RATES OF ADVERTISING. Your lines or less constitute half a square. Ten lines Sr more than four, constitute I RUare. lief sq-1 one daY••••-- $o so One sq., one $0 60 iL one week.... 100 " o ne week.... 200 4 , one month.. 800 I , one mouth.. 600 " three months E. 00 " threemonthslo 00 c" six mmths.. 800 " els months.. 16 00 1 , one year...... 12 00 '‘ one Year •-•••• 20 00 1,7" Business notices inserted in the LOCAL eo NE Ltnur, or before marriages and deaths, TEN CENTS PER Llfor each insertion. an To merchants d others advertising bribe year, liberal terms will be offered. ons must be designated on 1 The number of insertions the advertisement. 113" Marriages and Deaths will be inserted at th e same rates as regular advertisements. . . Illistellatteotte. PENSIONS, BOUNTIES, BACK PAY, War Claims and Claims for Indemnity. STEWART, STEVENS, CLARK & CO., Au o mpt and Counaliort-at-Law, and #7olicuors for all kinds of Military Claims, 450 PENNbYLVANTA. AVENUE, WASHINGTON, D. C This Jim, having a thorough knowledge of the Pon. lion Business, and being familiar with the practice in all the Departments of Government, believe that they can afford greater facilities to Pension,. Bounty, and other Claimants, for the prompt and successful accom plishment of busyness entrants& to them, than any other Arm in Washington. They duke to secure ouch an amount of this business as will enable them to execute the business for each claimant very cheaply, and on the basis of their pay contingent upon their success in each case. Tor this purpose they will secure the services of Law Finns in each prominent locality throughout the Staten where such Minium may be had, furnish snob with all the necessary blank forms of application and evidence, requisite printed pamphlet instructions, and circulars for distribution in their vicinity, with SABO elates names inserted, and upon the due execution of the papers Sind transmission of the same to them by their local assoeiates, they will promptly perform the business here. EX' Their charges will be ten dollars for officers and live dollars for privates, for each Pension orßounty and Back Pay obtained, and ten per cent. on amount of Claims for Military. Supplies or Claims for indemnity. 113• Soldiets enlisted since the lit of March, 1861, in any kind of service, Military or Naval, who 61.41 disabled by disease or wounds, are entitled to Pensions. All soldiers who serve for two years or during the war, should it sooner close, will be entitled to $lOO Bounty. Widows of soldiers who die or are killed, are entitled to pensions, and the $lOO Bounty. If there be no widow, then the minor children. And if no minor children, then the father, mother, sisters or brothers are enti _led as above to the4loo Bounty and Back Pay. JOSEPH B. STRWART, lIRBTOR L. STEVENS, RDW &RD CLARK, OSCAR A. STRVIDIS WILLIS S. GAYLOBI. flisenreravon, D. 0.08a2. Apply at our 011ie* or to our Associate at - Ussanstree, PA.—JOIIII A. BIGLER, Attorney and Counsellor. Pirronons, PA.—ARTEMIS & MULL, Attor neys-at-Law. Parramaye, PA.—WM. R. SMITH, Attorney and Counsellor. PIILLADOLTSIA, G. MINNIOHILD, 46 Atwood street, WM. Pl. SULTS, Attorney and Counsellor. tresuintiros, PA.—BOYD CRUMBINON, Attorney and Counsellor. jyalsily JACKSON & 00.'S SHOE STORE, NO. 9031 NABILBT STILINT, HARRISBORG, PA., Where they ntend to devote their entire time to the manufacture of BOOTS AND SHOES ell hinds and varieties, in the neatest and most fash enable styles, and at satisfactory prices. Their stock will consist, in part, of Gentiensetela Calf and Patent Leather Boots and Shoes, latest styles; Ladies' and Misses' Gaiters, and otheighoes in great variety; and in fact everything connected with the Shoe baldness_ CUSTOMER WOBHwili beparticularlyattendedto, and in all wee will satisfaction be win-rested. Lasts jilted up by oss of as best makers is the country. The long practical experience of the undeudgued, and their thorough knowledge of the business will, they trust, be ?nattiest guarantee to" the public that they will do them justice, and furnish them an article tha will recommend itself for utility, cheapnees and dam puo9l .11&010110N & 00. 111313,11'sIGER'S PATENT' BEEF TEA. AL a solid, concentrated extract of BEEF AND VEGETABLES, Convertible immediately into a nourishing and dell- Crone soup, Mg/ay approved by assn . /4er of miaow .Physicicas. Ties admirable article condensed into a compact form, all the substantial and nutritive properties of a large talk of meat sad vegetables. The readineeswithwhich it dissolves into a rich and palatable Soup, which would require hours of preparation according to the usual method, is an advantage in many situations of life too obvious to need urging. Its highly nourishing qualities combined with its delicacy, renders it invaluable for the sick while for those in health, it is a perfectanbstitate forfresh meat and vegetables. It will keep good 'neap Climate. It is peculiarly well adapted FOB TRILVELBR B iby land or sea, who can thus avoid those accidental deprive lions of a comfortable meal, to which they are soliable. SON INVALIDS, whose capricioni appetite can tints be satisfied in a moment. NOR SPORTSMBN and DICOTIBSIONISTS. to whom, both its compactness and easy preparation will recom. Mend it. For sale by sep24-11 CHARTER OAK FAMILY FLOUR! UNEXCELLED BY ANY IN THE Dr. STATES! AND SIIPERIOR TO ANY ..1E• .A. MV Cil lir MI 3EL JCL 1%1 . 3:3) 0 OFFERED IN PENNSYLYANIA.! IT IS MADE OF CHOICE MISSOURI WHITE WHEAT. 