s"111' . , M • • e • ?•• • . • 1 . • ' : T I F HEM I ' A. , S 11,4 ti+4 A. s. GERRITSON; Proprietpr.i DEBT AND TAXATION. The great Question of the Near Future— The :National Debt Must be Paid and Taxation Reduced—Justice to the Peo ple as Well as the Bondholders—The Measure of Relief Proposed by Geo. H. Pendleton, of Ohio. Hon. George H. Pendleton, of Ohio, delivered a speech at Milwaukee, Wiscon sin, on November 2d, by invitation of the DeMocratic State Committee of that State, which deserves to be read and stud ied by every citizen, interested in the re moval of debt and taxation which now cripples the industry, the enterprise, and the labor of the country. We invite for this speech the calm consideration of the reader, no matter what his political pro clivities may be. It treats of subjects which will he the ever mastering question of public policy next year, which will en ter into the ensuing PresidenTial canvass, and exercise a controlling influence on its decision. The gravity and importance of the subject finds a tilting exponent in the gallant and patriotic Pendleton. He per forms a statesman's duty in the highest sense of the word, for be not only expoS es impending dangers to the country, btit with consumate wisdom, points out the means,by which they may he avoided.— Let no one, therefore, slightingly read what follows, but study and ponder upon it, until the mind grasps the subject in - all i s details: AMOUNT OF TAXATION AND THE EXTENT OF THE NATIONAL DEBT. The revenue of the federal governtnent in 1866 amounted to 8551 000 000. You can hardly realize what that vast amount is. When you undertake.to count it im agination almost stands abashed. It would have sufficed for the whole expense of the administration under General Jack son for more than '2O yearQ. That was a )ear of profound peace. The army had Leen disbanded ; the navy had been re duced ; the military expeditions had not only accomplished their purpose, but they 1,: o l lawn hronght to all end. And yet, m • rear 1366, the government of the Uni.e.l States realized from its revenue 11;0t 000 000 more than the kingdom of Gr. at Britain, and 6190 000 000 more than the emi ire ef France under Nr a pok. on. If that amount had bee n asse sse d upon the peple of the United States, it wou d have amounted, for every man, worn tn, and child in the country, to more thalt 811. 46 in gold. And yet in this same year thy taxation of Great Britian, nssel=sed in the same way, would have amounted to $10,96. The taxation of France would have amounted to $7 90, and the taxation of Austria to only $5 00. If that amount had been assessed upon all the taxable property, real and person al, in the United , , States, it would have amounted to $3 90 upon every hundred dollars, and if the taxation of Great Brit ain, in the same year, had been assessed in the saute way, it would have only amounted to nine-tenths of one per cent. The taxable property of Great Britain, real and personal, of every kind and de scription, amounts to 8'36 000 000 000. The taxable property of France amounts to $4O 000 000,000, whilst thg taxable property of the United States, of the same character, amounts to less than 815 000 000 000. The population of Great Britain, includ ing her colonies, amounts to 25.5 000 000 of people. The population of the United States amounts to less than 38 000 000 of people. The public debt of Great Britain amounts to $4 000.000 000, whilst the public debt of the United States amounts to 83 000 000 000. If - the public debt of the United States were assessed upon every man, woman, and child in the-c.oun• try—l mean the liquidated debt, which consists of somewhat More than *2 200- 000 000—it would be equivalent. to 874 a head, while the public debt of France, if assessed in like manner, would amount to 857; that of Austria to $4O, and that of Prussia to less than $l2 a head. The interest which the United 'States pays - for money is, as you know, six per cent. in gold, and:besides, an exemption from taxation, which amounts probably, to two per tent. more ; while, as you all know. the interest of Great Britoil is three per.cent., and that of France still legs. It has been stated lately, very tersely; and - very truly / that when the United States borrows a•thousand dollars it bor rows at a Atte which pay the lender in twenty years two thousand and seven hundred dollars, while the government of Great Britain, going to the'same market, borrows the • same amount of moneY, on terms which will'in_twenty years pay to; the lender one thousand seven hundred. dollars. The government of the United States, with its territory unexampled in richness, with its population unexampled in activity, ,and energy, pays a greater , raten_of ititeriii that? any, nation in Euktpe,,' et* inulndin_geffeto and worn out Tur key. The public debt of the United States, which-3 have . told your was; three billion dollars, hie been accumulated al! except eighirmillicm dollars within five, yeartt. Thelnblic debt of Great grit:a, amounting to-tour. billion dollars, bag ac cumulated during