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SIXTHS trnsuraral ort PENNSYLVANIA: utiwescribed duty, ns melt ,as iong.es* tfiblikielfiffiake, IM:PeltOti to addreak you in:regard-to-the inestione involved in tile. se l tieral. eteetistins iiOW at' hand: lii did chating-thisldlity, Ire ihalispeak plainly, ana'cattlidlY'What we know to be truth, Itt,o4 4 ,lthiffsirO;;,therichest; (uD til lately) , the most favored land of - the' eorl4:here,i ; e4ore. the last; footprints of civilisation had betiqpianted ;' thia land Of all :ilio•Cihristian. nations of 'the world---the,, felt,tirit of war is now ra gitig,, Our proudmnd unexampled career of ingsPerity tut a nation has ;thus bedit rudely checked ; our industry,''thut is not devoted to. the purposes of tedeittructiie 'hitti`beftno.paralyzed pity fittiinciSf concerns have been thrown into uttercon fifition'ilud 'debasement; 'we have bend& forth , —:probablv forever—tn stagger ddr a load of debt greater, and under. tax.• ation` f ‘ tiore.,conerous; thhn that' of any other nation on the globe; confidence in tlitcatalfifity of 'Or institutions is every. *herd sadly'diminislied —in fine, gloomy forobodingsas 63 the future:Alarm ombar rassment mid distress have taken :be place of the happy peace, confidence, security, good order, cud contentment we so late. ly enjoyed. . Nor ,can hope End . a resting-place in contemplating the men who now control, our government and administer our laws; and it ' turns ..sickened and sadly away from.the audacity, arrogance and tyranny ii fads in high places, et'en in the very citadel of the nation.. Sciolists in govern ment.; "atheists in 'religion.; men who are free . loyers in one sphere, and free thieves in another; renegades in politics, and sena*** every well settled principle of public right, and private virtue, now away the..destinies of this Republic, and are crushing, out, the very life of American freedom. Fur three long, fearful years have the , best blood and sternest efforts of our peh pie been. freely .given in a civil war whiCh has no parallel in the history of the World., When this war co nenced, the Dente crat ie. party in the North, as such,was proa trate under recent defeat, which resulted, front its own unfortunate .divisions. But what . :7 grand and inspiring spectacle was present - 4On hearing the first thunder of rebellions, .arms Political' and partisan feelings, 'even in that hoar of party hu- I miliatioa; were all laid upon the altar of the country, and the sun of Heaven never shone upuu a people more united, rein lute and determined than "theise of the , Northern Statea at, the period we referto. Whatever might have . been the views ‘, of Northern Democracy in regard to the valises which ultimately 'engendered j this unhappy strife ; however much in I t their inmost souls they deplored. the mad - I and reckless 'career of abolitionism ; how- j ev.er deep was their detestation of the I course of those party leaders; who had bleu 4n• years sweeping' up all the low, hyking elements of _bigotry . ..and fitnati ctsm, and directing their vilest efforts- Oinitthe ri t ibis, interests, and . iu`stitu ticrua of the Sonthern ,peoplestill, the at tempt of a pertion of that people in conse-. qiterice,.te break Alois% the authority of the Constivirtion over . the whole country, and destroi,lhe Federal compact, was a criminal'act whielvcould not, be tolerated or . justified.' Ilia: amplest, remedies for the wrongs complained of were not only withon hope, but it band. Two millions of votershad ju4,reeorded their ballots in a general popular, election against Ab• rahata' Lincoln andthe Oats million who supported him in his polig,',TherC was besides v a Democratic. majority in one, if , ntiit,',hcith branches •of Congress. Which ' would render him powerless•to . inflict any pbknianeet - Mil en the country ., secession, claithed by the South as.thelemedy for their grieranoes', iilapolitieelherviy, COndenined sph. with -.l:ii,tlA4it: breath, and by taiMy Oigers ; otOur . itbleat- statesmen in all.seia-, tionabf