-;' r l ceil m i I.IUUKCR, Editor and Proirietor. JjODD HUTCHINSON, Publislier. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Henry Clay. TERMS f S2.00 PER ANNUM. I $1.50 IX ADVANCE. .... .i . ... fe'ia . imh .: i icj ver. lu&i n$A . t-ii v nrr n VOLUME 5. Address ellvered by Fred. Jleyers, Esq., before the Ger man Republican "Union," at .Washington City, November 21, 1863. 3r. President and Gentlemen : Grratc lully do I accept your kind invitation to address you to-night, conscious that how ever humble my effort, I bear the earnest purpose to aid the Republic. If ever there was a time when heroism .and self sacrifice were needed, it is the present; and fortunate, indeed; are we, who now liaveao opportunity, which centuries may not bring again, to cultivate and exercise "these great 'qualities which all history reveres. , We need no longer point to the past, to the revolutionary sires, to establish our greatness as a nation. It is the glorious present, in which we are now actors, which stamps us as worthy of the past ; and the achievements of our national childhood have been proportionately ex 'cdled by the deds cf our national manhood. So great is the preseut so tofcdcrtul our display of national heroism and cwer, .and so triumphant our faith in the future, that millions of aspiring spirits will sigh, and sigh in vain, that they were not with us partaking the glory of the present. THE PRINCIPLES OF GOVERNMENT. There are only twd ideas upon which all human governments are based one is 'the idea of despotism and aristocracy, and the other that or republicanism and .de mocracy. The former is based upon th assumption that one man, like Napoleon in France, or a particular class of men, Hke the aristocracy of England, are more capable of administering public affairs than the masses "the hewers of , wood and drawers of water;" while the latter assumes that the great mass of citizens in their collective capacity is wLser and more capable than any one class. Profoundly convinced that the idea of republicanism is based upon truth and justice, I hold that wc ought to maintain ii against all assaults, foreign or domestic, and by every acrifice which the occasion demauds. Kising above all creeds or parties, we fcmt take our stand upon the broad plat form that the right of the majority of the people to rule the nation, in accordance with the Constitution, mtst be main tained. SELF -GOVERNMENT A. DCTV. Self-gorernment is not so much a priv ilege as a duty, for the correct discharge tof which wc arc amenable to ourselves, to the future, and 'to God. We cannot escape this solemn responsibility. If in times of peace 'and pr6sperity we must express our best judgment through the ballot-box, how much more is it necessary to do so now in times of great peril ? We toast not only be willing to die for the He public, but to slay for the Republic, and a'oove all it is our solemn duty tothinc frrthe Republic. .Never did the country Deed wise counsels more never were ideas, whether m the field of statesman ship or mechanics, more acceptable, and lever was just criticism more necessary tj enable those in authority to correctly iWharge their duties. In fact, in no ffay can we serve the Itcpublic better ttaa by giving it our highest thought. THE CACSE OF THE WAR. It is not the fault of republican insti tutions that the present deplorable war exist.. There is nothing in the structure tfa Republic that could cause such a ?onn'ict. It is the departure froni the idea upon which the nation was founded "the willful violation of the fundamental kw of it3 being which has well nigh caused its destruction. And it we sur yive as a nation, we owe it chiefly to that aiall band of reformers, the Bo-called Abolitionists and Free Democrats, who, respite the influences of wealth and power, prepared the mind of the people for -the dreadful conflict. . A little less anti sla terJ sentiment in the North a little more copperhead sympathy in the great States f Ohio, Pennsylvania arid New York, "oold have inevitably ruined public af fairs. IJe therefore, who strain ed every tefve to increa?e the anti-slavery senti ment of the people for the last ten years, nd particularly during this war, was the feeing statesman, while those who aided 111 corrupting the public mind, for partizan Purposes, were undermining the founda lI of the Republic. surely T need not prove to you that Vuy " the cause of tlie war trie whole it tuQ0WS lt and the South Prclaim3 J The present struggle was foretold by ay citizens, and the inevitable and ir- epresstbio conflict pointed out by eminent atesiuen. THB JCSTIFICATIOX OF THE WAR. thJfresent war can be justified before e tribunal of history and mankind upon u grouod that a nation, like an