The Sun (New York) Newspaper, December 4, 1866, Page 2

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He takes the ame THE NEW YORK SUn. |!" Shines for ATL” in the proclamation fasued by my predeces | sor on the 22d day of Septem! proclaimed anit deel heretofore, the war will | sury @ surplus year ending J| that the recoipte w taxation ean be 1 tion of our rev ent with the put ha modifien laws as will be ¢ PURSDAY MORNING, DEX MIGSSAG IE. te the Thirty ‘The Election. | reasonable ants of the Government ccond Lesston ich States that | exch within the ope t to exelude the nent adverse ri tion of | Moi ‘ of the | of France with a prop ongroas may deom proper | ment until @ inutual work w forfelt Fecate or chicas t. A breach would re * Etnperorand people of France warrant 9 m- | hope that the traditionary friendship by {a not op. | tween the two riew might in that undertaking be renewed and permanently restored. with | A claim of a citizen of the United States ttled | for indemnity f jiations committed on the | the | French authorities, in Meh | the exerc se of a belligerent power againat », las been met by the Government ition to defer settle: nvention for the ad re of claim | justment of all claims of citizens aud sub to the lands and of title te the lands convey A which re: | vent ware on thia ( the several lines of the Pa. with extinguished sampled vigor and auccess, our, it is confi this great thorough © the expiratic Mectiog of Congress ted hy the Exe vn and time members to seats in imbs of other surg mnend to Con this resent time, itis | mate of military It is stated in sa matter of nai ne taken changed by t h f two hundred a rations had | { ger—the right of exclusion will be no dred and fifty-on one hundred makes it the duty of th to the consilerat thenaures we be sl President to recon vice is thirteen tho | activity aud vigilance all The squadrons, and their results of our > Meneure More iE pnsisderation aotind policy, and equal | hiv {loyal members unrepresented Staten. mate the work of peratively dem justice, than the a as would best and protect that was within tho seope A Call to the Beneyolent. wnilinterests of | ereising exclusive of Government test demand ia » harmony, and fra Te would tend greatly to renew | the contidence of the Ameri We know that wre laid up until t Most of the iron: vn to Cougress of Representatives from t citizens wh thus sire a chang ity of the General Goy * ation, and enable ux to show of the Nay and we must exy Paeee ceeeitution, | Hation. and enable ua to show f the Navy cleetions, re mont founded yple, and eat lished upon the principles | lie ata y, Justice and intelli edt strength refragably ¢ argnments a L for the iron niadod that the nonatrate the law There Ys perl distributes more of Republican Imiasion of loyal ty in the wor it of members frou the if this distr T laying doubt and apprehension, made to the deserving aloue there would be no cause for suttering in New Yo it in well knows that there is nocity in the w Naval Pensior having been inere the the Senate, th condition of inducing emigration those States priations made the elticient the bexevolent are so grossly imposed upe yu of 6, and this evi Lao much to the nation and the avery within the or any place ly know how they From the littl the door in the morn beggar who comes nthe devastations of war Lal traces of our done sin behalf of this des ehashed to board (which are usually to the favorabl organization of domestic i congratulation stitution of that no | eit In our efforts to p tor General pre coudtition of had existed promptly and safety, or among the nations, hi hilanthropi sition aud deceit se, there is much nation from perils of threate wort to consolidation, repudiated all preteud to use their eb obligations created procurement of the revolution howing an excess of the latter of $060,003, the reeurrence of similar having terminated, all ocension xercise of powers of doubtful. eon stion Was mi Province of Newtoum any of these States gee Ms on to expect tha o ean and yet will nents through tly jected line of telogray ka and the Russian pe y pared with th one-tifth per cent between Kins pos in Ameri mont in the way been communicated to the States w Wwe maintain intereours justly the