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SUPPLEMENT TO THE HERALD. ———————— NEW YORK, FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1866. ———e aiaetearinticeneimatianio oot Se all here Y “ Tate somes iy specitied, hs] nr years the constitution which giv: Nesmnith, Norion, Riddie, Salis’ Sherman, Sprague, | and to prosoribe the modes of settll Trumbull, Van Winkie, Wiley snd Wlsaany Be the Clerk of the Supreme Court of the of Colum Navs—-Messrs. Chandler, Conuess, Cres ell, dane bia, were taken from the Speaker's table, read twice and of Indiana, Nye, Poland, Pomeroy, Ramasy, Stewart, Wade | referred wo the Commiites on the Judiciary. of positive and aeclute power to chi Jaw, not to | out dispute it was necessary for some legislation by 4 government, or to any other of the govern- | declare what ’ po ange law, 4 4 to the act of 1790, appropriated’ Fira, "to provide necessary furni- | Tent, power to. declare the ‘aw was. The power to make law it Sangreas. Mr, Trumbull roferra hi of and fixtures for the proper. ex! citizen. And or otlerwise there would be no for it, to by him yesterday. "The Senator claimed that th asrumMes, ‘Vous Of the United States, according to the of the im. | What is the effect of the exercise of that Power? | that birth nlgy q that act only provided for punishment of 8 violation of | and Yates12 Commissioners, in’ that part of the Tog el What was the design of the power, and what | that no eazenstip. get peek in ional law; and he would ask was aright secured | So the Senate adjourned. On motion ‘of Me. Rao a. {rep of Mane the Senate y assigned to the use of tho United States, forty-eight | is the operation of tho power where ib iS | alone, it dectares that birth ‘a! i te of State | Dy the constitution less sacred than one secured by inter- —_ nt reaolution to em, of ‘Adinival H. Paulding to Gonsand dollars. Secondly, for the co! n'of the prin- | exerted? The design of the power is to remove dis- | oonseltnes ne, te eet national law? He claimed that the act was a complete Jolas seae) ym Senate {B7a) agent of the Exhibition in the United States at the rato | abilitios arising from the fact of and lons and State laws, shall confer shinenanio, the bill under HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. ‘accept a donation from the King of Maly, and the {wo thousand dollars © year, provided shat the period of | Sian. ‘The operation of the power spereriace the paris | NO% With all deference to the opinion of the hon Precedent for the second seotion of mean Som “ Dill to establish a bydrograptic office in the Navy De, ‘service shall not extend ‘sixty days after the close of | °°. operation of the pawn Pb | chairman of the Committee of the Judiciary (Mr. Trum- Bgeiion. Wasuivarox, April 6, 1806. were taken from the Speaker's table, read ‘the Exhibition, four thousand dollars, ar so much th When dlenbiitien, extning Meet ahenaye, are removed by ‘a8 clearly r. JOHNSON said he was rather surprised that a gentle-- ADO RIVER, twice and referred, the former Wo the Committee on For THLRGRAPY LINE n laws, in the same condition | Pw!) it seems to mo to be a M RAL LAKH TO 60 erroneous as any proposition ob ‘be in relation to the | Mab so clear headed as the Senator should have fallen into may bofound ueosssary. Thirdly, for oflloe rantat Re virtue of the naturalizal eign Affairs and the latter w the Committec on Naval ¥ ertising, for rent of store- | with anybody else; but whether he is to be considered for fixtures, stationers am eon stake of supposing that there was aay inconsistency Mr. Asutay, (rep.) of Ohio, introduced a bill to aid in Rousen: for fecontion of articles and prodgets for expensenct | wee citieea af eBtateof the Uuited. States by virtue of | Comatitution. ‘The States wero sovereign before the con- 6 of supposing y ' Affairs. bd stitution was adopted ; the ot only | in fie speech referred to and the position just assumed | the construction of a railroad and \elograph Line from BORD FRAUD WY CLAIM shipping, including cartages, &o., for frelghts on the articles | the removal of the disabilities consequent upon his ; eee Cains S by him. He certainty did hold that all persons bora hero Ane ane ll : ws gg 7 eee BS Gront Salt Lake City to the Colorado river, Read twice Mr, Bexby, (ron ) of Ohio, by una: fored a resolution reciting that claim and referred to the Committee on Public Lands. of Wathlngion, » r4 ty Science Livinia toot Soak lye lg, axsssi'sld, | Soe eee The uli order, of busin bel the call of cou soasion or under their control a or a8 being the ak OF SO | Holanging to soldiers and sailors, and that $e be cthibited from New York to France and returmand | taking advantage of the naturalization iaws, presents an | Sorting 10 Ite very tvrma dnes not profess to conte citizens of the United States; bat thts did not Fesolution approved on the ith of January, 1866, and-con. | entirely different inquiry, and, perhaps, I cannot make | Boone Rovernment of the Uni = entitle them to the priviloges of citivanship in the State tingent expenses, the sum of thirty-three thousand seven | the view—which I shail’ otherwise present in my own pea i cane Pda ore is pyrene oe {nphich they were boru, Over the question of State utared dollars r wo much thereof ax may be found neces | languaze—more clear to the country than by reading aa | Particutar Mcloguted powcr, ant to conscises were the | eltfenship the States held complete sovereignty, and it inbory eat Hares and, ralfway? iransporiaton cpenton ie the red Ce er tae wane Sakae, ers of that instrament’ and'tho great men of that not in the power of Congress to confer the right, of from Havre to Paris, returning; for labor in day to whom its subsequent Tecti: was loft, that, citizenship on citisens of the United States, This | mittees for reports, comme moing with the Committee on had collected el 3 and refused to u Palace, for sweeping and sprinkling compartments for seven | Ae |, thine, ac eoncnel nly _Deerass4, tbe, agarage: athongh, thoy had ay doubt on the "sanject, ‘and | DIB assumed such a right Military. ‘Aira, Mr. Scuxsox, (rep.)ot Otlo, fram that | tena emacs. pal: inetemestentthe 4 months, for guards and keepers’ for seven months, for | mont, not only of the majority of the court who } Sinouch thi . Yates, (rep.) of Hil., said that under the slavery : fualty (0 the Storing packlng boxes, carting, and for material for re | sanctioned that opinion, but of the very admirable law- | the q (ort a kypreapedanmt yuaryripag damon ary inn Tacnt he entertained the opinion ‘that freedmen | Committes, reported back @ memorial relative to the | Judiciary to report a bill mor ly to protect oe enti of thine le: iheasent. essen | Yet brow. the opinion was ap pore tinge lear apn ee ee ee eae en gerne he entiiod to the same rights and privileges as any | National Guard of the State of