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n adjoining States, but this bill provides for the destruction of personal and political rights everywhere. The bill, he said, was intended, and if passed would accomplish the abolition of State rights and personal and political liberty. Mr. Trumbull said the Senator from Kentucky (Mr. Breckinridge) had objected to the provisional exercise of military law, he would ask whether military law was not now exercised — whether men were not arrested in Illinois, Missouri and Maryland by military bouts, he answers that it would be incompatible with public interest. They are spirited away from one fortress to another, and the President refuses to state where they are, or the reason why they were removed. The Senator from Illinois (Mr. Trumbull) accused me the other day of being malignant in my remarks of the Executive. I have to say that what I have done I have done freely. I have criticized the acts of the President with the freedom of a representative, and will continue to do so
A Picture of the Federal Congress. --The Baltimore Exchange, in an editorial upon Trumbull's bill of abominations, styled an amended bill "to suppress insurrection and sedition, and for other purposes," says: The most malignant Jacobians of the Constituent Assembly, the Robespierres, St Just, Barreres, Couthons, and their followers, have their prototypes in the present Congress of the United States. In that mad Carnival of radical Republicans, when a harlot was adored as the Goddessen the acts of the French Republicans nearly three quarters of a century ago, and those of the American Republicans of to day? We might compare the lave passed by both, and show their similarity in all essential particulars, and we might cite Mr Trumbull's bill as the crowning infamy of a long series of outrages; but we forbear. It is sufficient for us to note the accuracy with which history sometimes repeats itself, and to warn every man who loves liberty and hates oppression to take heed, l