T '7 " y .-"N.: r r-s . " " ' ' ' - ' - - -- t . : ; . BY S. B. KOW. CLEARFIELD, PA., AVEDIESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 2, 1860. VOL. 7.-T0. 3. POLITICAL ISSUES OF THE DAY. ADDRESS OF HON. CHAS. FRANCIS ADAMS, OF MASSACHUSETTS. We publish in full tbespeechof Hon. Chas.Fran cU Adams, delivered before an immense meeting of the friends of Freedom and Protection at Phil adelphia on the 23th Aug.. and ask for it a careful perusal by every voter, into whose hands it may come. .Air. Adams is the son of Johs Qlincy Ad ams, and in point of literary ability ranks fore most among the "shining lights" of our "literary republic." Mr. Adams, on being introduced, was received with prolonged cheering, after which he gpoke as follows : I presume that I address the citizens of a place claiming to be the most conservative city in America. By the word "conservative" I mean adverse to"cbange,and most particular ly unwilling to favor any movement which seems likely to unsettle the established ideas and the customary social and political relations which time has sanctioned, and habit has ren dered familiar to all. "Conservative." There Is much virtne in that word. Although com ing from a diflerent and a more excitable com munity, I think that I, too, may claim to be conservative. I, too, am averse to change ; 1, too, am very unwilling to unsettle anything that is established on good and sufficient foun dations. I even desire to preserve much that is called old, merely because it is old. For that reason, when I am home I prefer to live in an old house, rather than to build a new one. Not that I think it the best, or the hand somest, or the most convenient, for in all these lespects I well know that it is vastly inferior to modern constructions, but solely becanse it is old, and because my fathers lived there be fore me. If I choose to put up with the inconvenien ces of small rooms, or narrow windows, or un even floors, for the sake of long habit and pleasant association of ideas, I do not know why any one has a right to find fanlt. Even if there were no other reason whatever, it is enough that I like it and do not care to change, to justify me in my choice. To this extent it Keeins to me wise and proper to be conserva tive. Hence, if I apply this reasoning to mat ters of government, I should say that I am per fectly satisfied with the Union and the federal Constitution, with existing State, and city and other municipal organizations, and do not, therefore, want to make a change. Nay, I would go lurther, and say, that I do not care to lavor any plan which should appear to threaten or to disturb the useful tenor of their operations. This is what I call sound, conser vative, national doctrine. I suppose you to approve of it with me, so that to this extent we may be said to be quite agreed. So far, so good. But now suppose we go a step forward. ' Let us assume that in course of time something turns up that, if not attended to in season, threatens to make very serious changes for the worse, in the old system to which we are attached. Supposing, in my old house, for example, I discover the dry-iot beginning in the timbers, or that my foundation" is starting a little, or perhaps my neighbor is building to shut cut my light, or that he is setting up a business that affects the purity of the air ; sup posing that Le undertakes to keep thousands of hops in a place so near that I have the stench in my rot ms at all times of the day and night. What am I to do then ? Must I be conservative here too? Must I make np my mind that I had better bear all this than make any noise about it ? Must I insist on liking this change, and calling it excellent, for fear, if I complain or resist, that I may make my neighbor cross or violent, and . that he may threaten to burn his house down in order that mine may catch fire and burn down too Per haps this might bo considered the conserva tive course too. But if that is what you call conservative, I certainly cannot agree with you any more. Here I am no longer conservative. I should call such a course lolly, if not down right madness. My notion would be to act at once yes to remonstrate, to resist, and if ab solutely indispensable, to change altogether. The true conservative policy in such a case Is not submission, but reform. Something that will restore to me the advantages of my old way of life. Something that will prevent me from suffering by a most unpleasant change. Fellow citizens If 1 now apply the sime sort of reasoning to the present condition of our political aflairs, you will see at once where I am coming ont. The time has arrived for us to look caretully into the condition of our federal government. If we have reason to suspect that a sort of dry rot is creeping into the timbers, and a moral stench is spreading so as to infect the air we breathe, then the ques tion arises whether it be conservative to let it go on without any hindrance or attempt at prevention 5 or whether it be not the really wise course to set about a plan of prevention, o that we may continue to enjoy life as we have done. In other words, ourduty is now re form. We must be up and abate the nuisance. We