The New York Herald Newspaper, July 8, 1867, Page 6

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B NEW YORK HERALD. MONDAY, JULY 8, 1867. mak r proper their tempo- |. te bola rebels for ev the matter. We are not sure we have | Tt es mee wero Ava b= measured phe Aer If he docking, of pion | } fe a TGiticn quoting Mr. Wade, aud feel that we hai | v Y y f " = al ad by the test of the constitutiv In like manner, there | republicanism be the trae one, thea we should not only r. STEVENS— 1 ou bave correctly Stated | injustice, for no man cap quote | being no longer any States in exi-tenve im tne conquered | let the conquered rebels of without beheading them, | my position, I ‘hall comsiaer it my duty to moveareso- } You must hear and sce bim to Perna sarmnnnnnney territory, Congress alone ad the power to recoustruct i | but without any pains and penaities whaisgover.”” jation of unpeachment, Heretoiore I have mot pressed | derstand him; and Fi is not eo into States for admission to the Caioa, aud for that par- MULD CONFISCATION NUT FULLY SATPACTORY, the matter of imj 3 but now, seeing a defiant | says as the way he says it that makes pose could cut it up im any manner thas mighi appear Your correspondent, Narine, toqaired whether this | determipation to the laws and to prevent the | He is a self-made man, ao original thinker, The Race for the Radical | 2.0 Nitto reeura to former divisions. No aher | “mili” eoniscation was a Mr, Stevens desired, ro- | will of Congress—which ia, in other words, the will of | the bess infurmed man now in public ifs tn this coun- sal Soe ean Coucren bad autuority 40 reconstruct ibis | ceived ie substauce the following reply the whole people of the United Biates—irom veing car- | &ry._ His pareuis were among the poorest people in Mas- SOUTHERN POLITICS: Nomination Ponquered territory or to make lawa for its government; | “Weil, sir, I shall at to carry a bill—probably | ried out, I ita incumbent upon me, ae & Tepre. sachusotis, and ho never had but seven daye’ schooling; { “2 ‘and any exercise of such authority by any other branch | not at this extra session, Dat at tns noxt regular wes- | sevtative of the to propose removal of this | yet at the age of twenty-one be had read @ vast number | ‘of the government was a usurpation of she functions | si0n—'o assess Miciont ‘sum on u-ceriain class of rich | obstruction, f Thave not a bit of doubt that thw | of books; mastered ‘Bock and was well versed 10 | a fod powers of Cougress Viesed by this tight the | rebels to pay these damages to privace citizens; tires, | resolution would under the present condition of philosophy and science. He, read the Bible through in hols work of recons.ruction was simple endugh, and | masmueh as they can be repaid in uo other manuer, | allairs, but fer the Detween the supporters of | & single winter by ine iteht of pine torches in his wood | THE QUESTION OF RECONS . Two OLD MEN’S TALES if the majority in Congress honestly and firmly car. | except by ibe people upon whose necke we have our | Fessenden and Wi is that which has a He read muck and reflected on all-he . * | ried out this principic in ail their legislation, there would | foes. But this will not satiety moby any means. Be- unhappily stepped im to mar the and par- | read. on his mother’s side was a minis- , have been no complication or difficulty about it, ”” fore} gonpanied 14, reaerd, Sha renelene anlies Loitiit oln9e OA Feet ee great hog ord — Sepa bat pan | iene moe fo ms ae an A En atteiie tan N peal. tnformaion, Mr, Wade cays the most dificals thi What Will Result From Rejecting solve he ever mes with was to Y He was Your correspondent having expressed a desire to Jearn | should then assess upon the —— w oon en he ws Present Plan. Spicy pinion of Oid bad upon the Military Reconstryc- | quered territory, po rata, Pletures of Prominent peony pode the following a agg the wh ontstanding war dobt of the United States, in one to show him, sine oye sane ieee aceaml bee propesname bed fact | vpn the oval Ioriog tame othe Moriyama bee though for Woureovarthe my werioes sgn aba Isto ot in after ower i upon the loyal laboring masses e and hel beter the backsidings of some of our weak-kneod | to keop thein poor and to. some of nai facie straight when toey are unui! by moras ‘as large as hisbaod, He had read | Views of the Confederate General Barksdale, Inionds, a8 & military, Didi alene, ip order that a | to the point of starvation; because it was incurred OLD THAD'S OPINION OF, ID AMD BRN BUTLER, them so they were constantly before ls eyes as + of Minsissippl. | OLD THAD STEVENS, United States foree ‘be sont into the territory we | in Waging @ war w.ckedly forced upon ua, without cause | Old thad, with hls and straight cleariy as if they ‘were painted upon canvas; but be | The Juckson (Miss) Clarion, edited by BE. had won from ap hh dent belligerent, to presoryo | or excuse, by the South, radicalism, has 00 bigh of course, of such men as Make nothing outof them. Gradually he began who, ® r saya, “was a general ip’ order, carry Ous the instructions of Congress and protect PUNISHMENT YOR THE MURDER OF UNION SOLDIERS. Raymond Ben answer to questions be | to comprehend them, aud he has not forgotten the pro- ns Southern paper : yim SPECIAL CORRESPONDENCE OF THE HERALD. tho loyal people and cwzons of the United States who “When I had done thus much throug confiscation to | slated that Raymond the worst ‘allure he had | positions to this day he then solved. Mr. Wade is still lerate army, that fought like a Roman Ted like a god,” is strongly urging reconstruction on — cht be found there, Butsome of our friends were eo | repar the injuries to the loyal people and to the North, | seen ju Congress, He whe maven, and Position of the Ulera Rndi- | {inpavent te got the fouthern rebels byck to sale 1 beveve Tabpuld a8 Fate Tam not oil ernie, Soe id Thad’s Vi mm Reconstruction, orage, in the forlorn of making poiliical capit ing to allow the murder. of twent thirty thou tl} a one yes » oun of 1 when they No ita dts the Datos, uns ‘Union soldiers in, the. F yea or aguecoarite ‘and | iatant under the teat A i present plan, We make some extracts from bie recen’ editorials :— e Eg g & ee Hi EB Impeachment and Confiscation=What Cou oi 1 | they lost aight of the great underlying subsiance of te |' other places, and the shooting down of colored soldiers of his most elaborate, studied iy perfumed har- * © © © The present condition of w coore We De eee eee Bacie- | ny eiieecarehing kbout alter’ ho, suadow’ of ‘ox. | ke tad do‘, 10 pass unavenged. 