fpsirtlaranw. THE OBSTRUCTIVE PRESIDENT. The President of the "United States ap pears to be a man of small intellect and strong passions. At present he is acting like young chess-players playing a losing game, who cannot deny themselves the small temporary gratification of uselessly checking their opponent, even though to do so they throw away the little chance that is left them of retrieving their battle., Noth ing could be at once more cynical and more silly than the policy Mr, Johnson has lately been pursuing in his unequal struggle with Congress,—cynical, because it inflicts the most terrible sufferings in individual eases without advancing, nay, at the expense of, that cause of colour-caste in the South, which Mr. Johnson has espoused;—silly, because in several instances Mr. Johnson has thwarted his opponents simply for the pleasure of thwai’ting them, without, even the power of overruling them, and without the pretence of the legal pleas on which he has generally professed to act. If the Com mittee to inquire whether he has done any thing worthy of impeachment—which the Atlantic Telegraph tells us was carried in the House of Representatives by the large majority of 108 to 38 —should really pro pose to impeach him, and should with any success, the success will be entirely due to the senseless obstinacy of his recent acts, which assuredly render him an obstacle in the path of the new poliey'which it is de sirable to shovel out of the way, if it can be done without any serious disruption of the party of freedom. Our own view has been, till within the last week, unfavourable to so strong a measure as the impeachment of the President, and would be so still, if any milder remedy for preventing the com plete waste of two most important years of political action could be discovered. Mr. Johnson is clearly not responsible in any way for his own nai’row intellect, or proba bly not now responsible for his own strong passions. It is not in order to punish him for being what he is, that any true friend of freedom would wish to see the ordinary course of events in the United States inter rupted. But if the future is to be perma nently imperilled because these two men of mean intellect and poor character—Mr. Johnson and Mr. Seward—stand in the way, then it becomes the duty of those who know what the war really meant, and how great is the danger of letting society in the South crystallize again on the old law, the law of Slavery 7 , instead of the new, to sw T eep away these obstinate misinterpreters of the dis tinct will of a great nation. Hitherto, how ever, we do not doubt that Mr. Johnson's narrow passions have done good, and not harm. As Louis Napoleon is said to have apologized in 1859 for leaving Yenetia in the hands of Austria, on the ground that Italy would be consolidated far sooner with two great external irritants, Home and Venice, still to chafo the Italian nation into active patriotism and absolute unity of feeling, so Mr. Johnson, if he had the astuteness of the French Emperor, might some day plead be fore the bar of the American nation, that his bitterness against the cause of freedom was essential in the hour of victory to alarm the too lenient spirit of the North, to secure the coherence of the Free-Soil party and its adherence to its resolve that the South should never be trusted again till it bad frankly obliterated the principle of social tyranny on which the rebellion took its stand. Mr. Johnson has hitherto prevented, and perhaps only a President of such bitter prejudices could have prevented, the North from unguardedly, in the generosity of its heart, making fatal concessions to the South. But now that he has succeeded in making them wake as one man to their danger, the next thing should be to save two most im portant years in dealing with it, and Mr. Johnson seems determined to show the North that this cannot be done without brushing aside the unfortunate political acci dent who professes to do their will. The case against Mr. Johnson is this. Congress has passed, —and passed as the net moral result of the war, without the com plete and sincere acceptance of which the war would be over only in name, —and the requisite majority of the States of the Union have ratified, the Constitutional Amend ment finally abolishing slavery, except as a criminal punishment, and giving Congress power to enforce this new provision of the Constitution by appropriate legislation. So far the President and the late rebellious States professed to go with Congress. But this change was only nominal so long as the States latety in rebellion continued to hold to all their old legal and social customs con structed on the ideas of the system they pro fessed to surrender; so long as whites who shoot negroes are acquitted of all guilt, and negroes who lift a finger against whites are shot dead; so long as white men may travel where they please, and negro travellers are called vagrants and condemned to slavery for terms of years; so long as white evidence hangs any number