COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT, AND BLOOMSBURG GENERAL ADVERTISER. 'LEVI L. TATE, Editor. $2 00 PER ANNUM "TO HOLD AND TRIM THE TOltOH OP TRUTH AND WAVE IT O'ER THE DARKENED EARTH." w. WOL. 15.--NO. 23. :0iPMBIA DEMOCRAT. It-UntlRHEn EVERY SATUitDAV, BY W jTF.VT T TATm. Jff IH DLOOMSBtinO, COLUMBIA COUWT1', IU. office ' LA ntie lirttk RUdigt eppciite the F.tt(nge, bp $tdi ftt Court Iloust. "Democratic lltai (iuarttrs,' . . TF.UMS OP SUnsCIlIPTION. 00 In advance, for one copy, for ttt monthi. 1.75 In a lvan ro, fur tm copy mm year, 51 00 If nut pfiid w itliln tlio timt three innnttu. 3 23 If not piilil within the flrnt iU montlii, - 3 50 If not nnlil within tlicyunr, ttTT No snhirrluttnn tnkcii for loin thmtilt mmilln, fcnd no paper illscontinucil until all arrearages iliitt lint u been paid. OrillnarvAnvrRTiirMvtTlnsrrtcil.and Jod Work iteeittcil. ot the eflttiblisliilonccft. UAIjTIMOKB LOCK HOSPITAL. 1HI. JOHNSTON, rpHEfounilrr of this Cck-ltrntM Intllntinn, nflVr the X tnot crtain, ep"pdy, ami only ciljctiiul riMiirily in Iba world forctlVclsfur (iifMtn, Hint turi0, Heinln:il wenk tieiSt I'ainn In tlis Lome, ('oiisllhitioii.il IH-Iul.ty, Iinii tenty,1 Wen k lie of tha Hick und l,im.M, Atlettimiti Ihe Kidney. 1'alpitatlnn ot tlio Heart, Ilij"'liil.i, Nur vmu IrritAliility, Dlseasi! of t lie Ilrud, Tliro.it, Noii or -SkinBnd all ili-wc orrjoui and mtlnnrhidy Disunion arliins from thr ili'ttriictivti Inltits of Vmitli, ulii.t, tic .itroyi both body nnd mind. Thrni! ctrt t and pulitiir) practice!, nro more fatiil to their i thud than tliu cun(.M.f tha gyre n to thi mariners Ulyssus, Miplitinj; tin Ir mut brilliant hopes und aiiUdrt..tiojm, mulcting marridgu &.c, linnuifibk. MARIUA.in. Married persons, or Ynnnij Men confpmplaiin mar flag, being aware f ph)siml weaknem, organic denMli ty, deformities &c.( rhnulri imm'dl,itt ly consult Hr Johnston, and In restored to perfect health. - JU who pint-en himself under th'i care of lr. Johnston, may rellKioimly confide In Win honor a it ecutlcinui, and confidently rely upon hi kill nn plinii(an, imtJANit; WiIAKni.sh Immediately etired nod full vifjor restored. Thij ileitj.mu lit tlio penally mot tni'mcnUy paid Iiy those win h ive hecomu the ictim of improper indnlin-u xiCH. .'.Vutiii)! pertioiu are too apt to commit rici-M trnm not being aware nf thti dreadful coim-iuciiie that imiy Vniue."' Now, who that uiiderittandi tlio mibject will pre tend to deny that the power of procreation in lo-.t nouner by those fait his Int'i improper habits than hy the prudtut, ltildes tiling deprived of the pleasure of healthy till prinB, thy ttmst plt.iujh mnl (L'Ftritctive h) luptomri to both body and mind arise. The iyitiM.i heci-iiies (lern.il, ti tha physical ind mental powers ueakeutd, iicrwuit, debility, ilyspepila, p.tlpitatioii of the heart, inHijcentioti, watting ui tlio Iranie, Coiili, mptonis of t'oiiiiuinp lion, A.c. IE7T Oifire, No. 7 Souru ratnni( k Htrekt, neven doorw from Ilaltlinorj treet, '.nt hide, up the ctepM. He par tlcular In bser imr llu NAMll and NIJ.MliUU, or int will miitaku t!i plac. JtJurt Ha r rented, vr hi Charge Jd'r, in from One to Tiro )7i. ' NO MKRCL'RV t:t .VAUHlitiL'rf UUl.'C.S VfiVAi. Member of the Un.il tiHi?ye ot Surgeons, nt hnndon. Graduat't from one f the moxt emin-nt Cdlffei ot the UnitoJ. 'Btitoit, and thii t-'rentjr pntt of w hose liiV has been spent in the utht iiofpitau oi uomion, i nrtt, nni.i . Ill till! UIM IIO?ll!IIH D l.lilHKIII. I idtl.. l llll.l ii t'lii'wiierc, h.i cir.Tt'ii rumour tliu nut ih cures that uurtiier kunun; in.uiy trciiililid ! ns in tuh.Mi.1 nn.ic.iM iiin iitioeiMirint ucinuitauu lonlihinit c with rinctni in the head anil ears when at-leer nsrvousneot, b:na al.iriiied at Hitildon soninls, nnd h.txh- fulness, w 111) freiuent M'ljillln?, attended KOtuetiiiies w jlh lieranireniL'iil ot mind, were Lured iiniiM'di.ittli. 1 A CKItTAIN DIHKAHl!. When tin tnlijrulrled and Imprudent ot.iry of pleasure finds h ll.is linhilieil the HUtdn of thii p.ilulul dueaie, it too oftdii happens that an ill tiiu-d henne ofch.ime or dread of discovery, deters hi 111 from applj Ins to tho-e who from education an I renpertahility can iiluue btfriett I Iltm, aeiaynip nil ill-! riiiinuiiliiniiary t-iii.inius 01 nil. jiorriuueiKciuiiici'tii-irasiiKMriiiiiv.iiiiciiujuiciTiiif.i .urutuiuii. iiiik-u.uii iii.ti-, inn. , 'aiun 111 iiiu urim nml Uiiibrf, Hiiiii;h. if iiKlit, itvufiiean, iiihIch llic nkiu lioniss. an.lnriii', liliHclim tm tlio 'kmiI, (.id anil fxtrrni't tl, pro(ri!.3liii llli raplility.titl nt 1 lit tlm pulatu nl tti t ninutti iiiil lion 'it or tin) miiiu till in. mill the iitim nf Till, doieaiii! iK'f'DiiiPH u horriil iil.jritiif rniniiii.sfrtitifiii till death iut. a i 'riol tulii.ilreiiurul .iiUViln?., hy klmi (Unthini ti I'tli it li'iuriiii frimi uh'iit-u mi tnclL-r ro -.tirn.' Tu Hilih, th Tiifort1. llr. Jnhilntnii pU'ilji'ii him. elf to nron'irvtf thl lniit tMiv lii-ilili' Ei'creiy. mnl frum hiii uxtennlVtf prjtlic.t in thtt firi-t lliniiliil nt' i:iirnii mnl AinerieA. hit inn nuiruli'iitly rt'riiiiiiiiriiil tint f nml iipveily euro tolho unfiirluiiato i ulim ut thin Imrriil iliyiutit. TAKli fAlinUlH.Alt Nlll'ICI-. 