1 wouid create mli- Anguss, "a fem words of sound common sense would to her fo te St ord Inthe Mabublionn Mpi4, pedienoy.? lary tribuaaivat the Soutu cvarged with the spocial duty | knock him at upon bis back and leave him helpless, conlidencs, keope away capital and reduces | Laycasrer, Pa,, Juno 30, 1867. HOW TUE BILL Was BOTCURD, or lata Ugating all these offenes. We could not now | He made a poor show in Congress among earncst eve: ecessaries of life, 80 a ‘SWO OLD BOTE AT HOME—THE OLD PUBLIC FUNCTIONARY AND’ “Every now and then one or another of these de- | probably try the offenders for treasop, nor would it be | men. song. * OLD THAD. moralized republicans would tack on somblaihendinent | necessary to hang them; but I would bold the whole | | Ben Butler, to 01d Thad, is a Ty must be remem! that the arrates of th The city of Lancaster, im the State of Penney). | Conceived by a diluted phiiunvwropy, vandicalguiaied to | conquered territory responsibio tor the acts. .The so- Rite te 8 ee eseman, ‘At first,’ Contederate States: surrendered, of cd » boich the bill aud destroy its real eflcwacy, Senator | called Confed rate government mist have known of | “1 had lovked upon him as a ae United States acquired the power to the terms ¥anix, numbers among tts eighteen or twenty thousand! | Sherman, wito his usua’ meddiesowe folly, put in ajsort | these murders and brutalities, and 2 would let none of | Jt would be dangerous to measure swor reconstruction, and that there is no instrumentality, feheditants two citizens who bave figured somewhat | of enabling act, which would have. left theJoyaiista | them oi on the paltry pretéace that they were not guilty But {soon found that he hat obtained short of Divine agency, whicn can take the work of entirely ws the mercy of the rebels, if’ it had been | because thoy had nok. ben formally imdicted for the uoder false pretences. H@ is at once a. | eagpirastion Sore the ad Pladeasteye” oP pa teenth Ai men! went Louse; then he to the Soatn, vane the Present enabling acta. al his office, es the fire, sweeps it out, dosis off the Wo repost, then, that thougn these measures are prominently in the public afuirs of the country—James itor » and { ticable.”? “ red to remain undisturbed. Bat when the de- | crimes. J would put such a forfeiture on, their estates impract bots Boobaoan and Old Toad Stevens; and the'relative poal- | parched bill came. back,to the House, Shollabacger and | as would suffice to ro in some the sar- OLD ‘rap tons these two celebrities occupy at homeaffordsatalr | myself took counsel, together aud got up. several | vivors of their bratalitles and then I would cat up the Tn epeakiog of Now Mostration of the political condition @f the country and | Prepositions of amendinent calcvlated” to remedy tho | o:hor coniiscated territory {oto wmall tracts, and would pressed tue opinion. $95. he BeeaLp iy. . * Inischief that had:boen done, «1 woo: these propositions, | seli some of 1t to small capitalists, so that the south | sound Union papor in | York duriag tho roe a ef the tone of popular sentiment atthe present time. he ‘of the real evil | sould be no longer held by afew aristocrats in large | and since ita ; papers, sik Times farniture, them goes to the stabie to ‘afier bis | such as tue Southern people would have dictated, if The one, who has been President of the United States, or sher Rana Srreeear yes Ree and having ac- | manorial poms etons. = | Fibune, had blazed ip ae imtervals with a fitful light; | horses, Whea he roturns he wakes up the family, and | had pomoees the power to pI the of paren arly represents thé tank hone hen complished thia, we were giad to pass the bill in tho FARMS U8 THE BLACK TROMANRY, but the ablest and most sent Union paper ‘had, | then goes to. his study and reads uniil called to vreak- isgion, yet they have ii cont phn fides diese Oo yee chen wad; for we sew that wo had to take that | “I would also give avery aduit freodman who wea the | been the HERaip, and the Saady ability wih which 1b | fash After breakfast he ikea a walk of two miles, bud | that they'are moro favorable “\hER, which will an it exisied before the Soathera repeltion, lives in close | oy noshing. bead of a family a noldi say of forty or fi'ty | Was conducted was a matter of astonishinoat to hifs, réturns to his Cn Set reads until three o'clock in the | enforced, if they decline to reconstruct under them. yetrrement, and receives nO more notice or thought THE VEMORALIZATION OF CONGRESS—WIVRS AND WOMEN. acres, out of the ends cnt Abele. former masters, ut ‘s poo’ the prec ae ‘aarggeeery r Bak tdaite Post O03, dona hes Priel Bhocrypd ye I oy to ae shee is ba ee take be for oe 23 « a Ou becom: yu vuld ot whic! jency large jor Biate froa: tis nolgabors than does the hombledt resident of | 4, “sue ac Cougress bai as asua), become shorougaly | could pot And eyongh in the old Plantations vom Shc) | 0 osed tobe commubieatve, He regards Geuetal, | Ail leery to pe. answered at once are laid on bis table | favor of improving UNe epPO offered, while the city, The other, who would not object to being Presi- | Wastipetou and their women at home, and others thoir | ing land, so that every freedman. might remain on the | Grant asa great soldier, wao has the best position any den: of tho United States, and is the representative of | women at Washinyton and their wie a home, and it {spot were be wos alsody as be could not fina other | Mall can eree Soon ey a Bag oh gg pone “ = g1 radical Was imposeinie to keep them together. i was not } laver be courd occapy himself and support bis family by patna iam born of the rebellion, is the centre | NM iiPoesi lod, but it waa tive Lest we couid get, and | working his own farm at uome,..1 shink this would ba | for any other, He thinks a sucoms as a f aitraction to all the country round, as weil as to per- | bo wo passed it, At drat it was proposed thas Cougress | produciive of good to the whole country and to ul | senor! may be w fullare asa President, Chase he rev wens from other States, and his goings and his comings, | #houid 1sel(.name the generals who were to command | Classos of men—to the former masters as well as to ihe garde as @ Regative man, by no means popular or pow- in the diffrent military districts into which the con- | former slaves, The freedmen would then be an inds- erful Butler is @ humbug. Old Ben Wado has played Bets sayings and his doings, are daly chronicled and | 71004 verriory wasdivided; but the objection was made | pandent yeomanry, feeling tueir own freedom and man- | himself out. | In fact, it is very probablo that Ola Thad g@ssiped over, day after day, The one is the embodi- | that 1t look-d like an -nierference with the discipline of | hood and seif-retiance, wick would be better for them | Lelioves in the dumost recessosof his hoart that if, in the mont of the dead past; the other of the hving prosent, | the army. ‘then the Commauding generai was to make | than the bailot, This, sir, is what I would like tado it I | sourse of bumun events, the country should look to a ; of our {reads said, let | hve and have the power to do it Busat the presen: | Lancaster for ite next Presidont,.and should tind him in Your ‘correspondent, who reached this place a few days | the svlections; butsome of our treads snid, hve and have Por lo i p ¥ the President do it, it can do no barm;’ and so we let it | moment, eonsider.ng the ralized condition of ihe | 4 twoand, ® half story red brick bouse on South Queen ago, was impressed with these thoughts by the following || go at that ‘| republican party—for it 1s badly demoralizea—I may | street, ‘he country would do by mo means a foolish conversation, held by him with » citizen of Lancaster, | OuxGnuds TUB COLR INTERPRETER OF THE MmUTARY mI. | content wyseli with the paymont of tue losses of loyal | ‘:Dg, and would be very likely toflad “Barks willing. eon after nis arrival: “We had the tess oojection o this, inasmuch agit was | ciuzens by the war, and the provision of homesteads ‘and the rest tied in a buoch and put into the drawer | have the privilege of voting. oe 8 en the war pions the pong) iy ft'a-smal! majority compare’ thetr “over- incinnati papers, the New York Tribune, Cowles’ Cleve- | whelming vote. The ii-jodzed, though well meant, Nand Leader and the New York /nd-pend-nt are laid away | pian of