THE RIVET OF I SOLDIERS TO VOTE. THE NEW JERSEY COPPERHEADS AGAINST IT. SPEECH OF HON• P. C. BRINK IN FAVOR OF IT. The - bill to, provide for authorizing the soldiers of New Jersey to vote was de kited in the Legislature by a strict party vote, an the Democrats voting against it and all the Republicans in favor of it. The following able speech by a true Union man, Hon. P. C. Brink, delivered in the House of Assembly, on Wed nesday last, will be read with interest. • Ms. SITAR= : I rise to second the motion of The gentlemanfrom Burlington (Mr. Iricki; and as I advocate tae adoption of the minority report, I desire to approach this great question for so .1 re gard it) of allowing the soldier to vote. 1 would do it in an unimpassioned manner. You and I, Zr; Speaker, are interested in it; each gentleman somprising this honor' , ble boc y is interested, with the thousands of our constituency throughout the State, as shewn by the 25, 000 names who have petitioned at our hands the passage of a bill extending the right of suffrage to the soldier. We cannot, if we would, close our eyes to the fact that tai are Interested. I therefore propose to discuss this question, calmly and dispassionately. There are periods in tt.e history of a nation, when from its centre to its circumference, in every de • partment and class of society, from the poor man's cot to the mansion of the rich, the high and the low, the learned and the unlearned, the young and the old, questions arise which agitate all alike; and that man is not wise who attempts to hedge up ' the way, as he may have his personal objections, and thus endeavor to prevent the free and full ex pression of sentiment upon a subject around which so much interest centres. If such a course, by the opponents of a measure, can be carried through in 'Europe, it cannot in this country, of Bibles, schools, and the teeming pre's, tutted by speech so free and. utrameled, as frequently to run into licentious- ness. There is one question which has been agitating The public mind in every porticn of our great Northern States, including the Middle and Bor der, for the last three years--and that is, the right of the soldier to vote. The principal objection which has been given is, Its alleged unconstitutionality and their special pleading and combat against imaginary difficul ties which have been made for the occasion. I shall Simply reply to the former by saying that the At torney-General of the State (who is the legal ad viser in all questions which arise as to the constitu tionality of any measure), on this quest -Lon, has decided that it is perfectly constitutional. And here our responsibility ends, as any further gime tions should be left for the courts to decide; and With this single remark—that gentlemen cannot hide themeeiv,es behind the flimsy ipse digit of such as ate unable to give en opinion upon a much sim pler questidn than this—l leave this part of the subject and proceed to the main question, as I urge the adoption of the minority report, which is very full and complete and the reasoning conclusive. We have the legal opinion of the constitutional adviser of the State of New Jersey upon this ques tion. I shall therefore proceed to argue the ques tion in the following order: Rid. It is but even-handed justtce to the men who have gone out from their homes to protect us. who have remained behind with our friends, andhave known but little of the sorrows and hardships borne by our noble citizen soldiers. And shall we say to our proportion of the million of soldiers who are thus engaged, ~y ou may as volunteers, or must as conscripts, fight, but you shall not help to make the laws," and so shape the policy of the nation, you have thus far, under God's good providence, saved—by the perils of an hundred battle•felds I think a majority in this chamber will hardly dare deny the soldier what they and their friends by thousands demand at their hands. 2d. It is their right while they fight for their coun try to save its very being, if, during the progress of the conflict, grave and important questions arise, which in their moral effect agitate the country to an unparalleled degree, and are to produce a great moral as well as physical revolution, that their will shall be made known at the ballot box. Certainly they have a right to participate in the great moral combat, even to a greater extent than we who have remained at home. Some of these questions come -under the head of the Emancipation Policy—the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus, the employ ployment of colored soldiers and sailors, the Con tacation acts, the National Currency, &c.,&c. And who shall dare to say they shall not have the privi lege and 'shall not be allowed to vote—either to sustain these acts, or to blot them out—and also to Sustain the men and measures brought forward, or to send them back from whence - they came, and put others in their places? Ishall only have time to speak of some of these' measure;; and in order to bring them fairly before this body, in making up my argument I shall have to look into the causes which brought out these great questions, and the necessity which required these measures to be put into operation. And while I take a hasty glance at the past, I , shall endeavor to be as brief as the circumstances will warrant. I adopt the oft rep eatea theory, that but for the division of sentiment among ns in the north, we should have crushed out this rebellion more than twelvemonths ago,w hen the hundreds of thousands of our citizen soldiers would have returned home, and this question never have come before as. I desire to review the course of events since the advert into power of the present administration as we have seen, and marked their course, and now that the smoke is lifted off many of its moral as Well as physical battle fields, or, as we have left ifs more immediate excitements. and are not now an the midst of conflicting elements, we are able in an unpassioneci manner to approach the question, not as bitter partisans, but as the Representatives Of an old and honored State of the original thirteen, whose soil has been enriched by the b: ood of hon ored martyrs in revolutionary days—Princeton, Monmouth, Trenton, Red Bank, where was obtained the Independence sought and suffered for, and thus became part of the Great Republic, one among the family of nations and began our march of prosperity, which has made us the wonder of the World,and for the preservation of which we are now engaged, in a struggle as unparalleleci4s has been our prosperity, and success,even so far in the con flict. 