o o -- OIIEGOX CITY, OBEGOIV, FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1871 NO. 30 TOL. 5. o jbT..'''i.,lc, hEIjc lUcckhj 03ntcrpviGcv -t DEMOCRATIC PAPER, FOR THE business man, the Farmer ti Me FAMILY CIRLI. AX APPUOPRIATE SOXG. IjjjSUKU VEIIY FRIDAY EY A. NOLTNERi KDITOU AND PUBLISHER. 't FFW 'Elix Dr. Thessuig's I5ik -o Budding. T MS of subs:riptioX: th'aglj; Copy one year, in advance $2 0 TER MS of A 1) VlMl T1SIXG : ""Transient advertisement, including all " 1--t il notices. U su. of 12 lines, 1 w.$ rFor ei oh .subsequent insertion. 'One Cduuiu, one your 'Half " " 2 50 l ;( . . .$120 00 . . . t;o . . . 40 . .. i i.rrter " Justness Card, 1 square one year BiT Remltt tnces to be made at the risk o Subscribers, and at the expense of Agents. BOOK A.XD JOB PJilXTIXG. gg- l" he Enterprise i!lic-e is supplied with '"be luciful. anuroved styles of type, ur.d nmd 'ern M VCilfN'H I'll KSSlC'S, which will enabie he Proprietor to do .1 'b 1'iintiiig at all tunes Xeuf, Quick and Cheap .' tfff" Work solicited. AH li-ninet trunswtions upon a Sprcie butt. B US IX ESS OA IUJ S Attorney at Law, Oregon City, Oregon. Kent.lr'My. Know ye the land where the Radical Vul ture Is i be emblem of Satraps wbo rule its fair soil ? Where nil is protected except agriculture. And Labor is free to pay taxes and toil ; Where the farmer is robbed when be sells bis productions, And robbed once again when he buys what he needs : Where the over-gorped Vulture croaks ' mare ' lor Protection, While the bard-working yoemau at v everv pore bleeds ; Where the Bondholder sits on bis throne like a vampire And cats off bis coupons untaxed at bit ease. While the Soldier who fought thro' flood, field and fire Is raxed lor the steel-bands screwed on at tiis knees ; Shall the word Suporsede the Law ? From the Chicago Tribune, (Republican.) Popular government cannot be maintained "by the sword. Insur rections, rebellions, disorders, and personal violations of law may be suppressed by the vigorous appli cation of military force, but the real strength and" defence of popu lar government is the law which is enforced by popular sentiment. The very theory upon which free government rests is, that they ex ist by the consent of the governed. The American people, in form ing their goverment, substituted popular representation and the right, under certain restrictions, to change the constitution at their More Radical Rascality. THE MODUS orEBAXDI BY WHICH THE BLACK-AND-TAN- PARTY CAR RIED THE ELECTION IX THE DIS TRICT OF COLUMBIA. , JOIIX M. 15ACOX, Importer and Dealer in STATlONKitV, rEUFUMEUY. ic, Orrgon 'CHy, Oregon. -it rh,tr,n,t.&- fV.rrri.r- old stand Jn't-hj OC- S. Ackcruian, Main sucei.. 10 tf cu pi' d by JOHN FLEMING, DEALER IN iBODKS AHD SIATIOHE riUE-PROOF BHICK, IN MYERS' M VIS STItKKT. OEKfiOX IT JL r3ACK & WELCH, 'OFFICK In Odd Feli.-.w' Ten.le, corner Of First rial AKii r Streets, Portland. The ratif.ii:iL'" of tbo-o desiring sup.-ripr op.-r.itu.Msis in special re,ne,t. Nitiousox-'d.- ! the : ai til ess extraction .f teeth. l-Z-;' Ai tiiicial teetli "better than the best. n. wi rhi',1 i a. the chc ipe-st. Doc. -J tr io his bell v And the Shoddies proclaim, " the mille nitim h' come I" Where (J rant spreads bis Peace o'er the dosohtte valley Where Negroes make laws and Blind Justice is dumb ; Where a!! things are changed and new ino'tHenclRture Is given to all thiags bo'.h sides of the grave ; Wheie the Gospel is preached to suit sordid nature. Ai d licit is abolished to suit every knave; Where success" is the standard of right that such follow Win re to sieal half a million is glorious a nd bold ; Where the truth is eclipsed by the "Al mighty dollar.'7 And ihe'Devil'js -worshiped is 'purple and irohl Wheie rhe Eagle is down and E Pltiribtts L'nu:u'' Is sc-onied, igntjted and traileS in the dust ; Where the -many are ruled by the few greedy new men Who have stamped on a nickel, in God how i hey trust ! Twtis the home of the brave,? tvvas the Land of the tree, Where our sires nursed with blood fair Libert v"s tree. Must we now all slaves in the South, in the West ? Is there, then, no refuge for the millions oppressed ? Shall thieves hold us down and rob us and keep us all ? Oh '.what is the remedy for the good ...;;.... I . 