Mr. Johuaon, to reorganize the excladed for bis own reading, and the rest are seat into the house | without authority of Consens, aendnaee for his family to read. Any one who notices anytuing | tween the executive and legisi thoy think he should see marks the article or paragraph, | regulted in giving to the latter the ‘and lays the paper on the tabie, and at night his wife | ing and irresistible control it now it reduced shi reads i to him, His wife, who isa reader, and a | former to the dimensions of a d' ; it most intelligent and accomptished , generally reads | latter to the pi bd a One of two hours to him every night. the unsettlement of the sectlonal troubles Mr. Wade is very fond of Nasby, and ail his letters | the anfortuvate sirife, the one the aro read at night, 90 the wiole tamily can laugh with | of popular sentiment in the Ni him, for be says he don’t like to langh alone, Comical | correspondingly ter. books are often rea@ to him, and amuse him immensely, Unfortunaeiy for the South, ‘she [ney herself to) distinctly understood thas the genertls im command in | for the freedmen. and with such miid coniiscation as f:x-Prosident Buchanan lives near this place, does he | the milvary districts bad simply to-do tue work orderad | may be necessary t accomplish thes? objecta, I sbail OLD BEN WADE. His wife, Doing @aked fora Christmas git, bougit hit | be drawn into this struggle, and 19 of! not?’ inquired your correspondent, by Cong and tha: Congress alone, and no other | not, under any ¢treuinstances, feel satisiiead with less ‘ul Mother Goose,” and be was so greatly amused with | the Executive. And jax by this ill adv step. “ power, had the richt to interpret the Reconstriction act. | than this’? : Sketeh of His Li H Hab her taste that, to convince ber he appreciated her gift, | contributed nothing towards his bathas throwm | Well, yea, Ho lives "bout a mile and a half out of 2 A Sketch of His Life and Home Huabite~ lhe toarned Tine b; 4 ins ver and over again Concress had deciared that they | Tus DEMORALIZED DODGERS IN CONGRESS—NO CONFISCATION What He Has to Say About His Ki od every line by bedrt, and insisted on repeating } obstacles in the way of a settlement ef ber, | thus,” was the reply. alone had the power to reconstruct the conquered THIS SEIN. e Oe ae ansas | isto her almost daily, Of bis periodicals the Wesl- | His arm is paralyzed; and she lies the hel) | *Ia'he at home at the present time ?”” terri‘ory; tliat no President, aud’no judges or Qusstion By Your Corr srovpest—Do you intend, Spcech—Views of the Labor Question—Fain- | minster Review, the Atlantic Mon'hly and Harper he | military despotism, wien Mr. Robert J. Walker, 4] gop’ know whother be’s.et home or not +1 courts bad any right to interfere in ‘tue busi- | Mr, stovens, to press for your mild” contiscation in | fly Anecdotes, Incidents, reads himself, and the rest are sout to the family, to be | a zealous supporter of the war against her, admits ox~) ne SUP! ne-s in any sbape or manner. It had bdeon | tuo approaphing extra session? [Correspondence Cincinnati Commercial.) marked and read as the papers. ceeds the despotism of Exypt, Syria, Turkey and Russa, pose bei herd ‘work to: drive our friend to the recognivicn | Mr Stevens--Probably not. I have takon a wide | Happemmg, the ‘other day, fo de io Ashtabula, and | AS six o'clock cash day Mr. Wade @nisbes reading his | Even this iron rule many of her pabple ave hafied) “Is nis health good nowadays ?"? of ho position tuat the South was notte but conquered | ground in stating wiuat I desire My position is that | learning we Were within ten miles of the home of Ben papers and goes to his eapper. He has not eaion any | asaboon, unl prayed that it may be coni in definitely in dread that something worse may Mont territory ouside the Umon and tho coustitation. A wa- | Liere is plenty of time im the future to complete tis | Wade, we determined to avail ourself oi au iavitation, prams oan seine, me las rae ye ponzivg, tme servias, cowardly policy was desired by | work. Tue conquered provinces wiil still be outiying | extended by that goutleman more than a year ago, to You do not appear to know a great deal concerning | sone of them, and with others, jealousy of so-culled | conqaered provinces of the United Sta:es, until admitiod | visit nim at hishome. A dusty rido over a plank road, wo disiinguished a fellow citizen, ’” lvaders, obstructed determined and straightforward | ,as States of the Union see to the coming session, I sup- | ina More vasent al in in two eae im set “ action,’ But we had compelied them to pu: tnemselv-a | “pose we shall have work enough and tronble enough, | down before the \e little village of Jefferson, Distinguished | Well, we Know that sucha mad a2 | O) record on several occasions On this important puint. | judiing from the Dai in aetting right the iischiof dous | which was the home of Josmus. Giddings, and rH dinner for twenty years contending that two m day are enough for any one to eat, and that he This apprehension may wel! be if ieeis better when ho only eats twice. The rest of fam- | pending reconstruction measures wi ily eat turee times perday, Mr, Wade canaot eat anything | has teddered to the peop'e of the excluded “— 4 cooked in grease, and the sight of butter aimost turos’ | rejected, Prem military rulo they will, in bis stomach, They bave often tried to deceive him } event, pass ander anotuer rule far more Oia Poppy Buchanan lives away out yonder, but that’s WAT THR MILITARY BILL REALLY WAS. by the President and hia adviaera, I think wo shail only | where Ben Wade for more than thirty years has resided, by puung<small particles of butter io his victuals, | rule of a class which has heretofore : a " me - L | out be. usualiy detects tue presence of grease, and | rosponsibilities of governmont, docile, about all we de know, and that’s ail anybody cares about ‘When the bil! became a law, !t was therefore simply | be able to patch up the old law, Wemay not even pave | Jeiierson is @ little inland town of loss than ono thou for Fran capuer. he welke dno milselend pa germ pe now, but who willy knowing.” the justructions of Congress to tive military agents, gen- | the power to pass a resolution deeiaring all tha’ has | sand inhabitants, and a dreary cuough hooking place to erals in the army oc tno United states wo should ba | been dono since the adjournment null and void. Suen | produce ereat men. Nevertheieas, it has furnished moro returns to his Coe Melger he locks up at dusk and joins | with enpreme control by the government Having arrived at this point your correspondent | named by the President, as to Low they were to goon | men as Schenck, Hingham and others bave no bone in | men of note than any other place in the State of Ohio u his family. He re early, seldom sitting up, even in | of wicked’men, find in tha very act of the walled off om another tack. ‘Well, x , | and do ceriam work in the conquered territory, laid | tneir backs and no biood in their veins Shetiabarger except Cincinnati, the summor, later than ten o'clock.. For more tian | these measures because of their relation’ to ir own - all, you kaow Mr. | 80d to or roee We never taught ofdelevating tue | stood almost alone in the Ohio delegatvan, for the ricst, | - We found the Venerable statesman at alaw office, sur. | ‘wenty yeara Mr, Wao has taken hisdaily walk oi four | interests a metive for the most vindictive legisieene Growous, 3 apppage