1D Delivered anyplace in the city fres of charge. Terms aria* us claZivery. OM WM. DOCK, Ja., /r. CO. QOLDIER'S CAMP COMPANION.- iJ A very convenient Writing Desk; also, Portfolios, Kezeorandnm Books, Portmonnaies, &c., at SCHAPpER I I3 BOOKSTOWA VHEESE 11-100 Boxes Prime Cheese '4_,/ (on consignment) for sale at lees than market rate. jylo Wffi. DOCK, JY., & 00 MOTIONS.—Quite a varlet) , of - useful 1. and entertaining articles—chesp—st. SCHEFFIOI.I3 BOOKSTOIIII. WANTED.—A. GOOD COOK at the BOMGAIUMBIt nom,. Apply immediat IvRET WINE ! !—We are closing out a TNItY ammo& for at less Male cost ! j.. 79 WK. DOCK 3311. CO. PRDIE POTATOES !-A LARGE LOT just received and for sale low. oct24-dtf WK. DOCK, Js., & CO. 111 NOE MEAT !—Very superior, just received and for sale by WM. DOCK, jr., & CO. VONDENSBD MILS '—Just received t/ sad for oak by WM. DOCK Jr., & GO. TJERMETICALLY SEALED Peaches, Tomatoes, Lobster, Salmon, Oyrters, Spitted Oysters, for sale by WM. DOCK, jr., & CO. RMOKED HALIBUT I—A very choice ),) axed., Just received and for Bale by WM. DOCK, jr., & CO. VRENCH MUSTARD, ENGLISH and T . Domestic Males, (by l'he dozen or hundred,) Su perior Salad 011, Ketchup, Sauces and condiments of nary description, for sale by isty2s WM. DOOR, J*., 00 TAKE TROUT ! !—A small- invoice of LARS TROUT, (Mackinaw) trimmed, and the quality "A NO. 1, 2, tort received and for sale very low by WM. DOOR, ay.., & co WAR WAR' —BRADY, No. 62 Market street, below Third, has received a large assortment of 811IVIDS 3 Sanas and BlLva, which h will sell very low. sai.o-dtf gni? SEALING FRUIT JARS !- o Beet and Cheapest in the markets! Call and examine them. kin VOR RENT—Tvto desirable OFFICE r. WOMB, second story front of Wyoth's Building comer of Market &pare and Market street. Apolyst his Ohm sep23dif ACKERELIII M►CHEBIL, Nos. 1, 2 and 3, in all stood poolroom wow, and mob package ararrasted. Just meted, and Or solo low by WM. DOCK, Js., & 00. WM. DOM. & CO . WM. DOCK, he., k CO - . . - -1 - ~..=------ • ,'- ' ,Cr.* 4. - _ *B7-I "iii --. 7 . - - -tr. -- . . --...___L_... - 7- - r; ~; „ :,.; , v,•---- -= - ---, -, , f ,At 't . . - = . :' . .,: - ,.= - 7 - I - -, pi • ' 7 : ---:";": 7 - - i - - - - , ; - rilif:".: ...:•,;.::-..-'• 7.':=;!L ' --.-- • .... • .-_-,-_:7-7 - ,i - „,..„ L . „. 1.,,..- _...---- 111 9 n . A t 0 n ... ' 1 4, - . L t: * • '-: -------; rq , . ----- • • . _ VOL. 5 -NO. 181. Buointeg tarbe. R. C. WEICHE ATURGTON AND OCULIST, RESIDENCE THIRD PINAR NORTH BTRANT. He le now fully prepared to attend promptly to the duties of profession in all ite breeches. A. %ONO AID TIST SVOCISBOVIIL 7111:110A1.11.12111NON juitiles him In promising Oil/ mid Ample maidefaetion to all who mayforor himmita a eel, bethe diem* Ohroidi or any other nature. mlit-dfaly W M. H. MILLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. 011'101 IN SHOBMAKER'S Bli/LDINGEI SECOND STREET , Birrwm WALNIIT AND KAMM NMI, ao2B] Nearly opposite the Buehler Heim. rdlaway THOS. C. MAcDOWELL,. ATTORNEY AT LAW, MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. Office in Burhe's Row, Third street, (Up Stafrs.) . Having formed a connection with parties in Wash ington City, who are reliable business men, any busi ness connected with any of the Departmental will meet with immediate and careful attention. WIT CHARLES F. VOLLMER UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street, four doors above Second, (Omens WASHINGTON HOB! HOOS11,) Is prepared to fnrnishto order, in the very best style of workmanship, Spring and Hair Mattresses, Window Our tains, Lounges, and all other artieles of Furniture in his line, on short notice iond moderate terms. Haring ex perience in the business,he feels warranted in asking a share of public patronage, confident of his ability to give satisfaction. janl7-dtf SILAS WARD. • 80. 11, NORTH THIRD ST., STEINWAY'S PIANOS, MALODSONS, VIOLIUS, OIIITARB, Banjos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, -11ccorde.ous, MINOS; BENIT AND NOOK MUSIC, &C., &0, PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. ALBUMS, Large Pier *ad Mitfttlit Mirrors ! Square and Oval Frame of every description made to order. Roguilding done. Agency for Hewes Sewing Machines. • U7' Sheet Mamie sent by Mail. oetl-.1 JOHN W. , GLOVER„. MERCHANT TAILOR! Has jut received from New York, an assort ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, which he offers to his customers and the public a , nov22) MODERATE PRICES. dtt SMITH & EWING,. ATTORNEYS-AT,-LAW, THIRD STREET, Harrisburg, Practice in the several Courts of Dauphin county. Col lections made promptly. A. C. SMITH, feb2ii B. EWING% JCOOK; Merchant Tailor, • 27 011ESNUT ST., between Second and Front, Has just returned from the city with an assortment of MOMS, CASSIMERES AND VESTINGS, Which will be sold at moderate prices and made up to order ; and, also, an assortment of READY MADE Clothing and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods. nov2l-Ird D E N-TISTR Y. .'• B. N. GILDEA, D. D. S., •• N 0 . 119 MARKET STREET, * Ate EBY & KIMONO litraDlN4, UP STAIRS. janB-tf RELIGIOUS BOOK STORE, TRACT AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DRPOSITORY, E. S. GERMAN, IT 801:ITN ONOOND STRUT, ABUT) 011NONIIT, nesatiseuso, Depot for tkomsle of Otereascopee,Stareosoopielriews, Undo and Musfeal Instruments. Also, subscriptions taken for religions publications. no3o-sly JOHN G. W. MARTIN, - FASHIONABLE CARD WRITER, HERB'S HOTEL, lIANAISBIJIM, PA. All manner of VISITING, WEDDING AND BTIS.I. NESS CARDS executed in the most artistic styles and most reasonable terms. decl4-dtf FRANKLIN SQ-USE, DALTIMORA, This pleasant and commodious Hotel ham been tho roughly re-fitted and re-rundehed. It is pleasantly situated on North-West corner of Howard and Franklin 'Amato, a few dogrel west of the Northern Central Rail way Depot. ]fiery attention paid to the eomfort 01 his guests. G. LISENRING, Proprietim, Jan.