pait g Ctitya#4 THE PEOPXE S CHOICE FOR PRESIDED', A Bit A- HA M LINCOLN, HA.FRISBURG3 PA- Saturday Evening January 23, 1864. "A joint Comnintate.:97l.lthe Ocutdnet . _olt the War.. 0.1 The Unifad States Satiate hai passed a reso lution providing - - fors the appointment' of a “Joint Committee on the Conduct of the War;" . ' With all due deference to the wisdom and, statesmanship of those who compose the Seri.' ate, we•feellthat we ard only expressing what is , well fiied and-deliberate public opinion, when We declare that practical men, men who under stand the vast magnitude of the work lupe war to save the Country, from utter are „browning hrirribly disgusted with these "CoogressiOnal' Committees." They : Are the, prolific sources of, much- evil,..the hot !bedis in' which are grown the . rardwit kinds of foul cor raption,-setting up one branch of - the Govern ment against the other, and making develop ments which, while they disgrace us as a Nation in the eyes of the world and humiliate us in our own estimation, do riot remedy, the evil which they profets to treat or abate , the wrongs which •they essay tcrtontrol. - ' We'are confident that the practical men of the country will hear of the appointment of ,a jointOongressional Committee to Conduct the, War,with foreboding of real danger to thei cerise of the Government The resqlt =lathe that ant.sgonismsand jealousies will be created in the army which should not - exist there, and which can only be productive of disasters: Trained soldiers, who are anxious and , emulous to do their duty, will suddenly find themselves inter fered with by, civilians who are totally ignorant of 'the science of war. Politicians who have nothing but selfish interests to servo by,the part they' assume In this great struggle for national life, will use this Committee on the-Conduct of the War to promote their schemes and secure their aggrandizement.- Jobbers and specula tore will impose on the Committee with exag gerations of evils that really have no existenoe, until Pie labors of the Committee become, as we - anticipate, the south of breeding diffarences, disgraces and disasters. If Senators and Representatives would at tend.to their-legitimate business and leave the donduct of ihe -- War to the hands where the doristitution has placed such a ffairs,the countri wonid'be vastly benefited. The .'Presldent is the Commander-in-Ohief of the army and the navy, and is the proper authority - for'the, con duct of the war. Thus farithe policy adopted has been at once =tired by the wisdom of the statesman and the"prudence of the soldier.— But if Congressional committees are to be ap pointed, arrogatiogtn theroselvea_DOwer to in terfere with the business 'of the' Executive, branch of= the Government, we shall ,soon find that the canduct of the war has become a con fusion from which our enemies will gain their victories and rittirly, - destroy.oni armies. And, therefore, as we haveldready declared; with all due:deference to the wisdom and statesmanship of thdse who compose these Conimittees, we tint that they will , be dissolved of theta- selves by a confession of a want of power to act, and the admission idea, that the conduct of the war is already In hands fully capable of conducting it to a triumphant end ! The Situation in the Senate—Senator ConiteiVa Speich We print today, the able speech of Senator Connell, in reference - to the organization of the Senate. We had supposed that this subject had been exlmnsted, but on perusing the able re marks of Senator Connell, the reader will dis coverithat he makes many new 'and forcible pointeould increases the odium' which the fac• Cordite Aave aiready earned by their course:in opposing the organisation of the Senate: Sena tor Connell takes tl Constitutional position assumed by all fair and honest legislators that, the Senate is a perpetually organized.-body, and .that the effort now making to change that or pi:Assam is nothing more than an attempt to obstruct and defeat legitimate public business. —We commend the remarks of Senator Con nell to our readers, i 6 a:Air expos°, also, of the desperate designs of the . Democratic lenders. He pulls the veil from the faces of those who seek to hide their shame in pretensions to justice and fair dealing while thus intcrfering with thevogress of legislation. Hon. William H. 'Meredith. The re-nomination of this gentleman as Attorney General of the State of Pennsylvania, was due to, his valuable servrces as well as to his eminent abilities., He is unquestionably one of the purest and ablest men now in pub lic life; and in a position where his vast legal attainments are dally,hrflught into requisition, therel a s not a - singlelnterestl of tie people or of the Commonwealth w hich is not beneficially • • affected, by his exercises of power. Within the last two yeare of his Attorney Generabhip,' we think it is safe to aSieff, that he has col lected more: money - due -the Ceinmcirlivealth, than was ever before gathered into the coffers of theStateTreasury from the same sources. The man who is the debtor of !the State mint be In a woful strait if he escape " ,the ,liigilance and.promptitude of Attorney Geneses' Mere dith; and, while he would scorn as the counsel even of a Comuionwealth, to oppress any man, the public