AND BLOOMSBUKG GENERAL ADVERTISER; JLEVB 5i. TATE, Editor. TO HOLD AND TRIM TIIH TOKO II OF TltUTII AND WAVE IT O'ER THE DARKENED EARTH." TERMS iSB,00 Villi ANNUM. VOL. 16. NO. 48. BLOOMSBUKG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PBNN'A., SATURDAY, JANUARY 31, 1803, VOLUME 2G puBLtsiiBn every Saturday, by LEVI L. TATE. at DLOoMsDuno, Columbia county, pa. o f fTo E tin new Drltk nultilnff, npjiotlte the Ktthnngt, iij tide of the (Vurt llause. " Demotrule Iliad QuaMeri." TI.HMS Or HUIiKClllVTTO.V. Vjl 00 In advnnco, fnr one copy, for six mouths, 1 In ndvnnci!. for one ropy, one your. S U') If luit pnlil w itliin Urn lint throo inniitlii. 5.1 If not paid within tli.; first its months. l At) If not paid within the year, F f No subscription taken for less thin si months, In I mi paper discontinued until nil arrearages shall havu crt palil. ADVKivrtsKtti'NT" InnTtod conspicuously (it one dollar iit .'inure, nf ID lines each. for the three lrt insertions s.u.1 tweutv fl vtj cents, per s.pinrs , fur every subseuuent I iimlinn, until ordered riii nntlnuod. Jnu Work, nfeverv desriiptlon, neatly and cheap'" (trcutei! at His shorleit tiotira sssnonsscsaTOEra 1S0S. 1SG3. !'!ii!,i(!(lihi,i & ICrio Kail Itoail. This (Trent line traverses tho Northern and XortM west counties nf l'unnrjlvaula tn the 1 ity of line, 1) l.aki Uric. It has b'on leased by the Peti"vlvanla P.allrnad rtitnpatiy, mill under their nuspii-es Is helig rapidly 0ii'iH'd thrmtzlioiit Its entire, length. 11 is now In ui" for Passenger an I frpigtit business tr nm llarrl-h iri! In drove I'l.il, 1 II'.' mill's) mi the l!.it e rn IHvisiou. and front Bhelhcld to laic on thu West t rn division. i miles ) TIME or nsSKSjahll TIUINS AT liOlirnt-'MllFR I, VVP. Mail Train loaves, Ihst 1 V.3 P. M. l',.irn.j Train " " II I'll " Mill " " West .1 M " Express (I :i-J A. .M. t'ors run thrniich with fiUNnr hoth ways on thoso traiita lu't'vfon Philadelphia and I. nek Haven, ami Iialtlmor''r7d Look llafii. , 'W and eleg-iut Sleep ing (Jura nceouipnning Hi Ktprcn Train both ways b 'two. 'ii Willluiuspiirl and ISalliiunrc, sud Williams port an I I'lillu lolplila. I'or infiirination respecting Passenger business, ap 111) ntt'ii' H V.. !or. I Mil an I M irk.-t 'is. A'l.l for I'r i?ht irisine-snf th" i'oinimy's Agents : H il Kingston. Jr . i'or. 13th and Market Sts., l'lul'a. J. - . Itoviwl.ls. I!n J t. drill, a -lit V. t'. It It., Ilnltluinre. II II Houston. 0 ui. I'fUht Am . rhll.idolphla, 1,' wh .. Ilrinpt. ii n'l.Tirk.'t Agt I'lnla letphiu. Joj ill II I'oit- 1; ii'l. M.uujor, W illi.iiusport. Jiuniry 1;, IH..3. LIST OF "CAUSES rnn rmiurAtx 'ieiui, H0fl. ) B-imuel IU.tl,rraJ.il.n K firnt7. t Dr. Ron U' I. U 1 ary VVVrtinau vs John l (irotz &s llr ;uo VF I. 3 I'liilip Winttfri-ioon vs Val-Mi'l i' Wmttrstren. mt i I J 1 1 11 J iiniiip-.iMi. 1 1 1:1 1 i It I'll- r ! 1 5 .Id 111 ! I' rfoyb -rt v-, A It Pi rn ft al. e llnnry U'clls vs Ooorg' K ml ), jr. 7 Jarob L'y r v-i Mir.ih.iin Klisi. H .lirJbim KI.h vs .1 01 0I1 l'.)i'r. V Diynl l! al vs Hiniii. I 1. licttli! ij Ds.iiitl rob t vti JoS' ph (loiwil. 11 i:ii)ih W mt T-ttfcn "t al vst I1r11tir.11 tVidf. 11 llirs.u U Tr 'as vs Jo baa tt-i iiian ot al. M iljn II. ilro.vo ot a', v. 1, 'un.ir'l 11 Knpiirt. H tVt.'r M T au'ili vh A.iroii 1 latou. 12 -iiiu'i lliti "lib -ii'L-r vh ri'l.ii 11 iMgur. Irt Jiius Unrio vs Ijli.is li IT 1 cun u i-li Kob Tt II iji'itbucb. li tjtissniidli I urh vsll'di-rt lias 'iibiifh, 1.1 Ai lr I.'iri-'li s yt is vs l.iVjt.-rt liiinliuch. '.'J Isiiah II Proas vs t m lk.-lr. 2l I .on 1 a (tiiwan vs liti.ab Ih D-iImm. 'it Willi 1111 I, Parks v. J:li. iV'lli It .till i 11 b . ii I ic ib Harris vs iVl r Jiuoliy. 1(4 Jscob Hon I vs I ilium V mlo. S tl orao ' J l; 1 'S i t ul vs J V ' riswcl! ct nl. 1W Uaul I It.'i ibold vs Mli'hvl (!nw"f. 11 t.'il b llolui.'S 1 lal vs I) twiii !l,.liii;' A dm'trli. 'ii u'si l P. SMk t vs Win Ik lor. 'II W A Klino vs (i W lliplf.iian .1 nl. 30 TI11 Minor's Uaiik otal vs IMniu VI Uiilnor. Shbiuff's Sales. "r!v virtue of f-uuilrv writs of I'cwlitinni ' tftjimii In 1110 illr"oti'(t. lssnod nut iiftho r.tiirt of i Couininu Pious if Uoluinbia county public sjIo on Silwihui Thhlu firM of January, 186'l. t ons o'ejork. p. 10., of said day n. th Cnint llnufe, in lilnuMsburg, the fi'lluiiine Roal r.n..li; m vmi: All tbnt cert'iin lot ol "round situato in Hspy. Brolt township, roluinhia ooiinty, Pciinvlvanta, bot 1 f rty ona and a half fiiot fiont and ono Jiiindrod and uim ly tlroo f m t 111 di plh. I'oiimloil as follow s to vrit - on tho iionli hy laitiip of John tlfKaiiiy, 011 tho nnrtheu t by b) II W II Vnuackcr, 111IH1 by M.1111 t. and south bv an alloy w Inn 011 aro oroct.'d a garni t'ruiiu Us. cllinc lluubc anil ktnllr n 1II1 the appiuloR. at. cos. ALSO : On other Lotr-ituatn in E"py, township and county .ilor.u J, u .Mill streot, north nf Mum tri't h 111- 1 ot 'o. 71 l'l plii 11 of slid town, bull; i,'lilv tno and (1110 half IV.'l front au.l una huudrod & oviiiv thro.- f i t in di'pth, wli roon am crorii'da K.i I rr.i'iiu D'V.'llin House a Triune Stablu Willi tfu nnpurtiiiian. eg. AL'O: Two other Town Lots lying rontnpous to onch nth 'r. unil situato in 1',-py tmiishii and roiin ty .ifoiosanl. froiilmi: 1 11 Mill stto' t, b'lui! oiid hnii ilrad nnd sixty fiv foot in I mil mid nun hundred mid sov ntv thri o f "it in di'ptli. hunnili'd on tho woi-t by lauds nf Put. on tho nor Hi by Uano frovol- ! ' . .. I .1 III.., .,,. 