w~aa~ • 4. -7 :1 1 4 , •••••• ••••-.4084 . tr 1, 1 , v DEMOCRAT VOL. XXXII. flogutolutrg flentocrat. EVERY AVV.UNEAUAY itt.toiNmsyno. P.A., Hy 11111.1. r. t lISON 11. J.it4)lllV. TER:W. — 11 I' ll in AJVAItro. If nit rid p.m% XIX 1111111T1Itt. 30 coat. additional will be i breed. 117' No WIWI' 0b0:001itogegl ' t oil 411 all orager life paid NI teat ot the or int .1 the editor IIATEI4 AV MA . EIMAIN II . Illte 4111114 reNVITIVIII A IVAN*. One inure NM or hire., Itioetllotto beery subspquont Instal lon 14,1,1 than 13.. 041 , 4441. he. ea. 3M. GM. I! •letit 'quite, 0.003 00 4.00 000 100 • Two squares. 3.0 u 1 1 3...0 0.110 0.00 14,141 Three " .00 i •.U0 PM) . 1".111 1 0 0 w O A I. stuatox. 0 1 e. 141 111,e0 141111 20.00 Ilalf opium's, 110.01 110. M) 1 14.00 I IA lid i Now !hie c.w.o. Ithoo 1 11. U 0 :01,1* :tox4ll 1:11,00 ihretin * . find Adthissiotrator'n rinttre. 09 .Itl store Notice VA) Other adverodentchts I h.ct ted scenr‘Ohti t. , .pcoial /antral'. Undress •nticee, without ailvertitcuiriit, cents per line. Tenneinnt noiVerthennurnlln pay3ble in mit anre all •410. e. due after t 4. Ot.t inpertion. PEEC OF ZION. C. R. BUCKALEW, At the Court Iluttse, its illuomsbitry, 3,6mthty L'ecniati, Sept. 7, !Sag. ---:0: I Rtl'OltTElt BY U. P. MI:RP111%.1 Fellow Gilizom of Cob, niUtt Olonty It i$ sometimes said in a pleasant or tinnier ens manner that. "this is it great eountry." It is certainly AO in geographical ex t en t,— Our territory abuts upon the two main (wean+ Or Ilse globe. Its northern lamb r passes now into a region of extreme cold, while its southern parts are washed by the warm waters of the Mexican (intr. IVon derful in extent, infinitely varied in scenery and char:tiler is that country which we in- habit and which we are proud to call our own. This (smgly has beets settled and is inhabited by various sorts of pipulations. %%ideas races and stocks of mankind have contributed to that t0a..6 of humanity which now constitutes the A meriean people. Here i s the native Indian, imperlbetly wilted with us, to be sure. awl yet constituting an inter esting part of what in a general seive may be descrilied as the people or the United States. Here is the negro, brought by the hand of violence and foree from his native deserts and his native wilds in Aiiies. and Owed as a laborer in the Southern Statesof our Union. Ilene all1:3111'st MA are emigrants from every nation of Europe, and most of us are the descendants of former emigrants f rom those nations; mei already upon the Pacific et ast are seen visitors from the Asiatie entintrils, from China and from Japan, %vim collie i hel itek beg ea,”!.tyaielit, seeking profit, seeking to et!joy. to semi' ex • tent, those advantages which till over the world it is understood that Amerivan in-ti tutiuns colder upon the man of labor and of toil. If wn pas-. rroto enteidering eerterritery, its extent. our pnlilltitiotl, it.- N om,. and the diversities whieh characterize it, to consider the pioductinits of 4J:ll* entltitly and material interests, our nonds :tr. ! excited and expanded in the contemph of wh:►t we ace. Here i 4 6.! 13),141 11I th tt ,t in the Smith, the enitiV3:i,iti whic h fOrd+4 clothing to millions in all i!arts of the earth. 'there, too, can be i4 r,,a a Ile? se..etr co ne, s ide by side with the heautit al plan tain and she orange tree, while here in Ih. , North thousands of farms, ba-king below h the summer's sun, are rich and golden with the Opening grain, which centribute., whenever the necessity exists, to the sup. port of the Man of hunger and the mail of labor in foreign hunk airs to „;apply in abundance in all parts of ()mown etenitry that cheap and nutritious bread which has come to be thought a necessity of human exis. tem. Again, we see in Pemr:ylvania great mineral interests; wonderful regions, com paratively sterile upon the surface, but which arc rich beneath, where have been stor e d up, through countless ages, that fuel which will warm and cheer the workshop. of art and the homes of the poor. And our people have Ibund other miner:di in newer regions west—gold and silver, anti copper, and lead; and they are bringing them out fain the depths of the earth and casting them into the channels of eemmerce. They enter into the general mass of labor productinus for the advantage of our own country and of all other countries. Here along the n ' coast is a bh:pping inter est engaFed in commerce, Ibrtnerly very im portant in the aggregate or our national in dustries, now dwindled and shrunk into infi nitely small limits, pat* tta ae, , tunt of the recent war, which changed tie, direction and movements of commerce, and portly by im provident and unwise government. NATtfRE (IF OUR GOVERNMENT. Now. then. gentlemen, when you come to consider our country in all these respects. what is a natural conclusion to which you may chine? Why, that government iu the United States intist he extremely ein a I ;fit% • ted and difficult. It has been found in oth er countries and in limner times, that when government extended its action very far from the point where it was located and ad ministered it became either Pei& or despotic; it was either insufficient to preserve order and promote the interests of the country over which it VW placed, or it resorted to three, to all the arts of despotic government to maintain itself and to ;wenn'. Wish those purposes of order fur which in great part governments are instituted among teen. Complication and difficulty were, therefore, by many sepposed to be a necessity of our politicai existence and of our political action. It was so said in the outset when our experiment was begun; it has been repeated often since ; and it is now the creed and belief of a great party in this country which holds the major mass of po litical power amongst us and is now strug gling and exerting itself to the utmost for the purpose of retaining and extending that power. Ihntlenien, I think it fbrtunate, not for us merely but for mankind, that the men who estehlished our political institutions