'Dr. J. atlilrmi h all tlumo nho ha to ii J truil thi'itistlvra by privkt'i nn.l imiirop'T inittil'jt'tici'H. 'l lie.o aro Hiiini uf tho nail aiul mi la'idKily ifloct. prn (luceil by enrly linbitii uf youth, iz' WtakncriH of tho Hack anil Llnilift, l'uui in th'j liciitl, Dti.iin'PH nf riiilit. Loi:. f Mu.cular 1'owit. I'lilliilatinn i1 tlio Hi-art. Dyn pep.ia, Norvu n Irralabilily, II .r.iiicciui.'iit nf tho Diuom tive fuiictiouii, tJv-iioral Debility, ii'iiiptoiii. of t'oii.iitui lloH, MENTALLY. Tlio fearful effect upon tho niiml nro much to ba dreaileil,.l,niiinf Miiuory, CnufiHion of lilenn llopre.stou nt tlio iiruii, uvn rori-ii,iiini:ii, Aversion of Society, Tlinity, .c, aro mnno nftho evil proiluroit, Tbousanill of pornuia of all i-gi-a can lio Juileo hat isUis.cau.3 of lli-lr ilcrliimis hoallli. Looiiins tlnirl vlor, becoming oak, palo mid em icliiti'il, hating iu. gnlar appearanc about tlio o es, coiigli uutl H) initoinn ot Cuniuiiiotlon. ON-S IN'VIGOUATINT. UISMEIIV ion , rfrlB; OUUANIO WIlAKNIIfS. Dy till, great an I lmport.iut reuvili , ueaknosb of tho organ, aro'.ucodily curoil, uml full ligor roftorcd. dad lo.t an hope, iiavob.cn iuuiiediatiiy roiiexni. An iiiipeuiinrnia io iiiarriuiif1, I uj irai aim .iieniiu iiixipiau. flcationNcrvotH irrat.ihility.Tri'iiililingriaiid Woaktioiid or txnaustatlou of tho moht fearful kiuj, .peedtly cured by Doctor Jottniitou. YOL'NO JIl'.N'. Who'havo Injured tlim.elvi'ii by a certain practice, jmnilged in when alumi -aluihit fri'iiii'iitly learui'd Iroiu Jn,!1mpeo, .rXSinan, the hnpo of.,1. ronn.ry. SftVocM tf?alX Kinpidiinj.v jnmji xri- ahould reflect thtt a .oniiil mind and body aro tho moa necessary rouuisitics to iirouKito roiiiinbinl happiness indeed, without these tho journey through life become, weary inlgriiiisire, tho prosioct hourly darkens tn tho ew: tkaliuad eecomos shailoned with despair & filled .vita tho melancholy retl.-ction that tho happiness OFFICK NO. 7 SDUTIl Kit EIIKKIUK rIT.. Mlim.re, .! ALL B1JKGIUAI. Ol'EltATIUNii IM'lll'Ult.Mi:!!. N. 11. lt no filso uioilesly prevent Juu, but apply luiiuodiately either personally or bv Letter. .SKI.N DlSliABi:.-! riT.i:i)il.V CUllIID. to britwatja. Tha many thousands cured ut this institution uilhln the last 15 yenrs, and tho numerous impott.iut tfurgicnl Operations performed by II r. Johiistiui. witnessed by tha reporters of the papers mid many oilier per.oiis, mi. lee. of which havu uppoareil again and again before tho nubile, buside his standiita as u aeiillemnii of tharnit. r ndrcsp9LsjljjJity,isa sulhii'-nt guarantee to tho alllicte 1 i-miUk IMk'K NUTlL'i: X. II. Thero aro so maiiv iL'iiorant nnd unrliilein tQuacka advertisjg Ihiiniseiyes 1'hysiciniis, ruining tlio jAciltu of tho already afiliitei!. that Dr. Johnston deems it necessaryHo .ay, esiiecivlly 1" tt.oso iiincqtriiuted with hi. reputation, that lus crcikni.ils uitd ill'lnmu Iwavt haugjubll nlhro, O" Taas Notue. All li tte mu4 l port paid, and contain a posUe stamp fur tlio reply, or no answer will tit ent. Marchl7. 1800. H HOWARD ASSOCIATION PHIL 'ADEWIIIA. A Bcnevoloni Jnilitmiun established by special endow ment, for tho relief of the Kick uud iti.trtssed.atlfirted jwith Virulent and Upideimo Uiscaces, and uspieiully for tho Cura of Diseases tif tlio rieiuat UrgHris. lis pensary freo In patuuts in ull parts of the United Btnte. ' VALUABLE UIU'OIITS on tfpcrinatorrliaa, mid Kill rt Disease, of (ho Sexual Organs, and on the NKV KEMEDiSjcuiployed, sent to the afflicted in seal id fetter envelope,, freo (f charge, Tnooitliroo Htauips for postage will bo acceptable. Address Hit, J SKI).. LIN HOUGHTON', Acting Surgeon, Howard Associa tion, No. s South Ninth tjtrcet, Philadelphia ' March 2, Itpj-l-Jui. P-p M P MAKING. TIIGundersigued Inform tho public generally that heyliava formed a ro partnership, and v III coiitin, uaitQfbusinoss of rump nuking und repairing, in ull thetr fjtrlous departments, iu Itinomsiiurg, uliero they will promptly attend to all orders in (heir line of busi ness, whether j'n tow n or country. Well and CJitcrn rumps, with lender) Pipe, mado in l, best stvla of woikmaiiship, on moderalo tefins, r,ud pi, very short notice. From their, long experience m t;o business, slid art earnest, desire to have their work commend itself to tho fiutilie Ihey feel. rotvlJeiit thev can Ituku It an object o hoio who may gvc them their custom nod rentier gi io rai safi.faciiou. JOHN CUUTUIILLV. Uloomsliurr.'Aprjl I J, 1 f r. 1 . 