fi was his Rext adestion, fight to the President, or any otter person, Jude, At. | and be made sure noble epeeches While the reconstrac. | rounded by the village lawyers, with’ whom he was | miles and itts this ‘habit that enabies nim to walk so | Tno clamor will then bo abolition of tax om persons, “Mr. Stovona—who!s Mr, Stevena?!. was the reply, | toraey Gen’ral or any ono else, to interpret the law orto | tion fight was going on, The rest wer? utterly de- | joking, Imugbing, talking and tolling orice a only an sy veh ike bee sos meni ioe apo eittion va peeenix en age heim Med Boon wn cied by a vacant expression of countena order the military commanders what to do, Neither iad | moralized, After trying every side wind and expediont | old backwoodsman can, ‘oor Mr. Lincoln, how he |’ nent Ww man) poor . get wan the conquered people any right to appeal tothe courts | to or defeat the Miltary bill, they votod for it; | loved to tell stories of the days whon ho was 4 flatboat- | business with him that has been wearied iutoa lather of | brood of agrarian schemes wil! be brought “Why, Thad Stevens, the membervof Congress, to | 14 reg, tne ‘conxtitutionality’ of the law. The consti- ailflad them doing the came again. In the | man, or spbt rails in Tiinols. so Mr. Wado wil sit tor | Sweat and had she life half dragged out of him by being | into frightful existence. be sure,” tution had nothing to do witn them, por they with it, thoy will evist aed squirm and shirk one | hours and talk of the tine when he droye cattieto New || trotted over the hot streets of Washington und around | Contempiating these horrors, the rash “Ob, you mean Old Thad!” cried the Lancastrian, || They were wala the pale of tue constitution, The | direct rarigeen of Gece i York, dug on the Eris Canal with @ spade or chopped | the departmoma, the Senator utterly refusing to ride, against acceptance of the scheme of adjustment, which r President bad. no right to tmerfere in the execution of A MARTYR WITHOUT A XICHR, cordwood in Onto, Story telling, by the way, ia de. | Nd not seoming to mind the walking or Lot sun. will asadre protection against them, declare that they brightening up with sudden intelligence, “* Well, I gu2s8 | she iaw.by the military commanders, The Attorney Gen- Qureaow-Don’t you think, Mr. Stevens, tust Presi. | ccudly a weakness of our Western’ statesmen, and ao- ‘Th> Senator $s nota rich maa, but has acompetence, | will bo resisted by.force of arma. They will ory havor, 1 do, Everybody knows him, But we call him Old | eral had no right to give any opinion ‘about what Con. | dent Johnaon desires an jtnpeachment, so as to become } thing delights them 80 much as a log cabin diuner or a | Whlob he mado by hard toil ut his profession and by | aad ouleasi the dogs of war! War! civil war! extere ‘Yad here, and we don’t know him by auy other name,’” rosa had dons or was doing. Congress bad not asked | a martyr? Hei te A Jog of forty miles in au old Tashioned four horse siage | Savius peer es remo ete epecoreage 5 per a Bry less Sour nen ot secantiine w ‘him for any opinton, Me. SP vewe—! is martyrdom isorer. He f coach, i mren here ‘You seem to think more here of Old: Thad, as you TH UNAUTHORWZED INTERFERENCE OF MA. eTaNoERy. — | already, ax muct: as he over tine Dat uo one would | Aiter introducing us to his friends Mr. Wado invited | enables him to live comfortably aiand) cntorcaio is | samme gaverament teas oversaw ive combined powers aii him, than you do of the ex-Prosident."” “Rveryihing was going on vory weil until this trick of | touob such a mariyr and put him in'a niche, us to his house, near by, and there tntrodaced us to nis | fiends, of whom he ia vory fond, ‘always has some | of the Confederate States when consolidated into a single “More of him? Well, I should say we did, Wo're! f/obtaining an opinion from x dispatatious lawyer throw | scaLousy OF WADE TUX ossTaveTION To iureacmexyr. | family, whieh consisia of a wits, to gous and & of them around: him. ;enige head and wielded with a united pu will have ‘ the country again into disorder. I }ook upon his action | Quranos—You think, then, that resolution of im- | daughter in-law, who 1s the wite of bis eldest son, Gen- Mx, Wade was bora at Feeding Hills, {0 1809, | nized and piecged itselr to maintain the State | democrats, here, in the city; bat thed we know Poppy | in the maiter as whoily impertinent, unaithorized and peachment cond not now be carried? % eral Wade. ‘and {¢, therefore, sixty-seven years of age; but he is so | ment which you will vainly.and madly strive to ¢ Buchanan's played out and don’t amoant to anything. | inofrial, being a con:ipaation of the usurpatiou of tie | dir. Stayuns—Lthiui nol. Tt would be defeated on ac- | Sir. Wail lives In 8 white frame house, hid away | hale, Lephpareimartrdgrenieerhrgyinpen did M Upe leerty Oo” Muha ang ag Mog IP aa Bat as to Old Thad, while we mayn’t like his polities, | President when be a ce torbitid up States out of | count of jealousy on tho part of the opponents of seni surround: fifty, He bas nota gray hair in his pead, his mind ts | of races,” as ‘was mero bh fo an-/ i the conquered territory ef the so-calied Uonfederacy be- | tor Wade” The contest berween Wade and Fessenden ieee, ond. anes tapeatins than, Wheres, wpe, apd be San | chor yous hanes Semeeece is 2 yord| we know he’s allve and that ho means work all the ? ~“ aati! shoot a rifle With almest any wan In State. He | as numerous. as y armed aod sig fore Congress bad taken action thereon, for the Presideucy af: the Senate was a very bitter one, y hunting and fisning, and is of hols power of bet whin WHAT TAD @TRVEN3 WOULD DO IN CONGRESS Tims Extra | and personal feelings and motives will 1ntersere to pro- Preyer Ayan orp tari a en 5 nae up by the whole p derail gqvern~ ) This satisfactory information having been elicited, Feet a ee Sra ais aialtks te that he was 8 coarse, ill-grained. hard-hoarted man, but | 4 (earful ‘will rest pon the heads of cout ad “If Thad my way in Congress.” continued Mr. Ste- | for a single day. After Wade's election, Bini never was there ag mistako in the world. Wheo ‘rash counreliors who would. preci your correspondent ascertained the looation of Old vens, “I would dociare every act that had been done by | Maine, said on the floor of the House, “T! the Sonator, we found two roome, the walls I.aed from pitare the ‘Thad’s residence, and waited him for th - 4 y i in debate, he was harsh and unmerciful to his opponent; | try into an abyss so fearful to conte: wh jence, upon him for the purpose The Prenideat or his Cabinet, or his lexal adviser, since | will pevor voto impeachmont. We don’t epee Nag ny Pali ro t24 bot when ‘of-doty” there wad mo mote gens, pened pit Scape tnin 1 We Od of learning his views on the present condition of the es naneneaeet gress, in eeaeee to the ques. | Bon Wade's ‘Shelly waggers’ around the White Howse.” tion of reconstruction, # nullity, and an impertinent an¢ | It ie this sentiment that will defeat impeachment, reoonsiraotion question, and op the course proper, 12 | ynuathoriged interference with and oncroacnment ivou | Kvery 1 ttle tricky politician who wants thia man for & his judgment, to be pursued by Congress in the new con- | tho powers and duties of Congress; aod I would forh d } postmaster or 1! bie, and doos not flict forood upon that branch of the government by the | @y person—military command r oF other—to oney nay | tuink Bon Wade will