THE TELEGRAPH IS PUBLISTFM EVERY DAY,, (SUNDAYS EICMPT6P,) By GEORGE 13ERGNER TKR/dB.--Sracms SIMENIMPRION The DAILY TILKGRAPH is eerved to subscribers in tht orough at 6.)i cents per week. Yearly subscribers 11l be charged. $4.00. WINICLIr AND EIZIROWNIELT TELNORAPB. The TWA:GRAPH is also pubilehed twice a week , during cue session pf the Legislature and weekly during the re• mainder of the year, and furnished to subscribers at the following rates viz Single Subscribers per year.. Seven . : t Pra TRI LAW OP OPWEIPAPI3I3. I subscribers Order the discontinuance of their news papers, the publisher may continue to send them until arrearagea are paid. if subscribers neglect or refuse to take their newspa pers from the office to which they are directed, they are responsible until they hav^ settled the bills and ordered them discontinued REPEAL OF THE TONNAGE TAX REMARKS EriZES HIESTER CLYMER SENATOR FROM BERR COUNTY, In reply to the Speech of Hon. Alexander Iff Cture on the Act for the commutation of tonnage - duties, delivered in the Senate, on Wednesday even ing, February 27, 1881. Mr. Speaker. The learned Senator from Franklin (Mr. M'CLuas) has consumed nearly one hour making a smooth harangue, I will not so distort the fact, as to call it an argument, in reply to a speech which he asserts was "a frightful monument of blunders." For this " monument of 'blinders" he Threatened to hold me 'to a strict account. .-.lndeed, sir, the bold assurance of the Senator made me fear that there was some error in my exhibit of the case-=that I might have been mistaken—that possibly this bill was right, and that I had unwittingly been doing gross injustice to an honest and deserving corporation. I began to think that an argument was about to be made: But, sir, as he progressed in his harangue, smooth, beautiful and in dulcet strains—when, as usual, the imaginative Senator wandered from earth to Heaven, and spoke of "the beneficent God, nature's God," I became composed and reassured. It was the old story, so familiar to every Senator, that it has long since ceased to excite attention, muchless to induce conviction upon this floor. We have heard it so often, that to all of us it was ass " thrice told tale"— when we heard the beginning, we knew the conclusion. There may be those within reach of the Senator's flute-like voice, who have been enchanted by its low soft notes—whose ears have been tickled by his flights of fancy,whose wonder has been excited by volubility and glibness; if there have been any such,it is not to be wondered at, as for them it was the first performance. But, sir, I say to the Senator that his sophistry is as thin as gossamer, his avoidance of facts is as pal pable as it is unfair, and that his logic is worse than his cause ! He has not failed, air, to re sort to each and every art known to the accom plished sophist, by which to hide the utter naked ness of hiscause. Assertion, insinuation, tergi versation and implied intimidation have been his only weapons of defence or attack. That he used them skillfully, no one who knows the Senator will doubt ; but, sir, they are the toy weapons of a child when brought to combat facts, figures, argument and truth. They are unworthy of any one, and more especially of any Senator of Pennsylvania. They may do to excite a pass ing interest, to draw forth temporary applause • but, sir, when the Senator's speech of thi s night passes into the history of 'eunsylvania, and is examined by unprejudiced minds, it will be pronounced "a frightful monument" of soph istry, erected to perpetuate the character of one man and to conceal the uriyast designs o ' one gigantic corporation. Thus much, Mr. Speaker, for this "monument," as a whole. I shall now proceed to examine it in detail. In some half uttered sentences, and in an ambi• guous manner, which I am free to adudt I did not fully comprehend, and which I am convinced no Senator understood, it was attempted by as sertion to deny that the right of way granted to the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was de stroyed by the incorporation of the Pennsylva nia Railroad. I confess, sir, I did not clearly understand the Senator, but surely his assertions were well calculated, if they were not designed, to pro duce that impression. If that was his assertion I must, again refer him to the Acts of Assembly of 1846. The important sections have been read once already to-night, and if the Senator still persists in his assertion I must;:Again in flict them upon the Senate. flu trust the Senator will not deny the existence'of Ahe Acts of 1846, although to him and to this corpora tion they may be a "frightful monument !" Mr. M'CLIJRE. I beg the gentleman's par don. I never denied it at all. Mr. CLYMER. What did the Senator deny? He denied something. Mr. m'CLURE. What I said I have already explained four times. I shall now explain it for the fifth and last time—positively for the last time. The gentleman from Berks said that we had lost a vast source of revenue to this State by chartering the Pennsylvania Rail ilbad company; that a charter had been-granted to certain citizens of another State to construct a railroad through Pennsylvania which was to pay a tax upon tonnage and upon-passengers.