the • Call the Constittitionf a compact, if von will—as does Jefferson! iii,thaleseltatL,'ilis . of .'9 =but it is a coin, ' ' aet,;! , :ftsOilereige States,. made, with each other as such, hating.no-right,Of secession: ".,og},4 l ll l 4W4',.fir censtit 00 in ,the bond.u• . Thertitorr thus formed was in-its nature; 4144' iii.tbiiiS-P.OrPetuel. Secession, then; in•view-alhejetnpact; 'siniply rrretw,' antl' the breakitio% fife--Union; oijr , fatbere htlueathed tht; Was undeti, ail , Stbe' .efrcunialanws we• have detailed; giV:P:7lli.e;Abi44ool: , OthOt; I . ConAitorazicius. and-consequences •which• mind;.cr.owd . ey . = eryjukeLligentland. patriotic mind, net on-° It - ltreqsol:4l , lo iv.'AP lit ' best hopesCf could .troti then— caratoky nolci--pd Nair= mu. consent IC •sorYt, aebirmillict to. Ow le? nrrd: 'Ott sw,c, Pk , i 0 :+caicely- tin eti*tioti; 3relyihg oTicfortfie" . * - 44041-it{, - , eNIC4f Abralikaga.ieeehl, Yieldext,lkiei their' rielaylantkpie!,t,eojnio"rtVW : hupei*" 4 4 somewititaalitudgm?' his' 'oath of office 'qvitriuptio'rt tio - n - OfttinTfiireZ SfitekTio her - nieVoZ"' Theo iehintillibiatif Adthieskokalinib !tit /dote frem unit of.khr 1 Oki' thitte Ito Eivilitidi*ity;'id hiterfre" with' We, 4441'6166h '1,!" 14;144 1 U Med Wheta''Itf.LIENTVIIIAVE NO' LAWIIIi ljT iffof - Ii0S4!),: AN II AlrE' NO' 'WOLIN T& rq .' e r teat mitt tan kablogeri ilia - imidet'at'iilid' tifilitar atid' "barn' neverl'i•Cbitilied • thr<tn. I p r o* reitettite"these spntrrneutai and in Adinif OnlY press n ntteil thin"' tilt! MO4i'VOnnitgirn'titottlenetl4*ni .ePat i ti lease is tiusceptible, that the4: o PdC.otOner ati'd 'se'Curi of tiO'ihdthaii " be arty wiii - endiii i tle u tea by th e no* "neinnifig• Ministration: all' tflO 'Fort!. , teotiion"irtaliV#instst4ntly whit - the Obrt: oiliiittOrf anctthilliwic te#o , 6ll will eClie4f glirti to till dro Stated:when !acridity denuildled, Pot wGat'et+ef'paS~e-mot t<s>;het 'One 'Section AA' Thep; :repaatedopu6lic ple4gralirgiught roinntarilY tbp standard: rapiOtin, be half the ,UniOn, han4re„LlP and l thßuPlliwris of as brave men as Cverbreasted a bakoo l et. T t he armies thus Titled . lere, precip,i tateci on t C . varicil t lorthiles of victory apd i 'defeat i l arid war, ,c 1 v it *dr — always thy, roost btOociy at all butnad strifes—ha; eyei !ince i kaged ov e r some of the ,faiieSt portiondOf thst unhappy re: Won. -• . • • . • . But the, loi r kg.eherished . echemes ' of fan: : aticisni tOr the eitingnislinient; of Afridaiii servit'iide cOuld s net be given up. Nix mat ter if massauhu r etts, ty :.seventy years since, dig, kelt 81avOtlio, th,e, • Peopi? the, Southern„,s,itt,es, under the guaranl tees,Of a Constitution, trtiihti Massachusetts site helped 'to assashusetts meddlers, hotii , in Congress and out Ot it, ,xipw, ,determin. ed, since they conid not,," rail," tieV would,rfner" the, seal eromklip,bend,"' The gallant "three, thousand clergYrnan, of New ,Eogialur' =- 70#90. 1 iii,.Hts.9tPle.f.P( the Prince of Peice!)—rallieci ; rto,o min, in the nevi. crusade of lanatit:iam, and wrOught,,sideliy side, with 401S i :who htie for 'yearti been in the daily habit of, sneering at .th a e ,Christitm's fait h,",ridicol: ing,the tan's 13161 e, and blasphem ingthe gAri § Li4 ! ;'il GOd • 0f..0 4 0i 4 1 11 P . 4;.f4C3t . .. 'ries dent, wete irorti.Ad',uppol;as . ht vanity and desire'orie.eleriiop, by, the extreme and radi?al.topmbers. of !Ws, gar ty, and die ernascipatiop ai!d.r.ortO•seauoil measures wer e foreeti iippa hira,a 9 4o4Acre a part of his policy 'in the conduct, of the war:' - 'll`tftitreffarlirtirrfereffillrbrp..l t put forth in Congress was defeated. The hostility of the abolition leaders to serf dom 'lbi-ple•Souttirnto ploy! Alps of the lamented' boopisi—" was stronger than their 6delity , ti:. the'Constitution." They' Aishiptm! 