RATES OF ADVERTISING. Four lines or less constitute half a square. Ten lines snore than four, constitute a square. sq., one day..— $0 30 One sq.. one day.-- $0 60 L one week..._ 120 I . 4- one week.— 200 ii one month.. 300 " one month_ 600 ~ three months 5 00l " th, er months 10 00 . six months.. 800 ~ six months_ 15 00 " " Le Year- --- 12 00 ~ one yesr--- - 20 00 lE7' Business notices inserted in the LOCAL COLUMN, or bee...* riterris.ges and deaths: via CRNTS PIM LANE for each L.:sermon. To merchants ood /Ahem advertising by the year, liberal terms will be offered. 1U" The number of insertions must be de:..goated on he advertisement. 117" Marriages and Deaths will be inserted at the same ates ea regular advertisements. Buoincos Cubs. SILAS WARD. NO. 11, NORTH THIRD ST., HARRISBURG. STEINWAY'S PIANOS, MELODEONS, VIOLINS, GUITARS, Blimps, Fisk:, Fifes, Drums, Jaw/00w, &MINOS, SHUT ♦BD BOOK MUSIO, PHOTOGRAPH FRAMES. ALBUMS, Large Pier and Mantle Mirrors, Square and Oral Prams, of every description made to order. Reguilding done. Agency kir Howes Sewing Machines. .117- Sheet Magic sent by Mail. oetLA JOHN W. GLOVER, MERCHANT TAILOR: Has Jae, toaiva, from New York, an assort. ment of SEASONABLE GOODS, Which he offers to his easterners and the public io nov22) MODERATE PRICES. dtf HARRY WILT.' ANi S, -G~RTT I , 482 WALNUT STREET. PHILADELPHIA. General Maims for Soldiers promptly collected, State Claims adjusted, &e. war2o4llta SMITH & EWING-, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, THIRD STREET, Harrisburg, pratue tip several Court& of Dauphin county. Col- Isetions made promptly - . A. 0. entrcr, T. B. EWING-. T COOK, Merchant Tailor, . 27 CHESNUT ST., between Second and Front, Has jest returned from the city with an assortment of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES AND TESTINGS, Which will be sold at moderate prices awl made up to order; and, also, an assortment of READY MADE Clothing and Gratlemen'S FlAndsking Goods. noe2l-lyd DENTISTRI R. IL .GILDEA, D. D. S., 4 444 -N 0 . 119 MARKET STREET, EBY k KUNKEL'S BUILDING, lIP STAIRS. ja,nB4f 10'4 GIOUS BOOK STORE, TRACT AND SUNDAY SCHOOL DEPOSITORY, E. S. GERMAN, ET SOUTH SECOND STREIT, ABOVE OHISINTIT, NAMILISBI7IiG, PA. Depot for the eels of Stereogicopee,StereoseopleVlewa, Wale and Musical Instruments. Also, subscriptions %ikon for tollgteas publication s noBO-dy SOHN G. W. MARTIN, FASHIONABLE' CA - RD WRITER, HERR'S HOTEL, HARRISBURG, PA. Allinanner of VISITING, WEDDING AND B - NESS GARDA' exonated in the owtt astlatis 'Ryles and moat reasonable tonne. - decl4-dtf UNION HOTEL, Ridge Menu, corner of Broad street, HARRISBURG, PA. The undersigned informs the public that he has re 'contly rtmeraik4 and refitted his well-known " Union Hotel" on Ridge avenue, near the Round House, dud i 4 prepared to accommodate citizens, strangers and travel ers in the beat style, at moderate rates. His table will be supplied with the best the maskets afford, and at his bar will be found superior brands of liquors and matt beverages. The very best accommo dations for railroaders employed at the shops in this vicinity. [al4 HENRY BOSTGEN. FRANKLIN HOUSE'', BALT/MOR- 2 , MD . Thli pleasant and eommodions Hotel hoe boon gig roughly re-fitted and re-furnished. It is pleasantly edtasted on North-West corner of 'toward and Franklin etreete, a few doors west of the Northern Central Rail way Depot. ivory attention paid to the comfort of his vests. G. LRIBENRING, Proprietor, jel2-tf (Late of Selina Grove, Pa.) rp HEO. F. SCITEFFER,. BOOK, CARD AND JOB PRINTER, NO, 18 MARKET STREET, lIARRISBORO -1- Particular attention paid to printing, ruling and binding of Railroad Blanks, Manifests, Insurance Poli cies, Checks, Bill-Heads, &c. Wedding, Visiting and Business Cards printed at very low prices and in the beat style. jan2l 9 1 F. WATSON, i . MASTIC WORKER ME3 PRACTICAL CEMENTER, Is prepared to Cement the exterior of Buildings with he New York Improved Water-Proof Mastic Cement. This material is different from all other Cements. It forms a solid, durable adhesiveness to any surface, imperishable by the action of water or frost. Every good building should be coated with this Cement ; it is a perfect preserver to the walls, and makes a beautiful, flue finish, equal to Eastern brown sandstone, or any color desired. Among others for whom I have applied the Mastic Cement, I refer to the following gentlemen: J. Bissell, residence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished five years. 7. H. Shoenberger, residence, Lawrenceville, finished five years. James M'CsadlaSS, residence, Allegheny City,finished five years, Calvin Adams, residence, Third sheet, finished four ye. r 3. A. Hoeveler, residence, Lawrenceville, finished four years. J. D. M'Cord, Penn street, finished four years. Hon. Thomas Irwin, Diamond street, Mashed four years. St Charles Hotel and Girard House, finished five years. Kittanning Court House and Bank, for Barr & Moser, Architects, Pittsburg. finished five yearS. Orders received at the .fitee of it Witldowney, Paint Shop, 20 Seventh street, or please address, T. F. W&TSON, P. 0. Box. DA. Pittsburg, Pa. mayl6-tf MESSRS. CHICKERING & 00. RATE AGAIN OBTAINED THE GOLD ALT THE /INCH - Amos' FAIR. BOSTON, YELD THU PLR DIbG 'ZEE. OVER SIXTY CoMPE2iITOI2BI Wareroom for the