New York, a4 affected by a ae me bee LGD Scromere “hall ig eg Re much thereof asmay | Of MF. Justice Curtis, in whieh ho differs from that of the | withstanding they all went upon the theory that no | oller citizens of tho United States, The wnthorities | act of Congross. Referred to the Commition on Militia (o'Gectdladtaviley of empeghemest, Gna Sones Also a memorial of the Minuosote Legislature in rete. rence to the eatablishment of miltary Posty and asking tho relmbursement to soldiers of money’ taken . ‘eal thom by the rebels in the late war. ‘The commitice wax | ,,.Mf; Fakxewonru devired, in tbat connection, Me toy Gischarged trom further oouabderation: in Hino, #tating that clan agents in Washington wore Also & memorial for compensation for damages to | Tee ent at yee curches, &e., by the Uniou army in West Virginia, | writing letters, bramcing thom Tabalees ones Tad os tbe ble, to know whether ho would not get these bounten and Also a revolution jn reference to making appropriations | yea warrants for them. Sa to completo the work of disentorring and gathering into Mh ned or 40 . Fiftnly, fc TT majority—an opinion marked by learning to as great an I Eee tho travelling cxpences.ot | Gxveat as any opinion. ever DrOnlaeks: Whsoay Foden of President, by and with the adviee and consent of the that or any other tribunal. The question which | Eit'the power 4 borer pie eye preplhe telcerinm | Fy seeorpe ren thou | in that part of the opinion he was dis- deenucs cioteaerion pal nina na principle that only ’s Bureau bill, which recognized his (Mr, Yates’) dédlars, it being under may ap- / cussing, was whether Dred Scott was a citizen | 49) Sponge a 4s the correct one, ners, novexceeding twentyinBum- | priitied to sue in the courts of the United States, A legated power belonging to Congress, they, by the tenth , sy of th from whose expenses shall not bo paid. ‘i ty Of the. cours Geclnd in consequence of | amendment to the constitution, declared that the powore ; ‘Thumaous said the speech of the Senator Sas, & That the Gaveraore:of ihe several Sistenbeand | ihe blood thatwas supposed 10 rar in his veluy hisde- | Rot dslenated by the constitution and not denied tobe | witch he, had just reed, was daltvered, oa ile vary ft Tespective States toasaist In the proper ion, | scent from African ancestors, and his buying eome to the | St#t0s wero to be considered as reserved to the States | cone Pikes del Be es pete ar eae of the handiwork of our artisang ‘and the prolife caources of | United States a slave, ‘he could Meet ‘baccuee Fespectively of to the people. Standing, therefore, a8 | Wet derlaring all persaue oitizens exeopting Tudiane nat powers were conferred except such as were oxpresaly vps by the Senator from Maryland only hold before granted, reasonabl: imphed loption of the ala amendment. The Senator or such es might reasonably be implied vo cArr? || ebes Maryland had offered’an amendment to the Freod inhed in the same manner as '& provided for ment of emberslement and grand larceny. ‘Saalerial wealth with ‘ well ‘thi tayed, but in his speoch the Senator went further than laos! e-countey i Suse fectuer mossutte. ce map, teimaseniony: tedioae a ee oe Ee Sirk ir. Loic Cares eid povatusutet songieested bell arn er thie’ Further extracts wore then read by Mr. Trumbull. | national cemeteries the bodies of federal soldiers wno | (ie Cnwulam wl ove the puuleas lh Mil te ot «ine Bnowledge of the proposed xhibition und to secure ta thelr bred oan be. rigs agora png Meee Standing upon the express provision that everything | Mr. CowAN, (rep.) of Pa,, aaid it was woll known to | died in the war, Referred to the Commitioee on APIO” | a ualizing bountien Ae desired to give nation ta hers Fespective States the advantages which it promises, bow prceen ty on het tt a ‘ae fy be ope ‘siviliged not finnted was to be considered as romaining within | m¢mbers of the Sonate that there are gentlemen who | priations, all over the country, aud hoped the Associated J Also the Senate! ol id set pb how —_— reporter would enable him to do so, that these aie fp Washington ‘Terriiory, with “an amendiaent in the | genie, ot Washingion were a vet of InCernal shape of a {ahapbord that the act should not be construed A Mewurn— Not all of thom. NATIONAL TELRGRAPH COMPANY. tos, unless the constitution contained aome par- | defire to vote against this bill, but who are in a delicate fs world that he who was born in # country, and not mad. : Mr, Smenwan irae oes se ety qdiave at the moment he was tom ny, any mruntoipa | ticular prohibition of any power, what doubt can there | state of health, and common humanity requires that the Nation! be that’ if the States possessed the ‘ealnre who | #ome hour should he sot apart at which those gentlemen Forred toa select comaltioe of ive bad is an fellowe:ce | Fesulations, became, by virtue of his birth, a citizen. | Pa hat, Mine States possomed the pote Ie a ealare wn? | can be present and cast their votes. T understand the 4 right or the power. And I aMrm with all deferones to | Mr. Txcwnvit, anid ho was ready to take a vote now. ations, and with the right and privilege to construct anid Canna ee oF te adoption of the constitution of th | tho better Judgment of tho Bonators who voted for | He had never beard of such & motion being mate before. = are or thal may hereafter be ealabliahed ‘within the | color were cotitled to the right of suffrage, and in which, | (his bill and the | honomble | hairman of | Mr. Cowaw sald be was not at all obliged to the Sens Bare fe test ay heres therefore: they participated’ ia. the deliberations. of tha | he Judiciary Committee, that it 8 perfectly | tor. He tills us that he ix ready to take a voto now bec. 2, That the capital of the said company shall notex- | States by which the convention was authorizes, and | Clear that nosceh powers exists ax is attempted to be | Wo aro not, and if the majority do not tntend to act in P= sum of ten millions of dollare, and such company | afterwards in the conventions of the several States by | °X*relsed by the first section. { hold with Mr, Justice | such a spirit ax the civilization of the age demands wo But he by no means held that the consequence of his of he right to occupy more than Breton 1. That Geor |. Senter, E, M. M. ™ ed, that power remains now - | chairman of the committee exprosses his intention of | as giving the company the Mr. Fansewourn—l would not say all. Walter, "Frederick Prentice, ‘Charles Te Sherman, Wosn | DeiDS a.cltizen of the United States, by Virtue of his | Sir, ag Kbps sphere congantng sa 5 2-8 mgm vote to-night. Ido not wish to make any | sixty feet M width on the line of the road at any point | ho ‘werswen also desired to aay that a claim Stones AH Markiand, J. Rt. Jones, Henry’, Barn birch, made him a citizen of any State of the United | tho pitt therefore proposes