- RATES OF ADVERTISING. Four lines or less constitute half a square. Ten lines or more than four, ennetititte a square. Bali sq., one day ........ $0 30 ,Orte eq., one day...« 80 00 It one week.... 120 one week.... 200 " one month.. 300 " one mouth. • 6 (. 0 it three months 500 " three monthslo 00 is six in m um.. 800 six months.. 15 00 a one jest----. 13 00 " One year ..-- 20 00 Tr Business notices inserted in the LOOLL COLUMN, or before merriagba and death*, Tsis CENTS 185 LINZ for each inertion. To merchants and others sdvertleing by the year, liberal terms will be offered. Icr The number of insertions must be designated on the advertisement -v. u„ r i.goe and Deaths willbe inserted at the same rates as regular advertisements. illiorellatteims, PENz-lONS, BOUNTIES, BACK PAY, War With and Claim for Indemnity. SThIrART, STEVENS, CLARK & CO., Atorneys and Counseanv-at-Law, and Solicitor. ter all kin& of Military Claims, 450 PENNbYLVANIA AVENUE, WASHINGTON, D. C. This firm, having a thorough knowledge of the Pen sion Busiume, and Ming familiar with the practice in all the Departments of Goverument, believe that they can agora greaser fatalities to Pension, Beauty, and other Claimants, for the prompt and successful accom plishment of haziness entrusted to them, than any other firm in Washington. They desire to secure such an amount of this business as will enable them to execute the loudness for each claimant very cheaply, and on the basin of Chef pay contingent upon their success in me& ease For this purpose they will secure the services of Law Firms in each prominent locality throughout the States where sack brininess may be had, furnish the States all the necessary blank forms of application and evidence, regniaire printed pamphlet instructions, and circulars ' for distribution in their vicinity. with f assoh- ates names inserted, and upon the due execution of di paye rsand transmission o the same to them by their local associated, they will promptly perform the loudness here. Their charges will be ten dollars for officers and =dollars for privates, for each Pension or Bounty and Pay obtained, and ten per cent. on amount of Mims for Military Suppyes or Claims for Indemnity. 1.1:7" Soldiers enlisted mace the let of March, ISM, in any kind ofteervice, Military or Naval, who are 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 ar 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- Jed as above to the $ lOO Bounty and Back Pay. JOSEPH B. STBWART, IIIiSTOS L. STEVENS, BDW &RD CLARK, OSCAR A. PTBVBI4I3, WILLIS B. GAYLORD. WASHIPOSOM, D o_,lBo'l. " Apply at our office, or to our Associate at HenslBBoll4, PA.—JOHN - A. BIG-IiBB. Attorney and Counsellor. Pirrentrao, Pa.—ARTHIIRS & RIDDELL, Attor neys-as-lam. Porrermin, Pa.—WM. R. SMITH, Attorney and Counsellor Putz.soni.ritta, XENNICHILD, 40 Atwood street, W N M. SMITH, Attorney and Counsellor. asnisoros, Pa.—BOYD ORIIMBINCJI, Attorney and Counsellor jy3l-dly JACKSON & CO.'S SHOE STORE, NO. 90X MANNNT HARRISBURG, PA., 'Where they ntend to denote their entire time to the assanfaotnre of BOOTS AND SHOES all kinds and varieties, in tete neatest and most bah enable styles, and at satisfactory prices. Their etwelt will eonsist, in part, of Gentleman's Gaff and Patent Leather Boots and Shoes, latest styles, Ladies' and Misses , Gaiters, and other Shoes in great variety; and in fast everything connected with the Shoe bitaineen CUSTOMER WORN YID be particularly attended to, and in all cases will satisfaction be warranted. Lasts listed up by owe of the beet maker.; in the country. The long practical experience of the undersigned, ano their thorough knowledge of the business will, the) trust, be sufficient guarantee to the public that they will do them Justice, and furnish them an article the will recommend itself for utility, cheapness and dins Wit". Ljanl/1 JACKSON & CO MURING PAT I , IIIT r i•Miza, a solid, concentrated extract of BEEF AND VEGETABLES. Convertible immediately into a nourishing and deli cious -onp. Flighty approved by a number of eminent physicians. Th.s admirable article condensed into& compact 'form, 41 the sabittential and nutritive properties of a large bulk of meat, mid vegetables_ irhe runtiness with welch it dissolves into a rich and palatable Soup. which would require hours of preparation according to the usual method, is an advantage iu many situat.ons of lie , too obvious to need urging. Its highly nourishing qualtuaes siomoined with its delicacy. renders it invaluable for the del; while for thoise in health, it is a pertactatiostitate for Pedi meat and vegetables. It will keep good in any climate, It is peculiarly well adapted FOR TR sVELIIRS, by laud or sea, who ca.. thus avoid those accilentaldePriva lions of a comfortable meal, to which they are so liable. FOR IltlirsiADS, whose capricious appetite can thus be satisfied in a moment. FOR SPuRTBI4IOI and BROIIRBIONIISTI3. to whom, both its compactness and easy preparation will realm mead It. For aids by a5p24.11 CHARTER OAK FAMILY FLOUR! UNEXCELLED BY ANY IN THE U. STATES AND SIIPBRIOII TO ANY XV "ir ra - la OFFERED IN PENNSYLVANIA! IT IS MADE OF CHOW! MISSOURI WHITE WHEAT. g 7 Delivered any place in the city free of charge pains cask oa &Livery. JP) QULDIEWB ( I AMP IMPANioN.