imply a right of ownership ? And does not a right .of ownership imply something more? Does' it not - follow that Pennsylvania is a slave tate, ? The consequence is startling. We are in nowise prepared to admit any such conse quence, nor to do any legislative act which would allow this State of affairs. Were such a condition of things allowed it would in all pro bability be but the entering wedge that might make us in time a slave State. We know that the institution of slavery is greedy ; it never cries "enough !" When it has obtained one concession it wants two ; when it has obtained two it wants a dozen. Yon can never satisfy it. But one says that the South desires nothing more than .the right to recapture its fugitive Why / then raise snob a clamor becapse we have laws which merely protect our own cit izens and prevent kidnapping? : Various have been the argunfents producedhere to Sliotv that these sections are _unconstitutional: One of them struck me as very novel. One argument, which has been offered to prove that these sections are unconstitutional, is, that so large a number of citizens have - peti tioned for their repeal, while some have'sent in petitions against the repeal. Therefore, it is argued, they must be unconstitutional. After such logic as this, who dare say that h new era of logic has not dawned upon us? Another says, as an excuse, that the codifiers themselves say that they never intended they should be re pealed. Sir, this is a little too much. Great offence has been taken because in the course of this debate some have mentioned "dirt-eating." I have only to say that, if tne codifiers have got down to that, I entertain serious fears that there will not be dirt enough left for certain other gentlemen: The same gdntlernan who has made this re mark in regard to the codifiers, has said that he did not wish the repeal of these sections to be made a party vote—that he would be glad to see them repealed by a unanimous vote. I have not the least doubt that this is the truth. No doubt, sir, he would he glad to see every freeman in the State of Pennsylvania prostrate himself low in the dust, crying out that cotton— no , that the almighty nigger shall be king over us. But, sir, this question must be met sooner of later, and settled. Shall we settle it ? Shall we meet our responsibilities like men ? Or shall we, like cowards, shuffle them off upon our children ? Sir, our duty to ourselves as men, our duty to our State, our duty to the Union, all require of us to actpromptly and decisively. I will go farther : Our duty to the seceding States requires of us that we deceive them not, but that we meet the emergency boldly, tend ering not only men but means to the President of these United States, whenever they may be necessary to sustain the Union or suppress re bellion. NIL HOFIUS. Mr. SPEAKER : I had intended to sit, in silence during the consideration of the resolutions now before the House, and record my vote as to the expression of my views on the great question that now agitates the public mind. Sir, the principles that are at stake are of no ordinary character—a question, sir. that extends to every locality of this great nation. Every class of individuals—yea, more, sir, the inter ests of generations yet unborn—are at stake. The lives, liberties and fortunes of the Ame rican people are now at stake. No more im portant question ever entered the mind of man 1 4 from his creation down to the present time. Why, sir, an attempt to take from us, at a time like this, the only boon left us by-our fore ii The world will scarcely believe that this whole controversy, and all the desperate measures its supporters have resorted to, have no other foundation than the election of the man of our choice in a Constitutional manner. This difference of opinion between a small ma jority in South Carolina and.one or two of the Cotton States on one side, and a, vast majority of the whole people of the United States on the other. It will not - credit the fact—it will not admit the possibility—that in an enlightened age, in a free, popular republic, under a goy : emment where the people govern, as they must always do under such a system, by majorities ; at 0. time of unprecedented happiness without . 4, practical oppression ; without evils such as may not only be pretended but felt and experienced; qs, not slight or temporary, but deep, perma -At and intolerable. at a single State should rush into conflict all the rest and attempt to crush the • or the Union by her own laws—and to rt those laws by her military power and zeak clown and destroy the world's last Well may the world be incredulous. We 'ear and see it can our selves hardly yet 'e it. Yet this ordinance of Dec. 20, 1860, al an ordinance to dissolve the Union be the State of South Carolina and oth- Iles united with her, under the constitu )f the United States of America, whereby ?dared that the said Union, is dissolved. dinance struck the country with amaze it was incredible and inconcieveable that Carolina shoidd Ans. plunge lleadlang. mistance to the laws on a matter of and on a question in which the prepon ? of opinion, both of the present day past time,was so overwhelmingly against ~ on the strength of that opinion, she les the laws. Has the rest of the country girt to its opinions, also? Is one State to be arbitress? She maintains that she +has a eign right to decide this matter, and that ig so decided, she (S. C.) is authorized to the execution of the laws by her own ;ign power, and declares that she win though such resistance should shatter the to atoms. sir, I take the opinion of Hr. Webster, ie Constitution of the United States is 3ague, confederacy or compact between ple of the several States in their soyer mcity ; it is but a governaihrit properly on the adoption. of the people, and direct relations between itself and in ; that no State authority has power !e these relations ; that nothing - can them but revolution, and that conse there can