HARVEY SlCHlLEli^^prlttor.l NEW SERIES, Uortli sr;titcli f rainsrt.! A weakly Democratic _. ijf**iii paper, devoted to Pol- end Sciences Ac. Pub- v ~ day, at Tutikhapnock, BY HARVEY SICKLER. Terms—4 copy 1 year, (in advance) 81.50. I bet paip within six months, S2.OU will,be charged **t- * : i. r rie3llS3"<^r. 10 lines ot-l , Uss, maJce three \four < tiro 'three 1 .tt.r > one. one square vretkwctek- mo' Homo Ih mi/th'.year 1 Square I.OOj L-'aj > 2,8 G 3,OQj 5.00 2 do. 20y 2.50 3.25, 3 50' 1.5 " 6,00 "J do. 3>V :;.75 4.7 i' 5.5t' 7,1)0} POO i Column. 4.o B,('o< lfl.oo 15 0# do. 600 7,00! 10.00 12.< Jit. 17.(qh.2§,00 do. 6.00 9.50 1 1.00 I 5,00'25.00 35.00 1 do. 10.00 12.001 17.00'• 22.00 2MMO,uO Business Cards of one square, with paper, 8". JOB WOUK 9f all kinds neatly executed, aud. at prices to suit the times. r')~ *7. • ' • fhisiitfss JJoliffS. BACON STAND.—Nicholson, I'a. C L JACKSOX, Pr prictor. [vln49tfj i'tEO. S. TUTTrtN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. vT Tuukhannock, Pa. Office in fc'tark's Bii k Block, Tioga street. A XT7M. M. PIATT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Of- VV fice in Stark's Brick Block, Tioga St., Tunk •hannvick, Pa. RR. A S. AV, LITTLE ATTORNEY S AT LAW, Office on Tioga street, Tuukhannock Pa. JV. SMITH, M. D , PHYSICIAN A SURGEON. • Office on Bridge Street, next.Uoor to the Demo crat OfSce, Tunkhnnnock, Pa. HS. COOPER, PIIYSIOTAN A SURGEON • Nejwtop Centre, Luzerne County Pa. l>li. .J. C- BECKEU Y CO., PIIY9ICI VXM SV'lijjiE.ON'S, Would respectfully .. .nonnce f.■ citi'/"n- - o r Wy nring that they h.a\e located at Tunkh innock wher bey will promptly attend to : 11 calls ill the line of neir profession. May be found at his Drug SUio r>t professionally absent. JM. CAREY, M. I).— (Graduate of the vf • M. Institute, Cincinnati) "ii 1 resjiectfully announce to the citizens of Wyomihr ant Luzerne Counties, that he e mtinucs his regular pr o-ftee in the s-arious depi tmcnta ot iim profession. M*v rm #owno wt his office or re.-i len'.-e, when not professionally ab cnt Particular attend: n given to the treatment Chronic liiseas. entremorciand, Wyoming Co. Pa.—v2n2 WALL'S HOTEL, LATE AJyrrsllCAN HOUSE, TUNKHANNOI Sv. 44 YOM2NG i O , PA THIS establishment 1> is recently been refitted an 1 furnished in the latezf style Ever* attention will he given to the comfort and convcn-enve ot those wio patronize the House. T. B 4VAI.L, Owner an I Proprietor. j Tunkhanneck, .reptumbcr 11, 1661. MAYNABD'S HOTEL, TU\KII \NN(K'K. WYOMING COUNTY, PENNA. J 011 N MA Y N A III), Proprietor. HAVING taken the Hotel, in tb Borough of Tunkhanncck, re.cently occupinl by Riley Warner, the proprietor respectfully soli its a share ot }Mblie patronage. The House hos been thoroughly rapai.-ed, and the comforts and accomodations of-a Grot class Hotel, will be found ly all wh > may favor t with their custom. September 11, 1361. NORTH RRANSH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, I'A Wm. 11. (.'OUTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the nroprii t ar-hip of the above Hotel, the undersigned will s;nre no effort to render the house an agreeable place ot rejourn for *ll who ia*y favor it with thoir custom. Win II CCRTIUIIJIT. Jane, 3rd, 1363 osm l)otrl, TOW2L3XT33A, PA. D. B- BARTi .ET, [Late ot tho BBTUINARP Ilot-sn, ELMIUA, N. Y.] I'ROPKIETOR. The MEANS! HOTEL, i onor.fthe LAR(}E.-T find BEST ARRANGED H uses in the country It 1 is fitted up in tho most modern an 1 improved stv.'p, find Bo pains are spared to make it a pleasant and agreeable Stopping-place for aif, v 3. n2l. ' v M. OILMAN, 5 \ 1 +; -fir" 4ltW 110 11 V v , . • • i >LT OILMAN", has pennansntly Icw-nted in Tnnk- IVI. bannock Borough, and respectfully under.; his f professional services to the citizens ( f this t i t-e and urronnding country. ALL WORK WARRANTED, TO OIVE SAT I? FACTION. jar Office over Tutton's Law Office, near t' e Pos ' Office ®*e U, 1561. TO NERVOUS SUFFERERS OF BOTH SEXES. " ' " F eiS?I E K RE nk X> - <3EmKMANHAVrNG I U ', a . fcw d 'J' 5 . undergoing all f rZ„. ?,r;' niJ lrrc? " 1 " expensive modes pf I VL? m • / SUcc "*> considers it hisMcfejl du- ! yto comi. .aicnte to his afflicted fellow creatures 1 the means or cure Hence, on the reec.t of an Kl ' t reused envelope, he wilt scn.l (free) ft 4 copv vf the rtexnptioqnted. Direct to Dr J 0 „a M jJAG.VU! 1 Fa !?