give him what he wants, will Lidouen of the Feaaisbht 004 tle Vabliek: orders or ipstractions that might tssue from the Prosi- | oppose it, panionable or agreeable man than Ben Wade, He ia, in | measures which they suggest as @ last resort — every sense of the word, an hone-t mag, and degpises a Vl “ be a pom When enraged, Be i Referring to ex pipers’ ‘States Senator Hil’s otes | fariously, but is always ready to apologize or repair | © the Sitvation,” columas of which are flooding) any wrong he may unintentionally do He is a | Georgia, General Barksdale snys:— strictly temperate man, and bas never been known in ‘Tho uewspapers are pablishing a Of articles om charts, aud isthe most complete in the country, em- bracing all toformativn concerning the government from its foundation to the present day. gutter,” “Madison's Notes,” **Knox’s Repors,” and many other books long siace out of print, can be found dent I would go further and pass a separite GRRELET'S DIFHWATER IN NEW YORK. ‘there, ‘On TMAD's KEALTH. sek ceut, in witch I 'pould distinctly “enthoarore | Quearione Wasi do you think, sic, ef the condition of |” A carpet lounge, an ‘old fashioned arm chatr, a few’ |’ bie wudleti(sto be wader te iaduence of igacr: He" ‘the situation, by the Hos. BB: ot We Oia Thad—to adopt is Lancaster appellation—resides | *ho should be registered and who stowld he | the republican party in NBw York stato? common chairs, a table and some maps on tie wail | bas been aSoustor at Washingion for sevepieen oars, | dad wottius in tase etuie cameo: || disfran-hised im the conquered ‘ieory. © That would MR. Srevers—I thivk you will bé killed by completed the furniture of tue rooms, which seemed and.was four yours a senator, and several years | sented previously in better style by the antl-Reconstrace | - State Judge. His uuswerving honesty and great talents | tion journals of the day. 1p taking his ete ‘egainst | have made bim tue leader of his party ia the national | the settiement of the sections! strife, Mr. Ri! EX a) to) | Capitol, aud :ast winter he was chosen President of tne | his destmy. Since Governor Joe Brown: for Senae aud acting Vice President of the United States | governor, sore years ag), be has laid it down uaa rule |, 4m ® plain, subsiantial, two and a baif story red brick | serve to protect tne military olc@s who aro intrus vaiien in New York "Your repablicans are hoes on Soath Queen street, in the city of Lancaster. with the duty of carryiug out the instractions of Cou- | Indo would call ‘mighty ancertain,”’ y 1t has originally been two houses, now knocked into | Stee and leave no doubt as to the meaning of the law. | boldne-s or settled principle, Your last year's platform dreary and lonely enongh in their isolated solynde. Rogging us to he seated, the Seuntor at once began to us avont his lave trip West anA the imaense covairy THE IMPEACHMENT OF THE PRESIDENT, was ono of the most ubsard and covaray that enald be | be bad travelled over. The towns, cities, roads, land, ope, the smaller being used as the owner's law offices cn , * " n timber, mit \—ali be had a we In the evont of the death or rémoval of Presideut Joba- | of hia conduct ta take opposite himom | “That might answer well enougn for the present extra | adopied in # country runving rapidir bo sud Ds een tenet rosa Seay power a ‘oan S SS | som, Mr. Wade would succced him in office His weil | all subjects. Whovtever Brown is Hie enc the larger as his dwelling, About the doors, at | session, provided the couniry is willing to go on tor ley has cenerally spit. upon such platforms; out T ‘imoat ‘any bour of the day, may be observed somo | ome little time longer with aman at the head of the pose ho will be for a Bull moro diluted ove nex, vent, Pe ig gt organ tome | SoRerament, ioirsted wiih the execution of the laws, | Your represeuladves are not reliadie. I look upoa lweal and some visitors from a pend + ft who, as soon a8 Conrréss bas ) assed acts and brought ‘be | La‘llin a8 an eutiroly demorsize! man. Most of the loan: and some | viaitars (from a distance, | all | couquered torritory in'o suijaction io the Union, uemw ail | othera are no etter than ne. Conkling has hitherto the leader of the extreme aie Winget Cong? h | te means in hts power to deteat the wo'l known and ac. | been true, and I hope ho will cantinae so in his new ne leader of the ¢! me radionl wing of Congressionsl | Knowjetged object and invention of the taws, and to hul- | position, I betleve New York will be lost this year bg known ability and long experience in pubiic affairs have | wanis it dirty undorstood that qualified bim ‘to fi ony position, aod he has hosts of | the war, when Brown and A Hy iriends all over the Union. atwny think he wiil be | certain peace measures in the Lope age ihe nominated for the Presidency in 1603, and if be ts of tarminatrne it on terms favorable ® the wit make a stroug run, and we sual give him our v was a furions and persistent Aat{-Oom) a with pleasure; for we Tea'ly Know of ne one who would | he was se ampion of Davie’ wo have never seen equalied. Phe Pacilic Raltroed ex- cited bis enthasiasin, ant be emphatically pronounced it one of the greatest enterprises of moder ames. He gave us minute account of the man er and dy with which itis balit, The roadbed men, the tlocutiers, supply trains, the raiimea, the spikemeu, the measurers, ray republicaniom. Oid Thad’s health has been much im | {ify ail that the legislative arm of thy government ‘ant of arnestness in the cause, and by the disnwater | ali appeared visibly before us, aud wo were soon ¢ make a betier Prosident than simple-hearted, soul | tration ae supérsery crate, He we Pal od by bie exertions in last summer's seesion oc Cu | Gone, Mf the comry wanta ech a man at ied heat | yehich bes beco throws Iouadtiy Gresley eT GUN | Gioced tat Afr. Wade bad’ sten more in his one minded, geatat and nonost old Boa Wade, 8. HL FP, eal of ® new convert undertook the Wi of gress, and while he has been carefully recraiting hun | which Day candid'y [do not, aithovgh T have spaxen | Smith. West (han we had in tareo trips aud a coneiderable resi- SS EE it throngh enccessfully in Georgia, over the sei for the approsehrug Wastington campaigo, be | put itcie about itnpeachment), then, I repeat, the action CORREPTION IN PENNSYLVANIA dence there to boo', POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE. heads of Messrs, Stepaons and Brown; but broke mown, con:.oues toable, aud his friends are apprehensive of | | have stated might suitice just at the presenttime: Hut | Qrremox—Is the republican pariy woil nusted in Penn. | We asked Sir, Wale about his Lawrence specch, apd signaliy faied in ihe edoth | He is nom figuring baa ¢ i he rye Kap to prevail at (he | if tne people ayree with me in the desire to put aman in i happeniog to have a New York Pome in cur yp The Presidency. extensively a: it = omy mneting. Ie ae S ee DE among | the Exeeative positwn who will faich(ully seo the te hal! lowe Pest we read te him tee report of the speech Im thay paper » pavel —' “Opi ing Proves an acces them strive to dissuade bim from attending tue extra | of the United slniea-cncvoted, 0b 0) simeraad wade all nk wo hare ris t and what the editor said of it WALT tha: Condhdron The Bestop Sasser pe ee la sattling dows 1 Gig to the adit weil but their eforts aro Wie; (or notiiag bat | crcumsances, and who will not seek to usarp (he of the readiag the old Senator laughed b and | #0 