11, 11,. Mil .1 nni uu u.tposcu 10 iu, t oeri.'o.i nr. net i' u 'i i 1 1" . ... "" " lurgii Fniislilnj HJinp. u nil thu nppiirtonaui.ee. ALSO: One other tract or p'ircci of land, situato In Omcnwnnd township. Columbia county, runtiiinin; oiL'bty.oiijht aeros. woll tinibvod. bniiudod and dos rrih.nl as follows to wit; -on tho north by lands of t.'lark Morrill on tho oht!iv lands nf Xii hnlns Kindt, nud on thu south In l,iuds of Janios P.ittrrson, wln ronn oru uroitcd a onod Saw Mil . 11 ennd I'raino nivulling House and a Hani, w Ith tho nppurteiiRncea. ALSO: Ono other Lot Mtuate in Espy, Polum- linibia enmity, aaid r,iitb"iui! ono l.uiidi.'d nv.d niin'tv su foot in W' dth and two hundred and thirty lout 111 depth, hounded 11s follows to w it -on tho north.'iist by lamia nf John K rcs.lor. on Iho north by nil alloy, nn the west by n slroot, and on tho south hv thr North llrmirli Canal, nru ortrtod n lumo tSPnin Mill, n Rood Praine lln . Hiug lloitsu nud a r'ramu liarn, ith tlis np p.irtr naiioes, ALSO : Ono other Lot situate in Epv, township nnd fnuntv nrorosanl, froutinj si' ty foot n Msin st . .nnd 01111 li.iudrod nnd oiahly foot in depth to an nlloy. fcminded on tlo woFt In lot nf "round liclmisnis to Ilrnlnl, unrthoa.t hv lauds of J. P.vans, whoroon jroiroctod a so ul I'raino llmtau and Stablu with Iho "appurtenances. ALSO : One othor L"t sifimte in Espy, township ind county aforesaid, frontine nuo liunilrod anil twenty Toot on Main Hr. it. nud one Hundred and clBhtv reel Jn dipth, bo'iiided on the west by lands of 1 nomas I'nwlor. on tin- imrllionH by lauds nf A bnydor, 011 the north by an alloy nud nu tho south by Main j root, whoreon nrn ororted n largo Fiainu Dwclllii!,' Iniiso a rramn Htablo and other outbuildings w ith tho up $'crti;nance j. AtSO: Two other Lots situate in Epy, town ship nnd county nfnresaid, bnundoil nnd dosrribod ns follows to wit ;-nntho northeast by lands of Hllas 1,1 gj.r,on the west by lands orrupled by Samuel 1 owlcr. on Iho south by nn nlley. and notlh by Mnln alrfol. bo Init sixty fei I in front and ono hundred nnd eishty foot In depth, tilmrenn mocrortedtwn sno.l 1 raine Hwellins Houses, snnd t-tablcs, Willi outbuilding! with tho ap- 'sa'ui'ullTaken In execution aitd to bo sold as tho prop erty ot Thomas IV. Udgar. ALSO: At tho samo timo nntl placo by virtue of a writ of .earl JVirlm nil thosn thrco certain I.nts n I Ground, with tho buildings and improvement. thereon sreiled. lyliH! coiilnsloiu to each other l "Itohert s Adilitlnii" uilinlniiiB the town nl Cattawisia, be ng three I.nl. ninikcd and numbered on tho plot ond plan cf said llnhetfi Addition number (Ifty-llJ, nlly-sevcii and fifty rinht, fnruilns one whnlo squs.ro In P'" or plan, of two hundred nud ten feet in length anil the tame in brendth, bounded on tho east by fourth Urco ofsnld linherl'i Addition, on tho north by U nliiul street, on tho wi st by nn alley, and on tho South by tho boundary llnuof mid Robcifa Addition to the town 01 1 Hslted taken ii rxeculinn and to bo sold as tho pro Tistty nf Truinau -M, llubblo nud Mnry Ann his nt. SitrmrriOrnc j J03IAII II. rUKMAV. nioom.btirir, Jin 10. IBM. I MMtf Choice Poelry. Ii ifS Rs Ei B6 E Ba A 5B fl A3. Tho pure, tho bright, th beautiful, Th.it stirred our hurt in youth, Thu impulse 1 0 a worldless prsyer, The dreams of lovo and truth, The lotiirlii-s after something lost, The r pn It's yearning cry; The strlt Inns after belter hopes, I nose things ran net cr die. Iho timid hand strcched fntth to aid A brother in his need, Tho kindly word lugtiif's tlark hour That proves tho friend Indued. Thu pl iafor mercy, si.ltly breathod, Wlunjustlco threatens liluli j Tho sorrow nfu contrite heart, Thescthings shall 110 verdie. Tho luoinory nfiiil,isiii; h.iu.l, Thu pressure nf u kiss, And all the trlrles.sweut mid frail, That makeup love's lirst bliss, If w Ith a linn, uiieh iiiglug faith, And holy tnut 1111.I high, Tlioso bauds ha e oluspcd, thoso lips havo met, These things fhall never die. Th" rritel and ths bitter word, 'I'hat wiiiiuded 11- it foil ; Th ihiliiii want of sympathy, VVu f. cl but never tell, The hard repulse, that cheers tho heart Whoso hop's wore bounding high, In nn iiiif.iliu roiordkept, Tluse things shall never die: l.tt ii'itliin; pass, nr oviry I. and Must nud Mime ivurl to do ; 1,0.-0 not a chance to waken lovo Unflnn.and Just, und true. oshitla lljlitthnt c.inuoifilo it. 11111 on thec from 011 high, An.langi'l voiios uy to thee, These tilings shall never die. .SSE' EOJ'CIl lion. C. L. Yalliiiiililiiim. of on 10, In the House nf ll'-ps., January 1 1, 1808. Mr. VALLANDIG II AM. Mr. Speak er, iuJuroiril ut tlu rccunt election wiiliin tbu sumii dit,ii':t for which L dtill bold a scat ou tbib rljor, by a majority four times grtMler than over before, I ipeak to-day in lli titiuie and by the aulbority of (be pjoplo who, for ix yeard, liavo intrusted me fcith lite offieo of a Representative. Loyal, in the true and lushest eenac of the word, to the Constitution and the Uni on, tbuy liive proved tbetusMilves devoted ly att.iebcd to and worthy of the liberties to secure wbicb the Union and the (Jon btltution were established. With candor and freedom, therefore, as their Represeu lj(ive,inl much pluiiineas of speech, but with lite dignity and decency due to this presence, I prupose to ctm-sider the state of tli o Union to-day, uud to inquire what the duty is of evi'ry pjblic man and every ciiiz 'U i'i this the very crisis of the Gre.it Revolution. It is now two years, dir. since Congress assembled soou alter the Presidential elec tion. A sectional anti-S'lavery nifty bad llirn just succeeded tlnough the forma of tho (Jou-iiittilion. For the lirst time a Pre.