VOL. XXXI.. Or COLUMBIA CO. President Judge--Ike, William E we n. in 1 )err, n Associate Judges-- I Peter K. Ilerbein. Proth'y and CV k of Court4--Jess Culunatt. Itegister and Iteetirlyr--..1 i di!, 11. Free re. I Allyn Mann, Commiusiouere-- 1 John F. Fowler I 111untgotuery Cu 'le. Sheriff—Samuel 'Snyder. Treasurer—John J. Stiles. Illaniel Snyder, Auditors— L II itupert, John I'. Kennon. I:4lnwiasioner's Krivklmiam. Commissioner's, Attorney—B. H. Littlv. MermanHe Appraiser—Capt. Uuo. W. lit. County Surveyor—lsauc A. Dewitt. District Attroney—Milton M. Traugh. Coroner—Willi/nu .1. Ikeler. County Superintendent- elms. G. Barkley, Amesurs Internal Berme—lL F. Clark. (Julie Thomas, IS. I)ietner, Ass . /;Ages Atoess‘r— U. tketer, T. 8. AVotAls. Collector—lienjatein Ilartinan. N EW STOVE AM) TIN SiluP. 011 MAIN irraltrr. (NE I.V !Tim pre .1111.1LERIA drug E:.) 1111.04)%iS ut; R '3. PA. 11118 gudentlesed Imo jut dud up, and 0pe0 , •41 Ms no* N . 1 .4, VE AN!) Tlp / 16 11411', la tale place. arisen/ h. Ie peeporyd 10 make op 11Pa , W +111.1.t or 111 ttn.le in 10. SHIN aa.l .10 repair. $4 With araole... 11.1.1 aaoa rlta ulna lea. ennoble terni•, Ile atom keep. 9111 lined Sri iV111•4 oh *trines pdit , •ree and rtyier, *hods he %ill null epee Wine i, rwt ourebemer 4. . h aha 3 ro)4 mechanic •n 4 de •%bile petsoinie. JAI:OI{ MOM Niue 1t0... . *Rolls* of .t Ainum•rwa &lot. 9, 19r,9,-.1, 1)LISTE11 FOll S 1141.» The under.iguce le ebv3t Gala 4? A PILASTIII Ntial it tliP PENV FI;IIVAIT. MILL R. ne.4 wul wive tu thy pubth; 111)Ni/1a:ill Nosia Scotia llVltile ?fader 0/ 0 0 1 ". 1 lea l 6.1 u•c lu •ivamuic. to aiil put cilia, ass. ta any tome (coin tho find et 3:41 cf• J. id. IIeNINCII. Caltowhees. Jean. V. \ -- 1) - " - ifoLiiiiii; 800 A. . oSe .1 P. Gllrri.).V, Ro.p. , ctNlly Informs the ii.tlilte tltAt tia yi IRAN pre pure au uraeulleture all It Was of reBOOTS AND SHOES, of dte LO WEST flogible l'ie's et Awl Roth.. nod in she veri• ass., Intros .'vier Mr. lilrt.•n'.'tf to %I 4,ls.sw is so eds.osisosorkr.; Iso b... 1 PlOlll/ yeurss Of vrea•i..' .it Ile.' 1. MI a I' I , leation G•r good WOOL, ilstegiily nod hoisoro.di. iud omostplowd. bu.sue•s (.11 !r ur Main and Iron Pnirviii. over J. K. G 'tow' Moog. Bloomsbarv. Ut". 10. FORKS IIUTEL, GEO. W. NAGGER, Proprietor. The share Well known hotel has rerrostly roster f.'s... radical thesauri in it. sestorsosl urraeigeillffl:lss, 111551 It. proprirt , tr lin ttttt to ht. torsarr ru.t , stn awl the gravelints plastic thet los ant. ..... assol.stiose. (..r thr comfort of hi. purar Wen ...torsi to ls 111.5 CI. miry. 111. sitar %111 "daisy. I.r mosso Ana soled. 11.11 0114 with agli,Nistial 6mii, toll Wilts al lka 4.5115 - ..,5,55.5, 01 the *.A.sso, 1114 wire /its{ 11.140 rs trissost ttent isolovilst 1111014 au ..11r1Pwrg • iarrtossersl ditort fr•on t so esalsorlort Irso.rr• htu,rr ltrolv purl, "rot Rrr fn hi. ill o.l.oassue drag.. Ile I. thankful fora Ica-rat aatrouseir In 1110 pd.., all.l still etiology to Oe.orve is 5% tifilfe. ULuttil. W. *AUGER Juna 13. 184 AL—tr MACHINE AND REPAIR SHOP undetehlird atoned roost veer:tangly Plll. 0.'11;10 In the ilssbil4 Mut hr is pr , pared to r %twine all kied• 3IAEUINERV. at .1.bi..1:P9 PIIAAPLLS , ' r..t: • ',Lev whelr he eau r.h. 1. ahe found newt) to do r n L.aide rethitt tag. to. lading The...hind Ma ht•we. owl 1N 4thett. aU of Panning IX PITUVU UP . Ur VAPPING AVII NACIIIYERf • doue nu shun not/ie./4i h houtiiiii.e Nish Art. UllOll Or 111011 fr(1.11.. It i toug ~.sp,rience hi the hh.hleor M rar 4 sonn la the shop of t.rwi. U. Mani of 1 / 1 14 0.'4% Nora your., warrsolle Wm 19 is that hn r oil gat , s entire iroissactioo to hit who use) favor him with era. work. eloomoben. tiny In, Itel FALLON HOUSE. I l L e vo u t e i r a lbet Malay yardman! l b . *Fallon T LOCK NA TEN, rn , properly t•f E. W. blowy. Erl.. would tar so the rI. at ib•• Mom, bit arquastoranceu. and lb.. pub Ur v..ittally, 11101 be we, low if , ^Artp a 11..tti.. with thr awroneutolut taws and coubfortu of a Mow.. aau bouthly oulicttu flick patronage. Lela n( the %%Mean nudes. Philadelphia Leek Raven. Ilee. itd, Pine. 1%1188 LIZZIE PETER3IAN, .• Would 'mouses In the WO, 01 111.1not.bure end he public ifioxerei!,. that ,dte has jun seemed !two Ite Imitates ci•l‘!* twr ko spring . and Sinniner tIo h wr MILLINERY GOODS, (milli " "X of .X!ir" . • 001.411, found it Oe r claim Mom 4. IP( "Orbls lif.• of IV I.e.f jMYlily aid isto,•nit tin fend heasloool4 slid eliedim.l o'llo amok rt 1 40/ Rad Pidarean ror ynor4elirre. •n. 5014 pHirrAme. 4,..wis•to before ..xantin - * 4 alio, ot.ek 4/111.0114 Ulida le tplnl r nu 111 . 1 ffiiifloof flatter. Of trpair-d. sior, on ifa.n •tratl. 9r d or Wow thit Moro of Moddsphall 4t 13111111.4 burg, 113711.16411,-1t OS, DRUGS, DRUUS. Trim►, nt Jnhoo R. Moyer'► Drug Pm, min and Mark.% dtrc►l►. A gum! *4G lIBE le. Ode end %%enlehou, niwiys nn be *eft eltexpet than at ally other hal !I, On s ryGuARANTEED =ll Plaper Dm • Mitt !tor', Widia kart. far Amy iq Pt • lAsther r IP 6Y V Me,:irtuet *old at Motes Oros 11.,k •r'l Litrr Oil, 113, .uld at star'• Urup t call at Mayne. ntosair and rctall, . • art, Ya. 11 1 sw-ir ?moo , vivo WI 04.1 Me I. &llk ' . • GL , ' • " i 46 . • ...,-01, Sil ty BLoomsßußG ,41 _ _ .._ _...... floomoturg.l,cinatrat. 18 MILIAllte.O EVEny writOirsDAY IN BImOSISBURO, l'A„ BY WILLIAMSON 11. JACOBY. Trl;Ntell, —II 90 In n.lvowire. Ir not p9ld within OIX 111I Si1114. rvut•u*ditinnnf will be rtutrtu,:. NI paper ALrnnliuuoJ 11..111 411 4l'Mdebigoa %Te pyjd the option 14 the editf. RATES ~ E ADV talr~ST 11. 1/.M IMISA 111401f11 , 1 IA A AIIC•RiI (MP Mqunrß .11.• Of liner itior loPle I;Vag y sg* than 13.••• DrAvv. In. Un. 3n. On. IT Illll.' plum r... •J.lO I 11'0 I 400 I 11.011 I 10.10 TWo viols, uo. :I oil 3 .)11 I ) f) 1 1 ,0 14.1.0 Threlt ' • 3.00 I 1.00 I SSA I 1''.14) IMMO Pon f I , llls to I. 1 . 1 0 1' I 0 11104) 14,00 %Nu))) Hof “oliiiiiia,l I 10.141 1'.1.101 14 011 11.141 I .'llOO One cal nwoll. 