of negroes, and negro evidence is not even accepted against a white; so long as negroes are taxed for the schools ‘which white children alone may at tend, and white men burn down the schools for negroes w T ith absolute impunity; so long as deliberate massacres of the negroes go ab solutely unpunished; so long as Southern Courts laugh at the Constitutional Amend ment, and declare it unconstitutional. Let slavery be declared abolished, and yet all these things of which we have spoken goon without interference on the part of Congress or the Executive, and it is clear that the re sults of the war are cast to the winds. Yet this is precisely what Mr. Johnson has moved heaven and earth to effect. Congress passed a Freedman’s Bureau Bill last session to protect the negroes in the South. Mr. Johnson vetoed it. Congress passed a Civil Bights Bill declaring all native negroes citi zens of the United States, and entitled to all the civil rights of whites born under the THE AMERICAN PRESBYTERIAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1867. same circumstances. Mr. Johnson vetoed it. During the long vacation a most bloody and malignant plot was laid by the citizens of New Orleans against the Free-Soil party of that State, and a massacre organized which in part took effect, which actually cost the lives of more than a score of loyalists, and but for the United States troops would have been a second St. Bartholomew. Mr. John son did his best at the time, and has done his best ever since, to palliate the guilt of that deliberate massacre and to throw the blame upon the victims. All this has long been known. But now Mr. Johnson is playing more and’ more boldly the same disgraceful part. This session Congress, which is the only legisla ture of the District of Columbia, in which Washington lies, has passed by two-thirds majorities in both Houses a Bill giving the suffrage to negroes in that district. Mr. Johnson has vetoed it, although his power only extends to delaying it for a day or two, when the same majorities given after his veto will pass it into law. Still worse, the only power by which the evil passion of the South against its freedmen was mitigated was the military power. Till lately it was known that if negroes were murdered and the State Courts refused to take cognizance of the crimes, or acquitted the criminals, the military authorities "would interfere. In Georgia in the last year there have been three hundred such murders of which only three, or 1 per cent., were punished, and these under the influence of fear of the mili tary authorities, who would have had far more influence but for the known bias of the President against the negroes. Mr. John son has just withdrawn this one feeble offset against the malignant negro-hatred of the South. The Supreme Court has decided that in Indiana—a State where there never was any rebellion—the military tribunals had no authority except over soldiers, and has set aside a sentence on a civilian passed by a military Court. Mr. Johnson with in decent haste has used this decision to further his purpose of giving each of the Southern States full freedom to slay or torture its own negroes, without danger of interference from the Central Government. He has revoked as unconstitutional the military order direct ing the Federal officers to interfere in cases of any flagrant repudiation by the Southern Courts of the plain civil rights of the negroes, and has himself dissolved the Commission sitting to try a self-confessed murderer at Richmond. Dr. James L. Watson, who had been acquitted by the local Court, in spite of his own boastful confession of the murder, simply and solely on the ground that negro murder is not murder. In this case a negro coachman, called Echols, had driven his mis tress’ carriage against Dr. Watson’s. Dr. Watson, the next day, proceeded to cowhide Echols, and on Echols running away called him back, under pain of death, to undergo more cowhiding, and shot him for not re turning. Of this the murderer Watson boasted, and the County Court acquitted him as guiltless of murder. The Military Commission which was sitting to try him is dissolved by Mr. Johnson, on the ground that the Supreme Court had declared trials by military commission in the Northern States, —where there never was any rebel lion or need of military authority,—uncon stitutional. And Dr. Watson may murder a fresh negro each day of the new year with absolute certainty of impunity, if not of fame. In Maryland the judges, aware that Mr. Johnson vetoed the Civil Rights Bill, tvhieh was passed over his veto, and will do nothing to enforce it, are setting it at naught in the most flagrant manner, and on Saturday, 22d December, four negroes were sold for a term of years at Annapolis for some slight offence, —we believe under the vagrant laws, —one of them being actually permitted to buy him self in, which he certainly would not have been if the offence had been more than nomi nal. The other three were sold to farmers for a term of years, Judge