CIIIMENRING- PIANOS, at Harris burg, at 92 Market street, 0e23-tf W. KNOCRE'S Nene STORM. T g / D INS I YOU KNOW WERE YOU can get fine Note Paper, Envelopes, Visitin anti Wedding Cards T At SCREFFER'S BOOKSVORIA. EWE RIOR STOCK OF Wm_ DOCK, ja. ' & CO., are now able to orer to their mu:towers and the public at large, a stock of the purest liquors ever imported into this market, compri f sing in part the following varieties : WHISKY--,IRISH , SCOTC H.OLD BOURBON WINE-PORT. SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA. TARD, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY. JAMICA SPIRITS PRIME NEW ENGLAND RUM. DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS These liquors can all•be warranted; and in addition to these, Bock & Co. have on hand a largc variety of Wines, Whisky and Brandy, to which they invite the particular attention of the public. NOTIONS.—Quite a variety of wiefill .1.1 •ad entertaining articles—eheap--at SOICEPVERII ROOKSTON.I. I .A.OKING !—MASON'S "CHALLKNON -LP th...i.ezrNa."-1.00 Gross. assorted size , just rr Ceivel amt I.or sale, lakolesa4e and retail. dell WM. DOCK, lA., h. CO. I% E D A L! _ ... .. ..___ . ... . _ . -.- .... —-. \ ~.? ----..- .-r ,--- V -- - - ' j,-S-- - '---. ----/_;:-_-- ~.... -- ''l , .-i.- = - -- .-"1. - --:- -- '- , - ___ z . ..._-- -.--- . -., 7--t-- - ----_,,., . ---- - - Ma. , z k: ,„,,...,.. ..- . " ...1 :: 4... - --- - .Y. .....,.... -.... ~- - . 1...J.J114. ... :N I ~,..., . tt . 441 , rri ~ 4.,. ' , ..4. - %_,-. - . tt u.. . ---- '4 . 7=1 . ...t.% .• • 1' ' " 1' .... ... .I'. i_ - , . ' atriot 0 , , ..,,, ~., . ~,,..•, ~,„,. . 1 .,...., r , .. , . nion. .... ..,.. ' ...L.A . .. • -....- VOL. 5.-NO. 265 Bank Notices. T EGISLATIVE BANK NOTICE.- Notice is hereby given that application will be made to the legislative authority of Pennsylvania, at the next session of the General Assembly thereof. com mencing the first Tuesday of January, A. D, 1864, for the incorporation of a Bank having banking and dis counting privileges, with a capital of One Million Dol lars..., by the name and style of " The Oil City Bank," and to be located at Oil City, Venkagh Coluit24 Penn• Sylvania. C. V. OOLVER. June 29th, 1863-6nt - N ono.—Notice is hereby given that 11 "The Commercial Bank of Pennsylvania," intend to apply to the Legislature of Pennsylvania at their nes session, for a renewal of their charter. Said bank is lo cated in the city of Philadelphia, with an authorized capital of one million of dollars, a renewal of which will be asked for, with the usual banking privileges., $y order of the Board. S. Q. PALMA; Cashier , PinJAMMU, June 29,180amtim IVOTICE.—Notice is hereby given that application will be made to the Legislature of Pennsylvania at their next session, for a renewal of the charter of The Farmers' Bank of Schuylkill County, located in Pottsville, in the county rf Schuylkill, with the present capital of one hundred thousand dollars, and with the usual banking privileges. J. W. CAKE, Cashier. him 16,1863.-7 m 111gANK NOTlCE.—Notiee is hereby 1-1 given that the undersigned have formed an associa tion and prepared a certificate for the purpose of estab lishing a Bank of Issue, Discount and Deposit, under the provisions of the act entitled "A supplement to an act to establish a system of Free Banking in Pennsyl vania, and to secure the public against loss from Insol vent Banks," approved the first day of May, Anno Domini eighteen hundred and sixty-one. The said Bank to be called THE FA:RMEREP BANK OF MOUNT JOY, to be located be the Went of Mount say, to consist of a capital nook of Om RIIIMBiI Thousand bollara, In shares of Fifty Dollars each, with the privilege of in creasing the same to any amount not exceeding Three Hundred Thousand Dollars is all. J. Hoffmar; Hershey, Sohn M. lierabpy, Martin B. Peifer, Jacob M. Stauffer, Reuben Gerber, John M. Bear. jan2B-d6moaw* MOTlCE.—Notice is hereby given of an 1.11 intention to establish O. Dank Cif Discount, Deposit and Circulation, under the provisions of an act, entitled "An Act to establish a system of free banking in Penn sylvania," Ac., and the supplement thereto ; said Bank to be called THE MANIIPACTURh'ILS , BANK," to be located in the borough of Columbia, Lancaster county, Pa., with a capital of One Hundred Thousand Dollars, to be divided into two thousand shares of Fifty Dollars each. deol-Emd ALLENTOWN BANK. ALLENTOWN MINN, ZENO 20, 1808, Notice is hereby give; that application will be made to the Legislature of Pennsylvania, at its next session, for an increase of the capital of said Bank to the amount of $200,000 in addition to that authorized by the present Charter; and also for an extension of the Charter of said Bank for twenty years from the expiration of the present Charter. By order of the Board of Directors. je2o-dtml CHARLES W. COOPER, Cashier. BANK NOTICE :—The Stook-holders of the FARMEItiV ANTI Dlttr i ffiltr BANK QV wAyNEBBURG, in Green county. Pa., will apply to the next Legislature or the State, for an extension of charter, for the term of fifteen years from the expire tion of its present term The location, corporate name and privileges, and amount of capital stock, to wit: one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to be the same as under its prevent charter. By order of "the Board. 