Completely in favor of making General Grant our pext | pray to be tpared from U @isability wil! Keep him frou | powers and obstruct ihe action of toe national Congres, aid: — President, that the frionds of many gentlemen are | ° | be seat in the House of Represeutatives oa tho first | thon we should at once impeach and remove Andrew “That ts a very garbied account, and the editor por | aiming the right to namo a candidate for the Vice Governor Perry Again, i i i South Caroliaian bas published an- | | Wednesday in July. Jou ” ‘ 1 Ww if retin the Doves ‘pedpie ia the i posely “uieundersiauds me. Why, sir, if you would | © . ‘ i. pANNOTANOHS PROM IMPERTINRYE VIRITORS. did deinenen de ceaaiccal Siege eee patty aaiuolo dictribauion of at the’ property in ao. | Presidency to be placed on tho Grant ticket, They’il | This lrrepressitie © ‘ sat, Sab ave ld Thad, baying been informed of the obj ct of your | Your correapondent here asked Mr. Stevens if tha re- ha do mot Suppose that you ena beat Yew | Uasiied Staten to-day among the poople, in ue years it | fail, Tho mame of the second man ov that ticket bas pot Lert vee pio dole: «J erne™, agalvefa Stain convention’ and always remomber ‘has would again be in the bands of a few men. ‘Such a ‘ jusasace would Bot De just, nor would it be ot eny prac. yet been published, unless Genera! Witson’s name be an : mean? teabie sdvauiago to the poor people if done, ihe | excepuon.”” The Titusville (P's.) Herald nominates |. this ia a white man’s nyanet: _ cine eaitors and corr-epondenis wii have been writiog about | General Grant for President, and Hon. Galusha A. Grow | Fecent opinion of Attorney Gener Dery, whedor- | tay cpoeoh know very well 1 am not ia favor of suct a | ror yige Président: ‘The Wilmington (Dol,) Commercias | *OC says: nould be adverss pion, do you? Gucrespomdout’s visit, very courteously expressed bie | port of the Judiciary Committes, if i © with this move- Mr. Srevere—I thin willingness to lay before any represeniaive of tho ad . invertor Ficratr bw full'vidws of the present status Of the revot |. 1o,/mpeactment, would not interh tates and of the policy Which, a8 @ representative in , ” . Congress, be should advocate wader the present PY ag Sag cey Stl ye ono ps ee we could. Cameron hat his fourteen votes th hia f Con- | Legrsiature. He had broadest grounds for tbe | the close of the election, bat soon after he had Phare of the reconstraction question, impexchmeat of Andrew Johnson, in his unlawful ogar- | Ooe man now claims $50,000 for eervices, and thoy | fovlsu tuing as the disirivuvion of property or of dis- ight gleam of sunshine “When | visted by 8 gentleman, and from | jstion of the government of this conquered territery | refuse co pay him This eurrapton will certainly beat | turb.ng, 18 any way, property rights.” nominates General Gfant for President and Hon. W. D. ha black ol ae tranny, pie poeoig By hove ee calico aon Mr Stevens, to raise up States, therein, without (he | us here next election, unless we draw out the republican We thou asked him tf be Would vot contradict the er- | Keily for Vice President. The Garrisbary (Pa.) Telegraph | ered over ‘i Ponthorn States during the past alt have bo concealmenis to make Bub I a | gutuority or action of Congress, Ia this ibe Prosidont | strength by guiting up os furor aud excitement on iin. | Foncous reporis made o8 lis speech, He raid:— age * May yet bo welhif, Wo: voluntaril; our- | Srequoutly annoyed by persons whom I do not | wag as rank © USUrper as Was (meer OF Cromwell. Tho | peachmeni. Geary, too, hurts us very much, THe san | “No; I don’t care what they say about me. I never selves by nveong the been a | @esire to see, and who have po right to trouble | aciion of the Judiciary Committee has beea simply | unhappy fallure, and Nia omnavion was ap unforta read uigown speeches, of comradict anytuing tha: m| We are inclined to the opinion that the crisis ia | Sesee st. vauimg fot & cow i Me sib their presence, Not many days a fossy, onneecesary and absurd. There was no occas\« thing fur the pany. said about them.” national affairs to which we are fast vorging will pro. | Goranca, ‘ Southern editor, a he called himself, in to take any testimony whatever on the sadject of 1m- THR EXTRA ARSON OF COLORES, “Bat,” said we, “what they are saying about y: hos 00 eae OB te mee tebe neds. the Gates = Laan tyranny. i forged hie way into my roum, im company with @ citizea i. ‘Sho documents and the facts wore evi Qemriox—You have no doabt of a quocam at Wash. | speece is injuring your prospects for tho Presidency the republican party for the Presidency, A great leader, liberaely | whee Revor voluntarily seek, by following te ugh, They should not have called a witnors, Tie langhed heartily, aud tepiied—‘My dear sir, Ido | Yet uonamed bat living for usefulness, will be brought | fought pallaotly eer ght hw card upto’ me, before Thad | ime have reported that Congress bad quite eafficent ai, Atona time T thought we | not sesk that oifice ’ 1 never sought any office, and | Ot im ume and prove himself capable of guiding we | of" patie, should not ‘| to decide whether I would seebim or not In aa mpeachment, if they desired to take that Lora, wrote some time sinco | Mover with J have served tne poopie oniy becauss they | nation out of the difficulties into which it has penee, take counsel from ious manner he put question after question ta sae, +} ‘p the encroachments and usurpation: of | to the Chairman of the Jodiciaty Coanmittes, who ix op. | wished me 10, aud not of my own Choosing. It is tuirty | plunged im order to screen our worst enernion, atricken with thelr ow ' “ ~ my heal a sontae badly the President, ch were, 8 matter, not of oral teati- | posed to imsenenmont and did hot want a July meeting, | years wince, began puolie life, Taman old man, as | 4s this “great leader” Simon Cameron? must bs @ reaction at | iy mm wanes com mony, but record feking bim to pabiisn a letter cailiog for a full attend- | you need ‘ party is daily increasing in. Spewored a fow he continued th his lawyer like cross. :q@ IM/BACIMEST TO BR PROCEED AM A DOTY. face of mamabiea: Det be replied at tie wo |. Tuisceruiniy true that Mr, Wade has never sought | the Atlanta (Ga) Era gives the following reasons for LR ie wowed Heaven. | erammation beg Pty eine informed him that I found Qrre tx cy Your Conmmaroxpaxt—shall you propose | put his vam: in the papers, I wrote to the Speaker to | otiice, ule election tm all cases having been the volun- | #upporting General Grant:— suitdtionsl huerty and. self-Row Mt nec ne Se ae bes ma oo he followed me | an impeachment of the President at tuis coming extra | urge him to do ile same; bat he replied that he bad | tary action of tue people or their representatives, Wo Ho is @ national man. Ho bas all his life heen re- | elections will swoep the biack republican party out of “py hes Ne he published a wen iy @ Philad oo stmion pee. } pinks woes nears ae vers aud ren watin favor of pen panama he ae oo te grea eanges one po map = bene a yor jou above the ioftu- | existence. abou! ir. VERS —| an impeachment as a | an oxtra session. I thea patonta few letters myse'l, jador question, groat ences tical etrito, and is, therefore, free from we Columbia. Phoniz refers letter ecrviow,, Comiaining & few words of truth and @ great | matter of daty and con IfT can find a mayor pad since then T see the Spuacer apd Others have de- | eitiong other tuings, “that eystem of labor witien de- Preiadions and animosites conseuueat, upon thers, = ec) tae ome qe emnpeay en in Congress who wili sustain it, 1 shall vote an impeach- [ clared in favor of a session. grades the mau and elevates the nlike any old politictan who might be elevated to | lows:— FRA STATOS OF THE KECK STATES-THR BLUNDER OF THE | ment of Androw Jonnson and his trial Just as soon as iho THE MADICALS CONTENT WITH THR MILITART Law, Lue rich and tbe poor ( the Presidency, he has ‘no friends to reward, no ene- Wo pubdlich this morning «1 Istter from the Ma ET ATA on of your correpent O04 Tana | (2BF cea bo organized, in order to pat oui of the way at | Qresriox—Were you and your frienda disposed to be | very soul out of the poor man for a pi es 0 punisi.’