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a NEW YORK HER* cy, igipaY, FEBRUARY 23, 1866.. | oop vans nove terete | SMa 2 ee emacacms | mopememnsmaracs amma & [eae be SOL a ne 1 tos must be i = Ms ~ Foch rena ita eee: | “er emacs fas cata Sny “nate tes | Same hrmey eet went ew Ym: sheath P an sien s of Sie cnlniens pak rs A eee The Chairmr Tone @OVERNOR DENISON, _ itself on republican ‘abjuring the rebellion and were admitted. (A) =F and de- § i i if Foard ke. principies, ; < Ohio, borders; a State which | i, reconstrus , but for jponoment driving out the rebels from ite ‘ers "1g3 of a few such lessons would be more, wholesome and i j lay by ihe concurrent tion oF the two Tousos of Con Ses eens OT mae Se Weenie price ‘should ae rata Ap Bathe A Sadarng restoration | Fata Bieutenant General's now that the seript: struct! » FROM FIRST PAGE, | ways accepted as an infullihe guide of faith and Am ted and thal there bo reason on the {ace oF ig | and more potent for the re ererion oft Cay go) ments Yesterday. : CONTINUED A in these latter days, 1 don’t therefore ask you whether earth for hayes ype noe then -iDg our tical structure, § eniorcing good goverament, 7 ae | _—_— the United States government ought not now to slay backs upon 2: a ee Se conten poy Be ‘a with dig- | than an army halt a million, I thus hastily whe must back, and, lowering sail, take time | the fatted calf and invite our prodigal brethren to 80 Joyal men sentence condemnation, (Renewed epplause "mn ti faent Tella ue whale C00" ry"teit thorougnly, | vision and em aud” which’ threat, | Marching Salute from the Militia gress have Peagon 10>. 2.8 eatusnganse en Parade. YW najority of its Vol". jn ate luxurious a feast; but I do venture to say that when f% go around them, ‘That is all the differ. | his nation ‘becams disorganized five years aco By flugra” ence, It is merely the difference of opinion | secession and rebellion, we did deverimine to humbi a i vebels ing them back again to their consti | he Between the pilots. I should mot practice my petty sre vont 4 eevee tare haditual charity if 1did not admit that I think them | thom, and have brought them, back ae rambled em, to: shih the ‘sepresentalives Sane See passion ap4i pre} prosecute ene ene ey ahs vaya - el feats in Congress, . then, di and Sen sees sat ae (But tho vessel will go iw ca ams song for resloration. | 1" | namaliation ey not do itt seen, anforemately, that f VISIT TO THE PARK, , ngres the ‘elections: has surrendered = ~ swe other, The worst that meed | 1 cii' nich gave allerance to Ml Je an wien, Men the consent of ‘ono of ite own commilteo, Sacred trust given to our keeping. (Applause.) Our Lcmneareyr panama” tion » it was 4 happen will be that, by taking the wrong instead of the | their expectation |My nate” ¢ necessary delay that dextanl tee ton ee members of Congress on any really | OVerriding It; and because, moreover, the Presi- | work is but baif accomplished. The magnitude of our T dies’ Presentati Fight passage, or even talking the right passage and J toy ee prodigal thoy ® “seatt sa aoe oe received | Pretlcal legislation relacing ta tu States lately in rebel. | (ent of the Vulted po Rg an gd Bering sheila ee ee een, on of a Portrait of avoiding the wrong one, the vessel may roll. little, and | 41 ih board. In the nam ai) Seem, would be recelnrs pony ond Esegeet tia meeting, of (clllzens Of | gcionco ami his oath, veloed & bill which they had | like Tol we’ Bare a sous arrow shone | General Scott. i liticians, | pation and to my brethre’ .@ eS are,, Wito eaatained the national euthortty tm: tbe | Soot for ‘als approv to show their resentment | shall ko it trom, its quiver. (Applanss.) Yet ail some honest, capable, and even deserving pol evafrer ine, I proter 44n it, to all those who are to he rebellion, asa most encouraging augury Let a oe orale nh pl provoke ron a 4 pag Peg ns &e. & & mavearoen, Pheakiand or Ouugresmmen TARY €% weane’ | Sot the man tontabor’ 4¥elnee God and. you Cat Tam which sdem "fo threaten the Union of | of, (Bat. act the, House til fu vines Bouthors State | dipsity of sateeneahin ia nee cinsephal careary tsaee overboard. (A voice—‘T guess the boss is safe.’’) (Cheers) There bel. » no. farther plas of Testora- r epic nd yey - ae shoul’. be admitted tocither House unt both houses had | to disregard Uae muticrings of individuals, cliques and Should be sorry for this; but if it cannot be helped it hat are the 34 then, ing out the system of - beta nd, | Conse nted thereto, ‘That action was taken in ® moment | sections who have. been crushed atid toutiated | Thousands of our citizens, whom the holiday of yes. ‘one of the unfortunates, It a0 ction 10" goin Thave roforrod? It is astmprae- | Sted Be nation, wil oat a gerots unity, and) | oftrsentment, You all know how powerful for tho mo. the wheels of the car of progress. We cannot | terday emancipated from their usual dicrnal labors, ean be borne. If I am one o honest, as | Ueable 19 t8e prter as Think els vicloum It Thave { HN4€E Providence, folly accomplish the great work of | Li ‘ueutmonts are, and hom utter ine indore | cto them ; Wwe cannot walt for thelr conversion | ayaiied themselves of tho opportunity to frequent the Mrieud we concerned on that account. As honest, read the D4 em of the country correctly it has settled | 1.9Rathouc miscion. | (App Lo disappoiutment because | Bion and excitement, where no time is taken fordis- | nor can we, like the friend of the gutter-bound able politicians, statesmen, Congressinen Giitgs:—First, no Btat> can keep itgelf out | 2 this hope Wo are doomed to di ppoiniment Vecanee | cussion or deliberation, resentments may decide very | incbriata, go and lie down, with, tiem ecxuse wo | vicinazo of the Metropolitan Hotel, in hopes of seeing eT ee. ‘ith of keep Itself ina, territorial, condision Cia the reat ene, resident te returning to Cam } \ioportant action. The‘teadems in this caso took carothat | have nek Sower to) hate hom op. eon tee | the visiting Lieutenant General. Nor were they doomed ate Thion, Tn the very beginning four States | Rirys ihe Breedmen's Burean bill, with his obj Providont § there should be ‘no discussion, by moving the previens | word. Wo most go aliead in the work of reconstructing to disappomntment; inasmuch as the General was several to enter; with wry faces thoy all camo in aftor- | US PSiNRa law? Lenswer no. What doce the question, and vefusing to hear one single word from any | Southern society. The longer i: maialainy its present i is veto moesago? Not ¢trat he is opposed t@ | in who roved of the @ tion they pro- | status, the worse. Pansion and prejudice may bo acuto | fimes called to the balcony, where the spectators were posed to take. It was thus, and thus only, that this | now with some portions of the Southera people. Let it | enabled to gratify their longing for even a glance ut the resolution was passed, But if you know how naturel and | remain as it 1s now, the compinits will become | ner, whose popularity ie as unfading as the fruits of hig how powerCal suck resentments are, you know, also, } chronic, tet thei