Magruder declar ing the Civil Rights Bill passed by Congress, which refuses to admit any distinction in the civil laws founded on colour, as uncon stitutional and inconsistent with the law of Maryland. All over the South the same absolute contempt for the civil rights of the negro is Bhown, under the fostering care of Mr. Johnson’s justice. North Carolina pa pers declare that State ready for a new re bellion on the basis of Mr. Johnson’s princi ples. South Carolina rejects the new Con stitutional Amendment, which incorporates the Civil Bights Bill, by 95 to 1. In Mem phis, Tennessee, organizations to prevent by terror commercial dealings with loyal shop keepers are formed. In Missouri the burn ing down of freedmen’s schools is a popular amusement. And everywhere the Presi dent’s cry is to 1 let be,’ unless the very peo ple who conspire to do these things interfere by their own Courts or militia to prevent them: These are not iniquities merely requiring a strong-handed remedy, but mockeries of the whole policy of the war. If this be con stitutional —as our “Yankee” correspondent, in his blind ardour for legalities, boasts, —it was far more constitutional to permit seces sion at first, than for the nation now, after paying hundreds of millions sterling to pre vent secession, to foster all the springs of se cession into a new and still more threaten ing activity. "Whatever price must be paid to reap the full fruits of the greatest and most successful of human struggles clearly must be paid. And if so insignificant a President as Mr. Johnson must be thrown overboard to prevent the wreck of the ship in the very sight of port, why no one will regret him, though many may regret the ne cessity of having to-do anything that looks revolutionary for the sake of clearing away so trivial an impediment, which by an unfor tunate accident of position is yet a formida ble drag on the movement of a great na tion.—London Spectator, Jan. 12 The Spirit of love to Christ can alone regulato the use and expenditure of earthly goods. —-Lange on Matt., 26: 6. Ucuirtiilc. [From Mr. Birkinbine's last Report.] THE PERKIOMEN PROJECT. It is not surprising that the project has not met with favor from the public generally. A little reflection will show that such has been the fate of all new projects of a public character; witness, the Fairmount Water Works, the introduction, of gas, street rail roads, &e. If there be merit in it, and the source of supply be, in any degree, as valua ble as indicated by the Eeport I had the honor to present one year ago, careful sur veys and estimates would enable you to judge more intelligently of it, and to form a correct decision on reliable data. The prin cipal objections which have been raised are: Ist. The belief that there is not a suf ficient volume of water in the stream to warrant the expense of bringing it into the City. It has been proved by Denys Papin, who printed a work on the origin of foun tains, in 1674, that the rain and snow-water were sufficient to make the fountains and rivers run perpetually. Subsequent investi gations have corroborated this fact. The old idea that fountains have their origin in a mysterious Bubterrannean, arterial system fed by the sea, is now abandoned. The pre cipitation of vapor by rain, snow and dew, is now known to be the only source from which all the water flowing in streams is supplied. This being the case, if the amount of rain-fall and the surface drained by a stream be known, its entire water capacity may be ascertained. Kirkpatrick’s reports of the rain fall upon this city, give an average of 45.436 inches per annum/distributed in the seasons about as follows; Spring, 13 inches; Summer, 12 inches; Autumn, 11 inches; Winter, 10 inches. The mean of several observations recorded in Bludget’s Climatology, gives a lower average of rain-fall upon the entire city; This average is affected by the differ ence in altitude of the various observers. From the character of the country drained by the Perkiomen, the actual amount of pre-. cipitation will be found greater than that upon the city. Kirkpatrick’s observations are, however, taken as a basis for these cal culations. Bain-gaugCs were placed, and observations commenced in the Perkiomen district, near the site of the proposed lake, at the upper end of the basin, and at its east ern and western extremities, but as no'ap propriation was made, they were abandoned. The area drained by the Perkiomen is about two hundred and twenty square miles. This would give an anriual downfall of water of 23,220,476,928 cubic feet, a daily average of 63,617,745 cubic feet. A portion of this wa ter is evaporated; another portion is ab sorbed by vegetation. From the geological formation of the country, probably none es capes by infiltration through subterranean channels to other drainage areas. It is dif ficult to ascertain the precise amount of loss from the above causes. In Humphrey’s Physics and Hydraulics of the Mississippi river, the drainage of the small tributaries is