113 oil 0) I 1)0 !11.00 1 30,00 I 511.110 Rionll..eo find Adwilti•lratuer Notice... Audit.Deo Woo We llOrr a4verllarsuppis In,urled aceordi fig to special Onto, 4. MlWises. sontkes, without advert lientelit, twenty. ecru Per rtagioletsi 11.1vPritgruttritta pasrahle ht &thane* all ellwr• der sm.!, th. firiq co- errics —us slaire'm Work, cur. or Won ars long &►rntr. 4141drere, 1: 41 00 , liC0S of Mc Staate 40,4 &lac "I Reiwesenttetircs: The continued disorganization of the Calm', to which the Prebident has in often called the attention of Congrewi, is yet a m t hj er t of profound awl is eivtig eititrenl. Wd fluty, hwever, find trona relict' from that litxtety in the reflection that the p a i n . ful sitivition, although untried IT our.u!vca, in nut lbw ,n the expericoco ol' um 4mo. seienee : perbaie% as highly per fected in our 41%1 fifth; limp :Is ill any other. has a n t decLesal any moans by which civil Wfta'S can be absolutely pro rated ; an enlightened nation, however. with a wise and beneficent Cettstitution of free pin ermnent, may diminish their fre quency and mitigate 'ledr severity, by di. meting all it. 4 11:11 , TeliiInts in accordance with iii l'undantentel law. When a civil war lists been brought to a do e, it is manifastfy the first interett Doll duty of the Stab to r ep a i r the injuries which the war has inflicted, and to source the ismelit oldie lessons it teaches, as folly Still u= freally MS possible. This duly was. upon the termination of the re beiliint.etOttlptly mS'Alltf.hi, taut May by the Executive 115 yartmete, but by tie insur rectionary States themselves. and resters tion is the CM 1 / 1 0telelit of peace, Lip he bored to be is., easy and certain as it was in &Tiler:Ade. 1 h • *Are t t tills, liniveve , , then so re:l - awl eutifidcutly emertained, were disappointed by legislation from which I reit constrained, by my obligations to the Coostitution, to withhold toy assent. It is, thcrefiire, a source of prolimmi regret that in complying with the obligation imposed npint the President by the Constitution. to k riingress 00111 tune tai t7iiiii iiiFirniia ties of the mate of the rnion, II am unable to communietee any definitive actiustment satisfactory to the American people, of the questions which. since the dose of es., 1...- hellion, have agitated the public whet. On the contrary, mutt)r compels me tw declare that at this time there is no Union us our f a thers understood the term, Witt as they meet it to be tueie.rstood by ns. The I 'Mon which they established Can exist only where the States are represented in loth Houses of Cou g rec", -ahem one State is as free as another to regulate its internal concerns according to its wit!." awl where the taw of the ventral iteVelltnenit, strictly *Joked to tnattoi- of nations) jeris , lietion, :ply wide Neal foxy t, ail the people of every seeti..U., That seals is n• - 4, the prevent "Ante of the ('union" is a seelaneleily Met. ..iel we all must acknowledge that the restorat;osi of the `tatted to their pi over legal reitttion4 with the Ceder:ll Government, and ~rich one mother, erearding to the terms of the ori- F i na l venire, would he the . greatest tem- Idessing which God, in his kindest i iwevi•ltinee. mold bestow upon this natioe. It becomes our imperative duty to evie shier whether or not it 13 ilOpossibio to ef. feet this most desirable coneummatiou. The l'idon and the Censtitution are inseparable. As long ny. one is obeyed by all parties, the . other will be preserved ; and if one is de- strayed. both neist poish together. The destruction of the Constitution will be fel- 1 lowed by other and still grower calainitiee. It was ordained not only to form a more perfect Vision between the States, but to o'establish justice, insure domestic tranquil ity, provide for the common defence, pro mote the general welfare, and swum the mos,ioto. Ithort3 to oursolre4 and our I posterity." Nothing but i pliei t elmilieneo to its mpoirentents. in all pares of the • roontry, will accomplish these great ends. Without that obedietwe wecti look forward , only to continual outrages mem individual I rights, ineesmint breaches of the public peace, natieeal weakness, anemia, dishonor, the total loss of our prosperity. the general isirruetiee sot ' morals, lad the final extinct ion of Isipular freedom. To save our' country &ow evils so apalliog as these, we should renew our efforts again and again. To me the process of restoration seems perfectly I lain and simple. It eon-his merely in a liiithful application of the Con stitution and the laws. The execution of the Inns is not now obstructed or opposed by physical !Inc*; there k no military or other necessity, real or prattle:lel which am prevent obedience to the Coustitntion. either North or South. All the rights - and all the obligations oi' State ;e,. 1 . can be protected and eMoreed by nicatr. perfeetiv consistent witty the fundamental law. The courts may be everywhere open, awl, it' open, their process would be unim peded. Crimes against the United States utti bo prevenied 'r pueished by the proper judicial authorities m a UnlnUer entirely practicable and legal. There is, therefore, no reason why the Constitution ',teeth] not be obeyed, unless those who exercise its powers have deter maned that it shall be dtsreg Idea and vie. lated. The mere naked will of this Gov ernment, or of' some one or more of its broootte., is the only obstac:e that can exist ton perfect Union of all the Status. (In this mementoes question, and some of the neeraires growing out of it, I have had the midiwtane to differ from Cengress, and have expressed my convictions without re serve. though with becoming deference to the opinion of the Legislative Department. Th ose co nvictions are not only unchanged, but strengthed by subsequent events and fluther reflection. The transcendent impor