/ Street, Brooklyn Now Tork v??4!y ' ' *m+ l SPEECH OF HON. D. W. VOORHEES, OF INDIANA. Delivered In the House of Representatives of the United State'., March .1, 1961. [CONCLUDED.] But, sir, I will be told by the advocates of force and violence a.s a remedy, and the | *o!e remedy, for our troubles, that although the South might send commissioners to treat for peace, yet they would accede to no term save recognition and separation. In sup port of this vtewjceitain propositions recent lv off,-rod in tiie Congress at Richmond are cited. To my mind thev indicate a far dif j ferent conclusion. It is true they do not sig utfy to me that the power of the southern people is exhausted; tiiat the rebellion is enislied ; that a'pantc of fear prevails in the Southern mind, that a government, whether tie facto or room to act. Such is not, in my judg ment, the meaning of this movement in t n* Confederate Congress. Sir, what is this con test? What iuter.sts does it involve ? ihev at.- very distinct and simple when di vorced lrom fanaticism On the part of those I who have kept their allegiance it is a 9'rug git- to maintain the boundaries of the Repub I iic. and thus defeat the ruinous doctrine that a State has a right to secede. On ttie part of those in rebellion, it is as effort, in their estimation, to pre-erve the integrity of their local laws, iheir social institutions, the right 1 to control their domestic affairs free flom Federal fntertVrence. With some, this at empt is tnatle tind. r a claim of the r'ght of :-• cession ; n] tiers proclaim a revolution, which i> lite right < I all pe -ple if grievances sufficient exi-t as a justification. But the people o! toe S"tfh are united in the objects j at which they ami. an I if they could he at tained in tlie Union, an 1 without war, would rhy gladly embrace ami accept them rather : Mian con iin to m a state of en Hess hostility, which is .le-t roving the very interests they e eck to protect ? Whv the gentleman from Dioo (Mi. ft afield) te-. ared a lew 4a} s ago ill 111 its tl 'op, that it the privates of the op posing armies in the field were permitted to (•■•me together in peace ; fry- would speedi h rctiH'.vc all our IFoub'eS ; arid yet tie-.poke and voted in favo" ot taking from even the wives and children ol the S u'hern masses, who. he asserts, are thus wiling to return ihe Union, tiie last I >ot s til. HI>1 the Ir.i ci'ijst I bread by wi.ic't life i< sustained.— With such evidence then as this can wej.is tify ourselves before God or tnan if we fail to respond to the action of tiie A >uth in fa vor of negotiation, winch promises in ad vance -licit hippv re*ults ? Let all gnevaue e. whether fancied or real, he considered by candid Rtatesinan-hip. 1.-t then tie safe and ; unrepeatable guarantees adopted against ; tii<>.-e that are found to he real ; and those i that are fancied will he easily explained awav. Five enli". ten-'d commissioners from eacii section, imbued with the spirit of Chris tion bertev lence animated by an unselfi-h love of country and <>f their fellow-me*i, meeting by the consent and encouragement ctf their respective authorities, could, and in my solemn and deliberate judgment would, iu ninety days agree upon terms which would he acceptable to a large majority o the American people, and by which the Un ion of the.e States would lie more firmly es— tab i-hed bin ever before 'be lives of mill ions spared, the bar I earnings f the laborer left for him to etij >y, peace and domestic tranquility restored. [ would nnpr ve the armistice which winter declares to 'achieve many bloodless and permanent victories in f:,v rof the Union and the Constitution. 