subject en renewed congratulations of ror of Russia, h whieh pplaint on” ou: of Reprosentatives and of twenty members in the but by the refusal of | gratity | Cares of public life by which free ne hundred a ‘The Control lership New Yous, D words to bis coun as to the from ed to Unet huni To keep in all things | within the pale of our constitutional powers and eberish the rock of safety exponditiiros, of $8,410,181 railroa‘l routes is thirty-two thousand and | grateful appreciation and the annual transpor 5 huudred and nine by him with expressions of | candidate of rds the renewal aud nL believe you migh to contrad: Federal Union Asso the Tax payer Federal Union were proseribed by yetwo miles tation thirty million six f their Cou- | thousand ause for dine inhabitants adventurers migration of freedu 1 the true princip! stitution, wad of steamboat three huudred and forty transportation sted sum as one which against the pro 1, would reduce ive than that from which Assurance dd from the government of nuatured neither its It is a ques consideration, whether Independence action of the atriotly coutined to the sphere of appropriute duties three million four sand nine hander mail service ix land sixty two miles, idly increasing thronghout the whole country, aud its steady extension in the Southern improving ¢ presentation A nor our Union preserved invasions of the rights and pow In thas attempti overninent. stron Its true strength consists in lea States as much as in making itself but in its beneticen all bave at le tion worthy of your our laws upon this suly i or punishinent of the crime also erita attention partment of Gre A upon a prel The Post Oftice Do t Hritain and ourown have nary basis for a new ention, which it is believed will al to. the commer 1 States, inas v reduction of the inter ing individuals to themselves not in its power the right of of Congress ; Tu the month of April last, as Ci urrangement gress is rests of the Unit ontemplates its protection the binding the Sta President of the drawal from I States for t Mexico of the tinobstructed amendment of Phis withdrawal | 2" Iments, the would her countries to aud from denee is transmitted in the British mail, | first «1 mails throngh the United King stu blishiment arges for the sea fected in three e withdrawn f din Mareb next, aud the third in November, Ist nil Laat upon the French | the same atti of country tude of nouinterventic ico, as is held by United States, hoon given by the nt, that ho would complete tion within the of the speated wssurances have since that agree nails, on to the inhabitants of the means of transi the promised ned ov Was reasonably expe tod that the pros templated would & crisis of great Rupublic of Mexico sent forward land were dixpos eight hundred aud ninety-two thousand five huudeed and sixteen w functions as Minis United Stat thought exp to that Republic wdient that I Tt was also should be attend uloptod relative United mine the course to be pul United jecta of both ¢ antrios, arising ont of the re. in pon by the two countr is not deemed nnreasona’ | to Congress to direct the ri | claims for inderanity by foreigners, # by citizens of the United States nt nit of the late civil war, sliall be jed and determined. 1 have ne the subject of all sich claims your attention at # conveuien It ina mattor of regret hevat advance h nn we S| States and Groat Bi \¢ entire | depredations upon ¢ h and other tresprsses dusing our "| civil war by Hritish sa international law and treaty y th telay, however, may be believed to have re sulted in no amall degree f dome situation of Great Britain, A e change of ministry oceurred in t antry during the last reason of Paria t t nto expect that it will 1 sidered | ina becoming and friendly t. The import ance of an early disposition of ation cannot be exaggerated. Whatever might be the wishes of the two Governments, it ia manifest that good will aud friendship be tween the two countries cannot be estab dLuntil a reciprocity, in the practice of good faith and nentrality, aball be restored tween the respective nations On the th Gt Sune teat, te. viel and enterprise against the British North American Colonics was projected and at | tempted to ho carried on within the territo ty and furisdiction of