must look sharply into the causes that make the trouble, and, if possible, put an end to them before matters grow any worse. Not a moment is to be lost. If we act at all we must act now, right off, without an instant's delay. . Is there anybody here that denies the fact that some action is indispensable? I know of nobody, unless it be the office-holders, and their friends all over the country, who consider themselves personally benefited by keeping things as they are. With this excep tion, whatever else we differ about, all, at least in the free States, and very many in the slave States, agree on this point. Dissatisfaction with the existing administration of the Gen eral Government is general, it not universal. Look for a moment at the various political or ganizations that have sprung np in this canvass for the Presidency. All but one of the four, and that one apparently composed of office holders, insist upon reform. At least two-thirds of w hat was lately the Democratic party in the free States are as loudmouthed about this as aDy one. They de clare their want of confidence ic Mr. Buchau an and his adherents, and their conviction of necessity for reform that is, a thorough change of men and measures. The friends of Mr. Bell in other words, the remains of the old Whig party say just the same; and the Republicans are more emphatic than cither on that point. There has not been so much una nimity of sentiment on any one subject in pol itics tor thirty years, since the time of-the second election of James Monroe. It stands , o reason, then, that there must be very strong - r"ndfor such a singular result. ' r . This universal conviction among persons not 5a agreement about anything else, goes to prove that not only are there great abuses in the. Government, but that there is an absolute necessity ror immediate measures of correc tion. This, then, is not a time for folding our nanas, or standing aside, and calling it conser vatism. No. In this case true conservatism is change. It is reform. It is the restoration of the old, by cutting out without hesitation the. material that is rotten or diseased, and putting in its place what is sound and new. Having settled this among ourselves, having agreed that our present duty, is reform, the next subject to consider is the best and most practicable way to get at it. And here it is necessary to remind you that no reform can be really effective which is not carried into exe cution by vigorous and capable hands. It will not do to trust the operation to the feeble or the incompetent. There must not only be ca pacity in the agents, but there must also be corresponding strength in the popular con fidence to sustain them. We all of us very well know that a single man, let him be ever so well fitted for the task, could of himself do nothing. He must have support and co-ope-raiion on the part of others. Aud just in the proportion that these others are strong enough and numerous enough to constitute what is called popular opinion, will be the probability of establishing some system that may be use ful and permanent' To expect of a small party organization, even supposing that acci dent should make it possible to try, that it should succeed in executing any distinctive policy of its own, would be unreasonable, if not positively absurd. Such a serious thing as reform cannot be confined within the circle of the Executive department. The spirit that animates it roust be spread among the people at large, and among their representatives everywhere. Especially must it predominate in both branches of the Legis lature. We all know that everything like the cutting oil of abuses must meet with dogged and steady opposition Irotu those classes the most subject to be affected by it. They will set heaven and earth in motion to resist the movement from step to step. They will resort to the thousand and one expedients to raise jealousies and disseminate distrust, which are touiia bo etlectual in bunging to nought the best conceived enterprises. In order to over bear all this resistance, and make it of no ef fect, there is a necessity for a united and com pact association of the common strength. Men must be combined into a political party, acting together for the securing of common objects. They must understand, and have con fidence in one another. They must have a bead to devise as well as hands to execute, and multitudes to confirm. Without the pres ence of all these elements, no real movement under a popular form of gevernment is likely to teiminate in good. Without harmony and union of numbers there can be no satisfying popular opinion. Hence the inexpediency at all times of inaugurating any 'kind of novel policy in a government where there is not a large array of people prepared to accept and maintain it. Now, let me ask of yon, if you really be lieve such a reform necessary at this. time, where will you look for the requisite agency to execute it? You must find some popular organization or other to act with, or you will do nothing at all. You have got to select your instruments: you have got to elevate your candidates for high places in tho Govern ment, before you can begin to hope to do any good. Who shall they be ? That is the ques tion. In order to arrive at some conclusion, let us consider w hat state of things it is that we have before us. I have already alluded to the fact that we have four distinct forms of popular organiza tion in the present canvass for the Preidency. You all know them well enough to save me the need of much explanation. There is the party supporting Mr. Breckinridge, and that supporting Mr. Douglas. These are the frag ments of the former Democratic party, but now opposing each other with more vehe mence than they do their old adversaries. Then there is the party of Mr. Bell, composed, as I said before, almost exclusively of old Whigs.