two hundred years- IS A , NAT/GBAL DEIITA NATIONAL BLESSING? A national debt, is the languaage of those who maintain the kingly govern cients4gurtope, is a blessing. I say, I tiattonal curse. it is the natural ally of a despotiC and consolidated Govern ' ment.. the natural enemy of change, and proareSS, and liberty. It loves des • potism. It lives by the coercion of the !many who labor tor . pay off their earnings to the few who do - not labor. Labor soon becomes restive and discontented land power becomes necessary to enforce prompt and regular payments, and thus the public creditorsclatnor for power in the government and are ready to aid in its execution; and thus a public debt at. tulles the creditors to the government and chains the tax payers to the creditors. Do we not hear, my friends, that the pub lic debt ought not to be paid tooNron ; that payment ought to be deferred 4 long as possible; that as the bonds outstand ing fall due they should be renewed that as future generations . will derive benefit from the deeds for which the debt was created, they should bear the burdens of the debt! .Gentlemen, Ido not believe any such doctnine. Ido not believe it is possible for the people of the United States, under the government which we have, to collect a revenue of $551 000- 000 for any great length of time, and yet preserve the honesty, kurity, and integri ty. which are essential to that form of government. The pdblic debt of the United States, as I stated to you before, amounts to $3 000 000 000. $2 200 000 000 or more is in.a liqUidated form and bears in teresis. $BOO 000 000 more is an unli quidatedlorm, and bears no interest,— ,This is an enormous amount, 2 'and yet,, gentlemen, I believe, and I think the Democratic party beleives, that it should be paid, every dolar of it, principal .„and interest, at the time it conies due, exact ly in accordance with the terms of the contract under which the loans were made. TUE cosranoss ON WHICH THE DEBT WAS A part of that debt is payable in gold and a part of it in legal tender notes. The faith of the country requires that the one should be paid in gold, and the interest of the eonntry requires that the other should be paid in legal tender. Prior to the year 1862 the laws of the United States provided that gold and silver coin should be legal tender in payment of ev ery debt. Every debt which was con tracted before that time, whether it was upon a contract for money, or bond, or a note, was payable in coin, whether it was expressed upon the face of the contract or not.. In February, 1862, the Congress of the United States passed what was called a legal tender act. It provided that Ell5O - 000 should he issued in paper, under the stamp of the United States, and that these paper dollars ehonid he received as "lawful money"—l quote the language of the act—"as lawful money, and as a legal tender in the discharge of a debts, pub lic and private, except only duties on im ports and interest upon the public debt." Mark the languag e of the act, "'awful money." That, is the first legal tender act. It provided for the emission of $l6O 000 000 in paper money. Every ermtract that was made after that time for the payment of money, whether it was made by ordinary contract, or note, or bond, by whomsoever made, was made upon the faith of the law and was payable in these legal tender notes, and not in coin, unless the maker chose so to discharge it. ALL BONDS, EXCEPT THE TES-SORTIES PAY- ABLE IN GREENBACKS The government of the United States has paid in coin every bon d that was is sued before the passage of that law, and which has matured since its passage; and the government of the United States since that time, by an act of Congress, has provided for the issue of other bonds, which, notwithstanding the legal tender act, are to bear upon their face an express promise that the principal shall be paid in gold, are payable in gold. These are the ten forties. They are payable in gold, principal and interest ; and I maintain, my fellow-citizens, that every other bond, except the 10-40 onds and all those is sued before the legal tender act, are dis chargeable iu the greenbacks of the coun try. Not only does the legal tender act of which I have spoken control this, but the law itself under which these bonds were issued, provides that the principal shall be paid in lawful money, and the interest, shall be paid in coin. And not only that, but the face of the bond . sliows that. the principal may be paid in lawful money, while the coupons declare that the inter est shall be paid in gold. Some gentleman will say to me, per haps, thak,the legal- tender shall not, be permitted to-over-ride the uniform policy of the country up to that time. I say to him, let 'him Hot object to the legal tcad er Set, for it is only by virtue, of it that theinterest on the first five hundred mil lion of 5-20, bonds is payable in, gold.