9 We want no new party with ideas eratic ; N. nick to the platform, ihe Old Demo cratic ! Up wi.h the Eagle, and down with the Vuli ure Make i luve your vows and each day re new i hem PtT Free Trade, Equal Taxes, and Free Agriculture. For God's blessing on them and E Plu ribus Unnm ! fFrbm the . F. Examiner. A gentleman in this city has re cently received a letter from an exceedingly intelligent lady cor respondent at the national Capital, from which we are permitted to extract the following. The letter is dated Washington, April 21st, and says : Enforcement of 14th Amendment- SPEECH OF HON. J.'H. SLATEE, OF" OUEGO.V, Delivered in the House of Keprtsen lulivi, April 4, ls71, On the bili to enforce the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Con stitution of the United States, and for ether purposes. Where the Lion lies down with the Lamb , pleasure, in the -place of forcible I revolution ; but nowhere have they ever abandoned the principle that the government is one of law, and that force was only to be used in aid of law, to execute it, not to destroy it. When the time Khali come that a government shall be done away with; when a lriga dire General shall be installed as the maker of law, ami his Quarter master, Paymaster, Commissary shall become li.e supreme judiciary of each tate; -ami Colonels, Majors, and Captains shall exercise the functions of civil officers, anil sergeants arul corporals shall be the sheriffs and police; when the writ of habeas corpus shall be prohib ited, the trial by .jury abolished; wli-Mi thn laws shall be found in "general orders" instead of the statute book, and the only form of justice shall be the proceedings of courts-martial then popular gov ernment may be said to have ceased, and the despotism of the bayonet erected in its place. ilave the American people so retrograded in intelligence, and re spect for the law, that it is neces sary to set aside the constitution and the statute book, the executive, judicial, and municipal officers of the people, and to provide that the President, at any moment, upon his own motion, and at his own discretion, may enter any State, declare martial law, suspend civil authority, and make a military commander sole arbiter in all mat tets of life, property, and liberty? lias popular government so far proved a failure that, in the most profound peace, when there is not in all the broad land an organized Mr. Plater. Mr. Speaker, I approach the discussion of the subject now under consideration, and which is presented in ! the proposed legislation. With -tell sens It is quit.,.. nrp,e,os oca,on .Ty j.- W and I think I better cclubiatc it by tIo!1 ll;ls 5een proposed Mnce rhe esab- sending VOU the joyful tidings of lishtnent .of our Government so dangerous the suc'CsS of the Uepublican can- to the permanency of our institutions, so in,'.. ,. r'mnrvess As fir nsi complete! v and thoroughly subversive t! dldate tot Congles. AS tai as i 1 0f the Sia.es and the am concerned politics nave little or j,.. vi- tt)e citizen, as that -nor invited, no attraction for me, and it is only I i ,s admitted by ihe stover of the bdt for the o-ood of public education 1 that it . enu-rs upon a new domini, n , ot cm- t-t I iVd any co.U, at t.,, cess of the black man s candidate. : mosl ,ul,v concur. n is a new dominion Thr. fw.vei'iim-. m know. I lre- : iri.,.voUHred bv anv of the ihustrious ume is for mixed schools, and cf statesman who have hitherto ' i. .i v r legislation of our country course ail tt.e otneis or i ;c sum, 7on wllurie tI.t.ac!lerous sands no one has stripe advocate the establishment , eNtM. (J (vd to vt.,lUm. ihe future of his of such a law ; but the KepuWican ! country ; a domain inviting and luring to Pf-perv, tnitil the last moment denied ; the atnbifons, but upon whose opposite j,.pt t." 'uk t boundary is centralization, empire, despot- it, when Chipman, then candidate, u- wuj u be Uir Ihe cilitM1 Asserted the night betore the elec- (,e gui'es. and the Union if that domain tioil that it waVthe platform Upon ; shall remain unexplored ior generations which he stood. Hut 1 presume it yet to come would have made no difference, as ; molded the ; domain Put That EascalOut. Dr. J5 K. HATCH, DENTIST, WX) The patronage of tUose ?esirir.g tirst Class 'Vn-'r it'ionx, is respectfully solicited. . , L .-...,.., in rill i':K('S !- n.lUMat,i 'i'" ... 7 ,y X. 1J. St-tn'i (xj-lf adiiinnsieieu ioi J'iniless Kxtraction of Teeth. Oauck-I.i Wei-ant's new Wdn.pr. et idc ot First street, t-etweeu Alder and iior Vison streets, l'urtland, Ore-ou. "Live and Let Live. 11 ELDS & STKICKLEK, DEALERS IX PROVISIONS, GROCERIES, COUNTIIY rilODUCE, ic, CtlOlCI- WINKS and LKror.s. -J?Tt the old t.md of Wortman & Fields tO.tfiron Cit. , Orejn. Q W II. V ATKINS, M. D , SURG EOS. Portland, Orko n. OFFICE -Odd Fellows' Temple, corner J'irstand lder streets UeBidence corner ot -Ma in and Seventh streets. . W. F. HIGHFIELD, Established since lS49,attlie old stand, Mun Strett, Oregon. City, Oregon. rt i - . 1 T ... n ssorttnent or aienes. olrv, and S.th Thomas' weight Clocks, all of which are warranted i a j renresented. lleoaifinurs iione on moui uv, tn.l thankful for pasttavcrs. While the congregation were collected at -hurch on a certain oecasion, an old dark, hard-featured l.