- 10 A very convenient Writing Desk also, Portfolios, lioraorandism Books, Portmoonales, &et , at BOWIIPPBBI I BOOKBTORB ("IIKESEII-100 Boxeb Prime Cheese u (on consignment) for sale at less than market rate. JY/0 Wfd. DOCK, Ja., & CO NOTIONS. --Quite a variety of uselid and entertaining artieleaeheap—at ROUE, KUM BOOKSTOAS WANTED.—A GOOD 0"OK at tht BOMGAILDNEB, aorzt. A.pply immedist OLARET WI NE I—We are dosing out a MIT SUPERIOR LOT at less than cost! WM DOCK Ja CO ptiI.M.E POTATOES !-A LARGE LOT net received and for sale low. octii44lU WM. DOCK, & CO. 11dINCE ME 11"—Very superior, just 11l received and for sale by WM DUCK , jr.. & poNDENSICD MIt.IK —Just received suit for Bale by WM DOCK jr., & HE RM PATIO bLY SEALED Peaches, Tomatoes, Lobster, Salmon, Oyrters, Speed Oysters, for sale by WM. DOCK, jr., &CO SMOKNIL) RAD —A very choice 11.1 article, just received and for mate lir WM DUCH, jr VELENUFI MUSTARD, ENGLISH and r Domestic Pickles, (by tbe dozen or hunared,) su perior w a d Ketchny, &mem sod condiments of wary description , for sale by my2s Wid. COOK, JR., .t Co LAKE TROUT I I—A mall invoice of LAKE TROUT. Offsatictsw,) trimmed, end the quality "A N0.11.. 3, just received and for sale very tow by WM DOOR. 3a.. & CO WAR! WAR —BRADY, No. 62 Market street, below Third, has received a large assortment of Swoans, Bassos and gators. will sell very low. a ,40-dtf (4ELF SEALING PRIM JARS 1 - goat and Cheapest in the markets! 91611 and 411311111130 them 9A► VIDIR RENT—Two desirable /)FOllll. .1 IWOMS, emend story front of my e tass g i dhuL owner of Market liquor* and Market street. Ids °Mao "eetMade MACKERELtii Nos. t s 2 and 14 is all dud psokageo wow, sad sock pociago w►rawt/4. Jost received. sal or soli low by WIL DOC& . Ja.. & CO. WIC DOCK. Jo., & Co WM. DOnli, JR , & CO EEO WM. DOCK. Is., I no _. ,:--,,i - ,--- .. - 7/ 1 2_11.7_' . - ~,.----...• '' .--' __„ jr ..... ;•_ --.., --...., - I I 1.1 1 )__l -' , D---..- ..,„..-. - " I, Itt 131. I ° till + .. •' . • • --._:,,,,;-'±.4 . ' ' ' -1 .... ......1.. .......,- . ,77,-;_-_::,,i,:2,:i:.°7 ''''.'" . Di '', • -.' r . „....._ ..4 - . :•-.*--__ : 7......,---- - _- -. .. , . . .. . i qOl. 5 -NO. 185. lituffintse flatits. DR C. WEICHEL, SURGEON AND OCULIST, ANNDINON .THIRD NAAR NOSTII STRAW. He is now fully prepared to attend promptly to the duties et profession in all its branches. it LONG AND YliT 13130018811VL 11111DIOAL 11211111101 junkies him in promising fall and ample satisfaction to all who notyhilor htio with a gall. be the Mame Ohm& or my other nature. mlB-therle WM. H. MILLER, ATTORNEY AT LAW. OPPIOB IN SHOBBIASER'S BIIILDINGFI SECOND STREET , lINIWINN WALNUT AND INARKNT SWAP; no2SJ Nearly opposite the Buehler House. rd&wav T HOS. C. MeeDOWELL, ATTORNEY AT LAW, . MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT. Office in Burke'a Row, Third greet, (Up Stain.) Hawing formed a connection with parties in Wash ingtod Oily, who a•e reliable tomineem men. any burn. near connected with 'nay or the impartments will meet with inunediate and careful attention. veri-y CHARLES F. VOLLMER UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street four doors above Second, (OPPOSITE WASHINGTON MOSS BOHOL) Is prepared to furnish to order, it the very best style of workmanship. Apring and Hair Mattresses, Window Our tains, Lounges, and all other articles of Purnxture In hie line, on short notice snd moderate terms. Having es perienee in the business, he feels warranted 'n asking s Aare of public patronage, waft* of his ability to give satisfaction. jantl.4l4 SILAS WARD. NO. 11, NORTH THIRD ST., HARRISBURG. STEINWAY'S PIANOS, MELODEONS, VIOLINS, GUITARS, Banjos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, Accordeons. svaihne, Man AND BOOS WSW, itc., PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. ALBUMS, Lhrge Piw'and Mantle Mirrors, Square and Oval Pram* Of evedilescriphoo made to order. Reguilding dons Agency for Rosins's Sewing Machines. Er Sheet Minna sent by Mail. non-] J OHN W. GLOVER, MERCK 11NT TAILOR ! Has just received from New York, an assort ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, width he oilers t hie anatomic" and the public a• n0a221 MODERATE PRICES dtf SMITH & EWING, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, THIRD cTRE PT, Harrisburg, Practice in the several Courts of Dauphin county. Col lections made promptly. A. O. SMITTI, ft.b26 J. B. EWING. CI )OK, Merchant Tailor, • '27 CHESNUT ST., between Second and Front, Has just returned from the city with an assortment of CLOTHS, CA SSIMER ES AND VESTING'S, Which will he Sold at moderate prices and made up to order; and, also, an sksortment of , READY MADE Clothing and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods. n0.21-Iyd DENTISTRY. B. MILDER, u. u. 0 9 NO. 119 MARKET STREET, REIT & BUILDING. UP STAIRS. janB-tf R ELIGIOUS BOOK STORE, TRACT AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY, E. S. GERMAN. It SOUTH 81100 ND STRNET, AUOTI 0111014IIT, 11•111131113116, TA. Depot for Use sale of Stereoscopes,Stereoscopic Views, Music said Musical Instrumento Coo, subscriptions taken for religious publications. now-ay O}IN G. W. MARTIN, FASHIONABLE CA W R S HO D W HARI: R.ITER, HETEL, a - SWIM, PA. All manner of VISITING, WEDDING ANDE USI NESS CARDS executed in the most artistic styles and most reasonable terms. decli-dtf FRANKLIN HOUSII BALTIMORS, MD. this pleasant and commodious Hotel has been tho roughly re-fitted and re-tarnished. It is pleasantly situated on North-West corner of Howard and Franklin streets, a few doors west of the Northern Central Bail way Depot. 