tance of' the subject will be a sufficient ex cuse for calling your attention to snue of the mamma which have en strongly influene ad my own judgement. The hope that we UEultuß II ASSIAT OUNDRY. MSitt Ito, (10. IA CO., PA. hmetitset;rt et*, 'eta, elmve named et blighturtit,s• now 11* fteViso4l uttivaa bury, lonary engines ALC.. &C. all sixes snit Hilly wade t 0. wm►. Ws OMP =I BLOOMSBURG, COLUMBIA CO., PA., WEDNESDAY, DEC. 11, 1867. THE W. IL Jeettrir. nienuaiherg. My. re ruEsuDENT•s 31 VISAGE. way all finally concur in a mode of settle went consistent at wee with our true inter ests, und with our sworn duties to the Con stitution, is too natural and too just to he easily relinquished. It is clear to my apprehension that the States lately in rebellion are still members of the National Union. When did they to lm fin ? The - Ordit..osees of Seces pion" adopted by a portio d in 111.1 t or IL, ”t a very small portion—of their eitiscus acre there nullities. If we admit now that they were valid atel effectual fur the purpose in tended by their authors, we swim) from under our Met the whole ground upon whieh we justified the war. Were those State.. of erwarils expelkl trout the Union by the war? The direct contrary was aver red by this sovernment to be its purpose, and was so understood by all those whogave their blood and treasure to aid in its prose cution. ....SI 54) 54) It cannot he that a sueemrsful war, waged for theßeservation of the Union, had the legal effect of dissolving it. The victory of the notion's arms ww4 not the disgrace or her policy; the of Seeem4oo on the hattle-deld was not the triumph of ite lawless principles ; nor could Cong . r . eas, with or without the consent of the 'tixecutive, do anything which would have the effect, di reedy or indirectly, of separating the States Bout each other. To dissolve the Radon is to repeal the Constitution which hoist; it together, and that is a power which does not m a ting to any department of this gov ernment, or to all of them unite{ so isl.•io that it ha s ',cut aeknowi edio4i f ; istanAse. of the I'4.Am-A Gov erment.. The Executive, my predceesaor, as well as myself, and the heads of all the 41cp:trl Mild* have unifiwthierly acted upon die l.riswiple that the I'niou is not only un but Congressi sub mitted an amendment to the Constitution to Ins ratified I , y the Southern States. and accepted 6 , 4 acts or ratification asa ttelm4- aary and !millil exercise of their highest function. If they were nut States, or were States out of the slinn, their conwnt to a change in the Niel:mental law of the union would have been nugatory. and Con gress in asking it committed a isolitical ab surdity. Tin; Judiciary has also given the solemn sanction of its authority to the same view of the ease. The Judges id the Supreme Vourt have inelotle.l the Southern State, io their eilCUitS, 91111 they are constantly, ia /Nine and eXerreidtl jurisdiction which does not lielong to them. unless those Slates are States of the Union. If the Southern States AN component parts of the rillllll, the Constitution as the seprOttle law fir thou, as it is for all the other States. They arc bound to Ob 7 it. 1111 d so are we. The right of the I , ederal Government, which is clear and timpiestionahle, to mi• form.. the Constitution U:Min 60111. implie. the cotelative obligation on our part to oir• serve its limitations and execute guaranties. Without she eon:Alt:Rion we are noticing: by. thr o ugh and under the Constitution we 411'11.0/34-itSlia:#l..;so6. e may doubt the wisdom of the law ; we may not approve of its provisions, hut we cannot violate it merely because it scents to eantiLe our powers within limits narrower than we omit! wish. It is to t a ple-ti , in of or class or sectional interests, notch le-s of party predominance, but of duty of hi g h and mitered duty— which we are ail sworn t.► perform. If we cannot support the Constitution with the cheerful alacrity of those who love and believe in it, we must give to it, at least. the fidelity of public servants who act under solemn obli gations and commands which they dare not disregard. The constitutional duty is not the only one which rtsioi MS the States to be te-tore , l • them is another consideration, though of minor importunee, is ytit of great weight. (=We OF THE LATE WAR Ott the L'..2,1 day of July, ISO, Congress declared by at. almost utinimon4 vote of both Houses. that the war sitimbi be con ducted solely I'm the purpose of preserviug the I to as ana maintaining the supremacy of the Federal Constitution and laws, with out impairine the di nits, espalify maul rights or the States or of•indiruluai nod that when Hide was dune sir! , war should ethos.. Ido pot - . fly Hutt this licelaration i 4 pemnially lending on those who joined m frisking it, any more than individual members of Congress are personally bona to.pay a public debt created under it law tier wlneh they voted. Bet it was a solemn puhlie official pledge of the national batter, and I cannot imagine upon what grounds the repudiation of it is to he justified. Ilia be Said that we are uot bound to keep fait with rebels, let it be remembered, this promise was not made to rebels only. Thou tanels of' true men in the South were drawn to our standar d . by it, and hundreds of thou sands in the North gave their lives in the belief that it would be carried out. It was made on the day after the first great battle of the war had been fought and lea. All patriotic and intelligent men then saw the neees•iitv of giving such an assurance, And believed that without it the war would end in divstvr to our cause. Having given that assorbee 01 the extremity of out peril, the violation of it now, in the day of our lower, would be n rude rending of that good faith which holds the moral world together. Our country would 0111.0 10 I n ure any c laim Up• on the csedidenee of urea. It weitlil