and gave them to us, did nut hold to this opin ion. They believed that in America there could be established and maintained a free government which would unite the two principles of simplicity and force. They did not believe that it was necessary to make an intricate, involved, and eomplicated frame of government for the management of our national fiffsirs ; and they believed that, al though they should confer upon the com mon or Federal bead of our political system, to wit, the government of the (!niteil Stat e s, only limited and rustrieted powers et:alibied to a few clan-e+ of political questions. never theless this country as it then geed anti as it would staid in future time, , xitild be welt governed, order could be preserved, liberty could be secured, the interests of' the people thoroughly and entirely maintained. They believed that the experiments in other times, in rawer ages of free government had failed, not because mankind were incapable of sell' government, nor because they ever wilfully overthrow good political institutions, but because they had not had fair play and a fair opportunity to exhibit their virtue, intelligence, met sagacity in those former experiments. Our fathers were determined that a great experiment of free government should be undertaken in this country. and that it should have a lair opportunity of' seeress. Gen. Washington himself who presided over the Convention that thrilled the ems j stitution of the tithed States expressed gteat doubts—and be honestly held them unquestionably,—whether the new governs went which it was proposed to establish in this country could stem!, whether it would work and accomplish the purposes fist which it was designed. Ile expressed great solici tide and cancers upon that subject; but what else did he say? Ile said that he would spend the last drop of' his blood if necessary in order to give it a fair trial. It was in the spirit of that declaration that he mewed the onice of !'resident after the Constitution was formed, and entered upon the perfermanee of its defiers. And hp kept firm to his purpose afterwards.— , lie eusleavored &wine his administration to maintain the Coestitution and its principles , . ' He held the scales of justice so far as he could, equally hal:sliced between parties. Ile endeavored to give to the people the ex am* of an honest, faithful, constitutional administration of reruhlican institutitets; and he succeeded. It was to a great extent the distinguished virtue of hi- character and the success of his civil administration that Rave to our government a fair start, that attached to it the affection.; and the confi dence of the people, and enabled us to go out for more than halt' a century, runn ing such a career of ricer's and of honor as never before had blessed the fortunes of any people upon the earth. What then. gentlemen, is the material and vital doctrine which we are to have in view always in considering our system of goverinneut and its administration? It is ' that the government of the United States must be administered and conducted within and wording to the provisions of the Con stitution of the United States; that it must net wander from them tier assume to itself powers which that Constit wises does not con fer; that it insist not undertake to regulate the affairs of the people of the United States its any respects except in those few where a clear charter, a complete warrant has been conferred upon it. In this spirit our government was generally administered from the 4th or !Morel', 170. when it was orgaeiz—l, down to the year 1 , 4;1. The Constitution was kept; the laws were ole so.red. the courts and their jellgytents were respected, the States within their jurisdic tion.; w ere not molested, were not infringed upon by the Federal government. The cons !evacuee or this peliey was that we had yeetee, ;trustee*, harmony throughout the emestry. For more than seventy years this was the eundit ion of things in our land. It was beeause MPH atiMilliSOred the governs meet of the I:J;itedStates who thought that a plain, , imple. f.tithsiid adoniisietration of it within it-. clear powers, was both rightist] and caflint and that the great IllasS of ;;,iveremereal adieu ie this country might left to the local comuntnities. or States, hay whirls our people mere divided. It. nical. At'( POWEU. ..$1 50 50 however, a party came int., pow er, the avowisl purpose of whkh was to use the powers and influence of the Federal go vernment fir the purpose of reforming the institutions of some of the States, fer the purrese of acting upon a local institution in the sent kern States of the riiion. That was re-fisted by us, by one of our great poli tical patties upon the ground that the gov ernment of the United States had nothing to du with that institution ; that action upon it pertained to the States exclusively; that the reneral government ought not to assume any power in regard to it. Public opinion divided upon that question; one (:arty was for action up on shivery in various ways by the Federal government and the other re sisted all interference therewith. In the contest which followed the Democracy of the North were certainly not in favor of slavery any more than they are now; they had no interest to subserve in continuing it; the opinions of most of them were impend to it and they would have rejected it when ever proposed as a domestic institution in their own states. But they stood upon the constitutional doctrine, without whet this government cannot last, that the States should exercise all political powers not con ferred by the Constitution upon the govern ment of the United States. They stood there when the currents of popular passion ran against them ; when human sympathy was aroused in the North : when by the pulpit, a n d the rostrum, and the press there was a deluge, as it were, of feeling and pas sion created against the institution of slave. ; first against its expansion into theTer rueries, afterward neamst its being permit ted to exist