'Every attention paid to the comfort of his guests. G. LBISENRING, Proprietor, jel.2-tf (Late of Selina Grove. Pa.) THEO. F. SOEIEFFE it, . L ROOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER' NO. 18 MARKET STREET, HARRISBURG. irr Particular attenti' , .. paid to printing, riding and binding of Railroad Blanks, Manifests. insurance Poll. cies, Checks, gill-Reads, &a. Wedding, Visiting and Business Cards printed at very low prices and in the best style. jan2l DYOTTVILLE GLASS WORKS, PHILADELPHIA , MANVIACITIM CARBOYS, DEMIJOHNS, WINN, PORTER, MINERAL WATER, PIQICLE AND PRESERVE BOTTLES OP STINT DBISOII/PTIOn. H. R. he G. W. RENNIRE 0ir.19-dly 27 South Front steret. Philadelphia. UBlO STORE! N 0.93 MARKET STREET, lIARIIISBURO. PA. SHEET MUSIC, PIANOS, MELODEONS, GUITARS, VIOLINS. BANJO STRINGS, Or every deeariptiork. DRUMS, MIS, PLUTES, ACCORDIONS, ate. at the lowest CITY PRICES, at W_ Rl4OOll9'S MUSIC STORE, No. 93 MAIM STAMM A BOOK FOR THE TIMES f 1.3 American Annual Cyclopedia and Register of (=portant Events for the YearlB6l. In 1 1101 8 vo. over 750 pages. Cloth 48, Leather $3.80 Published hp D. Ippleton 4. Co.. New York. The design of this work is to furnish. a record of al/ the important knowledge of the year. The events of the war, owing to their prominence, will, of course., 06- eupy a conspicuous part, but all other branehes—Sci enc., Art, Literature, the Mechanic Arts, Ac , will re• mire due attention. The work will be published ex elneively bv subscription. and ready tor delivery in alone .nett Also, new complete Resumes Debates of Coagress,l6 rooksmes, $3 and $3.60 per so/1~ Names Thirty Years in 11. S. Senate, Seolumes,l2.6o and. /3 per vol. nyelopedra of Amerecats Eloquence, containing tio speeches of the most animist Orators of America, 1! stmt portraits. Teets. $2.8 0 rads. Partmor Lift and rew ee of Andr * t ew Jackson, 8 volumes $266 week. kddreos J .1. STRABBAOOII. Harrisburg, Pa. General Agent tor D. APPLETON 00. 'or ihrenhuil deeeriptivenf Annual Oyelepedia starilB.4A wet SWEET CIDER !—A very ouperior lot Just received and far mile by WM &en. poTATOES —non HU-H LS OF A superior qawlity just ripooirrd and for Palo low, by Wit. D CZ, Ja., Ir. CO. DRi D PFAIOI3E-`—PAHED AND VICHIRSD—bia, roootrrd by ICIP DOCK, la, & 00. HARRISBURG, PA., AIODAY, APRIL 6, 1863. CIF 41 ,1 atrial & 741 ion. MONDAY MORNING, APRIL 6 1963. INDEMNIFICATION BILL. SPEECH 0 F HON. D. W. VOORHEES, OF INDIANA, IN Tun HOUSE or REPRESBNTATIVEI3, February 18, 1863. [CONCLUDED.] No age, no sex, no condition in life has been exempt from invasion, unlawful arrest and im prisonment. I speak simply what every man in the hearing of my voice knows to be true. I have seen the ministers of the. gospel of a peaceful Savior on their way to prison, leav ing wife, children and congregation a thousand miles behind, for preaching peace on earth and good will towards men. One, the 11ev. Mr. Bundy, as I am informed by my friend from Illinois, (Mr. Allen,) living in his district, was dragged away from the open grave of his child, over whose remains the burial services had not yet been closed; denied the privilege of ' returning to his house to take a final leave of another member of his family then dying, and hurried like an atrocious and dangerous erim inal to the safe keeping of a cell. I have seen the upright and conscientious lawyer seized by the loathsome instruments of oppression, for bidden to console a sick wife, the mother of his children, with a single word of parting, and I conveyed by furtive and rapid movements to a distant and arbitrary military tribunal, because 1 he had dared, as became a freeman, to declare what he conceived the law to be_ I have seen ' men who had been trusted and honored in • public life by those who had known them most intimately in every relation, arrested in my own State for no offenses known to any law, and without warrant, without commitment, made to eat " the bread which captives' tears have watered" in every age of despotism. Io the month of October last I met three friends, distinguished citizens of Indiana, wbo six years ago served as Senators together in her Legislature. I met them, sir; serving together in the same prison a term of imprisoment which had no other duration or limit, no; other beginning or end, no other cause or conclusion, no other condition or circumstance to support it than the mere arbitrary, unlawful, unen lightened and audacious will of one man here in Washington city. Sir, as I stood in their guarded room, lisitened to the story of their wrongs and looked out upon the sunshine and the aft—and the floe of the white man's free' dom floating in the distance—strange thoughts possessed my mind and strange visions arose before me. A new sensation penetrated my heart. I seemed to dwell for awhile beneath the shadow of the Bastile, and hear the cries and groans which finally rent its walls. The dungeons of Austria opened around me, and the prayers of their victims for liberty seemed to fill all space and all time. The damp vaults of Venice and the fearful caverns of the Span ish Ineuieition yielded up.tbeir horrible secrets. The Tower of London, that melancholy tomb of genius and beauty, the imperious form of li' 11 block, all eca A iteinflintulZa -113 t—the. Teekiug, looked, as