make the war not only a failare but a fraiel. Being sincerely convinced that these views are correct, I would be unfaithful to tov duty if I did not recommend the tepee' the acts of !feteress which Otos, ton o f the Smelter's States under the domination of military mesons , . If calm reflection shall satisfy a majority of your Inevitable bodies that the a c ts rerermd to are not only a yes lotion of the national faith, but to direct conflict with the Constitution, I dare not permit myself to doubt that you will initutt diately strike them from the statute book. To demonstrate the unconstitutional diame ter of those acts, I need do no more than refer to their general provisions. It'must be seen at owe that they are au thorized. To dictate what alterations shall ho maths in the constitutions of the several States; to control the eleetions of the State legislators and State officers, members of Congrese and electors or President and Vice President by arbitrarily declairing who shall vote and who shall be excluded from that privilege : to dissolve State legisltures or prevent them from pssomblife ; to dis miss bulges and other civil fun c tionaries of the state and appoint others without regard to State law' organise anti operate all the political machinery of the States : to regu late the whole administration of their do mestic and !wed affairs according to the mere will of' strange and irresponsible agents sent among them for that purpose. These are not powers granted to the Federal Government, or to &my one of its Imuithea ; not being granted, we viplato our trust by assuming them as palpably as he lould by acting in the face of a positive in. rdiet, for the Constitution fielnds us to do whatever it does not affirmatively authorize, even by express words or by clear implieto non. If the ant bority we desire to use does nut come to us through the Constitutien, I we can exeereise it only by usuritation, and j usgrtieti•mie one of th e most dangerous of I political crimes. By that crime the enemies ; or free government in all ages have work ed nut their design touting public liberty and private right. It loads directly and immediately to the establishment of abso lute rule ; for undelegated power is always unlimited Aid unrestrained. The nets of Congress in question are not only objectionable for their assumption of tingratogd power, but many of their provis. Ma are in temtlict with the direet prohibi tions of the Constitution. The( 'misfit ution tun:Han)s that a republican fie ma of govern ment shall be guarantied to ell the States ; that no person shall be deprived of life, lib erty or property, without due proem of law ; arrested without a judicial warrant, or pun ished without a fair trial before an impartial jury ; that the privilege of lusbatts corpus shall not be denied in time or peace, and that no bill of attainder shall be !wised even against a single individual. Yet the system of measures established by these acts of C o n g re s s dues totally subvert and destroy the form na well as the substance of repub lican geverunient. In the ten States to which they Imply it bioels them hand and !bet its :Amebae slavery, rod subjects them to a strange anal bust ife power more unlimi ted and more likely to be abdsed than any other now known among civilized mem It tramples down all those rights in which the essenea of' liberty consists, and which a free government is always most careful to protect. It denies the hutcos corpus and trial by jury. l'ersomil freedom, property and life, if assailed by the pas.nion, the mei- Wife or the rapacity of the ruler, have no security whatever. it Las the effect of a Itill of attainder, or bill of pains and penal ties. not upon a few individuals, but upon whole matisee, including the millions who in habit the subject States, and even their un larrothildreti. These wrones being express lv forbidden. outwit be constitutionally in ; Ilicted upon any portion of oh:, no I matter how flow may have e o sin our misdietion, and no inatteer they ; live in States, 'Verritories or I have li e desire to sure from the proper and just erteeequences of their great crime 1 those who engaged in rebellions agaidst the 1 gevernment but us a tit••ila of punishment, the IiseaSIIIVI4 meter temeideration are the most unreasonable that could be invented. IMatiyor those i .ormoo, mile l ierreetly imam:elle Muny were ineitpabie of any legal offence. 1 A large proportam PITH of the persons able 1 t-. , !war :trams 'A ere (Meted Mtn the rebellion a:millet their oil, and of those who are guilty with their own eousent, the degrees of guilt are as various its the shades of' their leliertue.ir awl temper. r- But -thescinns - of Congress - confound t hem all together in one common doom. Indis criminate vengettace upon cles.vm. sects and parties, or upon whole reamitunities for of ' fences committed by a purlieu of thou 1 against the Rovermstent to which they owed `obedience, W ie r common in the harbaroum ages of the world. But Christianity and eivilizatian have made such pre gross, that maiorse to a punishment so cruet and noinst would meet with tlio too ndemnation of all unprejudiced and rielttoninded teen. Time punitive jitetice of this age, and especially of this country, does not consist in stripping 1 whole States or their liberties and reducing all their people, without distinction, to the condition of shivery. It deals separately with each individual. continent itself' to the forms of law, awl viiidicutes its Owls purity by an impartial eaaminaibm of every seise before n competent judicial tribunal. If this does not satisfy all our desires twith regard to Southern nebels, let us cen , , soe o urselves by reflecting that a free Cun t stitution, triumphant in war and unbroken in peace, is worth far more to us and our children than the gratification of any present Ifeeling. I alit aware it is assumed that this