-i.i.-in.l-liniio individual. was wending his way np the aisle, and took his seat, near the pulpit. The officiating clergyman was one of that class who" detected "written sermons, and as for prayer, lie thought it ought to be the natu ral out-pourings of the heart. After sinking was conclud-ed they were as usual called to prayer. The genions we have introduced did not kneel but leaned devotion ally upon his pew. The minister beiran bv saving : 'l Father of all, in every age, by saint and savage adored" " Pope T' said a low Tj'ht clear voice near old hard-features. The minister after casting an in dignant look in the direction of the voice, continued : " Whose throne sittetli 0:1 ada mantine hills of paradise " " 3Iilton V again interrupted the voice. The ministers lips quivered for a moment, but recovering himself he beaan : " We thank Thee our most gra cious Father that we are permitted rissemble in Thv name, while force opposing the Federal laws, or questioning Federal authority, the Congress oi the LniteU Mates should provide for a military des- potism to taK-e tue juace 01 me government chosen by the popu lar will and existing by the popular consent? What is there in the condition of the State of Illinois which justifies the supieion of such intolerable anarchy, and warrants the substitution. -of armed force for tt-ie civil law ? Yet both houses of Congress have passed just such a bill, and are only divide! as to some of its details. Both houses have agreed to place in the hands ! of the President this unexampled power, wholly unwarranted by the constitution, "and only, defensible upon the plea that free govern ment is a failure, that popular in telligence has been perverted, and that to the army is to be com mitted the task of averting gen eral anarchy. Against this grave assumption we protest; and we trust that upon the reassembling of Congress in December, this law, so sweeping in its assumptions, and so dangerous as a prtcedent, may be repealed by an unanimous vote, ami that meanwhile the dangerom powers it seeks to confer may not be exercised. yon know nine-tenths of the voters cf the District arc in Government employ and were obliged to vole the Chipman ticket or else lose their only means of gaining a live lihood. Every man in the De partments was obliged to register, whether fresh from other elections or not, and of course had to vote. This I know from those who were so compelled. Committees were constantlv going through the De partments and the heads 01 Pureaus issued circulars to each employee asking where he last ex ercised the right of suffrage, and where he claimed citizenship? which, of course, was- understood fV every one, and men who have never voted here, and men who voted at ihe New Hampshire and Connecticut elections recently, reg istered and voted for the dominant party. Negroes were brought in droves from neighboring counties of Maryland ;uid Virginia to reg ister and vote. One of the Judges told me, this morning, that five negroes at once came to the window of the polling 1 ...1.. 1,,, - 1.-, 1 i plate Hlieie III. wan iim .i-ivlu Padical Judge to give them an order to the Pailruad Committee to get money to go back to Palti moVe where they lived, which he lid. And no doubt the same dory can be told by all the other Judges. Of course, this will be heraled forth to the country as a great Republican victory, but I assure you that never to mv knowledge was so much coercion usea to elect; t . - i : 1 any one. 11 is my cauuiu opinion that if it had been left to the citi zens, who are the legal voters, Chipman (the Padical candidate for delegate to Congress) would have stood no chance. I tremble for the school ques tion; for now it is certain that the negroes will be admitted, and then tumbles down the structure upon which is built the liberty of the country. The legislation proposed is but the fin ishing lunch to that which has. Step rjy step, for die past jc years, like mil posis, marked the insidious eentralizatiuu of power. At last. sir. ihe .nation has been b-ought luce to face with t he great danger l tie lathers sought with such earnest sol tc itnde to itvo'd and guard against in the very frame work ol the Contituiion itself. Necessity, the enemy ot const'tiutious and the plea of tyrantshas been successfully invoked at each step in the drama, and now in t tie last act it is again appealeu to in order to silence opposition and quiet misgivings. Sir. if there is one feature of our in stitutions as traced in our past history, in whichever depar tment yor may prnsectUe the search. i.ore prominent rbau another, it. is that ot 'selt'-governineut ; and ol tais noht. rV.e