it were, face to face, into the fright ful, appalling countenance of tyranny. I emu died' its ferocious and revolting features in the light of historical associations. But when I came to reflect on all this, and reason from cause to effect, I found that precisely the same terrible principle of oppression which has dis graced the past, and filled other countries with tears and blood, was triumphing in my very presence. I turned away, and took my "appeal from tyranny to God." But, sir, the people of this whole country and of the civilized world, have beheld worse scenes than even these enacted in our midst. This Houle has been invaded. The principle of popular representation, on which the theory of this government is based, has been assailed in the illegal and brutal arrest of two members of the American Congress. The honorable gentleman from Maryland, (Mr. May,) early fell a victim to the spirit of executive usurpa tions, which has since spread like an evil shadow over the entire land. He had dared, in an hour of envenomed popular frenzy, to raise his voice in this hall and assert, in no suppliant tones, his rights as a Representative. He had %dared to assert that the Constitution of the country was binding in all its provisions, in time of peace as well as in time of war, and that his allegiance was due to it, and not to the party which had ascended into power by trampling it under their feet. In the exercise of his undoubted prerogative as a legislator, and in accordance with his sense of duty as a citizen, he had brought forward measures here looking to a speedy and peaceful solution of that unnatural strife, which has turned our rivers to blood, and lined our once fraternal borders with A thousand miles of graveyards —not the sweet resting places of those who lie down to sleep together in peace at the close of happy lives, but where hostile specters will forever haunt the dismal scenes and vex the air With shrieks of undying hate. For these acts of duty as a Representative, and these acts alone, sir, the honorable gentleman from Mary land was arrested, and made to feel the iron of helpless captivity enter his„eoul. The sanc tuary of his home was invaded at midnight, l i that fit hour for the assassination of liberty,• by an unknown band of armed men, who searched every privacy of domestic lite, and then tore him with violence from a young and delicate family, with that total indifference to agony and despair, which so well becomes the callous agents of crime. He was thrust into prison, and became the recipient of all those odious indignities, which it is the trade and calling of jailors and turnkeys to inflict on noble minds and exalted natures. He lan guished inside of the bars of iron and the bay onets of sentinels, until the caprice of the Exe cutive threw open the doors of his cell and told him to go. As he was arrested• without charge. guilty of no offence, imprisoned with out authority of law, punished without trial, so he was released from confinement, without en explanation and without a hearing under the Constitution. This case, in a few brief sentences, comprises the ultimate point of a wanton and reckless despotism. Aud what I 'vivo said of it applies in principle with the same force to the case of the honorable gentle man from Illinois, (Mr. Allen.) Both are repre sentatives of the people on this floor, and both have been subjected to punishment, due alone to criminals, by the arbitrary and lawless edict. of one man, for the exercise of their opinions. Sir, do we live in, a republic or an absolute monarchy ? Is this an American Con gress or a Roman Senate, in the most abject days of the Roman empire? Is this an as sembly of freemen, or a French assetnhy in Ithe days of Louis XIV t How much More are we exp.:Med to bear? What deeper degrada tion is to be inflicted on us? If one member of this body can he arrested for his opinions, land made to feed on the damp vapors of a living tomb during the pleasure of the Bean- five, so can all the rest of us who do not, with bated breath and words of whispered humble ness, bow ourselves with Eastern adulation at the footstool of power. If these things are to be borne, the hour for a Cromwell has arrived, and these walls will never again resound with the voice of liberty. Let the victors advance and bind us with cords, and eooui•ge us in the open market-places, as the unworthy successors of a nobler and prowler race. Let the pilgrim of future times visit not this dishonored hall, but go and linger in the old and deserted one, and draw inspiration from the glorious memo ries which hover over it. The voices of the mighty dead, in behalf of freedom of opinion, freedom of speech,. freedom of the press, and the supremacy of the Constitution, yet seem to echo from its venerable walls ; and its place in the history of the progress of liberty is as secure as the battle•Seli of Bunker Hill. Sir, am I to be told that there was cause for the arrest and imprisonment of these gentle men? Who dares to say so? Why were they not tried for their offenses, and, if guilty, pun ished ? Who will assert that the thousands who have been imprisoned without authority pf law and discharged without trial were crim inals? If they were, a double infamy awaits the Executive and the agents of hie usurpations for liberating upon society unproseeuted and unpunished offenders against the laws. If