to change the eae of Hous oppouition, and T therefore ask the gentlemen | where the space between the river and bluff is #0 HAFTOW | named George K. Lemon bad asked authority to r in, Cram, Benjurnin, &-"Sinith, Robert Hquires, B. 8. | States Ket me road a ee rot Howards the par: | the government. The President, therefore, as I think, | ou the other ide to state some hour when the vote | as not to adtnit of the construesen oe another parallel | fe sich authority te bad pontively refused. ta. give, fecasors, are hereby constiited and created a: body pals. | of the opinion to which ttrefers ison page SOT and others. | Might in mying—and I go fartbor than ho doos—bo is | may be taken, 1 will move to take a vote at five Bees Sy car agnede woynas Vilas cucadedwar | Dat that notw ithetanding circulars hat been went all ave? ‘and corporate, bi if ‘Com- ’ right in expressing a donbt whether Congress has the | o’¢lock. ot 6 country by that agent, naming tho Speaker of with the Usual ‘powers ‘and privileges Incident Ailer having Seren es de wee ns Sane ten . otf passed, Maine aa one OF his’ references, he was now dally ane THRED RONTRE FAY OF VOLUNTEER OVPICERS wwering letters of inquiry from soldiers 1p relation Wo that He also, reported a bill construing section four of the . pond Army ‘ptropraton Dill of March %, 1866, #0 as to entitle | S800, Mating that he had Rover given authontiy to to the threo months pay proper, provided for therein, ir. Gurswer, (rep) of Towa, stated that the same Cee eer eee vecieaconsty’ citer nj] Sane eceTTad Lo bias WAG) SOW EnrwE neuro en ‘Manage its business with aach officers and such regula- | which the i. Cortis (and bis opinion has never been questioned), that | cau it until we aro ready. I shall insist apon calved aatbority to do #0. i BE Ths conclusions He caress a" Sanctioned, he came £0 | citigenahip of the United Stator, consequent upon ‘birth motion if it is in order, f eolisted men oF ae commissioned omicers, at rast two | "age, Monaitt, (rep,) of Vt, stated that one of ‘his con: ernment may ure the lines of guid company at such ratesand | — ¥f te the) uate cited | B® State, is to depend npon the fact whechor the con- fF. Me Dot (dem.) of Cal., said he did not think | Year# prior to the 10th of April, 1545, whose resignations | gtityents having inquired of hin whathor there was much ides voce vantbdthre ne the Posanaites Gonerel 7} 'y opinion is that under the constitution of the United | stitution and laws of the Stato make the party so born a | it was in order. Ho did not think it proper to establish a | Wore Presented and accepted, or who were music Acclaim agent in Washington, he had made inquiries, and an! head may from | States every free person born on the sot! of a State, who wa , at their own request, or otherwise honorably discharged but be lund fe da person of to time preseribe, Shizen of that State by force of its covapiwunon or lawa, is. | citizen of tho State, Now, what is the next section? or | rule; as ho might rise in bis went and debate the bill and | pt til chs girdle eg 4 could find no such person; but be found # p . 4, That Congress may at any time alter or amend this | citizen of the United States. pron - Let Pager 3 provision of the first seetion? Not } yjolate courtesy, as did the Senator from Maasachusetts tr jy oe et ng : a i ed the eniect. of the bill, and the that paime recorded in the Pension Bureau as A. Lyon, - Now mark the qual! vity that wi leclaring or assuming that they had the | (Mr. Sumner) some days ago. He had intended to make 4 @ objec » Menara, Pr aot claim agent Mr. Pouanp, (rep.of Ve. presented the credentials of | imparts the ipikcer of elton baton: taaehe eat ba Power to declare that all parsons, not aubjests of any-| somo remaris on this DIL, He would suggest thet, for pag TN Me clive eer) Minn cee | ee resolution was unanimously adopted. . ed 2 e rar, in the Uni States, are con- | the sake of humanity, its further consideration post Sy mydedy » “ 0 ; Goorge F. Edmunds, of Vermont, inted to fill the | aed to the fact of nativity the other fact, that at the | waisug hereafter as citizens of the United Stater, and : remarked that jn contemplation of common nense the war ; t til 1 $e pith z oma! he understanding that On motion of Mr, Lyoeneat’, (rep.) of eevera! i] ‘vacancy occasioned by the death 'of Me. Foot. time of mis birth he is, by tho constitution and laws of |} avin oe rs ¥epes until to-morrow, with wl ouded with the cessation of all organized bostility to the t of Coloent tak ate, el Z the right of auch persons to depend upon the | yoto be taken at four o'clock A fo the | ate bilis the Distrit of Columbla were taken aor oath, of office was administered to Mr. Edmunds, cited, bitth and eltisenahip bythe laws of the Beate. ke | fact of their being citizens, the bill goes on. to Provide | ir Sea satd'un ie wsomed that no arrangement coutt | United sates.” Thut the honorable geutlemen who then | from the spraker's tble, read Uwe, and referred to the took his seat as Senator. “ * what right shall belong to them. Now, what | he made he propored to say a fuw words. Ho looked | esiened were cut off by the War Department tran Committee for the District, beoam virtue of the two, acitizen of the United FARTING AGADNOT THR ADMEMON OF TES soUTHERE orga ge pa be any tee Gl . tly in. | 8 that’ for? Is that “declaratory, too?’ Citizen | upou the question as purely @ legal one. This bill wax a Petitions were presented against: the admission of the | terpret that part of the opluion, it would be speedily | ShP, says the honorable senator (Mr. Frambull) | very dangerous one. | But it could not effect all the pur throe month pay whieh was given to the lszy drones avenoay We whohung around aud would not resign until they were On motion of Mr ved KIA. (rep) of Mame, the Senate bill to authorize the President of the United States to st A removed r% i carries with it certain rights, What rivhts? He which its friends desired. The rights conferred | ™ue ut. oi Hately rebellious States without adequate security asking | Maton wi "cath tne ‘akention’ of the’ Senate,” Ho | Teed tO the senate from the gt of Kent, | By'the frat section of the bill are without reservation or | 4,MFCoox (rep) of Th. cabled aleartion tn tte ft | uranafere gunboat wo the government, of the republic of an eight hour labor law and for an increase of pensions, | *¥8:—‘The first section of the second article £6, & passage which be will pardon tum. for saying " doea not confer rights as upon white eiti- | that the Fresident’s, recent procta f Liberte, was taka from the Spaaker's able, read \anem. 5 as not! ‘ p8- hut confer bem piutel ey hav e apace Ts referred to Une Committee on For reef ome opi ig the Consitation et the language, = saiaral | ton betare un. The paacage which ne reat moray dated | {o'saln and enforee contract in nome of Ue Sates a | , eowe member raged that it alzo omitted the Die | *S "ST" M wat arrnoraiarion wt born citizen.’ ” It thus assumes that citizensh: of Dakota Territory was taken up and passea. It directs | Stitution, having recognized the rule that persons born | 1 ant oF che United States has the anthority and la bound oman hav not the right to make a of them her right is limited. Now, trict of Colombia (f “hE r) Mr. Srevexs, from the Committe on -agorepriations, Wek Te reese, Teh war hed cay connel top> | rapartag bnak, the Rapela gmandioate te Sh Haze g Secret within States 20D8 Inite: sors who have the care of States whether the ; bi / propriation bill, and the House proceeded to canal Se ete oo a, te ernie ote onanes aia of Biates, one of four things mast boteae” Nowe wharara | % protegs the rights of every citizen of the United | par it in tt power of district courts to sot aide all 5 Gloventhe, And or math fhe ee thei. ‘The House coneurred in the Senate amendment inition, to the ndred thousand rounds of am- | teye’T will rend: «First, that the conatitntion itself hag | States invaded by any other nation. Why? Because J Jaws in rogard tocontracta, Thie bill confers upon married Be eee ht that even if it were ao, these | providing that the carpets and furnitare Wo be purchased repel Ind) ‘crue ‘ots, to enable them t0 | described what persons shall or shall not be citizens of | tbe yn Apr tlre apn Meyer a Be- | women, pon minors, upon Idiots, upon lunaties, upon om putas get n under the act stall bs s. doraestie poanunchare ; ln the the Unit 4 cause, with reference to foreign nations, the States have yone born here, the right to make contracts, and 4 ~ si a - amendment ak io, a a ° r 5 4 - tween, jen nations the govern ower granted fv abrolute. Now many of the States be : i yey a ’ hia, $1, tion respecting bounties to colored soldiers, lints shall be citizens of such State, and thereby be | St 0 power & , kc. ahd’ It read ‘‘alao were in ner- nett Bee ke coearialion of a lered, na Teepecting bounties to colored soldiers, o¢ ibe | cluzens of the United Staten.” Tubail not read every. | Meet, and decanse that relation can only in that way | geriain contract are prohibiied—some for rensons of 34 ot Mar ’ sprronriation $1) an amendment. reported by the com. - “7 7 thing he says in relation to three of the alternatives, subsist, it is the duty of the United States, as itis the folicy, some for reasons of morality, and for different pnve PT weg selene pig Ret. eS ded bat only a jon of it, He aays if there besuch a thing duty of ‘overy nation to protect ite own eltizen But | peasons. In my State (Penneyivania) « coutract mace @ntitled, and which is now or ma Guocuner ue wuss Pry Anosadile of the United Btates ‘acquired by birth | BOW is that mode to prove that a citizen of the United | on the Sabbath day is not valid: bmt this bill steps in Beld by reason of such omission; Fee hat, woth, | within the States which the constitution iy re. | States who Is entitied to tho wai protection of the gov- | and onforves it. Now, Mr. President, I wish to show the Beroin contained shall be #0 construed as my entitie | Cognizes and no one denies, then these four TRoraszives | Sfnment of the United States is to be considered a cit!- | manner in which bills'are drawn up aud rushed theongh ques dhe sacan, Mbinanenedes bee sod ad mrbang subject, and it only remains to select, | 2 Of anyone Stato? What ate these rights? The bill | hoce, It ts enough, la the ninetecnth century, to make te receive bounty. specified | tne one which is true, that the constitution itself has | OVerts him into a citizen by virtne of his birth, whieh | » man tremble for the fate of constitutional government Mr, Wison offered an amendment to the effect that { defined citizenship of the United States by declarmg Lhave endeavored to rhow the Seunte conld not be py fear that some United States judge, actuated by mendment to the effect that in } wnat porvons dorm within the several Btales ohall of | done wolesn the constitution of the State where he is | srarice, party feéling oF other motives, may draw in and evt- | ghall pot be citizens of the United States, will not ba | Dorn has made him a citizen of that State; and it goes on | monopolize all the business of the State courts. Who ever Presented. It contains no such declaration. He may | frther and eave that such citivens that are citizens by | Leantof citizens of the Staths going Into the United Pe niilan as amended was passed, dismiss the first alternative as without doubt unfe 3 | force of this Congrenaional legislation, of every race and | Stang courts to settle their di cet when the State , The bill was then Line appropriating $5,000 Lo Lent the use of anita e. mipnpceiae: Wormsee Bees, tus a fuel ander marine bo-lers ; in the amendment tw re- Mr. Soncxcx also reported w joint resolution £vIng | ference to Hoavey § Inland, at Portemonth (N. H.) Navy construction to the jaw relative t bounties payable to | Yard inatructing the Secretary of the Navy, im case tho soldiers discharged for ‘wounds, It provider that the | Sogees of property there do not sail it to the 3 Taw inal! be conserved no ttn apply tony ented man | yreer'g tae pele named, 19 diersotinue, te. poba wwe or other person entitled to bounty who has been oF may | of iho bridge and thorvaphtare leading from Ue atand be discharged by reason of a wound received whilé 8 | ts ihe Navy Yurd; in the amendment for the parchase tually in service under military orders, not at the time | of tne Government House and crounds at Annapolis, and ander furiough of leave of abwenes, nor engaged in any r unlawful or unauthorized act or purmoit, > joint resolution war L. Monate amendment adding af new sections a section re that js to-ay, the constitution has not stated, or to use | Clr, withont regard to previous condition of wlavery, | court wore open to them? [fT have a controversy with TGatnarte on ta eusaumen. - bees -etbye oe om the langunee’ of his opruion the connitation has ner | &°., shall have the samo right in every Stais | my friend frum Maryland (Me. Johnson) Tio not ga into | ye srevexy made a report from ane Couterence Caan. | Peallna all sete authorising, tae appaintsrent | f many ‘The veto message was then taken up. Gercrived, what native vern persons shall or shall not be | and Territory to make and enforce contracts, | a United States court, bnt T take hit per hac wiet into te angen, (eta. ) of Md: sald that in the discussion } citizens, the propositions, to urephis own Ian mre} to sue, be partion and give evidence, — td | the state of Pennsylvania, Tho great powers conferred | bay yr: Gestion was NOE BITICLIY | yy dismissed a m propomition wholly anfounded "Well, 1¢ | Mherit, purchase, sell, hold and convey. real and per. | by tho bill were graphically demoribed by Mr. C. It Bao a gale a 4 