1, LAZEAR, cashier. Waynesburg, Green co., Pa., June 15,1863—je-LO•dtml v OTlCE.—Notice is hereby given, in conformity with the act of Assembly, that the stockholders of the Bank of Montgomery County will make an application to the next Legislature of Penn sylvania for a renewal of the Charter of said Back, with the same amount of capital (Four Hundred Thousand Dollars) as under the present Charter, to continue its Foment minis arid location. By order of the Board of Directors. W. H. SLINGLUFF, Cashier. Norristown. Pa., June 20, 1863.-6rn NOTICE.—The Miners' Bank of Potts ville' in the county of Schuylkill, hereby give notice that they intend to apply to the Legislature of Pennsylvania at their next session for a renewal of their charter. Said Bank is located in the borough of Potts ville, in the county of Schuylkill, with an authorized capitat of Five Hundred Thousand Dollars—a renewal of which will be asked without any extension of privileges. by order et the Board. MIA.. LOESER, Cashier. Pottsville, Slane 20, 1863.-6md TOTICE is hereby given, that applica 1, tion will be made at the next annual session of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, for a renewal of the charter of the HARRISBURG BANK, with its present name and style, loc aion, privileges, and capital of Three Hundred Thousand Dollars. By oiler of the Beard of Directors. J. WW. WEIR, jeBo-dtml,, Cashier. TRADESMEN'S BANK, PHILADELPHIA, June 24, 1863. Notice is hereby given. in conformity with the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, that the Trades men's Bank, of Philadelphia, located in the city of Philadelphia created with banking and discounting privileges, with a capital of One Hundred and Fifty Th,,siband ollars, that application will be made by the said Bank to the next Legislature for authority to in crease the capital One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars. By order of the Board of Directors. , JOHN CADPNEB, jy6-tmi Cashier THE BEST FAMILY SEWING MACHINE IS WHEELER & WILSON'S. NEW OFFICE, Market Square, next to Colder's Office. 117' Call and see them in operation. A general assortment of machinery and needle's cosh stonily on lama. MISS MARGARET Hthcr Will exhibit and sell them, and also do all winds t Maehibe sewing on these machines in the heat manner. The patronage of the public is respectfully ev)icited aplB-em HA M S!!1 Newbold's celebrated, Michener's Ex.celsior, Evans & Swift's superior, Jersey Plain very fine. Also, Dried Beef, Tongues and Bologna Sausage. For sale by apl4 WM. DUCE, jr. & Co. PT +' BENCE ISLAND. Messrs. BECHER & P &LK, Proprietors, announce to the citizens of Harrisburg that this cool and delightful Bummer retreat is now oven for visitors. Accommoda tions will be furnished to parties and pie-nice at reason able terms, &dancing platform having been erected f r their special use. Season tickets for families, good for one year, $l.OO No improper characters admitted, and no intoxicated person will be permittea to visit the Island. A Ferry Boat plies constantly between the Islandand the foot of Broad street, West Harrisburg. jel3-1m LOOKING- GLASSES —A Splendid Assortment of New Looking Glasses, just received, at W. KNOWELE'S Music Store, 93 Market street, where they will be sold cheap. Call and examine. mrl3 BROOMS, BRUSHES, TUBS AND BASKETS of all descriptions, qualities and prices, for sale by WM. DOCK, .1 ft., & CO. ('CHARLES F. VOLLMEI, UPHOLSTERER, Chestnut street, four doors above Second, (OPPOSITE WASHINGTON HOSE ROHM) Ie prepared to furnish to order, in the very beat style of workmanship, spring and flair Mattresses, Window Cur tains, Lounges, and all other articles of Furniture in his line, on short notice and moderate terms. Moving e x ._ perience in the business, he feels warranted in askiiig a share of public patronage, Confident of his ability to give satisfaction. jan.l.7-dtf TAPANEsE TEA.—A choice lot of ti this celebrated Teafust received. It is of the first cargo ever imported, and is much superior to the Chi nese Teas in quality, strength and fragrance, and is also entirely free of adulteration, kind.coloring or mixture of any It is the natural leaf of the Japenese Tea Plant. For sale by WM, POCK, & Co. SOLDIER'S CAMP COMPANION.- A very convenient Writing Desk; also, Portfolios, tderaorandum Books, PortmonnAies, &c., at BODEPPBRI3 BOOKBTORIV HAIMISBU,RG, PA., TRUPSDAY, JULY' 9, 1863 Eke grid it. gin. THURSDAY MORNING. JULY 9, 1863 STATE RIGHTS AND STATE REMEDIES—No • 1. To the Editors of the Patriot and Union GENTLEMEN :—I submit a series of numbers on the subject of "State Rights and State Remedies," addressed to His Excellency A. G. Curtin, so that the younger members of society may have an easy reference through the col umns of your able and widely circulated paper, to a truthful history of the principles upon which the Federal Government was founded, and the vital importance of protecting State Rights; for I do mast honestly and firmly be lieve that in the reserved rights of the States abides the only safety for the liberties of the people, and the only guarantee for the perpe tuity of the Union_ I claim no original merit for these numbers—they are condensed from the truly authenticated public records of the times they refer to ; and I respectfully request of any man free from the influence of