in motion, and timo will soon heal how short dived they are. You know that the passion | ail but the fossilized gramblers. My occupations are | miilary genius. It is aimost unnecessary to say, so- which may tead a man to do an act to-day may subside, | incessant and pressing, aud I am unable to read, keep | readily may tue fact be conjectured, that the thorough. ‘80 that be will regret dt to-morrow; and my own beliof pace with, or oygm cousider in detafl tie procesdings of ts that if timo can be efforded for reflection on tls great | Consrews, aad Mbm necessity must content mysolt with | fre iH front of the hotel windows and on either side of 5 ” a the ‘v ‘and President will make their appearance hereafter, | of the faster than neoded, to command the ship, as well | Dory ¢, a ud as wisely as uny that have heretofore stalked | w 14” meving tho whole number of States thirteen | °Y. extending protection freodmen and refusees uf thet: Meir hour upon deck, in the alternations of calm } ’,nsieset's¢ the nine fist consenting. AN the rxion east | oxte eee nen to the fom Seat anton eatin ger o the ; cal navigation, fessissippi rashed rapidly through @ beief terri- | ara ; @nd tempest that always attend political navig ; torial ‘pr ileee into the Union. We Sought provinces ies pega ecpepepeinge vane! pend leon e Ithongh Ido not think that'we are ID a | fren Spain, trom Franee, trom Mexico, From the cuting the essting Jaw vigote's!y and im good faith, avetion to-day Ae Wor ot ve poreant, iv. alt: | Biesissippl to the Pacitle’ ¢hey have roshod, or aro | Cer lausc), ‘What does he sky in lis inessage ? Let ine Ratton aod consideration. Tt is always important. JF. go- | rushing with railroad epced, after @ brief terri- Dal aie apeatian rassereati 4g into y port or in proparing for a how departy re, to } torial existence, as States into the Union. If it e : vations, in order to ascertain W gether | yes ‘ t ‘still m1 J have exemined with caro the bill, which eriginated in the | subject, Congress, as well as the country, will yome to | ob!y ainere xoneral view en passant. Lam not familiar | the hotel entrance was throughout the day thronged with, the stig) le coos ere sound and in good faiteu? nes ana et ape ida tyr eet mM gg eacivy Grane ata tact ented TAS set to eacaatiahne Bees fat | See thatthe path of wisdom, the path of safety and the | with the workinss of the pre-ont Preedmen's Buran | hie admirers i 00d railing condition. ‘The subject before Ws ig adit. | west, Hovery province that there might e. gaincd. whe ference of opiniou that reveals itsclt but too clearly be- | ther white or Diack, old-or young, alion er. native ‘born, tweea the executive administration of the PF esidentand | would be immediately rushing, as with railroad specd, as at itweukl not be comvistent with the publit welfare to the Ie zisiative councillors of the nation. | TY ,e President, | States into the Union, mothe thing chour natidnal | EVO mE wrptoval, to tes messurc, X return the bill to the Ree ee cee a oot tly evel {ee | history teaches ts, that tho Stules which are in the Union | Schateeith my objectisns to its become alav. (Cheers) Ruulve loaders, Two miay judge from ty sr resolutions, } cannot be takew or kept eut of its limits; and that's tho | t,.uaie call 10, mind, 4m navauce of tnse objections, that are Frying t@ slecide, not to coincide, Wf. him im opin- | great lesson of the rebellion. The third thing which thi ‘The aa to eats dlish @ Berean for the revel of freedmen and jon, They Dave appealed to us, Gatsiders as we } eventful war teaches us is, that the Sates wh es, which was 39, to prevounce between them. Twill try to show | the Union cansot keepany States tht are out ih Relief of Freeimen und Refugees, and ferother pug- path of ‘patriot.sin Lies in qhite another direstion from | machinery, nor am I able to Wwelgh thy several provi. 8." Maving with much regret come to-thesonetusion from dial in whieh they have becu walkiay litherto | sions of the bill vetood by the President with careful | 1 the morning the General breakfasted privately at (Applause.) The immediate occasion of ths teseutient | and iusiroetive analysis, That millions of a rice | the res'dence of a friend in the city, after which Mra, Huck has Influenced Comcress in tls ‘ase is, as you | of men, suddenly emancipated flow generations | Grant proceodod with a ludy friend to the Park, in the have ‘boon told to-night, the veto of the Freedmon’s | of servitude and degradation, should for. a landne “aiiiahthadenanl bee eae Brena bill, which was ent to the resident | season require the festeriag care of intelligence | B¢W landau which tho Genoral has p' and rowurned by him on Monday las Tho | aad philanthropy can be doubted by no rational | Between eleven and three o'clock the honors of reasons, whieh led him cio, sapprace that Pill mund, | That, has, a already | extended ite, the | marching salute wore toudered the Gonoral by the rogi- uve cen Be! fore you, ‘the lxaguage | colored people of the souttr, and must and should be, i é used bythe friends of tho bill, ak Conaroen and out of | soi Eta ‘derable time fort are. Buti nope | Mente of militia on parade. For gome reason this parade: Gongrees, on this subj ct—and Tam eorry go See in this | an ! Delieve, especia'ly terference | Was not a simultancous display of the troops partie pat- city oe ox ane sneiee pons Bie, Deseo ® ddisap- re er gis al eu , it Lng te va Ese jag. Each of the few regiments selocted its own time oval of that particntar bil ves the slaves th 16 bill i Pane t brought to fave boan anata tres undes this aenendr of its features Trogarded | fF marebing, and, in consequence, passed the hotel in stitution mt the absolute will and merey Hy tha: which wutho- | straggiing order. The General was honored noue the Among Whom they live, We are told that the Pres.deat tive power to au | jess, however, aud from the balcony of the house made bas abandoned thom to their fate, and wholly turned i ehiore woreiathers' Scare | sc owlasigummnnta the: eolaery: in whaee pane tothe rule of the rebcis, their iate masters, aneutire misappreber: of the iacts ia the always snvety, in | were marching a number of his own veterans. no Pvesident’s message itself should havo eor- vm) It eoreets | seanwhile a siream of visitors besisged him in the pare careless and fmprovideat, as well aa | aitnay ot tik tok a thel viciols and unconstitut legis nile | lors and hallway of the hotel, many in thoir eagerness it recied that view, and will correct it in the nuinds of all 1 i i vents error, its influences are all whoic- | permit:ing their anxiety to got the better of their polite. who read it with candor. ‘That message exprossly (hat for one year # ter peace shill have beon proc snes dover natith {never sufters by discus | nese, It was amost impossible to prevent the crowd sion and examination, The » decming the : by him or Congress, the present * bil, of which ‘no complaint is made, e with gives full and complete | | Pi! Guoive aud unconstitutional, discunrged a daty im- | from intruding aiter him fate bis private apartments, to that class