& (Late of Selina Grove. Pa.) T HEO. F. SOHEFFER, BOOK, ' LARD AND JOB PRINTER , NO. 18, MARIINT STREET, HARRISBURG. ID' Particular attention paid to printing, ruling and binding of Railroad. Blanks, Manifests, Insurance Poll. Gies, Checks, Bill. Meads, &c. Wedding, Waiting and Moines' Garda printed at very low prices and in the best style. jam% DYOTTVILLE GLASS WORKS, PHILADELPHIA , ILABVPLOTURII CARBOYS, DRIIIJOHNS, PORTER, MINERAL WATER, PICKLE AND PRESERVE BOTTLES Or 11112.1' mulosurnov. H. B. & W. EENNERS, 0011-dir 27 South Front store, Yhiladelphia. 'MUSIC STORE! NO. 93 MARKET STRIET, HARRISBURG, PA. SHEET MUSIC, PIANOS, MELODEONS, GUITARS, VIOLINS, BANJO STRINGS, Of every deeeription. DRUMS, PIPES, FLUTES, ACCORDEONS, etc. at the lowest CITY PRIORS, st W. KNOCHE'S MUSIC! STORE, No. 98 MASI= BUM. A BOOK FOR THE TIMES 1 American Annual Cyclopedia and Register of Important Events forth. Year 1861. In 1 vQi, 8 vo. over 750 pages. Cloth .p 3, Leather $3.50. Published by D. Appleton 4' Co., New York. The design of this work is to furnish a record of all the important knowledge of the year. The events of the war, owing to their prominence, will, of coarse oe cnpy a conspicuous part, but all other branehas--1181- enee, Art, Literature, the Mechanic Arts, acie. will re ceive due attention. The work will be published ex clusively by subscription, and ready for delivery in June next. Also, new complete Destaels Debates of Composs,l6 volumes, $8 and $8.50 per vo/etme. Esaton's Thirty Years to U. S. Senate, 2 Taunus' PM and $8 per root. Cyclopedia o American Efogamme, containing the speeches of eWe most amine' Orators of America, 1.4 scut mrrtraits, 2 vets. $2.50 each. Partoake Life and Times of Andrew Jackson,B volumes, 52.50 each. address J. P. WERAISBAUGH, Harrisburg, Pa. • General Agent for D. APPLETON & 00. For Circulars descriptive of Annual Cyclopedia. aprila-daewtf. QWEET CIDER !—A very superior lot tj just received end for sale by WM. DOCK, jr., dcoo. POTATOES. --300 BUREI 14LS OF A superior 'polity just received and for sae low, by WM. BOOS, JR., & CO. ia FD PE XCHES-PARED AND ITSPARID—inet received by WM, DOCK, k 00. HARRISBURG, PA:, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1863. atriot ion+ WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 1. 1863. THE TRUE CONDITIONS OF :AMERICAN LOYALTY, ADDRESS OF HON. GEORGE T. •CIJRTIS. MEETING OF THE DE4VOCRATICITNION ASSOCIATION. Hon. George Ticknor Curtis, formerly of Boston, but now a resident of New York, ad dressed tho Democratic Union Association of that city on Saturday evening. He came upon the platform amid applause, and upon being introduced by Mr. P. W. Engs was greeted with three hearty cheers. He spoke as follow 3: MR. PRESIDENT AND GENTLEMEN OF THE DEMOCRATIC ASSOCIATION : Nothing but a sense of the duty which every man owes to society, according to the measure of his ability to serve it, would have induced me to address you in a time like this. It is a time of strange excite ments and strange acts. No man who does not join in a wild, undiscriminating support of the measures bed dogmas of a dominant party can hope to escape detraction and obloquy. The utmost exertions are made to suppress ordinary freedom of speech; every device is employed to misrepresent, and every effort is made to , misunderstand, the purposes of thotie who are . in political opposition to the party in power. The vocabulary of political slang is exhausted to find terms of reproach and infamy with which to stigmatize men whose motives have in their favor all the ordinary presumptions of purity, and whose arguments and opinions are at least entitled to a respectful hearing. This process, which has been going on for many months with a violence unexampled even among a people whose political discussions are never marked by too much temperance, has culmina ted from time to time in outrages upon the rights of persons and property, and may do so again. It is no time when one would choose to utter opinions without being impelled by a strong sense of duty. • But if we are not prepared 'to suffer for our conviCtions they must be very feeble OORVie. tions. If we do not love our country and its institutions well'enough to encounter all the hazards that may attend an honest effort to save them, our love must be cold indeed. Such, f am sure, Is not your case or my own. (Applause.) Meaning to utter here nothing but words of truth' arid soberness--the truth, as I hold it, in the soberness that becomes me— I accept all the responsibility to public opinion which may justly fall thereon. I propose to speak to you to-night upon a a subject which seems to me to be strangely mis apprehended by many good men, and strangely perverted by many who are not good. I mean theaubject of "Loyalty." The word itself, at least in the sense in which it is to be used in those countries from' which we have lately bor rowed it, can scarcely be said to have an ap propriate place in our political and social system. But it is a word at present , in great • use among us; and we must take it as we find it, and are bound to inquire what are the moral duties which its just and true eigni4eation embraces. This inquiry, and the certain con sequences of accepting and following out the doctrines which are now farced upon us, will form the topics of my discourse. The trae eonditions of American loyalty are not to be found in the passionate exactions of partisan leaders, or in the frantic declamations of the pulpit, the rostrum, or the press.