- I ha,venot denied it; but I say this: that though in 1827 a charter was thus granted-to certain parties to construct a railroad from Baltimore, through Pennsylvania to the West, that char ter imposing a tax upon tonnage and upon pas sengers, yet,. sir, there was no acceptance of that charter. Subsequently, I believe, that charter was renewed ; I am not positive, but I think it was renewed. Nothing had been done under that renewed charter when the Pennsyl vania Railroad company was chartered and con structed ; and if the Pennsylvania Railroad had not been constructed, Ido not know that this road from Baltimore through Pennsylvania, would have been put into operation ; I have never had any evidence of that ; I do not know now, that if the Pennsylvania Railroad had not been constructed until this day, that the other road would have been made.; indeed I believe, that it would not have been made. The con- Bisection of the Pennsylvania Railroad within a certain time, made that charter, I believe, void. Is not that true ? To show how the Le gislature of Pennsylvania appreciated the value of the privileges granted in that charter—how they appreciated this vast source of revenue, of which the Senator from Perks has spoken, and which roused him to such en ergetic" eloquence—the Legislature of Penn sylvania followed that with an Act of Agsetably incorporating a railroad ".to go over _the very same ground through Pennsylvania to Balti more, and there was not a word said about tax, either upon tonnage -or upon passengers. .To_ this day, that company cannot pay ten cents upon the dollar; and there would not have been a particle of revenue to the State if such a tax had been imposed. This anticipation of eaten- Elite profit from that right of way is_one of the gentleman's revenue bubbles which I sought to dissolve. Mr. CLYMER. If the Pennsylvania railroad had not been built, the Baltimore and Ohio railroad company, which now exists, would, instead of going through the State of Maryland, have gone through the State of Pennsylvania. That was the question. Mr. IroLuRE. I beg leave to inquire whether it is not true as I have stated, that that charter stood upou'our statute books for years and years unaccepted by the people of Baltimore or any body else ; that no person would-take it and pay a farthing to the State. Mr. CLYMER. I will answer the crestlon of the Senator. It is true that the oraguaal clam. . • !I 2.00 12.00 15.00 1111=fill VOL. XIV. ter was granted in 1827 ; but, sir, it was grant ed in advance of the times or the requirements of the age, and therefore it expired by limit]. tion ; but when the growth" of the country east and, west required the building of agreat line to :connect the waters of the Ohio with the Atlan- I tic sea board, the people of the city of Balti more and the State of - kihuland came to this Legislature and asked the renewal of the char ter of 1827. This request was made in 1846. They well understood and highly prized its value and importance. They cheerfully offered to pay this State any bonus she might ask for its renewal. No onaof us upon this floor is too young to remember the intense excitement produced in certain sections of the State in re lation to the question of reviving the grant.— It was a "Legislative war" which has never been equalled, unless when all is over thispres ent contest should do so. It drove at least one Senator of that day from his home because he dared to vote for the grant in opposition to the supposed interests and expressed wishes of his constituents. Theie facts every Senator remembers. If, sir, there was nothing valua ble in: this grant, why in the first place did the Baltimore and Ohio railroad ask -for it, and in the next place why did Philadelphia, with un restrained wrath drive from public life a Sena tor who voted for "it? Surely, Mr. Speaker, that corporation and that city were not both composed of insane Madmen The one to ask for something of no value' and which they did not desire, and the other so to treat a Senator for voting for a measure which could do no harm ! 1 No, sir; corporations and cities ever have in them men of foresight, men of com mon sense—and the Baltimore and Ohio rail road and the city of Philadelphia at that day were no exception to the rule. .The company knew and appreciated the immense value of her grant. They came to this Legislature and asked for it in sober earnestness; they fought it through these Halls with the energy and des peration which the hope of saving millions ever inspires. In their earnestness and deterthina tion to' succeed, they were more than equaled by the fixed purpose of Philadelphia, that they should not obtain their charter unless it contained the germ of its own de struction—and therefore this destruction of the grant of the right of way to the Balti more and Ohio Railroad, thus became, and will ever remain, one of the three great considera tions for the imposition of this tonnage toll 'or duty ; and all the plausibility and all the so phistry of the Senator from Franklin cannot erase this fact from the history of the State.