individ- EBENSBUHG, PA., THUKSDAY, FEBRUARY -11 1864. ual, has the right to defend its own life. Had the slave-oligarchs proposed peaceful secession from the "hated and mean spirited Yankees," by packing up their "duds" and taking their departure for Central America or some other hot clime, we might have said, "Stand not upon the order of your going, but go at once." But when they proposed to create a hos tile nation upon our own territory, when they claimed a right not only to the Southern States but to the Territories of the United States south of 36 deg. 30 min. to the Pacific Ocean, when they endeavored by foreign alliances to crush out our power at home and our influence abroad, the -war became a necessity.. Frederick the Great wasredhe Seven Years' war, asraiust the great powers of the Continent, .for the purpose of retain. ing possession of Silesia, a province of so small a territorial extent that we might put it into the pocket of Texas and scarce ly miss it. Yet history has justified that monarch and the Seven Years' war, tho' it subjected .the people to extreme priva tions. If, then, this war were waged solely to retain possession of our territo iies, the war would be just. But we are fighting for a grander object the inalienable rights of man. We are endeavoring to maintain the right of the majority to govern, in accordance with the Constitution, and the right of the minority to enjoy personal fieedom. We maintain that every man by virtue of his manhood has the right to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," of which uo msjority can deprive him, except for crime. The people of Germany waged war from 1618 to 1648 to cstablishreligious freedom. For thirty years the conflict raged, until nearly one-third ot the cities and villages were in ruinsand deserted. Famiue reigned over the land, and in 1629, in the village of Nuremberg, a single egg sold for a florin. At the end of the war, notwithstanding the natural increase of an entire generation, Germany had lost fully one-third of its inhabitants; and yet history justifies that most desolating of all wars upon the ground that the right of privSte judgment in matters of religion was worth all the sacrifices. The grand idea of human freedom and personal lib erty for which we wage the conflict is such a priceless boon that a thirty years' war wagedin its behalf would not be too great a price. In fact, it ali '6t us were required to offer up our lives to maintain this great temple of Republican freedom, so that the world might have the benefit of its example, and future generations secure its blessings, we ought not to falter or to hesitate. We, who are the immediate spectators of this revolution, count its duration by days, weeks and months, but the historiau will count it only by years. And on the 15th of April, 1861, only three years will have elapsed since the tocsin of war summoned a peaceful people, engaged in the pursuits of peace, to the arena of deadly strife. The progress, moral and physical, which we have made is great beyond cocception, and the numeration of a few leading points will convince the most skeptical of cur final and not far distant success. OCR MOTIAL PROGRESS. Gov. Chase, representing the radical wing of the Republican parry; begged the liorder State men in the Peace Conven tion, to ttay their fratricidal hands, promising that slavery, within the limits of the States, should not be interfered with, but that, if they would give up all idea of its further extension, he should be willing to compensate the slave holders from the public treasury for their losses in fugitive slaves. Gov. Seward and many others were ready to go further, even to the adoption of a new article ir the Con stitution, eternizing, as lar as human legislation could do it, American slavery in the Southern States. Even after the war broke out, a M'CleU lan proclaimed in West Virginia, a Butler in Maryland, and a Sherman in South Carolina, that slavery should be protected by the armies of the Republic, and that the rebel, though he might forfeit his right to life, could not forfeit- his right to hold slaves. So thoroughly pro-slavery were many of our Generals, that in the West General Ilalleck issued his notorious Order No. 3, excluding every colored person, free or slave, from the linc3 of the Union army, and in the East, the Hutch inson family those sweet minstrels of freedom were expelled by military order from the camps ot our soldiers. And it was during the winter of 1862, when the Army of the Potomac was systematically rendered disloyal to the central idea of the couflict, that the germs of all its misfor tunes a&d inefficiencies were planted. Aye we may thank a merciful Providence that the army was saved in time from tho intrigues of