— (Cheers.) People who do not like my political opinions may hurl at me the epithet "disloyal," but when they have thrown this missile they have not taken a single step towards defining, to me or others, what the true conditions of loy ally are. It is important that this step should be taken; for whether we are to go on or to cease, in this course of idle and unmeaning abuse, it concerns us all to know what measure of public duty may rightfully be exacted of us. To know the height and depth of those great virtues which are comprehended in the term "patriotism"—to feel at once that they are seated in our affections and enthroned in our reason—is to get "wisdom and to get un derstanding." in the largest of earthly con cerns. (Applause.) The true conditions of Americal,loyalty are to be found in the law of the land; in the insti tutions under which we live; in the duties flow ing from the Constitution of our country; (applause) in the political system which we have inherited from our fathers, with all its manifold relations, through which we may trace the clear dividing-line that separates perfect from imperfect obligations. (Cheers.) The text of our fundamental law is the guide, and the sole guide, in all ethical inquiries into the duties of the citizen. To that source all must come, rulers and people alike; to that fountain all must resort. The vague and shift ing standards that are drawn from supposed dangers to what is called "the national life," or which spring from the conflicting judgments of men respecting public necessities, can de termine nothing. These things can furnish no rule. We must have a rule, for loyalty is a moral duty ; and it must therefore be capable of definition. A people whose "national life" exists only by virtue of a written constitution, and who can have no necessities that lie out of or beyond that written necessity, can find no rule of loyalty in any of the necessities which their constitution of government does not cover. They may find grounds of expediency, in one or another supposed necessity, for des troying their constitution; but it would be extremely absurd to say that this expediency could be made the object of their "loyalty." Let us go then to the fountain head—the source of all our national obligations. The Constitution of the United States itself prescribes the full measure of our loyalty in these words: "This Constitution and the laws of the Uni ted States which shall be made inpursuance thereof, and all treaties made or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, SHALL BE THE SUPREME LAW OF THE LAND." Observe how precise as well as comprehen sive this great rule of our duty is. It expresses without ambiguity the whole of our obligation toward the federal government. It makes a supreme law ;—n; law paramount to all other human laws—an obligation transcending all other political obligations. It leaves no room whatever for the intrusion of another or a ri val claimant to our civil obedience. That claimant can neither be a person invested or uninvested with office, nor an idea of publio necessity, nor an imaginary national life be yond or apart from the life, created under the Constitution. The only possible claimant of our obedience is the Law ; for as that law is made supreme, all other demands or demand ants upon our submission are of necessity cud/Ivied. (Loud cheers.) What, then, does this supreme law embrace? The text on which I am commenting itself fur nishes the answer. " This Constitution," it says—what this Constitution contains, and the laws that shalt be made -in conformity with it— these shall be the supreme law,rising in autho rity above all other laws. No public necessi ties, save as they are embodied in the Consti tution; no "national life," save as it exists under the Constitution; no legislation that is not in accordance with the Constitution—is the supreme law; but what the Constitution ordains or authorizes, that is the public necessity, that is the national life, because it is the supreme civil 'obligation. (Applause.) Such is the fundamental character of our political systein ; and so perTect is it in its con sistency with itself and with the rights of all who are subject to it, that it contains a ma chinery by which the conformity of all ants of the government with the principles of the Con stitution may be peacefully tested, without forcible resistance. If the acts of the govern ment are complained of as unconstitutional, they may be brought to a judicial test, or the people may themselves pass upon them at the ballot-box, through the instrumentality of frequent elections. (Applause.) Now, when we look into the Constitution of our country to discover the full scope of the obligations' which are embraced in the supreme law of the land, we fipd that it grants certain political powers and rights to the central or national government, and reserves all other political powers and rights to the States or the people. ' Hence it is plain that the reserved rights of the States or the people are just as much a part of the supreme law of the land, just as much comprehended within the duty of our allegiince, just as much the rightful ob jects of our "loyalty," as the