preju dice and devotion to party, a careful perusal of them,-satisfied that a, large majority will unite in the great object to maintain constitu tiointi liberty in its purity—to preserve the Constitution inviolate and perpetuate the Union as it iii. LUTHER MARTIN. To Hie Excellency A. G. Curtin, Governor of Pennsylvania : Reereeeen SIR : —Permit one of your citi zens, humble himself, to address you in a plain manner upon the present " state of the times." In doing so he assures you, it is not as a po litical partisan, but as a friend to his country, its Constitution, its Union and the Rights of the States—each to be held in their proper constitutional sphere as created and formed by the' people, in whom all power IS inherent and from whom all just governments derive their authority. It has been well said that, to ob tain an infinite variety of purposes, by a few plain principles, is the characteristic of nature. As the eye is affected, so is the understanding; objects at a distance strike us according to their dimensions, or the quantity of light thrown upon them. It le the came with ac. tions. A battle is all motion ; a hero all glare; while such images are before us we can attend to nothing else. Solon and Lycurgus would make no figure in the same scene with the Elder Napoleon or Wellington, and we are at present so lost in the military scramble going on in our own once happy but now distracted country, that we have scarce time to cast a glance towards the American people, and the rights and liberties of the respective States. It is known to you, or should be known to you, that the thirteen colonies or States were sove reign and independent before they united and adopted the Declaration of Independence, and that it was the States that formed and called into existence the Federal Constitution. Penn sylvania had her full share in forming that Magna Charta of American liberty and State Rights; her central position in the Union placed her equal, if not superior to most of her sister States for advantage of situation, fertility of soil, product of valuable commodi ties, number of inhabitants, shipping, amount of exportations, latitude of rights and privi leges, and every other requisite for the well being of her people, unassisted by any human help but the vigor and virtue of her own ex cellent Constitution. And surely, to a nation born to liberty like this, we are bound to leave it unimpaired as we received it from our fathers in perpetuity to our heirs and all interested in the conservation of it in every appendix of the American Union. The particulars of sucli. a contest cannot be wholly indifferent to the friends of civil and religious liberty—on the contrary, it is reasonable to think the first workings of power against liberty, and the natural efforts of unbiassed men to secure themselves against the first approaches of op pression, must have a captivating power over all friends of constitutional liberty, who have sense enough to know their rights and spirit enough to defend them, and thus prevent a ruler strongly disposed to convert free ten ants into abject vassals, and to reap what he did not sow, countenanced and abetted by a few desperate and designing confederates to overthrow the Union of these States. It has been truly said that power is ever stealing from the many to the few; and thus we find that there is a certain liarty ever ready to abrogate and exterminate State Rights, and render them mere municipal cor porations. But every one conversant with the principles upon which the government was founded, is acquaketed with the fact that at the time of its formation, the people of the thirteen States, then constituting the old con federation, were divided into two great parties, the one desirous of establishing a single strong consolidated government bordering upon mon archy, which would have reduced the States to the rank of counties, or corporations ; the other advocating a government upon the prin ciples of federation, which, whilst they would have left unimpaired the sovereignty of the States, would have conferred upon the general government the management of the foreign relations of the whole, and of such internal concerns as might be defined in a constitution of limited powers. In this diversity of views originated the great contest for principles and which first commenced in the convention of t S7 4 " which was renewed in 'OB, - and which resulted upon both occasions in the triumph of the friends of States Rights, and which is now again about to be renewed, with the cer tainty of success, if the American people are resolved not to live—but die slaves. These two theories of government involve the most important consequences as respects the liberty of the people and the Union of the States, and as there can be no better mode, of ascertaining which of the two is the true theory, than by referring to history, I shall beg your earnest attention to the following facts : Under the old colonial government of Great Britain, each of her galenite on the American continent was wholly independent of the rest. Each had its own Governor, its own Legislature, its own judicial tribunals, and its own code of laws, and each was subject to no other jurisdiction Or authority than that of the mother country— the same precisely as Canada and New