system , or g.ivertinient of the Southern States is 1 not to be perpetual. It is true this military i government is to be only previsional, but it is !Inveigh this temporary evil that a greater evil is to he made perpetual. It' the gnar -1 ties of the Constitutien can be broken pro visionally to serve a temporary purpose, and in part only of the country, we gan destroy them everywhere, mid fiir all time. Arbi trary measures often change, but they gen erally change for the worse. It is the curse of despotism that it has no halting place. The intermitted ezeeruise of its power brings no cute of security to its subjects, for they can never know what snore they will be called upon to endure when its red right hand is armed to plague them again. Nor is it pis able to conjecture how or where power unrestrained by law may seek its next vietinei. Toe States that are still free may be enslaved at any moment, for if' the (',institution does not protert all it protects moue. Is is manifestly and avowedly the object of these kiwis to media upon negroes the privilege of voting, and to disfranchise such a number of white citizens as will give the former e :deer majority at all elections in Southern States, 'I his, to the minds of some persons, is so important, that a viola tion of the Constitutien is justifitel as a meatus of bringing it about. The morality is always Wee which excuses a wrong because it promisee to accomplish a desirable end. We are not permitted to do evil that good may come. But in this •case the end itself is evil . as well as the inmost.— The subjugation of' States to negro domina tion would be wove than the military tles potisiti under which they are now suffering. It was believed beforehand tied the people would endure any amount of military op pre:saint, for any length of time, rather than degrade themselves by subieetion to thee negro nice, Therefore they Lave been left without a choice. Negro suffrage was established by act of Congress, and the military , officers were com manded to superintend the process of cloth ing the negro race with political privileges torn from white men, '1 he blacks of the South are entitled to be well and humanely governed, rind to have the protection (ilium. laws for nll their rights of person and property. It' it were practi cable at this time to give them a government exclusively their own, under which they might manage their own affairs in their own way, it would become a grave question whether we oil zht to do so, or whether com mon humanity would not require us to rave them from themselves, But, under the circumstances, this isril a speculative point. It is not pro posed merely that they shall govern themselves but that they shall rule the white race, make and administer State laws, elect Presidents and members of Congress, and shape, to a greater or lees extent, the future destiny of the whole country. WouA such a trust and power be safe in sueh hinds ? The peculiar qualities which should characterize any peo ple, who are fit to decide upon the mumge went of public affairs for agreat State, have seldom been combined. It is the glory of white men to know that they have had these qualities in sufficient measure to build upon this continent a great political fabric, and to preserve its stability for more than ninety veers, while in every other part of the world all similar experi ments have tailed. But it' anything can be proved by known facts ; if all reasoning up on evidence is not abandoned, it must be au knowledeed that in the progress of nations negri les have shown less capacity for govern ment than any other race of people. No independent government of any form has ever been aucceasful in their hands. On the contrary, wherever they have been left to their own devices they have shown a con stant tendency to relapse into barbarism. In the Southern States, how -Jeer, Con gress has undertaken to confer upon them the privilege of the ballot. Just released from slavery, it may be doubtful whether, as the.; know ! more than their an cestors, how to organize and regulate civil society. Indeed, it. is admitted that the blocks of he South are not only regardless of the rivnits of property, but so utterly is north t i.f public affairs that their voting can consist in nothing mare than carrying a bal lot to the place whim they are directed to depo,it it. 1 need not remind von that the exorcise of the elective franuhise is the highest at tribute of an American citizen, and that when guided by virtue. intelligence and patrioti s m, and a proper appreciation of our free institutions, it constitutes the true basis of a Democratic form of ti o enenment, in which the sovereign p'owe'r is lodged in the lady of the people. A truq. artificially cre ated, not for its own sake, but solely as a means of iirometing the general welt:ire, its influence for good must necessarily depend upon the elevated ele.tieter and true allegi slice of the oleetor ; it ongbt, therefore, to be repa , ed in none except those who are fitted. morally and mentally, to administer it well, fur if conferred upon persons who do not justly estimate its value, awl who are indifferent as to its results, it. will only a :rve us a means of placing power in the hands of the unprincipled and ambitious, and must eventually mid in the complete destruction of that liberty of which it should be the most powerful conservator. I have, there&ire, heretotitre urged upon your attcetion the great danger to be up prebended from an untimely extension of the elective franchise to any new elms i in nor country, e,oecially when the largo ma iinity, in wielding the power thus placed in their hands, rennet lie expected correctly emeprehend the duties and responsibilities which pertain to suffrage. Yesterday, as it werictiar - taitlifiai eT "liiieisslis were heti in a condition of slavery that had existed for generations. To-day they are