The New York Herald Newspaper, May 6, 1868, Page 3

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NEW YORX HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1968—TRIPLE SHuKT. 5 — ee Weeeeeees eee SS , ments to justify *.» president's removal, and that ! the Senate to take the recess now he would proceed’ | an unconstitntionat la law, but ” conscientious)” ne could not vote forcomviction. with his argument for another half hour. that it cannot be considered unconsticutiount cart THE ANNIVERSARIES. ‘ ‘ ‘for the was net . ~ 4 it beenso pronounced in the proper way. He - ‘ In conse, of these developments certain rr, R e prop y. : one-one quence peoten, Reged we reiterate that evil in i is to be pre- | pig c Mee oe een eee es Se sears ne teenie eects Se, | oad ron, cela, bc fneaent' ova nen, | Mt7reecond Anniversay aad Amana Moctog el ol P J a | wi, a view to ‘agheamng sntkompenstnené Sone aly Hed by andwith whe advice ‘and consent | conteawon. ‘To show. this ar ynauen Putt | Tuite Yaterectiag Teenie st Conant | Trial of President Andrew Johnson {0 ’ cue or nose‘ to te edeck toht Sowntors have been qocation. As the ine tica she ne eas arnied tS | Bere Bloghera codtinueds He cays as, GALE. | Stattstles, shy - | bought over; that the President's friends have made hold the office until removed Dy authority of the act | the it Was unwiiling to trust theamoe nin At haif-past two o'clock yesterday afvernoon the High Crimes and Misdemeanors pi ‘cbabaae mount to purchase; thst certain Ce Suttort ¢ a ae oxiating aay ope whe wonld 26, OY, holy tt compel Mr. fifty-second anniversary of the New York Sunday ° Senstors have been and that one in par- But otherwise he was not removable at | wellashe knew ing, If he indeed knew any. | 8001 Missionary Union was celebrated with appro- ‘ licalar, who haggled over his price, was informed ali without the advice and consent of the Senate. | thing at ‘all—( iter)—and if he does not, then | Pilate and attractive ceremonies and exercises in Y That is the position | take in reference to that matter | order an inquest of lunaty and dispose of him in | the Northwest Reformed Dutch church, Twenty-third Gontinuation of Mr. BYagham’s sho atesin tag whhout bis, abe: ot one single word in fererorae os a Das history that "he prevented, MP. “Slanign’ from resenig | Se Near Sixth avenue, ‘The interlor of this reven'! . resi x 4 this story is one of the purest of inventions. Another of the to contradict it, rhe wet ot tb Pry the omice. Mr, Stanton co not any ono neat and commodious place of worship presented an - ‘A Argument, story is that Fessenden and Company are merely ane ee ag Msi aod Be emoree = mil i Sl os eee A i cen Cte os Ren Appearance at once imposing and decidediy interest- eAtpientnnatiy Playing 8 sharp game in order to induce Wade to re- Gentlemen seem to think that the tenure of office de- | not know it ought tobe turned out oftheottice whicn |" crowded as it was to repletion with a oe sign and let Colfax slip into the aa tntertm Preal- Ponanages Bo. vents of the commission. If that ai and dishonors for natural stapidity. | the pleased and sparkling faces of friends, Excitement Ovey, Mr. Fi en- dency. The way this is to be effected, accord- nome poe Py myrd She question, om I deny panew ~ whe ae hee abused the powers enough to teachers and children, representing one hundred - “ The office depends visions man that pense and forty-six schools, hayii ‘6 > £685! to the story, ia by arranging thirty. of the constitution and isting There ia | find to. the Capitol. ought to have y-slX schools, having an aggregate den’s Defe oti eet partons rgeorte sir nga ne vested er in Proaident of the United | sense enough lo know that. ( +) nue = a pe nity twenty thousand scholars. States over subject. le never power tleman’ office goes on bs al ren wi ai wf on. Voting, thus developing the fact that one vote more whatever over the question except that joint po Seople ‘re mocked and insul ‘ day | a grand gala es ee Pinar ao week. Would suffice to convict constitutionally, Wade |. pn a have referred in (< by ee, pestence that Tyme m 88 streets on. their a aa A Posi, ‘wien os : Would be appealed to to vote. As @ man of honor Contiys pte ey inatantels y legislation of Congress, power which con- | of a ter of oaths. I have had occasion | faces and neat attire, bearing |: - Abortive Y:fforts. to Talk the’| 2° ¥u4 then resign nis position as President pro ferred it may take it atray” Tae Tenure of Oils ack | to say beta Senators, in the . of this dis- ners of vati-colored silka, fineey yey a0 -* the law of ks, fringed with silver and tem., and being then a mere Senotor, without the changed nN Gentlemen have made {| cussion, tence of President is an inseril Senator Over Fight to sucoced to the acting Presidency, would elaborate 8 to show that the act of 1808 did. Neuer which I have ast read, | old and inscribed wiyyasuitable mottoes, ‘The pro- ° ° not repeal the act of 1789;and that part | dated 10, 1 gays that object | gramme of exercises 1d of the Sabbath cast his vote ip favor of conviction, There being no of the argument was very significant as confess! ‘was to it Mi ming i pag he very ing pin prevent ir. ton hymn, “Our Army Song;” prayer; hymn, “Votces, 4 President pro tem, of the Senate, under the law the ee eemodent F the Cor of the Unit bey Pls ys then — the it is to o ties yu cout the validit w. | Happy voices;” anniversai H - (ONSTERNATION OF . THE - RADICALS, | speaxes ‘cotter whe wresia socerannons to co of, aioe. Repenaing in ‘any senso on the language of | Had he provenied the reataptinn Vi cen onion thers | ingr ver Singing,” addvtas; bean orke ae +, fi 5 1 | bain socoees Juhani Bat ihe itcahe visions of Ii, ithe act Of 1907 fepealed | could have gos te od has been dis: | OBe8 8t Home,” and the closing benediction, would be pe ; rd at te Both the note of 1766 and. 170s, Tt provides fos the gassed Longe ANd 1s no longer an open ques. ANNUAL MEBTING—EVENING EXERCISES, pang apeog bgem of og oop fe eg oo sat sy Tato eee | , Te emg te Union hide sy rend on th of the’| this stuf in order to deceive the ground! Let | nual im the same edifice, which w: a Senate, and ho kind of sophistry ean evede the plain, | him babble it to. the e anal meeting, h Lesh ele clear words ofthe law. ‘The gentlemen undertook ts | i to” the Wis, Freee? 