— The Senator cannot and shall not mistake or misrepresent it. I have- pluduced it as a part of tharecord in this great case, and as such it shall go to the people of Pennsylvania freed from the doubts which sophistry and designed misrepresentation would throw around it. I challenge any man, any Senator, to disprove or refute it. "- But it is alleged that the grant was of no val ue, for the reason that the Baltimore and. Ohio road would never have accepted it, which it is proposed to prove by. the faot that thia State subsequently chartered a road (the Connells vine) to occupy the same ronte, which has ne ver been built. This is an average specimen of the 'sophistry of the gentleman from Franklin! Why did the Baltimore and Ohio company struggle for the 'rightwith•desperation if they did not intend to exercise it? Have they not, since 1846, constructed their iron pathway over the mountains of Maryland, and is the gentle man ignorant of the fact that they did so atthe cost of five millions and more over the route through our. State ? Has the company not said so in one of its 'official reporbr, and would they not gladly forever have paid at least the interest of the increased cost for that right of way ? Surely, therefore, the Senator can deceive no one by his gratuitous assertion that the Balti more and Ohio railroad would never have ac cepted the grant with the - restrictions imposed; but he would support it by referring to the fact that • the Connellaville road has not been built, although its char ter contains no such restrictions. Is it I wonderful, sir, that the Pennsylvania road ' being upon the North and the Baltimore land Ohio on the South;• that capitalists should hesitate to invest their money in a road which is to • run between them ? The reasons why the Connelsville road has not keen built are so ap parent that I would not have referred to the matter, but for the purpose of explaining the desperate shifts to which the Senator has re sorted to sustain his position. Again, Mr. Speaker, the Senator from Franklin innocently says "I cannot understand why -a _ ton of goods must pay a tax when it passes through Lancas ter to Philadelphia, and why it Must go free if it passes through the county of Berke' Be fore the eloquent Senator asserted his want of understanding upon this point, he took oc casion to refer in terms of attempted sarcasm, to the people whom I have the honor to repre sent. From the tenor of his remarks it would seem that he entertains some special pique against that people. What is his cause I am unable to discover ; but I would inform him that they are • not dependent upon his gocd opinion for their self-respect, nor for the esti mation in which they are held by other see lions of this State. Their histori is an honora ble and distinguished portion of the history of Pennsylvania, although it is-unquestiona bly true that they ,are of that -stock who, in the wards of the Senator, have never been "radical recklessinnovators"—on the con trary they are _frugal, industrious, honest and intelligent. They love honesty and abhor dis honesty. They are jrist and fearless, brave and prudent The type of tinttrace which has done more to make honesty, prudence and courage, the characteristic traits of-this State, than any other element of populidirdi Within her borders, I would to God, sir ! that all the people of this Commonwealth were of that same stock, and that they were truly represented in this Legis lature. If this were so, I might safely venture the assertion, .that the subject now under dis cussion would never have occupied the atten tion of this Senate. But, sir, • I have digressed, I will now proceed to, enlighten the Senator, so that forever • hereafter he may understand why “a ton of goods shotdd not be taxed as it pas ses through Berko county." This State never-built-nor owned one mile of ra i lroad or a main the county of Perks; there fore, the construction of our railroads and canals never-impaired the value or diminished the receipts of thosoworks, to build which the people of other portions of the State had been taxed. Again, sir, as 'the State never owned any public works in Berko county, we were un able to purcha4 bur iinprovements of the State at one-third their cost, as the Pennsylvania sir, the building of the Read ing• road had reduced the receipts of the State works, or if' the 'people of the Commonwealth had first been:taked to build...that road and we afterwards had. purchased it for one-third its cost, or if in granting to us the charter tobuild it,• the State had for us thrown away a grant Which:would lumyieldedher treasuryhmuireds of thousands. Yearly, filen indo4 Mr. Spealter, "INDEPENDENT IN ALL THINGS---NEUTRAL IN NONE•" HARRISBURG, PA., FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 29, 1861. should we be taxed , and no honest man whom' re present would object. But,sir,aswe havedestroyed neither the value nor decreased the receipts of the State works, and as our franchises never cost this State one dollar, the learned Sena tor from Franklin, if he is not utterly lost to all sense of justice, to all regard for fair deal ing, should now understand "why a ton of goods must go free if it passes through the county of Berks." Taxation, sir, is a burden— s burden on all classes, men and corporations. In the case of the Pennsylvania railroad it was a burden, assumed in consideration of great privileges granted, in consideration of great in-. terests destroyed ; and as she has never, nor can never restore to us those privileges granted and those interests which have been destroyed, he has no right, in justice or reason, to, cast shis burden off. To do so would be a gross tutrage upon every tax-payer of this Common wealth. Again, sir, I am asked by the Senator from Franklin, in dulcet tones and with assumed in nocence, "Why the farmer of the western or interior portion of the State must pay tranite to the treasury to reach a home market, while the farmers of Berks are untaxed? I would ask the learned Senator when, where and by whom the right was given this corporation to' tax the farmers of the western or interior parts of the State ; ? Does he find it in their charter orin any supplement to it ? No, sir, this company, by their charter, was to pay a toll or duty to the to the State ,for the benefit of all the people. It was nevercontemplatedbytheLegislaturewhentheir charter was granted that this toll or duty was to be by some ingenious process, some sharp prac tice, changed into a tax to be collected from the people. It was supposed that the company would gave paid it, as they could easily do; and should be compelled to do. For I assert, sir, without fear of contradiction, that if the cor poration has this tender regard for the people along its route, if they really. desire to relieve them from this tax as it is now termed, they can easily accomplish that laudable purpose, by being satisfied with six per cent. inter-; est upon their investment, as you, sir, and all other men are forced by law to be satisfied, let them pay the excess of their earnings over and above six per cent. into the treasury; it will more than pay the "toll or duty." This 0/pastor as it is called, will then be removed from the Peot. ple and will become what 'the Legislature 1846 intended it should be, a "toll or duty," to be paid out of the excess .earnings of the eraed,. paw over and above six per cent. But, sir, why do not the people along the line of this road, for whom the Senator from Franklin in his tenderness, has uttered such piteous and mournful lamentations, come here and ask the removal of this "odious tax ?" Why is it that almost every county along the entire route, is here represented by Senators who not only vote against this bill, but are bound so to vote by the solemn and repeated instructions of these "sufeting people ?"-- Does the Senator from Franklin mnderstand their interests better than, they do themselves ?. 137 what right dow-he Ignore tlreirir: . uitr•uctionsr, solemn and oft-repeated, td their own represent atives? It is singular that he, who is not of them, should thus pretend to represent them. I assert, sir, that these people have not asked the interference of the Senator, by petition or otherwise. His labors in their behalf are un asked and uncalled for,and his lamentations are those of an uninvited mourner. When these people feel themselves aggrieved,lthey will. say so, through their own representatives on- this floor, who, it is fair to presume, are at least as competent as the Senator from Franklin to set forth their wrongs and effect their remedy. But, sir, assuming that the Senator from- Franklin incorrect in calling it "a tax" upon the people, then, sir,lt cannot possibly be, a burd.en upon the company; and if; as 'I have shown, these very people do not ask‘to be.re lieved, where is the necessity for any action on our part? Are we to relieve a people who do not ask relief? - I am glad, sir, to be able to state, that in at least one position; 'the learned Senator admits that I was correct, which is, that by the repeal of the tonnage tax or duty we will dimimsh the ,r'evenues of the State. EVen he was not perverse or obtuse to admit this ! On the co racy, he not only admite init glories in the fac that by this pretended "commuta tion" We re to be robbed of many millions, and revels in ecstatic visions of the wealth, the progress, the, happiness which this very rob bery is to bring to the, pe,ople of the State. The conception seenied to translate the Senator from this rude, tax-paying, tax ridden sphere, to some elysian land, in which golden harvests are ever waving, whose mountains are of pure gold, where ever upon his ear - there falls the music of ceaseless, endless prosperity, and where civilization Ils reached that exalted con dition which heralds the millenium. It was, indeed, a lovely', beatific vision, vouchsafed only to tr - nscendent genius—to the highest de velopmen of moral and in.tellectual culture! But, sir, I failed to appreciate its practical; beneficial result ; I was unable to understood' how this direct kiss was to produce such in& dental advantages ; and when, sir, I realized' that this dream of the, gifted Senator was to lean us forever subject to the curse of taxation, il felt that after all it was the raving of an en thusiast and not the teaching of a statesman.' I venture the prediction that this vision will be dispelled by the Sound Common. sense. of the pea ple, as is the mist by the' rays of the rising sun. The Senator from Franklin accuses me of another and unpardonable blunder : in assuming that the construction of the_Pennsylvania Rail road destroyed : the value of. our main line of improvements, andusserts that a considerable portion of my argument was based upon this point. Certainly, Mr. Speaker, the Senator must be in error, or he would, remember that although I asserted - the fact, yet I refrained, for the purpose of saving the time of the Senate, from enlarging upon it, as the Senator from Pike, (Mr. Mon), in.bisablespeech of yesterday, -had demonstrated it beyond the possibility of contradiction. I now re-asserton, basing my assertion upon the facts and figures presented by the Senator from Pike ; and. if, as the Seo tor from Franklin states, the facts are upon the shelves of this Hall to show that I am, in error, or rather that the Senator.from Pikeis in error, why has he not taken the trouble to produce and explain them? They would 'have been at. least as satisfactory as the naked assertion of the. Senator from .Franklin, But, sir, as he has not dealt in anything but assertion in his entire harangue, and as he