-idcut had been chosen upon a platform of avowed hostility to un institution peuii liar to nearly one half of the States of the Unio i, and who had himself proclaimed that (here wis an irrepressible conflict be cause of (hat institution between tho St. Kef ; and tint the Union could not en dure 'part slave and part free," Con gress met, therefore, in the iiiid:tbf the profoindeHt agitation, not hero only but throughout tho entire Sou'li. Kevolutiou glared upon us. Repented cfforti for con oiliation and compromise were a'.tenipted in Coii'M'CBi nud out of it. All wcro re jected by the partj just coming into pow- - . ,1.1. . 0 .1... I . er,oxccpt oniy uy iue pratuinuoi uiu ih hours of the session, and that, too, against the content of a majority of that party both in the Senate and House; that Cou grcs,I10t tho EkccuHvo bhould never bo authorized to hooiimi or inienero wtiu slavcrv in the St.'ttci whore it exited South Oiroliua seceiled ; Georgi i, Ala bama, Florid i, Missis-ippi, Lou-i.uia, and Texas speedily followed. Tho Confeder ate government was establihcd. Iho oiling tnvr Slates held back. Virciuia demanded a peace congros. I ho Com- . i .. o. ... ...... niis-ioners met, unu niter oyuiL- umu, agreed upon terms of final adjustment. Rut neither iu the Senate nor tho House wore they allowed i veii a respectful con sideration. The PrcMdont cltet left lin home in Febn-ary, and journeyea towarus this capitol, jo.iting a ho came, proclaim ing that the crisis was only artificial, and that "nobody was hurt." Ho entered tho oity under cover of nii-ht nud in disguise. On tho Ith of March be was iinugurattd, surrounded by soldiery, and, swearing to support tho Contitutioii of tho Lnitod Statss announced in the same breath that tlio platform of his paity should bo tho law unto him. From that moment all hope of pcaooablo adjustment tied. ' ut for a little while, eithor witu unstoidfast sincerity or promeditated deceit, tho pol ioy ol peace was proclaimed, oven to the ovacuatiou of Sumpter aud tho other bed oral forts and arsenals in tho sooedod Stntc. Why tbnt policy was suddenly abandoned, timo will fully disclose, liut iust after the spring elections and tho se cret meeting in this city of tho Governors of several northern and western Slates, a fleet carrying a largo number of men was sent down ostensibly to provision bort Sumpter. Tho autnormes oi awn olina eagerly ncooptod tho challenge, and bombarded the fort into surrender, wlulo ih0 tlect llrcd int a pun, but, just so soon as the flag was struck, vo away and rc Sm .Uo tbo North. It wa- Sunday, the Mill of April, 1801 ; nud that day tho PreMdout, in fatal liasto and without the tuvico or consent of Cougross, issued his proclamation, dated tho next day, calling out sovotitylivo thousand militia for three months, to repossess the foiti, places, and property seized from tho United States, mul .n,...,.n,.,11.... it. :.....HMA.t.. .ltnA..,n vUU...,a,.u.uS u . .uau.uuin-, ui-.in.-mo in twenty days. Again the gage, was ta Ken up by tue South, and thus tho flames of a civil war, tho I'randfst, bloodiest, and Jsaddestiiiliistosy lighted up the whole heavens, iliitia seceded. North I'aro- lina, Toniiesseo, and Arkansas followed; Delaware, Maryland, Kentucky, aud Mis souri wore in a blaze of agitation, and within a week fron tho proclamation, tho : line of tho Confederate States w.ts trans-! furred from tho cotton States to the Poto mac, aud almost to iho Ohio aud the Mia- .souri, and their population and fighting I men doublud. I Iu the North and West, too, the storm I raged with the fury of a hurricane. Nev or iu history was anything equal to it. ' Men, women, and children, native and j foreign born, Chuieh and State, clergy and I laymen, wero all swept along with the! current. Distinction of age, sex, station,! party, perished in an iiirtant. Thousands, bent buforo the tempest ; and hero and there only was ouo found bold etiough, foolbaidy enough it may have been, to bend not, and him it smote fell as a eon- "umiiig lire. The spirit of peraccuiion for opinion s bako, almo-t extiuct m tho Old World, now, by some mysterious transini gration, appeared incarnate iu tho New. Social relations were dis.