'Of Union would draw after its an inevita. ble t war hunt reetiong, nod fnally, through these -aunt ter extinctiou OssYvry tit, 411 theSoia em States; and s , it would seem, they, ach ed on this terrible belief lookois r ttte second : On, thg-lfikhApy l o( Cfekeipbet,i 113t10„; Senagirr - Gritteitilin i t of Kentucky, the bosomfriend of Henry 1 Clay • in Ws:life-time, intioduami into.the i Senate;' of Os I.Tnited ' States a seriss of i resoluiions,Mi a tasis.Of settlement be tween th'e - two sections of the Union.— The,, secession ,of South , Carolina took i plow bit.the 4!.y Of the its'ine MOntl4.l l lla.: her? uOlitbert e k , A4Vo 0.0 4 rctired filin 1 their pfd-es. ' We are 'gins paiircularin, referenbe'td this Eitibjlet, because our 15 - 1 pon'otditlito4b tliptr centrid ic4nott t -1 tee to 4 his 'B . tat,lhave'intrOclntiealit.'itti a late .add re s s to you; and there is a spa: cious effort made iti that address - to' turit at(ide f,t e r'lltplftepulgicipitillftt judll , r . c„,,," tfieposiAch iiiir,hi 111 - 4 dittos klf 86nato Ciitleifokni'lkoYo'iiillon had ati tened ofin - iitaripaisyc:;-..-‘r-.C...: - ...;"= The offered ,compromise , would, -in terMe;.Pivq.tietilod'ruorellisti three tifrake". of all our territorial domainligainst stave rrllirrpar-alpAsving Ahat-4:11 ,13 . 5itIck tindeYt46 - govTsionit Ortit4' b r. fi nance Or, 1187; More reeeiitly'knoviririt'sihe '‘'W.l)-.1 mot Prßyjsyr ; .- 7 .18,e,,vieg4A0 rs , egi pi a i ng 300,000 Giles subject. Its Whittvellaws ' those who settled noon it riiight"etifabliiib i l for akertitage4 tibtmeiliraß4l46,4 Midi State. : : All, the ether features of the pro posed_ compromise were, nothing AnticLr,e -alßintancea oft — 1 itt-41ikliteli4taiiergt am - Ipm visions of tte,,,Constitution sa,.r.alliibtf,` the falitlailti e4llo,ol6344lbUthili /that slavery should pot. ,be, stkolitibrd, iti i -thel District 4 coluinbinis„ 'saw asilepsted 7 ; inlftiiifiliatkitd Viiiininiitie titeniSiOf4 whie k kl 44.1.'iRigtitif°06". 1 1 eral'grinfern neat. iit• -'.' ' • ► the 1 - 4 h dej Of ,T,fillOthlgtOitril stor'4laote, the'td find . VrittiliOgliioo.o4oo4l4: strmang.vat S . O the tneterielprtrhii? . 11 a tkaifilyr they eueenitfel .thtl: bran Alt arivdv a. emigg upen ,11,358ia1e reedryppp rtaktupgwer l and - 110VA; VA - VA '4IL was earrie4l3,ra vote of 21 1 .1104'0,1i1l Repub li9eArz,kfainitt aPignoqratie matizeff 404 . Fain the address of f,fin'Asifabliefful'etAl o lnifinfi-d a lirritiWitMaofeffiligOlf .-.X9141,1,4 a =kitNoa, Atte, - propofiefit amopd a , raentf and when, with a cool degretrof *setalnge9rdh*SidaeViA4ointirnes, Wpm. en to ten the feepielbiretemrybit. 0:814`. *o AtefrlP.sl4.ollibOrThlittanAf e t• ~ftPktrk amendmentyit Qiould •defoted, -.Andrthe Crittenchk 3 MP7oatillelunaigblr rinte,hcen,,ttiked;up, f ittdleartied by 4heilant.n.Atujnrity.l, Oath.' PalnerOn*Atlitt ipaniArtb) ;bit* AtafttiOttbe,4ol prod of bill 'Rtrkfihitre in OnthrenOlllv berWoll l 4 , tint.lhath kOpt ut;44 , WieW)ltlttilinnOnt.haltiPlaelf.YOted:l ;/[or thistßAT )olark)timentimenti, an_d samwdcy. 'move jo t , Reconsiderationi,atal or. ;he - 1t5,, 5 ,, - 0.10,,, ; 14 , p Orss SfrafFl9l-1-Pql7lllB*, ffr),t .1.1101.4.„rg rec9P4 Iv* Att, hid ` 9; 4 814'1 e r?, l .oY9 , oo4lrsini#M§l, l 4ol),:iit, 0, 04, pit 4 gqnmEoßks.,,Yifil am n 614 / 1 4t.tu'INefArP t h ,o-*emli tin.; , a i ry. fl+ .r.PpPion,the raptoe lire!' and ,ie featy47-;tntry.,or.:ltlie, Southern, Sunatorti 111 9'3 1 4 F44,011'00 tront44. Senate in the interim, theft I ,States bavm seceded:from the Union. • ' , • IItIPPI E FAL i.ChTer947.clol°, ,sped the A dress, tinCis well as 'did - Sena: torf Canteroil; Who i guitaibed the adiendlititt,; that it requited twislthirds vote t i giVedeitalityr to' the' Crittenden' conipettnitie.; ; lsie knOWs,'iod, that every ' publi6dr"Vote, ineluding. own, jh the'Sknate,•W'tial giittil against 'the Meas ure, ih &eat,' front' fitst-to•rast. knows ' ftirtbet', that' the Republican . - Senatore re fused Seontbr BiglCr's pripositioir tdatib mit this qltelitiou Co' 'lt Vote'ortliti 'people as itkilietive or Cotigreasc Be knows al so that •Me. Clemen', sae Virginia, on the 1 Ith of Pebrintry; before that' State adop- ' ted secession, 'endeavored, iii the House of Reptesentatices - lit Washington, to obl I %aids' liirtiilar iirratig , ,ement in that boroy to gest' tbe lut4tloi3 of compromise before the Oetiple. and it' AS voted down by 112 Republiettia ttg,airait'Bo Demoollis— , every Republican' 'in " the'' knead 'voting in [hi negative: 'They would not—they did not dare' idltr•out the people, the .liipti tnintisouree!cf pOwer, oh this qti estion '' • At tlie hitatd of furnishing ,unnecessa- ' ryproliftr Oda point, we beg AttentiOn to the elver and' explicit evidence of Seiiator Pugh; A eoteMporary of the 'author of the Address, ih the . ' Senitizt of the United . States.. ; the cotirse of lifg,speeCh in the Senate iii'Mareh, 1861•,"be . kaYs ' ' " The• Crittenden' ,ColnPFOntise.has,locen endorsed by.i a de op r , ,imanimomtvoteof the Legialatitre of KeatuCkv. It has been en dorsed • by. , the nobleold I,:lorbmori wealth of. •V t irgicia . .. , It has been. petitioned for byl.tt-Argelt number of the e lec torsiof the United. Stooge. that any , proposition that tvocevenibesfore Congress. I believe . 4 n. My. heart. •to-thiy than it, woul&carry, an loverWhehaiug ttajority, of the people. of my ;Statioye,. air, of nearly. very State in ,the Union.. Before. thet.Senators from .the 'State of ..Misaissippi .1011 this chamber,- I beard. °woe thent.:who assutnes at least to be President of the Southern Confeder-• acy, propose- to accept -it, and maintain the Union, if „ahatoroposition cdtild re ceive. the eoteito•uudit to receive from - the other side of the chamber. Therefore, ' all of ortd propositianNal I of your amend • meets, knowing, es I do, and • knowing that, the ltistorian will write it down anY tiolo bctcrpli)P first of January, a two thiFf*Fo;p, for the Crittenden resolutions in this ch amber., would,,have,saved every Slate igthe Vnitm,rzcepS. South Carolina, Georgia would '6 here by her represent* . fives, and , Lopkian,a 7 -those tWQ great States- 4 least, would have tiro. ken the What.- at, cif. Secession."-- . .„ Glcibe,'poge 1,306. Upon the same , point, on the same day, the clarion voice of the patriot Douglas bilre testimotiymsfollow#,; i . , , " The Senator , (Ptigh) has ' said that if t the 'Crittenden proposition- could' have been passelitaily in the-session', it' wonlrl have saved all the States except South Car olina, I-firmly teliAve_ it word& While thy Crittenden ,proposition Was-not in, ad cordance with my i cherished views, la vowed, t iff -cag4Fness, Arld • :reAdieess to ac ever.ll, i n, l oralPf t 9 fave, theNilion, if we, 6(1414 u911 , e, .. uP, P 4 1 0..il 4441,0:infirm the. Sanatoels ~ O POlivation. that ' 4 Davis bilusfl/fr , Fnqil CR OP C9llunjtiee of Thir.i te,en,,wpa reatitnt,, ail , times to, coinproult t ise on the Crittenden proposition., I will go .11f therßmjsay : that Mr, Too inlis,was oleo'. —67ute pays . 60,1: . . ' ~' Hovn prepoatetid a a itt:-Ilil sr dnY' then; t h hi attempt :oft I one , lir tlfei laiiii,iig 'armors hi' - that •eitetri fit I- A rittiia: . t bile 1;1 'Stifle con. , science, and to seek tcf feittiti his'tri-tdon.L t , piraforeiffitini , theiretibirdifid.veifiict , cif his- , tory;•and the deservelituutinevitable con.. detonation. -id ~ U., liiititiyeff peopTe I ' The , conthilling: is piri tie of thei Republican par. tr., ineveutl itmeant' t peemetmek , ari: ,a`ought peace from first to last, at any time or in.' any form, save urrthe-one drear, and ' devilish 014Alltibli t ri tertiitii Nigel . Open ode , Ituntsbitie ) au' :abaf thtll4lnst Ortilaok semi -barbarians, under the specious isN=. tense" of rtt edianill As 1114 iltiitealiti liv iits 1 only to :tarr'sibillihri9 of thtigei ponirxerenL l tures! aiiiy fronttlieirblitimiktiPttntnio t taraz.: tiviollagginoss , itilittpeiteAolllnd-staii)* - tioo, tilbetraii&ditatb,l6,llll,itilitispittifila ctinetsim, levti,-;1 ~ d.ri, , pi,:t:Ll ~ 14! rit ) " President Lincoln has butreiktritlfidek: , eltiiiiipiPvt*Nl4flnlisfieriligiliehialltllis--; ten to ilkor-VrOpciAtitireifor ilkittbearllit..4 I does u no‘glnoludbAtildrkftlitaii thillgilihin; , pOlWitaitabilig Wet,/ ptaitteblifiltiftiVid. id prohibitions of all right ma the paliMl t tGetiend4hatiniment: shtan>tti intef bitnaelfplwitlilthemath , 4Eflea , fresit upoti his4s, , declareddia"had tegalaiP/A)andt 126.in/inane itadiartc , stadji it::: ft &rip Irv(' nzeistrito credit i ibwravhigs Of the! ahief advisers of t .thei:Prehideitti ri*as leasti:;tbosaWbo,..veett, itchAughteuee hip PHY - TISIPPPRrs.