3:i jqim cui.P. PERSONS about to commence House Keeplui'uill do well Igcall ami examine the ocl( vftinvf Oihts S.c. at IIA11T.M AN8. JDtifjinal Jiloctni, HrittiHfcr the CcUmHa Dtmoirat. MORNING'S GLORIES. BY B. T. H, When rosy itrcaks of morning's dawn; I.ijtht up the Kasteru sky. And by her fl) lug chariots inwn, The Pun, from aged Tithon'aliroait, lloth rise, and on her errand Hy, Wlnt glories meet the rye J Willi rnpturcfrom our beds of rest, Weriieto iew tho scene The morning doth our Rn?? present, When dew, on gross of purest green, Like gold dnth seem intent To sparkle in tho rays Of Tithone's f.ilr txwi Moomlng hrlile ; Thin scenes in Nature win our gaze, And all the works or art deride When pretty flowers, refreshed by dew. Deck Nature's broad, expatme J As we their wondrous beauty iew Our vision they entrance. When 111U1, before the ardent glance Of riio-bus, rolling bark. In columns thick, and leave no trace No footsteps-that will mark thiir track, Urtretituilh cue nnd grnce, To shady leaves, and dells, Vli(re darkness reigns supremo, Where all around repels, And shuts from them each beam, Of fair and beauteous light, In one long, dark, and dismal night ; Where ne'er can idiiue tho ra Of Tithone's fair, nnd blooming bride; Thfo seems In Nature win our gaze, And all the works ef art deride. I Ott l,F.KV ILt.F, Ta. SPEECH O F Hon. C. L. Yalhndigham, OP OHIO, ON EXECUTIVE USURPATION. In tho Homo of Representative., July 10, 1851. Jlr. VallanJiglinm saiJ : jr. Chairman : In tlta Constitution of tho United States, which the other clay we lit sworo to support, ami by the authority of . , . , . . wlticu wo arc hero asfeiiibleu now it i written : "All logisltilire powers herein granted shall bo vested in a Congress of the United States." It is further written also that tho Con- . 1 . t .. , , gross to wlitcli all Icgulativo powers gran ted arc thus committed "Shall make no law abridging the free dom of speech or of the prcsH." And it is yet further written, in protec tion of Senators ami Representatives in that freedom of debate hore.without which there can bo no liberty, that "For any spceclt or debate in cither IIouso tliuy shall not be questioned in any other place." Holding up tho shield of tho Constitu tion, and htandintr hero in Hin nlnnn nnrl with tho manhood of a UenreBnntrttirn nf 1 T 1 IUC people. L llTOpOSO 10 1DYSC1I, tO-UaV I . . ' . . the .IIICICIH ireCUOlll 01 SpCCCIl USCU Wltlllll . . . . . , tlieSO Walls ', tllOUgll With SCIllCWhat IllOrO, I trust, of dcecnev and discretion than , .. , ,.. -, , nave somciiincs ueen cxuiimcu ncrc. oir, I do not propose the direct question of this civil war in which we aro engaged. Its present prosecution is a foregone conclu- sion ; and a wise man never wastes his strength on a fruitless enterprise. My position shs.ll at present, for tho most part b iudicatcd by my votes, and by th9 res- ' d motions which I may submit. Kut ar '"ay 1"tions incident to ! "10 war and to its prosecution .about which I have something to say now. Mr. Chairman, tho I'lCtidcnt in tho 1 message beforo us, demands the cxtraordi- I J liarV loau of S400.C 03,000 an amount , 1 ' i nearly ten times greater than tho entire public debt, Stato and Federal, at tho close of tho Revolution in 17S3, and four times as much as tho total expenditures during tlio three year's war with Great Britain, in 1812, Sir, that same Constitution which I again hold up, aud to which I give iny who'o heait and my utmost loyality.com mite to Congress alono the power to bor row money and to fis tho purposes to which it shall bo applied, and expressly limits Army appropriations to tho term of two years, Kach Senator and Representative, therefore, must judgo for himsolf,upon his conscience and bis oath, and beforo God and tho country, of tho justice and wisdom aud policy of tho President's demand ; aud whenever this IIouso shall liavo be- como but a mere office wherein to register tho decrees of tho Kxccutivo, it will bo high time to abolish it. lint I have a right, I believe, sir, to say that, however gentlemen upon this eido of tho Chamber may differ finally as to the war, wo aro yet firmly and inexorably united in ono thing at least, and that is in tho determin ation that our own rights and dignities and privileges, as tho Representatives of the people, shall be maintained in their fpirit and to tho very letter. And bo this iw it may, I do know that thero aro some hero present who