military demagogues whose names are well known, before they had quite turned'it against our own Govern ment ; and when the secret history of that army is published, it will appear that we made a narrow escape. Our brothers were even compelled to storm forts, erected by the hands of bondmen whom we resolutely refused to absolve from rebel masters. Step by step au unwilling people and a hesitating Government were compelled by the logic of events; by defeats and disaster to call upon all loyal men, free or slave, white or black, to strike for the Republic; and thus the very power and intensity of the rebellion has worked the destruction of slavery. As Moses in the wilderness, wherthe children of Israel were afflicted with the plague, set up the brazen serpent, that ali who should behold it might be saved, so has Abraham -Lincoln, the Liberator, planted our flag, that all who rally around its folds shall be forever free. Though born in chains, and divgsted by state laws of all civil and political rights, as soon as the slave takes refuge beneath the banner of the free, the chains shall drop from his limbs, and he shall stand free and disen thralled by virtue of his humanity. Grate ful for this boon, the black man to-day stands shoulder to shoulder with ourselves to shed his blood for a common fatherland he is to day fighting for our rights, for our liberties, and the unity and power of the nation. OCR MILITARY ACHIEVEMENTS. On the 4th day of March, 1861, after President Lincoln had made his successful escape into Washington, eight hundred regulars and some two thousand district militia were all the military force on hand to protect the Capital, and to uphold the dignity of the natiou. No wonder that Foreign Nations, accustomed to large military displays, believed that all was lost ; and that the traitors, whose spies filled our hotels, held that this nation would be an easy conquest. Entirely disarmed, olficers and men alike untaught, the people commenced the conflict thus suddenly forced upon them, and at the end of two years we hold two-thirds of the territory which the self styled Confederacy claimed as its own. MarylandDelaware, Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas and Louisiana, one half of Yiipinia and Mississippi, and portions of the Carolinas, Alabama, Florida, Georgia and Texas, and all the Territories to the Paeific, are now in our possession. Napoleon, the Great, when lie planted his victorious eagles in Poland and in Spain, had conquered less territory than we now hold. Even if we should not gain another rood of soil, but only hold what we have already couquered, the independence of the South could never be attaiucd. Virginia is a conquered province while we hold Fortress Monroe, and our fleet commands the York and James rivers. South Carolina can have uo trading intercourse while its commercial capital is at the mercy of our arms, nor can any of the Western States lay claim to independence, while New Oilcans and Chattanooga are in our possession and. the navigation of the Mississippi is secured by our gun boats. The Richmond 'Enquirer. . fully realizing the truth of this position, has itself declared : "We may win victories I npon our own soil, but independence never. OCR XAVAL ACHIEVEMENTS. Our Navy, which scarcely deserved the name at the beginning cf this war, has risen in dignity and power until it is pre eminently theJirst among nations. Never were ourmef?tfaiiical genius and resources put to a more severe test, and gloriously have we sustained our reputation. One single Monitor needs the labor Of several thousand mechanics, day and night, for months, with all the advantages of improved machinery, before the huge iron, turtle is complete in all its parts. Never was I more impressed with our wonderful mechanical genius, than when witnessing the building of .the 3Ionitors, at Green Point, near New York. Think of the thousands of square feet of wrought iron plates, riveted to tho huge iron ribs, the turrets, the engines and the armament all begun in an impromptu manner, and so little failure .o much success. In another year our iron-clad navy will equal jnn strength and general efficiency those of Irauce and ' England, and our naval renown, so dearly purchased in previous wars,-has been augmented by the capture of New Orleans and the passage of the Vicksburg batteries. OCR FINANCIAL TRIUMPHS. But there if an element, of strength beyond all these, which most inspires the hope of success it is the astonishing financial prosperity of. the nation, dazzling alike to Europe, and to the rebels, them selves. 