1 Wf uld not stop her,*. f would extend th" armistice a- long as there was hope ~f induc ntg the return of a single State. But sup- I pose negotiotion should fail. Then, indeed, i would this A lministration be armed wiih an ] argument in favor of war which t! lias never vet possessed This lact ts well understood bv the Executive and his advi-ers, hut they refuse to negotiate because they have reason to believe that the Union w mhl thus be re stored and the war ended. But slavery would not thereby he abolished, and ttie scheme, "f building up ads,otic, centraliz ed Federal Government would be defeated. The war, therefore, goes ■ n ; the voting men of ths nation are swept into their graves up on the pi tin of battle, and the old men be— come slaves to the tax gatherer. not to re store the Unon, but to give a worthless lib crty to the black man. an 1 to strike down the legal rights and privileges f the white ] man. Sir upon this question of negotiation, c >il | Cession, compromise end Union, f appeal for appr, val to my own conscience ft sustains n. • with all tiie force of a burning Conviction jof duty, llv it lam 'ifted beyond the reach ofpr.rtisan inah.ee: I appeil to the people ! 1 ftp voice ami humane tns'incis of honest na Hire will p'ead my cuuse in thoir hearts. At t heir hinds I tear no evil for the country. I he} are just, and will appreciate a plain | and inherent element of right. I appeal to future years. When candor, reason and Christianity sit in judgment on this struggle, ■ every line wbi h records the history of war or peace in all former ages, tells me that , their verdict will be in favi.r of the princi ples which I advocate I seize this hour of \ future triumph by anticipation. That it will Come I entertain no no-re doubt than Idi that I breathe thv air • f life this moment.— F appeal, Anally, to G d, before whom I stand, and into whose presence we all hasten to answer for our conduct and our motives in that awful hour i humbly trust and be "TO SPEAK HIS THOUGHTS IS EVERY FREEMAN'S RIGHT. "—Thomas Jeflersen. TUNKHANNOCK, PA., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 20, 1864. lieve that my feeble eff >rts to turn aside the devouring edge of the sword ; t > atay the hand of the great reaper, death ; to pause in the horrid work of sending souls to their eternal account witihout repentance or par don, to stop bereavement, woe and tear around every fireside; to brighten the mourn ful face of the land with the radianc- of peace; to reconstruct and restore a fraternal and harmonious Union will meet theapprov al of the Father and go far toward relieving the new'y liberated and trembling spirit of the terrors which surround it. Bur, Mr. Chairman, what other declared pui pises of the Constitution for the accom plishment of which tins Government was c> i.ablisbed have been cariied out bv the poli cy and administration ol the party now in power ? Do they promote the general wel fare ? With the principles of justice every where suppressed, the blessing of liberty an nihilated throughout all our borders, and the domestic tranquility utterly destroyed, it is almost needless to inquire what is left to cons i'uie the general welfare. But it i mv painful dutv on this occasion not only to show that the principles of free government are dying, rapidly dying before our faces, hut that the material prosperity, the absolute, physical resources of .to* country are perish ing also The welfare, the .strength and glo rv of a nation are dependent in a vast meas ure upon the extent of its population, and the amount of its wealth. Next to the vw tue and intelligence of the people, their nu o hers c nisti'ute the power and dignity of a State. Toe ancient commandment and the blessing delivered to ttie original founders ol the iiiimiii race was to be fruitful. mu|tiplv and replenish the eartii. And one of the rich'-st promises to the Patriarchs of old was that their 'rihes and their descendi n's should increa-i* until they became as the i ares of itie forest and the sands of the se -h uv.