i.. V ' ' V .VOL. 1. ALBANY, LINN COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, JUNE 2, J8GG. NO, 43, V STAT: RIGHTS iDEMO.CKATi cscti'tiiEiiT bAicrbai; " TCijlI'SnER AKD EDITOR;' ' I" cm.-9 0a Story BuCainfi- en the sia? from the River by the jJir!? ne, Eat tide, Two Block tSK !-iiQf f5aia Xfeaiaess ftrcet. , , TERMS : ? satrsscsiyTiDSf i V 3 V e5"?7 ftr OneYear - - - 8S n V- j jfo Six Months - - - 2 1 -J" Fiynsent to be Bade ia advance in every " Paper wili not bo sent to any address paleu orcj-,, mna the", term for wbich H hvU be braered fee raid for., y gtrpartark V te af e re tie, !, f, im.rt.' , iimolir nrior notice wm be riven to as Bobieriber of the wee on which his sab sr'yttim ai tapirs jjjtinst an order for its funuousr.ss, aeeotspasiea with the. money, be ioa, th rper will, be discontinued to that address: . . i r.u 'Ciarfeef Te&Xinea, or u, Oae InsSrtica - - - $3 Ff I.srt Sabseucnt Insertion - 1 : "Vs-sl Xl&sMton frn taesa .Hates - aartfirlyr' Ialf 'Yeartjr ai , ir'r- divert icr, and upon all tenffthy u4Trri5ea;a&-"!wjUii male. A y .i ;s Correspsnionts writing, over assamed signatures or taoflywa'y, trmst make known their proper Barnes id ths i.altir, ot a atitnttan wiH te given All "Letter 'knd fensinnltttioBS, whttbw on fciiiaett or far jablictis ihooli bo addressed to lit Kdiraiv v. cmixoa. eao. a. hex.. &lHELM, itT:ixin 5 m ceraEuess it liw T. COUNSELLOR AT. LAW Will prketiee im th Saperiot and Inferior . CoarU of Oregon." OFFICE t fcfy rriiao, one iciis from Albanr. Febroary 17, IS6. AtT3E;;iVs Ana coujisaioas;. OREGON : CITY. '"tiealar' Atteatioil giTea to Laal Gli-J 1 Xas4 .Titles i .: .-. Oregon City, Ognl, Dec. 20 1SC5. A. F. YTUEELEB, ' OfAE PUHIilC. Albany, Oregon. rlXlu FROMtTXY ' ATTEKD TO ' TEE r -wrfliar tod: ukfez aciraowiedrTnents of Deeds, Mortjraireii, and Powers cf Attorney. Also, Depoitio2, ASdivits, te., tt. OFx ICE In do Kew Conrt Hsmse. JJicy Jannary J7 1S3. T , . ... . CU RC'ZO ?J B Zi 4T1ST, v' La;e Gradaate of the Cincinnati College of Cental Snxgery, "Woald arin effer bis ProSessjonal lervfces to tt IUsms o-f i plaea aadsmiroBndiBg eoantry. Cicx C? stairs ia Fester's Brick B eliding. r.ts; ..c alcTng'sids of the Paeifis HoteL I Albay, Aost Is65- A aagUtf- 1 1 IS ; "v 4. I ll;y&--. P9 (BCOCISSOaS TO TRACT 4 KING-,)' ' panTisArm.- OSEGOX i3v M -is fJ.'-f 'i t ; I THE HIGHSST PRIC fAIl run s CCtO t 3T, irSAL- nKDEHS, ETC. rirsr: srcciis isosigiit axd CiVTTCT, 5S Front.. streeL first door It ortU of Arrigoni's. '" ' : rt2d, Deo. 29, lS6i. . , . I. D. BOLtIl.lt . FAERISH & IIOMIAN PORTLAND, OGNv Ileal Sstate, oramercial and -. , . Stock brokers,. , . . . . IIS C'Cncr:'-'! Intelligence and Col- . m-&avu A.tvus i. j -Zi.W Picsse? Blotk, Jroat Street. 'rcatSt 1- -i . Prticdf J' -8 lit.' c::: :z:zh tzmm silver ware, x -.irr-ITARY, GOOI3Sy t r CLOCKS, '"feg.V oi,;-&o' :' 3 Fircat Clixcti Portland. A, Deo. 23, 1S55 C? Sl FBAKdISCO, tAliraEKIA.) i . .t"nd ia ji! a to tve - -c .-'a f C-'-- Ii:j!a Ores- tw .- E-'t.'c ici cf . sau wlii tL , :d f :st crFiCE i ' 1 4r i iwC. '4 it r-'-".t!y -3 haTi!!" 5, rl ui t - - wA.ft.J. , - : d, u:s :o :.IVcD!. , ' " ' ' - cry ! - I ',i . we are sellls; GOVERN- We talce the foUoinp; extracts from mi able ppooch dclirered i the U.S. IIoue of Represoutstivcs onitlia ! 12th of Jan uary last by lion. Johu W? h:ind!er of JSew York : ; : - ? Vet, sir, t niauitain that ibis is, neTerthelcss, a white- man's govoru ment; the dominion is his own, in emu lation of the models reared by our nee. to mark, their progress and prompt a" noble imitation, found strewn along tb,e high way of history, like the monuments of Roman, heroes leftaloqg th,e Latin way to rouse their countrymen to upeJs of daring conquest : models for which we look in vain in the fetish worship of the African, or in the bloody rites of . the King of Da homey and his brutish Arnaxons, or in the inhuman practices of the Aztec, or in the merciless aristocracy of the Peruvian, or in the crude code of the cruel Iroquois or of th.e wanderinsr Comanche.' Al though, the enjoyment of. the benefits of our institutions may be open to all men, still the dominion belongs to the white man alone Ills hs government, to be preserved for his posterity in its purity, snd administered with toleration and jus tice to ail races of men who may find a home among us. There' is po obligation upon ns to surrender the government into other hands, nor is there any call upon us to shaae the honors of government with any other race whom we may, from motives of policy, philanthropy, or jus tice befriend, protect, or release from slavery. r The fact that all but the white male citizens are excluded from voting in the municipal affairs of this District, the Seat of Ooyetznaent, is a crowning proof, first, that this is a white man s government, and, second, that there is a idling race recogniied in the practice of that govern ment. "The "history of the civilization