aro resolved to assert and to cxcrcUe these lights, wjth becoming de BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA-, cency and moderation certainly but at Ibo same titno fully, freely, and at every haz ard. Sir,. it is an ancient and wiso practice of tho English Commons, to preccdo all votes of supplies by an inquiry into abuses aud grievances, and especially into any infrac tions of tho constitution and tho laws by tho Executive. Let us follow this safo practice. Wo aro now in Committo of tho Whole on the state of tho Union ; and in tho excrciso of my right and my duty as a Representative, and availing myself of the latitude of debate allowed hero, I proposo to consider the piiesent statk of the Union, and supply also some few of the many omissions of the President in tho message beforo us. Sir, ho has underta ken to give us information of tho stato of the Union, as the Constitution requires him to do; and it was his duty,as an hon est Executive, to mako that information full, impartial, and complete, instead of spreading beforo us a labored and lawycr ly vindication of his own course of policy a policy which has precipitated us into a terrible and bloody revolution. He ad mits tho fact ; ho admits that, to-day, wo aro in tho midst of a general civili WAn, not now a moro petty insurrection, to bo suppressed in twenty days by a proclama tion and a posse comi'alus of three months militia. Sir, it has been tho misfortune of tliG President from tho beginning, that ho has totally and wholly underestimated the mag nitude and character of the revolution with which he had to deal, or surely ho never would have ventured upon tho wicked and hazardous experiment of calling thirty millions of people to arms among them selves, without the counsel and authority of Congress. But when at last ho found himself hemmed in by tho revolution, and this city in danger, as ho declares, and waked up thus as the proclamation of tho 15th of April proves him to be waked up,to tho reality and significance of tho move ment, why did ho not forthwith assemble Congress, and throw himself upon tho wis dom and patriotism of tho representatives of the States and of tho people, instead of usurping powers which tho Constitution has expressly conferred upon us I ay, sir and powers which Congress had but a lit tle while beforo, repeatedly and emphati cally refused to exercise, or to permit him to excrciso ? Hut I shall recur to this point again. Sir, the President, in this message, has undertaken also to give us a summary of tho causes which havo led to tho present revolution. Hc ha3 mado out a caso ho might, in my judgement, havo mado out a much strongsr caso against the secession ists and disunionists of tho South. All this, sir, is very well as far it goes. But tho President does not go back far enough nor in tho right direction. He forgets the still stronger caso against tho abolitionists and disunionists of tho Xorth and West. Ho omits to tell us that secession and dis union bad a NewEngland origin, and be gan in Massachusetts in 1801 at tho timo of tho Louisianna purchase ; were revived by tho Hartford convention in 1814, and culminated, during tho war with Great Britain, in sondiug commissioners to Washington to settle the terms for a peaco ablo seperation of New England from tho other States of the Union, He forgets to remind us and the country, that this pres ent revolution began forty years ago, in the vehement, porsi stent, offensive, most irritating and unprovoked agitation of tho slavery question in tho North and West, from tho time of tho Missouri con troversy, with some short intervals, down to the present hour. Sir, if his statement of tho caso bo tho whole truth and wholly correct, then the Democratic party and ov cry member of it, and tho Whig party, too and its predecessors, havo been guilty for sixty years of an unjust, unconstitutional, and roost wicked policy in administering tho affairs of tho Government. But, sir, the President ignores totally tho violent and loDg-continucd denuncia ion of slavery and slaveholders, and es pecially sinco 1833 I appeal to Jackson's message for tho dato and proof untill at last a political anti slavery organization was formed in tho North and West, which continued to gain strength year after year, till at length it had destroyed aud usurped the placo of tho Whig party, and finally obtained control of every frco State in tho Union, and elected himself, through fro State votes aloco, to tho Presidency of tho United Status, He chooses to pass over the fact that tho party to which ho thus owes his placo aud his present power of mischief, is wholly and totally a sectional organization ; and as such condemned by