American, trotn the earliest colonial period to the present time, has been exireyiely jealous. Eyperienee has tatnnt rn me paM uisiuij v tha.r" whenever this right has been invaded ,r sut verted anarchy and despoiifcin has followed. Not an instance in the long list whieh have nreceded us can be painted to. ii) ancient ot modern times .... . vM,-n t, i'r!M inle. And it vas an TA-i piiD - ..;..i.. nt twvt i.'iii f -oi- an invasion 01 un m;,ui others, equally meritorious but less ' -a 1 favored have been carried beyond that bourne from whence no trav eller returns " Shakespcar-!" again inter- , i 1 : rupieu Liie Mm-,. h-Miised a reduction of 185.00') tons That was too much. " rut tnat . , ' . rascal out." shouted the minister Worse tiiax Wak. No doubt the civil war greatly reducec American shinninir. That was : natural consequence. 1 he lvepub- lican apers say that tli-e Alabama GLAUS GUEENHAH, v City Drayman, v-r)uIO OEEGOXCITT. . ,1 .... 1 v,. c.vr thf .teliverv of merchan- ,,.k..,-e and freight ot whatever 1e rt ,1P. nf ti,p ,-itv. ftiilbeexe- catet promptly and with care. t; Original !" ejaculated the voice . 1 1 T 4 I - . x in tne same cairn, out ciear pro voking manner. 1ST JEW YORK HOTEL, nnatfehp fiafthaup.'i it r,nt Street, oppositethe Mail -steam ship landing, Tortland. Oreion. H. K0THF03, J. J. WILKENS, PROPRIETORS. WpaV 4l',-' " with Lodging. . . Dav Board per 6 t 1 00 The last Ku Klux ourage occur red at Goldsboro, N. C. The citi zens heard an explosion and went to a neighbor's house and found a wench in the last stages of being frightened to deatlu They s?ui- posed the Ku-Kluxhad been there, ami wtiue a portion 01 -tne crown Parted to hud the perpetrators of the outrage, others rushed to the telegraph otlice to send the news to the Northern papers. Jbut the old lady got better, and said she used a bottle tor a candlestick, and ti, bottle had uower m it. which a year, oiuce tne ciose 01 uic wui the depredations of the tariff have been 500,000 tons 01 shipping per annum at an annual loss of $12,- 500,000. Trul v, savs an exchange. the lorrill tariff might justly be tyled the Congressional Alabama, Make the Best. Girls always love those boys best who are the kindest, best natured, most consul i - iM-." in ii ai i- 1 it erate ana maiiowe m nn-n havior: and who are not coarse, . ...... i . nrofane, and loatensii in inen tatK. The bovs who are oy t-n.i -r-v...-. 1 " 1- 1 tlw tnntt mi Up or piavmatecs iutxi ."v...., the best men. A Standing Wagek. Two Indies of Mob e have a ntanainr wager, based upon the claims ot She Had Him there. The New Orleans Picayune is responsible for the following : It is not always the practice of pretty ladies to wear veils. Not even coqnetery will dispense with the pleasure of showing a lovely countenance, and the most modest and retiring beauty likes to be ad mired for the reg.ulaiity of her features. These reflections passed rapidly through the mind of a well known magistrate riding up town recently. Pyliis side sat a lady who, by -a single glimpse of her countenance, he imagined that he knew. At last he ventured the remark that the day was pleasant. os, murrnered the female. 'Why do vou wear a veil ?' in quired the dispenser of justice, 'Pest I attract attention.' 'It is the province of gentlemen to admire,' replied the'gallant man of law. 'Not when they are married.' 'Put I am not,' 'Indeed j' 'Oh, no ; I'm a bachelor!' The lady quietly removed the veil, disclosing to the astonished magistrate the face of his mother in law. He had business elsewhere suddenly. ernnient by the mother country that im pelled the Colonies in J.77H to sever their relations with Great Britain ; and in set ting forth their grievances anii tin cause impelling to a seperation attempts upon these rights b the Uritish Parliament are i,wa lii-omment. Thev declare: ' - lie has dissolved representative houses ,w. ...,'lv for opposing, writ) maniy hta inmsions on the fiiihis of the til 111 l V J " ii,." ...-is kent amontx us in limes of ne.ee si and it if at uiies. without the con sent of otir Letrislat v re. lie has combined, with othevs, to sub ieet us to a iurisdiciion foreign to our con .r, .j.v.l mvieknowledired by our MMU11UL1. .iv. v.---- ' 1 . .,;;rv hij neiit. ;o their acts ot iuvv.-v , m m' - - pretended legislation. -For ab.dishing the free system of English laws in a neighboring province, "Stublishing therein an arbitrary govern ment, and enlarging its boundaries, so as to render it at once an example and tit instrument for introducing the same ab solute rule in these Colonies. Tor taking away our charters, abolish in pur most valuable laws, altering lun damentally the powers of our govern ments. . , , For suspending our own begislatutes, and declaring themselves invested wrth power to legislate lor us m all cases what- fcFoiMhi3 right of self-government they paid the price of a seven years' war. rivin" freely ot their siidsiuhu- fives and blood upon the many batne tields tf the ltevolutton. to secure to them selves and their posterity this priceless lwiita.