UL ;t 1 if? V HI 1! BY S. X ROW. CLEARFIELD, PA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1866. VOL 12.-NO. 40. li-SM SPEECH OP O. "W. SCOFIELD ftp PENNSYLVANIA, HOIST. In the House of Representatives, April 23, 1866. Thm House, as in Committee of the Whole on iJ oY!b."nU haying under oondera rion the President's annual message- . Afr'SpuAKEE: What is the whole amount of disloyal population in the Southern States? I do QOt inclu(Je m thi3 inquiry Arsons who have been stigmatized as "sym pathizers" or. "copperheads." much less L other portion of the Democratic party, but only those who sought to divide the country into two republics and who now re mt the failure of their enterprise. The whole amount of white population in the Seven Confederate States is 5 097,524. De ducting from this amount the estimated number of loyal people in those States and addine the disloyal scattered through the ther five slave Scates, will give the answer to my question. .Making this deduct ion aud addition from the most reliable data within my reach, I conclude that the disy a nwuliiti.in in the whole South will not exceid, it indeed it will equal, five million '"ifthe eleven Confederate States were re admitted now (the Constitution and laws remaining unamended) what aaiount of rep resentation in Congress and the Electoral College would this five million be entitled to claim ? They would certainly have these eleven States. There could hardly be a doubt about Kentucky. For if the loyal juen of that State, sustained by the power of the Federal army and the persuasion of Federal patronage, with the young disu nionists absent in the South and the old ones disfranchised at home, could scarcely hild their own, what could we expect them to do when these young men have returned, the disfranchising laws have been swept away, the army removed or palsied by or ders, and Federal patronage at least uncer tain? This would give them twenty-four Senators. There are four more States that belonged to the slaveholding class, Delaware, Maryland, Went Virginia. and Missouri. Is it any stret h of probabilities to suppose that two more Senators will be picked up somewhere in these four States by the Con federate clement? I fear there will be more. This will sive them twenty six Sen jtorsk - . '. In the House of Representatives this population will have as large, if not larger, proportionate representation. By the ap portionment of 1861. fifty-eight Represent atives were asMgned to the eleven Confed erate States. These States will be so dis tricted by the hostile sentiment of their sev eral Legislatures that not one true Union man can be elected. To the other five slave holding States twenty-six were assigned by the act of 1S61. If any one will take the trouble to look over these districts, I think lie will come to the conclusion that even if the laws disfranchising rebels in Maryland, West Virginia, and Missouri remain in force, not less than half of these will be controlled by the influence and votes of the late secessionists. This gives them seventy one Representatives in the House. But tven this large number must soon be in creased. The two-fifths of the four million freeduien which were not counted in the representative basis of the last census must be counted in the census of 1870, and (other things remaining the same) add to that number thirteen members more ; so that the five million disloyal population, as soon as their full power can be felt through the elections, will have at least twenty-six Senators and eighty-four Representatives and one hundred and ten votes in the Elec toral College. This is a low calculation. When we consider the earnestness, or rath er I should say the fierceness of these peo ple, the ability, ambition, and courage of their leaders, we may well apprehend that the number will be even greater. But this number is their own legitimate and certain under the laws as they stand. Supposing the entire population of the United States to be thirty five million now, this fire mil lion will be just one seventh of the whole,' but will have more than one third the rep resentation in both Houses of Congress, and more than one third of the Electoral Col lege. The same amount of loyal population at the North is represented by only about half that number. If by factions or party divisions among the loyalists of the country, they could contrive to secure one-sixth more of the representation, they would have a majority of the whole, and be able to con trol Federal legislation, elect the President, and distribute his patronage. When these States are admitted and these people come to have the unabridged control of this two-fold representation, how will they desire to use it? I do not inquire how they possibly may use it, nor even how they now expect or intend to use it, but how, if unrestrained by a united North, it would be their interest and desire to use it. For the perpetuation of the Union ? I fear not. They have come back to the Union, we should remember, only by coercion. To them it is a forced bridal. They submit to it, but