pol a alee tb that is vot true, then is the other trae, if the constitu. | S08! property, and to the full be ob denofit of all | tended to centralization, and would inevitally proddce a questions pen A hy tion whieh the | dou dons not of Itesit declare who are to. be citizona of | JA¥* And proceodings for the security Tfict between Slate and national governments. No ded by prowibiti mittee on the Defletency bill; whieh war yy = ‘The | oficers for pon “ only matter ot public interest in it ix that inteference | feet ye transporting bad ta Ine engraving of tha fate of the Superinwndent of | Ste, cota teatinn for edginton y Printing on the five cent eon stainp® | hall be held at rach mated ten as the & and pro. makes to perty a i ; 7 ‘ Minittes agreed upon the following provino Nev: digecs; 0. section abolishing the u@lce of As 'y at is enjoyed by white persons. Now, Mr. Presi. | « wid tell where it would st Tet no one dolude y may A approbation, relates as well to the expediency of the | the United States! Is there Seon se nese the same | dent, if there be austhing hat might be cooridered ax | j vsoclf that in revalationary times it would stop at any | Provided, No portrait or Nkenesa af any person fistant In the Harean of Ordnanre, amended by add re GC tice ed aetenn thn sete octet tere ws tee What Jastion Corie ways about thats | tree pole orn Som ena towe | thay over every 1 Te this was intended he & remody for the wronua | Placed on wny oi We sondie necantiens elt ae the words *it approved Wy the Seeestary of eo “Has it ” er. | One its, OF, LO By more correctly, over mmanerpated African it was no remedy at all, and | °F posial curren a & seetia we Cpanel nll ore nelle alias, iL omporrered Congross 1o enact what free born per- | Serr one of the subjecta to which these fighle are made dm up to Mee eee ena a | Mr. Txaven, (rep.) of Pa, asked whether that proviro | in “the grade of Profemur of any other, i@ States avainst influence, way agreed upon 80 as to avoid tho expense of having | in the Navy Citizens of the Ui tates? to attach, the jurisdiction of the States was exclusive, | snare y ‘and to the individual citizen also. In addition wo | ¢URens of the Tetinortice Goin saabane The honorable gentloman from Ilinols (Mr. Trumbull) | did nob get. justice they w district | Bow platos engraved. tng the remem these one of the purposes of the convention was leged ¢laases within the States, who, alone, shall be en. | 86¢ms to forget, ax I think, what is the real cheractor of | courta We all know that these poor Mr. Stevens replied that if there were to be bot one | in the Pacific ocean, and & rection authorizing the treme fo guard against Inexpedient and ill-considered legtsia- | tiled to the franchion and priviloges of citizenship. ir | OF government and our Institutions, This bill, in are not hae any cases over the | plate engraved the Conference Commitive would proba | ferof a fund from the appropriation for the pay of tion. Looking to what had taken place in the Cong) it be true that the conatitution has enabled Congres to | Opinion, ririkes at all the reserved rights of value of fifty » hundred dollars, and by the time | bly have agreed to that. Bat the printing of new plates | navy Us the appropriation for contingent 6 tpensen for all the (ractior e confederacy and (o what had occurred in the declare what free pe sons, born within the ‘several | States You may look in the satnte books, and T aud lawy rrency would cout sixty thousand | The House refused to concur with the Senain in the State governments, the members of the convention 1 sure the honorable member from Tlinois will agree that “Bat th dollar and would require a delay of three months, amendment appropriating $13 00 for the porchase of Of 1787 were satisfied that it was juat as neces tar sons tae be cad hans an eaitpeet oeier such i# the fact. You may look in the slatuta books of | uoniee hisn his rg feted a Mr. Tnaven thought the action of the committe akiaa & Kivndge’s whart at the Boston Navy Yards im ary for the public weal to protect the county avainst | Jr'in'y subject is within the jurisdiction of Congress, it | (he United States in vain for the parpose of finding that | Docs that do the African any good Mr. Prowident, « tirely proper under the etreumetancen, Ho wished ‘amendment appropriating $200,000 for a quay wall inexpedient legislation, or almost as necessary as it was epend wholly on ita discretion.” ‘Then ‘he pro- | %,tnv time from 1759 up to the breaking out of thir | a law be enforced: it is country to mand the reason of the modification whine end baller howe t protect it againat unconstitutional legislation, It bas immediately al Js, in very clear forcthte | febellion anybody ever proposed in Congress by logia- | chinery pvernment, Whoever shing a | agreed to. rd, in the amendment ap been denied by some and doubted by others to say the constitation confers no such power | Jation to regulate by securing or otherwise the riehts | State juige for deciding agalust the coustitutionality of TER MAGE ATS OF PRENESOT TaN propriating 691,000 for sti jo . Umber shed whether the resident is justitied in axing the power ex upon Congress, Now 1 will read a part of what heaaya:— | Which wre referred to in this section. After dwelling | law « ted states ? In the froe blaze of the ni Mr. Wiisow, (rep.) of lows, asked leave to and storehouse in the Norfolk Nav cept upon constitutional crounds. That principle was o he furthor on this section Mr. Johneon pasand to the pro- | toanth century it le proposed to substitute an indictinent } lowing ment inereasing the appropriation ( ‘by the leading members of the whig party, at the Among the powers expressly eet Se sy 4 visions of the bill which define the punishment fort fora wnt of error, Mr. Prosident, the statutory amend. Whereas the President ef the United #¥ Yard from 20600 t» $50,000 and rs “4 head of wh ch stood Mr. Clay, when they became very | ROWer ” Presenbe a uniform Rot doubted that this fa = power to prescribe a rule for the a ng the appropriation for publ aby enforcement of distinctions on account of color by State | ment must be of & most pote aracter when it ele much dissatistied with the ex reise of that power by the | ey gee ee te oe oe ere hte | judges aud others. It would abolial ail Stat same position as an ambassador tira) Aloanar from $26 000 Ww O61 then President of the United Staies, General Jackson. eats tho sake Ganer eeaaied at Conquer te | SOM, Apa whss to the cone tn which by th Seine 8, SAS SO Ie len ar fan, Gt tee oe S eeenanleste af enetwrenen n° the-deaguasing ath of The fact then attracted the attention of Mr. Madison, rhing citizenship, 1s coubued to the removal of | juriadietion is verted in the courts of the Wpited 4 ant thie bill th the two howres was appotnied, and then, at Ove o clare ‘He expressed bis opinion on itin