of persons, will be mm full and coin: lee | Lupon him by bs oath of offi when he retired for occasional rest and relaxation. All eflect; and toatatier one year's exp: asad GER " ies found” nocesry, Congres, which assured Limi of their well wishes, and not a fow gave a 8 ealun, ean pass & etter adap tore proctival ebaracler to Uheir good dispositions by valnvititions, A very few of these only has he su has tr git expirad, # what eve nature and character Of the dilference is. | coming in. Cengress 1s habitually inclined to this experi- enoughé Bor the purp a view. 8 50 ne of you, few or many, hava been occastoniatiy | tment Kt hesitat-d ‘shone. Michiran and AMtssourrs ie | cece /Urther exy sree 3 ba 'adopted. te Gane ot fou therty's, You imay remember a ‘play that audteme | footed and stageered eters Texas and Cal fornia, and it | {luton as 10, the pol the stronuest deakre to secure 1 the some years ago, entitled. The Nervous Man | conyulsed the nation in resisting Kansas; yet they ar‘all | freedinen. the full enjoyment of ther freedom wud their au of Nerve. Both of these characters-were | in the Unies, all new loyal, and most of them cbeerful rs A ther entire independence avd equality in country gentlemen. They had been ‘friends | and happy. Hew many committe sof conference did we contracts fer their labor, 7 Their Criendshiyy grew with their years. | have, Low many Jeint commitiess did we not have, Why, then, the veto? Let the messago itself anawer the vd in distant parts of the country, Themervous | on this memontousquestion? How many jo'nt rosola- | question. “The bill betore me, suys the President, con aman ls da hopeful son; the man of nerve had v lovable | tions denying that Congress ever would consent to the | tains provisions which, in my opinion, are not warrantied sauekt or, By some freak of fortune, or semo more | admission of each unwelcome intruders? How many by the constitution, and are not well suited to accomplish sanrdious god, theso young people bad acsidentally | compromises, socuring guarantees for freedom, sgeuring | the nd in view.””(Applause.) With these convictions, come togettior at a watering place, and there formed an | guarantees for slavery, Were broken and seuttere@, when | my feltow citizens, what else could the President have atiag oment unknown to theirparents, Inthe meantime | one after the other these States-cam? in, as if by &@head- | done but to return the bill as hodd? Let mo recommend the “nervous inan sad the mas of nerve had-oaie to one | Jong thenst, and hurled by an Almighty Providence, who | you to a careful and dispassionate consideration o: the agmement, to marry the two young people together, | was determined that the people of this continent ‘shall | i vssage itself, Cam it be that the President, who has under a belief that suey wereentirely unkuewn to euc! be not many discordant nations, but one united and | never filled to signalize his devotion to tho best inter other. Each parent made the announcement to harmontons nation. T entered Congress in 1849, when | cats of the country, as ike understood these interests to ghiid ip « mysterious manner. The nerveus man’s son | the joint committeo of fifteen was skilfully, and it is | be; who, from carly manhood, fonght the caure of the was told that be was to bo married to an unknown | but just to say honestly, framed to obstruct tho admis. | rebellion’ in. his unyielding opposition to the slave ar s- fedy, wlth whom hoe was sure to fall im love at | sion of Caltorzia until the majority of the nation | tocracy of the South; who fought ticazon, face to face, in shy ut whose ame must ve withheld | should ‘compromise and ellence forever the debate | ube Senate of tue Uulted =tates aud in ‘Iumessee, with a day of the ceremony. ‘The daughter of the | upon stavery. The committee succeeded in excluding | hero sin not exee! nd, if cqualled, by any other living the veto power.” (0 nee, iP iL hut | i thea he in tale ot apy i n° if any further prov ti aflairs which ehill then exist. Is not that sensible? Is it on, sustenanes rind elev of nerve receives a similar pleasant inti Calfornin for a period of eight months and | public chara tor; who adopted, and has executed, and is | uot reasoanbley The Prosident has not lefir to be t ; i tnd aecept, owing to th brief d th lover protested, each parent was peremptory, no longer, and eventually obtiined, in broken | ‘now executing in goed frith, the essential features of bis | ferred that he is indifferent to tho fate of the colored ree those who : ie to accep 5S " ng ee e agar “se on Jover intractable, A8 a natural consequenc> both ran | fracments, ihe comproinizes which it sought. ‘That com- | iwartyred predevcesor's programme lor ths rectorathn of opie of the d s visit, Among thoso who called apon the General Southern States, He ins sta, as tt) ‘y will insist, that their natural, both came together and | pro ned by every cla martied. | When the nervous | inise of 1850 lingered, however, just four years and chen | member of his Cabinet (Applauce.) Can it b+, Tawi, that, of his sou's contumaciovs disobudience he | perished, giving pla’s to the incipient and now happily | withsuch a record aud such a character, the Fre dent @inoanced him, disinhorited him, disowned him aud de- | consummated adjastmnt-af the slavery question, by the | would now perform #0 grave an. uct as the vetolneo. & slaved ie would never seo him asain. When the man of | compl te and oniversal ubrogation of netieution, I] bill approved by nearly all the Union members of Con ard of the flicht of his daughter he in ately | loft Congress im 186t, whi d convention | gr ss, woking to the immedia'e wel are of four m luons summoned his dependents, who sought w restore her to | clustered in and around the Capitol demay adieg slipula- jiow people, unless impelled to do so by the we ght- Her father. One parent was all passion, the other v tious (which Congress refused) that fetters should be put | iest reasons and the provoundo-t convictions of duty? all devision. While they were comparing their mural upon New Mexico. N vada and Colorado, You can never | (Appiause.) The answer, my fellow citizens, 1 joave: to and common erief and d'sappo!ntwnent, the married lovers | kvep States out of this Union--gever, no, never. If we | ue intelligenceand the patriotism of the country, (Loud Sara, trembling into their anary prisouea, and, kuoeling | do not ke them we may, in the words of the old pro- | applause.) down, asked forgiveness and parental blessings upon what | verb, “Inmp them=” The present distrusts of fature State ise was dy ils te sw be perpetual. Tho compro- | the ineurgent Siat s—a programme sanct shalt hi restora dining the day were Admiral Farragut, Generul Heintzel. mc upon. tye: beat ‘Duryea, Goxueral MH. D, Hall, Colonel Ben- rene? © Third Veteran National and regiment; . Stewart, Prosper M. Wetmore, wi 1 Harris, and Mayor Wood, of Brooklya, Tn the afjeravon a carriage party was formed for a | drive inthe Park. Tbe General was cared for by Mr. (lows, while Major Leland escorted Colone!s Badeau and Porter, of the