45, PARLE | by a iarge, highly respectable and deeply interestea the discussion of any bill are not to be received as es 4S by. suggest @ distinction | settled long ago. Mr. Bingham im | audience, composed almost exclusively of adults, any oF conesructon. og interpretation what. officer. But noj| the opinion of Chief Justice to | Rev, Isaac Ferris, D. D., LL. D., president of the ever to be given to the act. HE Would be s sad day such distinction will avail them. This act of 1867 | the effect that the writ of quo warranio can be “ Bry m for the American people if time ever Euan ood to all such quibb! ‘The ofice and | maintained only at the instance of the government, | Organization, in the chair. Be rectlved aa tha tree onus and interpreter | of the aw aud beyond. the weae oe ths Becca | ue ene ae rae enanment, Senators, la the | ‘The exercises were inaugurated by the singing of ol ive col an: Hon of law. Look to tie act Benators: aa except aa limited and directed by the law. ‘No malt lity be referred. Mr, Stanton could not bring | tte hymn, “No Time to Waste in Slumber,” sung by gan. m referred to the nestion PECTS x Wade, and it is not likely, therefore, tliat Fessenden, . BIRONG PROS FOR ACQUITTAL or Trambell would have anything to do with it. STRIP ° ‘There is great gossiping all over town to-night on the Continuatian ef Mapager Biughaw’s Closing | subject. Fenenlews Detection Euctomeet “heees | PROCEEDINGS .OF THE COURT, [ the Radicals—The Rebellious Senator In- say whether gentlemen Juatiqed to that. Mr, it here. The people the cholr and congregation, with excellent organ Mexibie—Stories About Senators Being Thirty-firet Day. infer, either from the of 1800, OF jure of act, and continued:—There is a law could, and the ‘people Ravorand. the, people aeeis accom) after which an impressive prayer Beught. UNITED StaTes SENATE CHAMBER, }. from. lagietation, of 1795, or from any | so plain that no man can misunderstand it, There | your judgment, Now, Senators, I ask you another | Was by Rev. R. J. W. Buckland, Wasuinaton, May 6, 1868. WASHINGTON, May 5, 1868. or that at any time existed upon | is a plain, clear, distinct in the law that in | question, and that is this:—How does the President’s | The fifty-second annual report was then submitted Manager Bingham made » premature refiection | When the Senate was called to order Senator the country, this executive | snohloase’and 10 gther—t0 wit, during the recess, | statement that it was to compel Mr. Stanton to resort | by P. H. Verner, corresponding secretary, from which es eee prerogative in direct the express | and for reasons—the President may suspend from | to the courts that he suspended him comport with | it that the total number of schools con- ) eternal length of Mr, Evarts’ | CammRon moved that the members of the National the constitution to all the | office any person theretofore, or who there- | the pretence of his answer that his only purpose*was with the Union at the date of the report was for be has himself fallen under the charge | Medical Association be admitted to places in the | executive offices of this government at his pleasure | after pointed by and with |- | to have the Supreme Court upon The constiva. 194, of which number 136 are located within the city talkativeness, and bids fair to con- | gallery. In reply to # question by Senator Morrill, one to sil shen dneng session of the Senate, and | vice and consent of te. It ig | tionality of the law? Tender regard, this, for the | limits and 68 in ita immediate vicinity. Forty-two a staal P thereby to control pil the patronage of the govern: admitted that the: Secretary of War and every other | constitution. That his aly purpose in breaking the | students of the Union Theological Seminary, one about as much time, without affording a of Vermont, he said there were about two hundred | ment, amounting to ‘and millions of dollars, | officer ‘appointed with the advice and consent of the | law, the validity and the obligation of Which | lady,have been employed by the during the interest or instruction that Mr. Evarts did. | of them. foouibicagraia a to put A She hands el irre, Senate hold thelr Appointment within the provisions im the most formal and solemn manner he had Ln Limes Dm peek the aoe agent becomes e BU ol act; and within the pro- | recognized, _availin; imself express: mad usan Bingham made a fair speech to-day, but it was | Senator Duaxs opposed the motion, saying that mad erabition, f adinit that during the session | States Drake body of the act, the President himpelt ft to 8 the head of a department from the | introduced at least two thousand children to the Sab- the unlike those of the President’s 1ead- | Senators and Representatives could furnish them Godheel in not beisg systematized and | tickets and thus avoid crowding the galleries. being very barren of wuat might be called After ¢ome further talk the motion was lost and it The audience was unusually large, | the chair was vacated for the Chief Justice. Speaker was tolerably well listened MR, BINGHAM’S ARGUMENT CONTINUED, several Senators, whose names ought to At the assembling of the court Mr. Bingham arose mentioned, showed an unmistakable tendency to | and sald he would do injustice to the Senate ff he asleep. To-morrow Manager Bingham will reite- | did not acknowledge their kind attention to his ar- for the last time those favorite words of his, | gument of yesterday. He had said the act of the fioh he pronounced with such terrible emphasis, | President was criminal—done openly and defiantly, hzot the sword of Justice fallon the great criminal | and what was the defence raised against the allega- he your bar.” tion? It wag that there wag no proof of intent to fhe supposed revolt of Senator Fessenden from | violate the law. He denied the assumption that ‘$he radical ranks has been the absorbing theme of | it was necessary to Prove intent. A person of yonversation in every circle here to-day. The