7 ' , In times of peace, the main and almost only duties of the Treasury Department consisted in collecting the Custom House duties, aud i iu disbursing the public monies according to law. : If, indeed, any financial skill was needed iu the head of that Department, it was to invest the surplus' revenue to the best advantage for the United States. So successful, howev er, was Howell Cobb in disposing of the public funds, that no similar . financial skill was necessary in his successor. Tem porary loans were negociated at 11 and 12 per cent, per annum, ind the London Times remarked that "war in the United States was an . impossibility, because our treasury was bankrupt, and that we need not look to England for assistance." In these circumstances, when the nation deemed one hundred millions of dollars an enormous debt, and when confidence in the integrity of the Union was at its lowest ebb, Secretary Chase took charge of the fiuances of the Government. ; lie laid aside the ease and independence of a Senatorship, to ehare the responsibilities of a government whose policy, in many instances, he could not control, so thafthe ideas and principles for which he had made so many sacrifices in the past, might not be imperilled. For nearly one year, in the face of the Rull Run disaster, aud the inexplicable inactivity of our armies, he maintained the gold standard in the payment of public dues: and while he had no control over the expenditures, made with lavish hand, upon his shoulders alone fell the responsi bility of providing the necessary funds, and of maintaining the national credit. The Custom House duties were entirely inadequate ; and direct taxation promised but barren results. It is true, Treasury Notes were no new experiment learal teuder ; notes having been tried iu the American and French revolutions but the results were extremely unsatisfactory. The financial skill, therefore, consisted not in resorting to them, but in sustaining their value. The rebels at once issued Gray Racks," but, like the French As rignats and the Continental money, a hatful is scarcely worth a dollar. The Internal Revenue system, yielding a revenue of one hundred millions of dol lars per annum, was created ; and the new banking law was devised to encourage capitalists to fund the Demand Notes. Already 130 banks, with a capital of fifteen millions, have been organized, and their prospective increase is so great that the Five-Twenty bonds are rapidly absorbed in anticipation of a future demand. Aside from these positive advantages to the government, the people themselves will be greatly benefitted. It cannot be expeeted that the great mass of our citizens "shall know the condition and solvency of some twelve hundred banks, issuing some five thousand different bank bills. The uew system will give them, instead, a uniform currency, based upon the highest security, which will become so familiar to the eye that successful counterfeiting will be well nigh impossible. It is sale to assert that the losses caused to the nation by the insolvency of banks, by the circulation ot counterfeit and broken bank money, and particalaily by the great difference of exchange, reaching at times 10 per cent., amount to thirty millions xif dollars per annum, which would pay the iuterest on five hundred millions ef dollars of the national indebtedness. The public debt i? also more equally distributed more can be absorbed by the people of the West, 80 that the interest can remain in their own States, and their surplus will not be gathered up iu taxes, to be disbursed on the seaboard. To the people of the West so many new sources of wealth presented theiselves mines, manufactures and agriculture that they borrowed capital from the East, at the enormous rates of one to tw"o per cent, per month, aud, although individu als ia these circumstances failed, the West, as a whole, was progressive. Now when the increased volume of currency has reduced the value of money to six per cent., the -West flourishes beyond prece dent. New mines are opened, new man ufactures are. established, more Boil 13 cultivated by means of the most approved machinery, colleges and churches rise up in magnificence, and a much superior style of architecture has been adopted in the erection of private buildings. Never were the creative energies of a people more aroused, or surplus capital more rapidly accumulated. I have traveled extensively in the West, and know that its progress is substantial. So promising are the fields of enterprise that capital borrowed at six per cent, is earning twenty, and .thus the national debt is enriching the natiou. . This brief review of our moral, military and financial progress assures us of final ?uccess, and the only question that ro mains to be considered is "how shall we be able to secure permaneut peace, at thts least expense to the loyal people." . A CX1TED PEOPLE. 