powers and rights vested in the national governMent. If the po litical existence created by the Constitution is the national life, called into being by the su preme law of the land—and he would be a bold and reckless sophist who should undertake to find thit national life anywhere else—then the rights which the Constitution reserves to the States or the people are equally comprehended in that life, for they are equally declared to be parts of the suprenie law of the land. For this reason, all idea of a supremacy of the na tional rights or powers or interests, when founded on something not embraced in the Constitution, is purely visionary. No duty of "loyalty" can possibly be predicated of Any claim that is not founded in the supreme lair of the land. When it is once ascertained what are the rights and powers vested in the national authorities by the Constitution, they are parts of the supreme law, and our "loyalty 7 is due to them. When we know what are the rights and powers reserved to the States or the peo ple—and we know that they are the whole re sidue of all possible political rights and powers —they are equally the objects of our "loyalty," for the self-same reason, namely, they are parts of the supreme law of the land. (Loud applause.) Again : the Constitution not only contains some political powers and rights granted to the Federal Government, and a reservation of all other political powers and rights to the States or the people, but it also embraces rights, of person and property guaranteed to every ,citizen in his individual capacity ; and these are equally made, not by implication but . expressly, parts of the supreme law of the land, and are therefore equally the objects of our "loyalty." All pretense, therefore, of efliv-Peratactunt ernmeat to override these personal rights of the citizen, or to claim our "loyalty" in dis regard of these co ordinate parts of the su preme law, is a perversion of the very idea of American loyalty. (Cheers.) As well might the citizen claim, because the Constitution has made his personal rights part of the supreme law, that therefore the loyalty of his neighbor is due to him alone, as the govettiment can claim that loyalty is due solely, or chiefly, or primarily, or ultimately to the functions which it is appointed to perform. The rights of the government, the rights of the States, and the rights of individuals, all and equally, are comprehended in the supreme law of the land, and our loyalty is due to that law, to the whole and t 3 every part of it, and public officers are in the same sense 'and for the same reason bound to obey every "jot and tittle" of it. (Great applause.) These positions are very plain and familiar truths; too familliar, perhaps you will say, to require to be stated. But in these days nothing that is true is too fundamental or too plain to be inculcated. The extravagant lan guage and ideas that are current in the mouths of even sensible people on this subject of loy alty would have exceeded all capacity of belief in any other period than this. If one were to undertake to reduce this language and these ideas to something like a definite moral pro position, it would be found that the doctrine is something like this: In time of war, when there are great public dangers, the . rights of the States and of individuals must give way; and if those who administer the government are satisfied that public necessity requires them to use powers that transcend the limits of the Constitution, he who does not acquiesce in their judgment, or who questions their au thority to do particular acts, is a " disloyal" citizen. (Laughter.) This statement of the .doctrine is the best that I know how to make; for I know not how else to interpret or to ap ply the denunciations which we find in the proceedings of public meetings, in the columns of party newspapers, and in the common speech and action of very many persons. I need only point to the utter prohibition that is attempted to be placed upon all discussion of any plan for bringing this dreadful civil war to a close excepting by the particular method of fighting; or to. the manner in which the terms " traitor " and " secessionist" are hurled at all who question the policy and lawfulness of the methods pursued by the government in the prosecution of the war. For myself, Ido not profess to have a definite opinion, as yet, concerning several of the modes in which a peace might safely be sought. But I know not what right I have, legally or morally, to say that my neigbor shall not discuss such a ques tion, or shall not act upon it at the polls, or shall be denounced es " disloyal 7, because his opinions on these subjects differ from mine. It is to me very plain that this whole effort of a dominant party to control opinion by such means can, under such institutions as ours, lead to but one of two results—the establish ment of a despotism of a very bad kind, or the overthrow of the political power of those who resort to such methods. Either the institu tions of the country will perish, or the party which undertakes to repress all freedom of discussion will perish. (Cheers.) I hope we shall make up our minds to destroy the party and save the institutions. (Great applause. " We will do it.") But of this hereafter. Let me return to this new doctrine of "loy alty," which requires us to acquiesce in silence in the judgment of public servants as to what the public necessities require, even to the ex tent of overlooking great infractions of the Constitution. The doctrine