Bruns wick now stand. The limited population and resources of each disqualified it for separate action, and when the period arrived at which the oppression of Great Britain could no lon ger be borne by the people of the colonies, a sense of common danger naturally induced them to ?mite in one common effort to throw off the yoke. The first Congress which assem bled to take into consideration the situatiorrof the colonies in reference to their difference with Great Britain, met in the city of Phila delphia, on the sth of September, 1774. This body consisted of delegates from New Hamp shire, Massachusetts Bay, Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, Connecticut, from the city and county of New York, and other coun ties in the Provinces of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New Castle, Kent and Sussex in Delaware, Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina, and continued in session until the 26th October, when, after preparing several. important resolutions, it didsolved, after re commending delegates to meet again on the 10th of the following May. On the 10th of May, 1775,th e Second Congress assembled at the State House in Philadelphia. On the Ist of August it adjourned until sth cf September. On the 13th of September delegates from Georgia took their seats and completed the number of the thirteen States, which had resolved to be free, and remained in session until atter the consummation of the act which dissolved its connection with the mother country. Let it be remembered that all these measures were adopted prior to the Declaration of Independence, and whilst the colonies were still united to the British Empire. On the 10th of June, 1776, a committee was appointed to prepare a Declaration of Independence, and on the 28th of June, the committee, through its Chairman, Thomas Jefferson, reported a draft, which was discussed and finally adopted and signed on the 4th of July, end so well known to us as the Declaration of Independence, which proclaimed to the world, "in the name and by the authority of the good people of these Colonies we solemnly publish and declare that these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States," &e. In the war which followed, they acted in their new capacity of free and independent States. Each one established its own commerce; each one levied war, and maintained its own army, out of its own private resources, besides con tributing toward the colonial army its fair proportion, and each one performed "all things which independent States may of right do," ex cept those things which were specifically en trusted to Congress, by the States which had united ; and for four years after the revolution began, there was not even so much as an in strument of confederation between them, Al though the subject was proposed before the Declaration of Independence, yet it was not until the 15th of November', 1777, that articles of confederation were first executed by the delegates in Congress assembled ; nor until the 9th of July, 1778, that they were ratified by a subsequent Congress; nor until the 30th of January, 1781, that they were ratified by all the States, so as to render them binding on either. By these articles of confederation the terms of the Union between the whole thirteen States were first reduced to a systematic writ ten compact, and it is to that instrument we are to look for our exposition of•the relation towards each other which was at that time held to exist between them.. The first three articles of the instrument, which is entitled "Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union," are in these words "Article I.—The style of this Confederacy shall be the United States of America." "Article 2 —Each State retains its sovereignty, freedom and independence,. and every power, jurisdiction and right which is not by this confederation expressly delega ted to the United States in Congress assem bled." "Article 3.—the said States hereby severally enter into a firm league of friendship with each other for their common defence, the security of their liberties. and their mutual and general welfare ; binding themselves to as sist each other against all force offered to, or attacks made upon them, or any of them on ac count Of religion, sovereignty, trade, or any pre teem) whatever." Under the form of govern ment just described the war of the revolution was successfully conducted and brought to a happy close by the acknowledgment of our in dependence by the government of Great Britain on the 30th of November, 1782, in the follow ing clear and explicit terms : "His Britanic Majesty acknowledges the said United States, viz : New Hampshire, Mas sachusetts Bay, Rhode Island, Providence Plantations, Connecticut, New York, New Jer sey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Vir ginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia, to be free, sovereign and independent Slates ; that he treats with them as such, and for himself, his heirs and successors, relin quishes all claims to the government property and territorial rights of the same, and every part thereof." Certainly up to this period it cannot be pretended that the States had part ed with their sovereignty, freedom or indepen dence, and if that position be still alleged, we must look for that