- And lastly, there is the Republican party, which presents Mr. Abraham Lincoln. One thing is here worthy of notice and that is, that it is universally acknowledged to be true, that but one of these four parties stands the smallest chance of success in electing its candidate by the popular vote. The very best that the three others can hopj for is to gain e lectoral votes enough to defeat any choice at all. By this means, as you all know, the elec tion of i President would be transferred by the Constitution to tho House of Representatives. Here it is well known that one out of the four must be shut out. The Constitution confines the selection between those three having the highest number of votes; and at the proper time the House must proceed to elect one on of three. Of these three, nobody doubts that Mr. Lincoln would be one. But who the two others may be I think nobody at this moment is ready to predict with confidence. The pre vailing opinion now is, that it would be Messrs. Breckinridge and Bell, and that Mr. Douglas would be shut out. Let us, for the sake ot ar gument, suppose that this is so, and that the candidates are Messrs. Lincoln, Breckinridge and Bell. Which of these would you select with any hope of executing your project of ne cessary reform ? Very certainly it would not be Mr. Breckinridge, lor he is tho only one of all the candidates who is whollv asainst re form. He thinks things well enough as they stand. He is supported by all the office-holders under whom the abuses complained of have been tolerated. He is the candidate of Mr. Buchanan, who has not deemed it unbecoming the dignity of his office to come forward and advocate the election of his successor. Of course, if you vote for Mr. Breckinridge you vote in effect to approve tho policy of the very Administration which it is so universally deem ed indispensable to condemn. Of course, then, if you are honestly a reformer. Mr. Breckin ridge cannot be your choice. Very certainly you would -not select Mr. Bell. For though his will might be good enough, to execute a re form, it is very plain that the basis of his pop ular support would not be.in any way commen surate with its successful execution. We all know the precise extent of the co-operating power on which he could rely In the legislative department as at present constituted. We all know that in the Senate ; he w ou Id hare just two friends out of the sixty-six members, and one of these he is certain to lose next year ; and in the House he might get as many as twenty-tour out of two hundred and thirty Rep resentatives.' - Now, 1 ask you', as men 6f sense, what sort of an administration would you be likely to bare, so iar as any certainty of a def inite policy of reform is concerned, with such a basis of popular confidence as is 6hown here ? But let us change the programme again, and suppose Mr. Bell to be the candidate, shut ous oi me uouse by the Constitution, and Mr. Douglas to come in in his place, as one of the three highest candidates. Is Mr. Douglas any more promising agent of reform ? : Not a bit. In the Senate of the United States be has but a single friend, and he is certain to lose him next year; whilst in the House the number of his friends can scarcely be said to exceed twenty. It would seem then that, so far as effective assistance in the great work is concerned, there is little to choose between these two. Each of them is equally powerless iu tuuuuiiuig me means ot executing n is de signs. . Then, again, you should call to mind the circumstances under which the election of either of these candidates would be made. He must be chosen by the House of Representa tives. That is to say,you will, with your eyes open, put either Mr. Bell or Mr. Douglas into that body, to take his chances against Mr. Lincoln. Jn other words, you will set one candidate lor reform against another, with no expectation of electing your friend, excepting by the aid of the adherents of Mr. Breckin ridge, who are known to be totally opposed to reform. I shall not now enlarge upon the dan gers to which the country will be exposed by the process of an election in the House, nor upon the opening it would make to all sorts of intrigue, and to coruption even worse than any we are trying to break up. The time has been when many of the wor'hy and respecta. ble citizens who seem now to look with com placency upon the possibility of squeezing Mr. cell into such a scene, were among t! loudest to deprecate the happening of any such contingency, and