-e. In the formation ot ihe present Constitution they strove to intrench it behind barriers and resuicnons so as to render it impossible of attack r.un the ...1 ,n.i s;o eaiitious were Ihe States, that, notwithstanding 1 upon the inener.u ment to the Constitution, it effectually and completely displaces the Constitution it self, violating the very, principles upon which it res s for its security and perpetu ity. Invoked in the interests of the peo ple, it strikes down every right valued by freemen. It imperils trial by jury ; ren ders the people in their persons, houses, papers, and effects liable to unreasonable search and seizure ; subjects them to ar rest, without warrant or cause, either act ual or pretended ; to harrassing suits and vexatious prosecutions in distant courts and foreign jurisdie ions ; ereates a lens: list of new crimes hitherto unknown to our laws ; makes the commission of trivial offenses felonies, lor which cruel and un usual punishments are to be inflicted, and authorizes the intervention of ihe Army and Navv in the domestic affairs cf ihe States, without the consent cf their Legis- itures. or Executives when the Legisla ture cannot be convened. For sueh acts and crimes as these George ill was de clared by the thirteen coieuies unlit to be tb-e ruler of a free people. The legislation proposed in this Dill is predicated upon the following ass tmed prepositions : Fust, that the fourteenth amendment empowers Congress to define and punish all offenses against person and property committed witliii the several States. Si-ci-ind. That under die fourteenth amendment the Federal Government m ly at will use the Army and Navy to vnppress domestic, violence within the States with out, the consent of their Legislatures, or their Executives when Hie Legislature eonno' be c"Tened. 1 am aware, sir, that the honorab'e gen tleman fro ir. Ohio (Mr. Sltellob ti ger) does no: admit in his argument that the provi sions ol ihi bill reach 10 the full extent ot tli.- orooosiiion first named. 1 am aware. also, that the crimes of mayhem, robbery, assault and baiiery. perjury, subornation cf perjury, ciinnna- obMrucuoti oi legal process, or resistance ot ouicers in charjre of official duty, arson, and larceny. are not. as suen. made punish ble by the second section of this bill, vhich reads as follows : Skc. 2 That if tft o or more persons shall, within rhe limits of any Sta'e. band. conVpire, id-eou!!jine together to do any act in violation of the rights, privileges. or immunities ot any peison. to which he is entitled under the Constuuuon and laws of the United States, which. coiRtnit ed within a place under the sole and excln- - ... .1... T-..J....I IC. sive iijrlsCiCiHHi oi nil.- iiii.v-v.i ui" would, under dny law ot the United states then in force, constitute the crime ol eiirVr njnrder. manslaughter, may hem. robbery, assault and ba tery, perjury, subornation of perjury, criminal obstruction ut process or resistance of officers in discharge of official duty, arson, or larceny : and if one or more of the parties to said conspir acy of combination shall do any act to effect Ihe object thereof, ail the parlies to or engaged in said conspiracy -or Combin ation whet her principals or accessories, shall be deemed guilty ef a felony, and. upon conviction thereof, shall be liable to a penalty ot not exceeding S10.000 or to imprisonment not exceed in r ten years, or boih. at Hie discretion id' the court ; JJro vidtd. That if any party or parties to such corn-piracy or combination shall, in futher t.uce &f such common design, commit the crime ot murder, such pany or parties so guilty shall, upon conviction thereof, suf fer death : And proc'uled ai-io. That any offense nunishable under this act. begun ii one judicial district of the United States and completed in another, may be deah with, inquired of, tried, determined, and punished in either district. I understand that the act of combina tion of two or more persons to do an act. which act. if done in any place under the sole and exclusive legislative jurismc. .on of the United States, would constitute auy of the crimes enumerated in ihe section. ,..!..,i ,.-iti un -.lttemnt to nut the c jn- u i,,... .... .