1 say, as the honored represenynives of such a State, though small territorially, yet in all the elements of prosperity, added to our revolu tionary fame, we are great, and occupy a proud place in the national galaxy. So much by way of parenthesis. Ist. In this order, comes that much abused, and slandered man, Abraham Lincoln, who in Novem ber, 1660, was constitutionally elected to the high andresponeible position of President of the United States of America. This c fat, of his elevation in a perfectly cronsti tutional, and therefore legitimate. manne, has not been called into question, for a single mo- Ment, even by the insurgents now in arms. It has never been alleged that fraud was used, or that violence prevented the honest expression of the voter at the ballot box, when the several can didates for the office were before the sovereign peo ple of the United States for their suffrages. We, therefore, leave this and come to the main. point, and ask our citizen soldiers to aid us in de ciding questions which are viewed so differently. 'Why is, and has our honored President been made the mark, not only - for rebels and insurgents to " hurl their poisoned shafts at Why has the en deavor been made to lower him in the eyes• - 41 , the other Governments of the world and even in our very midst, by our own fellow. citizens? why has. the very language, borrowed from the - vilest rebel sources, *been used with such evident gusto and pleasure, if not for the purpose of in . juring him and his advisers at the - very threshold of. his and their labors, when the glory-of our beloved country appeared to be de - parting from us, and & tlchabod' written upon the • : pillars of our boasted Temple of Liberty; and as a - Nation We about to become a ttby-word—ahissing . —and. reproach" among the nations with whom welled but recently stood up proudest and fore most? aek - why was thds? I almost wish that for consistency sake, and for the credit of our poor, Weak, erring _humanity, there were reasons for this; but there.are none; not a good legitimate rea ' eon can be brought forward, and none have been found bold and bad enough, except when in their own midst, to argue the question. Everything said has been simply denunciatory of this, that or the other act, without proposing any other plan that was within the range of possibility or practi- Acability. I shall only repeat what has gone into history, but this becomes necessary in the elucidation of this subject, and I shall therefore crave ho indul ' .gence of this honorable body through you, Speaker, as I hastily revert to the few plain factS containedtherein. Within a few days, say in December, succeeding 10 . the previous month of November, when the ' Presidential contest was decided, after Mr Lin"- toln was announced as President elect of the United States, South, Carolina passed an ordinance of. Secession, followed by other States, and these by other treasonable acts, even.weeks before his .. inauguration, and while the political party was yet in power who were in sympathy with the spi sit of Secession. While a small garrison of our. ID one of the lot tresses of the United States were suffering for food. and an unarmed merchant anan laden with food approached, she, was fired into by another fort that had been already seized by the insurgents, and the Star of the West re ' tuned without having accomplished its mission of mercy—this vessel having been loaded and sent out not by Mr. Lincoln, but by President pa shanan. Days rolled shortly by—fear and appro.- beside° was written upon every face, growing out e this and tit hundreds of other Initiatory acts, 'upon the past t the insurgents. A financial Nude ." THE DAILY. IDI EVFNING ULLE Item place and its terrible ploughshar had 'fa e marked deep and long furrows into the weal. h of the eorrtmercial and manufacturtng interes,s of our lhnd, aid mnny beantlfnl snpers.ructures that stoodihe storms of all the ordinary and preceding. •commercial panics, tottered and tell, and, the labor and toil of a general. n was gone In _an hiar, and the hapless Eufferers and thoir thornis of de-. pendents wanted bread. Oh! the unutterable oaf ferings of the fall, and winter, aud- spring, and summer of 1680 and 1661 The time drew near for the President elect to enter upon his duties, by taking upon him the awful oath of office at, this most momentous period in the history of, the nation. Before proceeding further, 1 would ask each man composing this honorable body to lay for a short season, , every feeling but that of man for man, and ponder upon and enter into sympa thy with this man,Abraham Lincoln. Who, ot ail the honored ones, from George Washingchn down, that have occupied the Presidential chair, ever knew or felt a tithe of the alternations of hope and fear that roust have ffilest the breast of this man 1 Never in the world's history, as far as we have any record, was a man called upon to fill such a position in the governmei. t of a great nation as this, the chosen servant of the American people, was about to assume. He left his Western home on his way to the city of Washington. and in his various addresses to toe thousands that greeted him and bade him Goa speed. all his utterances were those ox a concilia tory character, utterly disclaiming all intention of interfering with the "peculiar institution'' of American Slavery, and pledging himself tea', so far as his acts were concerned, nothing upon hie part should be done to impair the rights of the South in their slave property; this was repeated and reiterated again and again and again. He arrives in Philadelphia and proceeds on hi, way to Harrisburg. On the following mid day the intelligence flashes over the wires from the ex treme North to the farthest South, and from the Atlantic to the Western wilds, that the Preinenl elect of the United. States, white on his way b. Washington, as he neared the territory when' Slavery held its sway, had proceeded by a, Melt: train from the capital of the State of Pennsylvania to the capital of the' United States,disgui,ed in a military cloak and Scotch cap hat for'? - Why has he changed his manner of travel l It was not because time was so precious, as It was yet tw,, weeks before the 9th of March. Why this singuta: and undignified mode of travel 'I While other stains in our country's history, brought on by bad men; were deep, no pieviou, crime equaled this, which, So far as intention cool,: make it, was an act of assassination of the Pre. i dent elect of the United States, in the. first city ii, the region devoted to Slavery. The night trip a-.i taken that this crime might not