now established in this country, which has its centra tere, proclaims the proof. The language a&d customs ef our people proclaim it. The laws, written and un written proclaim it. The organization of our government proclaims it. - The ad mission of fof eign immigrants of the same race to the same rights' as those of the original settlers in the different sections of the continent, and excluding the negro and the Inaian from voting in many of the States qf the Union, proclaim it. Our literature, arts and science proclaim it in the names of the illustrious men who grace those departments. This national capitol and. the beautiful works which adorn it within and without bear testimony to the identity of Ameri cas and European art,' to the homogen- ousheas of the. w.hit&.. race, as well as to the clase and cubreken eoanecuoa TUG WHITE MAX'S MKXT. iweea i.uroFan ana American nistery j tiie rj0m;ai0n 0f Edie, the hated aristo thc record of the yrtita race exclusively. trat rani intcriut biifot of their own w t a w On the majeatic and graceful colonnade at the main entrance of this capitol, the work of the Italian persico stands oppo site that of Greenough tof Massachusetts. Over the entraacg' to the Senate, the great wrkof Crawford, tie ? son of an Irishman, tells in marble ,llie story ot American i ciTiuiation bow .American liberty crowns with laurel the white bous of her race, while the (i, Ceather-ciaetnred savage' mourna. Over' Uie . grave" of his people And the'desblation of his hunting ground. Ilung- at the very jportals of this chamber by the genius of Rogers, of New-York, in everlasting bronse, ia the tale"N)f suffering and" xlisappoihtment which Coluinbus endured before his in spiration found otteraaee in the glad cry ot " LAua aneaa i - on the coast or fcanJ Salvador ! Then " westward, ho 1" came the rush ! of eastern men,t until the poet wrote out the sublime drama of a disen thralled race, and foretold oar Union, and its might, majesty and power: ! "; "There shall be snng another golden age, " The rise of einpire and of arte f " Not eueh as Europe breeds in her dosay Snch as she bred when fresh and yoang. Westward Use stiuf of tsnpirfrUteS Its way" " The drama is not ended. 2' The German Leutze, by the permission, and at the cost of the A'merieaa people, haj recorded the last great scene of this heroic play, and the rich imnset of the Pacific coast at the Golden Gate marks on your wal!&the limit of. the white man's dominions-over the flag of;; this Union in the West--" No negro race runs in a parallel line across thig continent in rivalry for this domin ion: . Would that it had the spirit.-cour-age and tenacity of will tor emigrate." I would not mar its plan nor hinder its hitnt after fortune. But the artist, with Ihe ajshetic skill of ibnation,"has introduced a aegromto this great picture-Mlie happy, numDie companion ot tne waite mas s progress, carrying his fiddle to cheer tiiem on'their way. s '. ' . The decoratioo of this" chamber,- the roof emblazoned "with American heraldry, aad every paneljof the rotunda rici iu the record of great things -done by white men sometimes painted iy the hand of "native artist, sometimeaBculpturecl by the chiseljbf the European all relate the same unvarying fact, that this is a white man's government. The Indian, he has", often been ottr,e4ual in?-wart some times shares the glories of out "triumphs, yrclis to thewisdotn of Penn , or rescues te"k sturdy seaman' from Heath" to proffer hinra'bTibe-- the negfo teverr 1 ' The garxie'6tt)ry eyery where reveals the proud deeds of our common ancestry as a 'white-race upon these wails, from pinna cle to foundation 'stones proclaiming the poof of-ie -white man's sola claim to r&le' and of his will and strength to do ta. This 'is alT ly taaster-wo'rkmefl who ' builded better than they knew " in estab lii hing the right pf .every workiog jnan of their race to have, hold and enjoy ,"ex-cl-oively for themselvea-aad their heirs 'forevertliirjjitadel ofjodiTidrial liberty, democratie - representative - government, and uti versa! uffiaj3. iTte filing on tbe wU tells this tru'Ji to. this; ffeopld. s.nit who Bpurns the' lesson it teaches deserve the vengeance and the brand'. oft shame truth bestows on fiinaiical inisticc srid-falsehooJ. - Sir, I deem "the balloi, the bayonet, tho 6tS2aagij ji5d,''itc press the powers of the nineteenth cen tury:' Of these the ballot is the, most typ ical of democratic liberty "and strength. I claim it as such for the white race against all the world; and jealously and zealously will I contend for its exclusive ue. r Mr. Speaker, the statesmen of the rev olutionary era were not philanthropist, nbolitionistd nor negro suffrage men. They were practical representativesof the white -democracy which fought out the seven yoara' war by themselves and for themselves, to establish a white man's democratic representative) government to be perpetuated in