Aeiltor, through his stern adminis tration, is. taught to regard. his dues to the Sate as of a like sacred ide debts •,. to an individual. We congratulatefthe people of the Common wealth on the re-nomination of Attorney Gen eral literedith. The presence in the Slate Admin hitration will Ikave the tendency preserve its zespectibllity; his talents will maintain its dig nity and keep In manly force the infinence which' the people design; it; ehould possess, while his purity of - character will .shield it freA til,Ostlepicion which, alas forthelimerican people, 'too commonly attends the 'practical ; opelithinii;of their State Governments •-';•:' A. Treason Fund. The CoPperheads in Clearfield county, of the I ilk of the men who shot down United •States officers -while in the discharge of their sworn duty, and who tuned into the road and the snovrOte defen6Oless -women Eipid children of those who clidmed the right of-exercising,their pont)* franalsas aieording to the diotates of their own consolences, are now raising's fund Ito supply thii.wanti of Vallandigham during his exile in Canada' It is claimed by the Clear field Cops. that the Southern friends of Val. can no longer supply him with funds, and hares the necessity of his Northern friends going to his rescue. Will the Tory Organ inc' -form _us when the hat will be passed around in this city, or was a collection taken up to re lieve Vallandigham at the meeting of- "the Damonratic Members of the legislature to consider and sign That preamble on the stthject of the 'Union? TUN PATRIOT DAMORTERS 01 , LAROASTSR are to hold a fair, commencing on the 22d of Irabrn-. ary next, for thibenfit of sick and wounded soldiers. It le only due to charity and patriot-. ism we shriuld-adrnit the fact that this organi motion was among the first in the country pro= posing to ascertain and minister to the marts of the sick and wounded soldier. Confining itself entirely within its own losallty, and de; pending almost exclusively on the opulent tiaderlmen, larmOre and Merchants oflaniairter countydor means`to operate, the Patriot Daugh ters have accomplished an immense amount of •god, wherever they could reach a soldier. sick and dying. And the great beauty of this organisation consists in the fact, that all who centribute to its support, know cert a inly the individuals who are relieved bytheir bounty, so that the good whieh is accomplished is at once a matter of record and of knowledge. Though we may not be able to take any part in the• great work .of the fair as well as patriotic daughters of our neighboring city, we can still extend to them our applausci in their labors, and set.forth their noble work as fit for the em ulation of the patriot daughters of every town and city in the Commonwealth. Pus METHRELN PAPBB3 unwittingly admit their dread of the influence of the President's Amnesty Proclamation by their efforts to con vince the Southern people of the impolicy of accepting its provisions. The- Whig assures its readers that if they continue-for a few months longer to give but a portion of their means to support, the army ; if they continue to hide their pork and cern and lie about their profits, the Yankees will be upon them and take all, and their wives and daughters will be washing clothes—their children working thirteen hours a day in Yankee factories. In this strain It continues at considerable length to demenitrate the inevitable misary and,ruin to 'ensue' from a Yankee triumph, and closes by the 'following assertion ; in regard to the Amnesty: "The conquered rebel may think to hold his acres by.a cheap oath of allegiance, but that little trick will not deceive the Yankee veterab volunteer wholvaitts a farm, or the Yankee - GOVOlllincriail , who wants mority, TothcLmiatai belongs the spoils. • Beggarynd exile will be our fate if we falter now." Resolved, "Thg the senate Will Now Vo to Work." Hit 1 2 333 IX SENATOR GEORGE CONNELL IN SUPPORT OF THE ABOVE RESOLUTION, IN THE SENATE OP 3E 9 32. os "y kv•ift. xi 1 et. JANiTARY 20th, 1064. Mr. CONNELL offered the following resole Ion: Resolved, That the Senate naw go to work. On the queetion, Will the Senate proceed. to the second read ing of the resolution? Mt. CONNELL said: . Mr.,Npeakee, I desire, leave of the Senate to present my views in re-' gard Va that "resolution Leave was granted. Mr: Speaker, for the lest sixteen days the Senate has been engaged in the singular em ployinent of holding an inquest upon itself. Is this is a live Senate, or not P . A properly or 'grudzed body, competent to do business as one branch of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, or , 'are, we a lawless amemblage, without head or organizition, bound to , content ourselves by going on with ireaseless ballotings, forever with the ume,result, sixteen to sixteen, for a pre _siding officer? While the other branches of the Government .have recognized us as the Senate of Pennsyl vania, in the plenitude of its' power, while the Governor has sent us his annual message fall of important suggestions for our consideration, while the Attorney General, the distinguished law officer of the Commonwealth; has sent -us his annual report, and the various heads of other departments have all recognized us by, their official action, half the members of this 'body deny our own existence as an organized *inch of the . Legislature, and graYelY tell as that they, at least, can do nothing bat one thing, namely, 'to ballot, ballot, ballot. 