Geueral’s sia A couple of hours were Ato them; that they sha ree courts of Jew, as parties and as witnesses, for tie } tion of life, liverty and property; that ey the right ty make contracts, to own real and persoual o tate, 10 enjoy the returns of their lalvor, respects involving thelr civil aud personal r be placed upon the seme footing with other ¢ iving onder tho eoustitation of the same canis ‘lover arain He recognizes the ob Le dectaratic Was now irre What was the parents’ surpri tin’ States have no substantial ground. The; 4 ORT OF THB PROOREDINGS or ba MEEPING | covernment Ww protect them duriug. th spent ina most extillarating ride through our rus ti urbe. ¥ match was just precisely the one of miserable perighiag fears aud factions, i ) BE PRESENTRD TO THE PRESIDENT. fom stavery to freedom, And A. A. Low then took the A tu a fow Words |“ arior dinnor at tho hotel the General and sta pro- “supposed failuroof which had so | fornia was susp cted of secret or ultimate complicity with General Weraoxs.then presented the following resola- | cure fully aud realy alt the provisiond of the ex. tho necking adjourned, . MDI were put to the mevting Dy the Charman ‘The man of nerve sequitted him- | slavery. All the men in the Union knew the bard feelings | tons, whic ning resignation, snd, sivee it lad all | her people entertained towards us fieesoilers, who wero | Abd carried fended to the lovers the boon they | turir most earnest advocates. We gave ber two years of ¢ Kesolved, Thata committee of thirteen eftizens, of which is man refused altogether ie be | pro-slavery, democratic rule, The lem years arm now up, 58 Presiding aficar of thix menting wien yee gi propitiated or even sooth Ho refusod, | and she fs Calin, perhaps distrustful of goime of us yet, | upPOnied Wo visit the seat of cover ny bet that iin would persist forever tm rofusing £6 | Decaike we are willing to udaalt the ‘tates shat lace telone an eae ee Fe Agais the son who had ben 40 disobedient. | sinned and repented an she did. If ever this thing of | Medatvod, Hat the preening olrer bo requeste When his outburst of passion had eomewhat subsided keeping out States by joint rezolution of Congress cosld | twelve membera of theecinmuites: fur that Purpose, she man.of nerve 1 now, old fizend, ‘why | have had any chance of permanent success that time bas | the following geutlemen compose the commalttoe:— ‘won't you forgive him? Have you wot got the metter | passed away. No State hax ever been hind:red in eom- Hamiltom ¥igh, William C. Bryant, Richard M. Bluteh- all your own way after all?’ “Why, yes,” replied the ing into the Union except upon q ‘estions growing oat | cord David Dudley Feld Marvhalt 0. Roberts varus hy will sew not Crete ht By own way.” “Then | of the system of African bondage. But Atriean | Wadaworth, George Opdyko, ALA. Taw, Win. M1” Evarte why will you not forgive him?” said the man of nerve. | bondage has new gone to the dogs, and they Jaines Brown, Houry Clews and $3, B. Chittende 3 “Why, damn it, Thavn’t had my own way of having | h made a sure finish of ft. (Langhter and ap- F 3." (Laughter and cheers.) ‘This, I think, is tho dif- ¢) Not oven crough of its ehriveled kin or SYRECH OF WENRY J. KAY MOND. fewence bet * President, who is a man of nerve, | disjointed limbs reman to sbarpen the cupidity o! 1 need net ony: -any. fellow citrecns, how deply I stand Washington, and the nervous | tb» race that were once called slaveholdera, or of that | indebted to you for the grectimy wiih whieh you recetve isting iaw—wi Were thea ave for the Provident aud the | Sted to Union eqnare, where ho was presouted with » one year joa Union, aad the sinmense gathering quietly dispersed, portrait of General Scott, the giftof a number of hig nuinstion of Congress, to pass anew law a year be ore a lady admmrers in this city, The presentation. of this ie can be required, comicrring upon the” Pr: Important Movement, likeness of the “oldest to the greatest gencral in the eparmons power whch ho docs wut wish to exerci, | SPRCIAT COMMITTER TU CONFER WITH $1 PRE- | world” was attended with & collation and appropriats and throsting upon him vast sums of money that e AIDEN " Femonies, The picture hid been previously shown to dioeg no wish to spend? | Tt is not fur meio canvas the | Aca meeting of the citizens of NewYork who pastain te me a — A iin a motives -ef pods action; but J eas easily understand ‘ . (hat us this case itanay be'qu te other tham thas. which 4 "Be President im his the Wi evlesing 40 the Froet-'t 241..c0 pride-by baving a portealt of himself painted as. apyears ou the suriace, cortamly it eauat be purely | mew's Burau, General John A. Dix was called to the | ty mpan‘en pleture.” upd eswiusively a dosiro to protect this class of our ni “ye wade a Ble; for tee exieting bill teat, 'Wieeetoen ph pad cba, and the fuliowins resglution was adopted : ‘The bricfness of his stay has precluded any formad it—Wwhy Jnterfere with its aperation? wreath TY eee cree rmimiuke of sows bemppnintot’by | stocramsce Cor. the Generel’d’ eiilesteinment ot .emuce- is a question of rentiment, of pavton, and action taken | (He Chatr, withont regard to ast polities relations, to under such indlucnee often. aus ut ‘other resu'te chan | PFoond © Washington and conter with the President as | Meat, Today he will dine with Mr. A. T, Stewart, ra fit force for at least yf this great end, why "this he , this iapatient and intolerant 9» name those Which sls authors wil be willing lo avow. T murt | 1 the best means of sustaining the great measures of Lilt = ar Hove> of Representatives, Both | other race which was known to the ‘country as | me aging hy Sorgew whoa Teume here not to speak | say that look with divtrust upon the action o: tie com. | dminetration, Generul Grant and President Johnvon, the Union restored as they originally planned it | “doughfaces.” No State, therefore, will ever - | (9 you, but to hear you speak to me, to Congress, to 1 mittee in whose hands Congr st has pia-ed tho en. The comuittoe consists of John T. Hoffman, Mayor; Wasmyotos, Feb. 22, 1866; mount be. | ‘They have got it restored, not with slavery, | aftor be hindered or delayed in coming back into | country. My duty for the moment hes ola whore. I ha ‘tre control of this quesiion, Not thant 1 distrust . itLHoUt it; not wills ses Witham B. Astor, William M. Evarts, Fawards Pierre. The Na‘ Mion fae rane, Wat | the Union pon the sroand* of slavery. You may | becn smdeavoring wo Cischaryeit to the best of my ability, | ihe motives of the ‘men, upon st; but it iene imal In'eltigencer feols warranted !n con- zy ran i not bese compensation fe Kcr ae ‘on, but | think that the irresistible tendency to unton which I so peerage en serpee secaeas a ones novel thing, something hey without example go | PQMt, osu Taylor, John Kelly, Short; Charnes ct, trediovng the rpreseatations which have been exten ‘Without it; not with compromise, bat without it; not | have deseribed inay lave eomethy alarming jn it, | could the eoun hose wollare we all have at heart, histo Canavan 1, Stew Senator, JOIN’ A, Cilairnan. — f +Hvel; hed that sume atieaation af foal ne ha with disloyal Bintos oF representatives, but with loyal | This would be a grave error} AMOK mo mech came here 0% sur moptration trons your presence, even ae Obie whit in oxyeces terms = ys sn ae ~ as nace eo thing. Mates and representatives; not with rebel debts, bat | ‘The im any Territory want to be a Biate be- | though any one who hud any eonsitivencss to the popular without thee; oot with exemption {rom our own debts oa om & pleasant thing and a good thing to have | impulse, which moat aiwnye rile thia land, might weil for suppr sing the rebellion, but with equal labilites | the munieipal powers and faculties which belong toa | draw inspiration from such a scene as $3 presen.ed here Bpon the rebels anf the loyal men; not with freedmen | State within American Union, and to provide by bt; but T trust ft may say, without beyting, and refugoes abandoned to suffering and persecution, but | its owa laws for the maintenance and security of lifo, | that in’ avch a erisingas Uhia through whieh our with the freedmen employed in productive, self-sustaiu- | liberty and property. A Territory wants to hea Stat p coo just passmg, need no inspiration to do my fog industry, with refagees under th ction of | and a member of the Federal Union becanse it is a | tluty but the sense of right and of ob! gr to the the Pevsident and Lieutenant Generai Grant was involved, Rich:wond Braminer, HO ropori of its acti the iuwtermation whieh 1 Jown to that Congress, from tm: to mater innsars fondamental law, and dena: Mass Meeting tu Kentueky to Endorse NAVY BULLETIN. Congress rs ta give, bat time, changes on or 7 sed on the spot. Tdeny it ix a tory, and it does not seem to me President Johnson. new position of our hi Jaw and order. The man of nerve sees that it has | pleasant thing and a good thing to have its pro- | communit; do nos believe that the reas | in accordance with the pr.nciples of our repub'. Lovisvine, Ky., Fob, 21, 1906 lie saaneien si come out right at last, and he accepts the s'tuation. | tection against foreign enemic 1 to postess the | now assembled at Washington is desirous 0° | egumont. It reminds me too much of the fuvel alin, k inal OnpErky resnvany 15, Sateen net tegeGos tae wecteoee wena ee privileges ~! tora State by | permanently broaking up this Un nme lieve | committee appointed to take char.e 0° The cdkor of the Loxievitie Journal, the Democrat | A. Bates, Jr, lo duty at Key West, oure the most io be secured by anybody 1s to have | the nat onal cowstitation, I therefore would not econ- | that the m ties aro taking will have the eftect o! rain the revolutionary umes of France. and the Cowrier have anited upon a eal! for a mass meot- | Fla harg of store bod Shing: come it right. pret to | seut to hold a State in a territorial condstion or to | doing it for a time, but enty fora time; for I agr-e most bave them brought out gether in his own w deny it the advantages of fellowship in the Union a day } hearbly and thoroughly wih the divtinyaished Secretary nervous men, on the other band, hesitate, del jJonger than I should be eompelied. Nor do I see any- 3 Who has addressed you to-nigit in words of wis, debate and agonize—notb cause it has not come out | thing calentated to exolte alarm, anything tranacending | dom and elognence whieh you will not soon furzet, ard ight, but beoanse they have not individually had their | the pol teal ability of our statesmen, m the whieh the whee country will Lear with delight. Tagre own way in bringing it to that happy terinivation. I | ation of the treedn with Bim th restoration of this Union us bot a ques- have raid that Japprehond no serious d feuky or ca. tate in the t y tion of time, and that Congres, or ernors, or pro damity. This confidence arises from the couvietion States without dixonier or q even, can delay that tive but fora! tle while, ‘eich 1 entertained that there never was and never very raised itself in rebellion aga ust the gv the last five gner F. G.Coggin to duty at !'Kendezvous, Now York. ng Assistant Corgeon Phos, K. Chandler to steamer AWARE syuadl oa. Accing Assistant Paymaster H, T. Fieldjag to coast survey steamer Carwin, : Grand Mass Meeting in Nashville to Suse | Aoi liasign Cas. A Schatky to Golf equadron, ale cienry A. May. to Gulf squadron, tain President Jonncon. ate Mowe H. Cistees to root ig sip Vermont hid that the game un'esly ambition should any of the leaders in our legislatve body, or tompt them to emulate such bad 1 us not koow, ; paet ben ing at the Court Heese, toanorrow evening, to sus the courve of President Jolineon, Delegations from va rious parts of the State are arriving to participate im the | Hei meeting. aul we.) What havo we been doing fu tie our instituttona, ang upon w eos ul process for the re: of onion | ment of the Union. When it took that attitude y yours? ¥ What have we been raising thove vast armies » it os to b> permanent, murt a! Nasnvittn, Tene, Feb 21, 1984, one ‘ a at bngneor Jolin Dolerty to steamer mig the State: that one with | abolished it oat = se tyrongh and Loge co by the oe and OF pop co gra! oe ‘ ee.) The ater, in bis annual me A grand mass meeting will be hed bere to-morrow | G# sow, Gull squadsa: i has avowed himeelf satisfied le ually forcver. This is w! of money o pave en been shedd-vz | vs veto mesaco, has tad down pring pi a i ‘ Be DETACHED reBaranr 16. rant if thas {he rebeltios. i , ended and ox e have had the sagacity and the courege to do | their Lod op die ficld of battia, down their lives, | immntenonce o* whieh this governmens can Sairc HEE bc srtant Page RT PUREE TEL biel the, ¢ en ab the ré it follow Lof ninety year, These Amenean people are fleing ery had on earth? Why are we bo be ropubican, Ether wo ws a3 | tion, Key W st, Fia., on reporting of relief, and ordered tee sooner or later natiat be orga eat deal better and a great deal wiser to-day leaded with a debt greater than tuls nat on ever t~ 1 plow, Or we Taust cease to be iu i 1 Nortu Boye! won In aceordance with the ¢! hey were ninety years ago, Those ofthe generation | ligved .t would be called Cpe to Lear? For what hos all a republican governmen Sulate In Weat Virginia, First Asdetant Engineer Goo. P. Mant from Naval Rea- metal jaw, and thut, being £0 or od, that is now crowding ws will be a great dal wiser | this been dime Quy to e } our fathers stil have a¢ ; Warerxa, Feb, 22, 1804, dezvous, New York on repo tof relief, aud ordered come by loyal represgntatives and reaume the j verveio the end or adavasen. and © grent deal better than we who are on gare & aed charged is Sid in the circle which, in a fit of the gage today, Do I think, there‘ore, that we ny of us ever ii L any Hoare Of authoray, we; We may A ralnie was fred daring the day in houm at Comnunder Edwart Barrett from ord and passion, they rebellourly' varated, AM th shalt lack the wisdom or the virtue to go righ: onand | from the « , n to the dey when i jon who thi'l be vw # dent's veto of the Ereedinen Wace duty ab Norcula Navy Yard, on reporting of relief, States but Tees done just that thin the work of meticration and