facts | sane mind who deliberately commits a crime by hed you last night concerning it were not | his act implies intent. On this subject of intent known until this morning, and so sud- } he might illustrate the utter futility of the posi- and astounding was the revelation that many | tlon assumed by the counsel for the President refused to believe it. Some of the more | by the edict of Frederick II., which put little earious radicals, in order to satisfy their own minds, | children to death withthe intention of sending Doldly inquired of Mr. Fessenden himself, To their mse ps heave! pote the es oo said, Rt such is lytter amazement, tt 1s sald, thetr worst fears were oon fe er ody they cas £0 Dee ed. Senator Fessenden acknowledged he ition, but it had been 80 persistently by the preparing legal argnment to systain his vote | learned counsel, though he Thought tt was unworthy of them and unworthy of the court to which such an Name and in favor of the acquittal of argument wes offered, Continuing, Bingham Presiden said:—Again I ask you, Senators, has the President act from removing them, as he tions of his office and to appoint tem; y a | bath schools, and have induced five hundred parents as you have @ it who | is authorized by the act of 1789 to make removals, | successor; and reporting the fact to the ate, he | 40 attend church, and one hundred competent per- cannot be trusted. Ian who bet his trust | There is no escape from the provisions of the law. | now comes with answer and says that his only | 80s to become Sunday school teachers. In addition ought to be suspended from his office by a temporary | What next? It isattempted to be sald here that from parnose was that he might test the validity of the ple they have dis! ited ten thousand tracts of removal for reasons appearing to nee to | the body of this act the Secretaries appointed by Mr. | law in the Supreme Court. Surely the President felt New York City Mission and Tract Society, con- pong 4 That is ly the law fe What Lincoln were exempted. Who, pray, says that? I | a sory, tender Tegard for the constitution if that | Gucted worshipin ten thousand families; prevailed one of the President’s counsel ventured to say here | have t read to you the words of | was sole purpose. How comes it that the | Upon twenty-five heads of families, formerly mem- au at any time | Mr. febster that exceptions, anless clearly | President did not institute the proceedings? The | bers of rural churches, to connect themselves with expressed in the law, are never to be nate will answer that question when they come to | Churches in this aa ‘ecured employment for of the of @ department even under | implied unicss a oattive necessity existe for that upon the defence which the President has in- gion one hundred and fifty unwilling idlers,” ant the application, That is a sound rule of construction, | Corporated in his plea, I think if the venerable Obtained assist for about one thousand needy his pleasure, What practice of the gov- says that the heads of dey ents appointed Senator from Maryland (Mr. Johnson) were to re- oe Mr. r, an agent of the Union, has also ernment was any by Mr. Lincoln are by the proviso excepted from the | spond here now to that inquiry, full of learning as | ‘lstributed Afteen thousand coples of the German #00 of power in the Executive? None whatever. | body of this act? Why, the gentleman, {n the absence | he is full of years, he would ‘answer that it was gn ebtingsoen es to immigrants at Castle Gardens " Binguam said that all the facts in the case of | of any further reason, undertook to quote a h | because it ‘was impossible that the Prosi. | The Unton has also during the past year erected by to of my-learned and accomplished friend, the Sena- | dent could have instituted the proceedings, | Permission of the Superintendent of Public Buildings ident's viola- | tor from Ohio, Mr. Sherman, forgetting thst one line | Mr. Ohief Justice, it is well known to | & mission church and school house at Broad- tion of the constitution. He would ask what sense | of that speech declares expressly, or by necessary | every jurist of the country, as the question stands | Way and Sixty-eighth street. This structure cost the Jie Bets in the provision of the constitution that | invendment, that the existing Secretarfes and heads | and as the President left it, that there 1s no colorable | association $4,000, but has sinco been purchased by the President shall have power to fill up all vacancies | of departments were within the operations of the | excuse under the constitation and laws of this coun. | Rev. Mr. Jagger, on behalf of the Anthon Memorial which may arige during the recess of the Senate, if | law. He says:—If a Secretary would not withdraw | try to that he would institute proceedit Ifthe | church, and will hereafter be devoted to the purposes Guring the recess the President shall have power to | and resign on the politess suggestion from the new | had not instituted proceedings then, I ask again, | for which the Union intended it. As a proof of the create and fill vacancies at his pleasure? If this pro- | President, he would consent to his removal. What | why insult the people by mocking them .with this | 8ucceas attending the mission it was reported that ort Vision means what it declares, that the power of the | significance can be attached to these words, if | bold political assertion that his only purpose in do- | the first Sabbath on which this edifice was thrown President is limited to the filling of vacancies which | they don’t mean this, To be sure, by this | ing the act was to institute a roceeding in his own | Ope but five children attended the a occur during the recess of the Senate, then the power | law the President after all not be permitted to | mode in the Supreme Court of the United States to | a school exercises, and on pe h he has ex is thia, that the vacancy he creates | remove a Secretary of War; but if he politely re- | test the validity of the people's laws? Senators, it 1s bath one bundred and Lari < yoy and for which he grants a commission he alone 13 | quests him to resign, and if the Secretary