Washington, by Jcficrsou, by Jackson, Webster, and Clay, and by all tho found ers and preservers of tho Republic, and utterly inconsistent with tho principles, or with tho peace, tho stability or tho exist ence oven, of our Federal system. Sir, there never was an hour, from tho organi zation of this sectional party, when it was not predicted by the wisest men and truest patriots, and when it ought not to havo been known by every intelligent man in tho country, that it must sooner or later precipitate a revolution and tho dissolution of the Union. Tho President forgets already that,on tho 4th of March, ho declared that tho plat form of that party was "a law unto him," by which ho meant to bo governed in his administration ; aud yot that platform an nounocd that whereas there wcro two sop- J arato and distinct kinds of labor and forms of civilization in tho two different sections of tho Union, yet that tho cntiro national domain, belonging in common to all tho States, should be taken, possessed, and held by one section alono, and consecrated to that kind of labor and form of civiliza tion alono which prevailed in that section which by moro numerical superiority, had chosen the President, and now has, and for somo years past has had, a majori.y in tho Senate, as from tho beginning of tho Government it had also in tho IIouso. Ho omits, too, to tell tho country and tho world for ho speaks, and wo all speak now, to tho world and to posterity that ho himself and his prime miuiatcr,tho Sec retary of Stato, declared thrco years ago, and havo maintained ever sinco, that there was an "'irrepressible conflict" between the two sections of this Union ; that tho Un ion could not endure part slavo and part frco j and that tho wholo power and influ ouco of tho Federal Government must henceforth bo exerted to circumscribe and hem in slavery within its existing limits. And now, sir, how comes it that the President has forgotten to remind us, also that when tho party thus committed to the principle of deadly hato and hostlity to the slavo institutions of the South, and the men who had proclaimed tho doetrino of tho irrepressible conflict, and who, in the dilemma or alternative of this confilct,wcrc resolved that "the cotton and rice fields of South Carolina, and the sugar plantations of Louisiana, should ultimately be tilled by frco labor," had obtained power and p'aco in tho common Government of tho States, the South, except ono State, chose first to demand solemn constitutional guar antees for protection against tho abuse of tho tremendous power aud patronago and influence of tho Federal Government, for the purpose of securing the great end of tho sectional conflict,beforo resort to secess ion or revolution at all ? Did ho not know bow could ho be ignorant that at the last session of Congress, every substantivo proposition for adjustment and compro mise, except that offered by tho gentleman from Illinois, Mr. Kelloq and wo all know how it was received came from tho South? Stop a moment, and let us sec. Tho committee of thirty-thrco was mov ed for in this IIouso by a gentleman from Virginia, tho second day of the session, and received tho voto of every southern Representative present, except only the members from South Carolina, who de clined to vote. Iu tho Scnato, tho com mittee of thirteen was proposed by a Sen ator from Kentucky, Mr. Poivr.Li,, and received tho silent acquiesenco of every southern Senator present. Tho Critten den prepositions, too, were submitted also by another Senator from Kentucky, Mr. Chittenden, now a member of this IIouso ; a man vencrablo for his years, loved for his virtues, distinguished for his services, honored for his patriotism j for four-and-forty years a Senator, or in oth- er'publio office j devoted from the first hour of his manhood to tho Union of these States; and who, though ho himself proved his courage fifty years ago, upon tho battle field against tho foreign enemies of his country, is now thank God, still for com promise at homo, to-day. Fortunate in a long and well spent life of publio scrvico and privato worth, ho is unfortunato only that ho has survived a Union and, I fear, a Constitution younger than himself. Tho Border Stato propositions also wcro projected hy a gentleman from Maryland, not now a member of this House, and pre sented by a gentleman from Tennessee, (Mr. Etheridgo,) now tho Clerk of this House. And yet all these propositions, coming thus from tho South, wcro several ly and repeatedly rejected by tho almost united voto of tho Republican party in tho Sonata and tho House Tho Crittenden propositions, with which Mr, Davis, now President of tho Coufedcrato Stutcs, and Mr, Toombs, his Secretary