-olved ; friend ships broken up ; the ties of family and kindred snappod asunder. Stripes and hanging were overywhero threatened, sometimes executed. Assassination was invoked; sUnder hharpcucd lib tooth; falsehood crushed truth to the earth ; reason fled : maduess reigned. Not jus tice only cseapud lo the skies, but peace returned to the bosom of God, whence she came. The gospel of love perished ; hate sat enthroned, and the .sacrifices of blood smoked upnu every altar. liut tho reign of the mob was inaugu rated only to bo supplanted by the iron dominatiou of arbitrary power. Constitu tional limitation was broken down ; hubc'is cirpus (ell ; libcity of the press, of speech, of the person, of mails, of travel, of one's own house, aud nf religion ; tho right lo bear arms, due process of law, judicial tri al, trial by jury, trial at all ; every badge aud muuimeut of freedom in republican givenimvnt or kingly government -nil went down at a blow ; aud the chief law officer of tho crown I beg pardon, sir, but it is easy now to fall into the courtly language the Attorney lliiiicral. first ot all men, proclaimed iu the United States the maxim of Roman servility: Wuacrci ikuba the I icn'nU, I'mt i-, laiv ! Pris oners ot otato were then hrt heard ol here. Midnight aud arbitrary arrest commenced; travel was interdicted, trade embargoed, passports demanded, b.istiles were introduced, -tra,no o.itlis niveuted, a secret police organised, ''piping" began, informers multiplied, spies now first ap peared iu America. Tho right to declare war, to raii-e and support armies, aud to provide and maintain a navy was usurped by the Executive ; and a little more than two months a land and naval force of over throe hundred thousand men was iu tho field or upon the ?ca. An army of pub lic plunderers followed, aud corruption struggled with power in friendly strite for the mastery at Uomo On iho 4th of July Congress mot, not to sock peace, not to rebuuo usurpation nor to restrain powor, not certainly to deliberate, uot cveu to legislate, but regis ter aud ratify tho edicts and acts ol the Lxi'cutivo ; iu your lansuago, sir, upon the fiist day of tho session, to invoke a universal baptiMa ot lire aud blood amid tho roar of cannon and tho dm of battlo. Free bp icch was had onlv at the riek of prison ; possibly of life. Opposition was sileiiord by tho fierce clamor of "dis'oyal ty." All business not of war was voted out of order, Five huudrod thousaud men, au immense navy, nud two hundred ami fitly millions of money wero speedily granted. In twouty. at most iu sixty days the rebellion was to be crushed out. To doubt it was treason. Abject submission was demauded. hay down your arms, suo for peaco, surrender your leaders forfeit ure, death this was the only languago heard on this floor. Tho galleries re sponded, tho corridors echoed, and con tractors and placemen and other vonal patriots overywhero gnashod upon tho friends of peaco as they passed by. In fivo weeks seventy tight publio and piiva'o ii... ii... i .. acts and ioiut resolutions, with declaratory resolutions, in tho tsenato anil nouso, qutto as nuniurous, all full ol slaughter, wcro hurried through without delay aud almost without debate. Thus was civil war inaugurated in America. .Cau any man today soo tho eud of itf And now pardon mo, sir(4if I pnuso horo a moment to define my awn pssition at this timo upon this great quostion. Sir, I am ouo of that uutnber who havo opposed abolitionism, or tho politioal de velopment oftho anti-slavery sontiment of tho North and West, from tho beginning. In school, at collego, at the bar, iu publio assemblies, in tho Lcgisluturo, in Congress, boy and man, aw private cittzon and in publio lifo, in timo of penco nnd in time of war, at a'l times nnd nt ovory saorifico, I havo fou?ht against it, Tt cost mc ten yours exclusion from office and honor, at that poriod of life when honors aro sweet est. No matter: I learned early lo do - .. I ri.ht and to wait. Sir, it is but tho do- j vdopiucnt of tho spirit ' or intermeddling, ) wi103 children aro stiifo and murder- , Gan iroub0d himself about the saeriBees I nf a l.nl ...i ,i,w !,!, -tn.i contention, litigation, and bloodshed! ' from til0 bcciiattirin 0f time, have been its . . . P J . truU3i T10 8pIrjt cf 0n intervention is tho very spirit of peace and concord. I ,!,, ,lnf v,i;n n.r if .im-sr. i..i r,i.t,i i,rn ro.mI.1 lnv. I. ml ...Ai:n... aI ControvorIo. This very civil war might havo happened fifty, perhaps a hun dred years later. Oilier and stronger enures ot tltscoutent anu ot disunion, it may be, havo exited between other States and sections, arc now bcim? devel- oped every day into maturity. The spiiit of inrnrvnminti nsunmnil tlin fnrm nf ,, litiouisin becauso slavery was odious in nainrj and by association to the Northern Mind, and becauso it was that which most nlivinll.! v lnfivl.-i tlin iliffnrimt r-ti-ilivnt.M.ta of the two sections. Tho South herself, d.i?"'!lic wholly iiieansistent with tho sta in her early and later ellbrts to rid her- b. lv 1,10 on.stitutiou aud the peace oi self of it, had exposed the weak and oiTon mvo paits of slavery to the world. Abo litiori intermeddling taught her at la-t to search for and defend tho assumed social, economic, and political merit and values of the institution. Hut there never was an hour from the beginning wben it did not seem to me as clear as tho sun nt bioad noon, that the agitation in any form in the Noith and West of the slavery ques tion must sooner or later end iu disunion aud civil war. This was the opinion and pr;dii'tion for yc'irs of Whig and, Demo cratic btntcMiiuti alike ; and after tho un fortunate dissolution of the Whig party in 1S54, and the orgtmiz nion of tho present Republican party upon au exclusively anti slavery and sectional basis, tho event was inevitable ; because!, in the then existing temper of tho public mind, and alter the education through tho press and by the pulpit, the lecture and the political canvass for twenty years, of a