this Union. . They were practical politicians, dealing with every difficulty with, slred pulley and admira ble tact. They mastered every obstacle I'tth hard, eoujad common sense. - Thy were not abstractionists as a b&dy, and left abstractions to theAfew fine writers and publicists among them. They knew what the inalienable rights of men were, but they never surrendered the material advantage of slave labor to the inaliena ble right of the negro. Why? IJecause they knew by stern experience that the negro did iiot himself know what his ina lienable rights were. He had no pqlitioal knowledge nor spirit of independence as a race, in thfs view, independence, just won irotn the throne, of ureat Britain by hard blows, and in abre Twu.rajre, and a French ; al'iandi .cle than an abstract idea it was a very ui terial thing indeed ; something to suffer long and keenly for, to die for ; pouie thing to claim for one's self asainst king ly power with the sword of a hero, and to maintain when won with the pen of a genius, the grace of a wit, the skill of a staVesman, and the profound learning of a jurist. They knew all this from experi. ence. All their wit and wisdom and skill united to devise the laws regulating suffrage.. Those laws exclude the negro and recognize him as a slave. Yet the negro had fought under the eye of Wash ington, beside the heroes whose blood was shed for the common weal of white and black men in the struggle for independ ence. It (white democracy) is not a thing of j to-day nor of yesterday, but belongs to the history of our race, not, only on this continent, but throughout the world, long before. Democracy in Europe and de mocracy in America may not be identical in practice nor equal in their develop ments, but their origin is one and the same, and can be traced by the annals of our race running through al! the eras of our civilization, from the Germanic tribes, from the Gothic hordes, from the J talian Republics, from the Saxon, the Gaul and the Celt, down to the period of the hejrira totof the people to America, in the sixteenth "lantl vAVAnKt'entlt rnntnriea to escare from T , . a. . . . f race and color. Every European tribe, race and nation mingled here in common cause lor civ it and roliious liberty. against the ruling classes of the Old World. Maryland was a refuge for tlie English Catholics from the persecutions cf the Protestants, and they brought tol eration witk them ; Rhode Island was the refuge cf the Protestant persecuted by his fellow PrbUstant and, Puritan brother; Massachusetts was the refuge of tho Eng lishman from the tyranny of a political party in, England ; South Carolina was the refuge of the Frenchmen from the tyran ny ot apolitical party in Jr ranee; Dela ware is the western home of the Swede : New York wasthe republican outpost of the Dutch Republic in their fife-lotig struggle for independence against the empire of Charles V . and bigotry of Philip II. republican colony, founded by a republic in the wilderness of the estern World,' to carry on the war of popular rights against kingly power, intolerance and commercial monopoly. , Iler people still cling to those great dogmas of our political faith, and stand true to the prin ciples Of public and private right estab lished by that heroic republic of Europe which has defied for ages alike the raging of the sea and the vrath of the tyrant with fearless dignity and untiring indus try. The history of this country is the history of our race the white race. The principles of our government are peculiar to that race in contradistinction to the African, the Asiatic and the aboriginal American. Sir, if you doubt this to be a white man's government, traverse once more the prairies and staked plains across the continent to the Pacific shore, from Oregon to .Utah, and,- if still in doubt, travel on to the shore of Australasia, and ask there if the dominion of sea and land is pot claimed and held by tho white race against all the other sons of Adam. ; 51 . If, sir, it should ever be your good for tune to visit romantic Old Spain, audio enter the fortress and "palace of A loam bra.' the fairest monument of Moorish grandeur and skill, as this capitoI isthe pride, of American architecture, you may see cut in sfone "a hand , holding a key, surmounting tEa horse shoe arch of the main gateway. They are the three types of s1ngth, speed and secfecj, the boast &f ow fallen Saracen race, sons of that i of sand, the desert, who earned the PA ry of Islam to farthest Gades. In an e .1 hour of civil strife and bitter hatred of faction the Alhambra was betrayed to Spam, to feed ancient grudge " between political chiefs. - The stronghold of the race!, with the palace, the sacred courts of justice, and all the rare works of art the gardens of ?unri vailed splendor all that was their- own of majesty, strength and beauty, . became , the trophies of. another. , ,i j The; legend of the Saracen Vexile