in the (Astrid of Columbia or places under the exclusive jurisdiction of the 'sited States, and eventually against its existence anywhere. Tho Democracy of the northern States went into a minority en that question. In order to stand by their principles they accepted defeat. Looking b a ck now to those events, who among them that understands the nature of this govern ment of ours and desires to hand it down to those who come after us, a good system as it tame to us, can regret his position at that time? We stand now as we have ever stood, upon the ground that the general govern• ment can exercise no power which has not been clearly conferred upon it, and that the States or the people of the States shall possess all which have not been so con ferred. CA11;1 OF OUR Int ERENT Now, gentlemen, I venture to say that all the evils which afflict us at this time in this country arise from departures from this prin ciple, anti all the dangers which confront us in the future do so confront us because a party in this country does not adhere to this prinetple and will not apply it in the admin istration of the government. Take up any of their measures of poliey,—tho Freed men's Bureau, the reconstruction laws for the South—go through the whole body of them and you will find that each one of them is a departure, or the consequence of a departure from the grants of power in the Constitution of the United States. Who gave to Congress the right to take the mon eys of the people paid into the public treas ury and distribute them as chanty through the instrumentality of a Doreen anywhere? Where is the power granted? Nobody ever pretended that there was any suchauthority BLOOMSBURG, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16,1868. except as an emanation of the war power. The war ended in April .15 , 7,5, and yet this in strumentality of Radical government is now spending our money at the rate of millions a year. When the Bureau measure was first considered, Mr. Wilson of Massachusetts proposed as an amendment to the bill creat ing it that it should continue a veer or two after peace. A debate took place and it was then insisted by me that the Bureau could not exist beyond the war upon any pretenee even of power. The Senate re jected the amendment. At a subsequent session the bill was passsed in a form which authorized the continuance of the Bureau for a year from the close of the war. The war closed in April 1565, but the duration of the Bureau was extended by subsequent le gislation, and here we are in the year 18613, more than three years qua. peace catne,s!nd that interesting institution is yet in exist ence and in full action. TILE RECON2,I2CrTION LAWS. Noweake the Ileconstritetion laws as they are called—the aet of March 2, 1807, of 3lareh 23 and of July 19 of that year, and of lareli 11, litete NVltat are those laws? They provide in the first place that in the States of the South there shall be military government, pure and simple. Five major generals were placed in command in ten States and those States were divided into military districts. They had conferred on them the power to administer civil and criminal justice at their pleesure throughout those States without limitation except that they could not take life without the consent of the President of the 17:thud States, and it required two struggles in Congress to get that exception—it only c ame at the end of prolonged debate at a night session. The whole population of those States were, about two years after peace had been seemed, placed under the command of major gener als who bad power to try by military com missions or courts matted anybody lhr any thing, to sentence at their pleasure, and to execute those sentences with the single ex ception I have mentioned. W hat next? Provision was made that the people in those States might postssibly have civil governments with full powers at some time. So it was enueted that the generals should appoint men to register the voters, and appoint a time for holding elections when men should be chosen to State Conventions to form Constitutions which were to be submitted to a popular vote ; that all the officers of election should be appointed by them, and after Constitu tions were adopted they were to transmit theta to Congress. In voting to select members of State Conventions and in vot ing upon the adoption of State Constitu tion., all the adult male negroee were to be permitted to vote, not one of whom had ever been allowed to vote by any Constitu tion bvlbre. By net of emigres.. it was pro vided that they might all vote at these twi t elections. Where did Congress get the p o w e r to do that? Who made the Coneti- Nano of Pentewirenia ? to /77e. Jupiter the Revolution, a Convention chosen by the people of Pennsylvania Met which ails pre sided over by Benjamin Franklin roil made A Constitution for our State. Again, in 1791). a Convention freely chosen by th e people formed a constitution mei idler they limited it announced it by proclamation in the streets of l'hiladelphia. That constitu tion is in o.ree yet and we are living tinder it. In lees a convention met that propose,' certain amendments to it which being sub mitted to the people and amep(ed by them became a part of the temetitution of the State. Since that time, on several oceaeions, the legislature net two suecessive sessions agreeing upon sonic form of' amendment to the constitution, it has been submitted to the people of the State and voted upon by them. Awl so it has been everywhere in this country. If there is it principle certain shop established in America, and certain and established as a republieen principle in the orgaikatiou of free government. !eh., that the people who arc to be bound by a con stitution and they only, can make it. 111' course, we all know that ; it belongs to the very horn-book of political science. Who made the constitutions in the South under this scheme of reconstruction? Sub stantially, they were made by Congress, and in that Congress not one representative (in either Senate or House) from any one of those States. So that, in the first place, they were not made by the people who were to be bound by them ; and in the next place they were mile by representative bodies in whi c h the people to be bound by them lied me representation whateter. '('hut is m i di. cal reconstruction in this lTuton in Ihti7 and lsfisl Well. we Anal think that rather stern practice to be applied in Pennsylvania. Perhaps we should do something more than grumble if it were atompted here. But the location of such an act by Congress does not change its character. It is just as wrong Gtr Congress to pass outside of its just au thority and make a constitution in one Stare of the Union as in mother; Congress can make one nowhere. Now observe, they pro vided that the whole mass of adult negro men should vote in choosing delegates to conventions and shouldvote on the question of adopting the constitutions made by such conventions, and the whole prowl:ding was to be superintended and, to a great extent. controlled by major-generals of the army of the United States. If them is anything of necessity to be inserted in a constitutiou when made. it is the rule of suffrage. That is at the foundation of everything in making free political institutions. Who shall vote is the first and important thing to be deter mined amp regulated. The political com munity determines that fur itself ; and from time to time that rule of suffrage may be changed by the people,as has been done often in our State and in other States. But there was something further in this legislation. Not only did it provide that the negroes should be permitted to vote at those two elections connected with organization, but it was further provided that the consti tutions to be formed should confbr sdch right of suffrage upon them ; or, what amounted to the same thing, it was provided that if constitution contained such a provision it would be accepted, or deemed acceptable by Congress and the State adopting it be re stored to its political rights of representation in Congress and participation in Presiden tial elet Cons. All these constitutions were made under laws containing such provisions. I repeat. then, that substantially and in point o f t au t th o s e S o uthern constitutions were made by Congress because the acts of Con gress deemed who should vote or be con cerned in making them and also provided in efleo what qhould be leading provisions in those constitutions when made. Now, we say that this whew) of recon struction dictated and enforced by Congress is not valid ; that it ought not to hind the people of the United glottis, and that the parry which established it, which upholds it, which proposes to maintain it i n future, should stand condemned; that the unauthor ised power of the government of the United States should he withdrawn from those political communities and they be permitted to form or amend their own institutions precisely as we in Pennsylvania aro authorized to form or amend ours. We say further that this sys tem of unrestricted negro suffrage is evil and must lead to bad and deplorable conse quences in the future. Why, is it not man ifest to any man of intelligenco wh o has considered this subject that unlimited col ored su ff rage in the South means corrupt elections hereafter. That this large mass of voters will be influenced by appeals to their passions, uninstructed and uncultivated as they are, nobody can question. But they will be more largely and (Molly subject. to theinfluence of' money,to the distribution of the good things of this life by which their votes will be affected, and this will extend through the whole mass of the communities which compose those States. We know that the great evil we have to guard against here, North, and in fact the evil to be most guarded against in all free countries, is the corruption of the electoral body. So lu ng . as the great mass of the ele c tor a l populatum remains sound and pure you can maintain free government. W hen influences come into existence that taint and corrupt it essential ly, the government must change its form. When the people become too base for free institutions, they will depart from them; some new film of government better suited to their natures and to their condition will take the nlace of die old. This is the his tory of the world from the beginning. We to upon the establishment of this system of unlimited negro suffrage in the .South as a judgment of degradation upon our politi cal institutions and when we behold this consequence following upon usurpation we see clearly how necessary it is to maintain the old doctrine upon which our govern meat was founded. and down until recent times administered, that Congress shall ex ert no power which has not been clearly con ferred upon it by the fundamental law. TILE DEMOCRATIC POLICY. Now, gentlemen, what do those who speak fie. the Opposition party (because we may now describe ourselves as such) teach and proclaim in this contest ? They teach and they proclaim two things as the material and vital matters for consideration by the people : first, that this system of reconstruc tion must be abandoned at least so far as the federal government is concerned, and next, that the expenses of the federal government and its imposition of burdens upon the people iniet be thoroughly 'Aimed. What makes expense ? Departures front the Con stitution. What makes burdens upon the people? An expanded system of federal government. $o that to wlichever of these Inestions—reeonstruction or public exprn aitura —you turn your attention, you find that it establishes or vindicates the propo sition with which I began, that this govern ment of ours must be administered a.s a re m Hued and limited government, leaving the pilot urns Or political powers to be exercised in the States, in the localities where their exercise i.v required, and that upon this doctrine alone can our government be neon tamed and be made to subserve the interests of the people. I.7 I )VERNMENT ES PESSES Aso REvEscr Now take this matter of expense. have already spoken of meonstruction.