entirely ignores the purpose for which the Constitution imposed certain stringent limitations on the powers of the national , government. In order to explain this it will be necessary to descend from gen eral reasoning to particular illustrations. The Constitution; after conferring certain well defined political powers upon the Federal government, declares that all other political powers are reserved to the States or the people ; and it further secures to every citizen certain PRICE TWO CENTS. inalienable rights of person and property, which it recognizes as inherent in the citizen forever, beyond all possible control of that government. Now does any one suppose that this was done without a serious purpose ? Does any man imagine that it was done for what is vulgarly called buncombe, Do you believe that it was done witp• mental reservation of the doctrine of public' necessity standing behind the Constitution and ready to strike it down from its supreme control over us and our af fairs ? Let me suggest to you, my fellow citi zens, that you cannot study the Constitution and the purposes of the great generation who made it, without seeing that the very object of all this careful provision for rights that were placed beyond the reach of the central govern ment was to exclude forever this doctrine of public necessity as a measure of the powers that were conferred upon that government.— (Cheers.) I use this language deliberately. I affirm that when the Constitution repeated the words of Magna Charts, not as a statute, but as a fixed provision of fundamental law, and declared that "no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law"—it meant to make a rule for all time and all circumstances, shutting the door forever against any supposed public necessity for vie latieg the rights of the citizen. * In like man ner I affirm that when the Constitution re served to the States or the people all political powers not granted to the Federal government it meant to preclude every ground of necessity for the assumption by that government of the powers thus withheld. (Applause.) In fact the idea of a written Constitution—a fixed and supreme law—is utterly irreconcila ble with the theory that the administrators of Bush a government can resort to their own judgment of public necessity, and act contrary to that supreme law, and that good citizenship requires the people to acquiesoe.in that judg ment. They who set up such a claim for our rulers claim for them an entirely' irresponsible power. We are required, for example, to be lieve that what are called "arbitrary arrests" are necessary, but no one explains to us the grounds•of that necessity. No account is ren dered. We are to assume the existence of cau ses of juatiftelition, but no one tells us what those causes are. They may remain forever locked in the bosoms of those who do the acts of which we complain. , Why should American citizens filling high places of public trust, act upon such a principle as this ? Can anything be more degrading, more injurious to the pub lic conscience of a people, than to form a habit of implicit belief in the existence of necessities which nobody explains, and of which nobody is required to &too an account? Ton may hear a hundred men in a day, speaking of some par ticular. ease of tbis kind, profess its necessity; and net one man in the whole hundred can tell you what the necessity was. (Laughter and applauSe.) My friends, these false theories of loyalty —for false I must deem them—are infusing into our national character a fatal poison.— They are leading those who cherish them to impute factious and interested motives to all pure and manly efforts in defence of the prin ciples of civil liberty. They who indulge in this dangerous work of deriding the defenders otinnuctfitintionst-riettrolfrailitlliffrr. very inadequate conception of the convulsions that must precede the final loss of those 'rights. They take but a very superficial view of the depth of those feelings which lead men in all free countries to resist every form of mere arbitrary power. They make no account of the principles implanted in our breasts, and cherished into dictates of nature by genera tions of training in the practice of liberty; those principles on which depends the primary office of an opposition in a free government, and by means of which.all constitutional rulers are restrained from abuses of power. Impa tient of those restraints such persons rush to methods which cannot be employed without undermining the foundations of liberty; and for a supposed temporary advantage barter away the strength and the supports, the vigor and the health of the body politic. This has been in all ages the downward course of na tions, who have substituted for free institutions and systems of fundamental law a blind and unquestioning faith in public necessities, and have then welcomed some despotic power.