they are the dangerous criminals which they are daily described to be, then this adminis tration has corruptly compounded with felony, and made itself a party to treason, by refusing to bring them to justice, even when the crim inals themselves protested against being liber ated without a trial. But, sir, I deny their guilt in every instance ; and in doing so, I plant myself on the plain precepts of the laws of God and man. I have but little indulgence for this constant assumption of guilt against citizens who have courted trials, and whom you have not dared to try. The presumptions are all in favor of innocence where just laws prevail. They grain favor of guilt before trial only in the minds of tyrants. But, whether guilty or innocent, not one single provigion of the Constitution has at any time or place been complied with, in the treatment of citizens ar rested by government officials. In violation of the Constitution, American citizens have been arrested for using the free dom of speech. In violation of ths•Constitution, their houses have been forcibly entered. In violation of the Conatitution, their papers have been searched. In violation of the Constitution, their per sons have been.eeized with armed violence. In violation of the Constitution, they have been deprived of liberty without due process of law. In violation of the Constitution, they have been held to answer infamous accusations with out presentment or indictment of agrand jury. In violation of the Constitution, they have been denied the right to a speedy and public trial by an inspartial jury. In violation of the Constitution, they have been carried out of the State and district in, which their offenses, if any, were committed•. In violation of the Constitution, they have been kept in ignorance of the nature and cause of the accusations against, them. In violation of the Constitution, they have not been confronted with the witnesses against them. And, in most supreme and wicked violation cfafarseelor--rortewermaheft—ha‘a been denied the insolence of a fanatical disregard of every principle of humanity as well as law— " That the general government will not re cognize any one as an attorney for political prisoners, and will look with distrust upon, all applications for release through such channels; anti that such applications will be regarded as additional reasons for declining to release such persorks." Sir, I challenge the worst ages of the most profligate and corrupt despots, for a mere in tolerable picture of personal outrage than is here presented. In prisons, in dungeons, in cells, in solitude, and desolation of heart, citi zens of this freeconntry are threatened with increased punishment if they resort tethe only possible mode of 'approaching those its power, to obtain information or trial with a view to liberty. Many new offences, unknown to the Constitution and the laws, have been created by the proclamation of the Executive, and to these must be added that it is a calms' for an innocent man, overpowered by unlawful force, and wearing away his life in prison, to employ counsel to secure for him the benefit of the laws of the land. Sir, posterity will hold in remembrance the authors of these outrages— the President and his Cabinet—in order to exe crate the prostitution which they have made of their high offices, to the overthrow of the Constitution. When they retire from their ex alted positions, and descend to the quiet walks of private life, where the voice of partisan op misuse and interested flattery will no longer reach their ears, and shut out truth from their consciences, let them spend the evening of their days in pondering over the wretchedness they have so needlessly and wantonly caused. Let them recall the tears of bitter grief, bereave ment, and shame which they have caused deli cate and tender women to weep, as they im plored their jailors in vain for relief against outrages, which the pen blushes to record.— Let them visit the madhouse, and listen to the shrieks and cries or their inmates, as they pour forth their wailing from the shattered dome of thought, and in that saddest sight which earth can present—a mind in ruins—behold a portion of their handiwork, which will accompany their names into history. And if dreams come to them in their slumbers, let them dream of the poor suicide, who communed in solitude with his sad heart, until his room became filled with sbadews and impalpable forms, which mocked his agony end despair, and who, to escape from his unlawful imprisonment, launched his naked soul into the mysterious realms of the infinite, and appeared for trial before a compassionate God. Let them awaken to hear the heart bro ken sobs of the widow, and the pitiful lamen tations of the fatherless. Let them make some atonement for the grief they have inflicted, by looking into all the detailed horrors which their system of infernal outrage has brought upon unnffending men and women. I speak not in malice I wish evil to no man upon earth, I feel psis to know that I ietliet it. But if I could forbear to speak with indignant emphasis on this subject, I would feel that the bond of sym pathy which binds me to my suffering fellow ' men had been broken asunder. I would feel i hat my heart was an maim from the sacred pre cepts of the divine Nazarene, who pronounced tee merciful blessed, because they showed mercy. Fut it is said that