--y---. , o 0 spiracy into effect, is what is to be punish ed by this bill. To illustrate: two or more persons in the State of ew lor.i conspire together and attempt to commit a larceny upon the pi'ofrty cf another, which, if committed in the District ot Col umbia or any fort, arsenal, ir dock yard ot the United States, would be larceny un der the laws of the United States ; such act is made & felony without regard to whether, it consummated, it would be .rrand or petit larceny. It makes no dil ference as to the value of the property attempted to be stolen, whether it be little r much whether It be an attempt ts nrb a hen roost or a bank. We are ...i.. .wl .intL-iwnlhl S1I1- trravelv. earnestly. a "ri j CereiV. tola inai no.- i- .. x ..v. upon the local jurisdiction of the b. aies. because it is not the larceny that is to fce punished, bur. the attempt to commit it -u distinction, sir. without a difference. Upon what theory is it, passible to rest the authority- to pass this bill oilier than ..M.ti.r ihe lourteenr-ii -amendment, the ..r ill.. I'nited Sta es has enlaiied and extended that it may n.us limitations placed upon the define' and punish all offenses against per the Gov- ir t". n t -i Oi i n t'UTe eminent had been particularly recil and numt exercise thereof, yet. iealous ot possioit. encroachmeirs through cons.ruc ion. at a very early dav after 'he Government went into operation under the Cousti.u- amendmoKts were mane ,,........, i delini-e re-u rouuno .Federal action. mid valued ngnts oi cured and guarded by a d in these ameiid- iiled that the been so now Hon, more stringent an and limitations upon All the important the citizen were se bill ot rights embraced ,c And it. was pro;,-! '... ti,.., u the Constitution cl certain rights should net be construed to deny or dwnarae others retained by tne peop.e ; HI. lll.i0v ..I..1..0- . U.d tri and also, that the powers nm ... .' -. l i.v ih. OinisiMi ion. nor Itie OJllieu ot" i,a..;tpJ bv it. to tne siates. son and property ol whatever tvtuu ami degree committed within the States, as .ii , it' f..m:nstted in tne i.'iKiiiei ui Columbia or the forts, arsenals, and dock yards of the United ftbues. wnere atone. ijV the exprevs terms or tin vons nu ion. exclusive len:duive jui lsdictlon ls ci.nier- red upon Congress, -.md by the stronyvst pns-il)ie inijmcati. n denied every wlw re lse:II Congf'ss nas tne pi; v. er to ue- pr were re- .- I.. ii,.. served 'o the Stat-en n-spec.ive.j ... neopie. This spirit, sir. so pervades !;onstitution in all its parts and provisions ll.at hitherto no Congress h is ventured to tuopose ihe over leaping ot Hi pbun and r '. .. .... ,. X l.i-.-.ver. we i positive umnai o i ..v.-.,-.. II.... nivir iliilCUlll ;..-tt.rl ti, P I PI !UU air mil"" in le fif all pofeus in nion. involving the conceicradon i re U' r v.f.vi.. ,.i .... ii,.. i.ii.iislon.'ni tor con-pi-.ing and tin.r iiwom iit anv and ail of the crimes enumerated in this section. rcutj; n.,i be derived Irom and as incident, to the jurist! t.ioiial right to (declare the punishment ot the crim-s themselves wherev er commuted : i tie power io pre vent or punish attempts at the commission of otfenseg inheres to atiti rs a t.alt of th iurisdiciion which has the power to deirie t .... ! .1. . .1.- 'l-t-. and puni-li tlieoiienses ineniseives. inis is as true ol State as oi reuerai jurist. c- tion. Sir. I tnti1 confess that I am unable to discover any consistency in the logic t n it oaves to the Congre-s ot the L id ed plates side of its courts of offenses committed within the States against person and prop erty under the pretense of enforcing pro tecion to lite, liberty, and property, and, compelling the States to respect the guar anties of the fourteenth amendment, why may it not ulso assume civivjurisdiction at law and equity of all matters of contro versy between citizens under a like pre tense? A man's chose in action is as much property as lands, horses, or cattle, and as such is as much entitled- to the protection of the Government. Where is to be the limit ot protection to person and property if the interpretation assumed is acted upon by the Government? Is this criminal jurisdiction now sought to be assumed to be concurrent with the Jafates or exclusive .f their rights; and if concurrent, is there not some danger of there being an over dose of protection? Hut. sir. it is useless to pursue this mat ter further ; the pretense of protection ig altogether tso thin a disguise to cover the masked design which lurks beneath. To assume jurisdiction over the domestic con cerns of the several States is the purpose of this measure. It can have no other, be Ihe pretense what It may. I'as it and enforce it and the local jurisdiction of the State is a thiiie o-f the p.,st. Once upon the statute book and it will be a danger ous precedent to be appealed to in die fu tne. and circumstances and exigencies will not be wanting to invite and urge 10 Inn her