refuses to | only another illustration, surrounded as the Presi- | were in attendance. Besides this the C ee the responsible for, and the commission can only expire | resign, I would myself consent to his removal. As | dent is by those learned in the law, and [ cast no re- | Holy Trinity has erected at a cost of $9, OT eat at his pengare, Where is the provision in the consti- | the matter then stood the Senate was, doubtless, en- peoac ‘on them in saying it—it was thoir duty to | gated tron Sa nd school \ eee at E rent a tution for this exercise of power? He defied either the | tirely justified before the country in coming to that | defend him. It was their duty to bring to his de- | avenue and Fifty-first street, for the accommodat on fotsined or volunteered defenders of the Président | conclusion, for facta had not guMciently disclosed | fence all their experience, and all their learning, | of the pupils of thé school No. 155, organized through: prove the existence of any such authority guar- | themselves then to show the necessity of the Secre- | “and all these great Pores of intellect with | the agenvy of the Union. anteed’the Executive by the constitution. It is ve tary of War intainis ie oftics ‘Imes hav hich it had Providence to endow Rey. Jolin Hall, D. D., at the close of the reading of HH i rent hdl more uy developed them; but Ab, ly another evidence of | the report, delivered » highly appropriate midaeas on wi Bome of the most prominent radical Senators say | this power under tie constitution and the laws, dur. | @Vident that the framers of the constitution when | changed. ‘The Presiden lope’ school aol they conferred executive r on the gov G ; t, ithstandil the importance and benefits of the Sabbaii, Sclioo for the last two weeks; estion as to | ing the session of creat acne, rane aie meant to throw around it-such Huitations ag would | the Crntaie’ and’ af fre mood civilized. world Darsing and in; aie pls reine | Mission movement, after which the beautiful hyu ‘ey the President should ivisteaor ac- | aim iil them without the authority of an express ee Seen from too free an exercise of uniim- | that he undertaken to usurp all the | ers, truth is at Sa . W en Work, for the night is comin; has been entirely in the hands of Mr. | law, withoutthe advice and consedt of the Senate? wer. Every law is constitutional until de- | powers of the government and to betray the trust | he comes before thi nate an that his pur- Work through the morning hours, jen, His defection, therefore, will have | If he las not he has violated the constitution; he has | Slated olnerwise, isthe autiority to decide whetner | committed, to hin by ifs welng exospeed from | the'vallalty of thestatute in the Supreme Court of | =~ "Wont paging tower d er | constitution, ea of ing eX e Vi of the statute in the Supreme Cour Of the land, and le: theiefore ‘crlinigal-eriinel in | $09 8W ia binding or not, In continuation he sdid:— | the body of the law ls an afterthoughts “The Prost. | the United States, when he know te had no power | Was sung by the congregation with fine effect * Duryea then delivered the closing ad- which was an eloquent hortative effort in behalf of the missionary work, and was attentively latened ae oe the course Oe ee a that it sometimes appeared to him man ‘wo little from Goa ‘4 this world, and was too apt to try to do all the work himself; but he ‘that the spirit of the Father would take a hold upon the hearts of men, and that, perhaps, tlen they would come with more earnest- ness, more hopefulness, more joy to this work of the Sunday schoo! missions. No —— could be broader than that asa description of ali the various forms of Christian beneficence in their entirencss, ‘When you had said “Mission Suni School work’” you had said all the work that man for Christ’s sake could do for man. Address yourself to the work, ther the children for instruction in the Word of Gea, teach them and minister to them. One Sabbath one of the little ones comes and 8, “Mother is sick,” You must follow the child home and be- come @ doctor and nurse, and soothe the pillow More serious effect upon the plans and calcu- of the radicals than would that of | hs coming ond ie ineretore, criminsl—oriminal 40 | Why not follow thelr promises to thelr logical con- | dent himself, in his message, notited the Senate that | under the constitution and laws to raise the leny -cthide Gasator:® ee den has been | Bal, where he sta by the order of the peuple. clusion, that the President of the United ig by | if he had supposed any member of his Cabinet would | tion at all, the written tor the re- y . . Fessenden has been First, then, 1s this pentadon by the aét of removal an | Virtue of the pacroeative of nis office, vested wi have avatled himself of the law and retained the | moval of the Secretary ‘of War, the written letter lered heretofore as among the strongest and | appointment? And here, ‘senators, although I shali | the power judi ¥ to interpret the constitution for | office against his will, he would have removed him | of authority for the appointment of Lorenzo Thomas men of the republicans in the Senate. The | have occasion to notice it more specifi hereaf- | bimself, and judicially to decide for himself on the | without hesitation before it became a law. He sup- | tothe office of Secretary of the Department of War, aah ona ft the " s br ter,-I aak to be pardoned for refer ‘at this time | Yelidity of every law, and may, therefore, with im- } posed then that Mr. Stanton was within the law. | are simply written confessions of his guilt in thé tors, many o! con‘emporaries | to the fact that tt ot have your notice ity set aside every law on your statute books for on, the President is convicted on this question, be- | light of that which I have alread: from the Mr, Fessenden, have looked up to him and fol- | that the learned inne astute wedge, for the President LA ae, in the | words of his advocate, | cause on the 12th of AI 1867, he issued an | records, and no man eon oe gag it. Mr. re ed bis leadership almost without questioning. —_ ae ans ibe times; ee fhe hecanaing 6 she Gnd, to” the cobolusioa