— Thus did the Roman empire succeed the re public. and thus we may be preparing ourselves for a like destiny. Let us be warned in time. (Cheers.) I have endeavored to state with due precis ion and fairness one very important part of the conditions of a true loyalty. But I should leave this subject in an imperfect state if I omitted, on the other hand, to give equal prominence to certain principles of our politi• cal system which limit the mode in which States and individuals are to exercise their constitutional rights of opposition to the mea sures of the Federal government. I have briefly adverted to this already ; but a more extended statement of the principle is neces sary. I will assume then that a measure, having all the forms of law, is believed upon good grounds to be a violation of the constitutional rights of States and individuals. What id the rule of action under such circumstances ? There is no difficulty whatever in finding the answer. IS7 the establishment of a judicial system within the Federal Constitution, having ultimate cognizance of all eases arising under. that Constitution, one mode is provided by" which both States and individuals can ascer tain whether their reserved rights are invaded by the Federal authorities. This remedy is at all times open; and there is no valid reason why a State should forcibly assert its consti tutional rights any more than that an indivi dual should do the same thing. While a State remains a member of the Union, it is bound to vindicate its constitutional rights and powers in that mode which is consistent with the pre servation of that Union; and it can at any time, under any supposed violation of its rights or the rights of its people, make a case forju dicial determination. Forcible resistance is open revolution ; and nothing but an intolera ble oppression, cutting off all judicial remedy, can make revolution a necessity and a duty. (Applause.) Again : there is another equally good reason, which shows that no pbpular tumults and no * It is, in my opinion, a monstrous fallacy to sup pose that the implied authority for suspending the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus warrants indefi nitely the arrest and detention of citizens without ju dicial process. This implied authority was given in the original Constitution But after the adoption of that instrument the people came forward and annexed to it the prohibition of Magna Charts, making that provi sion part of the supreme law. The two clauses of the Constitut' 011 must therefore be so construed and applied as not to rend r nugatory the one last adopted. and so as to give effect to its stringent d.elarations These clauses can be reconciled only by such a course of legis lative and executive action as will preserve the opera tion of both. If under peculiar circumstances of immi nent danger the sated seizure is made without judicial process, the prisoner should immediately be charged with an offense by warrant and then the suggienaion of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus may intervene to prevent his dlscha ge from theimprisoment for cau ses which would operate to discharge him if the writ were n t suspended. This is the only course of legis lation, i n my opinion, that can be consistent with all the provisions of the Constitution. Ido not see bow it is possible to contend that a continual imprisonment, founded on mere executive seizure, can be authorized by taking swarth.) privilege of the habeas corpus. If ssagna Charts had not been interposed there might have been more ground for this pretension, for then thete would have been no necessity for process at any time. PUBLISHED EVERY monNrsta, BVIIDAYS EXCEPTED, BY 0. BARRETT Bc"CO' TIE DAILY PATRIOT AND 171110rWill ba sered•to etib scribers residing to the Borough for I. au OMITS PIZ wiz; payable to the Carrier. Mail attbseribere, arra rattan Pia ANNOY. Tim WESKIT PATRIOT AND UNION is published at TWO DOLLARS PRR ANNOY, invariably in advance. Ten copied to one addresa,Aleen dollars. Connected with this establishment is an sae:wive JOB OFFICE, containing a variety of plain and fancy type, unequalled by any establishment In the interior of the State, for which the patronage of the ;atone is se Belted. forcible resistance are either legally or morally justifiable while the ballot-box remains un-. touched. If the people of a state have reason to believe that measures of the Federal go vernment are subversive of the Constitution, it is their right and their duty to correct the evil by a change of their rulers. (Cheers.) In oases of supposed extensive violations of the Constitution, to which the attention of the whole country is called; the remedy of elections is ordinarily suffieient to reverse, and is in our system held to reverse, erroneous constructions of that instrument, as well as errors of policy. The popular tribunal may not be quite so pre cise is its action as the judicial, but there can can be no mistaking the judgment of the peo ple when it is pronounced upon an issue clearly made with an administration which is charged with infringing the Constitution. (Great ap plause.) These principles no one, I presume, will be ' inclined to dispute. But there is thrust in, to intercept their application to the present crisis in our affairs, a doctrine which I for one dis tinctly repudiate. That doctrine is, in sub stance, that all questioning of the measures of the administration should be postponed while we are in a civil war ; that there should be but one party, and that all should rally in an "un conditional support of the constituted authori ties." This dogma needs examination. If by an unconditional support of the constituted authorities it is intended to claim that we must all recognize the fact that we are engaged'in a civil war, and that we must conduct it, while it lasts, through those authorities, and must hold no irregular intercourse with the public enemy, I readily accede to the proposition. But if it is meant that we are not to question the methods which the administration pursue in the prosecution of the war; that we have no rightful control over their measures; or that we are to refrain