iells the story of penitence and sliame "j. and 16 the last raoment5of tussadjite be sighs in the sultry desert for. tho fair homepf his anceaters, the corgeoua Ailiambrav .' e, too, are descended from a race of conquer ors.'who crossed the ocean to establish the glory of civil and teKgidu3 liberty, and to secure, freedom i,toJtheiEiirve3, and their posterity," ; To-day we are fsembjei jn the, "Alhs'mVraipf, America; hereti our citad4 ; kere our courts of highest resoTt; cluster flici rmu ; asuvuiuits m i uc .American - r.e:e. They seem - felnio.t' sacred ill" tbir yes. No lvstile foot of forcijia' fu or dt nieVtic traitor has tifrddoy, ..then.t, in triumph. Above it fltxats the flag, the fn:Llem of our Union. Thai Union "is the emblem of the triumphs of the white race.; That race rules by the ballot. &al! we surrender the ballot, the emblem of our sovereignty; tho flag, tho emblem of our Union the Union the emblem, of our national lory, that they may become the badges of our weakness iss and the trophies of another Never, sir ! neveFTTJtercr 1 race! SYHXEY S.HITH O.N TAXES, AJIEKIfAX Sydney Smith, in the '. Flinburg Ite view, January1, 1820,: conUtoiltedT an ar ticle oh AtncTifea, written an unusual thing for a Jlntish critic then in thel kindliest spirit to this country, lie says : f We can inform Jonathan what are the inevitable consequences of being too fund of p'cry : Taxes upon every arti cle which enters into the mouth, or cov ers the back, or is placed under the foot taxes upon everything which it is pleas ant to see, hear, feel, 6iuell, or taste taxes upon warmth, light, and locomotion taxes on everything on earth, and the waters under the earth on everything that comes from abread, or ii grown at homerri-taxes ou the raw material taxes every fresh value that is added to it uy muusiry ot maij taxes on tne sauce wBkh peppers taanl appetite, and the drug woih restores him to health on the ermine which decorates the judge, andlhe rope which hangs the criminal on the poor man's salt, and the rich man's spice on the brass nails of the cofSn, and the ribbons cfthe bride at bed or board, couchant, or Iftyant, we must pay. Thg scrqoj-ljoy whips taxed top the beardless youfli tiauagt'S his taxed horse, with a taxed bridle, ona taxed road ; and the dying Englishman, pouring hi taxed medicine, which has paid 7 per cent., in to a'spoon that has paid 15 per cent., flings himself back upon a chintz bed, which has paid 22 per cent., and expires in the arms of an apothecary, wcq has paid a license of a hundred pounds for the privilege of putting him to death. His whole property is then immediately taxed from 2 to 10 per cent. Reside the probate, large fees are demanded for burying him in the chancel; his virtues are handed down to posterity on taxed marble ; and he is then gathered to his fathers to be taxed no more. In addi tion to al! this, the habit of dealing with urge sums will make the Government avaricious and profuse; and the system itself will iufaliibly generate the vermine of spies and itbrtBr- and, still to-we pestilent race of political tools .nJ retain ers of the meanest and niostT odious de scription; while the prodigious patron age which the collecting of this splendid revenue win inrow into tne nanos oi gov ernment, will invest it with so vast an in flueace. and hold out such means nnd temptations to corruption, as all the vir tue and public spirit, eyen of Republicans Let tiik Pkople Remember. The New York Times,' a conservati Ilepubli can orsran of marked ability, very justly remarks: "The country will not forget that the critical period through which we are passing, is the result, not of tho Pres ident s caprice, obstinacy, or ambition, but ofthe disposition of Radicals to force throujrh legislation looking to the estab lishment of negro supremacy in the South ern States. The difference that exists between the President and Congress, have ineir crigin in ineories at variance wita the Constitution, and utterly lncoiupati bla, with the perpetuity of -the Union lne responsibility, whatever it may amount to, attaches not to the President who is willing to concede everything but hi3 sense of constitutional duty, but to those who insist upon having their own way iu Congress, regardless ot the consc quencc3." Clearly and plainly stated Let the people reuieinbpr that Republi can members of Congress, knowing the designs of the Radicals, boldly declares that they are legislating tor the"cstab lishment of negro supremacy in the South em States." ' -?A.;- , s , : ' . . Expensive Luxcav.-Even. the Radicals are' coming to the conclusion that the nogro is an expons'iTe" luxury. The Kew York Tribune says the taxes in this country are heavier than are or ever were borne by any other thirty millions of people. Including national, fctate and municipal taxes, they amount to full $20 a year for each man. woman and eh;ld-nough to bankrupt the most prosperous, people. Five years ago they did not amount to one-tenth of that sum 'And this has all been incurred for the benefit, ot the negro.' Taking all this into account,; with:' the cmous' expenditure of hte and treasure made tor his benchi,-thinking people must conclude that we have done and .sanctified quite as much for the negro as iustice or humanity requires. , It'is time now to do; something for the white man He has boon victimized too much for the benefit pf the negro and Radical Government swindlers. . The London Times announces that Mr Peabody. ;the American banker, baa in creased his previous munificent donation for the benefit of the London' poor by another ' hundred thousand making a total of a quarter of a million poundB Sterling. The-times says the amount of the gift, though not per&aps taa most . i . . . j , ? i Ji.l 5T aamirapie cnaract;eristic, is; i iueu sum cient, to render any expression of grati- tuae.insignificaht. f In -his speech 'before' the Democratic State :Cententioa of Indiana the Hon,. D. W.. Voorhees remarked, in regard to his expulsion irom tjongress, xnai is remiuea him to the society1 oi gentleffienand per? initted hin' to choose his own eompahy I , l .It t ii ; i j, ,1U. . . ' -. I '.'.1 f y. ,-: fl Bdthj ITouses of.;the lowa. Legislatijre have, passed the resolution demanding the trial of.Gsu.-Ouster' for Laving two Iowa bold licnruogfreu. around these halls STATE SOVEttEICSXT Y. .The Radiealx now prwlaim'tho doctrine of State SWeutigiity a treasonable here? v.- "TVe show below what the vorj' men who ara fore most iu this declaration said on the sul.ject a few years ago : Senator Henry Wilson's record ou thi sul'jeet c;l'ar and em phatie..- lrj. a letter which he wrote February U, 1855, -to Ves pasian Kllifi, l:o said : , I fully recognizo the dottrine of Stato Uights in its applicattoa to slavery as well as to any other matter of public ooncern. Tjie A'irginia and Kentucky Resolutions of -703, in the ninin, as I think, correctly set forth that doctrine. - In a debate ia tho United States Sonctoon a bill to protect officers noting under author ity of the United State, February 23, 1855, (eoe'app. Globe, vol. 31. 2d sess., 33 Con gres, pago 2C3.) Mr. .Wilson said : I recognize tho doertno of State Rights in its application to slavery as vfvll as to other inattera of public concern. I -will stand side by side with my Democratic friends in vindication of the Virginia and Kentucky resolutions of 1798-''J'J, vrhich they have indorsed. Senator Ben Wade, of Ohio, in th5 same debate (see same book, page 213 said: I am one of those who at all times believe iu the wisdom, the constitutionality, and the propriety of the Virginia and Kentucky itesohitions of 179s$-'tt'J. I ground myself upoathese resolutions, and standing upon theta5ifenounee this bill as a violation not only of the spirit of those resolutions, but as an attempt to trample upon tae rrgnts oi tne States. Again, at page 214 he sajs ; ; Who is to be the Judge of the violations of the Constitution of the United btates by the enactment of a law? Who is the final arbi ter, the General Government or the States in their sot reignty? ; Why, sirs, to yield that point is to yield up all the rights of the States and to consolidate this Government into a general despotism. Again, one of these Senators said : Legislatures everywhere are preparing for a legal and constitutional resistance. Aye, sirs, the State of Wisconsin has taught you a lesson, and it is only an incinient one. 1 tea the Senator that mv State believed it unconstitutional, and that under the old ircima and Kentucky resolutions a state must not on!y he a ludjre ot that, but of the remedy in such a case. In the subsequent Congress Senator Ben Wade made another well-studied and care fully prepared speech, in the course of which he said : Dut Southern gentlemen stand here, and. in almost all of their speeches, speak of the dissolution of the Union as an element of ever v argument, as though it were a peculiar condescension on their part that they per? Tll.t t TT i . , . 1, U-.f , miueu we u nion to sianu as an. tnev ao not fl -interested in t.4ieHiH"thi3 Union If it-really trenches on their rights If it eiiuangers tiieir institutions to eu-ii an ex tent that they cannot feel secure under it if their interests are violently assailed by means of the Union I ara not one of those who expect that they will King continue un der it. I am sot one of those who would aak them to continue in such a Union. It would b doing violence to the platform of ine party q wnicn 4. teiong. tie iiuvt; adopted tho old DeclaraUon of Independence as the basis of our political movement, which declares that any people, when their uovernment ceases to protect their rights, when it is so subverted irons the true pur poses of government as to oppress them, have the right to recur to fundamental prin ciples, and, if. need be, to destroy the Gov ernment under which they live, and to erect on its ruins nnother more conducive to their welfare. I hold that they have this rich I will not blame any people for exercising 1 1 1 1 - it r.. i i 1 it. vmcnever infi imm iiib qoniinency nns come, i certainly snail be the advocate 01 that same doctrine whenever 1 find that the principles of this Government have become! eu nppreseirc tu mo sucuua vj ttuicii i ue- i , i 11. 1 1 i t n lang, that a tree people ought not lender to endure it. You -will not then find me back ward iu being the advocate of disunion ; but that contingency never having come, 1 have never yet opened mv mouth in opposition to the Union. I never entertained a thought disloyal to this Union. But I say, 4br Heaven's sake, act, not talk. I am tired of this eternal diu of "dissolution of the Union" which is brought up on all occasions, and thrust into Our faces, as though we, of the North, had some peculiar reasons for main taining the Union that the Southern States have not. I hope the Union will continue forever. ; believe it may coutinue forever I see nothing at nrosent which' I think should dissolva it ; but if the gentlemen see it, 1 say again that they have the 6ame in terest in maintaining this Union, in my judgment, that we of the North have. " If they think they haye not, be it so..' You can not forcibly hold men in this Union ; for the attempt to do so, it seems to me, would sub vert the principles of the Government tinder which we live. . ' . " An examination" of the Congressional de bates ; during that period, as well as then political history of the New England and and some of .the. North-western States, will show that not only Mr. Chase, but Sumner, and other prominent' leaders of the present Republican party, were advocates of the right and duty of State resistance, claiming the right of a State to judge of tho constitu. tionality of ; Federal laws, and if they be lieved them to be unconstitutional, the duty of resisting their execution in whatever mode the State in its judgment might decide upon. Mr. Seward was too cunning to put his opin ions in too plain language, - but the debates of Congress show that he gave aid and en couragement to the Stats-resistance senti ments of Wade, Wilson' and Chase in's the debates referred to. Wilson and the Massa chusetts Legislature, and all the Northern legislatures, then under Abolition influence, advocated- and accomplished nullification, while Ben Wade,: by speech and otherwise, endeavored to organise armed resistance to r ederal authority m the State 61 Ohio. ; These men now, for , base party, ends, would, in the language of Ben Wade ''tram ple upon the rights of the States" , . r A' Yield up all the rights of the States, and consolidate this Goverhm,ent into a genets! despotism. . ;;." ; ; ;' ; ; Sometimes society- gets tired of a man and lianas him. bomctimes a man gefc tired of society and hangs himself. 1 Bad rale that don t work both ways.;- - S T ! !. V E ?i CKOI-'OHtC V I? ft E?VC-V I T1E LAI50EtIti 31A.SSES. On no clans of the r-emmunity clo the vibrations of trade, prof! jced by a fluctu ating currency, operate so oppressively as upon tho laboring masses. Their wages are the last to rise when trade prospers, frnd the first to fall when it is depressed. The real value of the wages tTicy receive consists not in the nominal price, but in the value cf the price. They may receive great nominal wages, and find their Jabor unprofitable. To illustrate if a marl re ceives twelve dollars a week under a pa per currency, as the wages of his labor, and it costs him twelve dollars a week to support himself in consequence of en hanced prices produced by that currency, it in clear that his industry is not eo well rewarded !S it would be if he received ten dollars of a specie currency, and was ob liged to expend only eight of it to sustain his existence, Ail the protection the laboring classes ask of the Government is to give them a currency that shall be sound and stable ; for then they know, that since money is the measure" of the value of their labor, they are sure their iqdustry will reeeive its just compensation. They know that they shall not be obliged, as they now are, to pay enhanced prices for the neces saries of life,, as the currency is progress ing in a course of inflation, while their own wages remain stationary, or lag slug gishly up the ascent; and that they shall not be pared down by contractions of the currency1 and be obliged to receive de scending wages, while they continue the payment of prices that submit slowly to the power or depression. The laboring men of this country have not been unin terested witnesses of the action of our system of paper money for the last four years. They have seen it expanding and contracting, the currency, raising and lowering the prices of all vendible com modities, and elevating or depressing the wages of labor at its pleasure j overtask ing industry, with its demands when mon ey is plenty, and subverting it wh?n it is scarce ; concentrating in the hands of the one hundredth and fiftieth part of Ihe population of the country, and eighth part cf its whole wealth ; enabling, by th power pf monopoly, the privileged few, without labor, to amass fortunes at the expense of the unprivileged many. These things the laboring men have seen; and, more than all, they have felt the mighty power of the system to draw off, into the capacious reservoirs of associated wealth, almost all the profits of their" industry. They now begin to feel the solemn truth of the declaration onee made by Mr. W ebster : " That of all contrivances for f-Yiea! aung tne laoormg classes 01 manxina, none have been more effectual than that which deludes them with " paper money. It is the niot -effectual cf inventions to fertilise the rich man's field by the sweat of the poor man a brow. fNevr lork News. A Modern Destkuctionist William Biighy,' a member from tins State, is a model reconstruction- ist, and out-radicals all tlrfe Radicals of the land in his views. Me even goe3 so far as to argue, in effee that he has no right to a seat in Congress, and that Cali fornia or any other State has no right to a representation in Congress. Lest it shall be thought we misrepresent the hon orable gentleman, we will particularize more fully. It is made the duty of Con gress to sea that each State is protected in K republican form of government; and it is generally conceded that a State which lias not a republican form of government is not entitled to a representation in Con- r-n -n . til V II gross lne Livil liignts bill maKes au native-born negroes, as well as white, Chinese, etc., citizens of the United States. The Hon. Higby declares that no State u Constitution is Republican in form which ! excludes any portion cf its loyal citizens " from the . ballot-box. Hence, Massachusetts has not a republi can form of government because she ex cludes from "the ballot-box ail eitiiefiS who cannot read and write ; Pennsylvania has not a republican form of government be cause she excludes from the ballot-box all citizens who are black, and all white cit izens who have not paid a certain tax; California has- not a republican form tif government because 6ne excludes irom the ballot-box all citizens who are black. In short, hone of the States1 have a repub lican form of government, for on one pre text or another all exclude from the ballot box some portions of the eitizens of the country, by making other tests that of cit izenship the test ot Btrftrage : and there fore none of the States are entitled to a representation in Congress. To act con sistently with his own doctrines and pre cepts, Higby should move for his own ex pukion from the House, on the ground that California, ! not haying a republican form of government,' is not entitled to a representation there. By the .way, man; people are so uncharitable as to think that, whether entitled to representation or not, this State, with one or two 'exceptions', is very badly represented in Congress. She certainly is yery badly represented by men who, in effect, contends that she is not entitled w representation.! a. r. Gall OrJAKRErikG. If anything in the world will make a man feel badly, except pinch ing his fingers in the crack of a door, it is unquestionably a quarrel. No man eyet fails ..to' think less of himself after it than before. It degrades Ijim in the eyes of others,' and,1 what is WoraS, blunts his sensibilities On the one hand and increases the power of passionate irritability on the other. Th& truth 13 the' 'more peaceably and quietly we get onflie better for our neighbors. In nine cases out of ten, the better course is, if a man cheats you, quit dealing with himj if he ia abusiyg, quit his company j and if he slanders you, take care to'iiye so that nobody, will believe him... Nq. matter wao h,e,is,ror how ne misuses you, the wisest ' way is to let him alone j for there 'is nothing better than this cool, calm and quiet way of dealing with tho. wrongs we mcet,ith.j- .. .,, ofxtJongresj A Kauai's Drxfrfptlon of th ireiSfcMt. The Hon. John D. Baldwin, Member, of Congress from Massachusetts, writes the description of Andrew Johnson and his late speech. Baldwin is of the Sum-ner-StevcriH stripe in politics. What the President said is before the country. How he said it, my poor words may fail to tell. For the first time I stood near and looked closely on the man. In the course of an eventful life I have seen many men of wilful pow er and force, bat never before ; have. I looked on one so thoroughly embodying the evil spirit of revolution. It will not do to underrate Mr. Johnson. ITe is ter ribly in earnest and withal most vin dictively cool. A thoroughly paced dem- ; agogue, his inconsequential logic, his egor tism, his repetition?, his thorough belief in himself, and his popularity, are all el ements of strength when he faces such assemblages as w ere arrayed about him yesterday. Andrew Johnson is an able man ; how able, I never realized till yes-; terday. All results are involved in his policy. Had he a Cabinet as able and as desperate, the dire results which the near future would bring could hardly be named now. We stand on the yerge of firey strife, to meet which the country should gather its strength and gird np its loins. This man is no weak- Buchanan, and he means to crush Congress or be crushed. Mr. J ohnson is a man of stalwart mould. Just above middle stature, he is so broad shouldered, firm set, and deep chested, as almost to seem below it. lie has a large head. It is a compact home for hisjery will and brain. : 'His face is marked 6tron"g oval outline, powerful nnderja well de fined but rather sharp chin; a wkte, straight mouth, full flexible lips, skin coarse in texture but firm, complexion . swarthy, hair coarse black, streaked with gray, a nose small at- the - root, but full and large at the nostrils, which expand and lift as he speaks, broad roomy fore head, beetling bushy eyebrows, be-. neath"hich are a pair of the coldest, ha zel gray eyes I ever saw in a human headj these are the outlines of Andrew Jonnson. Ilia voice is clear, harsh, powerful and penetrating. When he seems speaking with most excitement, he is evidently the coolest man in the world. I watched him with the awakened interest of one who felt the magnitude of the crisis the speak ing was ereating, and am convinced that all he said was weighed and measured, and meant to bring about c&itaiq results. When the tumult of applause whichgfeet ed his strongest denunciation ' and most violent attack was surging around, those cold eyes and that crafty ; smile could be seen calculating the entire scene and its accessories. ' Tbe President and Eanrna? Sag gestlve or liia Assassination.. e Chicago republican, (Kad.,) in lading to that portion of the President's speech, in which he declares the speeches of Sumner, Stevens and Phillips are sag--gestive of assassination, says: " Mr1. John- son may dismiss his fears; he has passed the point of danger." . - " The spirit that moves men to strive for the protection of the poor, the lowly and the weak, is not the spirit that incites the murder." History denies the truth of the last pargraph quoted It was the class, who professed to be actuated by that yery spirit, in the French Revolution, that committed the atrocious murders of that memorable period.' They were the fanat ics and the pretenders who' aimed at power, united, that did the bloody work and aU for the protection of the poorr. the lowly and the weak, as they professed. With Sumner declaring the President an obstacle to be removed AThadL Stovens denouncing him as an " usurper Wade proclaimed him " a rebel at heart f I'hilhps associating his name with Uurr and Arnold," and the New York Tribune calling him "dictator," what other con clusion could the President arrive at than that such suggestions were suggestive, and intended to be proyocative of . assassina tion ? Simply because the President pre- ' ferred his way of preserving the Union and restoring harmony, to that of these men who denounced him. Al hat was the whole of it. He was not aiming at power for himself. "He '-was refusing power despotic power that Congress was forcing on him.-;. Why the Negro was Hung.- The Knoxville (East Tennessee) Whig, in speaking of the late lynching of a negro in that place, who had murdered an old Union man, Colonel Dyer, says : I It was not until two hours after the murder of " Colonel Dyer that there was any appearance of a mob or purpose to mob the murderous guard; and not thea until it was known that he was not under arrest, and it was currently reported and believed throughout the city that the negro would escape. The fact known to the people that twa or three cjjiBnl had been murdered, in East Tennessee by colored soldiers, without provocation, and that the murderers escaped unpunished J created the belief thai' such would he the ease. In fact, when the nob collected Captain Abdill's office and demanded the negro, this officer told . them that he had instructed the negro to get out of the way. When the mob learned this they menaced Captain Abdill with threats of hanging", on the charge that ; he . was accessory t the escape. . They then demanded that Captain Abdill should, seek him. , This he left them to do with persons who went with him', burreturned with the informa tion' that his search' was in Vain.. - The mob then hunted up the negro and, hang bim. .-'A? ' -V . . ' A:A:-'T- ' Boswell complained 0 Johnson that the noise of the company the 'day before made his head ache. " No, sir it was lib the noise that made your head aehe ; it was the sense we put in it,? 'wW Johnson. ' Has sense that effect upon the hea4. inquired; Boswelt A 1 Yes, sirAwis the reply en heads that are not used to. hj,