— The very act, which athorizes the issue , of these legal tender 'notes provided for the issue of the 5-20 bonds. That alone ; of all the acts authorizing the issue of 5-4 bonds,, id xis provide that either the princittal or:interest.should be , paid in gold only. I say to those who have bonds MONTROSE, PA., TITESDA.Y, NOV, 26, 1867. of that issue, that the payment of their interest in gold depends on the construc tion of the legal tender act which says that this paper money shall not be receiv ed in payment of intereat upon the .pub lk debt. some gentleman will say to me, as has been said before, that the law which pro. vided for the issue of these same legal tender notes, provided that the coin to be derived from the payment of duties upon imports, should be set aside and ap propriated to the payment of the interest of the public debt, and to the purchase or redemption, year by year, in every year, atter the first day of July, 1862, of one per cent. upon the public debt. It is claimed that this provision of the law im plies a contract to pay the public debt in coin. Now, gentlemen, the same language which applies to the redemption of the public debt, applies also to its purchase. If those words constitute a promise to pay the public debt in coin at par, they also constitute a direction to purchase the public debt prior to the time .it becomes due also in coin, at par, and that would be, simply absurd; as you know that at that very time the government of the United States was selling the 5-20 bonds at par in greenbacks. SECRETARY m i cuttocu, THAI). STEVENS, AliD JAY COOKE It is said—J saw it in a newspaper pub lished in Wisconsin, to-day, that the Sec retary of the Treasury, while these bonds were being issued, thought, and gave it as his opinion, that these bonds would be paid in go'd. What he may have thought is of no consequence. -What he said was promptly met by Mr. Stevens, chairmakouf the committee of ways and means, winisaid on the floor of the house, that these bonds were not payable in gold, and that the opinion of the Secretary of the Treasury was wrong, and would bind nobod v. It is said that the newspapers declared that these bonds would be paid. in gold. When the 10-40 s were'issued only a few months later, the newspapers declared, under authority of Jay Cooke, that they were the only bonds whose principal was payable in gold. The one declaration may offset the other. THE t7NDERSTA.NDING OF THE BOND HOLDERS. It is said that those who purchased these bonds believed. they were to be paid in gold. I cannot aver, my friends, that they did not believe it, but I do aver that they had no reason to believe it.— The law was open to their inspection, and was plain. They knew well that the government of the United States paid ev ery other debt they owed, except only the interest upon the bonds, in legal ten der notes. They knew that they them- selves, when they bonght these bonds, they paid for them in legal tender notes, and they bad no reason to believe that an exception would be made in their case alone. THE CRY OF "TIRPCDIA.TION" CONSIDRREb Nowrgentlemen, I have thought it, worth while to dwell thus in detail upon the legal and moral obligations of the government to pay these bonds in gold, because it has been thought, in some quarters, a sufficient answer for every ar gument to cry out "repudiation 1 repudia tion !" There is not a particle of repudi ation in the proposition. Neither the law, nor the contract. nor the face of the bond, nor good morals require that they should be paid in gold. -Raeriorxrios 1 That is a charge which comes with an excellent grice_from men wiro, in _Ohio, and Indiana, and New-York, and Pensyl vania, and perhaps here in Wisconsin, paid in legal tender notes the interest up on the state debt, which was contracted kto be paid in gold. Repudiation ! that I Charge is made by the men who voted for the law which authorized every man who I had agreed to pay a hundred dollaiii in gold, to discharge the debt by paying a hundred dollars in paper. Repudiation! they are the repudiators, who, after they have compelled the people to take these I legal tender notes in payment of every I public and private debt, in payment of every state, and county, and township, and city, and railroad bond—now turn and depreciate these notes, and say they are not "lawful money," as they were de clared by act of congress to be ; and not tit to be given to a public creditor. Do not, gentlemen, misunderstand me here. I did not vote for that legal tender act. I was in Congress at the time. I opposed it. I voted against it. I believ ed the,. -policy was bad. Wet had coin currency and I believed we'should main tain it. I thought the war might have ' been carried on, ;as the wars of 'Napoleon against the world were carrifd on, for years, upon a coin basis, and without in flation, and without the issue of notes.