be added to tile catalogue of crimes with which the • , Thisbari,ic of Slavery" bad cursed our country. •Thr the active vigilance of the honored Winfield Scot, this deed was not consummated. All honor TO bi name and patriotism, and may it be embalmed in the hearts of the people to the latest days of ta- Republic. The day for the inauguration of _the Presiden , finally arrived—his Inaugural address is given the nation. Re there strongly disclaims all Intel, tion of interfering with the eculiar instlt uT len. ' • Be aroma the quettion in ins own straigt. t-forersr.! manner, he pleat a with the insurgents our Beeches them as an elder brother, as a symptiL log Sadler, not to bring ruin on themselves .Tec. their children. bays move slowly on—treason belches ffrth its venom—reports mite upon the wings of ever wind et warlike preparations Ilpou l the part of e insurgents. The murning of var 13th of April - comes with its accustoms.' beatry, but by mid-day the telegraph wire informs we worla that war has commenced and Fort Sumter. occupied by Major Anderson and his starving gar rison of ehree-score men, has bees fatiteked 7,000 rebels, and, alter a resistance of 36 hours the flag of our nationality is trailed In the dart. while the rebel hordes raise a shout of victory, far the onthern heart has been fired." and that they humiliate the mudsills of the North. Tilt:. was followed within a week by the murder of our citizen soldiers, while passing through the large.: city within the limits of slavery, on their way to the protection of the Capital of the 'United States; and the streets of Baltimore, are stained with lb, blood of the martyrs of liberty, to this infernal re bellion; next In order, the dock-yards. 'ships, awl ship-houses of the Navy Yard at Norfolk are flames, and $5,11,0,000 of property destroyed in an hour. When the shout from rebeldom again goes up, and there is great joy in the cities of South. Here let me pause and ask—and I wi-h the soldiers engaged in fighting to answer at the ballot box what was to be done, in this emergency by for Executive of the United State, that was not dons and as I follow him from his home, as I listen to his words of faith and hope, as he approaches Ca termination of his journey; as I hear him pleadin; whenever he can obtain the public' ear, until ht. own life is threatened by assassin beaus of conspirators—after that immediate danger passed, he continues to write and importune the leaders of this rebellion not to "rash as the un thinking horse into battle" until he addresses tor nation in Dia inaugural. and again in that paper avoiding every word that could be construed into a threat, he comes before the nation, not as a sec tional partisan ' but as the President of the Unita,. States—as the President of all the pccptc—l agat repeat, what could he de that he did not? Igo fuitter—l say it with great reverence, what conk: an angel of light, sent from above on an errand of mercy to the rebellions, have done that was lest undone] I ink the soldier this question; how can I get an answer but through his regresentativel Waat there was left for Abraham Lincoln to do, but ca.li for citizen soldiers to defend the national Capital from rebel hordesl—and the facts have gone into history that this, was only accomplished after great labor and toil. If less had been done, We should not have beenoccupying our places, in our several capitals. with plenty around ns and our Statesrepresented in the national capitol at Wasu ington, for rebel hordes would have filled is streets, and the middle and northern Sts es doubly broken into fragments. Representitives of the soldier do you doubt it] Disaster for a time attended our arms upon land and sea.. Conspirators were in our midst. Th.. army and navy furnished many. They were found remaining in the Halls of Congress for over twelve months after the war broke out. The must secret places furnished e)es and ears to discover the plans of our Government. Everywhere was there a whispering gallery -re -echoi g S ate secret., un tit toe great heart of the nation sunk within it as it iliund its plans frustrated, and kit and labor, blood and treasure wasted for naught. These were the dark days of the Republic. Plans were suggested an.l brought forward by the assembled wisdom of the nation. The rebels were called our erring brethren, and treated as such Soldiers, what do you think of thisi I ask your Representatives. Their hellish prejudices, even, were consulted, as they were virtually askedl what they wanted, and be:ought to return to their allegiance —e very thing was done—or left undone according to cir cumstances—that they might not be "alesnated," in the language of the remaining sympathiz,rs, still clinging to the loaves and fist es furnished by the general Government. Finally, the "(loads cation Act" is brought up for consideration, and wisely and carefully discussed—ahnist in whisper: —but delayed and looked upon with rear, lest our "Southern brethren" be thereby italeinated" from us, until the defeat of the armies under McClellan in that fatal Peninsular campaign, where the finest army perhaps ever witnessed in the world were driven back, and the whole cam paign a disgraceful failure, not because of the men but of - their leaders. Soldier, is this truth or a fable 7 In len days after the extent of the disaster was fully known, the Confiscation Act was passed by CoNgresaand became the law of the land. In that "act" It was made obligatory upon the Presl dent, after 'giving sixty days' notice, to confiscate the property or rebels, unless they returned to' their allegiance. The sixty days' notice was given by proclamation of the President. At the expira tion of the sixty days a further period of one hun dred days wasadded, expiring upon the first day of January, 1863; called the Emancipation Pro clamation," which has been the subject matter of so much abuse and small talk about the unconsti tutionality of the act of the President, although it is well known that he only carried out, the act of Congress as contained in the "Confiscation Act,' which embodied virtually, literally, emphatically, the "Act of Emancipation," and without which, except to a very limited extent, the "Confiscation Act" would have been a nuLity, and without any of the practical results commensurate with its importance at itat juncture. Is there a soldier doubts this 1 The emancipation of the working property of the rebels, not in its instantaneous re sults in furnishing them with personal liberty, but in its silent workings upon the thinking, reason ing powers of the humna chattel. Faith is one of the