— Every public ruler who by wise political and social economy ha< rapidly swelled the popu Itnioii of this country, holds a place in Lis-to ty as a benefactor of his kind. Every ho tun being is a machine of labor Eic'i head and each hand is a producer. The busy br.tin an 1 active muscle are perpetually adding 'n ihe storehouse, ttie granaries, and the mer chant ships of the w old. It was a blessing and not a curse ; if was in mercy and not iu wrath that man was commanded to eat his bread in the sweat of his face. By obedi ence to this command toe glorv of erviliza tion adorns the earth, and commerce pei.e trafes the 'noat distant seas. The fulfillment of tins decree redeems the savage face of na t ore, rudds up the great marts of trade, pat rutiizes sciences and letters, erects temples to art an i progress, aid i< a forerunner to the Christian faith. Labor is the foundation of all wealth, and of all happiness. Nations and individuals are alike utterly and entirely dependent upon i for their prosperity. And national prosperity is simply the result ot individual labor. The hu nble and obscure toil of the honest ploughman, who Homeward plods his weary way." at nigh full is the source of ill the nation's greatness, the foundation of all i's \ast en terprises, the support "f all its h >a-te 1 reve nues ; it is the small spring break-ug into a rivulet from IIR* hill s de, winch 11 >wing on and mingling with the other waters ofit kindred at I est swells into an ocean on whose hosoin the destinies of the world pre deter mined. All 'iu* great authors who have writ ten on tiie subject of the wealth of nation have recognized this a6 a fundamental trti'h- Adam Smith embraces if in the first s*iece of this immortal work He says: " Tho annual labor of every nation is the fund which originally supplies it with all iho nevessarus nn-1 conveniences of life, woich it annually con sumes and *hich consists always either in the imme diate produce of tn it labor, or in what is purchase 1 wi.h that produce from other nations." L 'Cke, in Ins equally celebrated treatise on civil government is still more explicit and clear upon tfi is ooint. lie uses the fo'l >a tng laiigua ;e, which covers tiie whole philo ophv "f labor: " 'Tis labor then, which puts the greatest part of the value upon land, witho t which it would saarely be worth anything. Tis te that we owe the great est part of all its useful products ; for all that jhe straw, bran, bread of tn it acre of wheat is in ire worth than the product of an acre of goo t lan 1 which lies TV; te is *ll tho effect of labor. For 'ti< not merely the ploughman's pains, the reaper's and tlie thrashers toil, tu I the baker's sweat, is to be count ed ict'i the bread we eat • the labor of th".'e who broke the oxen, who digged and wrought the iron and stones, who felled and framed the timber em ployed about the plougl , mill, oven, or any other utensils, which are a vast number, requisite to th s r un, trom ifi being seed to be sown, to its being in i 1 bread, must all be charged in the account of luhor, an t rece'ved as an effect ef that: nature and t' e earth furnishing only the almost wortbie-s ma - rials ■in themselves. 'Twoul ibe a s'.-ange cata logue of things th it in lustry provi ted and ui ide uses of about every toof of bread, before it oaina to our use, if we could trace them. From wood, leather, barks, timber, stone, hri-k. coils, lime, cloth, dyeing drtt -s, pitch, tar. masts, rope and all niulerial tn- .e use of in ths ship that br' tight away the coin, moditir" made u.-eof\v yof the workmen to nnr part of the work, all which 'twoul i be almost im 1 >s sible. at le tto long to reckon up. Sir as d; then fnun motives if humanity what shall be said of an administrative p|>- r-y which is unnecessarily depopulating the nation ? Every unrangnined field of strife cove-ed wen the noble and unce aniin,i'em productive pursuits, in Die same propirtio.i is the general welltare de strove i. And no nation ever long survived the'shuck which the abstraction of two thirds of its population inflicted upon every branch and department of industry. A par ilyaifl wilt sei£e every healthful func'ton of Government. The sap of life will c.-a*c to j ascend, and the greeu tree will wither and] die. The tountaina will be dried up, and the ( river will eats? to 9 >w. Sir, fam dealing in no imaginary picture. Go to ttie regions ] of agriculture on which all cWc depends.