— I endeavored to the utmost of my feeble ability to enforce that policy upon Con gress. / was over-ruled, and a contrary policy was adopted. It became incorpo rated into the business of the country, and I ..4111130w in favor, in good faith, of carrying it out to the end, until every ad vantage shall be realized, and until we can with safety and ease reverse this pol- , icy, as.l believe we ought, and return to . specie payments in the country, 1' And now, my friends, I not only say that these bonds are payable in legal ten der, but that they ought to be paid as soon as it is possible to do so. I do not know that it is possible to pay these bonds as fast as they mature, even in cur• rency; but I do know that, every possi ble effort ought to be made to do it. nip QUESTION OF INFLATION BY PAYING THE BONDS IN GREENBACKS. But just at this point I am met with the statement that we will issue an itu tuerrae amount of paper, and thus so far inflate the currenoy as to destroy its val ue, and bring disaster upon the country. Now, gentlemen, let me examine this ob jection. Mr. McCulloch in his lest month ly report' stated that the public debt which bears interest is comprised in three kinds—that three hundred millions of this debt could not be redeemed before 1874—that three hundred millions more could not be redeemed before 1881—and that the rest of the debt, amounting to nearly seventeen hundred millions of dol lars is comprised in five-twenties and bonds, which bear interest in currency. Seventeen hundred millions of five twenties and bonds which bear interest in currency, will fall due within the next five years. I cannot state to you the ex act time nor the exact proportions in which these bonds fall due. I mean these 5-20 s. Their very name' implies that when five years shall elapse after their is sue, the government may pay them, but it need not pay them until twenty years have elapsed. Now, gentleman, I maintain that these 8.20 bonds should be paid as far as it is possible tq do so without inflating the currency beyond a safe and just point.— And it is my business now to show ,yon how rapidly that can be done. The unli quidated debt of the United States con sists of greenbacks, and claims which have not been adjusted, and amounts to $800,000,000. It pays no interest. The policy of the Republican party is to convert these eight hundred millions of dollars of unliqindated debt into bonds, which pay six per cent. interest in gold. Now what will be the effect of that ? It converts a debt which bears no iatereit into a debt which bears interest in gold: it will add to the expense of the govern ment s4B,ooo,ooo—for that is the interest on $800,000,000. It will increase the num ber of those who do not pay taxes, and in crease t,he burthens of those who do pay taxes. It -will add to the untaxed proper ty of the country.. It will convert active into inactive capital. Now, I maintain that this system ought not to go on ; that the debt ought not to be converted, that this capital ought not to be locked up; and that this large num ber of people ought not to be exempt from taxation ; and that this additional burthen of $48,000,000 should be saved. The Republicans say they can, I know they ought to be able to pay this amount from the current revenue. HOW THE DEBT CAN BE PAID IN FIFTEEN YEARS If you look at the report made to-day in the evening papers by telegraph, the national banks have three hundred and thirty-eight millions of the bonds of the United States deposited in the treasury as security for their circulation. You know how these national banks are estab lished. A man bays the bonds of the !government of the United States and de posits them in Washington, and receives the interest on them year by year at six per cent. in gold. He receives ninety per cent. of bank paper which he takes home here to your dwn city, establishes a bank, issues these notes, and derives the inter est of six, or ten, or twenty per cent. as the case may be, when you borrow these notes. h • Three hundrea and thirty-eight millions of these bonds are, by the report of the Secretary of the treasury, deposited to dopes security in the vaults of the treas ury. Three hundred millions of bank pa per are issued on the faith of these bonds. Now, gentlemen, I maintain that this cit.: culation ought to be called in ; that these bonds ought to be redeemed with legal ' tenders which will take the place of that bank circulation. What. would be the effect of this ? The seventeen hundred millions of interest bearing bonds would be reduced to four teen hundred millions; and twenty mil lions of dollars would be saved Lathe gov ernment from the interest which is paid to the bankers for the bonds they have deposited. Now then suppose you take these $20,- 000,000 which is saved and add it to the $48,000,000 which these gentlemen say they can pay from the current revenue, and you have $88,000,000, year by year, and if you convert the sum into green backs, at 1,40, you have a hundred mil lions of dollars a year, and if this is ap propriated, as a sinking fund; you can pay off the' whole debt in' less than fifteen years, without adding one dollar to your taxation, or one dollar to the. circulating. medium. , . Bear , in mind that I ant:arguing a prop osition that these bonds can be paid in greenbacks without inflating the curren cy. Bear in mind that, ibis can be actiom plisbed in twelye or fourteen years with-, out