to exhort their fellow citizens not to throw away their votes, which could elect a good . candidate, in the wild ex pectation of helping the cause of some third person who could not be chosen. I remember that was the talk in 1844, when we were many of us engaged in the advocacy of Henry Clay against Mr. James K. Polk. I remember that at that time 1 did what 1 could, within the range of my feeble powers, to pre sent that doctrine to the minds of those who were leaning to the support of a third candi date. 1 remember also, that many of them persevered in their policy ; and that through their action Mr. Clay was defeated, and Mr. Polk -was finally elected. And the' issue of that election, and its effect upon the subse quent policy of the country, we all know. Just so it may again be now, supposing any friends of reform to vote for Mr. Bell or for Mr. Douglas, well knowing that the election of either of them by the people is utterly out of the question, but hoping that by some sort of legerdemain, by hook or by crook , if the elec tion can be defeated by the people, and they can 'go into the House "of Representatives, one or the other of them will succeed there. How is he to do it excepting through the votes of the Administration States; friends of Mr. Breckinridge? Surely the Republicans will not abandon their strong ground. It would be unieasonable to expect so large a party to move a foot from the position they occupy as the true friends of reform. To trade or to barter or to higgle for votes at the expense of their principles, would at once shatter the confidence in their honesty, which is their only solid ba sis of support. But if there can be little hope in that quarter, then these reformers must go to their opponents, to those who uphold the present administration, to those who have been giving contenance to, if they have not them selves been actively engaged in, the very abu ses which it is the object of all honest men to correct. Of course it follows that any combi nation made with these persons that - will se cure the election ot either of the candidates can only be made by a surrender, or at least a compromise ot the hostility which should ani mate them against the commission of wrong by them. Need I add that an election alone would not be enough ? It would be absolutely indispensable to a person chosen to have some basis broad enough to rest his administration upon. That basis must be made ot those who vote for him. It will then happen that the very class of people who are now held respon sible for their misdeeds must be continued in office to contend with a Republican opposition not disposed to qualify, or compromise or tol erate the wrong doers. In other words, there would be no change, no reform at all, and the work would yet remain to be done at some fu ture election. If I have mademyself understood,then I think you will see that the only way by which we can hope to gain a real good in the election is by effecting a choice by the popular vote, in the first instance. And this can only be done by uuiting heartily in the support of Abraham Lincoln. We all know that this canvass dif fers in its nature from any preceding one for twenty five years past. We all know that if Abraham Lincoln be not elected by the peo ple, there is no probability that anybody else will be. It is for us to determine whether he shall be President by our votes, or whether somcbod' else whom we may not desire shall have a chance to wriggle through the Iiouse of Representatives. This is the true ques tion: and if you are really the friends of .re form which you proless to be, th only way o pen to your success is through the elevation ot Abraham Lincoln and of his friends, who, with your aid, are numeeous enough, and de termined enough to carry their point, in the face of all the resistance that can be combined into opposition. - . ' " But, independently of all considerations con nected with the practicability of executing any movement of reform w hatever, there is anoth er and potent reason why the selection of A braham Lincoln as the agent is absolutely an imperative duty. A reform, to be in any way beneficial, must be searching and thorough. It must go down to the very root of the mat ter. Now, however much the professiouamay j be sounded abroad from the otherparties, there ! are reasons connected with the nature of their position and alliance which ' render it hardly reasonable to anticipate from them any very energetic effort to probe the abuses of the pres ent government to the core. It is the Repub lican party alone which declares its wish to ex-1 pose the influence which the Advocates of sla very exert in introducing and perpetuating these abuses in the General Government.. It is here that the real trouble is to be found. ; If any of you have a doubt of this, let him look at tho evidence in the Covode investigation, article Lecompton. Then he will see what stavery has to do with corruption. Everything else is merely superficial The true evil is to be found in the fact that the alaveholding in terest has been driven to the expedient of at tempting to bribe the people of the free States wun meir own money in order