they do not, because they cannot, embrace it in their hearts. The soldiers maimed, wives widowed, and children or phaned in their bad cause appeal to their leaders for the promised support, but the Union has no pensions for them. The for tunes invested Confederate faith Bee no hope of realization in the Union. Hatred of the North and its anti-slavery majorities, the original motive for secession, is ten times wronger now than in 1861, and is backed up h $4,000,000,000 of debt, damages, and pensions, which, as they , insist, could, in a operate government, be levied by an ex JJ"rt duty upon the cotton-consuming world. The life-habits of these people, their love f ease and domination, their pride, aris tocracy, wealth, and power were all the out growth of an institution which might pos sibly be revived in a separate republic, but n,i,;v, :a e Tr n. naiu la 1U1CVC1 gUUC 1U bUC UU1UU. vuu- federacy" is a word that must long be en shrined in their hearts by ths tender mem ories of their fallen kindred, but it must live, as they well know, in the history, tra ditions, and ballads of the Union, associa ted with perjury, dishonorable crime, and cruel war. If they should profess to love the Union we could not believe them. It is so unnatural that it would be easier to believe they were hypocrites than that they were monsters. J ' - But they are neither hypon-ites nor mon sters. They do not love the Union, and do not pretend to. It is untruthful men of our own section that prevaricate for them. The same class of men that misrepresented the feelings of the North before the war, and thus deceived the South and goaded them into rebellion, now misrepresent the feelings of the South to deceive the North and lure it into irretrievable surrender. Be fore the war they deceived the South and trayed the North ; but now it is reversed, they deceive the North and betray the loy al South. The same perfidious breath that carried South the untruthful story of north ern hate, and thus prompted the war,comes back nowwithanotherstory,eiually untruth ful, of southern love. They tell us that the disloyal South is a gentle bride, impatient for the nuptials, when they know that she submits to them withloathing . Have they not laid down their arms? is the argu mentative inquiry. No, sir; their arms were taken from them. Have they not sub mitted ? No, sir ; they were defeated in battle. There is nothing in their past con duct nor present attitude that justifies the use of the word submission. Prisoners of war have been taken, but they were releas ed on parole ; rebel armies have been dis persed, but they have been reorganized as State militia ; rebel State governments have been overthrown, but again revived and re stored to the old possessors ; and forfeitures of life and estates have been remitted, but that is all. Call this clemency, privilege, triumph, victory, what you please, but do not call it submission, with which it has not one shade of meaning in common. We do not need to call witnesses to prove that these people are hostile to the Union and its in terests The history of the human race proves it. Whoever attempts to prove the contrary must first show that they are un like any other people whose passions, strug gles, and defeats are recorded in the annals of the world. But witnesses have been called Union generals and rebel generals, Union and reb el citizens, without distinction ef party, condition, race, or color and all support under oath the great historic truth, that a purpose imbibed in infancy, cherished and stimulated by the rostrum, press, and pulpit for a lifetime ; upheld by large fortunes, wrung from the toil of slaves, and sanctified by the Hood of sons and kindred, has not been and cannot be surrendered to military orders. Such a purpose surrenders only to time. I do not present this great truth now by way of reproof or condemnation of these misguided people, but only by way of cau tion and warning to ourselves. I come ,to the conclusion, therefore, t hat they do not desire the perpetuation of the Union. If we would remove all restraints and give them freedom of choice thev would revive the Confederacy at once. They would take advantage of a war with Great Britain or France to secure their independence, and they would take advantage of their double representation here to promote such a war. If no opportunity of escape should soon of fer, would they not still live in hopes of it and in persistent hospitality to the country's ob ligations to the soldiers, widows, orphans, and creditors of our war, and friendly to the assumption of similar obligations crea ted by themselves in the iuterest of the re bellion? Even in advance of their own eoming a portion of their vast claims have reached your files. Wlieu my colleague Mr. Randall from the Democratic side proposed that the national faith, pledged in war, should not be broken in peace, there was one voice from Kentucky against it only one by eount, but considering the quar ter from which it came, mnltifudinous in omen. A bill has also been introduced by a gentleman, scmetimes