a l-tter written with the of foreign birth. “In all cases, civil or criminal, atroaity. Jt¥: and go it will be stignvati elted the House adjourned. \ me. poner lla 4 Ls =. — pe wing the unr vuctene there ism thecon- | are denied their rights in a rt and handed down the last generatio Parts. Inte of Wk im nd, Va coon AE ANIRRA ean A th 0 15th of ; A johnven bere | etitution any express authority conferred upon Con- | any such person against whom a suit may be bre it eo w the » pare the bill, ©. jeveriy Tucker, 4 : _- from the letter referred to, and contioued:— | gress to legislate at all in relation to the statute of | any cause whatever may appeal to the United States maieen 4 here | x of the least atte bay Mew gh roermebagrene ee yh pg ©. THE ANN STREET IMPROVEMENT. Lonorable member from Iilinoie (Mr. Trumbull) | citizenship, he proceeds to inquire whether there | courta. Any of theses agents or eub-acenta—for there | any sane man, There was certainly nothing in tho old | Wio,' fied wia\ee, aud wher call Nelle” . seems to suppose that he finds valid objections | exists any implied power to establish it, He says:— | are hoste of them provided for by the bill—who may kill | eonstituven w warrant {% It wax claimed that the to the exerciee of this power by the President | “Whether there be anything in the & freedman who is endeavoring to frovect what hecon- | power came from the amendment abot) fm this instance, in the fact hat the Lil passed received | from which the power may be implied, will best be seen | siders his rights i# not to be tried in a State conrt, but | and yet, ander it, we asmume to legivlate fo the votes of more than two-thirds of the members of | when we come to examine the two other alternatives, | in a United States court, Hore the bill goes upon (he | negroes and mulatioes, There wore nearly half « mi! each house; avd he cited in support of that dvctrine « | which are, whether all {ree persons born on the soil in | theory that there is batone government. Murder, rob- | liom free negroes at the time that amneodment wan sa! speech delivered by the President when he was a mem. | several States, or euch of them ae may be citizens of | hery and many other offences, which no one aver | adopted and. under th amendment sbelisbine slvery, viao aaa ap ohotner bp eaalelos Fp Hefore Judge @. G. Rarvard. ber of this body in 1869 and 1860. The Senate, aps, | States respectively, aro citizens of the United | dreams of trying in any but a State court, are to be | it was attempted to legislate for this immense namber & bring such perenus W © speedy and impor The ng dee was rendered yesterday by tual ‘rial aod @nid fons and payers And b bh MnIAiiee Dave puwer 4d for pee ‘wore induced by what he read from that speech to be | States.’ He says the last of 1 alternatives is, in my | transferred to the United States courts. The honorable | of ‘This of iteelf must be & #ufficient objection that the President stated the principle to be that | judgment, the true one—that is to say, there is no | member refers to the act of 1790, which baw bff me ate ‘ronality of yeaware, if there were no oe bill by « twe-thirds vote could not constitu power, expremed or implied, which confers upon Con- | nothing at all to do with this The pun . President, I have another objection to this tionally be subjected to the veto power. If he had read | gress any authority at ali to declare what free persons | ishment provited for by that act related to ‘ablishes the offee of public prosecutors, who ‘the latter part of the came » ntence he would have found | are to be considered as c'tizene because of their birth | suite and offences against the foreign ministers 4 by the President and paid out Qaat he Preaiight ingendgg go such thing. The sound- | within the state, except such ax, to use his own lan. | who were secredited to the government; an mey fer aming as Jadge ard in the Aum street opening ome In the Mater of the Application for the Appointment ff Comensesioncrs to Open and Whlen Ann Sire. — All Uae ob Jerloun that hare beet presented by Me aruus eoupeet im Opporition lo this opening will Bot apply at bh ‘Bess ne ex) in that speoch cannot be | g that is true only of such as may be citizens of | an offence against them was an offence agaivat the the character o! Huspartl “ > Mr, Jobnson, when he was s member of | eaci Wand because they’ are citizens of each Beale | ernment. That law was bused upon the sate principle allied to @ thief that it Ix diMontt e been eomemitted oa ay ntti wpe Doe aig Magy oh ~ body, merely said that the fact that a bili was we yi of their birth the srertipiion and ewe as that on which we provide for the punishment of those | tinguish between them. There an attorney nA, (rep.) OF PR, objected Wo the remiution | here cat in priscated Oil Melt aa oe the majority necessary for the purpose Of over- the Of their birth they bocame citizens of the | who utter false coins, ke. Tt t# incidental entirely. ft | in the United Staics who would be gully of cling wea preys presented to the Supreme y~¥ foo confirma REPORT DETER & veto, Was a fearon why he should very cau | United Stated, (rep.) of Pa, atked leave to intredoes ways that alone contains the | is 4 part of the law of pati and not derived from any | spy and iuformer in doing business for bimeelf, Mr. apply the power for its exercise; buteo tar from | truth. Undoubtedi he tad epee said, it 19 & principle | municipal power whatever. My honorable friend sks | President, the Soustor from Lilinoie charged the Prost. How, If the comuimioners shalt makt the prupee nfs y the © awards lo the property ownere and others interested T tts being in the judgment of the Senate, as it certainly | of public law, med? copstitation iteelt, | whove fault it is that eleven State are not represented | dent with inconsintencter, and read from former apeech=# | # joint rerolutiog to imerease temporarily the tes am ; " was not in the mind of Mr. Jobusom at the time, thata | tat birth ‘on voll Of a country dott, | here. Ho certainly does not ask thie in aned capfan- | of the Kiecntive, It i well, Mr. Prosideut, to know | importa tity per cent yo Wh gree dla fob f54 Dill passed by that inajority placed it Ao the vey it of | dum ntyie, as he animadverted upon that in referring to | that to excite laughter is not the depth of remson. No Mr. Hone, (dem.) of IM, objected Pg oyh ow x) lrwer part of Broadway 16 wit , the honorable member (Mr, Trambaif} an doetr by my | the President, He says their hands are recking with (he in the message has heon anawered, There THR WROOKE BODE CONTENTED RUEOTION oe tin The peamed opening enone Hert shows in the § remem. | blood of their fathers. What have they deve? They bave calm, C00 and collected, and wil! remain om ‘The House then resumed the conmde ration ef the oom hn whole ity \mperstively exile for. perly