? His services for the Union, and bit | on. B, F. Perry. It ma courtesy ‘bis position and e pr A Ah rote hare pi lent, ‘once a hich official who, through bis position, is obstenct- | satisiied with the Military law before the Attorney Gene. | wrong. We must elevate tho laborer at tation are sufficient t@ carry him unaat- | his former services to the Siate, but say, fravk- ad position on the subject of the statas of | ing the work of Congress, defying the laws of the United | ra! and Prestdent inierierod with tho action of the mili- | sare in the proceeds of bis labor. ”* mous'y into the Presidential o%i-e, unineambered by | ly, that we pubiish this letter with the cx-redel States: — Stater and destroying the county. tary commanders under it? how that was to be done, and he said:— ; his record being the only pledge we may be to any Chg or “Whee the revoiiion first commesteed I was in favor - OLO THAD OW “30D CONPTSCATION.’’ Mar. Srevava—Yes; and we were willing to await the ‘| don’t know; I have thougnt mucn upon the subd- peop! require. our columns agains: the utterance i ef Wentiog it as a rebellion and ai nghogaiets in it ae QveTIon—Do you still adhere to the policy of con- | action of the conventions beld under it going any not solve it. Tne man who successiuily Elected and supported oe independently | adverse to our own, to the peloy thas traitors to the government of the Vaited States, liadieto | fiscavion? farther. Of course the aciion of the contentious was | soives that problem will do more for the world tnan way | of the usual totrigues of int ‘iticians, and m- | we beileve is the only true ‘conservative pen s>ment for their treagon. It was #0 anderetand in Mr, Stevges—I look on the leading robels of the South | not to be considered conclusive, because the judgment | man that bas lived in it since the days of Corist ” directly to the people, Genorai Grant would | line of action that South ‘or the: Seagress, nod I suppovedt [t was so undersiood by Presi- | ag great criminals, woo have not yet expiated their | of Congross had to be passed Materwards Ifibe ‘We asked nim if le had go ideas about tue matter? free to select (he soundest staieemen and truest patri- | Southern States should mider con ' ent Lincoln and bis Cadinet, After tho adjouroment | erimes. They bave entailed upon the loyal poople, by | law was fully and fairl out, that was all wo “Yes,” he repied, “many, but none worthy of #0 | ots for his constitutional advisers, wchout regard tothe | pursue, And we would say, Pelation 6” : of the firet setaion of Congress during Mr. Lincoln's term, | their volumiary and wicked acta, moch suffering and | asked There werd sof it which we very much | greata subject. I believe, However, that the shadow of | section whence they come, or past political associa- | this communication, that, Ih err mt, it ie shorty wler my return to my home, | eaw, tomy sur- | sorrow—the loss of millions of crensare and hundreds of | disliked after Sherman bed injected bis conservative | whe groat struggle is upon as, aod we fMust moet it | tions destitute of any argument te '# position. pre. a proclamation declaring a blockade of all the} thousands of hvea They have done this in the very | portion into it; bas this waa remedied by Sheliadargor's | ihere is «deep discontent among the masses, wud they Martinily edacated by the Union, he is emphatically | in urging the people of South against @ Foe: porta. This was # grant bienter and absurdity.) If | worst cause that could be concetved-—tn an attempt to | amendments, dad we werd disposed $6 go on and me | wit! suortly demand that their condition be wade more | the child of the Union, and foros it with all the ardor | convention, when it ie conceded otevery tiade doe rebel States were etl in ibe Uniow, and only in | break up & noble, beneticeut and tree goverameat, | what the conquered provinces did under the law before | comfortable. Bovh in th * couatry and ja Engiand there | of a gratefal son. Having given his services to it and | of opinign that euch a conventies” held in thie uable revolt againet the government, we Wore | They have waged pon as a Sacrantiy unjust war. Taucy | we propered anything cise. We su) they would | to restiesaness, a feverish excitement, a disconteatod- | risked bis life to defend and preserve tt, be wil! not joug <Ad/ng Ourwelves—bie Kading toe ports of (he Uaited | deserve to bawe imposed upon them the heaviest | have cot through fn all the territory ‘the adjoura- L ettrio ited shis at cuce to the locompr teamanship of Mr. Seward, and wou i. | penaltis of war, now that they are conquered. Hat a to Washing- | they are our couatrymen, | woold be mercicul ta them, mout of tho ext regular Congress, ADOLISMING THR EXISTING REOEL enjoyment, They are casting about for relief trom their | dimimisied heads, and disunion sentiments would be | of the Attorney. aie, Q é nese with their lot among the poor Classes that we can- | tolerate the present practical dieumon, Disunioursts, ey Governor Perry the “bright not disregard, The people want more recreation, more | whether in tbe South or North, would soon te their | gleam of sunshine” the ovinwa We ‘Congres soe and talk with Previjent Linco!n on the » I would not take thet lives, and I would not bergar and Qrrsrios—Shall you favor this sosaioo the divtinct and | mouotonous amd half starved condition, and they will | forever Copperbeadism and radicaiiom fm the | be ory short to-day ip. Led my views before him, nnd told vim thatthe | opprees them. But, if I haa way, I would at | entire abotishmeat of all the existing State governments | bave it" North. avd those who, im ine south, covertly favor die- | special session, Ce ee ode was @ stultifcation of the former pos the very Jeast impose opon the fich mea of | ip ihe so-called rebel states? We related to Mr, Wade Horace Grectey’s pian of ¢o- | unon by opposing the oes oe for raconstraction, | by that body serqom, wilt it gowernmedt in relotion to the rebel <taies; the ex rebel territory those who bave eome out of their Ma. orevews—Yos; that will be meceetary under the | operative iabor, and asked what be thought Of it and | wilt enc all recerve their warrant, aod be buried ac pus do more—wiil tee ‘gorts, ‘ustend of beine Ddlockaded, should bave Kked sirnggi¢ Win large weato—a mild confiscation, | Presiden: ‘on, Tdo not conmider shove governments | what was hie opinion of Mr. Greeley, im the same grave, never ww be resurrected. Rut wile en and © saficient number @f ermed | ruttictent to repay the loyal men of the S#utn all ther | legal wt all. Woe supposed them to be ali virtually adol- He sand :-=‘‘ar, Gresley 18 8 wise mao; be bas done | withering vengeance would thas be visited upon the enue Veessle sent oul on the etas pre- | lave lost by comfieeation at the hands of the rebel*, aod | ished by the. Military No one but Congress some very toolish things; but he po has more | evemies of- the Union, the magsanimity of the tree had authority to form any” fovarnmants at al} in the con. | Koowiedge on alt subjects thay any man vo is Conary. | soicier and successful captain would be extended cheer. smigging. 