well understands "that figures will not lie,", he wisely and prudently adhered to his usual and only method of argu ment: It may bring conviction to minds simi lar to his own, but I tell him that the people of this State will demand something &bre than his unsustained assertion to disprove and combat the fortified position of the Senator from Wayne. I have, sir, but declared thathe waa and u correct. It would indeed require sir- perior intelligence to appreciate and subscribe to`the bare, and unsustained . assertion of the Senator from Franklin—an intelligence bright ened and sharpened by some means unknown to legitimate argument and fair discussion. As, sir, such means have not been at my disposal, I plead guilty to a want of intelligence such as the Senator from Franklin claims to possess. Where he obtained it, or upon what it is based, I confess that I am entirely ignorant * . The Senator front Franklin exclaimed in expiring energy : "Look at the records, and the eloquence of the Senator from Berks is forgotten in his want of in telligence." I would, sir, that not only the Sena torhimself, and each Senator on this floor, but that also every man in the State, could and would look at the records . if they do so, they will not fail to be convinced of the truth of my assertion, and of the sophistry and persistent avoidance of facts upon the part of the Senator from Franklin. I dare him to produce them ! He says they are on the shelves—that he can lay his hand on them. Why has he not done so? He avoids the truth, and thinks that by putting his own light under a bushel he can thereby produce universal darkness.— This course of conduct and of argument may suit this hour and this oocasion, but I tell him j the peetge will not,yely upon his unsustained assertiff; when it is clearly disproved by facts, figures and argument. They will read and de-. cide for themselves, and to their judgment I apPeal with unshaken faitik in its correctness and justice. But, sir, the anator having failed to refute the facts, to disprove the figures I presented, goes into excessive lamentation for the reason that I alleged that there was a sol emn contract between this corporation and the State which should not be broken. - He whined over it as though he were inconsolable. I fear ed that his excessive grief would have quite overpowered him; but in the lucid intervals of his sorrow what reasons did he assign for an nulling the contract ? I thought, sir, that out of his excessive agony,- some drops of reason and argument would at last appear, but I was again doomed to disappointment. • -It was the same story, " because you reduced the toll from five mills to thtee—because you relieved us from all tonnage duties upon coal and lumber, therefore now you must release us wa houtconsideration'from a contract which would be worthnineteen mill ions to the State in the next thirty-four years." Or,in other words, Mr. Speaker,because we have " given them the finger they now demand the whole, hand." Then again the Senator exclaims, with feverish energy, "that theinexorable laws of trade demand that the contract shall be abandoned"—that unless we do so the trade" of the West will be diverted to the competing lines North and South. I was not aware before sir, indeed I understood the Senator in the beginning of his speech expressly to deny that there was any tax, as he is pleased to call it, upon "through, frieght." I thought it was all imposed upon - the poor suffering people of this Commonwealth, and'that it was for that reason }this generous, kind hearted corporation came here asking that this toll or duty, should be taken off! Was I mistaken sir.? If I was it :would now appear that we are asked to destroy anabontraot r not to relieve: our---olm-rpo r l. .but to enable this corporation to compete with lines North and South. This then is the "im perious rule" which demands it ; for this rea son in the language of the eloquent and 'pleading Senator, "we must declare that here, 'as in - all the world beside, internal commerce must be free !" " "To what base uses have we come at last." After all-the touching, heart-rending appeals on behalf of. our own suffering people, we are now pathetically informed that it is not alone for them, but' to enable this oppressed corpora tion to - compete with other lines that this con tract must be destroyed.. But, sir, I am again compelled to 'correct the assertions of the Sen ator from Franklin. There is no toll or duty paid by this corporation upon "through ffeight, therefore they on this account are not prevented from competing with other routes— and that they have been able to do so success fully is demonstrated by the fact that while the New York and Erie LS bankrupt hi the hands of a receiver, and the Baltimore and Ohio greatly embarrassed, declaring no divi denda,tld,s corporation is growing richer year by year, declaring large dividends,although out of her, earnings she is constantly making vast and costly permanent improvements, which are greatly enhancing the intrinsic value of her stock. If, then, sir, the people along, the route do not ask the passage of this bill, if .the corporation , itself is successful, rich and dividend-paying, is there "an imperious ruk," do "the inexorable laws of Ode" demand that this contract, so odious to the sensitive Senator from Franklin, should be destroyed? Is not the demand based upon that ,other rule, an.inexorable law with some individuals and all corporations, "keep all you have and