called the Democrat ic leader in this House, to repudiate in part the public debt under pretense of taxing it, in violation of the laws by which it was created. These cannot be regarded as the oddities of one or two men, but rather as impulsive confessions of imprudent scouts, too far in advance of the following army. The purpose will not be generallydbclosed until the forces are arranged for its execu tion. I am speaking now only of the dangers that will beset the Republic by the allow ance of a representation unfriendly to its Srosperity and even its existence- in such isproportionate numbers. But we should not forget that this act is also a recognition as republican in form of constitutions, we have never seen (except that of Tennessee) and all, except those of Lincoln origin, un der rebel supremacy. The white Unionists who have been looking through five dreary years of persecution, lynch ing, and confisca tion to this as their hour of deliverance, will find themselves betrayed into the hands of their ola, unhumbled, unrelenting torment ors. It also consigns the freedmen to the tyranny of old masters, not now as hereto fore bribed to humanity by a monied inter est in the preservation of their chattel es tates. Twenty-five per ctnt., says an hon orable gentleman who. presents his back of fensively to the North as he makes his low obeisance South, twenty-five percent, have already perished. The wish no doubt was father to the thought with the masters in whose interest the declaration is made.' , These, then, are my psoases. I will re neat them. : - - 1. There are only about five million dis loyal population in the country. f 2. This population when fully restored to I the Union, the Constitution and laws re- Tvi Ullilnfy m w flnil 1 1 1 11 i 1 uuuuiug uuauicuu, wiu uoui more man one third of its representative power and the supreme control of at least thirteen States, 3. They will be interested to use that pow er for the division of the Union ; and, fail ing in that, for the repudiation of its mili tary and financial obligations. Now, what is to be done ? If these States are denied representation, it violates the fundamental principle of republican government. If allowed a double and hos tile representation, the Union itself must be destroyed or preserved at the expense of another war. Three remedies are proposed : 1. Disfranchise some portion of the reb els. 2. Allow all the rebels to vote,- but neu tralize their disunion sentiments by enfran chising the blacks in these States. 2. Equalize representation by taking as its basis either the number of voters or the population, minus the disfranchised classes ; so that these States shall have no more rep resentation in proportion to their represen ted people than the old tree States have. Father proposition would require an amendment to the Constitution, to be ac cepted by the rebel States as a condition, precedent to their restoration. It is also proposed to couple with either proposition a second amendment, prohibiting the as sumption of rebel debts and claims either by States or the United States. The third proposition has commended itself to much the largest number of Union members, and the amendments to that ef fect have already passed this House by more than a two-thirds vote. This, then, so far as this House is concerned, is the Congres sional plan of reconstruction. All we ask of the rebel leaders, who are. wrongly charg ing us with havme no policy at all, but de signing to exclude them for an indefinite period, is a little time to put in iorm ot lun damental law these pledges of future peace. For five years they have been out upon plague-infected seas. Can they rot tarry at quarantine for a single session? Stripped of all disguises, herein lies the main disagreement. Shall these States be recognized at once in their present temper, without guarantees of any kind and with a i twolold representation ? It is not whether they shall be represented at all ; to that we all agree. There may be a little question of time ; a difference of a few weeks or a few months, and that is all. Shall they be represented twice over, once in their own names and once in the name of the negroes ? Shall they come in upon a "representative basis that clothes a white man of the South with almost as much again political power as a northern man controls? That gives two white voters in South Carolina as much voice in the selection of a President and in the legislation of this house as five voters in Pennsylvania possess? That practically gives to one seventh of your population,dis loyal at that, more than one third of your power? That, sir, is the great question be fore this House and the American public. It is an effort on the part of the Opposition to carry into the politics 01 the country the old problem by which sixteen is made the majority of forfy-nine. In England it is called the system of "rotten-boroughs." It has long been the subject of political strife between the free and slave-labor coun ties of Maryland, Virginia, and Tennessee. And when it is everywhere else