progress, clowd, any ion of any other purpowes in waging it Jent; buy H @ug (hat thet conser. atives, presi and wailing feet in due time ti u And tho anth deLverance of labor from ation of cacte and clase an to pre the integrity of the Union and mals | of a kingly crown’ wil eit upon his heed, ig bing beid to-migle Mueb cy of the constitution of (he United | ha with wield more than kingly power, uniesw tod, the prinetples aid down by the Presdent con. a tinue to Term the bade of ont government. Ac f the Now Jeracy L-gislater blican goverum a's ave varely, if ever, o § Sa een a eee v4 a os a plate arely, i = 3 Taevrow, N. J., Fob. 22, 1886, Cidef Kucincer Monteamory Pletchor, from special i Atimiral Grogory, New York, and granted receiving slsiy Vermont, and od enough to nar dover and over again that the obj hStaes, fr y a foderal, rear from these > V yevewiiuent, whieh will eon nd the only elject, of this war v from steamer Cone Bay constitational ¢ A ; : endl E md, and other princi Resolutions favoring 9 waTrage and condemning | Hane to the end the eon-titational prineljles wits wh eh | texnity of the Union, and to preserve tho supremacy 0 under those very republican forms which conceal | pee vont Sotsnuan'e abe tases, ants tes which have been loy » began, They are sotiling th the iiintion, Why first year of the Wa is Conse ex chooses not to | PFs dent Joun pee seve eeretuned Gapteae | ‘ in the West Ind patrieth «i wd, J di !, we ehall very | today by Mr. Scovel (republican), and lost, They are as i with the «ane re Ipplase), into the I! Peale which @ ‘Congress whieh will do ‘i—(hewr'y | follows: a resoluth ng that, and not? if and one that I am afraid will be mu oante ana ¢ the object of the war, aud ab Just avo Ninction it will draw between | payy arnt hts bere decited by the Sup HONORABLE Drs reien ty of F Lobe gr H yal tian woare. This is one rea- | gvery chanre of movernmn ame thet ase or Willian H. Barclay. dine m atest tndrew Jolnson peri sm of my ansicty to have the present adia msiration | supervision and muthorty of exiasing tive body | gata Onuber 28 18 Rimed to wenmer De ute *, tively unlmperwnt havo the Henate a resatntion deviaring the same thing. 18 | aud the present Congress bring about that great te sulvnding the proincslon o¢ positi la to Cho pile, deaming tins is bing a burden after nterest and produce hile division if it stood | nesriy the same words, and both passed unanimously. | alt I believe they will do it wisely. 1 beley pas et tan tithes tema ode chee ne : GS Hs io : hich th Its ber ee has becom: the vecavion for re | s# has never from that day to this declared any | wil! admit none but loyal me: 4 al to the Con- boot i. et Ts my eenican bike tes bd Acting Ensign Stephon N. Baker, of Navy Yard, New ing the differences that I have airendy deseribed that | other purpose, The executive d par , the Kk stitution ond loyal to the Union, who fect the same inte- shell’ guide the political change, and that somewhere | York. She : Tieel gure that 1 bas alta ned the importance whieh seems to rurround | tive department*every department of the government, | rest with ux in promptiag the common prosperity of onr | kuhtnuce Guntea re is ulwaye a permanent organ- | Acting Third Assistant Engine-r Robert A. Inglis, of now loyal Slates will, sooner it Both tho President and Congress agre that during | from the begianing of the war to the end, when (hey | ommon country. the reedeut propases to restore the Rides the fantateps of these who reek | @eamer Glasgow Uiis sesion or at some other, by this the briet transition white th nutty is taking from | poke et oll of its object, deelaret that object to be the fF Union by t ial metlrud of adruitting joy nts which are disorganized and broken APPOINTED. wime other, be received tuto the 1. civil wart) internal pesee the freedmen and re agees | preservation of the ty of the Union and the main. | sontatives ¢ constituents to take thei roa thet ded by the highest pre. John Quevedo, mate, and ordered to steamer Idaho ma When thie shall have been done the process of | o ght nut to be abandoned by the naton to persecniion | tenance of the authority of the constitution. The Pros ress jast as fast ne they khail be sent to Weshington existing polltivat ber, on fie Sader len denrn aelicle daitecatllllag Feeleration will be comple ed; for thatas all that now | or anilering. It was for this trapaition yeried that ihe | deut iu nil bis prociamations, from the first to the last, | that pun Congroms proposes to exelade them: bot it | of the to tion. guar-niee t the states lately in rebeliion The Murde Femainsto Ledome, if 4. this view of the sub Bureau of Freedmen was created by ( sana mado What | d siaratwon, ahd Congress never di- | proposes nothing else. "All hs acte ar mere obstruction, | & repull can,form a: vvernmemt. | ae ls 90:4un Gen of Yun manana. dginont is ai fault, then some of th kept and is still kept in eftect.ve operat on. h the oved it; but, an the te 1 | purely nega. ive, denying everything and accompliehin esoived, That a ich aby mores et _ pores cab show some other process of restoration | President and Congress, on the and, agree that reaffirmed it Whiie in bothing. Why ‘doce ft not Veing forward. We pace Were Red thats tisod for the eatonboe a the mci dann | tn your report of the Coroner's inquest on the body of which is pructicable, and which can be and wil he | when that tra jod shall have ben fully pareed), sa muy have had other purposes in view, | tient meaurest Why dova it pot propor enter | Ba’ ‘and cannot possess, any elements of vitaity or | Philip Kraemer, late private watchman in our facwry, adopied, aud wher it is likely to be adopted. ond the harur hs between (he staves and gress iteclf, by ite authority, declared it t be the | ty make these States Provinces or territories, joao, you state crron*ougly that a reward of one lnundrod dol eon pr a pian? Other Unton ) that burean woukl be not of the war, and de lured, furthermore, that | ond covern them accordingly? Why does it not |’ itessived, That for New Jersey, and in the name of the Brace, be but eaconstitutional, d-moeralizing and n that purpose was attaived the war ought to end. | prescribe terma and conditions of atintesion ? Why we tender at once our hy aud respect to the | lars has been offered by us tor the apprehension and con country. symp ! * and therefore that it should ease to exist. | It wax that purpose, thus declared, that united the peo- | does it not put into the form of laws fome of its theories | buld and determined men in Corgrens wre hare been and | vietion of the murderers. ‘The reward which transition stage has | ple of this creat nation as one man in their efforts for | of deat ‘States, oF confiscation and of government by | Snr today falthiul 19 the princes tha: mode usaparty | offered is three hundred dotiars, to whieh am hal provision ior the | the prosecution of the warand the preservation of the | deputy? Why does tt not exerciee the power it ie so |” foo Tlonor the Mayor bas aduod five lnudved i at eb or taken jamie) S - " ute the end in view, | Union. While