Mate tendicte wit Ware Sear stunt Yoel What provision ta President. mete te held reeponaibie: Tor is generally accorded the rare quality among the power of a and the eS my some power vested in him by the people.” | the constitution was there authorizing the President what, with ordinary intelligence, he’ must of being at once able and conscientious. | during the session of the Benen Every Well, Senators, consider it. From rations of | to suspend anybody fora day or an hour? Hasany- | have seen would be the consequence of his facts will serve in some measure to explain | word’ in the — yoluminous nt. of the | *e lent’ ‘ag manifested in his past ofi- | body ever claimed it? Has saypeay, ever exercised | actions. In replyto the defence that the removal den’s i et learned and ingenious porn eo Prelacnt beare clal conduct, God only Knows to what absurd con- | it? It isa thing unheard of altogethor in the past | was not consummated, he sald that it had long been . Fessenden’s importance to either side. The radi- witness to the truth of what I now assert—that the | Slustons he may arrive hereafter if by your Judgment | history of the country. It never was authorized in | settled that the attempt to commit a misdemeanor feel that jn losing -him they have virtually lost appointing power is, by tie exprega terms of the ion, Pecogniae this omnipotent ay in him. | any way before, except by the act of the 2d of March, | was itself an indictable misdemeanor, in support whole case, while the friends of the President are | constitution during the session of the Senate, put he comes to sit In judicial judgment on all the | 1867—the Tenure of Office act. I do not intend that | of which Jeposition he cited tegal authority. tea of candinpartin teeta, | beyond the power of the President, save and except pw) on your statute book he may come to the con- | this confessedly guilty man shall change front in the | He also held that any offence under the com- ‘Various attempts have been made, it is said, to Mr. Fessenden out of his supposed opinion by who are supposed to have personal and party | pert of their client, ‘ { i i it, 2 all these statutes cat of some power | presence of the in order to cover up his vil- | mon law was indictable in the District of ageeennanes es capgccerarin Mes | Asawa ona paces ict wt ce Min | Mag, Meet atts maha pat | Saati Same, 8 Sat 2 uotes 8 $0 the Benate, for. Ik, Merge dts uses of common sense If this discretionary power isin | Mr. mb wotes ord of th ae mand the appoint aon. . Stanton, but he quotes the other words of the | removal of Mr. Stanton and the appointment of Gen- they act upon the ancient, time honored and the President no man can lay his hand upon him. | statute when he says the ‘suspension was not | eral Thomas a misdemeanor, and no intelligent man | of Next Sun lay another eee one juence with him. There, however, have met with maxim that “Silence 16 golden.” And so | That was exactly tue ruling of his Honor the Chief | revoked.” I ask you Senators, whether that | could deny that they were impeachable offences. The | 8&Y8, ig dead!” Yours is the mission Ilttle suecess. When he has once formed an | on it they were silent, one and ail, without | Justice in the Mississippi case, touching the exercise | word ever occurred before fn the executive papers of | only question which remained to be considered was | to Visit the desolate home, fold the little hands across pets of certain discretion: ra 4 ary powers v. in the Presi- | the United States? It isthe word of the ‘Tenure of | the constitutionality of that law. He might sim the breast, compose the form, soothe and give words ee Soe ee Tes extunig | dent by the Reconstruction acts. “His fudginent in- | Office act, It is too late for any mau to come beroce | the ee anal ‘nostion. "To scseerietee wow of consolation to blecding, yearning hearts. The law, in. direct violation of the express letter of the pmrtg sige hg cannot mew his the Senate and say that A the President of the United that the 4 ‘Tenure of OMce act, which after long ainous. eee a <. sep bf = ergo ry foyer dects! rap. states: nol msel: leve e Secretary o! jon been passed, and again over ‘schoo! Com arora, mdirect violation of every interpreta | wom'there is no end of the matter. It was setted | War was within. the operation of the statute.” Ho | Poniaesve vevo,and Mu approved on February 22, | preach the Onrist of Christianity in ite narrow ae, for he 18 not the man to be talked out of it. The Teport brought back by those who have at- ted to convert him is, that “Pitt Fes@enden is stapborn as @ mule.” Even Senator Morrill, his | this country, snd: the santo anaing more than thirty years ago. in the case | wus not excepted from its provisions by the process. | is unconstitutional, it W the Senate to ceptation, but the Christ of philanthropy. ‘This has met with no encouragement in this | U8 count Font Roe ra nw tc autt | which I. referred to Yesterday, and has never | More than that, his letter to the Secretary of the | ftscielaion thies tines made and t> confes thar | sostety almed to create mission’ Sunday sctools, to Mera mes MY © to meet that | been chal } ing ones within their folds, vo brin, ‘That he will take six ht Se point in this case by arty reference to the speech of Dalene that date to this. I deny | Treasury, Mr. McCulloch, recl'ing the cigtth section | is the guilty party worthy of impeachment, [ ye) straying in_ the: iz Sp. ene ea fe Se me lone nt fh kw Rl represents | 807, such m in the Executive, because | of the Tenure of Ofce act and notifying him that he | Mr. Bingham then referred. t¢ his own course and attention of the churches to them, to enlist him is generally conceded. This will be more the State of Ohio in this Senate, Mr. Sherman. Not | uch discretion ts incompatibie with pul liberty, | had Edwin M. Stanton was a further | that or th intendents, teachers and workers. Bus] @ majority of his party in opposing im} h- | Christian men and women as mission pastors, super- ress letter ition of the ff om his part that Mr. Went antl ie vas woavonbebae tit the Rgode had ‘@han enough to secure acqifittai. & word escal