given as ninety per cent, of the downfall, and from data collected in a table, page 280, the flow of small streams is given at .8 to .9 of the'raiii-fall. By careful measurements taken for the supply of Belfast, Ireland, with water, it it was ascertained that sixty-four and one third per cent, of the rain-fall could be util ized. In the project for supplying London with water from the Cumberland lakes, it is esti mated that eighty-two and a half per cent, can be utilized. In another plan for supply ing that city from the Severn, eighty per cent, is estimated as available. In the plan for supplying Dublin from the Dodder, sixty-six per cent, of the rain-fall is estimated as available. In the case of twelve towns in England supplied from limited drainage areas, given in my last Eeport, it was found that the average amount of the rain-fall utilized was .509, the amount varying in proportion to the capacity of the store reservoirs to im pound the storm-water, some of them utiliz ing over sixty per cent, of the rain falling upon the surface drained. In my estimate, only fifty per cent, is taken as the amount that can be utilized. This would make the available capacity of the Perkiomen an average of 238,566,540 gallons per day. The lowest recorded an nual rain-fall in this City was in IS4B, only thirty-five inches. This may be taken as the minimum. If fifty percent, be utilized, it will give an available water supply from this source of 183,997,438 gallons per day. We may, therefore, safely estimate on a daily average of 150,000,000 gallons as procura ble from the Perkiomen drainage, above the proposed dam. 2d. It is objected to this stream, that it is subject to frequent freshets, and also to being greatly reduced in volume in seasons of drought; which is true of this as of all streams flowing through hilly or mountain ous country. This, instead of being detri mental, is an advantage, for the water is of better quality than if it lingered in swamps or flowed sluggishly, and the oscillations in the amount of water discharged can be con trolled by constructing impounding reser voirs, as it is proposed to do. 3d. It is thought that the water in the store reservoirs will become stagnant and unfit for use. As this store reservoir will be a lake of 1500 acres, sixty-five feet in the deepest part, and not a shallow pond, this apprehension is groundless. On the contra ry, the quality of water will be improved by being impounded in a body of such magni tude. This will also insure limpid water at all times, as all sediment will have abundant time to deposit. The project may be stated simply, as sup plying the city with water by gravitation, from a lake fed by pure mountain streams. 4th. It is objected that $10,000,000 is too great a sum for the city to pay for a water supply. This appears to be a large sum of money, but the works contemplated will be of such magnitude as to furnish five times the amount of water now supplied to the city, and the first cost will be the only ex pense. It has been shown by the former Re port, that there is no means by which so large a supply of water can be furnished at so low a price. If the aqueduct furnish but one half the amount —75,000,000 gallons per day —it.will be at a saving of §218,000 a year over any other means by which the city can secure that amount of water. And if it fur nish but 50,000,000 gallons per day, an amount which, will be required by the time such Works can be constructed, by no other means can the city procure even this amount of water at a cheaper rate, than by con structing the aqueduct, even at cost of §lO, 000,000: It has also been asserted that the Works will cost much more than this sum. Without ac tual surveys, plans and estimates, this can not be proved to be erroneous. A little re flection, however, will satisfy any one ac quainted with the nature of the country, and the value of'work of this kind, that the sum named will b.e sufficient to do what is proposed; viz.:—to construct the dam, §5OO, 000; land damages, §500,000; aqueduct, twenty-four miles, at §250,000 per mile, §6, 000,000; store reserveir, §1,000,000 ; connect ing mains, §1,000,000; contingencies, §l,OOO, 000. This need not be a matter of supposi tion. Actual and reliable estimates can be readily furnished for your information. These works if substituted for those now in existence, would not be a burden to tax payers at the present time; for if the cost of pumping be deducted from the expenses of this year, and if the interest on the value of real estate and machinery that could be disposed of, were added to the income from water, the entire interest of the cost of the Perkiomen Works would be met, without increasing the water rents, or in any way taxing property owners. sth. It has been objected that the water would be impaired by manufactories placed upon the stream above the dam.. There is no probability of this. From the nature of the country drained, there is nothing to in duce the location of industrial establish ments. The water power