leading characteristics of the f t a n i ttr, t fao b aom iw e ce i t n od s g bf ate th h e e tisa things. toils b greate hl v ios id hp e eeal n dana c wfdi e onrb o htt things not :L a h, o o its t humans s t h e t Len r p e p ' t e o tstohh that-great n ta s : d l db s e v la o e en actedas by the highest Legislative body in the land, and orders thereby given to the highest Executive thereof; to proclaim liberty to the slave, and that thought working in the millions of brains. will soon put the physical man in motion. Its eine: is seen and feared by the so-styled owners of these brains, and more men are required to guard them. The men thus engaged cannot shoot down our sons and brothers and -fathers. This is a well-known fact to • soldiers. . If this were the only good, this Proclamation is of priceless value,and has already laved thousands of lives, doubtless. This, how ever, is but a tithe of its good. It has changed the whole sentiment of Christendom, by saying, that although we have "tried to save the Union with Slavery." we have now,determined to save the Union, "Without Slavery." These are but the lowest views to take of this great question. Its moral aspect is its coining glory. We-have comeat last to recognize -the right, and hasten to place our -selves right in the eye of the Omnipotent One, and appealing (I admit in our extremity) to the 'fudge of all the Earth, we wipe the foul 'blot from the other Wise fair escutcheon of our nation. Repre sentatives of the Soldier, if you are opposed to this, we wish to•know it.' Oh, that was a proud day for our land, when the . Ist of January, 1863, dawned upon us, with its glorious Proclama , ices, and we were no' longer a Diave nation, .and the Ring of Dahomey no longer Lad an ally in •he I nd of Wishington. 70% that dap ve stood b fof e. dm world and upfere Heaven, Buve we ever stop: ed and de itherately looked at oui selyee, as we v • Tr seen by other i.atioas in ital. (I want beer of die smaller's friend uere.) If we turned our ryes upon the coi_tia-mt of Eat ope; nowle re in that centre of every .hiu..; good as wsi l tin boo ' could we find a spot wiere st.i.ve foot tracked the soil • We have regarded Spain as a. sort of genii -civil-'. ]zed or bucaneering nation—and whyf Simply because of its indirect connection with heraaa slavery in some of its colonies; but no slave liv .d in Spain. We min to Russia, And, regarding the "GI eat Northern Fear" as a sort of semi-bar barian— why,but becitu,e of its serfdom? and even that was then giving way, to freedom of the serfs: Notwehetanding, serfdom, in its wqrst forms and darkest days, was..no more to be cohapared with the accursed system of American slavery, as it flourished with us. than the mildest apprentice ship to the cruelty of the Algerine pirates towards their (Animism prisoners, and for which they were severely chastised and this piracy ended. No spot on European soil was cursed with slavery. We continue our search for this "sum of all villain ies" end look into Turkey where the religion of the false Prophet is dominant; but the slavery of that laud is light compared with the "barbarism of slavery as it flourishes in the middle of the ineteenth Century, and in that land over which the Stars and Stripes float. The dark land of Egypt abolished slavery a quarter of a century before. So far as any knowledge we have goes,onte side of the continent of Africa, and a limited part of South America, -this traffic only is found where American slavery flourishes within the United States of America, aided and sustained by you and me; for I sustained it, and, before this war, as be tween Abolitionism and pro-Slavery, I was a pro slavery man. So strong were my sentiments is favor of State rights, and so fearful of infringing upon any of those rights as a Jerseyman, I took that very convenient ground assumed by so sissy before the outbreak of this rebellion, but held now by softie, of conservatism, and which,rightly in terpreted to=day, means disloyalty to our country. When, however, it became clear that Southern State rights meant African slavery, which, like Lanier s vision of the Ram., with great fury gash ing West, and North, and South,- and seeing that it had determined to "rule or roln," / then deter mined to wage against it a war of the bitterest has; tility, and` expect very soon to see the day dawn upon our noble country when its final death struggle and burial shall be an accomplished fact. So much by way of digression. Let us now look at some of the results - growing out of this much abused "Proclamation of Emus- eipation," and now 1 would consult with the re presentatives of the fighting man. It has been discussed by every print in the land, and bat rem new arguments can be used. Ido not propose to go over that ground. My strongest arguments are—let. That it produced such terrible consterna tion throughout every part of rebeldom, and the same cry was taken up by their sympathizers scattered through the North. This has satisfied me that if it is the "Pope's Bull against the Comet," the "Comet's tail Is decreasing cinch inf, length, and. the Comet itself will soon be among the things that were. Soldier, am I correct in my conclusions! It has produced each a revo lution in the sentiment at Europe that even the tebels are rapidly becoming abollitionists end pro roisieg the slaves freedom if 0.14 will Light, and agreeing to free their slaves 11 they can only obtain the 'countenance of Europe. Illey are adopting every devise and taxing their- brains far =as method, by which they can cliennsvent us in our glorious emancipation proclamation. I say owes, for it has become the property of the nation, and I glory in it. 