-49e0P,'lku-d-410iP 9 , —141P,u:17.14°114 beef; F 114104 such rd id progregs theie ° the bat , M 6f finitiatt peifeetion tnit near at intud..lPßut, alas' i, when, are: look. hopefully:forAhe.WealattgaletWbieb to !' bear us onward in,4Bo;tme, ,wa iteaF ;51 7 , :thing but the loud breath', ofthi) tempest; see nothing all around ne s 'lit ltbey and troubled - - sea,' - evtiry - Where sparkling tvith stirkingAzilite inadifelis ; and - we , aro tempted . to , ask, dam this ia• dae4 beT . , ,?' " The wind 4 , ind the elorl,ll:l4l . ll23§tde ,wortlA" These mei? ,urc ; mistaken, and, Med, or, are traitors of the'deep'est dye; degervin a traitor's iderkeeV•dtioni: 'Phis equralit'y of the blank , and' white !races which they are seeking to establish io this eoutitr.y is. absurcand ; idle drecm,. which ,a,prief Contrast of their progress and peculiari ties must dispel *rim' every thoughtful mind: •-• , • , // A little more -than twa Centuries siniti, when Om. fathers first.. planted a • , few germs of oar race at scattered points a. long •the North Arnekican .coast, the whole number of that race in the old : world did not ez,ceed gia millions. Eng land,'Sciitland and Wales then numbered fewer inhabitants than New York, Penn sylvania and Ohio do! now. Mark, the progress : In North America at this time (includinga wholesome Celtio infus ion,) there are at least thirty millious,and in the whole: world (confessing there also the same infusion,) from eighty to ninety millions of people, substantially Anglo-6 Saxon in their origin: .:We ore every where thus displacing:-,.the more sluggish race*Or - 4.WMillg and at this Current rate of Increase, la-one hundred' and, fifty years from this time, will run up' to - eight hundred' millions of ' human beings_all speaking the same lan- guage,rejoieiug- in the same high intellect tual culture, ?it'd exhibiting the name in herent; and inalienable characteristics, I 'Ott - the 'Other hand, the Afridan rflce `has never, anywhere; kivett any proof of its . capacity ibr. a 'Bell-sustained civilith tivn.i Since the 'sun first• shone on that continent, it has' 'remained in the same statepf mental gloom. cruel,,brutal, .-voluptuoes, and indolent by, nature, the African ,has never advanc 'ed a single step beyond his own. savage original. Slavery frit !per ; been c!nci in this hour ifOn4nues to ht 4 pormal conditio'n, iltiou.4bota every clime he can eall'his min! And yet they have had as many opport unities of ititproVviieiit at the inhabitance or of - Europe, 'Along: the silotes of the Metliterratieart waSonteconcentrat ed the Literature and 'Science of the world. Carthage, the rival of imperial Home in all the arts of commerce and civilization,' existed for many years on the African border. The garacen4, the most. polished race of their time, founded :and maintain ed for centuries a contiguous empire. Still,: for all this, the African has continu ed to prowl on through his long night of. barbarism ;and thus, in all: ;human prP bability, he will contiqueforever. Tell us not that his want of progress in civiliza tion is the result,of long established bond age. So, Or e4nturies,was ouc own race bound to the earth undor various Modifi: cations or predial vassalage. But the white soul expanded, and tnonnted aboVe all its burthens and tratamels, and finally,. in this country, reached the fall fruition of reptib!icib freedotric We grant this mental inferiority of the , Afrittati-;--(we forbear, in the spirit of sobriety, and. • physical vontemplatien. or contrast,) does norgiVe . a dominant race the right to ccitii7loWfriir&-hii.