there was a large party in the country | loud of arseriing? If the Breedent tea wurper, who | voniaumets, nist te te faded principe is rong EINMANN & SILDERMLANN Mr. Lincoln's vd that the ori eau is all that is necessary to ~That Congress i, Should ereate what are e while the bil submitted "by » | who disapproved of the measures of the government, | has forfeiud bis head, why does it not impeach | enough toaurvive the defection of auy patuisan, New Yor, Meb. 20, 1566. ts in the eleven Stat were in rebel fo give It indefinit> extension in time of peace and resto. | and who resisted and hampered the government im car. | him? Why content {taslf with talking and soulding | the coniod for toe rights of mankind we hs gl -_— —— a aad that the President should administer the govern. | ra He vetood it for thas reavou. le deciines to | rying out those measur s, Lam willing to do them the | about what the President is doing, instead of doing | Maintain the doctrines of the srr oagaeon 2 gg~ ment |) and ‘itsel| Jor Mr. Scovel, in offering these ‘esolutions, said:—Ind- Died. i? my seadeas "ee tea @at after long parse ited Inth the | ten thousand agemts, the ineremed powers and the avg. | tion that war would not preserve the Umion, but would | fellow eit know ‘better than I can tell you | dolity to liberty ie a bad invesment wherever made, | o¢ Mik. moron can <a gua to carr pejocted by Mir ‘ty’ the | is tunda,"Congroms, om the aiber baud, thiaie tnesihe | Seite om tke a7 ot the pee toe ne Caer eeine | teat. fecistone ee aie print Ration | Andrew Jonson made the worst investment of his life | ° His relatives and friends are javited to attend the fune wejected by Mr. Lined, as it by the | lis bands Congress, on the other bevd, thinks that the | wholly on the will of the peoy ence, could | that the final decision this great question | Apdren od the Fi ate borens Oc, Meubee- | rel hls late residence, 20 West Filty-sc ond strort Proaident. If it ever tay have Freedmen's Bureau is not adeqaale, and. » Bas | be preserved by force; and the reason they gave wae, | reste, You are the tinal arbiters of this great dis- Caneel, een ae a o iple that inte roden) ft uktan oftteem Mow altogether too late. the re power Would, like Thomp- | that even if the war should be prosecuted to a suecers: pe The deatinios of the Union, which your armics | Sewn inet town em prine Yr ulher Dentha we Tried Page.) vee to concur in so mad a mewure mt this date tion by Mrs. Toodie:, | ful termination, if the rebellion should be crushed, the | have saved, rest upon your wisdom and your fidelity, | “vate hy ound chehens Gheakdin tevutied: en. the vit we, 1 agree with | people conquered would never consent to come ‘back | We, who are in Congres to execute your will, have see Uvetr end eneting Gtesnagen Teeo- the extraord vary | arain into a Union with the people who had conquered | put'a short time to live—our offic al existence is v ‘ewark and New York Railroad bili has been post an indefinite period by military fore, and | ae opt, as unnecessary and aneolied for, the thousand oF | justice to believe that they acted from a sincere convie- | something postive you with for its ex: cable, it & Would be imporsible to exec or what you may, the hope that MISCELLANEUUS, perfect ery | The - harmony with f provision which the bill makes will not be necessary, | them, Now, what is the fact in that respect? Are they | ephemeral—our action Is really of but trilim and ~ : o wane land are in carr poration but that the whole question may be eimplitied by a | not even now, when thoroughly subdued, ready to come | temporary importanes. In oer tw years of service, | Poned to next Wednesday, FeceneD Wane <aseerone BCHLPRATED ment. It would require an ‘ reference to the exteting law hack? Are they not anxious to ome back? Do they not, | however badly we may behave, we can really inflict “ , . ), BABSFORD'S great Housekeeper's Bazaar Chiua, ¢ , and ch 3, 1805, which created the F though subdued and erashed by the euppresson of | but litle injury upon the long ‘Ife of this great and | The Mass aud Croekory Emporium, Cooper Fnsygnts Building of France or thi des that it shall continee in donne the rebellion, see and gcknowledge, one and all, that | y corous on. Its strength resists our most | © sident Johnson's Veto. Fign of the Golden Kettle —cocner store any one of th rb liion and one full year thereafter, When | the only fag 'that can mm shelter ts that of | wicked blows, ite vitality quickly heale the slight Rowrox, Feb, 22, 1866, —y States, into what you term a that year expire? In the President's jndement. the glorions Sters aw c wounds wo can iniliet, If we act anwisely, you . PP ais LADY WHO HAS SUFFERED FoR OVER FIV) Maximilian’s task, though his engo a 1 underviand the matter, the war of the rebettion has | bave been fighting for year? Now, Lhave ge will very soon replace us by those who better under In the Massachusetts Honse of Representatives yestor. FA month ne most esirome tartare from and two imperial organ zations, with their force heen coming and is still comming to an end, but is not y history. simply stend, or Will more faithfully execute your wie belese, afte cores ol lve were introduced re. | Leen campiriely cured by one —*) Shought not the ‘most were and hopeful political | fully closed, It ia on this ground that he ma of the United st If we'serve you und our conntry with duseretion, wth | 8 nie S ¢ Pre sin ttninds ta pu Pe 1 + alana wile Wate” REM enterprise of the di (A Voico—“They will beth | army, contiunes the saspension of | the war and have giveu so freely of th Atelity and jatriotic purposes that rise above all pasione | #tetting the act of Tree ving yw have te out.) On the other hand, we have no cm | lob as corpus, and exercises martial law, where theee | hves to bring it to a sucees and oll sel iehness, you will give us that approval whieh | Freedmen’s Bureau bill, ané 48ePing that it is the duty ORNS, At UB AND 1 Peror, but only a stern, uncompromising rat ound f [unintaning this Union, wii adhere to that | is tix only Otting tecompense a public man ean receive | of tne President to give M° NCETO™ that protection for | Cned sti aiosasee ot she German To fal republican, a democrat—call him what you will ination vend. Do you snp. | for good service to his country and his age. (Applause) ch (he national hort stands phdgod ‘and to which Dra, RICE & HART, 88 Bowery, ove for ¥ lent, who re in every way to Pa party to » ~t- ‘y are going to abandon that purpose which car- ae, moemecn’s. sibtints Nant conduct of the colored solders ent tice them any impertal tran ns, and he would hand them tock ried t through the war, new that the war is over? « DICKTN: r 5 > fevolutict eo referred to the c% m seeenenaaen 00 7 our P fo Congress if they wore to offer hit the meu and money ident ard of (Volee—tNever.") ta their resentment against those | Mx. Cuameas—The absorbing aud cherished vision of | pti Fevolutions w \epcieeiionn Donets, Laaatet oseaingn wetnoug x te coneeunaan | ie J 1 purposes the rebellion Who brought he war upon the country it i# possible, | my Ife