1. - can scarcely hope to throve any new light upon'a subject already so thoroughly disouesed, and yet I cannot refrain from reviewing our action and giving a brief comment on mime of the things which have been said and done since we assembled here on the fifth day of the present month. I begin, thembrreminding you,Mr. Speaker, that upon the 15th day of April last put you, Jeme P. PENNIST, Were duly elected and quali fied Speaker of the Senate of Pennsylvania, the oath of 'office having been administered to you by the Senator from - Berke, (Kr. Craliza,) In the presence of whole Senate, and as such you took the chair and ()lamed 'the eession of the Senate on the 6th day of aka present month, and haye continued to occupy the chair as Speaker ever since, either in person or by ap pointment., Since then what have we seen? It soon be came evident that the Senate" could not agree in its choice- for your suceekor. That fact has been Os clear as the noon day's sun ever since the Close of our first day's work. Indeed, so resigned are we •to this inevitable result, so de termined are we that such strait always be our action that' we have agreed all round that if by accident or otherwise any Senator should be tibsent, thereby eying the majority to the other Side and securing the chance of an election, some other Senator upon-the other side shall pair cuff with the absentee and thus defeat an election. As we stead it present then, in the Absence - of the SeUtOr from Indiana,,our lOtii by ogomou consent are to effect po t Alec Writ. Every Senator.having WM sworn in, and tbk Speaker ulreidtglittlified, if there be any' pre cedent at for tire antion cif the Speaker, any resoonable ground's to justify his occupancy of the chair, col:Union - sense would seem to say: "Drop your useless ballottinga ; go on with something else ; take into consideration the or ' dinary business of legislation ; consider the recommendations of the Governor; take up and dispw of the bills:passed at the last ses sion which he ' has ieturned with hie veto ; FIND SOMETHING To no, but don't waste. your time when the public interests demand that you should work. The learned and distiogulAted Senator from Lancaster, Judge CumiceNfilll, has cited to us the•construotion'of the fiounders of our Consti tution, at the era contemporary with its adop. tion, when a Speaker of this very Senate contin ed to occupy the chair without re-election for years ; and we were all familiar with the case of Wm. F. dotnston, who, in 1849, wasforrnally recognized: ISy resolution, entered upon the Jourhal of. the Singe writs Speaker without any re-election, and so continued for ton days, when he resigned the office and his successor was elected.. These cases were sufficient, 1 take , it, to justify your course of action, rendering impregnable the position which it seems to me is self-evident, that the „Spiker of a confine ons body shall remain as such until his 'en:- cessor is elected, or so long as he continues a member df that. body. Well, sir, what have we seen ? Upon one side —on the part of those Senators with whom I act—there lute been every' disposition to go to work. As soon as we eawlhat to elect a succes sor to yourself was an impassibility, we began with propositions to' do buelness. I Wt it' my duty to offer a resolution adopting Offices ternary rules for the government of the Senate while we ,attempt to do businesis, the same, rules which have governed here for years past. I What could .be More proper of. reasonable? Yet while everfFenator.with whom I act sup 7i ported the adoption of those rules, the whole: sixteen. Democratic Senators voted so. On, our side it was proposed to appoint the custo mary committees to inform the House and the governor that we were here and ready to pro- Curd to business, when again we had the sin gular spectacle of annanimous Democratic Op „position. Iniportant amendments to the Constitution baying been adopted by the last Legislature, one of which is to confonthe right of suffrage upon our disfranchised soldiers in the service of the country absent. _from the State, the same amendmenta wore proposed by the Senator from LycoruMg for the consideration of the Senate, preparatory to their being submitted to a vote of the people, and while every Sena tor supporting the Government gave his vote to proceed to the consideration of those amend meats, every Democratic Senator again cried NO; - In compliance with the will of my constitu ents, so far as I have been able, to learn it, I asked leave to introduce a bill providing for the payment of bounties to every volunteer who, under the.call.Of the President, shall be mu te-rod into .a Pennsylvania re,gimentand serve out the.term for which ha, was mustered in, or who may be discharged by reason of disability. net enlarge upon the meritorious services or the •patriotic sacrifices of the men who risk all for theiroonntry hee hou'r of need. Of cornea Senators who support the Government voted to grant leave to introduce this bill, while again the unanimous Democratic NO de nied me leave for that purpose; The Senator