1 pointed ext to him sho fact | Noriuorn men al ihe damages they have sudered Shat bP the act of bintkadd| we frecogaized the | robel raids and iovasions There are thirty or fo quered territory. Congress could authorize such Ttuink weit of bis pina, avd the idea of co-operation, if | fully to ali who should ground arms and retarn to thyr Stanbery, ine revel Sines aa an independent beliigeren', and sbou'd } thousand rca rebels im the conquered territary whove | as it might think proper to act for them, aad | r carried out among the Working clases, wil do much to | fidehty, Men who have received « milli education have apelied @ conduct the war, not as if | woalth would sulloe to pay these claims aad yet not | tary commanders were in fact the agents of Congress, | ame irate their eandition.”” He then went on to sbow | are proverbial, ns a class, for high-senied honor and officer Log & Fevelt IO OU OWA Siales, Out in | leave them beggars. These classes of cuderers by toe | not of the Presid iu Cinctunav, New York, Boston and other pices, | magnanimous dispositions, and may be implicitly reied te be makes 1, ave Wit the law of mations, war dave Bo other means of hope of obtaining Tepy 18 STANHERT TO nr ? king men bad combined, started manufactories and | on in all the Pom kh ‘ife, That General Grant tz @ bave- aid de. Lincoln, when he bad heard my re- | ment for thei loaves, and jt is Dat just thas they should Qoeeroe—Shall you take any action for the removal | were doing well, He showed bow, by tne principle of | representative of hiv profession, ia known io alt ag to his at & Lact. ‘he port now, but I don't | be tepatd of Attoraey General Staabery from the Cabinet this ses. | co-operation, laborers in large fagiories gould butld | with whom he ever came in contact, and especisiiy 4 bound to scout (he law onetivms, and I thought is | MODERN rulLonOrMERS AvD ParLawrunorsts—cameuty axp | sion for aa unwarranted imerference with tte Recon. | oF rent houses, Keep little sapply stores, ‘bay goods ta | those Sa. te fortunes of war placed iv bis pow under the OBRRIT srry. struction law? aentities Tor their famiiies, and im various w: General almost surrounded (ue now caciaded ‘will be. avout of@4bied of What it now costs ibem to live. | States, and by fotce of numbers competie: walt Mr, Wade, ‘the principle of co-operation iS | now the people are gathering in ther might, and soon” as I have cot, and, though certainly good in | Le will be “compassed about’ in euch a way am iteoif, It will not cover the whole case, and still some bw eurreaderho their will, There is no thing more will be required." sens ane pee ot Mareh, a aoe . ‘I should “Indeed, it would be thought that no just man could \rreader; supposed you would have seen tne diflculty at | Object to this policy or hesitate in carrying it oat, There Joyal citizens bave suffered severe iow and damage, and |,’ replied Mr. Lincola, ‘Tim a enovgh | have oven beggared by th ir. If we bad been gat Western jaw court, I sappose, : we dou't | ing o foreign enemy, in_ our treaty of peace we should au Ma, Sravere—T have not made up my mind to that ro Tadeod, I have not thought of it jo not know i” Theaters Sat poeta at all. we at authority there is veh ‘member of ‘he Cabinet 1 sappose we the Of nations up the ey have eeon that these sufferors were made whole, But ee re, olfice of Attorney General; but this We calied 00 the atteation of the Senator the fact that | inaugaration B Grant, ae new all ‘ ut 1's | the conquered territory not betng a foreign, independent | probably would not be desirable. IT Log Tebali be for Untied States, : Gone cow and can’t be Lelped, #0 we mus got along a4 | government, we make 00 treaty of pence, and, In leu of | Jetting hin romain where ho i; Tshad favor e Lee all, then, everywhere, who would . ay Pe ve cam. @ treaty, I propose to require that the rica rebels | declaration that his interference tm this matter is linper- soldier aad @ truly national man, to do fal “Io thie Mr. Lingoln wasright The biender had been | ahail pay these losses out of heir super | tinomt and nuatthorized. He can only be regaried, ¥ Justice to all the peopie of ali ibe ‘o eommitied and Uce rebel Staves were tienoviorty an ins | fucus wealth. The government cannot pay | however, asa mers instrament or tool of the Prosident. | laborer the Pi offies, raily to General negroes got bold of thé idea almost immediate: rf depoadent beiiigeront Not en independent nation. of | them, and the eofferers must get remuneration this was REVIEW OF 18% SITUATION, course, but an Independent belligerent, to be deat with | or not at all, This is eo fait and just that tuere wou! Querox—If T understand you corréctiy, Wr. Steve {via most wonderful they should #0 soon have compre. a-nsninatpeeiaiaianaaal am accordance with the law of nations, be no opposition to it bat for the bew-fangled doetm: the basis of your action now dna beceatter wit lie in tho | bended 1. Why, sit, when I was @ young man 1 THE CROPS ON LONG ISLAND. THE BTATOS GF THE AX REBFL STATES of the modern philosophers and philaatiropiaw wee fact that (he rebel States are territory, with. | worked on @ farm for ton doilare @ month, and it pever ana This being the Case,’ comtinued Mr. Stevens, in eab. | thrust themselves forward as tho evampions of the con- | out the paie of the constitution ited States. and TO THE Ei ‘THe HERALD. rn terowm LL, July 6, 1967. Knowing the lively interest you take in the interest of the country at large 1 would submit the following to en: regard to the growing crope om Long Island :—-Having bis ¢iews om the \bor had timo for ihe past few daya to carefully ¢xamige the romarkable and striking, De bad state of the crops 1 found thom all doing well, with tbe Pincce, “as soon as the War was closed by the triumph of | quered revets, and, reviving the old copperhead cry, de~ the Osion arms the rebel Staves became eCvhing more | clare that the North waa ae mach responsible for the fren lowe than the conquered territory of the United | war ae the South. This morbid pesemartey, by be. Bt of. To every respect thay were jas} as much @ubject | friending great criminals sod ameailing the 5 , hee te ber conquerors as though they Led been previously | done much to demorsiize the country ; for the moment @ i reign country. The consitution, whicd is the basis | we aduwit flat the war wey not & Vile War, an Hn o6t Of o8f ow voverament, Ind cee to do with tuem. ‘War, 6 reckons, wholly neweoertary 994 Creel wor on Whe bad the power—i Poagress bad the power—to | he part of the Cours, we deprive euseeives of the ).cbs subject to rach laws as the think proper to padet that you «itt Souder a pone dnty At this jou to present a direct resolution peachment ; bat that rou do not anticipate ite on @ count of the demorsiieed conaion of republican party ia nce aut thai, (herefore, comented for the preehnt witt rendering the mend! Of the reconetra~ ob Jaw specie as to yours aed powers of the all.

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