get all ' you can?" If the Senator from Franklin had assigned this as the law which demands that this - solemn contract shall be broken, he ,would have been entitled to the thanks of every one for his candor, though we might - be unable to perceive either the justice of the rule, or the necessity for its Observance. , I have thus, Mr. Speaker, endeaVored to ex amine: every objection urged by the Senator from Franklin against my argument made • this night. ' I have shown to my own satisfaction, and I trust to that of the Senate, that in no one point has he' disproved the correctness of my premises nor the justness of my conclusions. His every answer was an evasion, and that he has been unable to refute any one proposition, has certainly not been for want of inclination. For truly, Mr. Speaker, during this entire con test, the Senator has with rare ability and un accountable zeal endeavored to advance the interests of this corporation, apparently forgot ting, in his efforts so, to do, that he was sent here to represent the people and not corpora tions. He is their avowed and proclaimed champion ! Wherever the fight is thickest there is seen his commanding form, ready to give,and if it must be,receive the heaviest blows. liFhere crushing charge is made, and the weak er and less devoted followers are about to flee in terror and dismay, there his voice is raised in tones of encouragement, bidding them re main steadfast to the end and to fear no ' dan ger. ' But, sir, with all his devotion to this Corpo ration there is at least - one provision in the bill which even his ingenuity, his sophistry, is una ble to justify or defend. It is an exhibition of cool assurance from which even he shrinks in dismay—so bold and unblushing an. attempt to extract money. from the public treasury that their avowed champion confesses his inability to defend, though heisnot willing by hisvote at; least to justify it. Of course, Mr. Speaker, I refer to the provi sion in the bill which relieves the company from the payment of the accrued 'tonnage tax, amounting . to' seven himdred thousand dol lars. My =Amity was greatly excited, to know by what course of reasoning the talented sera= for would attempt its justification, well, know ing that if individual or collimate ingenuity could suggest' even the shadow of an excuse for this premeditated frauctupon the rights of the people, it would surely be advanNd. But, six, there is a limit to human ingenuity, a limit' to sophistry, a limit to misrepresentation and de ception—and this bold demand, this avowed intention to rob .thebtrea Bury, is beyond that limit. It towers aloft in its naked deformity, unsustained and unjustified, with no one, not even the Senator _from Franklin, to approve or defend it ! The future historian will cite this provision of the bill to prove that in this generation there existed a power which dared openly.and-boldly to deplete the treasury. It will prove that the body politic" was corrupt and that corporate power had sapped the vitals bf the State. If there was nothing else in this bill to make it unjust, to render it forever odious, this one provision is more than sufficient thud' to brand it. .1 - warn you, Senators, that no honeyed words, no ingenious explanations, will, ever convince the people that this is other than an open and deliberate abstraction of their money,- a large portion-of which is already in the trea asury of the State, and this balance of which will soon be there also, if you do not prevent it by your own deliberate action. The lateness of the hour, and the length of time I have already occupied, admonish me, Mr. Speaker, that I dare not much longer tres pass upon that kind attention the Senate half already awarded me. Still, sir, I cannot re sume my seat witholt replying to that which was of a personal mare in the speech of the Senator *cm Franklin. He has charged me unjustly and, gratuitously with having made unfounded assertions and aspendons against this cce poration. I deny, sir, that I have been influenced by any other - than upright motives in all that I have said. - As a - Pennsylvanian, I am proud of the magnificent highway built by this corporation. It is an enduring monument of the energy, enterprise and skill of its pro jectors and of those who. control it. If; sir, in the examination of this question, I have been forced to exhibit figures and state facts which place this company in an unenviable light, surely it is no fault of mine. I have refrained from using any harsh or uncalled for expres sions; if my argument has. prodUced a convic tion that such expressions might be justifiable; I certainly am not to blame; but he who as serts that I hayed used any such expressions, either wilfully or unintentionally, misreipre- vents me. Mr. M'CLMEtE. I certainly did, not charge any, such thing upon the gentleman from The Speaker pro ten. (litr. Lawa t attee.) The Chair did not so understand the :gentleman. Mr. HOLUM. didl say, in the most re spectful terms that, while I conceded to the Se nator from Berks integrity of purpose in his at- I titude upon thequestion,lthoughtheparidered to.thnprejudices isf the people ha a manner rin becoming a Senator-on this:floor. I meant the remark not unkindly. As I do not intend to take the floor again :to-night, the Senator will permit me to say a werd.in answer to his question as to who it is .trh - Ct - se - asking the repearet uns tonnage tat.