the'addition Of one dollar to your tax ation or one dollar to your circulating me diem. And now bear in mind also that I have not touched the revenue of the gov ernment, which in 1866 amounted to five hundred and sixty millions of dollars, nor have I attacked the expenditure of that year of radical administration. ECONOMY IN EXPENDITIME WILL PAY THE DEBT. But now set the radical reformer to work. Let bin' cut off every extrava gance—lopp off every extravagant expen. diture. Let him seduce the current ex penditures of the _government to $150,- 000,000 a year—l mean expenses inde pendent of interest on the public debt-- though it ought to be reduced to $lOO,- 000, and that would be twenty-five mil lions more than Mr. Buchanan expended ? that would be as much in one year as An drew Jackson expended in all the four years of his administration. Let the ex penditure be reduced to $150,000,000 and in five years you can pay every cent of the principal and interest of the public debt, without the addition of a dollar to the cir culating medium. DANGER ALIA.D. I have taken these figures from the of ficial reports. They are stifficiently cor rect. rorge the adoption '6f this general idea because I think I see danger ahead. The Republica.n party • insist on paying the bonds in gold ; this adds 40 per cent. to the public debt. They insist upon cur tailing the currency. This makes it im possible to keep up your revenues, and postpones thepayment of the debt. In the meantime the bonds are exempt from taxation, and draw an exorbitant rate of interest. The public debt amounts to one-fifth of all the property, real and personal, of ev ery man, woman, and child in the coun try, and yet, one fifth of all the capital of the country—that capital so well able to bear taxation—which labors from the first day of January to the last day of December, in summer and winter, thro' heat and cold, through storm .and sun shine, by night and by day, which knows no weariness, seeks no repoSe, is not sub ject to the disease, pains, and accidents which afflict the muscles and bones of men—whose owner, though he toils not, nor yet spins, is clothed like Solomon in all his glory—one-fifth of all' this capital is exempt from taxation. Labor will become restive—discontent will enter the hearts which control its brawny arms. This state of things can not last—it ought not to last. I beg . of the bondholders to be prompt and wise, wise to discern their true interests, prompt to act upon them, for I tell you, gentlemen, I do not say it by way of threat, I say it by way of solemn and timely warning, it is no threat to say, when the sun rises in the east, that it will ascend to the zenith, set in the west, and leave us in darkness; it is no, threat to say, when we see the gathering clouds, 'that there will be a storm • that as sure as there are passions in the ' buman heart, this capital of the bondholders will' be made to bear the same burthen as other property, and those burthens will be speedily lightened or other and worse consequences will follow, involving per haps, the violation of national honor and of plighted faith. ::.:.➢ :5. r 0 : . I I My friends, the first step in the right direction is to lay bare every frond, to ex pose and correct all corruptions; to cut off every unnecessary expenditure, to dis miss every superfluous officeholder, to abandon every unconstitutional scheme, to abolish all military goverinents, to re turn to the teachings of our constitution, and to -the enjoyment of the liberties which it specifically assures to.us, to give repose to the hearts of the people, in or der that labor may be stim.ilated by hopes of a rich reward for its industry. The - rest of the journey to happiness and safe ty and peace will be comparatively easy- The first step will cost you labor. It can only be accomplished by putting out of power the Republican party and putting In its place the Democratic party. I know full well the difficulty of this work, yet I do not despair. The signs around us are all propitious. Connecticut heralded the coming morn ; the sun arose from its horizon in Maine; its radient rays were thrown back in gol. den glory from California and lighted the lofty peaks of Montana. Higher it rose in the heavens, and Obio and Pennsylva nia were warmed into a new life. Soon' New-York and New. Jersey will be envel oped in its rays. Will you, Wisconsin and Minnesota, reflect, from earth to sky, the full lustre of its mid-day splendor? I believe you will, and the whole land, bathed in the warm light of delicious day, will throw off the noxious- vapors of the night which has just paste 1. Do your duty, men of - Wisconsin. Do it as ypur brethern of other States have done theirs, and we will obtain possession of thnpowers of the'gotrnment. We will banish &outland corruptioni and extrava gance ; we will regain our liberties; we will restore our constitution ; we will rein vigorate our own Union ; we will bold • 1 out to the people of the South the band of friendly and fraternal affection ; we will I bid them be at peace with ne; 'and repose ! at home: We 444 &tint, our noun oils and our Wirth thO,gbit'of vengeance, and ve"wiU intake the sprit .. iVOIXIVIE DitlißEß - 48. of charity and forgioneos and love, which dwells in the bosons of God hiMseif f and then this whole people,- sttestitig the ben. eficence of a government thus odthinistaf ed,- will, with tears of joy, and vole& choked with emotion, thank God that " tho' sorrow enduiretir for a night, joy cometh in tho moraine Mt sits =Snots oratomme.