be no such thing as secession revolution. there is a Supreme law consisting of the tion of the United States, acts of Con ned in pursuance of it, and treaties, in cases not capable of assuming the of a suit in law or equity, Congress lge of, and finally interpret, this sli m-, so often as it has occasion to pass legislation ; and in cases capable of and actually assuming the character of Supreme Court of the United States is nterpreter. That anattempt by a State te, annul or nullify an act of Congress, it its operations within her limits on d that, in her opinion, such law is un onal, is a direct usurpation of the rs of the General Government and of right of other States, a plain violation istitution and a proceeding essentially nary in its character and tendency. g, as I do, these views as to the right m, I look upon the conduct of South together with her advisers and abet tem come from whatever section of ry they may, or from what politi or creed they may, as common our Constitution and to our country. deal parties I have but little to say. political principles are fairly set forth icago platform ; the principles there ire no, new principles, they are the of a Washington and a Jefferson; and, ly believe they are the only true prin the American people. ir, but a few days ago I was charged wing a fire brand into this House, by these resolutions, and that by a ' the Republican party, a conservative istory of our country fully satislles me upon the subject of the extension of slavery and of the policy of covering up the real ques tion at issue. In 1852, the old Whig party de clared that the question of slavery should not be agitated in Congress ; that party lived but four years ; in the same • year the Democratic party declared thatthe subject of slavery should not be agitated either in or out of Congress ; that party has lived and staid by quirk and dodges till 1860, and she has bid adieu to time forever. The minds of the great Americanpeople have become agitated on this question, and political parties may try to evade the issue; but, sir, it CAD never be done till it is settled. There is a spirit of freedom all over this land ;, even in the Southern States the fire is kindled, and South Carolina is fanning it into a blaze. And that blaze is fast consuming the plots and schemes of designing demagogues, both North and South. One word to the unterrified of 1856. The hue and cry of the Democratie party outside of their party platform, waS 'kn. the Constitution and the Union, as their cry in 1860 was Black Republicans, traitors and tories. These charges were hurled at us from every quarter. To-day, where do you find the trai tor and the tory—to what political party do they belong—where are their names enrolled I, Sir, rejoice to-day that I can say no mem ber of the party to which I have the honor to belong, is chargeable with disloyalty to his country. Sir, I call to-day upon the Demo : . erotic party to come forwartland redo:mu-herself of the charge that may be brought against her; for not Coming out and declaring for the Con stitution and the Union, as she did in 1850. To day you say to the world and to South Carolina that you are in favor of : amending that same Constitution that you were for as it was in ?-:fie., and in this you are, encouraging Indirectly.the overthrow of this great government,: South Carolina, nor no, other State, would dare raise the puny arm of rebellion against this great nation without some assurance from the North. You are at least winking'at her course, although she has dishonored our flag, dishonored our country, taken possession Of ourproperty, taken the lives of our citizens, and this tc the know ledge of every member of your party. Yet, not one word has been uttered by a single Demo crat in condemnation of her course. It is true no one has yet undertook to justify her. But, Sir, if I stand by and see my fellow beings,mur dered without rendering any assistance, when by one word, or by giving my influenceagainst the commission of the crime, and whOnirekrieit-: ed to do so, repulsed, Sir, am I not chargeable;_ as an accessory, or at least am I not Morally : chargeable with the offence ? • ; Now, Sir, riissert, fearless of contradiction, that the present state of feeling between the Northern and Southern States was brought' about by the false and slanderouscharges, against the Republican party in the North, and that those charges were proclaimed from the stump and by the press of the Democratic party, they knowing them to be false, sending them broadcast over this land—thereby indueingthe Southern States to believe that:the only.object. of the-party was to destroy the entire South. And they have succeeded in forcing a this , falsehood upon. them, and we now call upon them to set their Southern brethren right - Pei this' question, about which they have taken so-mueh.-. pains to deceive them—go preach the 'true . Re publican doctrine-that we; although We have slavery to be a great. moral as well psi litical evil, never . proposed , to 'interfere with ' it in the slave -holding.. States -L--we affirnithe Jeffersorikin - doctrine on the subject„ and certainly no Democrat can. find . fault With that. This question•has been fairly settled-by the peCiple—let us not reverse that decision, let. us stand firm—no deluding concessions, nosUr' render of principllet us have the question'of questions-settled now and for all time. - If the great principles' of libetty are - to be 'Pacrifieed; it' may as well be done new mat any other time if this Government was framed for no other purpose than to'catch - tind 'earry - back as would seem to be - the;vicws - of 'scene : of ; our. citizens, from the. tenor of 'their' petitions' and' memorials, it is time the State of PermsylVardW. knew somet i tiing of it. But formed for high, er and nobler purposes, asset forth in the pre amble to the ConstitUtion..of, the United. States; and as set forthin , the. Senate resolutions now under conSideratiOk let up,. as - the-'repre'sent' atives of the' ; Keystone „State, give ; , ouk, hearty support to those. resolutions, show to the world and to South Carolina that. we believe the ConstitutierCresiramed as our forefathers declare, in",drilleilacirin a more per...