this system of open divre gard of the Constitution, and the arrests which have been made under it, have been necessary to the stability and existence of the government. •All the world knows that this is false. Neither insurrections nor invasions have taken place iu the lord States of the Union. The courts of justice have never for a moment been disturbed in the discharge of their duties by any of the circumstances at tending this civil war. Every function in the machinery of government has been tree to act. Does this administration distrust the entire PRICE TWO CENTS judiciary of the country, the clerks, the sher in, and the juries ? And in what way has the whole body of the people shown, that the safety of the Republic requires that they should have a master ? Sir, I scorn to pursue this thought. I spurn from me, at once and for ever, this base, false, and dangerous plea of necessity. What is there to Americans worth preserving, if the principles of liberty, the doctrines of the Constitution, shall perish ? We hear much stormy declamation about the life of the nation being in peril. It is true.— It is sadly imperrilled on all sides; But does mere land and water, mere extent of sail, con stitute the life of this .nation ? No, sir ; im mortal liberty in its life ; the soul which ani mates the body, and withcitt which the mere form of our government will be a cold and life less corpse, We are asked to make war on this vital principle, and submit to its destruction, in order to preserve the Union. You might as well ask me to drive the dagger into my own heart, in order to preserve my life. I recog nize no each monstrous folly. The Constitu tion is my country, and , I have no .country, outside of its provision& When you require me to destroy it, or consent to its destruction, in order to save my country. you require a paradox, which is the natural offspring of that unreasoning fanaticism, which shares se largely in the origin of our melancholy na tional disasters. I will not stop here to denounce this argu ment of necessity as the uniform plea of ty rants who have sought to destroy liberty in all ages of the world. The children in our school& are familiar with this truth. It has passed into a proverb, and has the sanction of univer sal human experience. But in close connec tion with this familiar household word of Star Chamber oppression, another and kindred maxim of unlimited monarchy has been thrust upon the country by the supporters of the administration now in power. Loyalty has received a new definifion. The doctrine of the Tudors and Stuarts has been revived, and now once more struts forth in- the habiliments of royalty on the stage of men. A prominent eitizen of my own State, occupying tempora rily a high official position,.has announced that loyalty to the government no longer consists in obedience to the laws, in support of the Consti tutiain, and in devotion to the flag, but in a blind, abjeot, nitiquestioning, and unreasoning obedience to the measures of those who are in power. He fails to perceive how an American citizen can be faithful to his allegiance unless he concedes the principle that the king can do no wrong. He has studied this heresy, doubt less, in European courts, and desires to trans plant it to these shores. And if it should bloom here it would be as the deadly npae tree, under whose blighting shadow every green and beautiful thing dies. All civil rights would perish. The courts would stand adjourned to meet no more. The scales of justice would . be broken and thrown away The temple of Janue_would stand wide open, and war, the sport tf kings and the ruin of the people, would waste the country forever. The sove reign voice of the masses would be silent and stilled in their throats. It would be dangerous to think, and children would no longer be educated to enlighten•their minds, but simply to develope their muscles, with which, as slaves, to work for the tax gatherer, or as gladiators to enter the arena of ambitious wars. The prison houses would overflow with all who dared to remember that they were once free. and death, in ita most appalling aspects, the gibbet. And' strains, or responsibility, would reign the sov ereignty of one man. Sir, need I ask whether the public mind of this country is ready to receive calmly and submit to the plain and inevitable cones (leen ces of such astounding principles ? Are Ame rican citizens ready to surrender all, all, Otto Cutely all that renders life a blessing and re deems their citizenship from being a by-word. and a reproach ?. i will not insult the proud ancestry from which we sprene ; I will not mock the memory of the dead who have died for liberty on both hemispheres; I will not peach the purity of the blood which Mows in American veins by reiterating this question . It has been answered more than a thousand times already in molten and in the field, by the great race to which we belong,. end the American people are ready to answer it. again. Our remote ancestors beat down the walls of Rome and , humbled the pride of the world's mistress into the dust. They broke the Ito. man yoke which Caesar planed on their necks, and turned and trampled to death the nation which had pecetratr d their misty regions, and awakened them to a sense of their power and their density. Their descendants for two thou r sand years, in all the wonderful vicissitudes df