— Over Merit hundred millions of dollars were eolleeted fisitti the people of' the United States in thitty-six months, beginning Juty I, I:915, and ending dune 30, Ices, redwing the gold duties on lUlllOrld to the greenback statelaid. Between fifteen am i 4txt eei , hundred millions of dollars were collected off the people of the I nited States by their preeminent in those three years. hew nronh of that has been paid on the public debt ? A emnliaratively small amount.— Most of it has been expended by govern ment won current objects.' I have an idea that six hundred millions of that mem of money should have been paid upon the principal of the public debt. In ley judg ment that would have left us plenty of money to pay the interest on the debt, which must be met, and pay liberally for pensions and bounties and all other legitimate and proper objects of government outlay. But it has cost you one hundred millions of dol lars a year to keep up your army in time of peace. Filly-six thousand men are arrayed tinder the flag of the United States, when 10,10 u or 15,000 would be adequate. Your navy has cost thirty or forty millions a year, which should have been eight or ten mil lions at the utmost. The Ft-admen's Bu reau has cost an amount that nobody can compute, because the filets cannot be fully known. In 1866 Congress appropriated over six millions to that Bureau specifically, and in the next year nearly four millions ; but a pert of the outlays by that Bureau do not appear in appropriations devoted to it expressly ; they are covered up in army ap propriations, because army supplies' have been turned over largely to it. A large number of the officers or the Bureau have been army officers, and it was a measure of economy to employ them; but if there had been no such Bureau in existence, all those officers and the men connected with these might have been discharged and returned to the pursuits of private life. Congress, which formerly authorized an expenditure of s2o,u(s) a year for . publishing the laws. last year spent three times that amount for that purpose. This is a sample item, Ft' ported to us by the Department of State. Congress increased its own compensation over 000,000 in the item of salaries. By reducing the compensation to *4,000 a year, which would be sufficient, there would be a saving now of $317.000 per annusu—wore than Is quarter of a million! The contin gencies and incidentals of the two Houses of Congress are enormous and scandalous; half a million could easily be struck off without impairing the energy of the gov ernment in either one of these Houses. But I cannot go over the various items upon which them has been undue outlay, and upon which there might be retrench ment. The general result we have before us and undisputed—fifteen hundred millions of dollars collected in thirty-six months, ten and a half millions a week, a million and a half a day; and nearly the whole of it ex pended upon other objects beside the public debt. Nobody has ever pretended that more than two hundred and fifty wallops out of this fifteen or sixteen hundred nul lities has been paid upon the debt, and a re rent estimate puts it at ono hundred end thirty-four millions, excluding money nn hand upon the first day of July last, which Congress had appmpriated away. Bus we need not stop to fix the exact amount ; we know it to be a small amount when com pared with the amount of the public debt, or with the amount of revenue collected. Now, what ought to have been done after the war ended? You understand that our debt was made twice as much as it other wise would have been by the issue or paper money largely during the war. The gov ernment itself issued paper money ; it in. ' corporate(' hanks to issue paper money; the currency was largely increased. Prices rose; and the consequence was that the govern ment appropriations became enormous, and the debt was swollen in magnitude. I shall not discuss the propriety of that policy, whether it was wise or not ; we are at pros cot only concerned with the fact. The amount of the debt was, in fact, doubled be cause of the policy we adopted in regard to the currency, ctutsite ab illerCllmf of pi lees. When peace came, with the currency greatly expanded, we ought to have applied the larger part of the revenue upon the debt and sponged it off rapidly, because, as we come back toward specie payments, as we contract our currency, as we reduce the prices of articles in' the community, the burden of this debt becomes the heavier upon us. When we return to specie pay ments, to hard money. to the currency of the Constitution, and then come to pity our debt, in point of fact we shall pay it twice over. Ido not exaggerate in that state ment. With restricted means, at a con tracted standard, we shall pay a debt which was created in a time of expansion. But we cannot always keep the currency inflated and prices up; in the long rue they are ruinous and wasting to the community. We must get back, and within a reasonable pe• riod of time, to a sound currency, to com paratively moderate prices. It now looks very much as it' we should get to that 'mint (provided we do uccomplish it), with our debt undiminished, with the whole mass of it upon our hands. We shall have, in other words, a debt of $2.600,00(1,000 upon us, contracted in a 611143 of expansion, and to he paid us time of contraction. We desire to avoid that result ; but we cannot avoid it Jr we pour out money upon a useless army, if we pay heavily to cultivate the political of rectums of the negro population of the South, if we pay shameful sums for Con gressional and other official expenses. We cannot avoid it if we support a party in power which uses the government for its selfish purposes ; a party which is Wafer cut to time expenditures of the public money, and which "outside of the Constitution" is constantly engaged in prosecuting its meas ures for the procurement and