-. feet Union, "establish justiee,if e dintiestth tranquility, provide for the, , commcurdefence, promote .the..general 'welfare and -secire, the blessings of liberty torthemielves and their . terity: If all the'benefitS intended to be conk ferred by the Constitution are inadequate; re dress can and ought to be provided for through- Congreps, as set forth in the first resolution. -* The second resolution sets forth that the.peo-:' ple of Penrisylvian entertain and desire to cherish the most fretinat.leptiments For their brethren of other BMUS; alliiiiNtA b gady now, 428.11.127.11 ave ever been, to , triP urea needfuliiiilrefi - i6lTare, security ifia piness, under the Constitution ; yet we can. not surrender our liberties handed down to us by our forefathers, and sealed by tlleir blood. In the second resolution I can see nothing of a partizan nature, nothing that will prevent any Union loving man from voting for it, although it is not quite so strong andpithx . as I would prefer;.', yet for the purpose of having the unanimous vote of the House I will vete for them with all my heart. • The third resolution endorses fully the senti ment and language of Andrew Jackson, expres sed in his message to Congress, on the 16th day of January, 1836, showing conclusively that the course pursued by the secessionists is haz arding the 'liberties and lives of millions of our peaceable and orderly citizens, utterly repug nant to all the principles and objects for which this government was ordained. Now, sir, it does seem to me that eve!) , Union loving man is in all honor bound to give his undivided sup port to these resolutions. " The 'fouillti resolu tion pledges the faith• and the power of ,Penn sylvania to the support of such measures, as may be required of her:by the constituted au thorities of the United States. The 'fifth resolution declares that all, plots, conspiracies and warlike demonstrations against the United States in any section of the country, are treasonable in their. character;and 'whatever power of the government is necessary for their suppression, should be applied to that purpose without hesitation or delay. Now, = sir, the principles set forth in these resolutions, I feel confident will meet with the approbation: of that part of this great commonwealth which I have the honor to represent on this floor, with out any respect to party. I will feel that I have done my duty whenl have voted for them without the dotting of an I or, the crossing of a T. Now, Mr. Speaker, the only apology I have to offer for occupying so much of the time of this House is the deep interest I feel for the welfare of the country that gave me birth. America, the pride of the world ! A nation sir, whose stars and stripes command the re spect of every clime, kindred, and tongue, (with sorrow and shame, I must except South. Carolina,) the flag that has been hailed with delight by 'every nation on God's green earth, has been despised by bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh. Sir, I feel that ,the honor of this nation must be sustained, even if it should be at the cost of our blood. , There were too many noble hearts sacrificed to obtain our liberties, for us to give thein up without an effort. May Heaven grant that we may have the fortitude of a Washington, the wisdom of a Clay and a Webster, and the true courage of 'an Anderson. Mr. WILLIAMS. When the witch of Endor invoked the spirit of the- dead prophet, at the bidding of the Hebrew King, his answer, as he rose slowly from the ground, was in a solemn and sepulchral voice, "Leave me, 0;" me to irty repose!" - - Pennopluania ;Daily etictirapli, actjursbap afternoon, January 24 1861. 'Why do gentlemen undertake to disturb me? I had spoken what I thought germane to the oc casion, and I intended to say no more. Is it their purpose to flesh their virgin swords on me ? Do they look to gather laurels here—to take the scalp of the slain and exhibit it in the columns of their presses, and at the head of their tri-: umphal march on another, perha s the ensuing Saturday, when they return to t 1 it homes? ' Well, Mr. Speaker, if gentlemen have any desires of this kind, while I am not the man to seek, they will find that I am not the man to shun, controversy anywhere. lthink that when it comes to that it will requir4 hot only all of .the intellectual power of Philadelphia, inside •of this House, but all that she can command outside of it gather any tritmiphs here: Sir,' 'I [endeavored to address Ws HOuseln a tone entirely conciliatory. It 'became necessary in the course of my remarks, adhering as I de sired to do to the great question*hich was be fore :as":4to refer to the action of a meeting of the :peoPle of Philadelphia in; Independence" Square, because the spirit of that meeting had: come ..here in numerous petitions which were loading down : your table. I felt that it was my duty to rebuke that spirit. : I did it in lan guage:at which I thought no gentleman could take offence. I was' desirous /to propitiate the party labiola is'antagonistical io myself,because I desired that PennsylVaniashould speak out - with a Amite(' voice when thateglorious Unionito the construction of 'which she contributed so 'largely, was imperilled—whe,i our common in heritance. and our common /safeguard was, in danger. I endeavored to adMenish my Demo cratie friends'of the rock upon which that - poiv- " erful organization had been Wi..eckecl m the States ; I; gave them Warning of the peril which.. they were encountering ; I indulged in the in timation that the people wok ahead of them throughout this State, and that perhaps they might find themselves shelved high . and dry: upon the sands. I made no imputations upon the 'loyalty of