'Witness the change that has taken place In Europe since the commencement of Letl3. Tne dangers that 11111111 threatened appear to have pal sed away, and who now apprehends a. foreign warupon the question of aiding the South ! If a war grows out of this, or kindred questions,tt will not he inatigurated•by aay Earopean power. The public sentiment of the whole Christian world is with as of the North and against that bog - us, mongrel, abortion of a government, the corner sums of which is slavery," in thii lan guage of the best mar. that rebeldom can pro duce, and that sane man, Alexander H. Stevens, of Georgia, who lodge t spins the spirit and act of Secession, until he wee forced into the rants, wad: ..The South has never asked anything at the hands of the North that has been reinsedthesa." I again regent, the sentiment of Christendom is with ne, and although heretofore the /corn could point to ns as as example in justification 'of every thing wicked and inAuswen, 'tow the lest may look at and emulate the "Model Republic," for it is now "The land of the free, and the home of the brave" —and that beautiful language does not convey a falsehood when uttered. I glory in the position we have taken among the nations of the earth; and the man who can say, "I am an American." bears a nobler title .than he who said, in ancient times, "I am aKr men citizen." A second reason would be, and this is AV:roar one, that those parts of the South, as fast as they are brought frOm under the rebel rule, unite with those called Abolitionists, and literally I .ont-lie rod-Herod" in the joy wino* they hail all the proclamations of the President, especially the Emancipation Proclamation. You have heard the the language of Gen. Gaunt. of Kansas. Again, read the proceedings of the Mary. land Legislature, and what they have de:welly doze —not talked about, simply. Look at the State of Maryland in its recent Emancipation aces. • Remember what has been done by Western Vir ginia Anon Eaat Tennessee comes up to join with her sister States. While Arkansas joins with the rest, and sings with Louisiana a song of freedom, as the smothered voice of North Carolina cries for help. Are we to wonder, when the poor inebriate, who has finally reformed and is no longer a slave to his burning appetite, having escaped from its power, looks upon the thing that produced degra dation,. ignominy, poverty and death. is it to be wondered that he scorns it, and would abolish it from the lama t And if he and his friends have such a loathing for this, how much more, as those of the South took upon fields of blood, towns and cities destroyed, %%mutat:id beggary wherever man is found, &hall they hate and acorn that terrible cause of all their woesl and why should they not The slave-owners of the South are only about four per cent. of its population, viz. 300.000 of the MO; and they 'do hate It, and all the powers of hell and earth combined, can no more save it than they can call back again to life the sleeptng scores of thousands of martyred dead that enrich the soil of a hundred battle-fields. I want the soldier's Tote on this que,tion, and shall men be found here battling, for what I—the cause of a meagre four per cent. of population, who have plunged the most beautiful land on God Almigh ty's earth in a war, which has made its fairest portion a vast Aceldarna, while the large ninety six per cent. of \White men are pleading and stretching out their hands for help, in addition to the 4,0(10,000 of hapless blacks, whose cries have came up into the ears of the "Lord of Sabaoth," who has heard their ere and came down in his providence to deliver them. Soldiers, have you any objection, I ask, through your representatives.l The puny arm of man can no more stop this on ward movement than it can pluck the sun from the heavens, or dethrone the Almighty. I regret '0 I end in the recent message of our Ex ecutive, the same sentiment, so utterly void of practicability when he says "yet wee does not be t see that ix the emancipation policy were abandon ed and a proclemation issued that tile sole objects of the war were the restoration of the unity of the nation. &c., halt a million of men would fly to arms and conscription be a thing of the past." I would We who does believe it I Not even the Governor hi la Bei ! - The Emancipation Proclamation abandoned! Without , tittering upon an arguMent, as CO its wis dom, or justiae, or policy, or right at this mo ncent. I ask how would you proceed to recall and senile on it, if it were deemed best to enter upon such a task. Perhaps our soldiers can - inform us. The Governor at:V ; atm present p sition of affairs is environs with difficulties, and nearly alt of them proceed from interpolating the emancipation policy in the conduct or the war—should not that - policy be abandoned ? W 144 the Governor and such as sympathize with him Indicate sonic practicable plan of abar.doning - it 1 It is true the President could issue a counter proclamation—am far as putting together wore, into sentences and sentences it to paragraphs—but what then? I may make a deed for a certain property in due form of law, with or without a real va.uable we aken ation other than e t 00 in hand to me paid; it is duty re' orded. I am induced atter a year or more to think I did wrong in thus deeding pro perty butt ow can that act now be recalled I I may issue the forms necessary to call attention of the now owner of the property to it. I think, hoWe ever, be would pay - but little attention to my insane efforts, anti pitying my Jolly pass on his way; but to resume. Who are to catch -and ;deliver back to the rebels the hundreds of thousands who have availed themselves of their liberty, as granted them by the highest Executive of the land, in a law Passed by the representatives ofihe people of the United States in Congress as 'se bled, after more than a year of delloeration, 'an two years of disaster to our arms, in so many conflicts. Soldiers, are you willing to enter upon - the task? How and where are they to be found? Many thousands of them have enlisted in the mili tary and naval service of the United States and are engaged in putting down this rebellion, in the place of our sons, and brothers, and fathers. Shall you and I, Mr. Speaker, change places with them, and disbanding them, break up our army in many places, and 'weaken it in others; send them back again to slavery, bondage and stripes, thus be coming a thousandfold worse than the barbarians of,eltrica, who only reduce to slavery . prisoners taken in war, or stolen from their neighbors '1 They do not disband their fighting men and reduce them to slavery, at the instance - of a sentiment Whicb bas its birth in perdition. If I had a voiceof thunder that would sound in every ear in the land, I would say to such of my deluded teliow countrymen, as would listen— Away from such teachers—you.have followed them long enough.such have - led you on until your eyes ..00k upon battle fields, the like of which our world has neverseene you see such rich blood flowing, as never before in such quantities en riched battle fields ; you see an amount of desola tion in extent, as our world never witnessed, 'because you hale listened to and followed such IPIIILADEtpHt&, SA.TITRDAY. PRII, 9:_1864.