freemen, and are assumed by law to be chime. It cannot be presumed from their . previous condition of servitude that. as a rAuse they are as well intinnoel as to the nature or our government us the intelligent foreigner who mhos our land the haunt of hi- choice. In the ease of die latter, withers mai &nee of tive Years nor the knowledge dour institutions which it gives, nor attachment to the principles of Lisa Canslitwinu are the only conditions upon which he can be ad mitted to eitizenship. Ile must prove, in addition, a good motel character, awl thus give reasonable ground the belief that lie will be faithful to the obligations whieli lie assumes as a citizen of the nepublic. Where a people, the source of aII political power. speak by their suffrages through the mstrumentality of the ballot-L4m it must he carefully guarded against the control of those wh3 are corrupt in principle and encode.; of free institutions for it can only become to our Ikthoetel and social Sysieln n sal;.: con ductor of healthy popular sentiment when kept free from demoraliziog influences.- 0)114484 through trawl and usurpation by the desining, anarchy and devotism must inevitably follow. In the hands of the pa triode and worthy our government will be preserved upon the principles of the Con stitution inherited front our futhem It follows, therefore, that in adtuitting to the ballot•hex a new class of voters, not qualified for the exercise of the electite franchise, we weaken our system of govern ment instead of adding strength and darn. bility. 1 yield to no one in attachment to that rule of general suffrage which distinguishes our policy as a nation. But there k a limit, wisely observed hitherto, which makes the ballot a privilege and a trust which requires of some classes a time suitable for proba tion end preparation. To give it indiscria►i nately to a taw class, wholly uttprepar.4l by previous habits and opportunities to per form the trust which it demands, is to de grade it, and finally destroy its power, for it may ha seVely assumed that no political truth is better established than that such it, disariminate and el -embracing extension of popular suffrage must end at last in itsocer thr mr and destruction. repeat the expression of my willineness to join in any plan within the scope of our must it ut ional authority which protuises to better the condition of the mimes in the South, by encouraging them in industry, co lightening their minds, improving their morals and giving protection to all their just rights i s fivadout, But the transfer of our political Inheritance to them, would, in my opinion. be an abandonment of a duty which we owe alike to the memory of our fathers and the rights of our children. Tho plan of putting the Southern States wholly, and the General Government par tially, into thin hands of negroes, is proposed at a time peculiarly unpropitious. The foundations of society have ken broken up by civil war. Industry must be reorganised, lustier re-established, public credit maintain ed, and order brought out of coofusion.— To accomplish these ends would require all the wisdom and virtue of the great men who formed our institutions origionally. I con- Wendy believe that their deseenlants will be equal to the arduous task before them but it is worse than mane.' to expect that negmes will perform it. for us. Certainly we ounht not to ask their assistance until we dr ya ir of our own competency. The great difference between the two races in physieal, mental and moral uharucteristies will prevent an amalgamation or fusion of them together in one homogeneous mass,— If the inferiority obtains the ascendency over the other, it will govern with reference only to its own intemst—for it will recognise no common interest—and create such a ty ranny as this Continent has never yet wit- nagged, Already the nagrooe are influenced by promises of confiscation and plunder; they are taught to recogniao as an enemy every white man who has any respect for the rights of his own rece. If this iamtlitues it mug become worse 111wor"'untialarerw su bve rted, alndustry"lumnth° fiel ds of t: iouthgrownj into a e. O f all the dangers which our nation has yet en countered. none are equal to thous w hi c h must result from the success of the effort now making to African's° the half of our country. I would not put considerations of money in competition with justice and right, but the expellees incident to reconstruction tinder the system adopted by Congress aggravate what I regard as intrinsic wrong of the meas. ore itself. It. has east uncounted millions already, and if' persisted in will add largely to the weight of taxation already too oppres sive to be borne without just complaint, and may finally reduce the treasury of the nation to a condition of bankruptcy. We must not delude ourselves. It will require a strong standing army, and probably more than two hund. 0.1 m lido I of di Pare per anemia to maintain the supremacy of negro gevern ments after they aro established. The sum thus thrown away would if proper ly used, form a sinking fund largo enough to pay the whole national debt in less than fifteen years. It is vain to hope that negrocs will maintain their aacendeney themselves. Without military power they are wholly in capable of holding in subjugation the white people of the South. I submit to the judg ment of Congress whether the public i.,redit may not be injuriously 'effected by a system of measures like 'this. With our debt, and the vast private incrusts which arc compli cated with it, we cannot be too cautious of a policy wide might by possibility impale the confidence of the world in our govern ment. That confidence can only he retain ed by carefully inculcating the principles of' justice and honor on the popular mind, and by the me scrupulous fi delity to all our en gagementn of every sort. Any serious breach of the organ . ° law, persisted in for a eonsiderable time. cannot but create fears for the stability of our institutions. Habit mil violation of preseribed rules, which we bind ourselves to observe, inu-t demoralise the people. Our mdv standard of civil duty king set at naught : the sheet anchor of our political morality is lost, the public con science swings from its moorings and yields to every impulse of passion and interest.