remotion of public power. I=ZM Now, what can the party who have nomi nated Seymour and Blair do if they come into power, with reference to the finances and the monetary affairs of the govermuent? They can reduce our army of 50,01 n) men down to ten or fifteen thousand and the ex pense of it from $100,000,000 to a) or millions. They can reduce the expenses o f the navy from millions of dolllrs to Bor p) millions. They can abolish the Freed men's Bureau, with its profligate awl wen d:dons expenditures. They can reduce Con gressional compensation by voemoo awl then leave members of COligre: , 6 adequately compensated at $4,000 a year. They can prevent the Southern Senators and Repre sentatives from voting th e mAe c ,i half' a millum of dollars for salary for sixteen months before they were elected,—a little point to which I will call your attention in a moment. They rant cut off the contingent expenditures of Cencress itself and at least one half of all the officers employed by the two Houses. Nay, I think in those times of peace and justice which will be inaugur ated, we shall hardly need even a Capitol pollee. (I.sughter and applause.) Of course I can mention only particular rel;wins most easily stated awl underg.ani, without at tempting to present the whole question be tween parties am to economy awl fidelity in financial administration. I'AY CARVET-lIMIOMS. T alluded a moment since to the pay of' the Southern usembers of Congress : and as that,illu,tratcs reconstruction by,its fruits, I will say a few words upon it. Two or three nights bel'ore the adjournment, at the last session, a resolution was offered in the Senate that the members of the Senate from the reconstrueted States who had been admitted should receive compensation from the complete:Alecto of the 411111 Con gross, the 4th of March, 1867. Au amend ment was offered to make their compensa tion begin front the time of their election. The vote was taken and stood 17 to 21 upon this proposition, a majoritrof four against the amendment, some of shoo members from those States themselves voting against it. At that point of time a question of order was raised by me under parliamentary law, that members who were directly interested in a question could not vote upon it; that these men who were to receive this compen sation under a special vote were in the cat egory of men who had claims upon the gov ernment; and, consequently, being interest ed, they could not vote. A debate of two or three hours took place upon the question of order, by which time the original propo sition, as I shall presently explain it, be came somewhat alarming to some gentlemen who were about to come home to northern constituencies to give an amount of their conduct and to meet the discussion of Con gressiomd proceedings in home debate , and thereupon it was managed that absent mem bers were brought in and by a close vote the amendment was carried and the original proposition lost lbr the time ; it stands de ferred until next winter when, if the people give the party in power a renewed lease of power, approve their conduct, declare them all honorable and fit men to govern this country, l have no doubt this money will be voted, the emergency of the election having been passed. What does it amount to? The salary of a number of Congress amounts to $4OO per month, tax off. For sixteen months, from March 4, 1867, to July 4, 1868, it would be $6,400 to each member. The reconstructed States are to be entitled to 50 members of the house and 20 Senators, making T 0; that you perceive nearly #430.000 of COMponSation was involved, assuming that this mode of payment would be applied to all the mem bers of both Houses from those States.— These Men were all elected in the summer of the present year, about the months of June and July. On the 22nd and 25th days of June laws were passed admitting Arkan sas, North and South Carolina, Georgia. Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana to repre sentation in Congress. In other words, on June 22nd and 25th, 1565, for the Gres time this Radical Congress declared those States entitled to he represented at all find these Senators were all chosen either a short time before or immediately alter that date. So that they proposed, and some of' them by their own votes, to he paid fin. sixteen months before they were elected to their offiees i for sixteen months before the ma jority m Congress . even had recognized their States as entitled to reprerientation. In other words, nearly half a million of dollars was to be voted at once or cmitually into the pockets of the carpct-bag Senators and Representatives for a period of tune Wore they wore chosen to their offices at nil, or their reconstructed States entithsl to repre sentation in the two Houses! FRUITS Or RWIONSTRITTION. I might go on and tnke up these Dimon struetion laws, explaining one feature after another, awl then point out the fruits which they have produced. This corrupt action of men voting money out of flue public treasury into their own pockets Ihr work they never did, for imaginary servious fur months before they were chosen, or there was any pretense that their States could send them, is only a sample of what Reconstruc tion brings forth• It does not stand alone. Look at the islislature of Florida, which has just passed a law that it will it*df choose Presidential electors, because it will not trust the people of the State to chow them They have passed such a law and adjourned to meet in November to choose electors. Nobody supposed when a member of either branch of that Legislature was selected that ho would have anything to do with the Presidential election. The Legis lature were chosen with no reference to that allbittet ; and yet they pass a law to take the choice of Presidential electors from the peo ple awl to wield that power themselves Look at Alabama. In that State also bill or a similar character was pas:toll—that the Legislature itself should choose Presi dential electors. It was sent to the