Philadelphia. I had no occasion to indulge in that way. I thought Hilly duty, .in that conciliatory tone which I adopted,:and to which I have already referred, to say •nOth ing that would give offence or create displeas ure anywhere. . It seems, however, that I Imve throvin a bomb amongst the representatives - of that 'city. , They have taken offence at that which ;has, fallen froin me—whether worthily, whither properly, is not for me to say,—the Rouge will _judge. What I have said is said. It is before the Philadelphia public—no sir, it is not, it rill find no access to that public. There is an instrument—a powerful one, stronger than the sword itself, — in a nation like; ours—which ought to diffuse light, but which sometiMes, now-a-days, in our commercial cities, seems to • convey the idea that its emission is to shed forth' darkness. Nothing that I may say will be reported in a Philadelphia .riews paper, or else lam greatly mistaken. Nothing which I'may say in defence of my own . people, ,or in regard to their relations to the so mil& idolized Qiuit whic.V.:ll-arn supposed to 'IMVO".. slandered, will; find, an audience, there. - , Sir, gentlemen lave thought proper—and we have a trio of them in stridulous recitative-- to hurl their puny arrows at the district ivhich have the honor to represent, and that, Tooking to my own peculiar relation to a ques ition which, I think, they will understand here after .I.h9gleave to say,.to r those'geptlerneri, Without tfiing par geinens. of their understandings, . that .ith v e,y, are but "babes in knowledge`," so taras regaids that greatest ' of questions, which constitutes my mission here, and of which I shall endeavor to speak`more fully hereafter. lam anticipated, however, by the assault.. -It becomes' me, in vindication of my own people, to make:the answer which it suggests, and which it provokes'..- The gentleman will find; perhapsi...whenlkhaye done, that he has not Understood this question quite so.well as he ought to understand it ; and e-iwill_forui,•-:perhap4,--t-hair it . 0 7 -3i.34. --other safe; according, to the proverb; to deal with edge, tools. " Why, sir, how could he expect information ? Could he look for it the'press? it shedi dark ness and not light upon this question. It has no initinet of liberty.; there is no pulse that responds , to - a generous sentiment beating in itiP bosom. I might'except some . perhaps ; my. as sertion is a broad one ; but I take it that, as to the general tone of the press, 'it haiehtirely : and recklessly disparaged my constituents and libelled me. *I am here to defend them and to vindicate myself against all the power that this 'nighty engine can hurl; and all too; that the great city, of Philadelphia can ,bring into the field. They shall understand this question by whht is the power uith am call 'id to contend ? The press, itself, is a great one, but there is another behind it. There is - a pow er - irtioi'd `seat s is — beyond the ocean ; it is the power that moves the coniMerce of the world ; it is the power that controls the press of the me t owlitari cities. It is a new power that has arisen within a century, dominating over every other and casting its blackening shadow over land. It is a Rower antagonistic to the elcs now to lock ice. free deadly embrace and strangle * .ea e . -Here are two great antagoniitie interests, as entirely so as. hose of liberty and slavery, met in deadly strife. I represent the' freeholder—the power this side of the ocean, and I think I shall prove Myself competent to defend him. But what is that power—that money power—of which I speak? What are its instincts? Are they - in the direction of liberty I have already indicated, in m y, previous remarks, that:they are not. I think it is a power that responds to no high or' generous impulse. - -Its idea i (that it mar buy the freeholder by a mortgage at a heavy, dis count, -and although seated in foreign lands, lead him captive in its chains at the bidding, of a Legislature and by the direction of a Court. Sir, it is an abject. ower. It stoops, it looks upon the carth—llite.that spirit it represents, so well described by Milton, "the least erect that fell''—the spirit that was always con templating the fiches of Heaven's pavement— because :it was make-cif gold. .0 That is the power. I know that it is a for 'Addable one, I know that it commands potent energies ; I know that lam 'feeble in its pre sence—that by opposing it I subject myself to misrepresentation, .to -Cabin:ay, to rillifiat tion. • I trust that the gentleman from Philadelphia (Plr..Lsasnittio) will think better of this sub lent when he comes to understand, the question with which ho has been dealing. He will al low Me to say to him now, that under these malign influences to which I have referred, he. nows nothing about it. He talks about the obligations of our citizens.; he undertakes to institute comparisons between tße:iity of Phil- adelphla and the' county Allegheny. Other , gentlemen have referred. to higunections that have prevailed in western Pennsyl vania ; and he reminds you, as others:) had done before - him, of like disturbances which' are are now threatened among the people of Alle gheny county—looking strongly, as he sup. poses, in the direction - of revolution. Be it so Call it revolution or what you please. And this is a right which no man can question. I say to him that he may take up the volumes of the .historians from the earliestiarinals of our race, and he will find no case of higher piovocation to rebellion than is now witnessed in the county of Allegheny. Why, sir, what is it? It is a question of confiscation. And what is the object of this government? It is the protection of property. Here is the assertion of a power to tax, without the consent of the citizen—to take his whole freehold—to deprive him of all the interest that he has under this government—because, if his property may be taken, by the same logic so may also his life In such an aspect of