-=-TRIPL E SIIEET. eaclungee My soldier Ira,. ad. do I not sneak ,teeth the words of truth and soberness 7 le ask tereenthyeur lepreseutetive. • The war was commenced by a few badenen in ebe Sonde aided be the few thousands of slave owners, eho bane involved a nation of 30,000,000 in i a b'oody Wee, fleo,ooo slavetiolders forcing in grau natty hundreds of thoneands ofehe poor white trash, as they call them, on the side of the rebel lion, until we, finding that they had a. reserve of 4. Melee; of servants (engaged in feeaing and pro viding for them. ) willing to aid Ins ii by so doing they -could aid themselves, we. accept them after we have Buffered much. and fled in so doing that we have struck the main artery of rebellion, at once a cry comes up from the friends of the rebels, in our very midst, (only a few of them, thank God) in our Legislative halls at Washington, our State Capitols. and joined by one or two of the Gover nors. of our Northern States. "Repeal this blow which has been struck at rebellion," when they and we know they might as well attempt to -repeal the deluge and call back Sodom and Gomorrah, with all their accursed tribes, or reduce to infancy and youth the hoary headed man of three-score and ten years ; it danuot be done, whether as a policy; wise or unwise, it cannot be done, and the end of the argument is with the millions of our lands who ray in thunder tones (at the dictum of the few remaining Southern sympathisers with rebellion in our midst,) it shall not be done. Soldiers, I want to know what you can say. Like all great movements which have been inau gurated, as we have learned our sad lessons during the past 3je years, take as Instances: ist. The employment of colored soldiers. A. great hae and cry was raised, particularly by rebel scrape- - ' thizers In our midst against this system; but where do we now find serious objections to hi all ac knowledge the wisdom of the movement; in that, it takes the place of so many white men, it has the most hearty support. 2d So with the 8300 com mutation bill; and 3d. So with the matchless system of finance as carried forward by the most consummate financier) of the present century. Salmon P. Chase, whose name and fame will live in coming generations; each satisfactory, because meeting our vets need; and dually, so with this matchless emancipation policy, it has passed through its terrible baptism of otepd, and public opinion has settled down in the great fact, that it has, as a measure, either of military necessity. or policy or both proved effectual, and this ends that chapter (so far as all are concerned, except the soldier, ) I want his vote on this question. I no not pretend that war in its mildest form is not to be deprecated, and entered .upon and contin ued as the only remaining remedy for greater evils. No foreign war could by any possibility equal this, our civil war, in its enormity and bitterness. But all this being forced upon us, we are to leave nothing undone to destroy and subdue everything that our enemy has, until he throws down his arms and begs for mercy. War means suffering and sorrow—it means wounds ' and blood—it means maimed men by thousands—i; means death and graves—it means widows and orphans—it means, in a word, sor row in all its forms; but to us it was the only road left to retain our nationality and freedom. No thing remained for us but to conquer or be conquered. And, although the - cry now comes up from the rebels in their extremity, "We only want to be let alone," yet this was not their cry at the first; but their purpose was to take in order. first —the natipnal capital, and so follow up, after SEiz tug all the forts, arsenals, dock yards, &c., of the United States, and all the proeerty in shops, mer chandle, r.stocks, money owned by or owing to Northern men continue their march northward until they subdued the whole North, and spread their cursed institution over the whole land, and Meng out slave ships at our northern ports en gage even our navy en extending the hell-origi nated system even in other laeds. And if James Buchanan or his like had been in power, the.bonst of Toombs might have been realized as he ealled over his slaves a. the foot of Bauker Hill Monu ment, for the plot had been thickerung for a gene ration. Bat by the blessing of the Almighty, through the instrumentality ot our honored Executive and our citizen soldiers—dare you refuse them a vote? —we think we are almost saved Many questions grow out of a straggle - like that In which we have been engager] for three eters; the dire necessities of which are many; one of thee. Is taiseman apation policy. Why any it the North who do not own &Wren or have any Interest In hem, should feel so . sensitive on - this subject, 1. have not yet been able to learn. It in iot usual for an enemy to fear that we shoe ld be fro much harassed by them, and lest in their zeal they should hurt us too much and curtail uur ability to injure them, by having in their midst, :catered arwng the people, certain men to occupy places in their de/iberetire bodies, and to employ the public press in endeavoring to embarrass alt the acts of bud: its are engaged in both tail and military oepartmena, to make the people, Iron whom they expect to obtain additional' men to tarry on the war, toss conj.:inter in the authorises, and soon as ter rain means have been dually adopted, that appear - to have all the elements of success, etfiese men, aided by some of the public journals of the land, raise a hue and cry throughout the dommions of this one enemy, that they inurt not pursue such a course, but the contrary. lest May (e) hurt us too much This, I think, is a novel mode ut procedure. Bat - eversing this picture, some among ter appear to be of ibis character, bet not oursoldi-rs: and 1 hear in this chamber, and other places, his farce is being enacted. 0 shame where is thy blush: 0 man where is thy 'emit:oat ' 1 again re peat the question, why all this sympathy for a meagre four per cent. ot Slave breer.ers ind Stare dealers, who have drawn in hundreds of tbuneands and plunged the nation in blood a nt dere; male widows and orphans; desolated whole. Settee, and blighted the beautiful, in the tatreet land upon which the sun . ever shone! We hear but little-sympathy upon the part of such for the suffering in Der maiet. These are not the Mtn who devote the,r lime and means and in- Iltienee to alleviate the e uttering. But, says the Inhebitant of another world, who ha. beard what appears so very improbable —how is this to be explained? What spirit of evil has taken possession of the liearts of such men as are bound, not with arms in their hands among the ranks of the rebel enemy, but in your very midst, and at times shouting in week tones, " Union," "Constitution, -, &c . and are tryine to prevent the soldier's vote! Why are they found we h yon, Why do they net join with those "who show their faith (in the cause) by their works" of blood? How do Sou reconcile these oppoeites? We have only to reply, "We .annot uneerstan I it. Per haps they think power will again counts from tte South, teed they will feed Its again with G cvern =lent pap." - But says the stranger: are tney numerous 7 Are they indetentes) ? Are they wealthy 1 Have they high social relst on-? Are they wtse mad learned 1 Have they the tentieen,.e of tile er ad and gnol 1 Who austral a them ? How have they r e tained so mach power as has sent some to tlengress ? some to the State Legtsiettu es etected °,.e or two to be the executives of Loyal States 1 In reply to these very . perti. nt (pastime: 'I heir number Was consid, re tie, rut it is becoming Ise. and lea', daily. They are now few—they a-e not as i Lein ennal as they - were A few Lave some means and some had sorrel position, but now trier are looked ' upon with denbt—they are not wise but very silly; they have been snetainea and retained by those who hesitated to believe that men could pursue so etrangewi course. They have used arguments meeting the prejudices and peculiarities ot the uu. fortunate among the hawrant and bed. They have pandered to the vitiated tastes of many and adopted the course learned trots their friends in ; rebeldem—they use the hallowed name of democ racy to carry out their plans. They have refused to acknowledge hundreds of good melt as Demo crats, but, as a term of reproach, call them aboli tionists They were comte_anded to do so at the beginning of the struggle ey their slave masters in the South, and oh! how faithful, they have been. • "There's a Divinity that shapes our ends rough hew them as. we may, "and the hand of that Divi nity is distinctly seen if we will but mark one among the hundreds which may net have been thought of. by many. I would ask, when, in the history of our country ?even before our re volution - - tionary struggle, were without a great statesman whose influence - was powerful, even, among such as in the main were not politically of the'satne faith 1 But for over two years after the commence ment of this struggle, we remained without the man, cc whom aid could lean. In this I think I see& the hand of Divinity. We are left without com promises, which would allow slavery to live, and again become a power in the land. . It Douglas had lived, doubtless, with his giant intellect, coupled with his vast influence, some measure might have been adopted which would have left -much of life in the accursed system of American Slavery, and, after all our struggles and bloodshed, a legacy would have been left to our children, bringing -to them another harvest of blood; but either, this ceases, its grave will be so deep. that Gabriel's trump cannot resurrect it for. ever. In the absence of ij such influence, centring in one or more great men, we wish to call in addi tioral conned and ask the men who have gone over . the bloody ground—Shall we have peace compromises, restoring the craw of our troubles,. and shall we continue tte few remaining men in power who axe its advocates? If at the ballot-box they say yes, I will help sustain them in their decision. lam willing to trust them. What say you Legislators of the State of New Jersey in General Assembly and Senate mete " Every landscape is surrounded by a dim, hazy belt in the distance, beyond which the eye cannot penetrate," is the beautiful language of one, to which I would add, faith then comes - in, for sight no longer aids. So in the great events of ours nation, sight is limited, if we have not one great moving. living, actuating principle governing us; but if, when clouds arise and storms continue for nanny days, we turn back, or waver from our course—all is jeopardized; faith in the great princi ple involved—faith in the great work in which we are engaged—faith in the great- God who governs our world— must be brought into exer cise; or, it everything is not lost, trench of trouble Will be the result e and the final .oblect only at tamed after a long journey through the wilderness before we reach the land of Proxriise. 'This faith we need. jest numbers have come to this faith, and now to many faith lends its realizing sense; the Shadows flee, the clouds disperse; the land of Promise breaks upon our view, We see a land literally abounding with milk and honey—blessed beyond:eh cater lands. We sees territory of for tility spreading from ocean to (Mean, and from the frigid north.to the torrniLgone. We see the re.to ration of all material, as well as moral good, wi out the black curse_ of Human &awry. I would contribute to its fullest accomplishment. Again, I ask, will you join with me, my associates. INDIA SHAWLS, INDIA. Saheb, INDIA SILKS; ELEGANT SILKS, ELEGANT ORGANDIES, ELEGANT GRENADINES. choice shawls of all kinds. Choice Dress Goode of all kinds. - Choice Fancy Goods. GEO, FRYER, 916 Chestnut Street 'writes the attention of the Ladies to his elegant stack of SPRING SHAWLS and OTHER GOODS selected with great care for best Oity trade. in L 9 lint -.Commission Paper Warehme. FARRELL, IRVING & 00. 510 MINOR STREET. Mannfacturers of ROLL WRAPPERS, DOUBLE and I-INGLE. MEDIUM; OAP and CROWN MANILLA, on band, or made to order. Highest price paid for gape in large or small quantities. mii243tno 1024 CHESTNUT ST. SPRING TRADE. E. M. NEEDLES Is now receiving, and offers for sale below present market rates, many novelties in LACE AND WHITE (}O®DS. He would call "special attention" to his assortment of over 20 efferent new fabrics and styles of White Goods, suitable for "Ladies• Bodies and Dresses." in stripes, plaids and egared,puffed and tucked inns line. _ . 