abandoned as a pernicious and anti-republican theory of representation, we are asked to make it the basis of reconstruction in the model re public. ' j he enactment 01 tnese two simple ana brief amendments, or others similar in pur Dose. is so absolutely necessary for the pres ervation of the Republic and the discharge of its obligations to its soldiers and credi tors, and is so jut and even generous to the the insurgents, that they ought to receive assent of every Union man. The oppo sition do not dare to discuss theirnents. While some deny that we have any plan of reconstruction, others assaU it with insidu ous and deceptive objections.' Some of these I propose to notice here. First of all, they complain of the con sumption of time. Five months have pass ed, and not a rebel admitted is the com plaining accusation. The opposition are impatient. They cannot wait. Come in at once, say they, to the "erring brethren." Do not wait to drop your side arms or ex change your disloyal garments. Buls to protect the loyal men ot the south against your pretended violence are pending now, come'and help dereat them. w e wui soon have bills to enlarge pensions and equalize bounties to the soldiers you have maimed and the widows you have made ; your ad vice and votes will be needed. - A bill to give bounty land to the "boys in blue' could not be defeated nor the "butternuts" included without you. A bill to lift the bur dens of taxation from the industry of the country and place it upon your foreign con federates, through exported cotton, will need your attention. Hurry up your or ganizations. Do not wait to heal lips blis tered with a double oath of broken fealty before you kiss the Holy Evangelists with another. We have buried our sons and are languishing to clasp the hands of their mur derers. When once admitted, deny that you ever tried to break up the Government, but swear on all occasionsthat the Lincoln party were and are the traitors. The complainants have only themselves to bbime for much of this delay. , Except for their .persistent opposition the amend ments would have been, submitted months a en u the Legislatures then in session w the loyal States, and vbeen absented to, no m,Vi- Kw'fliA Annstitntinnal number. Ex- uuuuu, yj ---- ; . . cent for their own opposition they might nnw h welcoming back their lone-mourned friends to seats in these Halls. But they would consent to nothing that did not re turn them greater in numbers, and more malevolent in purpose. Hence the delay. Otnc illae lacritnae. t ext we are tol that it conflicts with the 1 resident's policy." What is the Presi dent s policy ? I aver, first, that the Presi dent, when last authoritatively heard from. was in favor of the principle embodied in catn or the proposed amendments. Of the nrst one, because he required the confeder ate States to adont it ; nf tha because he has repeatedly declared himself in ravor ot making the number of voters the Dasis or representation. 1 aver, second, that he does not consider the status of the States such, that their asseit to constitu tional amendments cannot be required as conditions-precedent to their restoration, because he directed Mr. Seward to inform these States that their assent to the amend ment proposed in the last Confess was "in. dispensible" to restoration ; and because he has not himselt dealt with them as if they were States already in the Union. Wlien the confederacy fell they were in full opera tion under governments originally organized in the Union. Governors. Legislatures. judges, and a full set of county and town ship omcers were at work under constitu tions once declared to be republican in form by the United States. These governments were regular unless you assent to the doc trine of forfeiture, for they had political continuity, what the church people call apostolic succession, let they were des troyed by the President's order and new ones extemporized in their stead. . From that time to this, in these States, the breath of the President has been the law ot the land. ; Mr. Johnson went much further in this direction than his predecessor. Mr. Lincoln established governments, only in States where he found none existing before, but Mr. Johnson nrst destroyed existing governments and then supplied their places with those of his own creation. So, both by words, and actions which speak louder than words, the President assents to every principle involved in the congressional poli cy of reconstruction. Indeed, the two poli cies could not well conflict, because they re late to dinerent subjects. 