affairs, well might the people then say in the language of the-Israelites, in -the-days. of Rehoboazn, 19 - hat part have we in David ? we have no Inherftance i n-the son of Jesse. To your tents, 0 Israel! Now look to thine own house, David!" This we might well say, if those doctrines which have been promulgated by the very reverend judicial authority which has its seat in Philadel phia, are to be considered as law there or any where—doctrines which are incendiary, revolu tionary, immoral, atrocious and infamoustlec trines which have been so substantially pro nounced publicly by a Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States on more than one occasion. The worthy gentleman speaks of a late deci sion of that court, as being conclusive upon this question, and having settled all the issues that have been so long litigated.,l beg to say to him without having seen that ecision, that the ruling was of course upon the doctrine that the decision of the State court upon a question as to the construction of the State Constitution, is hiroling upon the Federal tribunals ; and - I can say, moreover, that bit for this reason the judge to whom 'I have • referred--and that: is Justice Grier, a resident of their own city— would have declared all' these acts of Assembly to be unconstitutional. I think I hold no opinions upon this subject that are not held by him. I hold none, I think, that are not held by the ablest of the lawyers of Philadelphia, the very patriarch of its bar, for whom every professional man entertain the highest possible respect, I think—l may say I know—that• his opinions coincide with my own ; and I think the whole professional mind of America--all its ablest lawyers—will be found to agree in what I shall hereafter proclaim as my opinions upon this question. The gentleman talks about debts. He sug gests, by way of contrast; that Philadelphia has always stood fast by her obligations, while the county of Allegheny has Tepudiated hers ; that. Philadelphia has always been loyal, always pa triotic, always liberal—her purse open and her hand five as that of charity itself, to the de mands of her country in the hour of its peril. Now, Mr. SPEAKER, I am not inclined to seek any quarrel with Philadelphia. I hope to find all her members voting with me upon these questions, when they come to understand them; but I think it would be well enough in the meanwhile for "those who live in glass houses not to throw stones." The SPEAKER, (Mr. Aouira in the chair.) The chair would suggest that the , question of the, Allegifeny tamids is not :under Aiscus.sion. Mr. WILLIAMS. It is not,; if the topic was legitimate in the way of argument on the part of gentlemen who have introduceed 'it, I suppose it is equally legitimate in the way'of reply. Mr. RANDALL. I hope that the gentleman may have the, opportunity to Troceed. Mr, WILLIAMS:, Well, sii-; I ask nothing t of grace or favor. If lam out of order, of course .I stand subject to correction. • Gentlemen have chosen to make comparisons._ There have been;references. to the Whiskey In, surrection in Western , Pennsylvania. '`Such re ferenees do not touch'Me and the men of my - county so nearly 'as the men of Fayette, nml Washington and Westmoreland—counties which I believe -were the - seat of-rebellion. I have no particular fault to find - in regard to that insurrection; it, was an er ror on their part, and it was corrected by the military •of 'the general government There was'no doubt then as to ,the right to "employ, authority.of that land.there was some --thing, at least, even in • that insurrection, which may be referred to as excusing it in some degree; there was in it a little of .the ring_ of the old metal ; there was something there 'that- awakened revolutionary memories in the idea:of resistance to a tax—something very un like the;position of the men who -Were takiiig sides . againsttheir •country,-• when it was at war with a pow'erwhose jnrisdiction itMulsolortinly abjured. It is not for me to make references of this sotte,,lint.it..-in,said.that • has always bee - faithful. Ido noethink that history speaks that 1-nturige. - .:' - 1 say nothing of -the loyalty of the people now—although it, seems, .tha,t, according to, the argument of t,.hp gentleman from Philadelphia, (Mr. the sins of the fathers are to be visited upon the children. I think there is no equity in that;buti do not insist that there is just a disloyal man in Philadelphia. I -trust 'Mine Suctiwill be found. But it was not -always so. If there was a rebellion in• Western. Pennsylva nia`littsfeVerfolirithem--twittriislayaltyrinealtt' - ern Pennsylvania at another—and that not very long ante6Rielifta the rebellion of which gentlemen have spoken. I think history tells ua that whemthe Americim- army- Evan- 1.3/1g at, Valley Porge, - Buffering- for want Of 'prOVisions.' without =clothing; . mithont blankets:2 almost without,,,fir,Pnilattlelphia, being in the.possef sion;af Wait:kit:l-my, antler the lead ofiGenz , eral Howe -.I think history tells us that at that :period there were a good many men in that city who were disloyal:to the country—such: men as-. the Chaplain • Duche, who addressed a solemM letter to General Washington, at the most dif ficult crisis of our country's fortunes, requesting him to abandon• a cause which was cursed of God—which could never be favored by Him. Nor do I think that Philadelpiia was quite so viVit - General Washington, if history does me, was obliged to send Colonel Hamilton to make a forced requisition upon her merchants to obtain the necessary supplies of blankets, ,clothing, etc., Tor the army. This was her lib lerality then. I'do not impute this same 'g-rud ging spirit to her _peoplenow ; I say it in the way of answer to the imputations made against the people whom I have the honor to repro sent here. But it is said' Philadelphia stands by her ob ligations.; she,pays her debts. What debts do we 'owe and not pay ? Why, these obligations are not debts