— He seems to think that the effort for its repeal proceeds merely froni men interested in this great corporation. Why, sir, I have met hun dreds of geritlenien here' this winter making personal appeals for .the removal lof this ton nage tax, because it crippled their energies and baffled their efforts toward the development of 'our State's- resources;:.and. I;reosg-nize upon this floor now two gentleman of Pennsylvania, whom I will not, of course; name, as they are not members of this body, gentlemen. who in dividually pay twenty thousand dollars in the shalse , of tonnage tax upon - this road This tax is imposed upon them, simply because they have the energy and the capital to go forth and develops the wealth of Pennsylvania. It is such men that have appealed to Pennsylva nia, to be just and liberal toward her sons—to ward those who choose to develope her own wealth and make this great State still greater and still more prosperous than 'she has been, even in spite of the illiberality of her policy. Mr. CLYMER. I understood the Senator correctly. He has .reiterated, in his last re . marks, an unqualified and ungenerous charge. He accused me of pandering to political prejudice. I scorn the imputation. Ido not need to pander to such prejudices. :Mr. M'CLURE. Ido not wish the gentle man to get astounded again to-night ; but I must say that I certainly have said nothing in the course of this debate calculated. to reflect in the least degree upon the Senator from Berks, personally. I tegret, sir, that prejudices have been created and fostered in.this State against this liberal and wise measure. Those preju dices have been fostered by politicians ; and I believe that the Senator (to use a kinder ex presion, but one which expresses the same meaning) bows to what is. an Imperious error of his constituents, which demands that he shall not be liberal and just to the great inter ests of the. State. Certainly I did not design to say anything which might, even by implica tion, reflect upon the Senator froni Berks. Iir...CLYMER. I have understood the gen tleman to say that possibly I am, influenced by the fear that if I. took a particular position I might not again occupy a seat upon this floor. The SPEAKER pro tem.; (Mr. Lawastroa.) If the Speaker had understood the Senator from Franklin to make any such -charge, it 'would have been the duty of the. Chair to correct him. The Chair understood the gentleman to make a general charge, not a special one. .3dr. M'CLURE. Surely, sir, I made it gene ral. Ispoke of those who, as I tliought,yielded to an imperious necessity created by the prejudices of their own people, which.forbids them to be liberal and just. I must insist that the gentle man shall not understand me unkindly. The SPEAKER pro tem. The Senator from Berke will please accept the explanation of the Senator fromTranklin,- . Mr. CLYMEI4. That, sir, is, a, question upon which I shall decide hereafter. I have endea vored to mike a legitirante and connected ar gument upon this question., but from the fre quent interruptions it.wOuld. seem.that there is a fixed design to prevent me from so. doing.— What is the motive I leave others to deter- The SPPARP.R. The Chair will not : permit the' gentleman to be interrupted again. Mr. CLYMER. . When, sir, the Senator from Franklin asserts that bow to what he is pleased to term au imperious error of my con stituency which demands that I shell not be liberal and just to the great interests of the State, he avnimes to speak of a matter of which he knows nothing.. and I tell him, further, that he is little acquainted with the person now addressing thisi Senate if he for one moment suppcouta that he has ever or will ever -bow to what he knows to be an error--and in this re- Spect Ifeel.assured that•l differ from at least some w ithi n th e h oa xing of my voice, Nor have I, sir, created or fostered political prejudices against this. measure. - If such prejudices do exot„andthe Senator from .udMa is nervously • alive to - the fact, it is 4teprejudiCe which honest Clam lgr Wing pm Having procured steam Power Presses, we are prepared to execute JOB and BOOK PRINTING of every description, cheaper that it can be done at any other ea tablishmentin the country. RATES OP ADVERTISING. .Four lines or less donaUthtehne-baNequare. Mg -- fleas or more than four constitute a square. Italt!quare, one day - 8014 one week • I. OP one mouth. • ....... a three mont hs a 00 a , six months 4 0 one year .1...• 5 00 One Square one day ig 60 one week. 2 00 II: one month.... . 800 it - three month s 5 00 MI six months.... 8 00 •• one year 10 00 Business. 110,113115 inserted In the .Lo=l column, ce before Marriages and Deaths, FIVE CANTS PER MI or each Insertion. NO. 72. gertiarriagee and Deaths to be charged as regular advertisements, men ever entertain and will ever express against corrupt schemes and their supporters. Ptrhaps it is to shield himself from the storm of popular wrath and indignation which will surely follow the consummation of this cm holy n d unjust mea sure, that the Senator from Franklin implores me and other Senators to allay this "political prefedice," and to lead our people to what he calls "lateral progress." Is it for this he entreats us "to combat the prgjudices of the ignorant and the schemes of as reckless?" I say to him that I will serve in no such capacity. I am here to repre sent honest men, men of sound judgments and upright motives. I have, six, fearlessly and to the best of my ability discharged my duty, andl have that, most consoling of all reflections that in the