to maintain it sen m the control of the government., That it the solemn truth, and the history of the Le compton Btruggle proves it beyond contradic tion. . . : ? And here I must ston to sav a fw wnrd a. bout this matter of slavery- , I know very well that in this city there are a great many people who dislike to meddle with it, and who honest ly believe that if all of us would only consent to stop talking about it, and to shut, our eyes so as not to see it, then the country would be perfectly happy. To all such persons 1 have only to say this in answer : . There are some things which men can do, and it is right and proper in all such cases for them to try. Suc cess will, perhaps, compensate for the exer tion. But whenever they undertake to con trol a power that is entirely beyond their reach, then they aro wasting both their time and . pains. They may as well give it up first as last, lor anybody to insist that an evil does not exist, when everybody, knows that it does, is pure folly. If my neighbor's house is burning, and the flames are already throwing their red glare into my windows, of what use is it to me to shut my eyes and say there is no fire ? Will that save my house ? If a heavy flood i covering the roofs of the smaller tene ments around mine, and is rapidly rising to my third story, how will it benefit me to keep my eyes fixed straight up in the sky, and say that there is no rain ? Will such a coursejstay the water ? For my part, I consider it proof of great feebleness of character to insist upon ignoring the pressure of an evil, because it is unpleasant to be forced to think of a remedy : to suffer it to grow without molestation, be cause any attempt to check it may be attended with difficulty. It has been very clear to my eyes for many years, that this subject of slave ry in America has got to be met by the people of the United States sooner or later that there is no way to escape its baneful influence, and that the only thing left for us is to take right hold of it, examine it calmly, quietly, in a statesmanlike manner, to fix its relations to the government of the country at the minimum rate of its disturbing force, and there to keep it for the future forever. I do not believe in tho wisdom of the policy that has been adopt ed along back, which is, to let, it have its full swing, under the pretence that it is the safest plan to let it entirely alone. 1 do not believe it is right to pretend that it does not gain strength in the Federal Government, when we see with our eyes how completely the Senate, the President and the Supreme Court are con trolled by it. I do not believe in the proprie ty of holding still about the attempt to saddle upon us a wicked policy, because if we do not, we may run the risk of driving the slavehold ing States to desperate and suicidal extremes. My notion may be wrong, but I hold it from conviction, that the way to deal with this mat ter is in no respect different from that which commou sense teaches us to deal with every other critical question in life that is, to ex amine it patiently, firmly, boWly, and, after a full and satisfactory investigation of its politi cal bearings, and of the bad effects it may pro duce to us, as a nation, to adopt and to exe cute a plan of counteraction, in no bad spirit, but purely to save the whole country from be ing unnecessarily and injuriously affected by a thing which ought to be strictly confined with in the limits in which it actually exists. In my mind this is, or ought to be always known as a Government favorable to human freedom ; and so far as any influence or any exertion that may be able to use is concerned, however eble that is, it will remain such. And when ever the institution of slavery appears to mo to be endeavoring to undermine the policy of the Government, so as to turn it against free dom and for slavery, I shall take a citizen's liberty to speak out about it, just the same as I should about any other doctrine or policy that I hold to be mischievous or dangerous to the public good. - Isoxr let me go back a moment to where 1 first touched this matter of slavery. I was saying that no reform could be at all thorough in the General Government which did not be gin by changing the spirit in which it was ad- mimistered, in connection with this particular Interest. Nobody who is not willing to blind his eyes and to close his ears to w hat has been going on during the last eight years can fail to understand the use that has been made of the Federal authority to the maintenance and extension of the slave power in that time. We all know well enough how the last Admin istration acted after the repeal of the Missouri Compromise in favoring the various desperate attempts to force a slaveholding Government upon the free lerritory ot Kansas. iDese facts have gone into history, and are beyond the possibility of contradiction. So we all know how assiduously the present Administra tion continued and enlarged that policy by the abuse of its influence over members of Congress from the free States in the case ot he Lecompton Constitution and the English bill, as well as bv its indefatigable exertions to palm off the extra-judicial