1. The first clement of sucecsb i a union of the people for the sake of the Union. ' Democrats should ' remember that it is necessary to have a country, before it lean be" ; ruled, and to hav3 a government, before it can be administered. They need not be afraid, that if slavery dies, there will be no room for political parties, for new questions will swou arise and new parties will be organized. . Rut during the pending contest we must know no creed or party, but only, our common country. As in great business enterprises, to secure colleges, railroads and manufac tories, tho en masse unite for the common benefit, so rrnist. we all unite to recruit our armies, and to uphold the arm of the government. We must never forget that this is our tear, that our armies defend our homes, and that, when they are to , longer able to invade the enemy's country, our own firesides are laid waste. EMANCIPATION IS THE BOXtDER STATES. 2. Nothiug will discourage the rebellion so much as speedy measures for the extinction of slavery in the Border States. Every rood of soil upon which free institutions are established is forever redeemed from the grasp of the rebels. The anti-slavery parties in" these States must be encouraged by the influence and power . of the central government. The recent victories in Maryland, Delaware and Missouri, if properly sustained, will sweep the last vestige of slavery from the land. ' j, ENLISTMENT OF COLORED MEN. 3. The black population everywhere must be encouraged to enlist. Every rebel destroyed by a black man's bayonet, brings us nearer to peace. If the govern ment has a prior claim to my son, although ho owes me service until he is twenty-one years of age, surely the country has prior claims to all her sons of whatever hue, to fight the common foe. Slavery niust not rob the nation of a single defender in this war of teif-defence against . the Slave Oligarchy. The slave-owners of the Bor der States ha7e no greater rights to the services of their slaves, tiiau the parent has to his own offspring. CONFISCATION JCST AND CONSTITCTION AL. 4. We must have indemnity for the past and security for the future. If all the leading traitors were strung along Mason and Dixon's line, they could not atone for a tingle life so ruthlessly sacrificed by their lust of power. The confiscation, in fee simple, of the property of the leading traitors the President, members of Congress, Governors and commissioned officers is absolutely nec essary to secure permanent peace. These men, ruined in fortune and disappointed in ambition, will never cease. to hate our government, and at all times plot for its overthrow. The constitutional power is perfectly clear, and it is singular that a provision sp lucid as the annexed can be open to doubt construction : "The Congress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason ; but no attainder for treason shall woTkcorruptiou of blood or forfeiture, except during the life of the person attainted." The first clause, "the CoDgress shall have power to declare the punishment of treason," is absolute. The Congress may punish traitors by hanging, shooting im prisonment, the loss of political rights, and the loss of property. . Congress, uuder the above clause, may even pas a bill of attainder, but ito forfeiture must be limited to the life-time of the person attaiuted, for the Constitution wisely provides that the children shall in uo wise suffer on account of the crimes of the parent. Now confis cation of property is not attainder, no more than imprisonment or fine. The essence of attainder cousists not in the confiscation of property acquired, but iu declaring the traitor incapable ot acquiring by inheritance or otherwise uew property, and the operation of such a law is restric ted to the life-lime of the attainted per son. Do you claim that it is unjust to punish and disarm traitors? Allow me to relate an incident. In July, 1802, marched through the city bf Adrian, Michigan, its first contribution to the war, the Fourth Michigan, with the bravo Col. Woodbury at its head. One ' thousand gleamiug bayonets, upheld by stout and gallant hearts our sons and brothers glittered in the sun.' 1 shall never forget that parting scene the music, the cheers, the fervent "God bless you," the waving of a last farewell by many a" fair hand, the shriek of the locomotive aud the firing of cannon. I knew war was no' holiday frolic. I could sec these noble boys then, on weary marches, on long vigils, siok in( hospitals, wounded, maimed and dyicg and my soul was filled with grief and indignation, that such sacrifices were de manded by the iuferual and bloody genius of Slavery. Where arc they now ? Its war-worn banuer is scarce upheld by a seore of the original members, and its brave Colouel