from Erie, Mr. Lewar, with a view to save the'people of the Ce' anmanwealth the enormous sum ricrvarcquired - to buy gold to pay the interest dae to the holders of the State debt, offered the following resolution : - Bemired, That the State Treasirer be directed to pay. the interest :falling due on the first day of Feb: eat; in 414,4, bumf egrarrooor-crt tres - g ent collected of 'the people -for taxes sad• now in his hands. Again the old line was drawn, and every Democrat voted NO. Four times has it been proposed, mrdifferent days, by formal resolution, to proceed-to con sideration of the ordinary business of the ses sion ; each time every ;Adminiatraton Senator has voted aye, and eaoh time every Democratic Senator has voted no. ' The.right of petition, "a right of inestima ble value to freemen and formidable to tyrants only,” was, Needled when - a memorial from Bishop Potter and other distinguished citizens of. Philadelphia was presented ; the reception of the petition was objected to bya Democratic Senator, whose act was approved by those en tertaining the same views. If any Democratic Senator feels aggrieved by this supposition, I would be glad to have him disavow - it. Ihear no disavowal—"then none have I offended." So the doors of. this. Senate hall 'would have been closed.to the prayers and voices of the people, and the Bill of righta, the corner stone; of the Constitution, adolated by the revolution ary aetion of the Democrats of this chamber. Resolutions thanking Generalgrantand the heroes of Chattanooga, and General Meade and the Army of -the Potomac for saving the State from the devastation of rebel invaders, were offered and supported by our side and opposed by every Democrat, upon the ground that they were ill-timed, Listen, ye gallant thousands whose blood stained the bills of the old Key 'stone around', Gettysburg I The Democratic leaders qf -this State, "The choke and master spirits of the age," cannot now thank you for your services and sufferings. The time may possibly come when they can do so—in a month, or two months— or some other period, a long way off, but new they will not. While the war-worn veteran stands upon the night picket,.let him console himself in his solitary round by reflecting on the gratitude of his Democratic friends at home, who deny him even the cheap encouragement of a-vote of thanks. " General Andrew Jackson,' the hero of New Orleans! "But yesterday the word of Cmsar might Have stood' against the would ; now lies he there, . And none so poor to dui him reverence." On the anniversary of the Battle of New Or leans, the Senator fie= Chester (Dr. WORTH norm) asked the Senate to make an appropri ate acknowledgment of the return of the day, and pf the memory of tho hero whose name is imperishably associated with it. Vow Meade and Grant, the living heroes, could afford 'to wait the tardy convenience of our Democratic Senators, but thoeighth of. January comes b u t once in 1884, and before its next return some of these, unwilling brethren may not be here to honor it. Theyhave lost foiever the opporiu • nity they should gladly have embraced At this limo there is a peculiar filsecas in keeping alive the memory, example and services of the gallant old Chieftain. At the very mention of hianame one would have thought that the old enthindaem would have been rekindled in every Democratic -bosom. The Senate could During ha ing ve his ho l no rce red id a nobl er ency heforesaw man or at truerdanger ous hero' tendeneY / led the States' Eight doctrines promulgated by many of his Southern support ers, and,heavalled himself of the occasion of the celebration of the birthday of Mr. Jefferson to send his ceiebilsted toast, "Oualkeeasall NION ••••/T MUST Bs museasa' vao.." It yen lik e a tomb shell among those who were secretly plotting its dismemberment; :it became the rallying cry Of the-cOuntry and for long.years .treason was Overawed and hashed. His sagacity foresaw and. Oredicted.that the attempt of his-time 'would be renewed again in after years, and that "SUIVIIST MIXT *WOULD:BS DIN PRNIErr." it be possible, Mr. Speaker, that any man claiming to boa, Dentocrat can by any actlg nore the memory and services of -the gallant old heto,-who in the : expreesive language of Mr. JeffsraOni,had 'Tilled the, mespre. of ad s country's glorYe! .ithaidy . .the pre. tiol of p r. 01; made on the floor of IN! jfioktiftet thwelose of the war, is falai .ed by thelict4Oik of tide Democratic Senate. So long, "saidlie in reply to the questkon,What have we gained by the war?