his lips in the’ speech which they | because it Is in direct conflict with the of the constitution, because it 1s a discretion wh ju t of At the conclusion of the remarks by the reverend ‘There are various surmises and gratuitous reasons | have quoiedouching” ths eee ee pomiment | vests him ‘with kingly prerogative, Decaueo itis a | But thet is not all. Mle oud quenect, who opened troy.” ney regard “io. the. defence baad, “on Gea ee. for Senator Fessenden'’s ¢onduct. The“more —, ‘the express cvtateor-oe nets oniopany X act; | Giscretion which puts the servant above his master, | the case, Mr. Curtis, declared that there are no ex- | the practice of the government during eighty nediction. Poyn radicals, who are greatly incensed at him, | nor did such word escape from-the lips of any | Decause it is a discretion which clothes the creature | press words within the that brings the Secre- years, he denied that such practice was contrary An election of oMcers and managers pes he al t he is trolled by Senator. Iam not surprised, It ia a credit to the | Witt @ power superior to that of the Creator, The | tary of War, Bdwin M. within that proviso. the spirit of the Tenure of Ofice law, but | ing year was then held with the following result:— tly hint the: ag y mercenary | intellectual ability of the learned and sccomplishea | American people will tolerate no such discretion in | That is his own proposition. t being so, he must | claimed that the @cts of 1789 and 1792 and subse. | President, Rev. Isauc Ferris; Vice Presidents, J. W. ambitious motives. They say that he is anxious “| Chancel who appeas for the Pretden that uney Kept | 82 Executive, by whomsoever sanctioned or by | be within the body of the statute. ‘There is no escape | quent years all implied and assumed the power of | ©. Leverl M. C. Morgan, Albert Woodruff, D. B. Keop his frtends in office, and that he has an idea | that question out of sight it elaborate and ex- | Whomsoever advocated. When that day comes thut | from it. There has been a further argument, how- Songress to late the entire subject. In regard | Atterbury, Peter Balen, one - le Sprague; qreasures, a the Aimerican people will tamely submit to the as- | ever, on this subject, namely, “that the President | to the declaration of the President, which, contrary | George 8. Schoficht “ oan better be done under President Johnson than nae toe consnd ow, Senators, from | sumption of authority that thelr ‘President ts above | didnot intend fo flolate the Taw. It he wellored to all rules of evidence had been waduced in his wc. | Earle; Correspon Jarwood Vernem Wade. There ate mysterious whispers about is their constitution above their law, and may defy | that Mr. Stantoi was within the statute, and sent, in | fence, he said they were all made after the facts, yet | ad a board of twenty-five managers. He shail have by and with the advice and je connection he has with certain doings in the | sens of the Sei to’ make Sprotinn, Provided tworhirds gach or both at his pleasure with impunity, | obedience to the statute, the reasons for his suspen- | he was not y all concurred in showing the Sak o concur; and he bem ferhney pare 7S themselves cus- | sion to the Senate within twenty days and the evi- | President’s unjustifiable purpose. New Yerk and F on River Conference of Department, His known personal intimacy | of ,the Genators, present concur, 5 es tee of trust which. hag | dence on which he made the suspension, it will | Mr. Binghat then took up the charges of conspirac; Secretary McCulloch, and his former connection | he snail appoint Sand other public ‘minis: | been committed to thetr care in the interests of their | not do. to come and say now that the President | and argued that the joint action of the President wed wn 8 a dé io dparnen ar nt yee raat give | tea tana tint oat | Gon unde soen ote og it ar | id ho “nando le "ei heh | Sgr hme aria under ecomp acy | TO capaion an sacar of he Mw, . uu id not mm. or act ut e indictment of Gen- e1 Park avenue and Thirty-fou si et, to these rumors. Of course these stories | for and which shall be established ; thelr instincts are all right; they | why did he obey itin the iret instance? Why did he | Seatrack 2] Bxcanad papa: : ‘dy law vest the appointment of such tnferior officers a8 Frente; as Would be useless until after the | snowed a very thin attendance last evening to listen only #0 many malicious slanders, which no | a! President understan: rfectly well that the President is but | exercise power under it at ali? There ts but one | President’s impeachment and conviction, since rani who knows Mr. Fessenden will for a moment they nk proper in the Frei eiean, ta taconite OF Mew | ieee to obey thelr laws inecommon with | answer which can be given toit, and that answer | the. latter would mulity "it “by Tie "ase. ot | to the sormon of Rev. William R. Alger, of Boston, Wt, It 1s algo asserted that the Senator from | Can any one doubt that this provision clearly re- | themselves, to execute thelr laws in the mode and | itscif covers the President with , his pardoning power. In the interests of justice, | preliminary to the coming anniversary exercises of i and 8! ni a + manner bed in the laws themselves, and not | and reproach, It is this: “{ will bi oaths t en, the conviction of the President demanded, ve 7 iso ver Cc cl Int. 0 is actuated by hostility to Ben Wade, and that | Sitiised the pawer of the Président im the appoint | Siti jadgment day by day on thelr anthony to te. will avoid the 1aw; I will suspend the head ot ade- | {Pi were urged that this was.a sieall otfeace: ine rez | te New York and Iudson athedlg regi sly er than see the latter go into the White House he | presal; es that oN eed not otherwise hd eg tog themselves by cere under aa express authority oe the first | minded Senators that they were not granted | tarians. Rev. Dr. rg ge rie Mr. a nam, fos Will endeavor to keep ent Johnson there, provides for in the tion, enumerating am- | 48¥8 duly enacted through their representatives tn: | time in the ri the —— 'j { will report his | tho pardoning power. He then reviewed the | Brooklyn, aud