at all. They were never ruled by the court as . binding in_the character of debts. They have not the smell: of contract abOut them They were imposed by the votes of Philadelphia members, against the consent of our people at home—against my consent as one of them. Our pleasure was never consulted in reference to them. They were intended to con struct improvements to benefit the trade of Philadelphia. '. .It was by the power exercised through this Legislature that these burdens were imposed ; and they were only sustained, (as gentlemen will find if they look into the case of Sharpless, the first and ,leading. case, ruled only by three judges out of five,) the va lidity of these obligations was only sustained on the ground that they were an exercise of the taxing power, that court turning out the plain tiff Sharpless,who was a freeholder, on the ground that it was none of his business, and that_ aT though all Philadelphia had been protesting, still the obligation might be laWfullyrimPosedi even to the whole property of the citizen.— What is the doctrine that was settled there— nothing about it of contract—nothing resem bling contract—not an element connected with the matter at all. If every citizen of Allegheny county had protested, still his voice would have been of no avail under the ruling of the Su preme Court of Pennsylvania. The . act was •done without their agency, and.was intendedto 'be done in sucha way as would debar them from privilege of dissenting. How is it with our friends of Philadelphia ? They impute to us "repudiation." That wordy I know, has a commercial signification. In its Original meaning, referring to its etymology, there is no harm>m it ; but as used now-a-daYs, it is supposed to convey imputation of fraud of dishonesty ; it is supposed to involve a moral delinquency. There is no moral question in volved here. I beg to say that it is a'question of politics, and a greater question by far than that of the Revolution itself. That was, ques tion merely of the right to take a part of the property of the citizens for the support of .goi-- eniment.. This is a question of the right. to take the whole for any purpose whatever.- the presence of this great question, the qnestion of the Revolution itself is dwarfed into- absolute nothingness. This if; a ,questionthat has never' I been made since the days of Magna Charts, when the stout4fdarted Barons of England ex ' 'forted that instrument of liberty at the point of their swords from the , tyrant King John. But let us see how Philadelphia acted in these cases herself. She hai obligations her self. She has two millions and a quarter in the Sunbury and Erie Railroad. It is a bad investment. What does she do ? The Board of Trade meet and pass resolutions, (I gleaned the facts from the public newspapers, and may not state them with entire accuracy, but I can I give their substance,) declaring that the invest ment will be lost unless they can obtain relief from the State ; and the-meana devised was the appropriation of one-half of your public works to that purpose, after the other, half had been given to the Pennsylvania Railroad company, of which that city was the largest proprietor— one-half of whose capital stock she herself own ed.' Well sir she votes these public improve meats into her Own., poqket. She commands some seventeen votes in this House.; and I do not undertake' to say how many in the &nide ;- she has =de's: bad investment; she comes to' the State for relief ; she plunges her hand into the treasury and helps herself. . Now, when my Philadelphia friends talk to me of " repu diation," may I not well remind them of the fact that they make good their own bad invest ments, and pay their own debts, by plundering the public treasury ? *ay I not say to them, with regard to their votes, as Falstaff said to Prince Henry:on a melorablebccasion, "when you are , king, Hal, rob me the achequer." With the same means and appliances we I.Wuld pay our 'debts too. Have they a right, however, to reproach us? But, sir, I had no desire tozo into a disqui sition of this sort. It is entirely irrelevant. Gen tlemen have supposed; libwever,that they might derive - Some' satisfaction from a fling at Alle gheny county. They thought her to be vul nerable. They will find that she is notquite so vulnerable as they have imagined. She is cased in armor—yes, such armor as cannot be trans pierced, because it is the armor of justice—for, as the poet says, Mu ice i.he itru - ad who has his quarrel just Aud he ha. bly, Pouglklucked up in steel, Whose co, seio lee with ]nuigtiee is oppressed I would suggest to my Philadelphia friends not to be in any hurry over this question. I shall ventilate it after awhile ; and I think it will require all the ingenuity and all the learn ing of themselves, and their friends outside, to make a:good ease for the judges to whom they Teter. And now, sir, I lake leave of that question. I regret that I have found occasion to refer to it at all . ; but I.couild not sit here in silence, -Withont rePellink, an unprovoked, as I think, and certainly a very :irrelevant attack made upon my constittients. - If gentlemen think they can profit UT the repplitton'of such attacks, IT opening anew, such, controversies, they may try, it. I, B*M alWiys he realtyand quite' as willing to meet them aithey who make the as sault, - * And now one word in regard to these resolu tions. I have already expressed the hope and belief that. - the representatives of the city of Philadelphia,. of both parties, 'when they should unclerstruid the ilueition':tc; which I have re ferred, Would think With me. I think there is an argument upon that question that appeals to I the instinct of every, mart—to the great instinct of propriety to which every holiest heart must at once respond. I equallytrust-that they will be with us in this great national exigency *hi& seems to have absorbed all other questions— and rightly ,too—it is the great queStion of the tiine. An. this question, I have trusted that the Legislatire of Pennsylvania 'would be a unit. I do not see why . they should not be.