of fjtalc, both SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1861. declared in tho Senate that they would bo satisfied, and for which every southern Senator and Rcprcscntativa voted, never, J on any occasion, received ono solitary vote from tho Republican party in cither Houso, Tho Adams or Corwin amendment, so- called, reported from tho committeo of thirty-thrco, and the only substantivo amendment proposed from tho Republican eido, was but a bare promise that Congress should never bo authorized to do what no sano man ever believed Congress would attempt to do abolish slavery in the States where it exists ; and yet even this proposition, moderate as it was, and for which every southern member present vo ted, except ono, was carried through this IIouso by but ono majority, after long and tedious delay, and with tho utmost difficul ty sixty-five Republican members, with the resolute and determined gentleman from Pennsylvania Mr. Hickman! at their head, having voted against it and fought against it to tho very last. And not this only, but, as a part of tho history of the last session, let me remind you that bills wcro introduced into this House proposing to abolish and closo up cartain southern ports of entry; to author- izo tho President to blockado tho southern coast ; aud to call out tho militia and ac cept tho services of volunteers, not for three years merely, but without any limit as to cither numbers or timo, for tho very purpose of enforcing tbo laws, collecting the revenuo, and protecting tho public property ; and were pressed vehemently and earnestly in this Houso jirinr to the arrival of the President in Uiis city, and were then, though seven States had sece ded and set up a government of their own voted down, postponed, thrust aside, or in some other way disposed of, sometimes by largo majorities in this House, till at last Congress adjourned without any action at all. Peace then seemed to be tho policy of all parties. Thus, sir, tho caso stood at twelve o' clock on tho 4th of March last, when, from tha eastern portico of this Capitol, and in tho presenco of twenty thousand of his countrymen, but enveloped in a cloud of soldiary which no other American Pres ident ever saw, Abraham Lincoln took the oath of office to support the Constitution, and delivered his inaugural a message, I regret to say, not written in the direct and straightforward language which becomes an American President and an American statesman, and which was expected from tho plain, blunt, honest man of tho North west, but with tho forked tonguo and crooked counsel of New York politician, leaving thirty millions of people in doubt whether it meant pcaoo or war. But whatever may havo been the secret purposo and meaning of tho inaugural, practically for six weeks the policy of peace prevailed j and they wore weeks of happiness to tho patriot, and prosperity of tho country Business revived ; trado returned ; com merce flourished. Never was thero a fairer prospect beforo any people. Seces sion in the past languished, and was spir itless and harmless ; secession in the future was arrested, and perished. By over whelming majorities, Virginia, Kentuoky, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Missouri all declared for the old Union, and every heart beat high with hope that in duo course of timo, and through faith and pa tience and peace, and by ultimato and adequato compromise, every Stato would bo restored to it. It is true, indeed, sir, that tho Republican party, with great unamity and great earnestness and deter mination, had resolved against all concili ation and compromise. But, on the other hand, tho whole Democratic party, and tho wholo Constitutional Union party, wcro equally resolved that there should bo no civil war upon any pretext ; aud both sidc3 prepared for an appeal to that great and final arbiter of all disputes in a frco country the people Sir, I do not proposo to inquiro now whether tho President and his Cabinet were sinccro and in earnest, and meant really to persevcro to tho end in tho policy of pcaco ; or whether from tho first thoy meant civil war, and only waited to gain timo till they wcro fairly seated in power, aud had disposed, too, of that prodigious 'horde of spoilsmen and office seekers, which camo down at tho first liko an aval 1 anchc upon them t Bnt I do know that tho . people believo them sinccro, and cordially ratified nnd approved of tho policy of , peace ; not as they subsequently responded 1 to tho policy of war, in a whlrlnind of passion and madness, but calmly and I soberly, and as tho result of their dellbcr. I .... ..) ....i i. .i t..i: UbU SUU UIUDI OU.V1UII JUUIUi;Ub, UUU UbllUY. ing that civil