position I have taken on this question I have obeyed my own solemn convictions of right and the wishes of every man whom I re present. If the Senator from Franklin is sus tained in his conrseby the same reflections, duty honeitlyperformed,a constituency honestly and truly represented, he need have no fear that he will have "to combat the prejudices of the ignorant and the schemes of the reckless." But, sir, if he is not thus sustained, it is in vain for him to call upon us to save him from the re proaches of his own conscience or the denuncia dons of his own constituency. If, air, he has done wrong, they will surely come, though this Senate asonemanshouldstandby him. He must meet them unaided and alone. It will then be too late to call upon us to assist him to"combat the prejudices of the ignorant and the schemes of the reckless." His opponents, if any, will be the honest, intelligent people of this State, who will be thrice armed because their cause is just. Yet, sir, to induce me and, others to follow him in a course which he admits is disapproved of by the vast majority of the people of this State, he has pointed us to the career of one who in his day and generation was an actor in these Halls. He tells US of an old man past three score years and ten, who, with undimed eye and heart still strong in its convictions, daily wends his way to his seat in the House of Representatives at Washington. I will yield to no man, in, my respect for old age—for those who are "soon to be gathered to the city of the silent"—and more especially will I yield to no one, not even to the Senator from Frank lin, in my respect for the commanding abil ity and brilliant talents of Thaddeus Stevens, although, sir, I may, and certainly do, differ with him in my estimate of his character as a legisla tor and a politician. The Senator from Franklin, fn glowing eulogy and highly wrought strains of eloquence has placed TIiADDZUS %Irvin upon the very pinnacle of glory as the man who gave this State her public improvements—as a man who dared combat public opinion, and was ever in advance of his friends. It is becoming and proper fdr the Senator from Franklin, who also represents the county of Adams, to extol and eulogisethat veteran of three score years and ten; for, sir, it will ever be remembered that in the county of Adams there is an enduring monu ment of the devotion of Thaddeus Stevens to ltul?/!?-1!Nr"'"?e'h - It ic-highly -probable, that It " was the recollection of this far famed and never to be forgotten improvement, upon which the Senator has gazed, if he has not traveled often, which induced him to hold up its projector for our admiration a nd applause. I thank the Senator for the taste and wisdom he has displayed in his selection of an example of men who in their day and generation were devoted to public improvements. It was most for tonate---most thoughtful ! Most men have reeson to exclaim, "Save me from my friends!" But, sir, to increase our admiration and to corn pellis all to worship MS idol, he has farther as • mired us that in his day and generation Thad deus Stevens dared "brave public opinion , " and was ever in "advance of his friends." I could. wish that the Senator had not neglected to re fer us to some particular time and place when :these traits of true greatness were erlibited. As, sir, I was compelled to point out his grand est public improvement, the "Tern Worm," so too am I compelled by the admiring, though forgetful, Senator, to refer to a particular time when this, his great exemplar, did, beyond „doubt, dare "to combat public opinion," and was then, as ever, in "advance of his friends." Necd I remind you, sir, that it was here in this Senate Chamber, during the "Boca Snor Wan" that this his most daring combat with public opinion took place, and that then, too, ,he 'was most certainly in advance of his 'friends, whenhe hurriedly retreated from this Hall, through the most convenient aperature, which, according to tradition,. happened, Mr. Speaker, to be the window beh ind your seat ! So much for the great exemplar of the Sena tor from Franklin. I sincerely trust that upon some other occasion and in some more; appro priate place, he will restore him to that pinna cle of glory and renown to which he was once raised this evening. It was a labor of love, / doubt not upon the part of the Senator from Frank ' , therefore he will not"complain that he is compelled to perform it again. Imust close. If this bill is right it will bear the test of argument and examination, and this argument and examination shall' not be met and defeated by plausibility and sophistry, or by sneers and taunts ! Senators if unable to combat facts, figures and argument, should.scom to resort to mere assertions and unmeaning generalities. They are unworthy the subject or the occasion. My facts and figures,and the arguments drawn from them, remain unquestioned and unchallenged by the Senator from Franklin, and until he shows that I am in error, in fact or in figures, he must.stand convicted of attempting to up hold a cause which will not defend itself, as it surely would do were the facts and figures with it. ' I have again to thank the Senate for its kind ness. I feelthat it is to the importance of the aubject under discussion I have been indebted for your patient:attention during this prolong ed and fatiguing, debate. On motion of the Senator from Philadelphia, (Air. SIMITHO the Senate at 14 o'clock P. 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