`Gentlemen are 'placing themselves ; - upon the record in a crisis of unexampled interests and moment: Would they haVe their record *right? r What is there in the resolutions adopt: ed by.the . :Benate, (Whose plaraseelo2y I. do not altogether approve and which do not go so far as I would desire),:what is - there in thoseresolu, tions, taking - thern as the enunciation of great political titiths, .frem.which any: man can -sent ? Domanybody dispute those principles'? Whytkerare axioms , in politiSa Do Demo crag distnite'the doetritlimpf General Jackson, - which are eiribbffiedOcfpTortroie resolutions? Then why mitilet.Tuporklie&ilj There: is a cri siso the preamble of both sets of resolutions &clues: 'Whs . :bib the duty of the:l-igishitiire of Peraisylyarria? What do its meritWr` Pro pose under "tIM circumstances? To intervene for the relief of the GovernMent—to save the Ihilon. I take that'to be the general purpose. And how is the" Union to be saved. By strengthening the bands of the'.Government in 'an obvious and effiCacious way?'or by going off upon. a -wild gooqe chase" after the "eter nal nigger?" My - friend 'froth Lehigh (Mr. LicniarawArmara) has remarked that it is time we should have done with discuasing questions as to the slave ; and yet in the same speech he was supporting a set of resolutions which refers to nothing , else. If I have not mis-read the reaolutions offered liy the ' gehtlemite fib& 'Philadelphia, (10:" DizIT FIELD,) they , contais one,yrord_which does .tfiw...to that question.-Thereniedyproposed 15-y- thug Class from the Senate is to strengthen the arn - rtil;•7-‘ 1 •0 3 ."P-N4. —to give it power, if'it has it not of itself—to tender all the resources of the Commonwealth to assist it in this crisis. That the call of this great government upon her 'children in thiS State. Shall it, be answered or shall it not? Gentlemen cannot affirm any of these pro positions. What do they propose by way of reply? The government is in danger ; how is it to be saved? Why, by repealing, as they think, some two or three Acts of - Assembly, passed, as one gentleman '(111.r. DAVIS) - Ofis evening has suggested, by the Democratic party themselves, And acts admitted to be constitutional—acts that are, at all events, according to the lan- ' guage of your Governor's Message, entirely harmless. They look unfriendly, it is said; but the question is, how are they in effect? Are they unttienflly in point.of fact ? Do they conflict with our Constitutional obligations ? think nobody pretends it ; no lawyer can say It I cannot imagine an argunient which the ingenuity of the wisest and most learned of the profession could construct to support' such a hypothesis. But what do gentlemen, grieve at ?. What is to be the effect ? Is this the-medicine the sick man wants? The general government is trem bling upon a precipice. One gentleman who has - Spoken to-night, I ' , think the gentleman from Philadelphia, (Mr Ems: mum), has said that "we are treMbling.": Tliat may be true as to Philadelphia ; but I tell you that there is no heart that trembles in the West • We are pre pared to meet, the crisis like, men. -We deplore the shedding of blood as much as any man, can do, but if it becomes necessary, we know that blood has flowed in torrents in those times that "tried men's souls," and we feelthat we should be unworthy descendants of noble stock, and false to all the glorious memories of the Revo lution, if we should fail to offer our own small pittance of blood,uPon the same altar, and in the way of a like sacrifice. Does the South ask for the repeal of our en actments? 10. Will such repeal satisfir, them? We start on the hypothesis that thereis noth ing wrong'in them ; it is merely that they seem unfriendly. The South luni not asked any le gislation of this sort. When it was proposed in the Committee of •Thirteen, appointed by the Senate of 'the United States, to. recommend to the severallStates of this 'anon to pass laws to secure the COnstitutional rights of the citizens in all the States, or to repeal, in other words, all laws contravening the Constitution of the United States, What - Was the answer of the rep resentatives from the slavehokling States ? They declined the proposition. They would have no objection,,perhaps,...ou ahardd. repeta,AA uncOnstitfiticifill :law at the .but they will not confetti thenaselves forePial-siky not even the law which throws the negro sailor into jail and sells him for his fees. They will do nothing to protect the citizens of Peens).lva nia from the indignities of tar and feathers and the lash. We are denied our Constitutional rigkts; and now the medicine, the grand panacea, the nostrums which our friends on the other side offer to us, is the repeal of an offensive statute of Pennsylvania, where they utterly ig nore the idea of a right on the part of the north, or a duty on the part of the Southern States in reference to us. How is this ? It seems so unfilial. -As Pennsylvanians, I ask gentle mento- recollect it; if we have a common inte rest and I trust a common pride in onr great stale. shonld we see faults and flaws :in our statute books, exploring them with a microscope, descending into these little minutia Such cenduct can serve no effee- trial purpose whateVer; and in pursuing it we ale at the same time entirely overlooking, „wilfully; neglecting. and ignoring, those very matters of complaint with which the whole of Pennsylvania is now filled. Why, our citizens are suffering everyday. Have gentlemen not bowels of compassion for them ? Do they not think a Pennsylvania citizen is entitled to pro tection in the South, and wherever else the tie°. of our country waves? By the terms of the COristitution of the United States it is his eight. By that he is entitled as well to the privilege of free thought and free speech. Why this House will recollect that in the