generation taught lo hate slavery and tho South, the success of that party, posscs-cd, as it was, cf every on iue ol political business, social, and religious influ'noo, was certain. It was nnly a question of time, and short time. Such w.ts its strength, indeed, thai 1 do not believe that the union of iho Demo cratic party iu ltffld en any candidate, uvea though h s had been supported also by tho entire bo called conservative or auti Lincoln vote of the country, would havo availed to drfe.it it; aud if it had, the sue cess of tho abolition party would only have been postponed four years loiigur. The disoneo li id fastened too strongly upon the system to ho healed until it had run its course. The doettino of the ''irrepressible eontlier' had Ij. cn t;i niriit ton long and aecpltd ton widely and earnestly to die out, until it should culminate in seces.-ion and disunion; and, if coercion were resort ed to, then in civil war. I believed from tin? (irt that it was the puiposo of some of the iipostlcs of that doctrine to force a collision betweou the Noith aad fouth, either to bring about a separation or to And a vain but bloidy pretext for abolish ing slavery in tho States. In any event, knew, or thought I know, that tbc cud was certain collision, aud death to tho Union. Relieving thus, 1 have for years past deuouneed thoso who taught that doctrine with all tho vehemence, the bitterness, if you choose I thought it a righteous, a patriotic bitterness of an earnest and im passioned nature. Thinking thus, I fore warned all who believed tho tlocrino, or followed tho party which taught il, with a sincerity and a drpth of conviction as pro found as ever penetrated tho heart of man. And when, lor eijht years past, over and over again, I havo proclaimed to tho peo ple that the success of a sectional anti slavery party would bo the boiiiuing of disjiiiou and civil war iu America, I be lieved il. I did. I had read history, and studied human uaturc, and meditated for years upon tlio character of our institu tions and form of government, and of tho people South as well as North ; and I could not doubt tho event. Rut tho peo ple did not believe mo, uor thoso older and wi'tr and greater than I. Thov re- jeetetl the prophecy, and stoned tho pronl ..I. 'I'l.n ..,,!;, I .... e ii t.ii I'll. s ii I..1IIUIUUIU ui iuu iii'imuiieau party was chosen President. Secssion began. Civil w.tr was iintuincut. It was no potty insurrection; no temporary cont inuation to obstruct tho exoouiion oi tho laws in certain Stttcs; butn iievoi.utio.v, systcmatto, deliberate, determined, and with thq consent of a inajoiity oftho pC0- , plo of oach Stato which seceded. Cause less it may havo been; wicked it mav havo been; but there it was, not to bo . .:n i.. , i , i ., i . . railed at, still los to bolaujihed at, but lo bo doalt with by statesman as a fact. No display of vigor or force alouo, however sudden or great, could havo arrested it even at tho outset. It was disunion at last. The wolf had oonio, Rut civil war had not yet followed, In my deliberate and most solemn judgment, thero was but nuo wbc and masterly mode ofdealing with it. Non coercion would avert civil war, and compromise crush out both abolitionism and secession. 'I ho parent and tho child woultl thus both polish. Rut a resort to forco would at onco precipitate war, has ten secession, extend disunion, and, while it lasted, utterly cutoff all hopo of com promise. I beliovcd tbnt war, if long enough continued, would bo final, eternal disunion, I said it; I meant it; and ac cordingly, to tho uttmost of tny ability and influence, I exerted my?ulf in behalf of tho poliov of non-coercion. It was adoptod by Mr. Ruolianan's Administsa tion, with tho almost unanimous nruaot n4rmtimmrvnMitnK.mmmi iss iI'j'Ji'ji.jiui'i1 jlisisL-isarws wnumjrjjiwsJM of tlie Democratic and Uonstitutional Uu- ion P"tioi in and out of L ongrcai ; and in February, with tho concurrence of a ma Jorit.v f ,h'' Kopublican party in tho Sen. ate and this Hou?o. Lut that party, most Jtsnstrously for tho country, refused all coinpromi.se. How, indeed, could they a ........ .. I rni,n, ,l.t r t, s.,,il, A accent any ? That which tho youth de manded and tho Democratic nnd conser vative parties of tho tNorth and West were willing to grant, nnd which alone could avail to keep the poaco and savo tho Union, implied a surrender of the sole vital ele ment of tho party and its platform of the very principle, in fact, upon whioh it had ju-t won tho onntcst for the Presidency ; i ,lot ""'"d, by a majority ot ttio popular ! vote tho majority was nearly a million ! "fiaHlSt It but Utltlor tllC forms of tllO Constitution. Sir, the crime, the ''high orimo" of tho Republican party was not so much its refusal to compromiic, as its original organization upon a basis and UIU UIJ1UU. But to resume: the session of Congress expired. The President elect was inau gurated ; and now, if only tho policy of uon coercion could bo maintained, and war thus averted, time would do its work in the North and the South, aud final peace able adjustment aud rcuuiou be secured, !... it..: Some time in Match it was nunouueed that the President had resolved to contin ue tho policy of his predecessor, and even go a step further, and evacuate Sumter and the other Federal forts and arscuals in Iho seceded States. His