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into the enemy's country the supremacy of the laws would follow. He further maintained that it was not within the power of any legislature of the State to take a State out of the Union. He did not consider any of the states were out of the Union. Mr. Lovejoy, of Ill., would inquire of the gentleman if the President had a right to appoint a Governor for Tennessee? Mr. Lehman, of Penn., thought the President had a right in cases of necessity. Mr. , of Kentucky, said that Gen. A. Johnson had been appointed by the President, in his capacity as Executive, as a Military, and no as a civil Governor. Mr. Lehman, of Penn., resuming, considered that South Carolina was much in the Union as Massachusetts. Several members asked and obtained leave to have their remarks prepared and printed in the Globe. Mr. Hickman, of Penn., favored the bill. He was in favor of confiscating all the property of the rebels. In conclusion, he said that the military process would rea
ibit a studied reserve and dignity in their intercourse with the invaders which has already satisfied them that the alleged Union sentiment of the South is a myth — a thing which, if ever existed, exists no longer. They discover at once that Andy Johnson, a brutal politician and adventurer, one of the ten thousand Dalgettys in politics who have no principle but prevent and pay, is no type of the people of Tennessee and of the South. Not only the men keep aloof from them, and regard them with nd, we may add, his whole country; and with such men blended heart and soul with original Secessionists in the war of independence, we do not wonder that the Yankees are not satisfied with the acquisition of such cattle as Parson Brownlow and Andy Johnson. The ministers of the gospel in Nashville, Alexandria, and elsewhere, have set an example in patriotism, as in religion, which deserves the universal gratitude and admiration of their countrymen. They have been dragged from their pulpits