100 pieces of figured and plain Buff and White Piques, bought before the recent ad vance. New invoices of Guipure and Thread Laces, Thread and Grenadine Veils, 'Edgings, Insertings, Flouncing.., Broad hemstitched IiANDICERGIIIEFS all Wien, good quality, from 25 cents up. 1024-- 013 Mi l l NUT STU r ET PAPER HANGINGS. JAMES C. FINN, FOY lorvaTqY OF THE FERN OF HOWELL MOTHERS. Wall Paper Decorations. SHOW BOOMS, 614 CHESTNUT STREET. The Sunbeam Stories, Containing the , charming, bright Stories of TRAP TO CATCH A SUNBEAM, CLOUD WITH SILVER LINING, HOUSE ON THE ROCK ONLY, OLD JOLLIFFE, MERRY Osiusrius, DREAM CHINTZ, STAR IN THE DESERT, &o. Six beautiful volzunes, Illustrated, s 2 50. W. P. HAZARD,: 1.214 Jo 3 t So nth - I.a,.TH Stet EDWARD P. KELLY. JOHN KELLY TAILORS, 612 CHESTNUT ST, LATE THIRD STREET AB. WALNUT, Hale now & complete assortment of SPRING GOODS. Including BLACK, COLORED and MIXED, PLAIN and FIGURED CLOTHS and CASSI. MERE& CHEVIOT and tHEPRERD PLAID LA:Sib:IEI3ES of all fashionable styles and shades. Terms Cash. Prices Moderate. SPRING, 1864. SPRING 1864. EDMUND YARD & Co., 617 CRESTINTT STREET, AND Gli JAYNE STREET, PHILADELPHIA. • Have now in store their _SPRING IMPORTATION OF Bilk and Fancy Dry Goods, Consisting of DRESS GOODS of ail kinds, Black and Fancy silks, Satins, Gloves, Mitts, Ribbon and Dress Trim- ALSO, White Goods, Linens, Embroiderie4 and Laces. A large and handsome assortment of Spring and Summer Shawls, BALMORAL SKIRTS, OF ALL GRADES, Which we offer to the trade at the lowest prices ja3o-3ml Ice Pitchers Castors and Plated Ware ; Of every description REPAIRED and BI PLATED, AT JARDEDPS, S. W. earner Tenth and Race Sts' ria2o-3m4 NEW MOURNING STORE. The 'undersigned would respectfully announoe that they are nog► receiving their SPRING AND SUMMER STOOK OF Noturning Goods, SUCH AS Bareges, Mozamblques, Crape Marais, Organdies, Ernanis, Poplins, a , Grenadines, Valencias, Ta'matinee, Lawns, °bailie, Mohairs, Florentine, Foulards, &c., ko. ALSO—SHAWLS, Shetland, Grenadine, Silk, Barege, Lace, Tissue, kc., kc. MANTLES of the newest styles. A splendid assortment of LIGHT SILKS always on hand. M. & A. MYERS & CO., fe27tilsw2m 926 CHESTNUT Street. CELEBRATED REEVE SPALE COAL. T. W. NEILL & CO., S. E. corner Broad and Callowhill Bts; ralM-3mll STEAMSHIP NORMAN, FROM BOSTON. oonsigneee of merchandise per above vessel will please send for their goods, now landed on wharf above Pine street. H'ENEAr innsou az 332 South Wharvee. apB-24 BEDDING. MATTRESSES, !FEATHERS, BLANKETS, iQUILTS, COMFORTABLE% IBED TICKING% And every other article in. the Bedding tinsinegg atl the lowest cash prices. AIMS BEILLEORN, fe26.3zai TENTH. BELOW AMOR 5T t _ _ GEITIBBURG- BATTLE FIELD MEMORIAL. AN APPEAL TO LOYAL PONSYLVANLIIM The 'GETTYSBURG BATTLE-YIELD ME. MORIAL ASSOCIATION" was institutedforthei purpose of securing, forever, the principal points upon the great battle-Held of the war, in the exact. condition in which they were left in July, 1863, when the rebel hordes of the invader Lan were driven back from the free soil of Pennsylvania, and when the gallant soldiers of Ginsimict. Ids.S.DS remained in possession of the field which they hail won by their vaior. The Association have already secured the purchase of Oxman= Rm., Cum.' S HILL, Gnertpris SPun. and' Roma) Top, with the entrenchments thrown np just upon the eve of the great conflict which was the turning point in the career of the rebellion. The field, with its redoubts, wonderful stone defences, its timber breast-vt orks, itsforest heights, with the trees torn by shells and countless bullets, and its long line. of earthworm defencea,'have all been preserved intact; and toss continue to preserve them, as to be a monument forever of the greatest of -American Battle-fields, is the object of- the formation of the Association. To enable a large number of persons to join in this patriotic work, the projectors of the plan placed the subscriptions at ten dollars each. The payment of this sum swats EACH suisscuricra A IcsNERS OP THE ASSOCIATION, AND PART OWNER OP THE( GLOB One FIELD OP GETTTSBURG. Wt at Loyal and Patriotic Citizen of Pennsylva nia would not gladly embrace the privilege of re cording his name upon this ro.l of honor, and of linking himself directly with the field where the lofty heroism of his countrymen vindicated the integrity of the Union and the principles of Free dom 1 And who would not desire to hand clown as a precious heir-loom to his children- the evidence oz his part in the good work, bearing, as the certi- Skate will, a view of the field which will rank in history with THICELNOPTI.D, MARATHON aged WA ICI Tzsa.oo There are tacisalaried °Masts in this Association, no: are there any objects in view in its creation other than those already mated. The grounds were purchased from their original owners at the exec price to be paid for them by the Association, and the points selected, and the prices to be paid for them, met the unqualified approval of a committee. of the HisTostioAm SOCIETY. Or PENNSYLVANIA, appointed for the purpose of visiting the field. The follewing are the names of the general offi cers of the Association, and of the Local Con. mittee in Philadelphia : OFFICERS. Hon. JOSEPH R. INGERSOLL, Chairman Pro. visional Oominittee. Rey. Dr. S. S. SCILIIIICKER, Vice Chairman. Rev. J. ZIEGLER, Vice Chairman. T. D.. 0 ARSON, Treasurer. D. McCONAUGHT, Secretary. LOCAL SORMITTEN —PHILADELPHIA. HENRY C. CASEY, Chairman. Edmund A. Souder, Henry C. Baird, Treasurer. Secretary,. S. A. Mercer, Prof. H. Coppee, N. B. Browne, Dr. D. Gilbert, J. G. Fell, George H. Boker, Charles E. Smith, James 1.. GlaghOrd, S. M. Felton, Ed wd_ W. Clark, W H. Ashiturst, Rev. E. W. Butter, Jay Cooke, Hon. William Strong, Chas. J• FerdlnAnd J. Droer, A. J. Drexel, Jno.A. McAllister, Oswald Thompson, Geo. W. Childs, George R. Ziegler, John IL Dohnert, J. B. Lipplieott, Marton. McMichael, Will am Bradford, W W. Harding, Aubrey H. Smith, Gibson Peacock, John W . . Forney. John 0 James, Solomon W. Roberts, Morton P. Henry, Geo. F Lee, Dan' 1 Dougherty. Persons who are desirous of aiding in this pa triotic work can send their subscriptions to either of the gentlemen named above, and they will re ceive their. Certificates of Stock. BY ORDER OF THE FAIT. ADELPMA 00X MITTEE. mh3 NOTICE OF REMOVAL, The undersigned would inform their friends and the public eenerally, that they have removedfrom their Old Stand, 517 ARCH street, to their SPLENDID NEW WAREROOMS, No, 912, ARCH STREET. Where they will continue the sale of . GAS FIXIVAES, CHANBEL LEES, COAL OIL BURNERS, are. .Having associated with ortr; house Dlr. C SABLES PAGE, (formerly the Principal Designer for Cor nelius le Baker.) we are now prepared to execute orders for Gas Fixtures of all grades and designs, from the plainest to the most massive and elaborate. VAN KIRK & CO,, few-Sand No. 9121 ARCH STREET. REMOVAL. • A. N. ATWOOD, FORMERLY OF No. 42 NORTH SECOND ST. 3 _ HAVING - REMOVED TO THE ELEGANT OREN AD COMMODIOUS ST - No. 45 South Second Street, Respectfully Invites the trade and the public V> ' call and examine his extensive stock of SUPERIOR MATRESSES, BEDDING AND , SPRING BED& Also. a choice assortment of all kinds of UPHOLSTERED AND-COTTAGE MM. mhi9-t! - SEYMOUR, FEARLESS Sc SANDS, IMPORTERS OP UNION CLOTHS, MELTONS, SUITABLE .80.8. CLOAKMAKERS AND • CLOTHIERS. • - 202 CHESTNUT ST., COME OP SECOND ARD AT 8- M URRAY STREET, NEW YOB& int.r2- LONDON BROWN STOUT } SCOTCH ALE, By the Cask or Dozen. ALBERT C. ROBERTS. DR A TNR IN FINE-G=3lo MA Oorner Eleventh and Vine Street