—"so long as the father of , waters rolls his resistless flood to the Gulf, so long shall the day of New Orleans be gratefully remembered by the American people, and for ages nerve the arms of unborn mil lions." Eight in this chamber Democratic Sebeteig refuse to honor the day or the hero of it, oeto hear read a single word of his most celebrated State papers, and the resolnion of my friend, Dr. Woemenserm, is hustled out of the Senate with the least possible respect. - Every proposition coming . from our side of the Chamber to consider any busineeri - whatever has teen voted down lay our Democratic friends. Now how comes it that such a record is made up by themielves against themselves? So black and damnable? Some of them have sa id they were ready to go even further. think I do not misrepresent their noontime when 'filmy that as Senators they will do nothing except ballot until a new Speaker is elected. That Is so, is it , non' It is admitted. Then even though the cannon of Gen. Lee, tackedl by his invading hordes, were in eight of this Capitol, on the (Either side of the Susquehanna, this Senate would adopt no measures of resist ance whatever, hitt mustgo on eternally ballot ing for Speaker. No money could be voted—no l troops raised, nor fortifications erected for the defence of the State; no, nothing, say our ' Democratic friends—nothing save only ballot, ballot, ballot, 16 to 16, until the enemy bat tered down the capitol over our heads or car ried tul all down to Libby prison to keep com pany with the Senator from Indiana. I im pugn no Senator's motives or express a; doubt' ' of the conscientiousness of his opinions; I only repeat what SI Senators they have done and state what, as Senators, they would do under certain circumstances; nor do I'question their eight„, es it has been termed, to pursue any course, as long as they assumed the responsi bility of - their acts. They have the naked right to neglect all public business and to go on forever voting for their candidate—the Sen ator from Berke, not now in his seat—tells absence I may call him the Chevalier Bernd' of 'Democracy, sans puer, sans reproach; but the people will hold thane responsible for the waste of time, for the delay in the public business, for the lose to our Treasury, if by their reined to act on the proposition of the Senatorefrom Erie to pay out—lnterest in the National currency, thereby. saving a million of • dollars to the Treasury, at the present price of gold; they will be held responsible for the de lay in strengthening our armies in the field and fcr procrastinathsg the bloody struggle in which we are now engaged. The public mind naturally Inquires, How Is this? Why is this? What nececeasity is there for it? Why can not the Democrats in the Senate do anything but ballot? Why must they forever forswear all other business and attend only to this one thing. when you have a Speaker already , folly (reunified and compe tent to discharge the duties of the caw? The , answer is very simple and plain. As the strong man of Israel was bound with green withs , even so our sixteen strong Demo cratic Senators are bound - with red tape; with this difference, that while Sampson brake the withs as a thread of tow is broken when it ' , toncheth the fire; our Democratic Sampson are clasped as if with bands and hoops of steel and imagine they are powerless for all action, save only the everlasting ballot. Will it do to tell the country that because no precedent can be found satisfactory to the signers of the "Triumphant Vindication," as , the Senator from Washington called their de fence, bat all the material interests of the country are to be sacrifeied, its business ne glected, its armies to dwindle aid suffer defeat, +,..aueer-co purchrileigeraror for sign creditors, and all our heroes to , be passed over by them with ceeterepteons indifference? I tell you, Mr. Spmker, the people will not sanction each hair splitting, such vexations trifling; they will condemn it with their strongest censure. The American people are a common sense 'people,' and they will take a common sense view of this question—a practi cal view of it, and they will sustain the course of those Senators who are endeavoring to sup port the Government, by at once adopting and paiskig the measures demanded by the public interests and by proceeding with the business we were sent here to transact. Why, what would Mr. Jefferson, thee great apostle of Democracy, who, finding no warrant in -the Constitution for the purchase and acqui sition of Louisiana—no precedent to justify the absorption of foreign territory, did not hesi tate to pay millions for that province of France, upon the ground that its acquirement was es sential to the interests and prosperity of the country. What,l repeat; would Mr. Jefferson say, if he saw his nominal disciples here inthis Sen ate bound harid and foot—powerless for good, boggling about precedent, and only Able to ejaculate, Ballot! • I assert, Mr. Speaker, that the construction of the'Constitution and of law by which you are now recognized as the Speaker of the Senate of Pennsylvania is the only tfuly safe and sound construction, the only one that can prevent a return to chaos in our political ele-. mate. By that construction the objects of the framers of the Constitution are secured; the machinery of Government kept in motion ; this branch of the Legislature is prepared to transact business, and more than all, in case of a vacancy in the Executive Department, that vacancy is at once filled and the wheels of Gov oriel:mut move on harmoniously. On the other hand, behold what a ricketty, 'crotchetty piece of mechanism does the con struction of our Democratic friends give us ? In case Andrew G. Curtin had died any time since January 6th, this Commonwealth, accord-. ing to these sticklers for precedent, would have no Governor and could have none until this Senate elect ed a Speaker, be that time ever Ile far off. A commonwealth without a head ! Tr) what a pitiable cenclition'would they reduce