is now fully oc cupied by mills, which produce no objec tionable offal, and legislation can- be readily secured to prevent the location of establish ments that would injuriously affect the water. To those acquainted with the Perkiomen project, as presented with my last Annual Report, the following statement of its ge neral features may be of interest: To suppply the city with water from the Perkiomen by constructing a lake or store re servoir between Swenksville and Zieglers ville, in Montgomery county, a distance of twenty-six and a half miles from Broad and Market streets. The water in this reservoir to be sixty-five feet deep, and to cover ah area of 1500 acres. The lake to have an available storage capacity of over 5,000,000, 000 gallons. At.this point, the estimated average daily flow of the Perkiomen is 240, 000,000 gallons. Of this it is proposed to take 150,000,000 gallons, and convey it by an aqueduct delivering the water into a re servoir in the northern part of the city, ca pable of storing 1,000,000,000 gallons. The surface of the water in the proposed reser voir to be seventy-five feet higher than that in the reservoirs at Fairmount. The water to be conveyed from this reservoir to the sev eral centres of distribution in the City by large iron mains. The permanent.part of the Works to be constructed with a capacity of 150,000,000 gallons per day. The distri buting mains and such parts of the Works as can be readily duplicated and enlarged, to have a capacity of 75,000,000 gallons per day, at first, and to be enlarged as the de mands of the city increase. This is a personal in vitation to the reader to examine our new styles of Fine Clothing, Cas simere Suits for $l6, and Black Suits fors22. Finer Suits, all prices up to $75. Wanamaker & Brown, Oak Hall, Southeast corner of Sixth & Market Sts. THOMPSON BLACK & SON, BROAD AND CHESTNUT STREETS DEALERS IN FINE TE3AS, AND EVERY VARIETY OF caoics 'F&si&r Goods delivered in any part of the City, or packed securely for the Country. FANCY JOB P Fine Work— Original Styles. PLAIN AND SANSOM STREET Classical School^ 19. 33. Corner of THIRTEENTH I LOCUST STREETS. PHILADELPHIA, B. KENDALL, A. M., Principal. COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE s ' TO K YOUNG LADIES, North-West Corner of Chestnut & * Eighteenth Streets. REV. CHARLES A. SMITH, D.D., PRINCIPAL. Circulars maybe obtained of S. P. Moore ft Co., 1304 Chestnut Street, and at the Presbyterian Book Store, 1334 Chestnut Street. WYERS’ BOARDING SCHOOL FOR YOUNG HEN AND SOYS, FOBMEBLY A. BOLHAR'S, ~ AT WEST CHESTER, PA. A Classical, English, Mathematical and Commercial School, de signed to fit its pupilb thoroughly for College or Business. The Corps of Instructors is large, able and experienced; the course of Instruction systematic, thorough and extensive. M .dern Lan guages—German, French and Spanish, taught by native resident teachers. Instrumental and Vocal Music, Drawing and Painting. The scholastic year of ten months begins ou 'YYedntsday, the sth of September next. Circulars can be obtained at the office of this paper, or by appli cation to WILLIAM F. WYERS, A. M., Principal and Propriet ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL SCHOOL, FOR BOARDING AND DAY SCHOLARS, FORTIETH STREET AND BALTIMORE AVENUE, WEST PHILADELPHIA. REV. S. H. McMULLIN, TJtIA’CJOPAX.. Pupils Received at any time and Pitted for Business Life or for College. References: B. A; Knight, Esq.; Rev. J. W. Mears; Rev. Jonathan jjdwards, D. D.; Rev. James M. Crowell, D. D.; Hon. jjichard H. Bayard; Samuel Sloan, Esq. Presbyterian House. SMYTH & ADAIR, MANUFACTURERS OF SILVER-PLATED WARE, GOLD AND SILVEB PLATENS, KTo. 1334 CHESTNUT ST.. OPPOSITE U. S. MINT, SECOND FLOOR. PACTORT-RO. 35 SOUTH THIRD STREET, .PniuankLemi. 106-t It W. G. BEDFORD, CONVEYANCER AND REAL ESTATE AGENT, JNTo. 03 NT. TontU Street, PHILADELPHIA. My central location and the many means of communication with the suburbs enable me to take the Agency for sale and care of Real Estate, the Collection of Interests, ground and house rents in every part of the city. References will be furnished, when desired. M. P. SIMONS would call Attention to bis SIZE PHOTOGRAPHS. Those living at a distance can have Daguerreotypes, Photographs, Ac., copied any size, and colored any style, by mailing the picture and de scription of complexion, hair, Ac. All pictures are warranted to give full satisfaction. M. P. SIMONS, 1320 Chestnut street, Philadelphia, Pa. S T E A m; Dyeing and Sconring Establishment. MRS. E. W. SMITH, No. 28 N. Fifth St., below Arch, Phila. Ladies’ Dresses, Cloaks, Shawls, Ribbons, Ac., dyed in any color, and finished equal to new. Gentlemen’s Coats, Pants and Vests cleaned, dyed and repaired. J. H. BUBDSALL’S OONPBOTION 33 R. Y, ICE CREAM & DINING SALOONS, Jo. 1122 Chestnut St., Girard Mow, PHILADELPHIA. Parties supplied -with Ice Creams, Water Ices, Roman Punch Charlotte Russes, Jellies, Blanc Mange, Fancy and Wedding Cakes Candy Ornaments, Fruits, Ac., Ac; 1070-6 t RINTE R, HALL.