1 he one creates or revives State organizations, the other re news their fcederal relations. When these organizations were complete, and the States ready to apply to Congress for a return to the Union, the President's policy was ended. His work was all done. The rest was for Congress. So he directed his Secretary of State to inform Governor Sharkey, July 24, 1865, Governor Marvin, September 12, 1865, and so he informed us in his annual message, it he has cnanged his policy since then it is hardly worth while to inquire what it is now, for his principles are written in water. - I do not wish to disguise the fact that while he approves the amendments and be lieves the power exists to require their adop tion asconditions ot return, he thinks it un necessary to insist upon any terms addition al to those imposed by himself. It is in this opinion that his old persecutors, the de feated enemies of the Union, the foiled Elotters of his assassination, have taken eart, and with cruel malice conspirSd with northeru sympathizers to pursue him with their unrelenting friendship. Their last hope for the destruction of this country lies in the seduction ot its friends. War failed them, they resort to diplomacy. The Presi dent was not much moved by their threats, will he be seduced by their flattery I lr so, let me assure those of our friends who are disposed to suppress their own convictions in hope to detain him and his patronage in a little select court party, that they might as well exercise a reasonable liberty of opin ion. For if he ever determines to trust his political future to anybody besides the great earnest, triumphant Union organization that elected him, he will have Bense enough to put them aside as mere nobodies in popu lar strength, heartless friends and harmless enemies, as courtiers always are, and push straight for the "southern brothered," rebel led opponents of a permanent and peaceful Union. In that event his children and friends may well rejoice that the past, at least, is secure. His patriotic thoughts of the last five years will still live, although only to reprove him. Again, it is said by way of excuse, "Why not admit such Union men as iowler, Stokes, and Maynard. of Tennessee?" Be cause it is not a question about men. Shall a disloyal district, while it is still in a dis loyal spirit, be declared entitled to represen tationwith only half as many represented peo ple in it as we require for a district in the North? That is the question. Captain Semmes ran un the Union flag when he wished to decoy an unarmed merchant ves sel under the power of his guns, but repla ced it with the pirate, emblem when he had secured his victim. Ihe names ot these patriots are hung out to-day to secure rep resentation to a rebel constituency behind them, but they will be hauled down at the first election and rebels put up in their stead. You may think you are only recognizing the Union flag, but when it is too late you win find yourselves along side the 'Alabama and in the power of its pirate crew. But it is said in reply, "We will not ad mit disloyal men even if elected." How can you help yourselves? .Ifa whole dele gation from South Carolina, for instance, present themselves to the Clerk of the last House and ask to be placed on the roll, prior to organization, and tender him the certifi cate of their election signed by the Gover nor and sealed with the great seal of that most sovereign State. , shall .the Clerk nay which is loyal and. which not 2 J suppose not. Aflw t-.li a .rtrMnization.' in which " have participated, and all have been quali fied and taken their seats, will you get up an inquisitorial committee to explore tnese- mrat aana tVai- vnSiinOeS ! aOU . 0 father confessors to their sins ? .iNo, but the iron-clad oath will exclude them. . Xo that almost every man who is in favor of admitting these States without conditions is also in favor of repeal ing that oath ? They already denounce it as an odious and unconstitutional test. The Secretary of the Treasury and the Postmas ter General, backed up by a message from the President, ask its repeal so far as regards their Departments, thus making rebels as eligible as Union soldiers to appointments here, and under such lead I expect to see it swept away, and so do most or the gentle men who are now urging us to lay aside a real safeguard and trust to this cobweb of a morning. But suppose we could in this way contrive to dictate to these people who they should and who they should not elect, what kind of representation would that be ? Wre say to them, "you are free to select your repre sentatives, but mind that you select such as suit us, not yourselves." Youcallthat rep resentation ? I call it obedience. We pro pose to extract the envenomed fang of the serpent before he is uncaged, and you to bind him with test oaths afterward. Sup pose, again, you could manage to exclude in this way those who had been engaged in the rebellion, do you not know that a rebel constituency could find a fit representation outside that list, and all the more danger ous on that account? If they had none at home they could colonize from the North. Again, magnanimity is invoked as a shield of desertion. A great natiou, it is said, can afford to be magnanimous. Of course it can ; but let us see how this is. F'or four years these people made war upon us with out cause or even plausible excuse. Before they began it, we begged them in great hu mility to withhold from the country this terrible desolation. In tears we warned them of the punishment that must follow. Our entreaties and warnings were