•IMMIMIM••••••= 1 . ,11 • 1 • f f .rt Tril rM ° A. J :' ` C r , FOR iiEmbatter. ot . the Gieni-000ict between . • Demooracy and-Abolitieniine t ending in au War apon'4 , Andfeiv'36linedn. ' • . ~ • . In Oct ober, 1665, ;Johe,lN. .Forney, one of the foremost leadecu of the.R,epub!, h e an party wrote as follows; ",The decision of a majority of the pets pie of Connecticut against, negro suffl•agee is : a newt evf4ence that President John• son'*fixample. , and counsel on this, and the entire question of reconstruction, can net:kg .1,00-Artleatly:eustained , by_-thet , Ust• ion party. We cannot force this great innovation npon the South by Congres sional in;eiferefidei' ir( t vitius 6.004 that deep seate&prejudice conferring the right of suffrage, even up on the intelligent of the colored race, and while I believe itr the-mission of the Un ion party to labor to remove that preju dice, there are other duties more import ant to the , freeelinen theitiielvis, which c annot be postponed by the effort to die sipate, ,a feeling t hat ;hal eiitt d ft?r ) lett! turietk' ' "The Convention that nominated Mr. Lincoln and Mr. Johnson, refused to make a national teseof the question, and noth- ing but disaster has befallen our friends, whenever th,ey b ye epar t-ed4l:),, it II the States:* Letr'ifs dad attempting to force upon the Southern States what we are now once more taught we cannot, ev en with our better - tifOrmed colored peo ple, do ourselves at our oct n homes. A part from tye clear, itulitsrtittie proof that Cotritrttseh'as'no right to legislate up on the subject, is the proof that lite man-, emitted millions - of the South are totally unprepared for this'gretit TrancLise. - It is fur the good as well as for the interests of the whole country, that the Union par ty should stand &tally by -President John son in his policy of reconstruction." Such were the counsels of le-Yorney to the 13411441.1ati ftarty:rSde3i--4ere his confessions of the injustice, the wrong fuhtessoire utieenstitutiOnaiity of the at tempt of The North to force negro suf frage on the South. " Congress has no right to legislate upon the subject." No right according to the Constitution ; no legal, lawful right to meddle with the subject. Then what is the following c um-3.401n th4r.colkiieLcif. three months after the above admissions, Forney rays ,; • Tile passage of Judge Kelly's bill, striking out the word white from all laws !•-re•ieribint7 the qualifieationq of voters in the Distrie• ,of Columbia, devolves a sol emn duty upori every loyal citizen. I do not know a better time to meet thi.: issue than theept:eserit:ally to suppose that we could stave it off. He was a. otat4nait who. supposed that the great Union party voulthibt be'cAlled at last to meet the question of conferring civil rights upon the four million of slaves Te.seued by the rebellitart from their for mer masters. Are you ready for the is sue, my countrymen lie {Q 4 9 1 , 111 Thlittk stares:min 'the' face that John W. Forney, as wt 11 as ev ery other man who gives p the same coun sel, is teachiri,g 'the people'of the North that it is their solemn duty to uphold inemkterso) , Perigress„-bi conpmitthrg-per jury. dlbiela meArTher &eke§ idl diith that he will obey the Constitution of his eouilfry,'and Mr. Forney declares that " tit elittnif IS'ereat 'ard indisPutable ( - hat C u i;gress has no right to legislate ;trial the subject of negro suffrage." That "we cannot force this great innovation upon the South by Congressionaliuterfercrigq.", n 1 y' '