-own. be nighted land tO.; foreign ;bondage,: - .even under, the, iormit of ,. a perninuse from, , African master. But, this naturill inferior ity must be considered by.thastat.esp?an in framing laws, and, adopting , 'Conetitun tiOnsfor human government. In Penn. sylvania we have always afPrmed this in feriority in our fundamental" aws ; and the same hasheen done in almost- all the free Statesot tho Union; generally ezelndi in r ,v.the African from the right of suffrage:.l This . neeessity-of . duly regarding the htvr ofraoes, is thus forcibly corrimented-apon by Lamartine (aiseholarand et , statesman; I always in: diver largest in arecenttwork CI • ' 4, Tbe moral' bava traveled ( the. more aniroohvinthld that races of imam form abeE &env seiret of Men Midi manners; •, iMao n eapabl e of edneation as ph iloioph ant The . .ittilutmee. - .of • GoVeinment and •lavis•barlesa , poWer, radically,;tban.ii• supposed; over)the ntannemand instinetii oflury people; ' , Vbilaithe-printitive. con. stitutiowand -blood of tbe•raaa haste aiM waYsibbia inftuoriesi!and•manifest .tnem4 selves thousands of leant !: afterwards: in. t he , Phylicat formation , gad ihabits of, &liar. titular family or't ri bee , Haul tin , man reflonia. in/fivers and streamain theivasslocain;of humanity; .bat lta:•;matora mingtiv•bat sitoriy..-siimetimestbernover minglevand iVethergelngairi; likes tholtbodo frocalbee, Lak‘otiOenivaii 10103tsviiirtestetspir OlbrAidriSields, linitobdtvfeal abp of itiongitirtVealtStineprAfav stream itiggiuittretiffitikgtel*tt Auron4 they - keeitli(OWt Thew' %het succeed.v.but - (Aber falleJsitem:Akey SUiVetogilinstitbill.alitalr.44mi l epo#l9ll4 nolny 400.4er4LaP:413 , oel3 l llllo' JIMA , WhichloWinntielptlea9 9. 1 4,10,9 Y frequenfrdiaceetnonlOY,hyrrhecumie„toi, ideasCurfirlnng.outtcaesr9efeD44-9.!1; part of our °poolroom iiktke,yguOqii,,fir, our,prefeal pols vul atrupple. let no man , be ti'lrerfilt issue fit ihe'presenttmtilitent'betWeettjthe ,t*o partial/ Tammy_ 4311 g 'WC t ha ir 4onie. al 41g.; k f, -net #1 8 ,. 1 * PuP/P 4 :00 4 ‘ lohigit;i B . 4 Qw-Cidu.6 . 211 4 .! ' tartaW:thyrii,lernnt bigettir .r.,:rf tits, - th e Aghts' tif thei-Ststell +an& mockingly trampled Willer foirt;lOr this,. both uoperioue.and . 4tuporialoiliott l / 2 ; sack aa would send to,,tbe ir block. any. monarch in. gnglatid, haste Veen issued by the Pre sideit,:andiiiitigM to be ' nfOrced; forth's,' 'Secruturr Seward?s , boasti to-Lord-Lyons , - I can touclemy office b'ell at any mom ent, and order to be arrrited any citizen of this AbbstiP•46vbieictill an frequent ly realized l• " r. The ortent to. which itho Willing support-, ing the • Viesident are tb go Iry negro affiliation, Ands' a tied:wrath Wag trition hi the propOsitiotrusiike lit'Seere tory Ctuneron, ihit'first of the several' 45i , -. cupants of the plane of Secretary or War , wide President LincOltf.' 'Hem:lolly pro posedc, in his first' and 'last 'annual' coin munication; to'free; and then'tv artrt the whole black popnlation of the South, and turn them gr antatitheir white Masters in a wnri-Uf indiscriminate butchery I This. truly: iiifernal simgestion was not adopted by the President' When first proposed, but ' it has sinee been - teted upon in tibteli etAnces than one. We hilib'plitirkell - tlielakt at present' in'pothirfel le* • eitiiehs, `atith tyranny and' uturpatioth We now go further, and, solemnly asSert oar belief, that there is a' deliberate design to'change ilea:treater, if not the form of'oet governMent. the leading, papers in the support of the Adi ministration operily advticaFelt• tbbdifica don w h ich will' place'grea,ter 'powers in thelhands of the , Preisdent ; and if their advicesbonld be adopted by: the' people, in a short time the chains will'be riveted,land our liberties completely sub verted. The , Philadelphia Press ;lot long since remarked : , "Anohcx principh3 mast zertainly be embodied in par reorganized form of gov eruinent The men who sh.4pe the legiS: lation of this Country. When the waio is past mast remembertbat what wewant er and streoloh. The prpblem WiA be to combine the forms of Republican, 9oyern ment with the poyier§ 9 a