— ! You w 1 there hear the cry that tins lab- r •rs are few. One man cannot do the work of three; and two are gone and hut one i> i left to sow the seed and reap the harvest I have seen the wife and the mother tilling I the soil in niv own distr>c ; her children !ol- j lowing in the furrow, and iheir filher away ; in the army.. I have seen broad lertile acre> in the West lying waste and idle for the j want of hands to place them in cultivation < II nv long can th.s s'ate of things continue ? How long will one-'hird of our u-ual p o ! duce meet the dema ids of uur increased and sMipeiidous xpenditures ? How long can diminished prodiicifon and multiplied laxa tion go ban i m hind ? H>w long can you continue to des'roy the laborer, ai.d at the same nine rai-e a revenue frniu the produts ot labor ? The tendency and speedy resuli of our present career are plain and inevitable. Soon, very soon, the fruits of industry wnl prove in 'dequate to meet the annua! demand of the National Treasury, and then the land itself, ttie farm, tiie homestead, must be ex ha ist.'d an 1 swept a.vay. Are you ready for this? Are you ready for the laud lax upon uncuhivated fi d is, in addition to ihc I tribute w.'i'cn w • aireidy pay t fitiatigifini i and corrupt ton ? If ynu arc, tbeu eternal I war, vast conscriptions, no negotiation, no I reunion, no peace, will firing with tearf il I rapidity the realization of all tour hop s. - But in the protbgate destruction of hutna • lite; and wanton and wicked overthrow of tiie whole natural system ol American labor. liow much I mger do you expect the toiling I t • endure in silence ? Wnen the | curtain fir : rose on the hateful scene of this j c.vil war, the Country was mocaed with a ! call for seven■ y five thousand men, and on" i greedy ears were si u'ed from higfi quarters j with the fiat • ring story tint He in ion would scarcely wax and wane until ttie G v eminent would again poess us own Yai fell me of esty in tiie present conduct of our disastrous ntfiirs. Sr. not a plan laid down in tiie beginning hot w iat has failed, and not a pr ninse made bv this A 1 n nistratmn to the people but what lias been broken. The at mos ~f ihe rebellion still stand with a defi ant front aiinoat in sigh' of the Capita'; and the hoarse and terrible demands of a ne.t c inscription are now going • -nt over the conn irv a< lat.al to tii" peace a > I hippie ss ot Du ic-in. D • the f< w who now riot in the i lives and fortunes of the many imagine that they can pr 1 >ng forever the decepti m which they have imposed upon an anxi *us an! trusting people ? But on this vital question of the rapid de crease of our laboring population, and the c 'iiet-quent prostration of the general welfare [ will doubtless b met by an indignant de— nai from the other side of the chamber. 1 submit, therefore, the I Mowing extract from the last message of the president; "I ag n subini' to your const l-ration the e.rpe li ] en'V ot iblishing a system for the encouragement jof 'uninigration Although th's sour,-e of u.itienal : wealth nnd strength is ng fin fl uving with greater I free-loin than for several years before tho insurrec i tion occurred, t.hero is suit a great rders. 1 welcoe him now wnh a warm and extended hand n. the eqoa! enjoy oent of all that our si.at er.*d and defaced institution*. But wt'k what sorrowful emotions will the people ot tlu "iice proud land listen to the voice of A;uer ica pleading wi'h the population "f Enrobe, and ofi. ring the i pecuniiry iii'luceiaents t • C"me and t ike th" places it our |o-t an dead 'o fid toe empty ch or- amuiol the bereaved fireside—to -tippy die demands which war mil deaih have in nie in the corufiel i and ai harvest time! ami vet the de-trovuig angle i- to continue to hover in everv blast ; tin- tierce spirit of the g';is and -cvthe i- t<> pu siie his msattftte c.i'ce ; the flower of our m uih 'itd ate to be cut d ,v • ; -tratigers from loreign hinds are t" ot-ciipy their vacant -eat-; and it i< treason to attempt to stay this fi.r rid holocaust, of human sacrifice bv a resto ration of the ti ivernm.mt upon the princi ples which w. re satisfactory '•• \Vahttigto >! l'he rebel chief at U ciiiuotid, who inaktS open war against "he Union, and th - Execu tive here who d" -8 nt in ike war for it, a' I who would not accept its restoration to day on the ancient doctrines of the Constitution, are engaged by con-cnpii >n, force ami vio lencc in hurling against each other the un willing and peaceful populations of evvr. Section; bleeding, palpitating ami inangle'l ; to stniggle, to c unb.at and 10 tiie, like the glaiba'ois in the amphitheater of R >iue. butchered to make a K uuan holiday. Tue-i are tacts winch will not c-cipe history, an 1 yet, theconsent of .the governtd is the ju-i meaurcof power wfnch a public ruler can exercise in a free government, and we fondly imagine that wt*sti,l ;ti*e tree! Bui in iimnediate alliances with the qnes tion of population arises the consideration of the amount of burthen which i* to b.