— If we repudiate the Constitution we will not he expecte to care much for mere pecuniary obli rations. T e violation of moll a pledgees we made on the 2:.td day of July, 1861, will assuredly diminish the market value of our promises; besides, if we now acknowledge that the I, 4,.,,,tal debt was created not to hold the State in the Union, as the tax-payers were led to suppose, but to expel' them from it and hand them over to be governed by nes grons. the moral duty to pay it may seem ititteli less elear. 1 say it may seem so, fur 1- 1 - do not admit that this or any other tap ) mem it: floor of roptidation (.an be enter- I tained as bound ; but its influence on some elasses of minds may well be apprehended. 'fhe financial honor of a great commercial nation, largely indebted, and with a republi eau feu of government administered by ! avids or the popular choice, is a thin.; of I such delieate texture, and t'pe destruction of I it would ba follewed by such unspeakable ' calamity, t hat every true patriot must desire to avoid whatever might expose it to the slifhtest danger. ('he great interests of the country require inimednite relent' front these enactments.— I Rosiness in the South is paralyzed by areas: 1 of general insecurity, a terror of contiscatiou I and the dread of negro supremacy. The Southern trade from which the North have derive so great a profit under a gov. el.:most of law, still languishes, and can • !weer be revived until it ceases to be fetter ed by the arbitrary power which makes all its operations unsafe. That rich country, the richest in national resoures the world ever saw, is worse than lost, if it be not soon placed under the protection of a free emistitution. Instead of its being us it ought to be. a source of wealth and power, it will leconie ail inttiarable burden upon the test at the nation. Another reason for retracing our steps will sloubilese be seen by Congress in the late manifiLactions:of public opinion upon this subject. We live in a country where popular will always tbrees obedience to itself, sooner or later. It is vain to think of op posittg t with any thing short of legal author ity. backed by overwhelming force. It (Mi not hive escapedyour attention that, from the day on which Cungress fairly and firm ally presented the preposition to govern the lanuthern States by military force, with a view to the ultimate estehliahuient of negro supremacy, every expression of the general sentiment has been more or less adverse to it. The affections of this generation cannot be detached from the Institutions of their ancestors. Their determination to preserve the inheiitanee of free government in their own hands, and transtuit it undivided and unimpaired, to their own posterity, is too strong to be successfully opposed. Every weaker passion will disappear before that love of liberty and law for which the Amer ican people are distinguished above all oth ers in the world. How fur the duty of the Preside it "to p i KT% e, protect and defend the Constitu te)," iequires him go on in opposing an unconstitutional act of Congress, is a very serious and important question, on which I have del:berated much and felt extremely anxious to reach a proper tstnelnsion.— Where en act has been passed according to the forms of the Constitution, by the su mono legislative authority, and is regular ly enrolled among thepublie statutom of' the country, Executive resistance to it, especially in time of high party excitement, would be likely to produ iolent oollisionbetweon the respective adherents of the two branches of the government. This would he simply civil war. and civil war must he resorted to only as the last remedy Pr the wort of evils. Whatever might tend to provoke it should be most carefully avoided. A faithful and cons&entious magistrate will concede very much to honest error and something even to perversonalice, before ho will endanger the publiepoace, and he will not adopt forceable measures, or such as might lead to force, as I ing as those which are peaceable rou . aim open to him or to his constituents. It is true thalaasea may occur in which the Executive sOlfuld be compelled to stand on its rights, and maintain them regardless of nil consegeenees. If Congresa should paws titi act which is not only in palpable conflict with the Constitution, hut !yin, certainly, if carried oat, produce immediate and irrepar able injury to the organic structure of the government, and if there be neither judicial remedy for the wrongs it inflicts, nor power in the people to protect themselves without the official aid of their elected_ defender; if, for instance the Legislative Department should pass an act. oven through all the forme of law, to abolish a cc-ordinate dw partment of the government, in Pooh a ease the Preiid'nt must take the high responsi• bilities of his office, and ttaVO the life of the nation at all hazard. The so called Reconstruction acts, though as plainl unconstitutional as any that can be imagined, were cot believed to be within the ekes last mentioned. The people were not wholly disarmed of the power ofseltklefence. In all the Northern Stated they still held in their hands the sacred rights of the ballot, and it was safe to believe that in due time they would conic to the mews of dicir own institutions. It gives me pleasure to add that the appeal to our oammon oonatitueney was not taken in vain, and that my oonti. demo in their wisdom and virtue seems not to have been misplaced. It is well