scaled with his life his NUMBER 20. devotion to his country. In the name of these our brothers, and thousands of others already sacrificed in the name of the widows, the orphans and the bereaved : parents, . I demand of the Congress and the Government, that no measure be rieglectei that promises security for tho future. TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENTS. 5. To the end that all may be secure in their lives aud personal liberty, lam in ' favor of the establishment of Territorial Governments, because they give the lar gest liberty to its inhabitants consistent with public safety. Many pretended , friends of the South prefer Military .1 Governors and a military regime until., orocr is restored, fctrange infatuation! It is only another evidence that the Rad-'. icals the Abolitionists if you please have always been, and cow tire, the best, friends of the South. Surely no loyal' man would wish to see Jeff. Davis and . Stevens iu the Senate, nor any other men ' of similar political training, tho' bearing different names. If then, some strong' supervising power is necessary, as in Tennessee and Louisiana, where virtually there is no .civil Government, surely the substitution of a Territorial Government' would be a tstep in the' right direction. But ll the peculiar champions of the South,' and the Southern people, prefer the diciplice Df the camp, the arbitrary ru'.es: of Military Governors, and the petty annoyances of Protost Marshals, their tastes ought to be gratified. But it cer tainly seems, rising above all party consid erations, and having solely the safety of the country and the liberty of the nation as our object, that Territorial Government would best meet the wauta of the people. Seme thcughtless people deal in the phrase "the Constitution as it is, and the Uqiou as it was," as if the Republican party cherished different principles. We all are for the "Constitution as it is." The clauses concerning slavery become inoperative by its extinction, and in every ether respect that grand instrument has filled the purposes for which it was de signed. We all are for -''the Union as it was." The Union as the Revolutionary sires designed it, to "secure the blessings of liberty" to nil the people. We are in favor of the Union in all its pristine vigor, when slavery was considered a dying in stitution as it now really is. As to the Union of 1850 and 1860 when ,Slave holders ruled the land it is forever gone. The dead cannot be restored to life by human power; and no Executive act or judicial dictum can ever breithe life into slavery. That time is part. Justice and Truth may bs slow to conquer prejudice and ignorance ; but their conquest is as eternal as the throne of God itself. ; ARMED COLONIZATION. 6. We must re-people the South. As soon as the war is ended European crui- gration vill pour its millions of people upon our shores. The expanding power of free institutions is so great, that armed and organized colonies numbering five hundred thousand people per annum can be planted in every State. They will carry with them a free press, schools, churches and all the enterprise and energy of a free people, and teach the South by example the advantages of free labor. They will prove to the poor whites that by the abolishment of servitude, they have beeu lifted up in the scale of being to a position of self respect and independence. AN AMERICAN CONGRESS. 7. We are the natural protectors of tho American Continent, and must encourage the friendship of all our sister Republics. We ought to have a great American Congress, for the arbitration, as far as an expression of opinion goes, of internal disputes, and more especially for the pur pose of protecting tho weaker natioua from European rapacity. Very soon the Aniericau Continent will be reater in material power than Europe, for within the Uuitcd States there is room for 300 millions of people. An American Cons gross, supported by tbe power of tho Union, would be as much respected, by Europe as a European Congress is in America. We. must also keep alive the military spirit of the nation as the best means to preserve permanent peace. L THE PATRIOTISM OF THE GERMANS. : This war ia not an unmixed evil, for it has taught us many a valuable lesson. Wo have not only become conscious of our immeuso national power and resources, but have also learned more fully to appre ciate the blessings of Republican institu tions. The American nation has been true to religious toleration, and generous to tho emigrants from other lands. There is no country iu the world where citizen ship is so fully and freely conferred nor has that confidence boon misplaced; and the seed thus tovn has yielded u bounteous harvest. Upon' tvery battle field thj r ii-.