proudest days of the Roman empire, the Apostle Paid, in the remote province of Jerusalem, when he ap pealed to his character as a Roman citizen, stayed the scourge of the executioner, and was remanded to Rome for trial. And shall we stand by here and not assert, but absolutely ig nore, the injury and the light on the' part of a citizen of our own State, "bone of our bone and flesh of ourflesh ?" - How unfilial, how un natural, seems - to be the feeling that prompts the action of gentlemen' here ! They. talk of the equality of the States. their object were to look to the diffeiences that exist between them, why did they not turn their attention in this direction ? Suppose the like things had happened in Northern States : suppose even that we had merely dis sired free speech, without 'resorting . to the Southern process of tar. and feathers, or the club or the bludgeon ; how quiet would have been the clamor of the whole South there ! Would they have stood quiet -under such circumstances? Would they have obliterated laws from their statute books.? Would they have been guilty (for, Imay say guilty) of, enactments reflecting upon themselves, amounting to confession of absolute quiet? and would 'they have been entirely silent, dumb as the grave, in reference to outrages upon themselves, such as rio pen can describe or tongue utter'? ask you, men of Pennsylvania, -- why should we act:thug'? Have we' no local pride? We are associated together as brothers. Here is a case in arhieir*e cannot afford to differ. I beg to remind gentlemen again that they have a record to make ; and there will be a question hereafter, who is right upon that re cord. The flag of rebellionis unfurled, and'blood is likely to be shed. If thejilood of our Southern brethren or oh our own people; is to flow, in the unnatural strife, that the men who now ignore the wrongs of Pennsylvania," and can realize no thing but the imaginary wrongs of the South, will, when that day of reckoning comes, be glad to call, upon the rocks and the mountains. to cover theni. I subinit ifto' gentlethen matter of discretion. I think they ought to have learned by this time that it is this power ful instinct (for it is an instinct) which attaches us to the Union, and accompanies its flag and surrounda everywhere,it is..this toppled down into ruins the enormoug par ty once wielded an irre*ustable „sway throughout - the country tinder the - nanie of the Democracy. That instinct has not yet tied out ; it will not die ; it will out live all of us, as I have no doubt will the Union itself. But when the record comes to be made up, I trust that gentlemen whose names are not written in the right place will find &letter reason for their course than is to•be discovered-, either •in their speeches, or upon the face of the amendment - which they are so zealously supporting, (not by way of addition, but by way of substitute oniy,) as the remedy for our pres ent troubles. Is the Government to be allowed to languish in its present inaction—without fen*, without power—spurned, reviled, by its 1s revolter-provinces ls there to be no ac tion, no utterance on-our part, except a, tefer ene4 to imaginary wrongs. supposed to have been suffered by the South'? • Mr. Speaker, I must beg the pardon of the House for having said so much. I . did not in tend to*utter another word in this debate: -I thought I had said nothing calculated to offend any body ; I hope I have said nothing now that may have that effect. But when gentlemen as sail my constituents, of course I must reply. I had not intended to impute any personal dis loyalty to the people of Philadelphia ; but if members are desirous to ransack the pages ' history, I shall be always ready to accompany them in such researches and see what story history tells. As to present loyalty, I think the people of my district will compare favorably with those of any other ; and so far • re eras' their present attitude, in_regard to . er teLtivou -I-- repeat to ' onee - 110,4, la 'oir and fully istifled in the presence of this legis lature. • On motioa of Mr. SELTZER, the Flonse then Adjourned. .MITCHELL'S NSW GENERAL ATLAS. FOR ISi3l. This is Mitchell's latest and best att tele p; 14, furnish the Ametican people with a c, raileTe Atlas, comprising a aeries of sevtitty,ix rape and plans of different Pities in the Unit. d States, with a full and accurate list of pest aces, arranged in al phabetic,l order,uttlkiLuil: g some twenty-live thousand, and c-rrt.c - ed cen sus of the faiucipal towni and cities according to the latest rettons,apd other statistical know ledge so important. to 4 -1 7;_ly initn of 1.r,i0 SS. Its maps are Char and distinct. The hounda - ries of each county and St , e are plaint and dis tiact, the .coloring .thandful, al. e mbit,ing to make it one of the most at t raci ive desint ble wmits for the drawing r center •—a work every family ougit t ile the low price at which it is flit nislie.l.l-h+ca it withitahe'reach•of fareires: rakidC7ate'Mt'gu;s , The engMeings arc 4.lltitely nW, I ei , g i a up expressly fur this work, aid g lye a eka nu. to the lettering to:d lives cl dent ,1 tat on the I.illercnt countries, seldom no r with The vi uric is sold i:t,t3• by agc:•t• and rot. lig procured of tlo, twent wit" city. Jan. 21-if. LARGE ARRIVAL OF NtIV GOODS.— 111 E CHEAP. EST GOODS OFFERED YET.-2,000 yards Cant n flannel at 10 cents, w. , rth 12 ce4t& ' 2 000 yards bleached 4-4 muslin st 10 w.ii th l 2 cants. 100 Pe be tutilmi new et) p.iet at 10 cents, worth 12cents, 50 aut.:int ,i. t t 8 cents, worth 12 ants, wit. rattled fast .(4.1 1,500 yards of nnbleauhed thurlin nt 10 ier,'.•;„ the best ever made forl.le 1 !Mee 1 1 (1141 shirts ancl drawers .at 50, 62 and 75 cent,— Sockti and and 'ladies Ancki,V. a. Lug. v tr. Oar. whole stock of winter goods, rue'', as Sbawlk, De Daines, Pant Stuff, Cloth. •11 kinds of Flannele l vdll sell off at cart. Now is the titile to get. bargains. S. LE.WI: at Mauls' old'oorner. EN Jos. F. JACGI:ItS