* borne While looking on the one hand in sad u*s atii grief t tin* depletion an destruetion ot the laboring masses, we are comjielled t" turn and gaze with apprehension and terr r of the fright ful proportions an i in'reusing rnaguitu ie ol our public lndeb'edness. A the ability of the people to m>-et taxation becomes each day tn>r* feeMe, the d'-m "ids up n their foil and their resource* account late with appolltng velocity. I shall deal in c >hi and steady figures. What I assert up-n the subject of the national rlebt I siand pre pared to make good, as time, the test of truth, has done for me heretofore. On the 51 -1 day of May, 18G2. on this floor, I made the following statement. "It is sale, then, to conclude that th year that is to come, and on which wo are just entering—tha second year of tho war —Rill swell the in lebtednscs of tnis Government to the alaruiing sum of i' 2, 000,- 009. 000." The tierce clamor which broke upon my head here and elsewhere, for that atatematH, will not be uasilv forgotten. I was honored by an officaa) contridic'i m from Hie Secreta ry of the Treasury fumselt. produceil on this ti >.r hv the'uit lem -n tr in M tsai'hu*ct t.-. (Mr I)i we--.) Then came iu i goant on ci its of iijured patrto'isui from the ihr at- of thai venal and -lavish c'as- who earn UIH I v r of princes, and porciia-e priveh-ge* of p under tv ecnoiug the words of their mi-'er But f appealed to tune I>r mv vmditiiion, and now n-re again to day, 1 challenge in accusers to tiie is-ue. On the sixth div of Mtrcb, 1804, when the Tntrty seventh Cons' res* a j oirned. less than one year from the date of my -'iniai(, tie appropriation-of m-i.e-v mm l!. Eii>ial Treasury, in the pa* meot -I use pub! c x fie di I lifts, tnod a- foil w : First session 37ih Congres- 5279 071 500 Second do do 876 109 600 Third do do 974 128 100 Total amount 82 126 iSU9 200 Ii will i tiu ' e seen, unit in less uiait tie time h\ me sp Cell • i to my -pe -Ch ol Mi* 21- ; 18 12 that o-n • 0 .■ t wh c i I aas ttie i a member, appnpria ed .*>128.309 200 ni r than even 1 pred-C'ed w old tie c > i-uiiie I hv our alartinn; rate expense Reports ma}' he wri ten by able and skififul pens, and speech s uiav he made hi ei q ieoi au ! plau-thle tongues in -order to di.-nut-e • tieS>- figures, and delude tile I eople -ill firmer t< ttieir ruin, hut itie murder of w.e tia'lon's welfare a. li-i will out an I bank rup cy, Ike an u i -asy and troubled tr' - 1 wiih its shriv-lle l face an 1 skele'o i fi gers, will c'uie ti> plague an 1 mrm-nt the ai ti les- lUi'r lereTi. Ittntv he an unwelcome 'ask to pnrtrav tiic-e ticts naw, toil tln •l'iiir is fast approaching, in w i na the so,.s and daug'iters ••! Inoiesi toil will lay hitter in iled'Ci ion-o i I tie authors of tins oppres sion and I hank those w.io hive p ill ted mi their danger. I t tiie r-p >rt of the Secretary "f the Tva -ury suhmH'ed ar i tie "pening -f me pre —m se--i"ii of Congrcs-, w-ti id in- i-e meet >t i the ti-cil year en 1 Mo i e 3d, 18.il • tie •'Xpeti-e- .if Hie G iVe.'iiiileiit' am untlilg t !51,099,731900 E i- 11 otr thai lie amu-e --ine Country h* a Conjecture tliat a c >n-dera t>le p >rtioo of to it s i n wdl no b • piia ed, tint genii* tot!— i mates t hat so ue' of it ma * r iri.ioi i o h-s hail-, j out paid out on 'oe 30;ti -June, !BGi Bot ! oeismucb as *ve !ve a'readv' at th.s siso.-n i pa.-sed deficiency bilis over and ab -ve Ins ; "mates to tor eX ! -lit f more than atm el red million- of d.-ILrs. I most d,c me tuk nig am calcuiaiton o, <>u any lower basis than •h" toil am Mint . | fns own fi nr.--. Tnen akiug ihe apnr priation- already in ale up i>- March 4 h, 18(j4, as ah -v state : At SJ, 126.3€'9,200 Add the estimate rt ihe S-.cre. iry up to Jaue 30, 1564 1E99 7J1906 83,228,611 i 63 We thus have from the "fii •> >1 r. c > i-, m todeluedoess on the 30m of June tn-x., no m r a •loincut. Ve sW -.l' 1.1.' ux p:\vrs, H'|d c-On p'fbelid, it you Call, Ihe Welgll' ot tnis I >s<) t pause with yo, for m* heart is tvnw a loltle c!l"gmg to I tie scenes "I iirelipu-i iii-baiidry vvmcti I repre-ent 'ere, ai"i vlnch I spi-k |o s.ive from d.--ofi'ioti •But the Secreinry ot toe I r*a-urv ha •livrn us h forecast ot an oher *eir >1 the tu •of". Cotnuieiictig agit'MVi '(•• Is ot Ju!>. IBG4, and clo.sin Jn i.- 30 h. 1805 fi • gtve ii- til- estimates of (he xpeii'tuiu e- ot an "tier fi-ci! year He p aces Gem _ At SI, 151,315,033 Add the amount already es inateti up t.* June 30th, 1364 '• 3,223 041.160 •ot.il debt, June 30th, I>G" 55,379,356.246 Fr tn ttit- am mil 1 niu-t be <1 lucti l ih ictirtl receipt, from ev-r* -otirc.- •■( revenue during toe years of 1802 and 16G3. H"d tin est mated receipt* f>r Uie \ears .( 1804 an i 1865. Allowing tha' tin* estima' -. f th. S. cretary will pr..ve c >rreC tn the future w ten is exceedingly chun able :• vn-vv . the inevitable operaitott* of war. I' n itie niihoc dett w ill -t mi, Juste 30 ", 1865 ii $4 010 213 093. Sir, in tuts cilrm I ••ave strained nothing in • r I r t-i svtetl t .mount. Far otherwise. I w-utld gladly nminish it ifAn m* power. I tnve simtt •akeo tiie an it it- appr.iprt it • i nv a f rtn.-; tjo 'gress, and added the .m 'tint- wtnc t 'lie Secretary "t fie Tr-a-ury u-k- shall '••• ap ..roprift'eii for the years of 1804 iu I 1 * ,5 I assume, and in >-t sat. I 1 t .ink in v.ew ot I he pas', tnat all tie* noiiey tint- appr uutat ed by Congress for specified otj.-ct- will be -pent. This is all, and y.itt heboid the tip nailing r.—nit. I do not -top to take an ac e nnt >f S'a'e debts, winch co'tut h. hu; t 'lred- "f millions 1 pis- by the d,.f ( t ( ,t j .unite-, cities towns and v iri'-n- corp. r ■ • tons, all of w ich are a direct tax up >n Im people 1 simply cum .ore tiie F-f- rai m di-b!>, and yu hive Gtcso Irtgh lul fig tires. ST, this debt now inevitably fastened up m the American pe .ply, has no paiallcl in tfi,. tustory of natto'is. lis like is unknown iu the annuls of ml'lkm l. The power of lan •gitag - cannot exaggerate if as an ag"iu of de struclioti. M re than four thousand million >.f dollars ! I In- det>f of E-tglaod. w;>tc't is n>w a permanent curse, is I. ss Yet. sn.ee 1829, tto Bnt.sh -tat'- -ill iit has i h* itlgtit ti r an tntan' that t' w >nl t .-ve • h- fi i.llv p. 1 I" c >nituei tv' accttjigtii -ui.lt pr .p rt i x.- 'luntig the reign ot t'u tries 11 -i w . ,n , it-,- | years ago. SucC'-edtug wars iup llv im-r.-a* ed it, and I) -til *d all the wt- t>>m m I r< —ui ces.it the English p-op! , in their long am! midilnl eff" r's to acnooiplih ii* pa< iiien'.— f'hey pay the itUere-t ami fnqt.'atti iiii principle wi'hatl its cru-hmg **eight, t.. each succeeding ge.i M i'• t Ai I .-v * t tips fturthett on itie lao-.r ol England is so great and so perpetual, that <>ne e'ghth of horciti Z'*ns are inmates of the f>o.,r h >u-e. ami at most another etgh h have leen driven tv want trom their native land. We are to trea.t in the saute blighted pathway, groaning wea rt'.y uoder a ettll heavier Juad—tit® cursed TERM 9: 81.60 RER A.NM'IJM f' tii'B 'f a sectional party, and ti.ianiui cor ruption. We I. ok our upon lite field of the fu'tire. It lie* diMij 1 and endless Intf-re u*. Tin r.- is no laud of rest m 'he distance for • lie tnvd tax pater. There is n< promise of r the Welfare of my c untry. Sir, in order to enable us to grasp tho ! mightv fi "res which will suin up our na tional d-t>! sixteen months luuice, let us in dulge fr a in iiieni in c •niparisoiis. # Ttie :r i*iti of ihe A iieric*n Republic, in all the : • laments of material wealth, fr-un i's birth lo . h" hour ol i,m present misfortune*, fiad been > the marvel and wonder ol all time. It had J strode upon Hie loftiest peaks of giea'ness wiih an easy taindur step. In |>eace or in warjour giory was the same—the fiist of all mi*tons. Out actions at home and abroad were up oh a scale of magnitude which lwarii d tne g'aiit achievement* of history by , cmiira-i. B n in all that tune very item of j ■ ur pubic. xpemhf ure* would scarcely suffice '•i meet the ili-iiiamis ot one year under our ' res, in system ot