has been the preservation of the federal Union, Tl Lely. Questss guerastes t the rebellion whieh songht ite destruction | py. rise r fuged to receive a resolut™ thanking the managed properly. Advice free, . a ga vot je by a vote of ed by the moral and material forces of me Fer Bie vaio memenge 07.8 VON OO tw a, icteric ident, whe if the President or Congress Hay, itis neturel, that ten should be unwilling to take | and now thi ' fat Law S25 Treadway where will you find in the | one or both—ofic ally annoences ite termination. Now, | hasty action in’r KING. Coun States totheir | bas been ory vy would want to be elected to | suppose thie anconneemet do by the President | rights under the n y do not feet it to be | petrotism, L pray that the desolations of the ba: Pa ‘ IVORCES OBTAIN ny " ry into civil war for | and by Cou or by either of them, In | right oF proper or safe that the mon who have been | field way berretooved, and fie wane Places nade | Haropean and North American Railway, | J )VORCHS ONTMNED. wal eve f there be sneha one, what ehaner the Freedmen's Bureau is conti by | prosecuting this wagacainet the governmentshould, apon | to emie with the return of peace. Believing Acavera, Me., Feb. 20, 1866. w ene that bo elected for auch @ pttrpor the lunitation proseribed a of | Mts eesention, i ny come bork and resume their arate that the | so-called ordinances secession, whether a i gen i hen ae te bn ooeeg ag 8 fn hat ech t ny nd, and i# not now even seri 1864, one year after eneh — prociama Members of The fecting ie uateral, and within | the resnlt of force or fraud, or the ‘sanctions | eat Railway pan © passes gia rr 7 y Manes ously nen i any other plan? Congress tow have been «hts the Freedimen's | litnits it ivemtirely just and proper. Wedd not, any of | of poptine fury, were and’ are utterly null | form eathiactory to ite friends, The chic? interest has CG TUOMAS R. AGHE W'S Ant hada Reconstraction Cemuitive, ast iecalled, compos Hereau wonld continue, by the original limitation, | us, wieh to seo m Frith the Wood of oar fsa Lolt—-te gender, number, person and exe; that the | centred epon the enabling wt, so called, which extends | Taq EEL tmy corner of Marray. sed Wore | of fifteen mer who have stopped the whee antl the 22d day of Febroary, 1867—a very proper day | brethren march 1 vr of triumph, a though f States, in their political framework, are and have at all | all therighte of the compan: y, preserving to it its land | any stores Now York. One prot howwe fegistation e t e ubtait a | on which 10 bring it toan end. It Congress id then | they w viet * their seats amen | tives been States of the Union, aud that it has been the | gran and the claims on tho United States; sanetions the | -— <_——— - ~ process af plar nt from th von the | find it Mecesary to prolong ite existence, ttean at once | those who make our laws We do not propose that this | peopie of the States and not the Siates themselves | conyact for absorbing the ine in New Branawick from Fer MADE NEW WITHOUT eV FETAC LE ove of a happy mation, And e take the neressary steps, for it will at that date have | shall happen. Nobody has propésed any such thing. | which have been eugaged in the work of inaurreetion, | the boundary to the city of St Jobn; authorizes the B. Foote, 3. Be aibah tee Yok Ames ren tia? One propored am ment to th been in session nearly three months. Ought the Pres} | The Prew t hoe maid that whoever takew a feat in Con- | treason and = I have at all times—since the | eatolidation of the lines between Portland and 1189 Bro ' compel the ex @ to equals deut of the United states tobe denonneed In the house | gress, oF fills an office undor the federal government, | close of the ‘war expecially—urged that a brond line wnd the purchase of the lines cast and fort and ( the Rapes Sant free Adare ty malty of an seetdgen of his premive—arwen more, ought he to be denownced senld ¥e 0 man loyal to tho Constitution and the Union, | ee crewn beween tee Baufas, coinektte wd 1868, | 1B, Foote, Me D., LAB Grnadeay, Now York n@iscus its merit in the house of his friends for refusing, in the absence of to take unily any test oath the may oy! lo the u t accepted wyd br a neta eal be Roe 1 @iti Not be adopted. The expertat) any necessity, to ocenpy or reten and te exercise | preeeribe; oud Oi) thet Re sae i thes feyel mes, ropre- former might be encouraged and rewarded, and | @ loan of 000 to the Sees new lon, tt orcas adareon Ete, Mpevensd é Conse ar even x" Congress. in amy ease it timp! powers than those which are exercised ¥ any = | loyal constitnents, and able to take rie the aed = and finishes. (Applause.) | authorizing a public loan of wt LGA Bae: | cay, New York. / ation a” the Southera States It is fore no plan | imperial magistrate in the world? Jndge ye. trast | sei for ail, shail be allowed to come op and take | Kotertain' Magen Baas e office mine, as it is cers directors to the city, elected - A, LA —. oF procas of reconstruction at all. The committee | that thie fanlt of declining iinpertal powers, too hastily ona in Congress, in order that those may be | thatof the two houses of Congress reapectively, I hes vouncil. The city of Bangor ia to hold a first Landon Confidential Information f ne Marvin’. Sent free |” ve thio to be the true character of the proceed. | tendered by a too confiding Congress, may be fe m | rest to their rights as members of the Union under | tate not to ary that with the ample power they posses | railway to Union, fifty-seven miles. oo ora Py MO . » B. Fonte, MD. 1,180 Brow ; decaum they fall back upon a process not of | by a generous people. It will be a red hour for the re. | the conetitntion. (Applavee.) As for disloyal men whe | to admit, reject and expel mem claiming seats, I | amount to 873,112 acre. To the claims of Maine way, i 2 ion, Bxt Of obstruction. The resolution which | public when the refueal of unnecesea were, treastire | cannot take the oath prescribed, he hes repeatediy anid, | would freely admit all representatives duly elected woo | United States, assigned to they submitieh Saturday iast, and wh and patronage by ihe President shall er held. to bea | and we all agree, that ey had better go Beek to ther? | were persohasly and politically worthy, and r ject all | those of Massachusetts eld Jo the Hoyse of fe ge oe fe directly rime When it eh i be so con time will etitheMte And give place to others better fitted to take | others (cheers)? and, in view of the rebelion throwgh | in 1865, which are ex) that loyal represemiatives shall pot be, U n | have arrived for setting up at the White H an im- | part in the legislation of the iand. And so say we allot | which we have #0 succeeafally passed, should x: oppropriation of $1 per Joyal Paige uh!) Comerens shall pase a iS for that nu peval \brove ond surrounding the Executive imam fue Bot the Presiicnt does think that » State loyal | verienee prove (at rwombers had ‘been admit. branche CAL COMMON SENSE Rp peers 0 BEnica! Rent by wall everywhere Petri, nia toute ena one Somat? Author! B® Foote, 1 Eyre st) stance may covenhs bs fouer 3 Es