history, have chafed under and resented and resisted the insolent spirit of encroachment, invasion, and usurpation against their civil and their religious liberties. They have met the degrading demands of executive tyranny at their thri•shholds, in whatever forms they have been advanced. Sir, this is the race of ' liberty. I solemnly and earnestly commend the study of its glorious and exalted history ' to those who are this day trifling with the majestic principles of personal independence which it has secured to the world by its wi-dom and its blood. it bas stood as the iron mailed champion of constitutional government.; it has borne the banners of the cross and -planted Christian civilization on every shore and be neath every sky ; it has poured the beams of the useful soleness into the dark and waste places of the earth ; it has carried the refine ments of the arts, to the savage forests, and caused the wilderness to be transformed into the abode of learning and g- nine ; it has thronged every ocean with commerce ; it has spoken the great emporiums of trade into existence; it has defied every barrier of nature to resist its adventurous spirit; it has played with the fiery elements of the physical world, and used them as obedient servants in the grand march of its gigantic progress; and in the midst of all this, and under all circumstanoes, it hits waited on the fortunes and espoused the cause of liberty with the unmeasured devotion of a knight errant of chivalry, and the undaunted courage of the Lion Heart. Sinn a race will take no step backward. It will submit to no diminu Lion of its glory. It will surrender none of its high prerogatives. Revolutions and changes may retard its progress for a brief season, but they can no more defeat its ultimate suc tees in all that is gr , at in conception anti sublime in execution, than the storm which lashes the waves into fury oat , annihiltre the ocean. My faith, which brigh-ens the future to my eyes, i 8 founded on the blood which the Amerman people have inherited from this lofty emits. it. will never f end the servile Knee to executive dictation. It eears an erect port and an ele vated cress It has d fled the insolence of power in every age of Its history, and it defies it now. Yes, sir, the American peeple have Buffeted the outrages of executive umurp diens, and they have a lemnly laud deliberately na Cored their defiance. The voice of the Barons. the voice of John Hampden, and the voice Patrick Henry, crying **give me liberty or give me death." were all concentrated in the vetoe of the people of this country, as expressed at the ballot box in the recent elections. PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, OUNDATEI EXCIIPTED, BY 0. BARRETT & CO' Tin DAILY Pmrszos AXD USION will be served Una. scribers residing in the Borough for TEN owns MAUI; payable to the Carrier. Mall subscribers, nn /mamba ram ANNUM, TEL WINIELY PATRIOT AND Limon is published at gwd noza.sms run imam, invariably in advance. Ten copies to one address, fifteen dollars. Connected with this establishment is an emtensive JOB OBPICB, containing a variety of plain and fancy type, unequalled by any establishment in the interior of the Mate, for which the patronage of the publid Is se. Betted. Much has been said in regard to the mean ing of these popular expressions. Therc are many issues before the country, and I. shall not at this time seek to interpret at length the public will on any other than the one I have endeayored to discuss to-day. It is true., however, that this administration stands condemned by the people in every es sential particular. It no longer possesses the public confidence. It is waging a war which• it is no louver pretended is to restore the Union as our fathers made it. The constitutional rights of the States have been abolished by proclamation, and that portion . of the slaves which are not to be liberated by the sword are to be paid for by direct taxation. - A war thus conducted is a fraud on millions of voters who , have hitherto sustained it. Its failure as a remedy for our national calamities is palpable" and absolute, even if war, under any dram stances, could have brought us a restoration of the Union. These and kindred questions were decided in certain and distinct tones at the. ballot-box in October and November; but I can dono more than give them a passing' allusion on this occasion. But on the question of the integrity of the Constitution and the protection which it af fords to the citizen, the voice of the people comes to our ears with a sound equally plain and clear. It rang out from the cities and plains, the mountains and the prairies, in stern , denunciation of every infringement which this administration has made of that holy instru ment, and in favor of the preservation of civil liberty, whatever else might perish. Ie de manded not only that the prison doors should roll back and the victims of despotism be • yielded up to the guardianship of the law, but it demanded also, in the sovereign and imperi ous tones of a free people, that the audacious and dangerous principle on which arbitrary ar rests have been made, and speedy and public trials denied, shall be at once and forever aban doned, in the most open and explicit manner. Nor, sir, will the people give any second warn-- ingen this subject. They intend to be obeyed. They know themselves to be masters and