bered tho: the constitution was the desisoed Jehed wlavery Some Cs hav en @ fartner * pnewerahie, ented election case of Dodge ve. Brooks from the Eighty tw «@ tor far low Congremional dirteiet of New York Mr Strtsananonn, (rep.) of 0 which be maipialned that the the cow Mr, Srewarn§ (rep) of Nevado, vaid he had voted for made an arpoment magh been form, ofa! Caited States of America, a government the honorable gentie ithaelf ; ABA Pugh some once wo in fare ‘alty and obedience from the citizens were to | of them bave fought in the Geld of battle, they cap take ws ad 7 for the bill | be given in return {or protection aud privileges, yet the | thai ath aa conscientiously as the honorable member or | ‘i Vy amd ie inianaton to te 80 Nani ae the Influence of the Presi- | several sovereign Stales whowe people were theif citizens | myreit. Congresriomal legiaiation ie recramary, it in | », Mr Huson idem) ft Is wonors {or that purpose to ont fyntil to-morrow — . rep.) of © endow of the ¢ tee President, in order to | were not only \o continue in existence, but with powery | said. Well, they applied here in the month of Decem Mr Gurmnis, (dem )of Ky, anpaaled to the majority pl Paine, trop.) of (pen pardons vas The Khode Istand Klectton. my: | " it was proper for the President to | unimpaired, exeept so far ax they were granted to the | ber, and it la now Apeil, and it may be until July or De- enmary to ascertain | national government, and among the powers reserved wo | cember, as rumor i Lean go into the State | postpone. a ol > opened to tak Mas Hh te Laan ton the 4h ueiamt pammod 5 tose eed the States wap thet of derretaing ‘chat persons — of the honorable — himeelf and find hen wi, = it bad already been prop “ ” » eapected, very quietly, and the repstinen which cloarty net el rene, come w the conch | dredsof men jost as al ax ony in thome Staten ” My een . ern o in tionality of as the | that la, disloyal in the modern sccepiation.of the te yeas said Ht wae tenpoenibie to got the gentlemen | aeciaive of the invaltiity ticket wae eustly victorioes, The Providence Jowrnal of upon | A short time ago it was distoyal to oppose the Prew It still devolved on the © f1ve8 Ue retares (rom the whole Bale, «neapt Mr, Trowrent - ore egal votes east there fr ‘ the town of New Beorcham sad ome Gistrh( a secured by that; mee 8 Ed gp Kd aging tua beens napponette Wows | bor c mopaio.” Tao epemase Goprt bee ‘om ee es oe San ane Gass woud te Wad eon dome on. If tho peturws uf | fd. No eerie oppudizon to General Burnade oun @ law which Congress had @ nght to make, because | Mr. President, what is the comsequence of thatdoctrine, | these Slates as being in the Union, inane gett ama seliecns wet artde, Mr. Brooke would cotaln anywhere ationpted. aud only in & few towns where lor al ineaee 6 vetted interes wan there amy Ppitited cow towt at the pote, The republicans oartied every town in the State tat foun For Governor the ya wan sa fol lee Nor unde (rope reiens) Merce (demrraty, St ee Rarneide’'s majority, therefore trom smoannte te 6AM. ft oy Mh vere The whol aloat the tatne tmajor'y e & ‘The Conersl Asserntly ©! nee, te the Renate U0 rimesl iret . Henne to & demenrats, ood in the House 66 repultceme to 1 heme rete Paine) should vole for bin retaining an oppartanity he # ry ta bis judgment it ia in the power of Congress by law to | fit be true? At m them, declare who shail be citizens of the United States, The | rom iilinois to disprove it. The authority, before cit! | apprepended that mischief will result if the ‘ ‘Onla, @ yr" meme: Rocorablo member referred to aease feported in tho | senahip, under the constitution of the Unived sates, ia what kind? os HA ae Ar ilbees ealatiocs coud tate om op Gh Peters, the decision of Chief Justice Marshal, for | not delegated to Congress except in ono particular in. | party character. Thi is the only mischief be 7; + T olarak the oth ‘tty of Congrems the purpose of showing that acitizen of the United | stance, and that not one which was mtended to make | that fam aware of that can remolt. Where ip the ocen- | A tt wae 2 ne Fight to vets thelr arts, ond. wax ‘Btaies who had been naturatieed and who resided in any | the party in whoo favor the power might be exercised | sion of this fire? Does any one suppose that the rigats ee van of a @ieusor, So far from ite being Beate of the United States had a right to go into the | a citizen of the United Statew merely for the purpose of | of the black man aro not ae safo in thee Staion as in | PMY the part of & muumon A” lal tal Oe lee eourts of the United States. The honorable member | removing the dleatilities which a law of Conj can | any of the taral Ftates? Go into Missouri, the State of | ny Teawyn, nmuw So aneai tons of the President, that @ Clearly, as I thik, misapprebends the decixi Temove consequent upon bie foreign birth and foreign | my friend on my right (Mr. Henderson). What do yon vortnent ehould be agreed to, he (Mr, Woe) woe he reiers. The question before the court wi allegiance, That was @ question In which the whole | find there? That men cannot pray im public without | Pomponement whould te wertor i tet net put St appeared upon the {ace of the pleading that the party » interested, Tt wasn matter of general moment. | taking am oath’ Where minister are taken out of the thant hana. tie Precigeas had picked this quartet Going into the ‘court below hed @ right to go into Uhat | It reinted to a common chject for which the coaatitation | pulpit! Certainty that lean invasion of private 14's ne wanted Court under the constitution of the United States and the | itscif was adopted and in which foreign nations | and I invite my friend to draft a hill to protect the <i ect of 1789, which was passed to carry out ite provimons. orn Terause no one State had the | rene of Missour) from murder ana robberies § Hruia! mrgauon ent che ‘The jurietiction of a court of the United States, where it to ks Inte upon any sulject upon which a foreign | atro \tiesand unbeard of crimes are constaatly oerern id A se whieh the Almighty = red, he world ‘was wade to depend upom the character of a party, was | citizen might be concerned, it was deemed advisable to | in the loys! Staten of the Eaat, hat my friend doer uot | (very atvanings shiloh the Almighty, livin. he wal given only in c pl ne | invest a power, which might etherwise create difficulties | think it necnmary to intarpore the authority of Congree | Yr “outn’ DF ine pee Gil wight and aid Go-mnorvew @ Party defendant were citizens of different Slates. And the njury to the whole, in agovernment to whieh the | there. [have but ome word more. Mr, President, my | [4° #8" *iiling to wt here all mg : @vestion before Whe court was whether it appeared who is committed. Butthe | friend adverts im rather severe terms tw the | re om the face of the declaration i thie partieolar