received in the rebel capital, so their telegraph in formed us, "with peals of laughter. ' They fired upon us while we were yet upon our knees begging for peace and union. The contest once begun, was conducted on our part with great forbearance and within the strictest military law. We even returned for awhile their fugitive slaves. On their part it was conducted not only with the con demned system of cruel guerrilla and pirati cal warfare, but with fire, poison, yellow fever, 1 and assassination. The estates of Union men within their power were confis cated, and have never yet ' been restored, and Union men were hung for treason to their pretended government. You tell us they have suffered. ' So have we. Peace has come at last ; business pros perity will return ; the insignia of mourn ing will be laid aside ; but in the heart of every family there is an unspoken sorrow thatwillsaddenlifeeventothe grave. Now, we are admonished to be magnanimous to the authors of all this suffering. I accept admonition, but I submit that we are so already.- The law condemned them to death, and we have pardoned them. Their estates were forfeited, and we have restored them. Not a traitor has been been hung ; not one convicted ; not one tried ; not a dozen ar rested : but many have been honored as rulers in States they only failed to ruin. The high-sounding eloquence of the gentle man trom JNew lork, I iur. Kaymond, call ing upon us to admire the "courage and de votion" with which these bad men prosecu ted a cruel war against our kindred, our homes, and our country for four years, has scarcely subsided when our tears are invok ed over their self-inflicted sufferings. Thus at this end of the avenue we are alternately called upon to admire and pity them, while at the other the green seal is kept hot with its work ot clemency clemency often unso licited, sometimes contemned. We have even ordered historic inscriptions to be eras ed from captured, cannon at West Point, that the boys educated at the expense ot a Government their fathers could not quite destroy might not be irritated. What more can we do ? What more can gentlemen ask in the name of magnanimity? "Give to this one seventh of your population more than one third of your political power ?" Is that what you ask, and call it only mag nanimity to the false men of the country ? Call it rather treachery to the faithful, or if that sounds too harsh, call it submission, surrender, what you like, but for the sake ot truth let no one call betrayal of country and friends magnanimity to enemies. Again, sir. the enort to cut oil the excess of this unpatriotic and sectional representa tion in ascribed to party motives. Is it not the opposition exposed to the same charge? Is it not the Democratic party as anxious to secure friends as we are to avoid enemies ? For the last five years they have been beaten everywhere. ' Every' election has proved to them that they were growing small by large degrees. "Would to God that night or reb els would come". has been their dady prayer. Does their haste to embrace the misguided brethern come solely from pure love and af fection I Is it not possible that their pas sion is somewhat like that of "The immortal Captain Wot tie. Who was all for love and a little for the bottle? Is it not possible that they look a little to party, too? That they long not only for the alliance but the leadership Was general ly able and always consistent, however un wise. . It was not under that lead that they proclaimed both secession and coercion un constitutional ; that the war for the Union was constitutional, but there was no consti fntinnal mode of conducting it : that an ar my should be raised but .volunteering; was imnracticable and drafting unconstitutional: that it was right to raise money, but wrong to tax or borrow ; that they were opposed to emaucipauun, out not in iavor oi Slavery. It wa3 not tinder that lead that Andrew Johnson, was denounced as Lincoln's satrap when he consented to be provisional gover nor of a State from which the old Governor and Legislature had run away, and cheered as a patriot when he drove out the , Gover nors and Legislatures of half a dozen States and supplied their places with appointees of his own. It is not probable that, tired of their contradictory and hypocritical posi tion, they crave the undissembhng leader ship of Breckinridge and Hunter, Davis and Toombs, as much as we can possibly dread it? . :: ' ' As another excuse for opposition to this plan of restoration it is said there are other inequalities in representation that ought to be removed as well as t his. - An honorable gentleman from Pennsylvania complains that the six eastern States have each two Senators, while New York and other large States have no more. It is true that some of the eastern States are small; but the Constitution provides that each State, wheth er large or small, shall have two Senators ; and it further provides that while that in strument may be amended in other respects, with the assent ot three fourths ot the Mates, in this respect it shall not be