opinions of a slaveholding bench of Judges of the Supreme Court in the Dred Scott case upon the country as being established and recognised by law. We all remember this. We all feel the use that has been made of the Executive authority in these cases, to discourage the doctrines of liberty and to extend the influence of slavery. Now maintain that this sort of action should be all of it reformed by the voice of the people. t is all wrong from the beginning and ought o be made right. But nobody will be likely re ally to make it right, unless it be Abraham Lin coln and his. friends in the Republican party. Mr. Bell certainly will not, and Mr. Douglas. f we are to judge by the submission to take any slaveholding decree that the same judges may hereafter make, and an ultra slaveholding candidate for Vice President on his back in advance, will not be likely to get very fat. 1 here is, then, no other cnoice for the true believers in reform. All efforts made in any other direction will be in a great measure was ted.: If you honestly mean to restore free dom as the rule of action for a government professing to be founded on the principles of he Declaration of Indepedence, Lincoln is your man. ' Even in the secondary light of money trans actions, let us now bee the' connection which slavery has had in fostering the corrupt prac tices of the present government. I do not know whether yon have been made fully : a ware of the fact, which appeals tolerablytwell established -by. the testimony given before the Covode Investigating Committee of Congress, that the. people's, money yes, your juoney and my moneywhich, we give exclusively for the purpose of paying the ordinary expenses Of the Federal system, has been constantly and persoveringly directed Into '. particular cnannels called contracts, by means of which snch great profits have been given to particu lar persons, as to enable them to devote large sums to the object of sustaining presses, and seenring the election to Congress of represen tatives in the free States who will justify and defend any and everything which the slave holding party may require. Nay even more than this. Your money and my money has been used without scruple to sow the seeds of division and discord among ourselves to such a degree, that even though a large majority may desire to effeet some useful and perma nent reform, we shall be sure to fail in doing anything at all, because we do not agree in our choice of the agents through whom to execute it. This was the policy of 1853, when the friends of Mr. Fillmore, in their innocent sim plicity, were led directly into the Democratic trap, baited with the principles of Native A mericanism. The division then fostered in this very city and county of Philadelphia was the real cause of the failure at that election of the movement for reform, and of the corrupt practices which have been since exposed. Bat, although the evidence' of this truth is sufficiently displayed, the same agencies are once more at work, in hope of once more ef fecting the same object. In the free States at least the name of Mr. Bell is held forth solely for the purpose of division and the con tinuation of tho corrupting slaveholding su premacy in the general government. And hostile as the same authority has ' shown itself to the success of Mr. Douglas, it is not averse to the use of Buch power as he may ac quire in the free States,by catching votes un der a separate organization for a delusive doc trine, to the end of dividing and weakening and destroying the movement for reform. Divide et impera was a maxim of ambitious leaders thousands of years ago. Divide and rule by dividing your opponents is the instinctiv e lesson of a great political association now. , Fellow citizens : I address you in the words of sad and serious soberness, without exagge ration, and without an attempt to appeal to your passions. - Are yon seriously and truly discontented with the course of the present rolling power at Washington ? Do you believe that it has squandered your money .abused your power and perverted your principles for the sake of sustaining a policy which your con science and your reason unite in pronouncing to be wholly unjustifiable ? Do you entertain a hope that something may be done to rescue the reputation of the country now notoriously discredited in the eyes of the world by the mortifying disclosures of the last few years ? Do you really believe in the truth of the dec larations made by yonr ancestors, that there is such a thing as human liberty, too sacred to be touched by any tyrannical hand ; that there is such a thing as government intended to protect human rights and not destroy them ; that there is snch a thing as love, the exponent of benevolence in construing the privileges of mankind ; that, in fine, there is such a thing as downright, independent honesty, without which no forms of authority can be anything but a mockery ? I say, fellow citizens, do you believe in all these things ? Then tho hour for you to be up and doing is wou?. The way is open. Unite with the only association of men who have it in their power, and who like wise desire to effect your object. Declare for the