act of self immolation to some subsequent period of our history. Rav ing given the history of the organization of the government under the articles of confed eration, it will be in order to give a detail of the occurrences which led to the convocation of the federal convention for the purpose "of revising the Articles of confederation"—which shall be the subject of my next letter. REJOINDER OF THE OHIO COMMITTEE TO PRESIDENT LINCOLN. NEW YORE CITY, July 1, 1863. To ills Exechoney, the Preatdost Qf the United states ! :—Your answer to the application of the undersigned for a revocation of the order of banishment of Clement L. Vallandigham re quires a reply, which they proceed with as lit tle delay as practicable to make. They are not able to appreciate the force of the distinction you Make, between the Consti. tution and the application of the Constitution, whereby you Assume that powers are delegated to the President at the time of invasion or in surrection, in derogation of the plain language of the Constitution. The inherent provisions of the Constitution, remaining the same in time of insurrection or invasion, as in time of peace, the President can have no more right to disregard their positive and imperative re quirements at the former time than at the lat. ter. Because some things may be done, by the terms of the Constitution at the time of in vasion or insurrection, which would not be required by the occasion, in time of peace, you assume that anything whatever, even though not expressed by the Constitution, may be done on the occasion of insurrection or inva sion, which the President may choose to say is required by the public safety. In plainer terms, because the writ of habeas corpus may be suspended at time of invasion or insurrec tion, you infer that all other provisions of the Constitution having in view the protection of the life,liberty and property of the citizen, may be in like manner suspended. The pro vision relating to the writ of habeas corpus, be ing contained in the first part of the Constitu tion, the purpose of which is' to define the powers delegated to Congress, has no connec tion in language with the declaration of rights, as guarantees of personal liberty, contained in the additional and amendatory articles; and inasmuch as the provision relating to habeas corpus expressly provides for its suspension, and the other provisions alluded to do not pro vide for any such thing, the legal conclusion is, that the suspension of the latter is unau thorised. The provision for the wt of habeas corpus is merely intended to furnish esturnitary remedy, and not the means whereby personal security is conserved, in the final resort; while the other provisions are guarantees of personal rights, the suspension of which puts an end to all pretence of free government. It is true Mr. Vallandigham applied for a writ of habeas corpusas a summary remedy against oppression. But the denial of this did not take away his right to a speedy public trial by an impartial jury, or deprive him of his other rights as an American citizen. Your assumption of the right to suspend all the constitutional guaran tees of personal liberty, and even of the free dom of speech and of the press, because the summary remedy of hdheaa corpus may be sus pended, is at once startling and alarming to all persons desirous of preserving free govern ment in this country. The inquiry of the undersigned whether "you hold that the rights of every man through out this vast Country, in time of invasign or insurrection, are subject to be annulled when ever you may say that you consider the public safety requires it ?" was a plain question, un disguised by - circumlocution, and intended simply to elicit information. Your affirmative answer to this question throws a shade upon the fondest anticipations of the framers of the Constitution, who flattered themselves that they had provided safeguards against the dan gers which have ever beset and overthroNn free government in other ages and countries. Your answer is not to be disguised by the phraseol ogy that the question "is simply a question who shall decide, or an affirmation that nobody shall decide what the public safety does require in cases of rebellion or invasion." Our gov ernment was designed to be a government of law, settled and defined, and not of the arbitrary will of a single man. As a safeguard, the powers were delegated to the legislative, ex ecutive and judicial branches of the govern ernment, and each made co-ordinate with the others, and supreme within its sphere, and thus a mutual check upon each other in case of abuse of power. It has been the boast of the American people that they had a 'written Con stitution, not only expressly defining, but also limiting, the powers of the government and providing effectual safeguards for personal liberty, security and property. And to make the matter more positive and explicit, it was provided by the amendatory articles, nine and ten, that "the enumeration in the Constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people," and that ."the powers not delegated to the Uni ted States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to 'the States respectively, or to the people."