Gt.v. entor. Tlmre Was some prudent fear ol'the effects of it North, and the Governor, upon some judicious suggestion, sent back a veto. What was done in the two Houses? Did the Legislature act upon his Veto and sus tain it or dkapprove it? :so; they laid it over and postred it till the day before the President:al eemtion. What then? If the State is likely to go against them mu the popular vote, they can then ',ass that Law; they have thf votes to puss it over the veto, (which may or may not be a Wet fide veto) and if that is done, they will choose electors and not allow the people any voice in their selection. This is one of the fruits of Re construction in Alabama! TEST CATU What else ? In most of these Southern constitutions they have put a provision that no man shall Lao permitted to vote who doss Hot swear solemnly beforehand before a pub lic officer that he accepts the political equal ity of the negroes with himself, and will maintain it in future. Think of that! There is a majority in this State opposed to colored voting ; we have it in our constitu tion ; we do not allow that class of' persotas to vote. There has been difference of opin ion among our people on this subject, hut a naujority has been opposed to negro suffrage and is opposed to it now. Not one of you holding your opinions could go into these reconstructed States and settle there and vote honestly under their comatitutious. l'utt would hove to swear away your manhood, your judgment upon this sultiect, not . t 4 the time being only but for the future. 1 00 must swear substantially- that you will not vote to alter the constitution of the State or in any any other way remit hack these Congress-math) voters or any of them to their former condition of non-voting. This is a fruit of reeonstruction under Congres sional legislation. This is the oath made by carpet-bagger and negro in State conven tions, and adopted by negro votes, a n d fast ened down upon the people by Congression al law. For what malaise? In order to re tain political control of those States, to push away honest anal decent men from the elec tions, even men front the North. It has nothing to do with loyalty ; it is an oath test of opinion, most infamous and wicked, concocted for purposes of rascality and ate plied generally in tue South to prevent hon est and fair elaxtioos. Oh! is it possible that all this iniquity— and I have not touched more than the verge of the subjet,t —is it iossible that this mow :emus iniquity of reconstruction now going on for a year and a half, as it appears in the enactments of Congress, upon the face of the Southern constitutions, in the legislation of the new-made legislatures of those States, and in the political . proccedings at their elections, can NAM in review before the American people and not be rebuked? If so, I will not say that I shall despair al together of republican institutions, but I will say that l should utterly despair of them it they were to be judged by the elec tion, of 180. But this will not be the result. This sub ject and the financial question hav e go ne t o our people everywhere. They are under going debate ; they are tieing comprehended and understood; and it is idle now for the speakers and writers o f the R e publican party to come along with the old war cries, attempt to get astride the passions of men and ride them forward in the direction they luny choose. It ca n not he. M en ma y have misbehaved themselves in the war, tbr which they received a just measure ot' ap probrium, but what has that to do now with this question of reconstruction or this other question or taxation, of revenue and its disbursement? The pool* willjudge the actual issues of this want pawn, and put aside all matters which are irrelevant or untimely. corm:Nor. sumoun Gentlemen, at tho New York Convention an eminent man was named by our party for the office of President, who bail been Governor of the greatest dour States. He has undergone examination as a candidate since he was named, and no man could un dergo suet% examination better. lie has a political and a personal record which defies criticism and debate. Remember, ho was Chief Magistrate of the greatest of our States during a part of the war; and for years no man in this country contributed more than he to the suet-esti of our armies in raisin g troops, in organizing them, in sending them forward to the war, and in fol lowing them afterward with considerate and earnest care and assistance. When our own State was invaded by the enemy in being destitute of troops of our own, Gov ernor Seymour sent over troops to our aid. They were sent promptly and without grudg ing. They did their work. Our State was to a great extent protected by them. A riot broke out in New York city. lie Left the quiet of his residence at Albany and went down to Now York, called over some State forms newly organized from Staten Hand, and used them to put down the riot. Ile went among the rioters themselves, and, addressing them in kind language, (for which he has since been foully abused, and very unjustly), reasoning with them, allnyed their passions, and thus assisted to restore peace and order in that city. No Federal troops were used at all ; the government was saved front expense or trouble about the riot by 11overnor Seymour's discreet and energetic action. I saw him myself, at 6,1 time, at the Astor House, in oonauitatiee, NUMBIM in Viet in session with the Republican Mayo or that eity, and with llovernor 51orgat linked States Senator from that State, aii a Republiean• They were acting very prof orly in emieert and harnionhitotly to webers the peat%) or the city. if there was amu in the Union who attlsted this governmer in the late war, ho did. Ills position gay him the opportunity of aiding the goveri moat. and ho did his duty thoroughly, an to 11,1 in this State he gave needed and time! assistatoie. HOW mistaken and misplaiss thee, are these revived cries of -loyalty in the eleetion of' I ftrig ! Th e y d o m a t on e our candidate or cause, and