us I No supreme executive ••power, no com mander in -chief of our military forces, no source from whence commissions for the thousands of gallant officers in the field shall Issue—none to fill vacancies in the judicial offices of the courts of this Commonwealth; no one to take 'care that the laws le carefully executed, and none to approve the acts which this Legislature may deem essential to the interests and prosperity of the State ! Is this the entertainment to which.they invite us ? In view of the present unusual state of affairs,- I _rejoice, sir ; that you took the chair at the opening - of the;session as the Speaker of -this body, and,that you have nontinned so to act. ever since. Others who have -preceded you, when parties were not so evenly bedewed, and when tarty lines were not to silkily drawn as now, have resigned the office and come down upon the floor of the Senate without any detri ment to the public( good. .And This, sir, reminds Me that the language of the Senator from Berke on Thursday last, In my winks., yields the whole ground contested in this case. Speak ing of the action of Byron D. Hamlin the Speaker elected at the , close of the sessi on of 1864, be said that at the opening of the hessian. of 1856, "he had resigned in conformity with the prevalent custom. If he were not the Speaker on that day, how could he resign ? Or it he was not the Speaker, what _business had he, or any other Speaker holding over, to go into that chair at the opening of tbe.seasion f I amert,eir, that ifhe were not the Kanter. he ' had no more business to enter that chair, of his own motion, than any of his predecessors nomore right there, sir, than Wm. Penn, or' Wm. Penn's Exedutor. But, sir, it has Inan the custom for the Speaker holding over to occupy the chair, and in, several instances cited by, the Senn* freth lecolning: he has °faith*, ISpenktir's powinn by qualifying neiilY -abated" members whilano occupying the chair. And, sir, when he vtated the chair pending the elec tion he resigned the office; the vacation of the chair has always been regarded as tantamount tro.e resignationof the'office. He does not re `sign what has'altenoly bein?ended by limitationn of law. No, sir; the Speaker who resigns his office_ here on the first day of the session abdi cates tip • power as fully and4ktirely as did Charleit V. in the sixteenth matey. He does not go out by virtue of the 11th &lotion of ar ticle lof the Constitution, until displaced by the action of the Senate in choosing his sue- censor, according to the provisions of that sec tion. He is the Speaker of a continuous body, and unless ale resigns; ashes been enstomary,by vacating the chair, he will remain the Speaker imtil hie successor is chosen. _ I listened with surprise, sir, to the letter of Fa-Gov. Packer ' . read in the Senate on Friday last, and with all due respect to those who think differently, I must regard its main po sition as the most singular which has been ad vanced _by anybody, Senator or outsider, in regard to this queslion, since its incepthm. tells us that i the Speaker who holds over only continues to be Speaker in case of the death or resignation of- the Governor. He is riot Speaker by virtue of his election and Aualifi cation, but by the happening of a contingency in another-Mai:L*6We Were you, air, to define yopr position here according to the wondrous logic of this Packer lettrr you would do it thus: "If Gov. Curtin be. dead then I find , myself suddenly made the Speaker of the Senate; but if Gov. Curtin be living then I am not the Speaker of the Senate, but simply a plain Senator." Why, sir, a man in your position would not be able to iveserve his identity, if this new fashioned political metempabycosis were gener ally prevalent. It reminds one of the bewildered E. B. Ammy,a well known cittssen of oar me tropolis, who golna home at a late hour of the night from a wine party and being refused ad mission into a house in the middle of the sqnare'where he lives, which appeared to be his, and which he thought his own, thus solilo quized: "Now, this is my house, that's certain —or deal sin not B. B. Ammy; and if lam not E. B. Ammy, why, then, who the mischief am I?" I confess, Mr. Speaker, I have not met in the wide domain pertaining to theology, medicine `and politics, any theory or exposition of a dis puted point which equals the Packer absurdity. Why, sir, right' reason and common sense are -dead egainet his ex-Excellency. The ac ceptance of , a much higher office by our Speaker, and the attention required from him as the Ex- ecutive of this great Commonwealth, is a potent reason why he should awe to be Speaker of this" body, not the special and only cause why he should be continued in the lesser office, as the Williamsport Luminary asserts. What strange perversions of vision are caused by looking through , the Democratic spectacles ! The late President of the United *States, Mr. Buchanan,' when treason first marshalled armed boats against the lawfully constituted authorities, and beleagured the forts built by the common treasure of the na tion, looked through those singular glasses, when 10, to hls vision all power to protect the integrity of the Ilnion by force of arms van lahed; he saw but "a rope of sand;" the sword dropped from the