— With this care and precaution on the part of our forefathers, who framed our institu tions, it walk not to be expected that, at so early a day as this, a claim of the President to arbitrary power, limited only by his conception of the requirements of the public safety, would have been asserted. In derogation of the Con stitutional provisions making the President strictly an executive officer, and vesting all the delegated legislative power in Congress, your position, as we understand it, would make your will the rule of action and your declara tions of the requirements of the public safety the law of the land. Our inquiry was not, therefore, "simply a question who shall decide, or the affirmation that nobody shall decide, what the public safety requires." Our gov ernment is a government of law, and it is the law-making power which ascertains what the public safety requires, and prescribes the rule of action ; and the duty of the President is simply to execute the laws thus enacted, and not to make or annul laws. If any exigency shall arise, the President has the power to con vene Congress at any time, to provide for it, so that the plea of necessity furnishes no rea sonable pretext for any assumption of legisla tive power. For a moment contemplate the consequen 'en of such a claim to power. Not only would the dominion of the President be absolute over the rights of individuals, but equally so over the other departments of the govern ment. If he should claim that the public safety required it, he could arrest and imprison a judge for the conscientious discharge of his duties, paralyze the judicial power, or super cede it, by the substitution of courts martial, subject to his own will, thritoughout the whole country. If any one of the States. even far .removed from the rebellion, should not sus tain his plan for prosecuting the war, he could, on the plea of public safety, annul and set at defiance the State laws and authorities, arrest and imprison the Governor of the State or the members of the Legislature, while in the faithful discharge of their duties, or he could absolutely control the salon either of Congress or of the Supreme Court, by arrest ing and imprisoning its members, and, upon the same ground, he could suspend the elec tive franchise, postpone the elections, and de clare the perpetuity of his - high prerogative. And neither the power of impeachment nor the elections of the people could be made available egainst such concentration of power. Surely it is not necessary to subvert free government. in this country in order to put down the rebellion; and it cannot be done under LUTHER. MARTIN. PRICE TWO CENTS PUBLISHED EVERY MORNING, 0112IDAYS EXCEPTED, BY 0. BARRETT & CO TER, DAILY PATRIOT AID UNION will be served to sub scribers residing in the Borough for TEN DENTE PEE WINN, Payable to the Carrier. Hail subscribers, ries 'NALL," PER ANNUL THE ViEN ' ELY PATRIOT AND 'UNION is published atywo DOLLARS PER ANNUM, invariably in advOßOb. Ten oopie to One address., fifteen dollars Connected with this establishment n extensive JOB OFFICE, containing a, variety of plain and fancy type, unequalled by any eatablisbnimit In the interior of the State, for which the patronage of the pates In Ito • netted. the pretence of putting down the rebellion. In deed, it is plain that your administration has been weakened, and greatly weakened, by the assumption of power not delegated in the Con- In your answer you say to us—eY•ew cl a i m that men may, if they choose, embarass those whose duty it is to combat a giant rebellion and then be dealt with in terms as if there was no rebellion." You will find yourself in fault if you will search our oommnnicatien to you, for any such idea. The undersigned believe that the Constitution and. laws of, the land, properly administered, furnish ample power to put down an insurrection without the as sumption of powers not granted. And if ex isting legislation be inadequate, it is the duty of Congress to consider what anther legisla tion is necessary, and to make suitable 'provi sion by law. You claim that the military arrests made by your Adieinistratien, are merely preventive remedies " AS injunctions to stay injury, or pro ceedings to keep the peace, and not for punish ment." The ordinary preventive remedies al luded to are authorized by established law, but the preventive proceedings you institute have their authority merely in the will of the Ex ecutive or that of officers subordinate to his authority. And in this Peoo4eding a discretion seems to be exercised as to whether the prisoner shall be allowed a trial, or even be permitted to know the nature of the complaint alleged against him, or the name of his accuser. If the proceedings be merely preventive, why not allow the prisoner the benefit of a bond to keep the peace. But if no offence has been com mitted, why was Mr. Vallandigham tried, con victed and sentenced by a court-martial? And why the actual punishment by imprisonment or banishment, without the opportunity of ob taining his liberty in the mode usual in pre ventive remedies, and yet say it is not for pun ishment ? You still place Mr. Vallandigham'a convic tion and banishment upon the ground that he had damaged the military service by diseoura ging enlistments and encouraging desertions, &c., and yet you have not even pretended to controvert our position that he was not charged with, tried or