Itoriarchical Goveraw,99A.:)T to • , j r zi r 40o.ut c tit saute time r , ny.:4 by ,coneeyt, we find in th e ,liforth American : " This war 'Mei' siteadi:eitkoirn ' die ab.' surdity of a - Gov'eenenetit - With • liniitedl pouters.; it has shown that the. pouter of every Government ought, to be and must be unlimited." Such doctrines as those would have met 1 with rebuke even at the hands of the elder Adams; bat theywere thenaturat preCur sors of the'" war poWet" which has been , made to override'she most explicit doc trines of the Constitution. The ivory wrongs, in fact, complained of by; 'oar fathers, and enumerated'in thek declara tion against the English -monarch, have been revived upon their' tons. This Ad-. ministration has t Wilfully vidlsted its own oath-bound pledges,'and sought ~' pretests of isinovafian upon the established principles of . Mei Government ;" it ;has fostered 'a ";spiritof encroaehritsni which; tends to con. solar:le all the departments' of she Govern. most. in: one, and thusereater, 'Waterer She formamtay , be, a •real despotism." • h has rendered , 'lithe military superila. !o the civil power." It; hat , euperseded in areign of lawlessforeelbe. security ,prescribed ;by law against teizere , and , imprisonment " without due process o('' la.w." It has verily " created a Multiitulitif new Oftices to harass ourpeoflir,siiid eat out their substance2x l illyinft'iinsidttituktonscrip tion law, ; it has distributed ;its agents among , the ~ people,. baeked, by bayonets, and. clothed ; with. ,discretionary ;powers over the,, liberties, Mutt, the livesof our, citizens. • /it "Itas,quartered large armies of trueps, ! amongst, , us:',.. It , has imposeil taxes o,uma wilheutourconsent. „ Finally,. its.cbesen ..and purchased , ad vooates are now el aultiroltsfer astrouger,Goyeremln; I that, ‘! our, cilarterkmay,;l;us , taken away, our most upluatile; laws obolisho,japd the ; powers Of. OPS , GOvUrittliels t- 4aturra -filo au -11)P1041V! • ghelle,i . me , fiebelit, ~ Pie wv 1 eifj;eo.so*,e , pikof them fdatareo fliflyiex,, hibit.e4.4,tbeol 4itropger, m Governent,,;', which•O r ur,furef'uthersv , OPpea ling trio tbit„ i l Supreme Judge of the world," eigkf i raT P.gcir f1ed554 4 4,., - • ijTPF , 9 a j u1?;,0,... 8 .0C14 , !' ,grr-Air .. , : 94T, tae , lf',P l . l ll?- r' er ,:: N 0. . i:sl:7_.'.l"l , ii.. -, V; '3ii: .r.:1: i rWyerNIOWT. - 8 -a k g 1 1,4 fttit e ! t lff 46, 0 041 o ,l.lrE g MelL e ?ffti troqiii h ;t, °,. ii iliT4'% l The mountain Of de ivhic ~RS;lilli, Ma ; .I.Fif,P,9 i fWl T,PP,9o 9 k s fi 11),AR, 1. , ' t 9,4 ll fi!A ii it A Aigg vitt.- 7)0 -,.:4 1 1k As, fairly counts . i is, Penditylvapter i t, share will be at leas one tent of 'the' w r ite! , . ; WOWS, rP - 13, — „migual in. i t Oirdii . ....'n dialiftibl , ' iiiiibadly :Mtitiat t 4i , ,a 141) VkilndisabliWeighttesttaii ''' 1 oat of . ours. Tbilto.444titic thessaidi u tri .111•0 ; D 5. ggregate of inte - • , nff, . and hence borgui_ the. a_of-thia- csnlipppii stvp4s -.WM.' • ' 9 C Llv e l l - 7 41 1 3 1 1 F 4 qt# 9 0T4 - r t heigfiteh Aar t '' zr *bleb an inexorableiirliff636lE4if Wahl tiqn:.siVezieTS,Oir47l4"Par deft itroTrafirker:pki4seed it atiAregried:ctherupiortaatien&VC earth:lo AtukyelftbtAgva of the day areincreaeing tins taration t emt, urging on aayatentufAraPn der the,p9tottelCo6lllloticitattn §hteon ditioa 4,05 1, f Afo,ool , Wiltr4rvi ainohnnger l pratT.l gruttygt g i Opt. ing* Ite7Maniind atar beahlei thhi; if the forcible boudagif• at the 86ntiketionhi4Attajlt( , wilonly/ he Ale, bring the .14 blow workingt men and • women of the fi North.intn . com, t ,„ petition-Mrth,e same , pOt r ika . of:labor with' the African they have bfektrired aria _ gifted to' bring: here; ittidlauft6ilifimilnigit" "- " r cr. r• • ..• The favored otpitalieto who has trionegt,•, to.lend,tp ,the -Adrninisylitinti, ; gets hif t .„ bondi, upon ivKich - there is fro taxation and tbus is increased she burdens Of sti r () laboring and rniddlC" . 