can only di: grace those who utter or applaud them. 1110 f. The opposite party have mimed for th Presidewy the genet al chief in commit' of the armies of the Unite .1 state , . it w at , prnsentr"l, nut tweitte,t, lie bad het: identified with them in their past history their past struggles ; not bemuse ho w. known t o hold opinions wills diem upo any one question whatever but bee tuse running hint and in supporting him, the would to some extent keep Out of sight did own misdeeds and enormities, as they se t posed. By running b u n they expected escape front a debate upon reconstructio and upon the use they hail made of th people's money, and to get us back agni into war debates, and by shouting "rebel, 'ereb , d." and other cries, having na l're• eat significance or application to the east paigst of 1%8, obtain a false judgmet front the American people and be enable to control our govertunent for the four yea to come, as the have for the four years pas (HUNT'S COCKSE AS TO EXTUANGE4 I have little to say about Gcn. Grant' military record. It is nut .the most illus trious and brilliant in the world or in a: history. I cannot approve of his cours with referent,: to the willing.) of prisoner of war. I think it was improper, 111 -Avis e.l; I might almost say, inlitUnan. At on time it was supposed that Mr. Stanton wa responsible for exchanges not being made But his friends (111110 forward with over whohning proof that he was not responsi hie ; the respondbiliti •srus to a great eaten pushed away front him; it was shown tha control over that subject hal been turnet over from the Secretary of War and dole gated exclusively to the Lieutenant! leneral General fluter was the agent of exchang at the time ; and in speeehes awl publics tons be bas produced official evidence, he sides his own statements, by which it ap pears clearly that he was not responsible to interrupting the exchanges. That respon Ability rests upon the man who ("Antrollu. At that time the eXtilan . V3 and the genera management td' the war ; and ho took th ground that by not exchanging, by bullin Sentient men in our prisons while the Con federates held ours in theirs, the advatitag: would be on our side, as we bad their men than they had of ours ; and the whh regard to the suffering and &Ai while these things were hard upon iodivid tuts, yet its a matter of general i was to our advantage; and therciere h. persisted in it. This reasoning has not up proved itself to the people of this country and it will not approve itself to the judg meth of history. I say, then, that upo the military recur.' presented, here is great imperfection, n great blot ; and 1 .1• not think that the candidate who has the record has an' large or extraonli wiry claim,: upon the aoltiler population of the I States. GNANT'A "NO rourr." But the great objection to him is that la, has ''no policy'' of' his own. Ile says so he says it openly in his letter of uceeptanee It chosen to the l'resitlential oflitat, he wit go into it and exercise its duties and it. power without any poliey whatever of hi own. IVhat then? lie will tweept tin policy of Congress. That is the way every body understands it, the way members o Congress and the people everywhere under stand it ; and it is no doubt the just ewa struetion. the actual meaning of' his lan guage. What then have you? You hay simply a proposition to continue in powe the Radical leaders in the two Houses o Congress. They are to run the governmen according to the ir pleasure in the future an , to control its policy throughout. The el& lion of General Grant does riot mean any thing more than au Meumbeney of tin dice by him, while the actual powers the government arc to be exereistal by do men who haven policy, and who have ex hibited that policy before you. Therrien it is that WO are always, during this canvass called upon to di.-eti , s Congto,ionalp. , lioy, and we are not called upon particu larly tt discuss candidates. Perhaps never heron in the history of this country, where a Pres idential eleetiou has becu contested, ha: , there been so little said about the candidate. on either side, except by sonic little peoplt who do Radical talking, and who, not tan detstanding public quest i ons , w ill go b ite and recite the history of the war, and en deavor to make out General Grant to b what nature never intended, and what Prey itlence never vouchsafed, a great General [Laughter.] It is a good thing, a very proper thing that the people should discuss measures 0 government, rather than individuals, in at election canvass. It is a good thing,. anal proper thing, that in this campaign m should discuss the 'obey of Congress, wide' has ruled the country for years, and volt with reference to it. and that we should no. have much debate about candidates. I hay no doubt that both the Presidential candi dates are honorable men. That is the gen eras) judgment of the country. Our canal date is well qualified for the Ake, and tin ether is not, and we regard that as an ire portant consideration. But if we are ft consider a Presidential election with refer enee to the merits or elaints of' candidates, there is another consideration to be taker into wont. GRANT'S RANI: AND PAY in the middle of the war Congress vote, the rank of Lieutenant General to genera Grint and called bun East. He ha, achieved success at Chattanooga. mainly b the coming to his aid of lietteral Sherman who struck the enemy nt Missionary Ridge and in fact extricated nenerul Grant from L of great danger. Ile was wade Lieutenant fleneral and given enntrol ove, the operations of our armies. Why ? No because there was any wonderful opinion it Congress with referenee oehis capacity fo conducting the war. but Leentsse it had be come all absolute neeessity that the man avement of the war should be taken out the hands of Mr. Stanton and ClOn. Hal leek. They had been mismanaging it fo years, protracting it. wasting our resource. and our energies, losing one point etc tlllolLor of folvoutoge, whie6 we shoot CONCLC lAD ON youtatt