nerveless grasp of the Com mander in-Chief of the armies of the United' States, the sworn successor of Washington and Jackson, an or a brief while " Blood! treason flourished over us." Our Democratic Senators look through these magic glasses et the Constitution of our good old Commonwealth, when, behold ! that in strument; the bcested work of the sages of of the era of the Refolution, revised and im- I proved by the highest talent of the deowdo ending in_l24o, this beautiful handiwork of the brat and brightest Wilda of Pennsylvania, this protecting mantle under which our State has grown to greatness, becomes at once a garment of shreds and patches, grievously die: figured by what the Senator from Clearfield de nominated the "cassus umlaut," and so fearfully imperfect as not to ba sufficient to save us from an interregnum in the Government, and pond bly from civil strife. Our political judges look through this won drous lens when the Conscription Act to their sharp optics looms up a.gross violation of State policy, and inconsistent with the sovereignty of the State. Fernando Wood and his sixty odd compeers on the floor of Congress, including nearly a dozen Pennsylvanians, peep through this won derful stereoptician—their knees sink under them at the alarming violation of the rights of the revolted States, in the President's pro cbunation of amnesty to rebels, and his invita tion to reconstruct the chaotio.exunmunities of the South. One, one figure, strange to say, im proves in beauty bpd graceful art when seen through this wonderful glare. " The dark figure of slavery, human slavery, changes at once its hue and posture and stanthf forth to the admiring eyes of George W. Woodward, so - matchless and 03 heaven endowed that nit is a sin to talk against it and a crime to abuse it." Its blessings must be spread through all our broad territories, where the white'emigrant from the North and from the Old World must stand aside to give a fair chance and an open field to "the peculiar in stitution." And you, Mr. Speaker, when seen by Sena tors from that`stand-point which has of late been denominated the " Southern side of the Chamber," as they raise their glasses dimmed with Musty precedents and the cobwebs of sev enty years you, sir, most singular to say, ap pear In the character of an usurper ! I con -1 firstulate you, sir, upon your good fortune. In every free State, from thedaysbf =Sada to the present hour every statesman wholes firmly resisted anar chy, i who has shut the door upon confusion, who has repressed the tendency of the fierce Democracy to unlicensed disorder, and who has prevented the excesses of revolu tion by a constant adherence to .fixed principles and unswerving administratibn . oiflce- every such statesman has been stigmatized as a tyrant or an usurper. "The tyrant Of the Chersoneae Was freedont's fastest truest friend , " and the "useursa" of the present hour w ' ill be gratefully remembered hereafter as the keaker of the Senate of Pennsylvania, who fearlessly exploded a mischievous dogma ' dangerous to the peace of the State, fraught with evil, and which, under Jess favorable circumstances, might convulse the Commonwealth with all the miseries of civil war. • Mr. Waimea (Senator from Chanted) having replied, at length on behalf of the Democrats, preteiting against the legality of the present `organisation of the Senate, Mr. CONNELL. I desire to ask the Senator from Clearfield a question--whether any act I.passed by the present Legislature, and attested by Jona P. Pear, the b'petiker of the Senate, s and approved by the Governor, would not be held to be a valid law in any court in this Commonwealth. Mr. WALLACE. What may be the rightsfl of parties who obtain legislation it the him& of this Legislature, conceding it to be erg s one is thing. Whether we have an body is another thing? Youmaybe the Speaker de fado, and not the Speaker &Ore. We know that you are net the Speaker hi accordance with the law and , the Constitution. Whilst your acts may be sustained as those of the Speaker de , fado—that does not prove anything in the argument. Thequestion here is whether we are to have a Spmher that Is to live for ever—or whether wa . are to stand by the "musty records of the pad," 'and have- a right to a Speaker at the commencement of a, If you are for tisurpition—if you chcioieho'call it ri 4— qtese are your words not /24142—if itTe , foriliti4l4l* and yotimmii . upon the name of _usurper. you are to • Mr. CONNKLL. I think that.the answer ~ the Senakiidralts the validity of say law may be peered by the Legieleture, atfeetel i. the Speaker and approved by the Governor therefore the propriety of the resolution urni , f consideration la manifest. After further debit* in whichfienatore sent, Kneefr, Commui sad•FMK= partici;g ted, the question was on proomding to a eeco. - . reading of the resofiation offered by Mr. c am., when the yeas and nays were as for.oz- € Yaw—Messrs. Champneye, Connell, Fleming,Grabam, Hoge,Householder, Johcsol. lirCandlesa, Ridgway, Turrell, Wilson, Wort'. ington and Penney, Speaker-14. Raze—Messrs. Beardelee, Bucher. G la, Hopkins, Kinsey, Lumberton, Latta, /I.