from demanding a change of their policy—l reject the doctrine without the slightest hesitation. The very issue which you make with the administration of itself refutes that doctrine. That issue is, that their course of action subverts the Constitution'; makes the war an attack upon the social system of the South, and renders it impossible to succeed in. that war, without destroying, for the South and for the North, the whole principle of state sovereignty on which the 'Union was necessa rily founded as one of its corner-stones. It is in vain to say that the acts of the administra tion of which you complain are military mea sures. In every civil war there are political considerations which must qualify the military action, or that action can result only in disas ter. A government that undertakes to suppress a great revolt of powerful and organized com munities, at the same time furnishing the strongest of moral motives for resistance, is in the same situation as he who fights his enemy with one hand and supplies hint through the other with the munitions of war. In the pre sent case we have made the conquest one of infinite difficulty, by first declaring that we waged the war solely for the supremacy of the Constitution, and then turning round and ma king the overthrow of the Constitution a too probable result of our success. ("That's so." Applause.) Tho relult will not be confined to the condi ton 'orthe revelled States, 11 the - war contin ues to 1 )0 preEmeuted as it. Lisa been for the last six months. You cannot acquiesce in the measures of the administration, involving, as they do, the exercise of many powers that lie wholly outside of the OenStitution, without leaving this country hereafter to be.ruled by powers that will rest upon nothing but what the judgment of a party, or a faction, or a clique, shall deem to be public necessities. In this aspect of our affairs I cannot avoid a - word of earnest appeal to all reflecting men, to consider what fate must attend the securities of prop erty, as well as the rights of person, if we per mit the Constitution to be lost. There are five great securities of property, the continuance of which in this country is dependent on the preservation of the Consti tution of the United States. Let me enumerate them. They are 1. A uniform metallic currency, as the basis. and standard of all values. 2. The power to establish a uniform system of bankruptcies, whenever the interests of commerce require it. 3. The inviolability of contracts by States Legislatures. 4. The provision which places property un der the protection of the Constitution, as against federal power, so that no Man can be deprived of it without legal process. 5. The prohibition which restrains the fede ral power of eminent domain, so that private property cannot be taken for public use with out just compensation. Now no rational being can suppose that these guarantees can be extorted anew from.that cen tralized despotism which is but too likely to be the only successor that the Constitution of the United States can ever have. I care NM what ideas men may form of that "stronger govern. meat" which some allow themselves to wish for in the place of our present system. My reason and my instincts both teach me that that government will be an unchecked and un controlled despotism; and we need not look far for the signs.of its approach. (Applause.) Con sciously or unconsciously, there. are many agencies at work to promote its advent; one of the most potent of them is the false doctrine of "loyalty," against which I contend, and ano ther is the perilous idea that you can safely trifle with a fixed Constitution.. We have made such vast strides towards a system entirely unknown to the Federal Constitution, that we can now see the nature of the only power that will ever replace it. When that power has fully come the present securities of property will have been swept away with the securities of person. Both will disappear with the Fed eral Constitution ; and we shall never extort them as concessions from the new power, or place them beyond reach if we can extort them. There are no barons on this our Amer ican earth to make a new Magna Charge,: our race will never see another Runnymede; and we shall never see another Washington, another Madison, another Hamilton, another Jay, ano ther Patrick Henry, another Samuel Adams.— Ev6n the States, with their separate constitu tions, their bills of rights, and their present capacity to protect their people, will fall be neath the new and unchecked power to which the nation will surrender itself when it outs aloof from the Federal Constitution; and if they should not, every intelligent man who has had much to do with aoeumulation knows, or should know, that property, deprived of the supports which it derives from the Federal constitu tional system, can maintain but a feeble and precarious existence. We must remember that long, long centuries ago—in a state of society in one sense rude, but when the manly virtues of our ancestors gave them a historic splendor that we can only reflect—it providentially hap pened that the rights of property and the rights of person were indissolubly blended in one immortal maxim, that was laid, for all time, at the basis of the civilization of our race. Whatever may happen in other civilizations, or tryishandproperty for ns together. (Great m in us o t th t er ou e r l i i s m h es o , r lib p er e cheering.) My friends, it is time that the warfare upon opinion, and thought, and sieech, should