4ssii,,, Ita,t• y4w 'berar.t,s) pi:m*10111s andib' cliol / trait. facitcOro tO . ,thel tßidr‘ 'grtithfa" . ooasideration hoir rui'e 6113130' sobietfiiiig for the correction ofiliese It )13 tist be pita fel Ici w z ci tizen s, the only.. hopethai r minservatiVe !Med can haVe or• saving tlie cOtintry frointinpendinganiay and ultimate ruin, is by uniting with the! Deineeratie party—the drily party -now lett that is truly national in. its character and conservative in its aims; the only-party the country that , has over been able to govern fcrr•any length of time; tot& •satisfaction.Of the:people at large. , This party has , now presented, for the Presidency,. and Vice PreAdency, two Men of the Most linspotted lives and 'unblerii ished reputaiions--every • tray unassailed, and unassailable; except by the corrupt; and mercenary creatures in the pay and,, promise of the-existiug Administration. In regard to GEORGE B. , we shall not pause here to write his Moto ry. ThaS, is already' engraved on the hearts and consbiences of a grateful peo ple, We feel confident, also, that his eh- . ility, integrity and independence, th`e.man 1y firmness he has ajways exhibited; and especially,and above all; - his herein-devo tion in the darkest hours to the true pail eiples of therconstitation„Will draw 'around him tiO*;• the nation's cofifidelice. • This' conadenee f reposed in such hands, would' never be betrayed. . , die stands at this moment, as be has 41... stood, wholly aloof !rein • ict4in.. kle is allied' by no ties or contracts with mercenary : adventurers in political life. tie seeks not• the office for which he :has • been named 1, but, has all along 'held 4 the • pctitseless,,nor of his way," free from the embrinissments which trammel active and ambitious candidate for office. Even if defeaishouldfall to his lot 'in This con- ' test, (which we cannot believe,) -he will he , Consoled with , the couscieusnebs of having implored, no man's aid; pledged iu ad vande, no places that would' be in his gift, if elected; and that those wlni had espou. sect his cause !even from 'the beginning, aothd from sympathy with a'bravc, permit-- • cqed, and patriotic man.; acted freak • principle and hive of conntry, seeping no reward or' futur'e favors, No one who ' bas been named for the:.PresideacEdesires it less!; no One, ceriainft has courtedit less, and tbis is an additional reason why he should be, and will be, preferred by the thoughtful and!upright. The varnished reports of rivals it 1 wand; the suppressed and distortedfacte of a partis an committee of Congfer ; the ta consnt jealousy and malignant otipcisi.:' tion nt every steii of those wile gated' his success and dreaded Idb irp."- It:amity, • have , failed ; in -*sting his- military , reputation.' 'lntelligent men everyWherei in eV err land, have read the liltels upon this aocompliahed soldier. maly. ticitb,a sickening; sense.of their injustice anotVentilitY._ . in tbiSC4llllloy, they have. penetratedthe hearts of our. soldiery and' : thepeople at -large, only Ito kindle !lentil broader and: brighter:game of devotlint theitintended victim I, and the.world, tire , long, wilt Witness ;with Approbation,- thy reword:OW/ they, will mete, out ~itlist tigpal b,enefaetorm, • The eminent statesotagi who has nominated for the second place, on mutt ticket, has long beemeonspicuous in the legislative of :the Govern - Meta. Remembering his , years, few' tannin our,, coanry, have•ever readied higher.posib, thin in , therespect,:and confidence ofTtlisr, public., •No an an in 'the present Vongremi , phsaesses todi greater .eateetL those , gills: , of oritel Auld:wow plis hititrotic of staXeei; , matishiKtluttlampl a jastifyithaividerpop. , tilarity,adfiefacens with which heisisvesy4 Where regardditial thioseotionof 4,he .17141: lirestmiTabtimilliidatei.iensphalidallyzba4l ong to theft:lOW umr3Tdithincieimtry.ii These lirratiOnscaftress l erly, nte , IPEO , 6Bt,'`oft ' uthilelo d ibl4 l 4o= 7 t~frOW.* Eitifidf-'"TfiP AtilelSktetWiifti Afi'VtAbslST , r i,.w C2Cfr: caoncargitr im 70178111 P A f, REM
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers