. k, , 1.111 1 VOL. II. ALJ3ANY, OREGON, SATURDAY", JAUY 12, 18CT. NO. 22. 5! STATE RIGHTS DEMOCRAT. rCBLISnCD XVKRT SATURDAY, BT ABBOTT & BROWN. pffiee-OTer l. QUycYs Store, f ir$t Sjrcet. TERM 3, i AoriKCB : Gayesr, $3; Si Months $2; Oo -Month, 50 ct.; Singis Copies, 12 cts. &3r Pfcyinent to l, m$if in sfartce a Y'J fut. The Taper will not be tent to Mf mddress pnless ordered, and the Una for which it ihall be ardered bs paid for. iV xVqrli,r j ct7 e waif jYM Urmt tit my imtanc. N. B. Timelj prior notice will be giyen to each Subscriber of the week on which hi sub scription will expire, and unless an order for its eentinaanse, accompanied with the money, be riren, tat Paper will be discontinued to that address. RATES OF ADVERTISING, per tbab j One Polamn, $100 IJf Colama, $68 ; Quarter Col umn, $35. Transient Adrer.tis.nients pr Scjaare often lines ft less, first insertion, ; esb. subsj,quen, inser tion, $1. ' Correspondents writes fSvn4 signatures er anonymously, must make known tteir proper pames to the Eli tor, or no attention will be given f their communications. All Letters and Communications, whether on bpsjness or for publication, should b addressed to Abbott Jt Brown. ' BUlNESS CARDS. I. LYOXS, JEWELER, AXD CLOCK AXD WATCH REPAIRER. Shop in Oradwohl's new brick Store, Albany, Oregon. oc20n!01y . H. CRA50R. 6K0. K. HELM. CRAXOR Jfc HELM, JTTORXEYS fc COUNSELLORS AT LAW Orrici In Xorcross Brick Building, up-stairs, Albany, Oregon, u4 J. C. POWELL, A TTORXE Y A XD CO UXSEL LOR AT LAW AXD SOLICITOR IX ClIAXCER Y. ALBANY, Oregon. Collections and cooTey ances promptly attended to. ospnlOly D. B. RICE, 31. I)., SURCEOX, PII YSICIAX AXD A VCq VCBER Tenders his serriecs in the various branches of his profession to the eititens of Albany and sur rounding country, vmce up-ruurs, in Brick. - clinoajy: WIXTER & JIcIIA-TTAX, nnrXE. SIGX. CARRIAGE, AXD ORXA- uk XT AT. PAIXTERS GRAIXERS AXD GLAZIERS. Also, Psperhanging and Calcemining done with neatness and dispatch. Shop at the upper end of V.- . ; I- : 1 ,.11 ,,,., I AIV.MI1V Oregon. se22no6it J. ARROWS. l fcLAIK, S. E- TOC0. JT. BARROWS fc CO., GEXERAL & C03IJIISSIOX JIERCLTAXTS TTV EALERS in Staple, Dry and Fancy Goods, I Jr Groceries. Hardware, Cdtlery, Cjoikery, iioots and Shoes, Albany. Oregon. Consignments solicited. oc6nStf A. J. LiWBIKE. BCCESB SEKPLK. L1WBEXCE A SEMPLE, - -V - - & J i ATT Q EXE YS AXD SOLICITORS. Portland ----- Oregon. Ea-OFEICE Over Kilbourn's Auction Rooms December 8, r2nl7tf C W. GRAY, D. D. S., SURGEON DENTIST, ALBANY, QGN. Performs al! operations in the line of DENTISTRY in the most PERFECT and IMPROVED man ner. Persons desiring artificial'teeth wonld dowell to girelum a ealL Office op-stairs V . .... t. - , - r o J I feaker streets. ' au25-ly in Jf osier s one a. Aiesiaeoce ciu i stcvwmu I. O. O. F? ALBANY LODGE, NO. 4. ices or Albany JUodge, JJTo, 4, L 0. 0. F., are held at their Hall in Nor Raillimr. Albanr. eTcrr WEDNESDAY JVENl(i, at 7 o'clock;, uretflren in gooa standing are inrited to attend. aui-ly NOTICE ! iTJOISEY TO LET. A FEW TWENTIES left, to pay for good J Wheat. Highest cash price paid on delivery effeood wheat at my ware house, Albany, Oregon. n niii'iriiu" WAITED: M. 100,000 POUNDS OP WOOL1 For which we will pay the HIGHEST MARKET PRICE. 57. W. PARRISH A CO c . i ... . Albany, January 27th. J6. ALBANY, OREGON; qr HAVE ALWAYS OBT If AND P or will Jlanafajf tiire to order, every style of ' B00R5, SASH AND BLINDS, the shortest cotice and lowest posfible charges Boards Matched and PJacgJ.. Work executed in a style not surpassed by any Shop in the State. gSt" The 3f ill U. in the lower part of the town, on the river bank, at the corners of the joining 'claims of the Montiethf and Hackleman. tUV' " J. B. OOMLEY. Albany, tepjember 20, 1865.- PliAIWEllS' HOUS Cor. WabingJon"aaa First St , 77T " ' i fT Having Jbeen thoroughly refitted, is 'J now open for the accommodation of AlilL, ihetatveling public, The table will gpea,k4or it self. - Neat -und comfortable iedi and'i'fcos for patrons, &e. RATES OF BOARD; Jer week..... Per week, with lodging.; $5 00 6 00 pmgie tneajK..: 50 50 '- Mea Is all hour." " ' ' . t r gTONE McCQY, Proprietors. nol0p66y. " ee XV ANTED. EGGS, EGGS, CASH psid on Eggs,7 delivery, I .71 for any amoontof R. CHEApLE . i 'i n A i .' THE OL11 ELSI TREE. - 0,! the old elm tree is standing now, Where it stood so long ago, hen in its shade e, children plJ. ITill the sun in the West grew tow And its branches reach as far and high. And the sun above Is M clear, But under it now no children pl7i la the golden day of tb,s jar. The sunbeams oreep through the rnstlifift; leaves That fall on the moss-grown teat, Aptd tall grass waves where, in, oher year,!, It wn (Ridden b children's foc; And the bees hum H.tij in the sbsdo, Through the long bright summer's 'day, nd the soft wind murmurs with lonely o'und, Yfbflre the ehildren used to play. They are all gone from their childhood's home And hafe wanderod faraway Of all that band of the dejr eld time, There is not one left to-day j They are parted now bvnsany I mile, And the waves and mountains high; And one has gone to the borne beyond, Through the golden gates of the sky. And many a year has come and gone, Apd many sumniers sun Has passed ado n the golden West, When the long bright day was done. And many an autumn wind has blown ; And roanv a winter cast; O'er hill and dale, its shroud of saov. Since the children met there last. And the weary years will still move on With their sunshine and their pain ; But there in the shade of the old elm tree, They will never all meet again ; But there is a haven of quiet rest. And its p rUli are opened wide ; And one by one, as the acgels call, They will meet on the other side. SPEECH OF C. L VALLANDIGHAM, At RovsviUe. Butler County, Ohio, October 1, 19G0. I am here as a Democrat, to addrca Democrats, in nuppoTt indeed of the pol icy of the President as a preat li?ip! is sue of the hour, and because that pJicy is thorouhljr consiU;qt with Democratic principles, and because t could Dot' ad dress to you a Democratic speech unless! avucaiea ine uoioii aou ix.c oosmu- tioq. . e I am not here to-night as a Democrat to eulogize the policy, or principle, or personal attributes of 31 r. Liucoln. leave that entirely to those who supported him during hn adiuiuitration, whether they Toted for him in 18Gv, or became ubsequently his friends. It is nut fur me it is not for Democrats who oppon;d him toarue that the present Executive is but 'puj-suinsr the line of policy pre scribed by, Abraham Lincoln. Neither am I here to assail men who were his supporters, and wlium X am accustomed to hear denounced. It is the fashion to assail Bcccher. and Lloyd Qarrisou. and Wendell Phillips. and Sumner, 'and Wade, and Stevens. and a score or two of others like them. for their fanaticism, radicalism and vio lence; and for their disregard and con tempt for all the ancient and settled prio cipis apu institutions ot the lorcjomect and the country.' And yet they were the men whoxe pioneerini: steps Lincoln. more fclowlv in his own time, but most surely in the end,' followed till thecloicf nis career, l wjii n;t oenouuee tnesc men and spare Lincoln. It is the fashion, or was till the ether day, to as.ail William II. Seward, because it was he who spent a mc-ttme in creating auu atuerin loeiner ine emenis oi i . . i - . i . i. . i . .. ianaiiai anu sectional UBCora ana sirue which burst, at last, with such de.solatin; fury all over the land ; he who, first of an men, prociaimea the doctrine ot the SI 1' . lijgber Law," and of the "Irrepressible Conflict ;" le, who, schooled in the dev ilish politics of the Jedici, the Macbia vels and the Richelieu of Italy and France in the flfteepth and sixteenth centuries, developed, complete in all its parte, irj tl;e very hrt weeks ol the late civil war, a system of despotism and terror never ex ceeded in .conception, detail or execution, in ancieni, oriental or meuievai tyranny; he at whose instance the privilege of the writ of ha Leas corpus was, by Executive order, first suspended, and the Supreme Court and th'e!hjef Justice set at defi ance ; he who first closed aid jarred the casemates of Forts Warren and Lafayette upon "prisoners of State," and then by special order Jieptared to them that he would .'.'not recognize any one as an attor ney for political prisoners." and would re gard iae empl ytneoV of counsel by them as "an additional reasons for declin ing to release them;" and finally, who boasted to .Lord .Lyons, the Jintish Min ister, that he could touch a bell at his right hand and arrest any man in Ohio at his will, and to$h it agai and arrest another a thousand miles distant in Mass achusetts, and then with a charming affec tation of simplicity, which Sejanus or Godoy might have envied? asked his Lordship, "Can Her Majesty" do as much f And yet A for each and every one or these things, or in spite of them, was he applauded, honored, cherished as his chief counsellor and friend' by'Abra- ham Lincoln, to the day of his death. I will not condemn the servant and approve the master. I will not denounce Seward and spare Lincoln. It is the fashion to assail Edwin M. Stanton for his rudeness, his brutality, his cruelty, his reckless disregard of hu man liberty, human suffering and human life;'fof his heartless refusal to exchange prisoners duringthe war, Jvlje.nce tiie hor rors of AndersonyjJte"; and for a tHousand other crimes and enormities by which his name and memory are blackened and de filed day by day, And yet for every phe ot these, his characteristics, or in spite of them, he, too, was retained in office honored and cherished as' counsellor and friend, by Abraham Lincoln, to the hour of his death. I will not denounce Stan ton and spare Lincoln.' ' ' " " It is the fashion to assail Joseph Holt for his merciless and' cblid-blooded 'peVse- cution of political prisoners, through the agency of the most odious and execrable oi an tue innovations aim lUTeuuons oi the war,' the'inlamous "llurcau ot Mili tary Justice"-p-'odious in uauio and exo crablo in practice ver Tflch ip wus chief; and for hU hea'dlbng and niurdcr ous subopatioq o perjury to produce couviction. ' 'And yet, fWa'lrthcse "thini:s. or in spite of them, lie, too, was retained in office, supported and "applauded bv Abraham Liuciiln while he lived. I will not denounco' Holt and spare Lincoln. ' It is the fashion to assail IJenjuuiui F. llutlor iq language which I need riot ro- peat, for criiues and qffeuccs against re gion, against morals, against liberty and the Constitution and laws, against lion- csty, against deceucy in short, ofTenee and crimes ot every degree "from pettv perfidy to mighty wrongs " And vet, at every step in his career, from his .insult to women to ins larceny or millions, ne was prai.cd. petted, honored and promot ed by Abraham Lincoln up to almost the last moment, ami thcu rctuovpd trout high command for tho only wi.se. humane and praiseworthy act of his whole life. 1 will not denouuee Butler aud sparq Lin- coin, It is the fashion to aatl tho monster McNeil, for his ruthless ina.acre in cold bjootj often iunoccut citizens of Missouri, under circuniKtances of more than canni bal barbarity. And yet, for this very act, or in spite of it, he was promoted and entrusted with high military commaud by Abraham .Lincoln to the end of his life. I will not denounce McNeil and spare Liu coln. It i the fashion to assail the Milroys, the Schencks, tho Wallaces, the JSurn- sides, the llovcys, the llurbridg., and a host of petty satraps, depot and milita ry murderers. And yet all theae were the appointees and servants, the minions of Abraham Liucoln. retained in com- maud, honored and promoted by hint to a - e s-' L the'day'or his dqath.'i yy ill not Ucnouuec tlicm and'sparo Lincoln.'" Finally, it is the fashion to assail T ur chin, wIioms deed of horror no language caCj'"' describe,' becauso at Athens, Ala bama, he gave over for the fpace of two hours, a whole seminary of the first yount: ladies of the South, to the brutal lusts of his soldiery, whom he invited to tho act of outrage. For this dsed of unspeaka ble atrocity he was tried by a Federal court-martial, found guilty and condemn ed to dismissal from the service. And yet, with this official record before him, Abraham Lincoln not only lefused to con t . e arm and execute the sentence, but upon the spot rewarded Colonel Turchin with the commission of a IJrigadier uencral m the army. I will not denounco Turchin and a'pare Lincoln.' These are my reason for not s,aiing the men I have named. These arc my reasons for declaring that, as a Democrat, I am uot present to eulogize Lincoln, nor to pretend that Andrew Johnson iscarry ing out the policy of his predecessor which policy, thr ughour, we of the Dem acratic party steadily, consistently, and, I think, rightly opposed from the begin ning. I never learned to stultify myself, and I do not propose to begin at this pe riod of my life. Others can exercise their own judgment and their own rights I propose to exercise mine. I have said to you, fellow-citizens, that I pould not speak the language or senti ments or maintain the doctrines of the Democratic party, without defending the Constitution aud advocating the Union ; and hence I am the firm, earnest and de termined fcupporter still, as from the time it was finally declared about one year ago. of the policy of the President. I go jn further back. I do uot now assume to discuss the question whether in the be ginning that policy was properly proclaim ed. I have an earnest and decided opin ion upon that. As elsewhere I have said. and bejieye, it would have been far wiser and better every way for the whole coun try, and infinitely better tispccially for the peace of the couutry now and hereafter, had the President approved of the terns agreed upon between uencrals Sherman and Johnston, in North Carolina, in April, 18G5. Hut the explanation is sat isfactory, at least to myself. The Presi dent had but for a few days been in the office of Chtjf 3Iagistrate. He was gur rounded by men of whom !?$ was almost, even personally, ignorant men who, bad he dared to place himself in their path way, as since, thank God. he has had the courage to do, might have disposed of him as summarily as they did the body ot uootn. i?or this reason, 1 think we ought not to quarrel with him for this mistake and a mistake I think it to have been, for had those terms been accepted they would have accomplished whatUen. Sherman declared in his order to the ar my accompanying the announcement made peace in four and twenty hours, with Union from the Potomac to the ltio Grande. They were terms of immediate restoration oi'-the Union " They required only what the Crittenden resolutions uc maiided- the surrender of the Southern armies, the laying down of their arms, submission to the Constitution and obedi encc to the laws and the Federal authori- ty. ana witn mat me return, aiso, to tnc exercise of all rights under the ConstUu- iion. .na uus wasstatesmansnip-nign, noble statesmanship ; and more than that, the highest' and noblest patriotism. I have said that tho president has now a policy which every Democrat' endorses. It is our duty to support him earnestly and cordialiy in carrying out that policy. Now it so happens that the very issr.e of io-uigiib wan me issue six years ago. When last I addressed you from this very buoi, iu louu, wutti was me question i Mr- Lincoln expressed it in his' lnauirura '"the terms of intercourse between the North and the South." It differs' now only in so far as the status of the nues txon hasbeeb changed by the long aud bloody war which has intervened; We then jdebated in public assemblage upon what terms of intei'ddiifsQ 'the NnrtJi and South '"shBuld1 live' together; At that time iuu uamowc uicu oi iuy ouuiawcre ciaim ing that thpy coild not "remain in tho samo fJnion vith ttio N,orth and the West, unless they had'guarantcos to pro tect them In the enjoymeni of their slaVo propcriy',' over and aoovo' Hat" the ' old Couslrtiitio'lad given thotu ; and now, after this long period of jjloody 'nnd"db- vastating wanaro, vnat w. ina nucation ; "TliO term's of intercourse" sUil and 'a party of extreme meu here in the North, controlled by Congress, are claiming that they cannot livo with "the. people of the South, unless they liavo ijevr,and addi tional guarantees to' protect" tho North against tlq South, lest one of these days they rise up and conquer the .North. Hear Lincoln in his inaugural: "Suppose you go to war. Yon cannot Gght always; and when, after much loss on both sides and no gain on either, you ceac fighting, the identic, old questions as to terms of intercourse ard agaiu upJn you." . ' '' Now;, J heard that. Standing in the eastern poflico of Vjtot Capitol, under that iuognificnt statue of Christopher Cilum- bus, chineled oul of solid njaftl, unhap pily not by an America'?,' but n Italian artist I lifttpucd those words, as they fell from his lips, and thy butconfiritied me in the course of public conduct which I had prescribed for myself ; because it was tho profound and solemn conviction of my utmost toul that if war could settle nothin', it at the cud ot the uht the "identical old questions" were to remain (or adjustment, then reason, and religion, and humanity, aud eery material, moral and political interest of the country, re quired that they should be adjusted with out war at ail. 1 he late war is over the nct is to couij-! Shall I digress a moment to tell you how? 'Tis raily told.' '"hey have proclaimed it' already ltinghnui' 'Wade, Mcvens tue leadars ol the uepuuiicau party everywhere. Under the pretence of impiachment of the President, they moan to depose hiru. I do not way impeach that is a mild, iron tie constitutional word though it is absurd in the extretno to talk of impeach ing a President for supporting the Con stitution and maintaining the Union. they will depose him by violence, though under the pretended violation of law; and let mo here say very emphatically that upon the fundamental maxim of Lin polo's administration they have a perfect right to do so. hat wa it? lie bold ly and rcpeadedly proclaimed, and tnerci leslv he acted upon it from the bpgir, ning to the end sustained all his under Yw 'n everywhere in executing it, that he had a right, and that it was his duty to remove every obstacle, of whatever kind.' human or material men, things, or insii- utin which he thought which hebe icved stood in the way of the successful achtoveiiieuts of what he called patriotic purposes. And in this montruus claim e was supported in tho beginning by the great mas of the ptople its the States North and West, and throughout by a majority of them with a recklessness and bitterness, and a scveri y, too, never be fore exhibited by a free people in any country or any age. w . W I Now, upon precisely thusamo maxim. thus rigorously practiced upon,' the Radi cals have right to remove the President ironj ipj omce, ana to imprison, exue, ana even put him to death upon the pretext that he is believed to bp an obstacle in the yA: of the successful execution of their plans and policy for what they choose to call the public good, nd I do not that any one who, in Lincoln time, gave sanction to the execrable doctrine, could .... . . ' have any right to complain. I would have that right. The Demo cratic party would have it and here and there a solitary wayfarer, marching out of puce witn cue ncpuoiican noswt. iut no matter; let. me vrarn all concerned, that this ' intended impcachtuciit,' this in tended depstng of ihQ President will be resisted to the last extremity. He is President uudcr the Constitution, and has precisely the same right to exercise the duties of the office to the end of his term,' Marc) -4, that the members of the Senate or House, or any other of the olucers oi Ooverumcnt have, and the.se will find a million hearts ot oak and arms of steel to dfijd him in the enjoy- meut oi inai rigut. we want no more war above all, no more civil war: but if they will force it, if shall be, will be "war . ' 'I' tf .1 , ... . 1 !. to tnc Kiiuc, auu too Ktuio totne nut." Jut to return. I ho recent civil or sec tional war is over. The Confederate armies have surrendered and been dis persed, and the Federal army, twelve hundred thousand strong, has been dimin ished to less than, fifty thousand. The war is over, but the Union is not restored. Did war restore the Union? Let exery soldier and every officer answer. If war restored the Union, what wcro they do ing here advocating the President s poll cy ? They all ditl their 'duty like bav men. It was no fault of theirs that their work did not restore the Union! They broke down the armed hostility to. the Fedora1, government, and Jt was because, in the eternal nature of things, by the decree of the Omnipotent God, fore could not cement a Union . ruade by oon sent, that the union was, not restored; and 'now tjie' ientijre '. Denaocratie . party is where is it has always beeii, 'and every soldier and officer who fought in that war should come forward and unite with the Democratic party in seeking to accomplish through the Joailot tne worK that war could not accomplish. The recent civil or sectional warisover, The Confederate armies have surrendered and been dispersed; and the Federal army, 1,200,01)0 strong, has been, dimm ished to leas than ou.uuu. me war is ovor; but the Union is not restored. JLid i' A i- .1 'it . i , war restore $iq Union ? Let every sol ' "si dier and every omcer answer, it war did restore ... - iu every . imc nunci. xi vtrur tore it, what are they doing here, ti6g the President's policy ?. THey Al;?-.. 1 !l i' J1 -L i Ta adyocati all' did their duty like brave men. Iff was no fault of theirs that their work did not restore tho Union. They broke down the armed hostility to the Federal Govern ment, and it was only because in the eternal nature of things, by the decree of the Omnipotent God, force coId not ce ment a Union, made by consent, that the Union was not restored; arid now that the entire Dcmocrutie patty is where it has always been, and overy soldier who fought iu that war ought to come forward and unite with that party in achieving through the ballot tho work that war pould not accomplish. . ' . T t P .1 . 1 . f- iigaiji, i uia oeueyo irora tuc t;cgin niug that tho war was for the abolition of slavery, and not for the restoration of the Uuiotr. irue, I heard Abraham Lincoln say,' on the 4tlj of Mu'rctilBftl. that lie had neither tho light nor tho desia to abolish it. Airain.' after the battle of Hull Run,4 1 aw John J. Crittenden, pre sent, for the second time, a resolution which, when ode red a few days before that battle, 'hud been Uughed out of the House; any I savf every member of thtt House vote for it. excent two Hennbli- cans, I voted lor it because i thought u we were to have war, it ought to be de clared, at hiiist, only a war for the su premacy of the Constitution aud the re storation of the Union. I remember, too, that in the several Executive orders calling for an increase of the army and navy, and in the first message of the PresidenttoCongress.it was announced that tho purpose of the war was to restore the Union. Rut I remembered that Abraham Liucoln was chosen I 'resident by a sectional party that he had avowed the doctrine of the irrepressible conflict, and declared that thm ' I'nioh ' could ' not endure part slave and putt free. 1 JJemchi ber'tng thksfc thing, how could I be de ceived? ' Knowing WVIl tjic character of the Republican tarty, how' could I hi mistaken? I remembered further, that after the firstMonday in December, 18(11, the Republican party never had re' affirm ed the Urittcnden resolution. 1 remem bered that in the second and third cs sions of the Thirty-seventh 'Congress, and throughout the whola of the Thirty-eighth Congress, that resolution' fn sorao forni or other was offered by Democrats and mod erate men. ftod regularly laid upon tho table by ' Republican 'majorities'. T re mcuberc J. further, that on the 22d of .Seiitciiibcr,'18n2. or about that time, the President i&s'u id his proclamation declar ing alavery "abolished in the United a a a a Mates. 1 iMjhcv'cd. then, that the war was not for the Union nor tho Constitu tion, but for the abolition of slavery, aqd that this would lead us to the very qucs lion which is threatening us to-day with another civil war. Now, who was right in all that? Was it not fur the abolition of slavery? Has it not set free three or four millions of slaves, and arc we not to day debating the btatus of the4c slaves now freed men ? Rut candor compels me to ay that. while right on these two great question, Iwas wrong in another. 1 did not believe that even the whole power of the Federal Government, put forth with such terrible energy and earnestness as it was. and met to some extent, liy "corrtiiptidiijg clergy aud earnestness on the other side, could o any reasonable period tif time, break lowu the military strength of the South. In that I was absolutely and totally wrong. Rut I could not foresee that the resources often years would have been" so wasted away by the men in control of the Confed erate Uovcrnment, as to become exhaust ed in four years; but upon the main prop ositions, that war could not restore the Union and that it was for the abolition of slavery, I was right aud so, too, as to the other considerations. I believed that when the South should be broken down if broken down she could be the country would be perplexed and harassed by ques tions ten times more difficult of adjust ment than the slavery issue itself. These are tho questions now aud to day before us. As Mr. Liucoln predicted, the iden tical did questions of terms of intercourse . . . . . are agaiu'upon u$. Now lor the facts. Tho President, and with him the National Union or Johnson party, ana ttje wtioie ueinocrauc pany proclaim that the terms of intercourse be tween the North and the South shall be tlie old Constitution pf Madison, Washing ton, Jefferson, Jackson. Clay and ebster. The Republican party proclaim that the terms ot intercourse shall be tho new or amended Constitution of Thaddeus Ste vens, Charles Sumucr and Renjamin Wade. That '' tho issue which is forced upon us now, directly and plainly stated. Hut behind all this lies tho question: What shall be done with the negro, now free? First the Republican party pro' claim, as part of their policy, that it is the duty of the United States to care for tfic "black children of tho uatiou," as they arc affccitonaiclv termed: and accordingly " i ' ' ' r we have had, for eighteen jbjoolhs pas;, a Freedman's Rureau. It is still in exist ence. The bilj, for its enlargement, was m a modified form passed over the Prcst dent's head; and that Rureau has appro priated, for its support during the current year,' seven millions of your money, and that by the vote of your Iieprntutiye, Robert C. Scheuck, Seven milhohs' of inotiVyl Jut tjaatis not all. They were not content with the old bureau; a new ouo must be provided, of rarer aud more cost- ly material and manufacture, a Rureau bill which tlie President has declared! it' it had become a law, would fiave taxed the peo pie fifty-three millions a year for the sup port of this black population. Now I bej to ltnow upon 'what principle of the Con- stuuuon, or oi rigutanu justice, tuo uiacic man ojr U19 black omin, or the black child, is entitled to money out ot tho treas ury of tKe United States, for food, lodging and clothing, when that treasury is not called upon to furnish' the same for the white paupers of the United States? 'f Again for I'ani here to speak plainly I do not believe that the President had a right to annex conditions'o'f any -Bort to the admission "to" th'e exercise of their rights by eleven States which according A. 1- .1 " 1? l.. A J - 1 .. I to nis ttieory, accoruiug wnat is aumitteu by Democrats every where, and "what nev er was inconsistent with the declared doc trines of tho Democratic party in national convention whatever may have heen the private opinions of individuals, what is now recognized, even by the South in ev- cry State Constitution, declaring their or- dinances of seeess'ion null and void, were never Out of the' Union' He had no bet- tef 'j'gjft as Commandcr-in-Cliicf or as president, 1:1 my humble judgement, to require 6f thcnV conditions precedent than IhaddeuJ Stevens, or Charles Sumner, or Benianjin Wade. Rut it is needles to dis eu tlftit question. The South accepted these conditions, and incorporated thcml Hon, being for the Dmon,- and acknowl into their State Constitutions ; and now. cJging' obsdience to all the laws. JoodI after oue year has passed, the President t 1 1 ... 1 .1.... i .... 1 1 has proclaimed that, whereas they have t ".. . 1 . .1 ' I ' . i f 1 1 suomiitcd to tnc v;onstituiion ar.a ooeyiwno occupies mat position' to-day is s the laws, and subjected themselves to all the burdens of government, they are enti- iicu io uuiiitMiou, w ine Jieri;itK5 01 wieir 1 right of representation in the Senate and I louse ot lieoresentatiycs. aradia the t'lectorarColle'.'e. '.' ' , "It ii said by some who concede that these States are m the umou as they al- wavs were in the Union. their ordinan- ces of fceccMsion bc'ini: null and void that i they arc entitled, therefore, to represents- tion, but that it can be only in the persons of "loyal men. 1 airree to that, except that 1 fiuarrel with the word. I never heard it until 18GI. Itis notan American word, not a republican word, not a Dem- (cratic word. It docs not belong to a free country. Itispcculiartomonafchsand monarchies, todetotp personal attachment I stand upon the doctrine of the Presi, fidelity to an individual 'or a cro'.7u head. dent. I am not 1 is partisan, and do tiot 11 nas no oujsiness nere. ii never wouiu have been introduced; except by men who Were attempting as men are still attcmp- ting to establish a strong or monarchical government in this country. Ihe true I old-fushtoncd word was 'patnotic, 1 hat j is the word you are accustomed to hear iroui trie beginning 01 your uyes on tne 2id of Feburary, on the Fourth of J uly. and wherever aud whenever any man ad- dressed you aopealini' to vour VjVo "of try. Now, bowcrer',' mcri' d4e' the j void ''loyal" aud tell us that in the! Senate atid llousc of Representatives, as ferpret the iiguificatiun of tho word, and couiment. upon toe text lata aown uy tnei President. I choohe to go to the fountain .1 .l I .1 head, not to the muddy stream lower down. Let us see. In remarks to an in- tcrvicw with a con;?mttce of the Iegtisla- tare of Virginia, on' tjie 10th Feburary, 1SU0, Mr. John R. Raldwin, Speaker of Hou-te of Delegates from llichmond,being chairn;ah ol'thc delegation, Andrew John- wti, referring to this ver rjucstion, said : '0 the curding p"ritjti pie of represent- tioii, to which your refer," I Will make a siugle remark. I hat principle is luher- cut. It constitutes one of the fuudamen- tal elemeiits of this government. " The rcprcHjntatives of the States and of the people thould have the riualifications pre- hcribcd by the Constitution of the Uuited States' ' " There alone I find the authority to de - clarc qualifications, and I find, moreover an oatli prescribed; and for one, I deny the right of Congress, or any other au- thority of the Federal gavernmeut, to su- peradd one syllable, or letter, to the oath which our Cithers set down in that instru- ment; and the Supreme Court; and I'statel in 1110 electoral cojtegc, none out loyai ueaa, t wuu wnom "ine wtsnr is meu should bo admitted to seat. 'Now 1 the thorfght,'1) let hipf take notice projKjse to take tho definition of loyalty there are two milliohs'of men,'wn'd' uh given by tjie Prpid?nt, not by any of born in that party, whose children iiiomj fciuauer iigius wno unuertaKe to in- been ba it ou the authority of General I' rank Rlairlcrat'C party of the United Slates, and by us wfell as other authorities which I need thai doctrioe' we" rausfstand 'of falll IT uot aud will not name has already dcci - ded that only the oath prescribed by the Coutitutiou is' the oath 'which Confess can exa'et. ' The President" continued in tor patriotism or attachment to the Con- stitution. as Jefferson called it. lsavuu - questionably the President is right. No . . mau can bo attached to the Constitution aud not have the 4loyal" qualifications to entitle him to a seat as a Senator'or Ilep: ... A .A ' ..! .1 . , words which are strongly emphasized: It is not the country Iwas born in. y Thce qualification most unquestionably not the land of my nativity. ''For forty imply ioyaliy.V ' Now again protesting Vears I have been mistaken; these ' are agaiust. 1 no u-e 01 mai woru as asuosutute uot tne . . 1. - 1 . 1. . . 1 ' ..-".. I . .1 rcseuutiive. i-urinir mo war. men wnoiuraws iue itef- mroujiu iue wuoie ajaicut. were in rebelliou as it is called men in armed hostility to the Fademl mi t Imrlt v who reiectcd the Constitution aiid laws . '. ... . . . .r could not have a seat in' the Senate or House, or a vote in the Electoral Colleire because they were not loval. not attaehe.l to that Couttution. I herelure, they could have been lustiv excluded, llow stands the case now? They have surrcu m - " dered, yielded obedieuce' to fhe'Cdstuu- tiou and lawj and aro loyal, therefore, to day. 1 mean loyal now, without refer eireo to their past record.' Dg'you'go I .'I. . 1 ' 1 A ' ' Jt ' ' I, . - oacs auu ust 01 oue wno. would join a church, whether he was asiuner once and and if he had been asiuner, do you there fore deny him the right to unife With ite With H asked; ot loyal- your No; these questions are n una so with regara to this matter ot ioyal iy ... Aveprc.iwauyes auu oeuators, ana incmoer ox tno liiecioriai uuiicgc. Any man who to-day is in favor of supporting man rs loval iu the proper term of the word, if indeed it bo applicable in any seuso m a ltepubucan government. . ; VH.e ; who comes as u ltepreseutative," says the rresideut, 'having the q uah'fica. turns a a js prescribed by the Constitutiou' by (Jougress "to fit him to take a . c -1 not oy yougress-to n him to tak-e a seat iu either ot the deliberative bodies which constitute the national Legisla- ture, must necessarily, , according I'd the "NT intendment of the Constitution, be aloyal niau, willing to abide'by, and' devoted to the Union and the ' Cous'itutio'd' of the States." . . . . TJiat is the only qualification of "loyal ty that ever iustly or properly was known in the land. I am aware that we have had many other tests within the last four or five years. To be loyal, a man musi swear that Abranam Jjincom was the greatest statesman and the truest pat riot that 'ever lived. To be disloyal, it was only necessary to censure any act of nis aammisirauon, ana democrats were Acs.