war was absolute and otern.il disunion, while secession was but partial and temporary, they cordially indorsed also tho proposed evacuation of Sumter and the other forts and publio property within tho seceded States. Nor, sir. will I stop now to explore tho several causes which cither led to a chango in tho appa rent policy or an early development of the original and real purposes of tho Adminis-1 tration. But there aro two which I cannot pass by. And tbo first of these was tar ty necessity, or the clamor of politicians, and especially of certain wicked, reckless, and unprincipled conductors of a partisan press. Tho pcaco policy was crushing out tho Ropublican party. Under that policy, sir, it was melting away liko snow before the sun. Tho general elections in Rhode Island and Connecticut, and municipal elections in Now York and in tho western States, gavo abundent evidence that tho pcoplo were resolved upon the most ample satisfactory constitutional guarantees to tho South as tho price of a restoration of Union. And then it was sir, that tho long and agonizing howl of defeated and disappointed politicians camo up beforo tho Administration. Tho newspaper press teemed with appeals and threats to tho President. Tho mails groaned under the weight of letters demanding a change of policy ; while a secret conclavo of the Governors of Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, and other States, assembled here, promised men and money to support tho President in the irrepressible conflict which they now invoked. And thus it was, sir, that tho necessities of a party in tho pangs of dissolution, in the very hour and article of death, demanding vigorous measures, which could result in nothing but civil war, renewed iccccsion, and absolute and eter nal disunion, wero preferred aod harkened to beforo tho pcaco and harmony and prosperity of tho whole country. But thero was another and yet stronger impelling cause without which this horrid calamity of civil war might havo been postponed, and, perhaps, finally averted. Ono of tho last and worst acts of Congress, which, born in bittcrnesf and nurtured in convulsion, liltcrally did thoso things which it ought not to havo done, and left undone those things which it onght to havo done, was tho passago of an obscure, in digested, and unstatcsmanliko high pro tective tariff act, commonly known as tub Morrill Tariff." Just about tho samo timo, too, tho Confederate Con gross at Montgomery adopted our old tariff of 1857, which wo had rejected to make way for the Morrill act, fixing their rato of duties at five, fifteen, and twenty per cent lower than ours. Tho result was as inevitable as tho laws of trado are inexor able. Trado and commerce and especi ally tho trado and commerce of tho West began to look to the South. Turned out of their natural course years ago, by tho canals and railroads of Pennsylvania and New York, and diverted eastward at a heavy loss to tho West, thoy threatened now to resume their ancient and accustomed channels the water-courses tho Ohio & the Mississippi. And political association and uuion, it was well known, must soon follow tbo direction of trado and interest. Tho city of New York, the great commer cial emporium of tho Union, and tho North west, the chief granary of tho Union, be gan to clamor now loudly for a repeal of the pernicious and ruinous tariff. Threat ened thus with the loss of both political power and wealth, or tho repeal or tho tariff, and at last of both, Now England and Pennsylvania, too, the land of Pcnn, cradled in peace demanded now coercion and civil war, with all its horrors, as tho prico of preserving cither from destruction. Ay, sir, Pennsylvania, tho great keystone of tho arch of tho Union, was willing to lay tho wholo weight of her iron upon tho sacred arch, and crush it beneath the load. The subjugation of tho South ay, sir, the subjugation of tho South 1 I am not talk ing to children or fools ;. for there is not a man iu this IIouso fit to bo a Representa tive hero who does not know that tho South cannot bo forced to yield obedience to your laws and authority again until you havo conquored and subjugated hor tho subju gation of tho South, and tho closing up of her ports, first by forco, in war, and after wards in tariff laws, in pcaco, was deliber ately resolved upon in tho East. And, sir, when once this policy was begun, these self-samo motives of waning commerco and threatened loss of trado impelled tho groat city of Now Y ork, and her merchants and her politicians and her press, with hero and thero an honorabl exception, to placo herself in tho very front rank among tho worshipers of Moloch. Much, indeed, of that outburst and uprising in