convicted for any such offence before the court-martial. In answer to our position that Mr. Yellen digham was entitled to a trial in the civil tri bunals, by virtue of the late acts of Congress, you say: "I certainly do not know that Mr. Vallanaligham has specifically, and by diriel lan guage, advised against enlistments and in favor of desertions and resistance to drafting," &0., and yet, in a subsequent part of your answer, after speaking Of certain disturbances which are alleged to have occurred in resistance of the arrest of deserters, and of the enrollment pre paratory to the draft, and which you attribute mainly to the. course Mr. Vallandigham has pursued, you say that he hoe made speeches against the war in the midst of resistance to it; that "he has never been known, in any instance, to counsel against such resistance,: and that "it is next to impossible to repel the in ference that he has counseled directly in favor of it." Permit us to say that your iittermatinn is most grievously at fault. The undersigned have been in the habit of hearing Mr. Vallan digham speak before popular assemblages, and they appeal with confidence to every truthful. person who has ever heard him, for the accu racy of the declaration that he has never made a speech before the people of Ohio in which he has not counseled submission and obedience to the laws and the Constitution, and advised the peaceful remedies of the judicial tribunals and of the ballot-box for the redress of grievances and for the evils which afflict our bleeding and suffering country. And, were it not foreign to the purposes of this communication, we would undertake to establish, to the sati sfaction of any candid person, that the disturbances among the people, to which you allude, in opposition to the arrest of desertere and the draft, have been occasioned mainly by the measures, poli cy and conduct of your administration and the course of its political friends. But if the cir cumstantial evidence exists, to which you al lude, which makes "it next to impossible to repel the inference that Mr. Vallandighani has couneeled in favor" of this resistance, and that the same has been mainly attributable to his conduct, why was he not turned over to the civil authorities to be tried under the late acts of Congress? If there be any foundation in fact for your statements implicating him in resistance to the constituted authorities. he is liable to such prosecution. And we now de mand, as a mere act of justice to Mm, an in• vestigation of this matter, before &jury of his eountry, and respectfully insist that fairness requires either that you retract these charges which you make against him, or that you re voke your order of banishment and allow him the opportunity of an investigation before an impartial jury. The Committee do not deem it necessary to repel at length the imputation, that the atti tude of themselves or of the Democratic party in Ohio "encourage desertions, resistance to the draft, and the like." Suggestions of that kind are not unusual weapons in our ordinary political contests. They rise readily in the minds of politicians, heated with the excite ment of partisan strife. During the two years in which the Democratic party of Ohio has been constrained to oppose the policy of the Administration, and to ;gaud up in defence of the Constitution and of personal rights, this charge has been repeatedly made. It has fallen harmless, however, at the feet of those whom it was intended to injure. The Com mittee believe it will do so again. If it were proper to do so in this paper, they might sug gest that the measures of the Administration, and its changes of policy in the prosecution o f the war, have been the fruitful eoureee of dis couraging enlistments, and inducing deser tions, and furnish a reason for the undeniable fact, that the first call for volunteers was an swered by very many more than were demanded, and that the next call for soldiers will proba bly be responded to by drafted men alone. The observation of the President in this con nection, that neither the Corivention in its re.solutions, nor the committee in its commu nication, intimate that they "are conscious of an existing rebellion being in progress with the avowed object of destroying the Union," needs, perhaps, no reply. The Democratic party of Ohio has felt so keenly the condition of the country, and been stricken to the heart by the misfortunes and sorrows which have befallen it, that they hardly deemed it neces sary by solemn resolution, when their very State exhibited everywhere the sad evidences of war, to remind the President that they were aware of its existence. In the conclusion of your communication, you propose that, if a majority of the commit tee shall affix their signatures to a duplicate copy of it, which you have furaiehed, they shall stand committed to three propositions therein at length set forth, that you will publish the names thus signed, and that Otis publication shall operate as a revocation of the order of banishment. The committee cannot refrain from the expression of their surprise that the President should make the fate of Mr. Val landigham depend upon the opinion of this committee upon these propositions. If the arrest and banishment Were legal, and were de served, if the President exercised a power