Rev. Mr. Pullman conducted tho . | Congress assembled. Mr. that the | suspension to with the reasons | evidence of General Thom: and claimed to 0 “2 hen Wado was elected Président of the Senate Mr. | vice ‘and: comment. of te Renate’ it i useless 16 | COUMe talked about walking and thebanner ofthe | and the evidenoe apou the suspension was | show. therefrom. that he and the President | Bening exercises, consisting of prayer Pease: was competit came within ords proposition, ition to the omnipotenoé of Con- | made, and if the Senate concur in the suspension I | had conspired togethot in reference to various | The reverend clergyman took for bis text Revela- pics ike den Tho raat it to proto sions, "It ee ee aetiee . Hecould ‘understand the significance of this | will abide by the law. Ifthe Senate nonconcur in | matters cucernitng army movernente and sppropria: | tions xx1., 251—“The gates of tt shall not be shut at Acads of departments ¢re otherwise provided for in | Pass. He-clakmed no omnipotence for Congress. | the suspension I will defy the law and fing tions, but on conierence had decided jo let their | ai.» ‘Tne gates referred to, he explained, were the {hat his feelings towards Wade bave been anything | the constitution, and 1 respectfully ask Senators | He claimed f the representation of thé ome | old their faces, tell them that it Matters rest until they should see whether au 7 i nipotence of The constitution says they | my pre: re to att it judicially on the uittal would not give them a better chance of | @ates of heaven; and then he proceeded to dixcuss but friendly. This feeling, it is said, is shared by | wherein are de » Provided, for the heads or 40 Fy mo y | ML Ag ah porn oo ine | Se 0 gi shall answi that they responsibie cess. the nature of heaven. Heaven has generally been § number of Senators, among them Mosars. | Of departments Ney te wa ot to fy'whom they wore elected. | js all the answer that can be made to it by eaybody, ingham at this point stated that it would e6, Trumbull, Sherman, Sprague, Pomeroy, B4- | gututin’ that. Congtem, may by lay eee a not es of eguuondg ear to tay | Sow, seston, 1 Le coantrct anywody, | Me Bingham at this polnt stated that tt would | considered some distinct local abode, where all the @unds and nearly all of the New England men, with | the heads of a the power to appoint, the ite of ited expressed the | law, that the \ Thy is himself | and court both adjourned at five minutes past four. | evils of life are banished and all the good of life is of Senator Sum: None of th ‘without the consent but the authorit wer which did not to them in the matter | the judge of the sufficiency of the reasons and evi- Scat Geir aaa A se admitted, God is supposed to be enthroned in the he exception ner, None eae | of the law of oificers? Can it pecans their oval of the President's action | dence on which he makes the suspension, and that THE NEW YORK CANALS. centre, and the future state is pictured as the acme @ro in favor of Wade for Vico President, and hence, in the light of that provision stand before | !2 the removal of fetary Stanton. It was the | he is not to be held iia eee errors — , r * @& 8 said, the defeat of impeachment has is Senate and argue the heads of departments | IUty of the Benate on the | of judgment in egy ee conclusion, It would Troy, May 5, 1868, of the highest imaginable enjoyments as compre- Aouble purpose—first, to t Wade from | are inferior oficers? fam not uniats 1 of the fact Of the President, and it was not the place | be gross injustice to him impeachable for any | he canais may now be sald to be fairly open for | bended in this life through the medium of the senses. becoming President ad tgrim, and, second, to pre- | there ofthe leaned, counsel forthe Undlaputed Ngut of the Seuats, He ‘woud. waste | {atthe Beoseuyeot War was {ai oft mimic: | the transection of season business, though they can- | Having such views, of heaven many. strive to vent him from being nominated for the Vice Presi ee ‘aathorit oale vacancy. oeeniee Bo words the question whether the articles of | meanor or crime In or that haa become in- | not be said to be in the most perfect repair. Rich- | win admission in tha life to come within its elysian some | are not strong enot client; they cannot ht had the technical requisites of anin- | capable, gr that he was ualified to hold 4, engineer of the Western division, complains | Precincts. Greater intelligence of modern times Geney Ot Coicage. | She snk teeked wpenes Rta of enenat. He thal he did ake On shis subject he said:—I waste no | tho othoe; but the ent is TONG, eng poet and reports that a large’ amouut of | HWS that God ts not .athroned In any specitte 1o- measure collateral with the other, an tment indefinitely; that he made @ removal | Words upon the q Fig RY if, without any of the reasons by work is yet'to be done. Bars are to be removed from ality, but that he is a divine essence—the spirit of Whatever trath there may be in these latter state- ry vacancy —"‘an tment ad interim | ticles technical requisites of an the law, he, nevertheless, availed t tie bottom, as well as large accumulations of | ¢reation and the untverse, | Heaven is not a favored pana come toms more once eacaped thé lips of counsel, 140 ig no law any where at all, that requires it. | power con under the jaw to suspend the Seore- | Sua’ Ti toiing wails are to be reconstructed and | locality or a resigned soul, but a combination of tiese taper craptparitdba gd “Rowever, to rest this” is the past precedents of the | tary of War, al he that there was no docking to be put in order. Commisstoner | {2% Proper IS thay be hereafver of here, in ry ia that Mr. Fessenden is actuated of as 8 xouse that the of life or in death, or anywhere where the conditions more correct theory ‘upon of any _technicaili sitting high court | ocolorabie e: ord ‘a large gang of men to at once entirely by a sense of duty asa sworn judge df the | any eon about Words, 1 rest 1s ca the | of that pay Sach engees: | War was guilty of Grime, or that he ‘upon every section of the work, save one, | Se right. Ite eternal essence of blessedness