tho North which followed the proclamation of tho 15th of April, as VOLUME 25. proclamation itself was called forth, by the fall of Sumptcr an event long anticipated as by tho notion that "insurrection," as it was called, might be crushed out in a few weeks, if not by tho display, certainly at least, by tho presence of an overwhelm ing force. These, sir, were tho chief causes which, along with others, led to a change im tho policy of tho Administration, and instead of peace, forced us headlong into civil war, with all its accumulated horrors. But whatever may have been tho causci or the motives of the act, it is certain that thero was a chango in tho policy which the Administration meant to adopt, or which at least they led tho country to be lieve they intended to pursue. I will not venturo now to assert, what may yet somo day bo mado to appear, that tho subsc qucnt acts of tho Administration, and its enormous aud persistent infractions of tho Constitution, its high-handed usurpations of power, formed any part of a deliberate conspiracy to overthrow the present form of Federal republican government, aud to establish a strong centralized Government in its stead. No, sir ; whatever their pur poses aro now, I rather think, that in the beginning, they rushed heedlessly into tho gulf, believing that, tho Boat of war was then far distant and difficulties of access, the display of vigor in reinforcing Sumptcr and Pickens, and in calling out seventy five thousand militia upon tho firing of tha first gun, and above all, in that exceeding ly happy and origional conceit of com manding the insurgent States to "disperse in twenty days," would not, on tbo ono hand precipitate a crisis, while, upon, tho other, it would satisfy its own violent par tizans, and thus re vivo and rcstoro tho fall ing fortunes of the Republican party. ' I can hardly conceive sir, that tho President and his advisers could bo guilty of the exceeding folly of expecting to- car ry on a general civil war by a mere fosse cnmitalus of thrco months militia. It may be, indeed, that, with wicked and most desperate cunning, tho President meant all this as a mere cntring wedge to that which was to rive tho oak asunder ; or pos sibly as a test, to learn tho publio senti ment of tho North aud West. But howev er that may bo, the rapid secession and movement of Virginia, North Carolina, Arkansas and Tennessee, taking with them as I havo said elsewhere, four millions and a half of people, immenso wealth inex haustible resources, five hundred thousand fighting men, and the graves of Washing ton andJackson, and bringing up too, in ono single day, tbo frontier from tho Gulf to tho Ohio and tho Potomac, together with the abandonment by one side, and tho ocupation by tho other, of Harper's Ferry aud tho Norfolk navy-yard ; and the fierce gust and whirlwind of passion in the North, compelled cither a sudden waking up of the President and his advi sers to the frightful significancy of tho act which they committed in heedlessly brea king the vaso which contained tho slum bering demon of civil war, or else a pre mature but rapid development of tho dar ing plot to fostor and promote secession and then set up a new and strong form of Govcrnmct in tho States which might re main in the Uuion. Bat whatevor may have been tho pur pose, I assert hero to-day, as a Represen tative, that every principal a ct of tho Ad ministration since, has boen a glaring usurpation of power, and a palpable and dangerous violation of that very Constitu tion which this civil war is professodly waged to support. Sir, I pass by tho proclamation of tho 15th of April, sum moning tho milita not to defend this oap ital ; there is not a word about tho capital in tho proclamation, and thero was then no possible danger to it from any quarter; but to retake and occupy forts and prop erty a thousand miles off summoning, I say, tho milita to surprcss tho so-called insurrection. 1 do not believe indeed, and no man believod in Februar last, when Mr. Stanton, of Ohio, introduced his bill to enlarge tho act of 1795, that act ever con templated tho caso of a general revolution, and of resistance by an organized Govern ment. But no matter. Tho milita thus called out, with a shadow, at least, of au thority, and for a period extending one month tho assembling of Congress, wero amply sufficient to protect the capital against any foreo which was then likely t bo Bent against it and tho event has pro ved it and ample enough also to suppress tho outbreak in Maryland. Every other principal act of the Administration might well havo beenpostpoued until tho meetine of Congress ; or if tho oxigenciis of the oc casion demanded it, Congress should have