• sar x es iv ci -sr Of the bred' letrugele lieystopet &WM, snit Despoils* for the Dasi • Eltuadreil 'Yeatiti ; TUB REPUBLICAN PARTY NOW IN 11138)Ira r lON AGAINST TUB ooirzsianctrr. On the 14th day of April, 1801, Abr*. ham Lincoln issued the &flowing ptocla lactation : " Whereas, Laws of the United . States are now opposed in several States by cow binations too powerful to be suppressed ift the ordinary Wa,y, I therefore call forth the militia or the several states of the Un ion to the aggregate narrater of 75,000 to suppress the said combination, and to ex ecute the laws, and I appeal to all loyal citizens to facilitate, and aid this eltOrt to maintain the laws, and the integrity of the National Union." By what authority did President Lin• coin call out the troops to execute the laws of the United States in States that bad declared themselves disconnected and separated from the remainder by the or dinance of secession ? Ifis inaugural ads dress gives the answer to this question " A disruption of the Federal Union, heretofore only menaced, is zoirtlftempt ed. I hold that, in contemplation of uni+ versal law and of the Constitution s the Union of these States is perpetual, Ac. cording to the views I hold ' , no State ttp, on its mere motion f can lawfully get out of the Union • that resolves and ordinan , ces to that effect are legally void,. and that acts of violence within any. State or States against the authority of the United,. States, are insurrectionary or revolution ary according to circumstances. "I therefore consider that 'in view of the Constitution and the laws,, the Union is not broken, and to the/extent of my ability I Riad! take Care, as the Constitu tion expressly , enjoins upon me, that the laws of the Union be faithfully executed in all the States." In four years and two months from die date of this proclamation, the laws of the United States had ceased,to be °Wised ; T the combination of armies, raised to effect the disruption of the States, were all sup pressed, and the reign of peace was pro claimed. Yet on the Sd of September, 1867, a proclamation wade issued again by President Johnson, almOst in the precise language of that of President Lincoln, as follows : " Whereas, by the Constitution of' the United States the executive power is ves ted in a President of the United States of America, who is bound by solemn oath faithfully to execute the office of Presi dent, and to the best of his ability to pre serve, protect and defend the Constitu tion of the United States, and is by the same instrument made commander-in chief of the army and navy, and is re quired to take care that the laws be faith fully executed, and whereas, it is provid ed by law that whenever by .reason of un lawful obstructions, combinations, or re• hellion against the authority of the gov ernment of the United States, it shall be come impracticable, in the judgiuent of the President, to enforce by the ordinary course, the laws of the United States within any State or Territory, the Execu tive in that case is authorized and requir ed to secure their faithful : execution by the employment of the land and naval for ces; and whereas, impediments and ob. 'etructions have recently been interposed in the States of North and South Caroli na, hindering an enforcement of the laws of the United States, bud as well founded apprehension exists that such unlawful proceedings may be attempted there and . elsewhere; " Now, therefore, I, Andrew Johnson*, President of the guited States, do hereby warn nil persons against obstructing or hindering in any manner the faithful exe cution of the Constitution and the laws. And I call upon all good and welldispoi ed citizens of the United Buttes , to re: member that upon - the said Constitetion and laws depend the protection of thfi fives, liberty, property and ! happiness Of the people. And 1 exhort theta- every- where to .iestify their &Witten' tO.iPWr country, their pride in its pitisperity' and hreatness, and their determinaticm to up. old its free institutions, by a hearty co operation in the•efforta of thegOvernment to sustain the authority .01 , the last, to, maintain the enpremacy of the! Federal Constitution, and to preserve atiimpaired the integrity of the National Union." ' Why this solemn warning from ther President of tbe l llnited States? Why this' second admonition - Atm the Chief, Magistrate of our nation told' the citizen* thereof,, reviirenee the Constittitien of their ihthefa? Whl thie second Op*, to a l l the of ArdiAdeto," 0040; ate wits the 4046024 Tb eatt-tki maintain the authority 41,.;the Fefisti4T•