the United States. I oly uh ‘ ation — Linpos: ed upon the Executive by Con fo nto that the are , all ¢ ous " awful military fi nt of lit tha the expedition, we ve beew brought to t capital ¢ nthe Prov a. Judgment and aenten en pronounced against others have been acquitted belleving in the maxim yvernmont, that 1 | persons who bave engaged lutiouary ttempts which have disustrously failed, is unsound and uuwise, such representations Mj have been made fo the British ¢ ernment, in behalf \ viete | who were en in the t Cour 5 nd citizeps gf i (States w aiituted in the Courts of the United tS regarded the expedition as not grati- | great measure fore from the United The atte iinderstood to be made in kn | land had y | eralcenturies, ‘The persons engaged in it were chiefly nat ie that country, some | of whom had, while others had not, become usot the United States under our gen eral Laws of nat ation, Complaints of mi) rmiment in Ireland continually en t- | gage the attention of the British nation, and md and the | tertained in rog io an expedition ex pressly prohibited by our neutrality laws. celobrated in | So long as those laws ret Wpen ol tatute-books, they 1 be faithfully oxe cuted, and if they operate harshly, unjustly ical and ¢ pited Stat in somi pe.and th T Government onght to have a} i | plomatic representati This Gov l transpiring r ite political right of we .and a choice of uew vational alle Most of tho European States have dissented from this principly, and | autjecta as buye | ated to and been naturalized in the United States, and atter | Maras returued on transient visits t native countries, to the performance of mi PY lary service in like manner as resi dent subjects, Complaints arising from the | claiin inthis respect mado by foreign Stat have heretofore been matters of controversy between the United States and some of the European Powers, and the irritation conse quent mpon the ‘failure to settle this ques- un increased during the war in which Prossia, Maly and Austria were recent] ugaged. While Great Britain has never whnowledged the right of expatriation, she has uot practically insisted npon it, Rr has been equally forbearing, and Prussia has proposed a compromise, which, although | evincing increased liberality, has not been | laccepted by the United Stites, Peace is now prevailing everywhere in Europe, and the present seems to be a favorable tue for an assertion by Congress of the principle, 1g maintained’ by the Executive De nent, that naturalization by one State fully exciupts the native boru subject of any other State from the performance of mill tary service under any foreig sofong as he docs not voluntarily renounce its rights and bonotite In ‘the performance of a duty imposed by the Constitution, L have thus upon me submitted to the Representatives of the States and of the peoplo such information of our domestic and ign atlairs as thy public interests seem to require, Our gov is now undergoing its most trying I my earnest prayer is, that the peril may be successfully aud tinally passed Without impairing its original strength aud symmotry, ‘Tho interests of the nation ar Best to be proinc the rovival of f 4 terual relations, the completo obliterat of our past ditterence the re-inang tion of all the pursuits of peace, Dirocting our eflorta to the early accomplishment of these t ends, let us endeavor to pre: serve harmony between the co-ordinate departments of the g ite proper sphere may cordially co-operate with the other in securing the maintenance of the Union, and the perpetuity of our free tutions th ANDREW JOMNSON ntaining | WASHixaioy, December 3, 1860 ‘ourse with the | pants in it seomed to exercine Deeply interest nal humanity cause of liberty obvious duty whatever influer toration aud permanent esta and the diflasion of pilation over ts of far greater importance ‘Taking Sheep to The Wheeling (Va.) IN BLLOBXCEI su. Phe taking of sacep from Obio and B: lishment in counties, in this State, and Washington Mexico, when, last, official inform confer upon the plow nil ot November | known of seve mn was received fre 1 # hinited po ad enactments reliey payment of pul tachment of bis forces in the month of N ording to engagement but | to drive out, say a hund b unWistakabl that