute-book to-day. Sir, some writer has said our liberties aro traceable through one thousand years' of English and American history. Tbey are the possessions of those who ever advanoe, not by senseless clinging to the present, bnt by holding, repair ing, improving, grasping the good ot the present, remodeling the political fahrin when decay 1 prMent and im proving at every step of essential progress-Many of the best change of later times have been made in costing asid innovations, removing tbe debris tbat time and tyranny bave fastened upon the sturdy base, and in advancing by falling back upon original principles. The greatcharter, the petition of right, the bill of right, and tbe Declaration ot Independence contained nothing new in either. Tbey were but the re assertion of tbe old, the resuscitation of Ui right of tbe people.. In all f;rcat political struggles it is not new aws or new principles tbat prevail and give form, force, and coherence to the victorious party, bnt better redress of grievances, more faithful observance ol laws, and a restoration of th rights and privileges of tbe masses which by neglect or from oppression or mis rule have become lost, obscured, or donied. Tbis great right of free elec tions hat been menaced, obscured, and donied. ' The disputed section of tbis bill ia an effort by the legislative power of thia Congress to return to original principles. ' .... Tbis great right raenaood by these statutes, tba control of which never belonged to tbo Federal Government but always bos belonged to the people and the States, has been menaced, ob scured, and denied, and tbe disputed section in this bill is simply an effort by the legislative power of this Con gross to return to original principle; its purpose is to restore the military to strict subordination to the civil power, to permit a fro system of laws to be based again upon a free ballot every where, and to expunge from the statute book a menace to free institutions. "Baby, Comi Koani." A little child was takon once to a funeral of ono of his young companions. He had nevor seen a dead body bofore. He looked long and earnestly on the beautiful form of his little friend, at it lay, like apiece ot wax-work, or of polished marblo, In the dark colli n, with flowers all around it. He did not go to th graveyard. His mother took, bim borne, and let bun stand at tbe win dow where be coald see the funeral procession of bis play mat go by, He looked at it with fixed attention for awhile ; thon he turned to hi mother, and hi face all brightened up witb gladness, as be said: "Ub, mammal how beautiful It will be wben Jesus ays "Baby, com forth I" Tb little feilow was thinking, eo doubt, of what b bad beard about Josas manaing by the grave of II is frleni In Bethany, when He said, "Lazarus, com forth r" Tht dear child wa making th right -use of wbat tb Bibi teaches ns about Jesus and the resurrection. In th orning of th reswrrecUo Juu will peak in that way to all th dead children, and to all Hit peopl who died Believing in Him and it will, in deed, "be beautiful when tbey com forth." Dr. Artclim. Tb toune woman- who aaada bar- tell an object of curiosity la London by carrying about a Mexican beetle harnessed by a gold Chain la aotxxiy now. Tb bag crawled Inside her hind lo rest and was (revoked by ta antha- iastio greeting of on of tier impulslv mnas. Th Frwtoh pettautry act nat yet tired of shuffling about in . wooden shoes, and Franc produce about four millioa pair yearly :Tby atw ry economical and keep th feet dry. Th best at mad of maple, and, in pro vincial towaa, ladies often wear them. Tber waa an ingeniu amonnt of de votion Implied In ths remark of a lev tick BailboriaVtaa whan tfcemretaaf hi affection became acstatae over th beaaty of tb vnlng stai "Oh, do not--V not praise) U Itk tbatt". cried: "I cannot gat it tot oa."