party of reform. The honest men of A merica constitute an immense majority of the population. The only thing needed at this time is that they should unite to dictate a pol icy, and to name the men to execute it, and the honor of the country may yet be redeem ed. We may again be what we once were, proud of the work of our hands, because it is good. - Fellow citizens : I come not here before you to praise particular men, or to censure others. I never was, in my youth, a hero worshipper, neither do I feel disposed to be come bo at my present time of life. My pres ence is rather to analyze the principles that move the action of great political combina tions of men, than to dwell upon the mSrits or demerits of single individuals. Yet I cannot forget the importance of selecting suitable agents to carry out even the best purposes. I acknowledge the necessity of explaining the reasons for my confidence in the candidates I support, as well for my faith in the principles profess. With Mr." Lincoln I have never had the opportunity of a personal acquaint ance. I cannot, therelore, speak ot him Irom knowledge.' But I have taken some pains to inform myself, by reading his published speeches, and by inquiry from persons who know - him familiarly. And the result of my reflections is this. I think that his dis cussion in 1858, with Mr. Douglas, shows him to advantage as a better logician and a sound er statesman, whilst he is incomparably su perior in one great province of political duty 1 mean in tracing the connection between the higher law of pure morality with the obli gations of public life. From the character of his argument I should infer that he was a man of ability and still more, that he was a man of integrity. Whatever else there may be in a party of reform, one thing we must have, and that is, an honest . man, an incorruptible man, an independent man. Such a man the testimony of all my witnesses unites in repre senting him to be. That is the man for the present emergency. . I believe that we may safely trust him. But let the intentions of the person for whom we vote be what they may, it should be recollected that his ability o execute them must, after all, depend upon the degree in which he is supported by the popular view. I do not conceal irom myself that, if elected, Mr. Lincoln is destined, in all probability, to serious trials of his firmness as well as of his energies. Whatever these may be, his best action will gain prodigiously n force from the knowledge that he enters up on his duties as tho representative of an over whelming mass of public sentiment. Especi ally is this essential, because from the necessi- tv of the case he must, at nrst at least, look for his support mainly in the free States of the Union. - - - ' " We all know that there exists In the slave- holding States a species ef despotism which renders even the expression of an opinion ad verse to its supremacy somewhat dangerous." And -this despotism andc kes to deny the right of .any.pne there to advocate or support Mr. Lincoln. The. proper remedy lor this is ime for the development of his policy.' Rest- ng upon the broad basis ot the confidence or a very large number of the voting population thin cnuA if tima f an hA affitrdml in him : and .' nnnnrMihitir nrtll t.a irlvnn tn hnw that. hnWAT. I er. thorough tne reform; it mil f ettectea oy i legitimate means, and only for legitimate ends. Having no right to complain, the resistance of the violent men in the slaveholding States wjll lose its popular force ; and the threats or se cession and disunion will do injury, only to those who make them. This process of men ace has been carried on so incessantly for years back, to deter us from doing our plain duty to the country and ourselves, that I, for one, am thoroughly tired of it. I do not believe it will be sustained by the sober aud sound sense of the quiet citizens of the South. We have hu mored and indulged it so long, and given way so constantly to the sacrifice of our own con victions of right, without producing the small est effect in putting a stop to it, that it seems to me expedient now to try the other way for once. Let ns do light. Let us insist upon re form in the policy ot the general government exclusively within the sphere in which we havo the most uoquestionable privik-ge to exercise the authority vested in a constitutional major ity of the people, and then let us see who will be so unreasonable as to call our action Into question by a resort to suicidal measures. It is said to be a custom with the Japanese- that when a man imagines himself to have been af fronted by another, he does not call that other to account, but straightway proceed? to rip up his own bowels, and thus put an end to bim self. So it maybe, indeed, with the' good people ot the slave States. .They may choose to kill themselves purely to spite us. But I do not believe it; I have too good an opinion of their common sense. Theyareimpulsive.it is true, but they are by no means idiots. They have demagogues who go about talking non sense, inertly to excite men's passions, as well as we. But the great body of the citizens I believe to be perfectly sound ; and if convinc