this deci with Congress if | sacrifice of cousist is, he ia tired of tig vy odds with which Of this deter United States bad | every year. T ed any notice or intimation 40 soon as the information was received by | arrangement, and the Government, and, | puts odt the sheep run up very fast by this manifested whi Meer aes tine shall have given to it care was taken in | counsy, Pa, (othe Wost, and patting them ont on shares, has got to be « rather exten ard | sive and profitable business, We have Al instances lately in which 1 large profits have been realized, Moat of sheep thus put out havo been taken to Hingis, but a great many bave gone also to Weatern Ohio and Indisia, ‘The process is | cd head of good average sheep, aud find a farmer who is willing to take them on his farm, attend to them, and divide the wool ard the increase 16 profits of the man who the barg in also pays th to make | farmer abundantly for his trouble, | Sheep 1 be glad to make peace upo a wider develop 1 grants of public the coustruc Kroat military Jone to corporations, in tion of railroads and other inte ‘Should this policy hereafter preva iuore stringent provisions will be faithful applic mala 1 cannot forego the ho © getithe im insider the subject, ard adopt some reso: | handsome, In t cation of Mexieo | jon a recent. tra nas nearly as practicable | in Fauquier county, Va. by wh neo will | tive and prossion that a recon President aud Cong: | Ofioe Seoretary ed if | General Land 0: A a War loa lution in regard to the ev which will o tion of the fund, | of | that can be bouglit in this county for two | | and three dollars worth in the West gin of profit is very nection We may nie: a with @ gentler h he aud. thus | been furnished with a’ thousand sheep on Indian Olive The title to the lands should not pass, by pat United | shares f t the just expe of adjustment ‘a term of ten years, He is to graze yject | them on his farm, and at the end of that time ent or otherwise in the Govern. dient and sulyject to its control until some pore 7:00,010, leaving 4 The papers relat will be laid before you. | with the evacuation of Mexico b, y forces, ng aublock Ler serious atent Ottive available surplus of $47 the expe 19 (of tuo Goveruueut Upon (lia subject bas, emding the SLL yk Juue, 1907, will be @tio,- | Hons of (uous might then, trom Quye te time, | dition restore a like number to the seller, and in | lr | Wye Lagrenee af the Hoey Finametal News, Markets New Yon, Monday nts were firm, i week opens with an increased eas Prime paper was current | ateady at 10 ‘The bank atatemen and shows t in @ strong without decided char noninally lower ther moro st 100 Marioov PY 10000 Oinio & Mise 60 Cle. & Pie “Tt is 80 Simple PMALNED Faw of the Grover & Boker Ma LAL NO Fr finds them ia ne us parte of the world proved relfable, movement tet I teh sewing un atitch machines foi mauufeturers way, N. ¥., and 235 Fultou Nimes tor tami! y relieves paiu, and never Overcon's,” * Overconts,”? The Winter Clot! serorimeas of prices less. F. 1, Baldwin, 7) and reat Boot avd shoe The Howe Machine Co.'s Lock, ELIAS HOWE, J Mowing machine), fe 8. M, Co's Lockstitch Sew Keeps it glomy and chiedly the beet prepert Hold by Kushton, 1) Astor House, Wherever the New York fan you will see hones faper, avd sold for the bouest price of I find a fine Amory ar, at PAA How: Bchenck's Eiuporium le (he ‘Tho New Verk Sun presen the low price ut Two Cents Boots and sho: 284 Howery. cor, cf Houstan # id Huy what you wan’ -W.N. B. Sehr Capiliarium, wat aftie'e for ‘snd. making | rf Magten! Hair i feavoring whe Hh original color. Ad inet, Robes of the family ai to attend the funeral, th 4 Aluslle #1, Brooklyn, F lay evening, Dec, 24, ai irlenda of the fi Sflernoon, at 1 o'clock nativoof the townland of oeeres tine, County Munaghan, Leland, in the SAYER-On Dee Caiharive Saye months aud 24 days. May his soul rest |x fealdence, #87 North 2d oh, cor, of Liria WART—At Hobok ‘and severe illness, sud friends of the fe fully “invited to atte eon. Alaban York cliy, om Tuesday siteru house it! swal a | Terk WALDRON-On ‘Bou! Wal the meantime divide equally the wool aud | Breond ave, this Tursday afternco., at ($e Last Page for other Deathd

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