*StkerrT Montgomery, Reilly, Smith, Stark, Stein at The Union Senators voting in the affirmat.. and the Democrats in the negative. So the question was determined In the Ete.ii tive. Teregrapii Ar, P HOUSE OF BEPRESENTATIVI,:3 The House then-proceeded to the considers Hon of the bill to increase the internal revour;: and agreed to the amendments reported troll the Committee of the Whole on the State the Union. Mr. Stevens offered a substitute far to amended bill. He said it was similar to to bill as originally reported from the Committ.' of Ways and Means, but makes more dietlr.-. the feature that a tax of sixty cents per galkl OR spirits shall be levied on that which may t . distilled and sold, or distilled and removed f consumption or sale after the 12th of January 1864. He said the legislators of 1862, whe the internal tax b !I tem was inaugurated, aft a free and fell n. distinctly declar, : that all our taxes should be prospective. TLC., principle was decided by those who at the Um bad cantrol of the legislation of Congros They had a right to suppose that that was tL policy of the country. To depart from it roe by adheroing to the amendments agreed to to diet, would be rank injustice to those who ha, governed themselves by this principle. House then voted on and rejected the east: tote—fil agaicst 100. The amended bill wa then passed—yeas 86, nays 68, as follows : The bill as passed provides that after passage of this satin lien of the duty in th act of July 1, 1882,and in addition to due payable for license s, there shall be levied, co . Meted and paid on all spirits that may be d., tilled and sold, or removed for consumptlo:. and saliof first proof—this duty of sixty ern: on each and every gallon, and said duty eh-: be alien and charge on such spirits, and al on the interest of all persons in default in ti. distillery used for distilling the -same, with ti stills, vessels, fixtures and tools therob and in-the lot or tract of land whereon tI distillery is situated until the duty shall paid, and all whisky or any other spirits, o . being rectified or mixed with any other - aphe or Said. whatever may be infused, and to be so? as whisky, brandy, rum, gin, wine, or by no; other name, and not otherwise provided for b. this act, %Aim act to which it is amendatory shall pay an additional tax of 20 cents per sal ion Provided,. That the said duty on spirit:. one liquors, and all other spirituous bevene,, enumerated in this act, shall be collected at a. lower rate than the basis of first proof, or shall be increased in proportion for any great - strength than the strength of first proof: P- Wed. That all spirits on hand for sale, ahett distilled prior to the date of this act or no• shall be subject to the rates of duty provide : by this act from and after the twelfth day January, 1864, except that spirits which ha: been already taxed under the law of July firi 1862, shall not be more than the additional - increased tax provided by this act. The second section provides for the seize. and forfeiture of spirits or other articles talc in this „bill, when there is reason to belies that ttd same are possessed or held for tfl purpose of being sold in defraud of the late nal revenue laws, the penalty is, on oonvicti: to be five hundred dollars, or not less the double the amount Of duties fraudulently -.• tempted to be evaded. The third section provide's that all diet ;!!: spirits upon which an excise duty is imposed I law .may be exported without payment of dot and when the same intended for export may, without being charged with duty, moved. Ho Ho drawback shall in any case lowed on any distilled spirits upon eeb:, L excise duty shall have been paid, either or after it shall have been placed In a bou t warehouse, as aforesaid ; but no provielen this act sh all be construed to repeal asig.l. laws. FROM OINOIR NATI- CINCINNATI. Jan. The Kentucky Legislature took two ball: for 11. S. Senator yesterday, without result. Special dispatches from Indianapolis that the recently published statement th 3 150 of the Indiana six mouths' soldiers dit from exposure, enronte from Tazewell. Ten:. is false. They have arrived at Indianapolis. The 66th N. Y. veteran volunteers arrived - Indianapolis yesterday. From two to three regiments pass throu, Indianapolis daily. The 44th Ohio arrived bore yesterday ; re-enlisted. Two hundred thousand dollars have bee paid over to the sanitary commission by t officers of the fair- Funds are still coming IL It is thought the net total will reach ti hundred and ten thousand dollars. Illness of a Member of Congress. The Hon. D. C. Littejohn -is quite in, at_ will be tumble to resume his seat in Congre for a month. Earritb. At Dauphin, on the 19th that, by the 8. 7...lCeinble, Mi. Cloonan Haman to Suns 'Kumla, both of litnepfehannatownabli Dauphin on , Pa. • On the 21st inst., by Rev. B. T. Eemble, Onauoan H. • Wikberm to Miss &man JA' Synniura c all of Dauphin, Dauphin eo., Pa. }€litD. Ecnw This morning at 4 o'clock, Faunal zrzza. Funeral Sunday morning at 10 o'clock, ti t& refildence e on Third street above North. Diem 2thriertistmatts. WEAVES& AND EPNEEI23I rl-] v v FRANK. TENDERS WANTED at Shett Eamsnutn, CairponteT & Co.'s, No. 3 Mill,L =elder ' l'a•pal having been increafe : girls oan now toskegtaid waged. jan23 Aiwa - C. B. D&VIS, 300 fitilare PEAK , eVrao re°thelfat WM. DOOM, Jr., & Cc Wassiaxams, Jan. 22 Haw Your, Jan. 22.