aggressions Once concede tho principle and ihe current of legislation will ihencelorth sweep with irresistible force to tiie cen : ra 'ft. it ion of all power 4lT Congress and the Executive in P.nd over the States, absorbing one hy one their re ni lining- rights, until their lines and juris dictions -will -bo wholly obliterated and lost. But there is another feature in this sec tion wort hy of note. The bill is entitled -A bill to enforce ihe provisions of the fourteenth amendment llie Constitution of the United States, and for other pnr poses.': And it. is claimed that guarantees made in the first section of this amend ment, bv way d negotiens upon the States, e urv w'itn them atd particularly in con nections with the tilth section ot the amend ment, the power or icerr c ar.i..i impose upon Congress the duty of provid iug the neces-i lry laws to that end.0 The lnuiorable genUeman from Ohio Mr JJingha.in made an elaborate argument upon the power and duty of the Govern ment to enfi.rce t' ese amendments, which abounded in e!qoience and sUtely rheto ric r;iost worthy the gentleman. I he Ilonsesj) and ihe occasion. Did it accur to that gentleman that that question was not nec essarily involved in the discussion of this measure, ihe power of enforcement of the fourteenth amendment, not being denied It is not whether the Government has power to enforce upon theStjtes an ob servance of the restrictions placed upon them in the first section of lhat amendment-, but whether this particular measure is a proper remedy, and whether it is not ob noxious to the charge of being an un warranted assumption of power upon the part ot Congress, illegal in its provisions and unpistih ble upon any principle of i., ,'....,?,.,! lf.crisl.ition ? The lngiiive lave law of 1850. based upon the third0 clause of section two oT article four 'if the Constitution, has been referred to as finn-i.-hitig an undoubted precedent and lull iustilication for the passage of this enor- J . . .1. .. I..... ;, mitv. (he Clause upon svuii;ii i-i w based reads as follows : -No person held to service or labor in State, under the laws thereof, escaping in to another, shall, in consequence oi any law or regulation therein, be discharged trotn such service or labor, but shall be delivered upon claim of the party io whom such service or labor may be due." It will be seen that there is no parallel whatever between this clause and the first section of the fotnteenth amendment. There are two phases to the -clause to be noticed : 1. The slave was not to be discharged from Jvervice on account ol tne laws of the State into which he had fled. Thai is to say. the State was not denied the right to place the law on her statute-book, but the slave escaping within her jurisdiction vras not toCfce dis charged by reason of anti-slave laws. 2. The slave was to be delivered up on claim of the party to whom his services were due. q This is not the denial to the States ihe right to pass a la w. but ejmply except ing trom its operation Cert ate persons cimiing within their jurisd.ctions. This is not all. A delivery tuxya claim was to be made, and the act of delivery was not devolved upon the State but U-ft to the General Goverumeiit, aiYd it vVas this duty that Carried wish it power to provide" therefor as a necessary implica tion. But the guarantees ot thPlirstpsec tion of ihe fourteenth amendment are wholly negative ir. their character : No State shall make or entorceany law which shall abridge the pri vilpgesr immunities of citizens of the Duped Sia es ; nor shall any State deprivtPany persou'of life, liberty, or property with oiit. due process ot law. nor deny ro any sors..n within 'us ' jurisdiction the equal protection of -the laws.'' Such laws would be simple nullities if pjv.sed. End every officer o! the Stale, from ajus;ice of the' peace to the supreme judge from a constable to the Execunve, 'n infer their oadi u support the Constitu tion of the Uni ed S a e would be bound .iu.-..n-ui-.l tii.-in. If. however, litt-ir 'JQ- forcemeiit were ait uiped the citizen is -i.l ill.- means ot nro ection. Tiie o 1 . . . . ... r-'t , 1 ; r .r I 1 . I 1 . . I, . I.. O-.ent and in fi 3n s wl,li' power u ceciare u.t ihh:iiiu .ui m h i 1 1 M lilt ijanir-i i attcmiH n ciiihiii si cumi mhu uniir . t rii :i.tn n rirtirw i ..r.mnt tti (rtM MltHf lUt nn . I ' in i' 1,1 . .U . J..i,.. iirr-illt . . . ii at... bv ihe fathers to r ro'eci lue.m.r.--...,,.,.. ,,llWer to ueciare me -7 .1..., ko-i1 ini un'P A. G. AVALLIXCrS Pioneer Book Binclery- OltEGOMAN UUILDLNG, Comer of Front and Al r Street, POUT LAND, OREGON. she would have forgotten entirely th j re.etive husbands to snpe . 4:..,. I. .t i if it hadn't got on tire. The Meanest Max, Tie lives Wmi hester. 