and publicly. known that ennrs mile frauds hare been porpetrated on this Treasury, and that oolossel fortunes have been made at the public expenee ; this spe cies of corruption has increased, is increasing and if not dimisliehed, will moon bring us into total ruin and disgrace. The public credit ors and the taxpayers are alike interested in an honest administration of the finances, and neither class will long endure the high. heeded robberies that have recently °war red. For this disenediteble state of things there are several Causes. Some of the taxes are so laid as to present an irreaistahle temptation to evade payment. The great eunis which officere may win by connivaned at fraud, ureate a pressure which is more than the virtue of many can withstand, and there can be nn doubt that the open disro gard of constitutional obligations avowed by some of the highest and most influential men in the country. has greatly weakened the moral sensed time who serve in subor dinate places. The expenses of the United States, in• eluding intere,t on the public debt, are morn than six times as much as they were seven years ago. To collect and disburse thiavaet amount requires careful supervision as well as sy , tennatie vigilance. The system, never perfected, was much - disorganized by the "Tenure of Optics bill," which has alumet destroyed official accountability. The Press Went way be thoroughly convinced that an officer is incapable, dishonest and unfaith ful to the Constitution, but, under the law which 1 have named, the utmost he can do is to complain to the Senate, and ask the privilege of supplyiut his place with a bet ter mxu. If the Monte he regarded as per. tumulty or politically hostile to the President, it is natural and not altoeethor unreasonable tbr the officer to expect that it will . take his Part as far as possible, restore lino to his place, and give him a triumph over his Es• eautive superior. The officer has other chances of Impunity griming from accidental defects of evidence, the mode of investigating it and the seamy of the hearing. It is not wonderful that official malfeasance should become bold in proportion as the delinquents learn to think themselves sere. I sin cutirely persuaded that under such a rule the President esinuot, perform the great duty assigned to him of swing the laws faithfully executed, and that it disables him most especially from . enforc ing that rigid accountability which is nese. sary to the due execution of the Iterenne laws. The Constitution invests the President with authority to decide whether a removal should be made in any given case ; the act of Congress declares in substance that be shall only accuse such as he supposes to be unworthy of their trust. The Coustitution makes him the sole judge in the premises; but the statute takes away his jurisdiction, transfers it to the Senate, and leaves him nothing but the odious, and sometimes int preeticable, duty of becoming a prosecutor. The prosecution is to be conducted ben ire a tribunal whose members arc not. like him, responsible to the whole people, but to sepa rate constituent bodies, and who may heir his aevusition with great disfavor. The Senate is absolutely without any known standard of decision applicable to such a case. Its judgment cannot be anticipated, for it is not governed by any rule. The law does not define what shall be deemed good cause for removal ; it is im possible even to conjecture what may or may not be so considered by the Senate. The nature of the subject forbids clear proof'. If the charge be incapacity, what evidence will support it Fidelity to the Constitu tion may be understood or misunderstood in a thousand different ways; and by violent party men, in violent party times, uufaith fulness to the Constitution may even come to be considered meritorious. If the officer be accused of dishonesty, how shall it be made out? Will it be inferred from acts unconnected with public ditty, from priv a te history, or . from general reputation ? Or must the Pres ident await the commis sion of an uctual misdemeanor in otlice? Shall he, in the meantime, risk the eharc ter an 1 interest of the nation in the hands of men to whom he cannot give his confidence ? Must hu forbear his complaint until the mischief is done and cannot be prevented ? If his seal in the public service should impel him to anticipate the overt set t must he move et the peril of Icing tried himself for the offence of slandering his either linate ? In the present circumstances of the country, some ono must be held responsible for oft cis) delitepieney of every kind. It is ex tremely difficult to say where that responsi bility should be thrown, if It be not Id. where it has been placed by the Censtitu tion. But ell just men will admit that the President ought to be entirely relieved from such responsibility, if' he cannot meet it by reason of restrictions placed by law upon his sedan. The unrestricted power of removal from office is a very great one to be trusted even to a Magistrate chosen by the general suff rage of the whole people, and_ aecountable directly to them for his sets. It is insloobt. edly liable to abuse, and at some periods of our history perlinps has been abused. If it be thought desirable and constitutional that it should be so limited as to wake the Pilk ident merely a common inthrwer a,gainstooth er public agents, ho should at least be per mitted to act in that conicity befere some open tribunal, independent of party polities, ready to investigate the merits of every ease, furnished with the means of taking vldenre, and bound to decide wording to established rules. This would guarantee the ferret) of the accuser when be acts in good faith, and at the same time secure the rights of the other party. I speak of cot with all propper respect fbr thi proo Senate, but it does legislative body insure its It is tirs that p, CM 1 NO. 41.