ed that the majority seek only to reinstate in the government the very same principles upon which it was originally started, under the di rection of George Washington, they will disa vow all treasonable counsels, and consent to share in the blessings which, under our happy system, all parts of this magnificent country equally enjoy. It remains, then, to bo seen, whether the honest and independent voters of the United States are so far convinced of the responsibility pressing upon them at this cri sis as to unite together to reform the Govern ment, and to give stability to a liberal Admin istration. The question is between order and system, as prefigured by the elevation of Lin coln, and intrigue, confusion, weakness and discord amoug a batch of competing candi dates, not one of whom has the confidence of any large portion of the people. Choose ye, then, under which banner you will enlist. Can I permit myself to doubt which it will bo? If I did, I should be insulting your understand ing, not less than denying your patriotism. Let us suppose for a moment that Mr. Breck in ridge could be elected. - now are you going to gain by that Mr. Breckinridge is the can didate of the extreme, wing of the slavehol ding, secession disunion people in the South ern States: the same men.who threatened last winter that they would prevent a Speaker from being elected by a plurality, even though they knew that success in such apian might bring on a dissolution of the government ; tlie s.ima men who talked the rankest treasonable talk all the season about what they would do if the people of these States should elect certain persons to the Presidency whom tbey did not like. I am very well aware of the fact that Mr. Breckinridge himself has disavowed all sympathy with such doctrines by the earnest ness with which he has reiterated his devotion to the Union. But it is always well in similar cases to extend our view a little beyond the mere incident of the election. We aro bound to bear in mind when we vote for a candidate, the precise position in which ho may be pla ced alter he is chosen who are bis friends and advisers, and what his policy will be. Obvi ously Mr. Breckinridge can find these only in the quarter where he will have been sustained before he is chosen. We have then a right to presume that his administration will be simply an aggravated form of the present one. ' We have then a right to presume that the cardinal principle of it will be tho perpetuation, the protection and the extension of slavery the fortification of the political doctrines proclaim ed In the Supreme Court by tho decision on Dred Scott ; and I do not hesitate to declare it, as my own opinion, that an early measure will be the retraction of the policy of the country on the abolition of. the slave trade. All this I say is unavoidable, whatever may be the personal feelings of Breckinridge : if ho succeeds as the candidate of the extreme par ty of the slaveholders. He must go with bis 1 friends or be can do. nothing. He must be the exponent oi ine exireine opinions, or no win be at the mercy of his opponents, and his ad ministration wili come to an end as lamentable as the present one has done. In the mean time the country will gain no respite from the agitation which has so long disturbed It, For you may rest assured that so long as the old principles of human liberty are not recog nized as the rule of action in the general gov ernment, just so long will there be an Opposi tion that will leave nothing undone - within its legitimate sphere to affect a peacef nl and per manent establishment of its policy.' With, this power victory is only a question of time. As to the scheme of presenting Mr. Bell, with the idea of reinstating the old Whig notions, I must bo permitted to say that I re-, gard it as almost exclusively designed in the freo States, to maintain and uphold the exis ting authority in the Federal government.-'It is aimed as a blow at the Republican -move-, ment, by dividing the sentiment which ought to animate the free States. The proof ot this, is found in the way that it has been tolerated by the friends of the other candidates oppos ed to Mr. Lincoln. They all understand tho fatuity of the idea of restoring a defunct par ty. As well .might you undertake to push back the current of the Mississippi ? As well might you pretend that you would place a statue on the eternally frozen apex ot Chim borazo! No man, with the smallest concep tion of what belongs'to the character of a statesman, will presume: to affirm that can have been a nomination made in good faith, which is made without any regard to the ques tions that really agitate the nation,' and which is based upon principles that not a handful of men can be found in America to dispute. 'If Mr. Bell could by any possibility be elected, the first thing ho would have to do would be to fake his side on present questions between the two, and the only two parties-really based upon existing conflicts of opinion. .Without the co-operation bf one or the other' of these two parties, he could cot carry on the govern- Blent ft Weekl ,W all knOW that,' Who snow Concluded on fourth fa, I It y i ! '. . I!;: i i