uraiization laws did | President. The Preeident tates that in Wr MeDovaan, guid the Senator war very fond of ease that (he panty, pinintill was a citizen of a State, aud © 4 citizen of any one Stale, That power, in | opinion the bill t# @nconstitutional, and, thinking 0, | tk to him. He anid as sock enti ‘to go into the courts of the United | the words of Justoe Curtis, remained ar it etood before | it war bie duty to interpore his objection If he had | #0 Reon my cee States. The Inowunge Of the declaration was that he | the constitution was adopted, exclusively belonging to | not done so he would have been (aise to bis plighied | ony there were two gods; one of love and bewuty and I think I may challenge my friend | for weeks been tryiny cases fro ay FROWNULL 1064 he hed wo objection of Oia wait that 0 there reed : od wh wraght we earee ty te Foneny Se wee Bales of Meal Be st of Glen fast te Ths toliowmg nee of real cate were mate yee oy satiefied ‘vias the © tettey tnd that pumarnae frends were prer Biot they had no rghit to rajert the omnqoeens A tereguinety tm oY MULLER, TILEOME AND Oo, ee a 34 rh, berwarn Somth 60 aed beh ote ne ah, thd et Om Garner a OO tone was A paturalized citizen of the United States, residing | the Htates themeetyes, Now what does thir bill propose | faith. Ax to any suspicion of disloyalty against him, ni" | one of darknem The devoteen ne god of Gree Chih hed gree bw lange fromm Bos ipots owh tm tho State of Louisiana; and the Court came to the | to dot It ays that every man born in the United States, | whole politienl course diaprover that, In 1861 I was | darkness would not plant « aAmmit the returns © fm sod et on Wythe av, near Raa @onclusion that that averment was equivalent to an aver. | whether born as aciave or not. It ie not confined ia its | here, bus not a member of the Senate, and I heard him, 1; ond thet wae their r pep ~ Cine 8. ©. corner Mth av ahd Bh ot, eect Gent thet be was a citizen of Lowisiaga, in the absence | opemtion to thors born subsequent to the abolition of | standing in the midst of those who were plotting | Got. This wae the god of the depatur from Ohio (Mr us applied Be believed tb bine a + Oh ak, bet Oth ond Oil own @f anything to the contrary. But that is not the quo slavery in the United Staten, bat applies to all, to who- | destroy the Un'on, and, in words that Dermed denounce | Wade) But wheo he came to approach the eryntal gee — biome ne lth ot, bet Oh ond OD ore cach. Mon which this bill presents, became a citizen under | ever war torn at ang time Thongh born ja slavery, i# to | their attempur at rebellion he would fad that hin god would not help him mach. It | people o ‘he 4 leur w. Tih ar. cormendith Arent, eect, .... the natoratization laws of the Cnited States; and the | be considered a citizen by reason of the fact of his being Mr, Nvx, (rep.) of Nevada-=Will the Seastor allow me | tx virange that when two Renatore are here in the city of | »'t oe Cote e190 ot, im reer of shere, cont ° @uthority of Congress t pame such laws could nat be | born here and that fact alone. The State may heave de- | 0 ask him a question? Washington, and will be able to appeat here om the day | York no right to 3 } ‘4, atjaining aire, oath 3 Aoubvind. The efect of the exorcise of that power wan | clared at the time of hie birth, if he wae born of = save Mr. Jouxsos- Certainty. wcoseding this vou on & Erent question, | “9 seieienere of mamma avten. TT te to. Ae o ton to remove the dimability arising from biruh, and . * Th Nre—Did be not at the same time sdmit the right | Seasor—whe should be agenueman to be « Bene! Paonns, (doen) Of N.Y, nett eAdrewmed the Get © nm Tb OF, Corner Dh Mreet, earn... mm to give blin the capacity of becoming a citizen of oe of Of “ereesion? should thank bit Got thet be bad ailieted them. Hoch | deetering tat be simye Got #9 mech for fu i the Stace. When the declaration, therefore, averred | that ae descensantof a colored mother, whetber she wax Mr Jonveon-Certainty not, Quite the reverse. The | s pices of declamation was taworthy of am honorsbic | wai at io Vindionie the Fabtof two wwodre: \s . ~ ining shows, each ry that the one lity of alienage was removed In | free of not, souil be a citizen by of his birth, and | most prominent puplic man who advocated it was \ mented rehoke people, (none of the kangent reprew , oe Tth ar, commer That mreet, cant - that instance by the party having become a eitizen | yet = frend from Tilinet aod) = the «= Con. | tate lamented Premdent Lincoln, in a speech m 1647, the Ueited Ptates, 0 the choice of thelr wen ar Goan th of, Wt Oh nad TOD ave, cord iy ‘enter the caturalization laws, the only other | grew the United in pasaing thie bill, Mr. Nve—Mr. Stephens certainly did advocate it ive That district wae the evslibien io ff a ie @Uertion upon which the case before the court | have declared that those are born in a State Mr. Jonssos—I am sot speaking of Mr. ya, bat Males only approwbed one of the ose. -_ Qurned war whether be was a citizen of a different State | of “avery, and who were never citizens as long as that | of the late President of the United States, jy friend He wm sorry to cay that Pell) sed propert: } - from the Htate in which the other y rowided; and the | condition existed, whe were prevented from being citt- | from Nevade ts net often wrong; but he has certainly bier Fifth evewus one 4 we Court decided that the averment of a residence in a State | sens by the constuntion of the State in which they re- | made s mistake thi time. The President tm bis own Wwiets, Gere 1@ gn) port greeraily Wo the contemam s @f one who was averted to beacilisen of the United | sided, which bas never been chamged, shall, by force of | State of Tennessee again perilled bie life in defeace of ie the fiver ‘where the herd Gated ber oot Inne tthe, fi ©. &b or mn States was squrvaiont 10 ao averment that he was @ | this enactment, be coneidered an citizens of the United | the Union, He wants it restored, and should we not indoetincse five, fasjerine were + Bi . = Giizen of the State. I suppose nobody could well have | States, ana ibetefore ciritens for ali parpowen Now, if | come together ones more aad glory in the herole deeds ’ rpm : doubted it, or will now doubt the correctness of that de | it be true that whether birth i to give citizenship of the | of each other? ton sion. The bill, in its first section, makes all who were | United States depends upon the (act whether the party Mr Te (rep ) of TH. — Mr, Prepon, 5 08 av - i@ the United States at any Ume, and who are new | born # the laws of ee sea ee hear a et St 1 Citizens of the United States, and, aa such, | cittren of that State, Io like to know where is the | understood way ‘all persons born tn the United » | aathority © Congres to interfere over what o State | States were not citgens ™ the opinion am