under all broad constit and stand here tion, I of the at- | had become in any ‘dioqualited. is the very Cees the contractors have refused to make the | COuditions must be the same. Heaven, in fact, by Jaw and the evidence in the impeachment trial. The that was bear ‘t rather than for the of the Sen- | crime him in the eleventh article of Mr. Richmond has em men 4 Bothing more or less than the reconciliation of tie so yesult, however, will be the same, so far as President ‘into. operation that Sie, trom the texs Of “Rawle on the Constitution,” | trpenchment, he to Becessary repel «Madingagat cont 3 men | with its divine allotment—the harmonization of the : C1 who declares that ‘ot Seapeschment | 130 %he of ot” ones | t,the expense 1o working onder tual, real and ideal, Salvation 1s but the recon- aves ite doubt an to whleh way Mr. Peoenden | Body creereae tfc dons | Rust hok be dena with tho atratghtass of tn: | at, in dat one vatiomphod, proves aia | “Hie°tatls ‘cuprinta te iat’ tviion are | Sston of henaman ain harmon, Howe ag ty we vd that stant be in three aspect ’ - ‘gow intends to vote, still ¢ would not be safe to con- i adn i HY in good condition, the Chemung, Crooked | Tal arexverience; secon, ar aocini save; and ted, 48 & realization in the far-away future. im all these of the i i He : i ot gE B i I Aazetood aren by the ren ‘and with Canal the summit level at Ham. | Conditions it must be viewed as the product siira radical Senators, backed by. powerful influ- ‘aro able t end who direct victation ot the the act welt fiton Ley water, the locks at this wont hav. | Will of God. In regard 02 ine by poo Aas nce outside the High Court, are bent upon ap Se 4 with L--¥ aly a pH cae Pe, undergone extensive repairs durifg the winter Seer eee es local places Historical fact and making every effort to ‘bring the stubborn ft cathy record) kaa ia t closed. , showed this error. Caivanis Fessenden to @heit side. They will not easily eis; tna be ance Nod a ps his record. | " Below the feeder at Rome & heavy bar is being | Moral law, he weet vriat Gramma, representing the the 3, the laws, were his reasons? ieee answer when ved, the work of so doing being nearly com- and desires of men. "he is consent to his defection, as ‘they call it, see to all jovern- come to did he fur- 7 ttom of the fi artificial follies - ‘ s' =? while the bottom i first level of the 0) that “God has two ing, as they do, that it ie likely to ruin all Trnleh ie the and the Jade | nish to this Renate in 1 made to it | Higok River Canal is being excavated on s level with | *>8Urd, to, Ante nestor the elect and anotier Sek pans, which they have pant 20 many onthe ‘ie satorm, ttle need ‘be waldy the | ‘istdued to <vaauee of the officer | ee re onet Hoyt te engaged in the removat of | et Who are not elected. The ere aegeptanice 1m devising, They will teik at him while. single the Senate that Mr, bar from the mouth of creek. It reached | OF 8 tis robes, he ape remaina, Some of them deplore the fact that era ras misdemeanor of | fwosirds of the distance across the channel, and | Satta poste are catara eeake ine Wine ‘the thing has got into the newspapersat all, as they wes ice By A oar py a ae to have been within.a foot of the baptism ot guar? py being the rd path- dhink it will nos heip.them in their attempted jab of stated Tasloven “* aca, ‘Boats are rapidly coming eastward. The 1a wenn, oe be a ya sh EA Converting Mr.,Feseenden to have&im mow thatthe nae Senators, showing ope k.. Guitea hes fleet at Rome 1s well on ite a, to ‘West Toy, the ge i pupeavent a canal jeraily jaram ord: Bat rather public siready know he hes taken # stand win the of Beo- | Sith 'voute: uf ett hol Without a. fault in heaven that, Fessenden ms uation bave eo FU LY in mith one, showed the right spirit, was the right kind even may “go on 0 ate, A FISH OIL WAR IN KEW ENGLAND. of life—su: man in hare rece ner hn tue, ny | SR SE ca eae Sen on on ane | Deming Of Menbadry Qu Works br Aros | 3h eee was e 2, . however, (hat Mr. Featondeh 1 not the onty | Uuived ‘On Nad fae epee : a Ca ed ihe heaven nsclentions Benator—that others may be at for to three o'clock | (Fro Ww Bedford Mercury, Moy 4: oy | Way Fa! cobvinced of the folly and injustice of e yee tas’ peopl 0 tinpenoh him elloee Yn wae | works, situated at Moxie’ Cove, Bristol, Me. long- first gate. that they will vote secordingly, not merely as farougn a Representatives ana to ‘ty him contained» tm {ho first, second, | third, ing to b, rigntmnan 8 Sons, of Oty wore a tag ny impfoved followers of Fessenden, but as swom to ty | ance ‘ow any” ib is we jae of the removal of aan er eae aermmegom ame count of Maing copy tajate | ond gave. conqueror brie Antony, sera, Ton Win Wiey an | Rui, se origd Pas cores ee a cate been nce ee | Ea hae veka | Uae a , Sherman, Van y re: loner one We : gh wio regiize their Rows a mgo who wil votes certs wap merely to | Lo? cB ako i Be ar ad oe Guat ner eee a dianaet e | Be Wiaiacnsay ae tereeeaack, SAR" atgpulaed and | Penta of they ie Rolowod th please M?. Feleenden make grave mistake. Sen- ngat I e\a $ nevure ho. superior in ai » yet fhoroughiy’armed. oached the cove in boats, A | on at considerable length, and tor Trumbull i@ @ Man of equal power witli. has been Written in ‘te me ot hat been Pinoved poeee ci them ‘landed, and having secured the | the doctrine that Ce is the great, the Gen, and he is beli@ved to be opposed to convaction | Whatever may be iS atanmenty Whatever | Senator Sanikgn interposed and suggested a ‘atchman, proceeded to burn the a ane pase Oe eer eneey crore a J ; may be his p , ¢ President has | recess. ‘ Forks, Messe irightman & Sons, Wie aiso.own | Tue anniversary | Oxe Shey oy | quite aa strongly. Witigy 16 said to jave remarked | the power, in larigNaeo of Dis anewer, of to. | Mr. IIOMAM #aid Ne hoped to be able to close hie Similar Works at Narragenset, M. 1. "a lal out | o'clock thie mare Shas he-bad geen nothing i the tesc:\ony or argu>. denaliaty Vaoating all th? pxeoutive omces of the | aprument toxtay. ‘unless it waa the vieasure of $8,000 at Moxle's Cav~ day and ¢' .

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