31ass., now the mlnnest man and hts a deacon vnt innc a'o his father and mother flied and his brother buried them, started and broke his wife's neck. T?LNK BOOKS RULED and BOUND to AEnut half a cart load ot earth a neighbor told him that he wished nor uiriiness. liotn ccem uunt u .n so extremely ill-favored that no outsider can "be found to decide the question. A gentleman havincr a pony that Old Lady. " They're all alike, mv dear. There's our Susan (it's true she1 a dissenterl. but which thev to enter largely .... i.r, ii ohm .'II t S 111) c 1 1 " " . . .I .r. ,.v-r domestic atltH! m ide the chief corner itoae of our system et government. l bi not propose, sir. ;f.. liscussion of the numerous con- .;:,! ones ions suggested by this bill. This has been already done largely and cM fcv -others who h ive preceded me in ihu.liseussion. The bill needs only to be to ii nisUment of i he c imp Hs-lf when coinmr'te-l. vvn. the bill itself refu'ea the argument, as vyill iie seen bv aa ex amnia' ion oi ine nrst proviso of the swetiou under cons deration, which noes a step further. n I dec ares sn in. Federal covins, alwavs open vvi h writ of h-iUciK cnrp-is. wr.ts of rest aOt. and injunctions, and othei reme ha. agen-c'-es. can al tll luces rend. -r effijtelit a .d ,,t ,A eoritv air -tins' acinil or ihivaien- t I . A tri'l i rim u t-.- tf !.uimI in. mils or nfiircir.sr th'- sect...., ... ...... - -- i i; ...I .. . hi-e .rn ll ano-es. in eo I r u. - r the c.v il acr -u i K.-.b-ral coui iS is to b- . ..: tii.. fi se li.DITIi.K ...... . ..K tioual atlieudtnen . ro" ' r j , . . i , ,. f e. i IOI! " uiivyu g ioi.h j , . i i . a;n esauu o.iu- ie-;.n i w i i hiii their limits. If. the provi- t . , r i lo.irteentn ameiMiuieni. aiia nferreil as claimed, . : . 1 T',-o i read io be at once an uaem . iu ' .. i i il. .. it k nioi been well anu uuiy m.u '" - . c.rfia and atrocious-'' Under the guir be carted away, and the 4 enr sesneu . , unA , MUSIC HOUKts, JIAUAAIA, , , , . t fh flf... 1 .-U tl i uiv.., vvv... ... v-.v... '.iv.j " i in avw" . , i-onwn to the trade. f. tho nsfi ot D15 OXeH anu j., - . , , i c e 1 1 l s wi "- . Tv.iofi to. I cart. to purchase it for his wife to ride upon. "Xo," says the other, "I will not sell the little fellow be cause I intend to marry aain." It has in , , i i ..i... i neell wen sum mi'T -- n owed her to m to Chapel iniee. .1,.111.i linger the sutse tiiniw pvcrv Simlnv since she has , liriimrr the ot ivib-rxes and ltnraunuH i .;tl. v ,..,Vl T 4ISOH11 votl r The citizen, it at once and effectually 1 1 V e. l iv nil m-, aii.i - " - . - ,- ,i ,i .,ruj UtV flinn destlOVS his own Sllield, aia ir sne tiosfii t ni..K a ..11, v.. - ; nrot.erty a prey ".o irrespon- she did the first dav! L;ki n.--r neutered in one man. Un 'A.. ,tJ ..intense of protecting valued Whnt a man needs in a garden, nhts. their most important safeguards are that if any oariv to such eotispiracy ' i in attemp n.' to cany out me -comu.i the crime of mn der. such p- ry th ill r.iilier or parties, upon con iu. death,'' . , . ., ;-:..;. Mr. Speaker, the conclusion ble that that lepisla'iou is ant can ated on no othe-theory th .n that Ua fes under .he Constitution, as amended. m iv in the pleini'"1"' ' . ever Circnmsrauces - . T , ---: - demand, define anu puu.-i. .... . offe-v a-ainst i e -on and properly com mid within ti e States. ...... i n ah 1 1 rr Ana cton t!n. t IIS Dll-I ",r IHVJ ....7 .-.v A pretend- flir!her. Ii' 'he United States may provide says Mr. Charles P. Yarner, ,s a s r c.en , --wn eWad- "I' jurud.cuonapon the crimiaal cast-iron back with a hinge id it. 1 - in in. throimh pen il ......r .MUir :.. .i..: -me is to tnforce s r. "if ,,itts of i he lhe power is c early cnterre.i as claimed, ...... t.i.ie and m isk ihe purposes of ihe im.1,re belund the phrase, -which. Cin mitied widiin a place under the sole and exclusive jurtsdr ion of I he IBi ied S'ates. won d under ar.v 1 -w of the L'nited State then in force cous in ire t'te crun." &c. J This lau-'uajre cannot by any pisrbility wha ever add to the validity of 'he act. by extending he power ol exclusive lejr,sla iion within the Di-trict ot Columbia, the forts, arsenals, and dock yards ol th, Uni ted States over the States them-elves. The crimes enumerated are all defined in the juri-prudence of the coun ry and at com mon law. and are neither more nor less definite because they are made punishable when committed wi bin places where il.e sole Mid exclusive legislative jurisdiction of the Government may be . x r.ed. And if. sir. to protect the rights. prji e-t, and iaunucities of aDy person, to wlycfe C0URT3SY OF BAfCROFT LIBRARY, UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, O G G 0 9 O o G 0 O 0 o G O O O o o