-BccauS(i she loves her Nap. , , pursued, persecuted, arrested, imprisoned, vvJ;-' .. . y s s. tried by military commissions, exiled, How taanY peas iri a pint ? Ans.T--CSf thrown into bastiles, or murdered, because'?, . . ' ....... ,v: they were not loyal in the sense of party, which iarty had teen the peculiar advocates for ycars bf ' fhe speeth' and S free' press. I The PresideftC brocecds : I 'He'caonot' be fotthe ' Constitution he cannot be for the5 Union he cannot acknowledge obedience to all the laws un less he is loyal'; - - " ; Agreed. . Then loyalty m the lieprej sentatives who are to be se'nfc from"' the Sooth consists in being for the Constiui That istound Deniocratic ' doctrine just !. -1 .1..'...' I precisely wnat we proclaim, ana any man - 1 . . . Al A . .. ' . loyal tuan, whether he be a citizen of Ohio or iit'&fsvtli Carolina. "And there w neT uocinuo upou wnieii we c cpo 10 nave lasting pacification in 'the Unritcd States. Upon any other they "will be as Huocarr until the Km peror of Austria was obliged o give to Hungarians the full rights or Austrian subjects: as Poland is ' td-daf,' and has been lor a century: and as Iraw land, glorious old Ireland, has been fxit five hundred years; but, thank God, a she will not be for many years longer- under British rule. " . - ' 'V And further says the President and this clinchss the point which ! make-1 'when fhs "people send 8u"h iden in cood faith, they arc -ettimd tfJ representation thrdugh them."' ' '' H 'I - support mm as sucn. l am a lemocrat; and ever intend , to'bea'Demoeraf,' w!tb out prefix or affix. Yes, for one at least: I mean to bo by your consent, a member of a convention, a" naticnal converiUon,' t$ nominate Democratic candidates for Presit dent and ice President in 1868, tbotign mat convention snouia be no larger than la county convention ;' and for otfe",' I meatf to cast my vote for those Democratic' cant didates. thouirb they shonld recerve rJh more Votes' than' James ORnrney in 1844 Let the men who talk aboUtf disbanding the Dcmocratid ' party, about its beidj lather to that were ptizeu in if, ana wno mean tosus- tain it ai etery hazard, as long as theV II II SFa - - . . snail live. tAppuu.ia.j - ' 1 Will any nran tell me ? Is it because the negro is better than the white mfcn', or is it because Reniamin F. Butler'd clared in his great speech at Toledo, re ported (correctly, lam sure,') in the'Cincm- nati Cotnmereial I quote his own "words' I "I reject, 'w?th""fcnutteraJJle loathicg and scorn, the doctrine th'at (hxi is'ft' whiU man's Government." Dare he repeat the' aecfaration in Dayton? '"Will-he, upon Saturday',' itr old Butler Corrtty not called in honor of him, but of a far braver, cob lar man. utter it ajrain f "I challenge him td'decUVe'here that Tie re- jects, with' unutterable scorn and loath- ing, the doctrine that this isl white iaiA Government. " If not a white nianVGoT1 ernment, then it is either totally blact or lit ii mixed.' TApplause. I I was 'taught it w'as1 the doctrine of the 'fathers';- it was the idea cf the Constitution, the furl- da'mental theory'bf all partiesthat this was a white man's Goveanment, '"made by white men for the' government of whi e "men Thai is the doctrine1 of thi Pfesidcnt'to-day,and of the whole Demo- lthis is to be a black man's Government co, if it i to hp c?ulatto Government, part' black and part whitethen' I'rei nounce it forever. rCriesof-'Sodowe'l United States: "this is hot tha Republic of America, 1 -'", : ' I . w a NEW isvENTiON. A J08 f3 .,a" vented a new stoy e tor the comfort ot tray- ellers. It is io be put under the feet with a njustard plaster on Hhe head; which. -.' .I'.'l.il tt li.' It is called' "the Robins6n Exhilarator" 'l r T t ..1.1 i ix-uovernor rrauit ja. uuuooca., v Texas, who was' Colonel in the' Confeder- army and aid to Jeffersoa Davis, hai established' hiniself at Houston, in the commission ana auction ousiness, in con- neetion wun nis son. Baltimore has a pbpulatiqn of 300.0QQ, which would imnly a votins nopuhtion ot af least 40,000. Undertladical rule there are" only 7.000 voters, five thousand of whom are liadtcais. v" Jou tuati popu lar government? A tunnel 1GS1 feet long is to be ruu under the Chicago river;, from Franklia t0 Clinton sW. Chicago. This will re- i;ara tka (rouol twViioK imiAir nrttimiallv - 1 He,:e t travel wWch U now continually choked at the bridges. I There is "a farm Tn Colorado 18 miles is worked by Mexican laborers, who are fed and managed by officers like an army." . """ 1 -- . ; VVJtiy is a 't King sxiri use a siauaer pen f! Because lean and fat calves "are 1 ! a . i f ' , f : - , . seen m them. nn n , - Wo ft ft . , punch so indas. a: VL Asta wm, t do she knit her brow. Prentice says : .'-'Cottou isn't king. and corn isn't king.;. Braids' "tire ltii, and industry is prime minister ' u- . . t- ; . r Ameriea feaa presented to England fair Field for future intercourse." A: warning needed at all fashioaable assemblages:, Look out for paint.-". ,H Why is a dolt like jelly ? Ans.-Bei causer it is i made with eyes in1 glass; 1 Why is Eugenie a sleepy empress ? 1 ' w J , n , " 1 , -i J . , - .... . r - T. r T--4