own party ac quiesced; the whole country rejuiced. Tho policy of iion-coerciou had triumphed, and for once, sir, in my life I found myself in an immense inajoiity. No man then pre tended that a Union founded in cou'-cnt could be cemented by force. Nay, more, j the President anil the Secretary of State i wont further. Sin Mr. Seward, in an1 official diplomntti: lit or t Mr. Ad.tins; "Tor those reason- ho (the Pre-ldent) would not bo disposed to reject ucardiu.il iloiina of theirs, (tho ' scros-iouitt-,) namely, that the 1'Ydcrat (loveruiuoot could not loduco Hie sotediii'i sUute- to obedieuco by i roa.pictl, although ho won ilit-posod to iiistioii that propo-itiou. Il.it in lacltlie President willingly uc- I ccpls it as true. Onlj 1111 iuiierl.il or ileipulii: Cov- i i rniiieiit I'ould subjugate thoroughly disallcf ted and j iiiMirn.-ctioii.iry members ol tin Sjtato." Pardon me, sir, but I beg to know ' whether this -conviction of tho President and his Secretary, is not tho philosophy of the persistent aud moat vigorous eilorts ' made by this administration, nnd first oi l all through this same Secretary, tho mo ment war broke out aud ever since till the late elections, to convert the United States into an imperial or despotic Government .' liut Mr. Seward adds, aud I a.reo with him : "This federal Itr publican system nf ours is, of nil . foiuis nf government, the very nue which is inoi-t un fitted for such a labor." . This, sir, was on the 10th of April, and ' yet that very day tue licet was under sail for Charleston. Tho policy of peace hud been abandoned. Collision followed; the militia were ordeied out ; civil war began. Now, sir, on tho Mth of April, I bo licved that coercion would bring on war, and war d suuion. More thuii that, I be lieved, what you all in your hearts be lieve to-day, that the South could mver be conquered never. And not that only but I was sati-fied and you of tho aboli tion party have now proved it to tho world that tlie sceiet but real nurposo of the war was to abolish slavery iu thu States. iu any uvont, t uiu not uouot mat wiiat- over might bo the momentary impulses of , ...e ..,, ' '. .. .. . . illUCU (11 JJJWU1, UUU II UttlUI Vll ni;iius LIIUJT mitrjit make in tho midst of tho fury for the Constitution, the Union, and the flag, yet the natuial aud inexorable logic of revolutions would sooner or later, dtivc them into that to icy, and with il to it li ti.il but inevitable result, the change of our present dcmocratieal form of govern ment into an imperial despotism. These wero my convictions on tho 11th of April. Had I ehaugctl them on the lo, wheu I read tho President's proclamation, aud become convinced that 1 had been wrong all my life, anil that all history was a fable, and all hum tin nature false in its development from tho beginning of time, I would havo changed my public conduct also, Rut my couviotioni did not change' I thought that if war was disun ion on tbc Mth of A pi il , it was equally disunion on tho Ifith, and at ull times. Helioving this, 1 could not, as au honest man, a Union man aud patriot, lend an active support to the war; aud I did not: 1 had rather my right arm wero plucked from its socket, nnd cast mto eternal burn inSs than, with my convictions, to havo thus defiled my soul with thu guilt of mor al perjury. Sir, I was not taught iu that school which proclaims that ''all is fair iu politios." I loathe, abhor, and detest tho excroablo maxim. I stamp upon it. No Stato can enduro a s'ui";lo generation whoso publio uion practice it. Whoever toachos it is a corrupter of youth. What wo most want in these times, aud at all times, is honest and independent publio men, That man who is dishonest in politics is not hon est at heart, in anything; and somotimos moral cowardice is dishonesty. Da right; ni d trust to God, and Truth, nnd tho Peoplo. Perish offieo, parish honors, per ish life itself; but do tho thing that is right, nnd do it liko a man, I did it, Cortaitily, sir, I could not doubt what ho must suffer who daro defy tlio opinions and and tho passsoin, not to say tho madness, of twenty millions nf peoplo. Had I not road history? i id I not know human na turu ? Hut I appealed to Time, and right nobly hath tho Avenger answered me. I did not support tho war; and to-day I bloss God that not tho smoll of so muoh as ouo drop of its blood is upon, uy garments. s-w mwjm Sir, I censure no bravo man who rushed patriotionlly into this war ; neither will I quarral with any ono, hero or elsewhere, who gavo to it nn honest support. Had their convictions been miuo, 1 too, would doubtless havo dono ns they did. Willi iuy convictions I could not. Rut I was a Representative. War cx isted by whoso act no matter uot mine. The President, the Senate, tho Housoand tho country, all said that there should be war war lor thu Union; n union of con sent and good will. Our southern breth ren wero to bo whipped back into love ami fellowship nt tho poiut of tho bayonet. Oh, monstrous delusion ! I can comprehend a war to compel a people to ncccpt a mas ter; to chauge a form of government ; to give up territory; to abolish a domestic institution in short, a war of conquost and subjugation? but.a war for Union ! Was the Union thus made? Was it ever thus preserved ? Sir, hiitory trill record that after nearly six thousand years of folly and