not slaves. If the peaceful admonition of the bale lot- box goes unheeded; if the reasonable and earnest remonstrance of an enlightened and patriotic people is lost on "those who seem drunken and mad with power; if the insane wickedness which has ruled this Congress and launched the present administration on its schemes of ruin cannot be reached and re strained in its destructive career by the pop ular voice coming up here in all its impressive grandeur ; then the sword, the sword, sir, must once more in the annals of the world deter mine the ancient Nene so .often baptized in blood, between the abso lute power of one man,. and the inalienable, indestructible rights of the masses. I speak plainly. The time for words without meaning has gone by. Yon may pass this bill to protect the Executive and his agents in the exercise of arbitrary power from the consequences of their own acts You may plow, them above all responsibility, You. may elevate them above the law, and say that it shall have no claims on them for the viola tions it has suffered. You may say that the victim& of their barbarous oppression shall be• dumb in their presence. You may say that the citizen shall have no legal redress for his wrongs-. You may sanctify power and outlaw liberty. Sir, no such law can be enforced. It will not, for one moment, be obeyed. The courts will obey the Constitution, and so will the people, but they will treat such a law as thin se an intruder and a misse-". — -0 moor atthe reaps, s_sa sit r isen... w seer at its terrible features We are treadines on the thin crust of a flaming volcano. There is coming woe and disaster in the very air around us. The tremor of the approaching earth quake is visible in the ground on which we tread. The signs of the devastating whirlwind are gathering in the angry sky over our heads. Already the deep mutterings of its wrath can be heard is the distance, Will you stand still in stubborn mutiny against the raging elements of popular indignation which injustice and political debauchery have aroused,. and •be crushed? There is but one par hwtly of escape and safety. It. is the pathway on which the lignt of the Constitution is shining in all its original lustre. It is the pathway of the fay there, in which the footprints of Washington and the sages of tbat hallowed period tie yet plainly visible. It is the pathway of justice, of truth, and of honor. It is the pathway of constitutional freedom, and leads to national life, union and peace Mr. Speaker, lam done. I take leave of this subject. A greater or more important one to every generation of men, in my judgment, was never submitted to the ennsideration of a legislative body. I have confined myself to the discussion of a single issue; but the princi ples which govern it are imperishable—in. stinct with eternal life, clothed with immor tality. The proudest works of human hands decay; the brightest models of human wis tom grow old and give place to others; govern ments are rocked to and fro by fierce revolu tions, and fall to the earth to rise again in some new form ; we all hasten on in our eriee journey. soon to take up our abode in the eilent Necropolis—the city of the dead ; but liberty, liberty—that divine emanation from the bo som of God to the soul of man—will survive every mutation, every shock, every change. But if we expect to retain the illumination and glory of its presence on these shores; if we expect to transmit to our posterity the exalted and priceless blessings which it 'bestows; if we expect to escape the reproach of being false to the great trust which our fathers reposed in our hands for present and for future ages ; if we would avoid the utter and absolute over throw of every principle which has signalized this Government as a Republic and not a deep°. Liam; if we , e t >main e hereon this narrow isthmus of time which divides the living and the dead, with the Femme of our ancestors stretching back into the past, and the advancing footsteps of rising generatione terming up in the future, would flee from the juke and lawful condemns,. ti-n of both, we must return—return without delay—to the pl'tin, the safe, and the immuta ble, precepts of the Constitution. Let those who control the administration now in power give over their wanderings into dangerous lati tudes. Let them hastily tetraoe their steps, and take their' stand within the buti.s of the law. Let them ehaodon their impious claim of power outside of the provisions of the Con stitution. Let them pur. e th• it minds of that madness which dares to treat, American citizens as slaves. Let this be acne, and public eons lence will muse more brighten the flee of the country, and a new strength will sprint up from a sense of public security. Let this he done, and though deep and dark salami. lee may overtake us. se t. the primary and fundamental object for which this government was founded —the establishment of liberty—cannot be de fretted. if. however, the present policy is t 4 be pursued; if there is to he no change in the destructive career which now usurps end sup. ptant.s the Constitu isn the laws; eht n r e w ere my solemn belief that a scene of ruin is near et hand in this once favored country, more mournful then that over which Maria* ir Car burgs, end more terri bleell,4llhthee P p l i 4 c iiris f tuce ° O I desolation which marked the destruction of the holy city of David.