amended with out the assent of all the States. But why point only to the eastern States to illustrate the inequality of senatorial representation ? The best illustration of it is not to be found there. The population of these States is 3,135,223. In the South you can find a smaller population with a larger representa tion in the Senate. The population of Ar kansas, Texas, Florida, South Carolina, West Virginia, .Marylard, and Delaware is only 3,032,761. Here are seven States with more than 100,000 less population than the six eastern States, one third of that be ing negroes, with fourteen Senators, two more than New Fngland. Wrhy did not the gentleman make his point on these States? Was it because the eastern States are free and loyal and the others were slaveholding,' and in part disloyal ? And why, just in this connection, does he complain that boun ties are paid for catching fish? He never complained when higher bounties were paid for catching men and women for the south ern market. These are the old complaints of the South, warmed over, in anticipation of its return, groundless, no doubt, but if ever so just, furnishing no good excuse lor allow ing to the complaints a twofold representa tion in this House. . Onec more we are reminded that taxation and representation should go together. True, sir, but that would not entitle them to a double representation, nor deprive Con gress of a reasonable time for deliberation as to tbe extent of the right and the best mode of securing it. But if is meant that they are entitled on the score of taxation to instantaneous, unconditional, and dispro portionate representation, I must beg leave to inquire, where are the immense taxes paid by them, upon which to base such ex traordinary claims ? The loyal people of the country have been paying burdensome taxes, a million per day, imposed by their misconduct, but when and where have they paid taxes? For the last five years they have paid none, and the amount they are just now begining to pay is too trilling for argument. If the right of representation couid be acquired by imposing taxes upon others or by robbery of the Government, their claim would be indisputable. They robbed the southern post offices of money, stamps, and mails; the arsenals and milita ry and naval depots of ammunition, arms, and clothing; the custom-houses and sub- Treasuries of goods, bonds, and money ; and the New Orleans mint of $600,000 in gold, and have never made restitution. But they have paid very few taxes, and long before they will be called upon to do so a lair and adequate representation will be accorded them. V " But they have still another argument 8 the one relied upon when all others fail, their refuge from discomfiture in every oth er field of debate and that is what they call the constitutional argument. When they find themselves unable to maintain in discussion the propriety of allowing the dis loyal population a twofold representation, the half to represent themselves and the other half to misrepresent the loyal people, white and black, in their midst ; when they can do longer screen themselves behind the "President's policy," words of indefinite meaning; when their aspersion upon our motives is " rer elled by showing that they have as strong party interest in forming an alliance with the re Deis as we possibly can have in trying to prevent it: when their taxation theory is demolished by a report from the Secretary of the Treasury, they fall back upon the - constitutional right of States to representation. : They will retreat no further. This is their last ditch in de bate. And here, - -.-.- "In Dixie's land - i They take their stand, ' ' To live or die for Dixie " .:, . . ; Mr. Speaker, we are in an anomalous con dition. The Constitution doeanot especial ly provide for the difficulties with which we are surrounded. Our fathers could not be lieve that so large a portion of the American people could be so barbarized by slavery as to undertake such stupendous crime. They' did not provide for what they could not foresee. There are no precedents on file to guide us. This is the first disunion rebel lion? Ours will be the first precedent in re ' construction,, and the last only if it is just ly and wisely made. ' There are objections, plausible or otherwise,' to every theory that has been or can be advanced as to the ttatut of these States. My colleague Mr. Ste vens said that theirpreent position was very much like that of California after the Mex-' ican war. 1 A score or more pf speeches have been made to show that there are objections to this theory. The gentleman from Ohio Mr. SheUabarger ' suggested that these State governments nad perished in the re bellion, ana mat now new ones, republican. m form, should be ong mated by Uoneresfc Objections were raised to this tbertry. The gentleman from New York Mr. Raymond suggested that new governments most be originated and proper guarantees and con ditions could be imposed, but these things should be done by the Commander-in-Chief of the Army and Navy as the torms of sur- Pis 1-3 5 Mil Si- ' nr