wickedness in every form and administration of government, thcocratio, Democratic, monarchic, oligarchic, des potic, and mixed, it wus reserved to American statesmanship iu tho nineteenth ecntury of the Chiistiun era to try the ! grand experiment on a scale tho most cost- 1 ly and gigantic in its proportions, ot crea- I ting lovo by loroe, and developing trater- ' nal affection by war; and history will rc- ! cord, too, on tho same page, the utter, disastrous, nud most bloody tailitie ot the experiment. Hut to return i tho country was at war and I belonged to that school of polities which teaches that when wo arc at war he Government 1 do not mean tho Exe cutive alone, but the Government is en titled to demand nnd have, without resist ance, such number of men, and 3uch amount of money and supplies generally, as may bo nece.-sary tor tho war, until an appea' can bo bad to the people. Rtforo th.it tribunal alone, in tho first instance, limit tho question of the continuance ot the war bo tried. This was Mr. Calhoun's opinion, and ho laid it down very broadly and strongly iu a speech on tho loan bill, in ldJl. Speaking of supplies, lie 9aid : "I hold tbnt there is a ili-litn tinu in this respect be' tvvci ii a state nf pcaro and war, In Iho latter, the ri;bt of withholding supplies ought oior to behild -ul.i.r.li nnt li the nergetie and suirosslul prosecution nt the wur, 1 gofurth"r,nudro!.,ard the withholding supplies vtlh a tilio pf furexng the country into a dishonorable prtrt, as not only to bo what it h is been c.ilt.'il, mor. al treason, but very little short of actual treason itself." Upon this principle, sir, ho acted after wards in the Mexican war. Speaking of that war in 1817, no and : "Pvory iScnator knows that I was opposed to the war ; but none knows but in) i-lf tlw depth of that op position. With my conception nf its character and cousi-'iitences, it was impossible for me to vote for it." And again, iu 1818 : "Hut, after the war was declared by authority of the Oovermui'iit, 1 acpue-ced in what I could uot prevent, and which it was Impossible for me to arrest ; and then I felt it to bo my duty to limit my efforts to pivo urli diroition to the war ns would, ns far as possible, pre M'ul the CMlsaud dangers with whirh it threatened the ccuutry aud lis institutions." Sir, I adopt all this as my own position nnd my defence; though, perhaps, in a civil war, I might fnirly go further in op positiou. I could uot, with my convic tions, vote men and money for this war, and I would not, as a Representative, vote again -t them. 1 meant that, whithout op position, the President might take all the men and money ho should demand, and then to hold him to a strict accountability befo o the pcopl.5 for tho results. Not be lieving tin soldiers responsible for tho war, or in purpose, or its consequences, I havo i. ..l.l -I. ...1 .1..!. r. ' ulu , ' Ti 7r larato interests wore coucernod. Rut I have donounced from tho beginning tho usurpations and the infractions, ono and all, of law and Constitution, by tho Presi dent and those under him; their repeated and pomstcut aibittary arrests, the eus pension of hnbeus cn ;, tho violation of j freedom of the mails, of the private bouse, oi llio press and ot spcecn, anu ait ttio old or multiplied wrongs and outrages upon public liberty and privato right, which havo mado this country ono of tho worst despotisms on earth for tho past twouty months; .ind I will coutinuo to rebuke and denounce them to tho ond; and tho people thank God, have at last hcaid aud heeded, and rebuked them, too. To the record and to timo I appeal again for my justifi cation. And now, sir, 1 recur to tho stato of tho ( Union to day. What is it I Sir, twenty, months have clasped, but tho rebellion is I is not crushed out; its military power has not been broken ; tho insurgents havo not, I. . M. If ... . . 1 dispersed 'tis union is uot restored; nor the Constitution maintained ; nor tho laws enforced. Twenty, fixty, ninety, thrco huudrod, six hundred diys havo pas sed ; a thousand millions been expended ; : and three hundred thousand lives lost or j bodies mangled ; and to day the confeder ate (lag is btill near tho Potomao and tho Ohio, and tho confederate government stronger, many timosi than at the begin- 1 ning. Not a Stato has been restored, not 1 any part of any Stato has voluntarily ro-1 turned to tho Union. And has anything been wanton that Congress, or tho States, or tho peoplo in thoir most generous en-! thusiasm, their most impassioned patriot ijin, oould bestow ? Was it power I And did not the party of tho cxecutivo control tho entire Fcdoral Government, ever,) Stato govornni'jnt, overy oouuty, every city, town and illago in tho North anil t West? Was it patronage? All belonged to it. Was it influence ! What more ? Did not tho school, the college, tho church tho proas, tho seorot orders, tho municipal ity, tho corporation, railroads, telegraphs, express companies, tho voluntary nssooin tiou,nll, all yield it to tho utmost ? Was it unanimity? Novcr was an Administration so supported in Filmland or America. Ftvo men nnd half score of nowspapors mado up the opposition. Was it ontbust asm ?