rum. Take the period of I seventy two years —th >se bib-vou div* of | i-t'criy and ira erniti—from 17>i'J t-> 1861 I) iring tieil -pace ot happi mile, for every ! \e-ir. H"d tr ail purposes, tfie expenses of •fif Goverum nt were: *i,453,790,788 ! Far four .years from 1361 to 13G5 ••• 4,010,21j Ui3 , fnerea= of expanse i.. four roars over twenty-two years $'2,556,4 22,307 F-ur miei hut terrible years under ttia ! present A (ministration will have consumed | m -re tiian ttiree tunes as much ot the wealth tne Iri> -r, tlie lax s of tn people as every I it'ier A iuunis va'ton of the G >ver*mnent put • •gethei ir on Washington lo James Buch j man! I) > you sti'l say, in vrnw of itn [ -tarthng tact, that there :* n> nec-*ity fr lira cna .ge in our pohev a id in ur ruler* I i i order to save us Iroui utter overthrow? Are you s ill c ni'ent thar this ra e of ex- I ix-nditlire siiail corinue? Uiw long ciu I t continue? Bv the stnistic furnished in ! the wri.su* i I 1860, the value of Hie real and pets"iia! property >! the personal pioperty of the Unied B'a es bef.rv wa p an ide . s ■ ui.t ioii had assailed it. was § 1 2.084,660.005 Even remitting that it pos-eSses 'iic same value to day, yet t lie debt is one third of trie wuole aim tint. Bo' every one will acknowledge that an assess-inen' ol the value it ill. propel ty hti'tigli or "he United Siates ! ew iv iit• i nof s e-w more .hail tw- nurds • n (■> in' i v.lui'. • Tl.ii w ul J be b mt 88 000 OuO.OUO. 0' Hi s *-UfN ilit* public l.*ii, in ,i t>- \ in i*i. f ii. will l> • more it,an mt* ' i.ilt. 1! ill ilie mmi iii ihi* fielh; half 11■$ i..r-e* in 11 fir-tall ; naif fit* -cattle m ihe pasture*; hail fin Imps in ti.f pens; ha f the •i i i itseii, eVtf'V n'lu-r .otv, wiil Mau I mgr'- inml foriiu* i a iiieni a f-.m year*' dreml !n| * x (M runi-iii in tin* IIV of ilit* >w .rd and h • MV ii i aiiin ,i . in ifiupi a; a r >t(irarn-n •I i In 1 LT*n n and *-vnu now,all nvif tte land, ilie tXi'ii"iiinitj tiie iix tfailierer ar* swarm nisi i , eiif .rev Hie iivelosute c' tini crushing and releiv less unu ipape. I' n held bv ihe eredif'-rs who ii'Veiinii liearis. There will he mi prace gpe i . fu i q iic\ of fedeinp'ion. \ i>nl if I-a. > m is the pniicipiil holder; and • hen c iiii .O's an I Irairl hold the iiilanr-*. B'l al'o.v uie to make an iippl.ca'ioni of • h'sdnhr (*• ifint r-a' S i e—a p*ru >.. ut *• h 'S'- poop u 1 rcpri'seiii on mis tl >r. The ■i-i'SH' I v inil* of all ihe real and personal prop, n \ ..I ihe people of Indi tta in (800 v.s 8411 042. 42 4 Tnt propo-tmn of Hid Fi'dei d i -le M inCh Will a t.if'h tilths* stale •luiie 30 1 fido, wnl In* §285 980 510 It A |i. In r. I .ie. fie seen that it tnr-e lonnhs •• even li W iro i TILE CIIIZ us and proper— i-hoi.lets ..I India ii p*i-asess -.vas put up at no ' u and sol,| ace irdmg to the appraise n t of < tie census report, U would hi rely s tfli *e lo meet tie dent inds wpic t the Fe l ral G 'Vi riiinent is making lip MI the weal h aid Indus'l Vof that Slate. lam aware that ill Hits wili tall idly u ion the ears of lhos who are prom Hps war ir in ut itives of lespo i-iit and unhalloued gain; hut I speak to dty I *r ihe lat'tuer and tin; mechanic—fir Hie laoorer whose hein is filled will unself sn pal rim win, and whose hands are u i-iam. f 1 by fl ii: 1 1-r. L call up mi Mint elm* to ••i r* I ll v e-Mini'e these burl tp'ii*, tor o tun wary >lm diets i.'.ev are t ie b >rne. But auani. i will he met here hy the fact ai t tie p.v 11 n• >i .f the nbl'c debt will l> p >sii) >ned trom one gen - • iM'ion to aie ther, an I ttiat like ttie peoble I £ -ji tii'i we will oily tie called .jp .11 (or h interest Taking even tint ii.iw irtby view . f lie q:i*ti..n let ii* *ee wtial will bj 1 leculloiieous, .uom; 25.0UU.000 8201,0.10,000 Interest on the public debt 240.1 i 12,73 d 8441,612,755 Every ie >f the abuv items t put uu.cn lower than cane liy ii will be, but even at these rates we fin 1 that each year of the daskeued tuiiire, the Treasury Department will r eac!i t .rlli the hungry tiaiid of revenue and se*ze upon ihe Tints of in lutry to the eX'eut o' tour hundied slid f.rt v-une Millions s x hundred and twelve thousand, seven huiidied and eighty lived.dDr*, And lbs VOL. 3. NO. 36