-lt was fanatical. Thero has boon tiothtng liko it it since tho Crusades. Wnfl it confulenoo ? Sir tho faith of the peoplo crceoded that of tho patriarch. Thoy gavo up Conititntion, law, right liberty, all at your demand for arbiiary powor that tho rebellion might, ay, you promisod, bo prushed out in thrco months and tho Union restored W.ts credit noodetl ? You took control of n country, young, vig orous, and inexhaustible 'in wealth and resources, nud of a Government almost free from publio debt, and whoso good faith bad never been tarnished. Tour great national loan bubble failed miserably, as it deserved to fail ; but tho bankers and merchants of Philadelphia, New York, and Ronton lent you more that) their entiro banking capital. And when thai failed too, you forced orcdit by declaring your paper promises to pay a legal omlcr for all debts. Was money wanted? Yoa bad all the revenues of tho United States, diminished indeed, but still in gold. Tho whole wealth of the country, to tho last dollar, lay at your feet. Private individ uals, municipal corporations, tho Stato governments, all iu their freuzy gavo you money or mean, with reckless prodigality. The groHt eastern cities lent you 8150,000 OUO.. Congress voted first, 8250,000,000, and next 5500,000,000 more in loans : and then, first, ?30,000,00p, then 510,000,000 mm 800,00(1,000, rind, in July last 8150 000,000 in Treasury notes; and iho Sec rctary has issued also a paper "postago currency," in sums as low as fivo cents, limited in amount only by his discretion. Nay, more : already siuee the -Ith of July l&Ot, this House has appropriated 82,017 90 1 000, almost every dollar without debate, and without a recorded vote. A thousand millions havo been expended since the 15th of April, 1801; and a public debt or liability of SI ,500,000,000 already incurred. And to support all this stupendous outlay and indebtedness, a system of taxation, direct and indirect, has been inaugurated, the most oneroua and unjust ever imposed upon any but a oonqucred people, Money and credit, then, you havo hae in prodigal profusion. Aud were men wanted ? More than a million rushed to' arms.' Seventy fivo thonstinrl flrk fnmi the country stood aghast at tho multitude,) then eighty thrco thousaud more wero domauded ; and thrco hundred and ten thousand responded to tho call. Tho President nexi asked for four hundred thousand, and, Congress, in its generous confidence, gave him fivo hundred thou sand ; and, not to be outdone, lie took six hundred and thirty seven thousand I Half of these melted away in their tirsl campaign; and tho President de.nandcd three hun dred thousand more for the war, and then drafted yet another three hundred thou sand for nine month. Tho fabled hosts of Xerxes bavo been oiittiiimrinrnri Ami' yet victory strangely follows tho standard f ,l.. r . ti . . ..... . ... oi uiu loe, rrom ureat JJetliei to vtcks burg, tho batcle has not been to tho strong. Yet every disaster, except tho last, has bi?en followed by a call for more troops, and ovcry timo so far they havo been promptly furnished. From tho beginning tbc war has been conducted like a political campaign, and it has been the folly of the, party in powor that they have assumod that numbers alono would win tho field in a contest not with ballots but with musket and sword. Rut numbers you have had almost without number the largest, best appointed, be.-t armed, fed, aud clad host of brave men, well organized and well disciplined, ever marshaled. A Navy, too, not tho most formidable perhaps, but tho most numerous and gaiiaut, and tho costli est in the world, and against a foe almost without a navy at all. Thus with twenty millions of peoplo, and every clement of strength and forco at command power patronage influenco, unanimity, eulhusi nsm, coufidenco, credit, money, men, an Army and a Navy tho largest and tho noblest ever set iu tho field or afloat upon the sea ; with the support, almost servile, of every Stato, county, and municipality in the North and West ; with a Uongrcis swift to do the bidding of tho Executive; without opposition anywhere at home, and with an aibitary p wer which ueither tho Czar of Russia nor tho Kmperor of Austria daro exercise; yet after neatly two years or more vigoious r.tosocuto'in of thenar than oror recorded in history ; after tnoro skirmishes, combats aud battles than Alex ander, Cicsar, or tho first Napoleon ever fought in any five years of their military career, you have utterly, signally, disas. trously I wi 1 not say ignominiou ly failed to bubdue tcu millions of "rebels" whom you had taught tho peoplo oftho North and West uot only to hate but to despise. Rebels, did I say ? Yes, your fathers were rebels, or your grandfathers. Ho who now beforo mo on canvas looks down io sadly upon us, the faho, tfconor nto, and iinbecilo gunrdians of tho great Repub io which ho founded, was a rebel. And yet wo, cradled ourselves in rebellion nnd who havo fostered and fraternized with every insurrection in tho u'meteonth eeutury evory wboro throughout tho globe, would uow, forsooth, maRo thu word "rebel" a reproach. Rebels certainly they arc; but all tho persistent and stu pendous efforts oftho most gigantio warfaro olinovdcrn times havo, th-ough your in competency and folly, availed nothing to crush them out, cut off though thoy havu been by blockndo from a, I tho world, and depondent only upon their own oourago and resources' And yet thoy woro to ba utterly conquered and subdued in six'weoks'