THE DAILY EVEKIIfG TELEGRAFII PHILADELriHA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1867. SPIRIT OF THE PRESS. EDitoriai ororcoirs or thi Li&nma jovra.m vroR cnrmuirr topics compiled ivbky Pay vox m xTKNina tkuobath. Kr. Cfeai. tn4 Ills Plana and Praipscts for th. Pr.ddtn.jr IVow Vm if. T. Herald. As the shocking disaster of the first Bull Han fell upon the loyal States, so hare the astounding results of the New York eleotion fallen upon the radical Chase faction. Mr. Chase himself, alarmed at this fearful catas trophe, has with the clearing away of the Smoke from the battle-field deemed it expe dient to come at. once to this city for the par pose of considering the extent of the damages he has suffered and the ways and means of re pairing them. He has been here for several days in active consultation with his ralical friends, and we think the opinion may be afely ventured that,so far from giving way in favor of General Grant, Mr. Chase is resolved henceforth to use all the organized forces and resources at his command to rale oat Grant, find to secure for himself the nomination of the Republican National Convention. To this end he hat his hundreds of national banks and other financial agencies to back him, in addition to that numerous faotion of fanatics whose ultimatum, sink or swim, is Universal negro suffrage. lie has, too, a pow erful body of retainers in both Houses of Con gress, who will be very apt to shape the legis lative measures of the coming session in accordance with his wishes. We may thus expeot, among other things in the interest of Mr. Chase, that Southern reconstruction under the existing laws will be so aotively pushed forward that all the ten outside Rebel States Will be reorganised and restored as negro radi cal States some, if not all, in season for the Republican Convention, bat all in time to give their eleotoral votes to Mr. Chase. gainst these formidable appliances of the Republican party machinery, the friends of General Grant have nothing but his popularity to depend upon. His popularity is great; it covers all the land; but unless his zealous friends oan bring this power to bear upon the Republican Convention, it will avail them nothing; for we have no doubt that General Grant is so well satisfied with his position as General-in-Chief of the armies of the United States, that he will not oonsent to any Presi dential nomination bat that of the regular Republican Convention, and will refuse to run against Mr. Chase if thus regularly nominated. The political friends of General Grant, then, being a sort of unorganized militia, have no Other course left them but a vigorous agitation of his olaime and popularity, in publio meet ings all over the country, such as have already been commenced in Pennsylvania, with every indication of oomplete success in au out-aud-out Grant delegation to the Republican Con vention from that State. As the contest now stands, however,, within the Republican lines, Mr. Chase has the odds heavily on his side for the manipulation of the Convention. Assuming that, after all, he will Seoare it, and be nominated with some such man as Fenton, Morgan, Stanton, or Geary for Vice-President, and that General Grant will decline to run in opposition to this ticket. What will be the course of the opposition elements T They have only to nominate Gene ral Sherman, or some such popular conserva tive Union soldier, in order to sweep the whole North, from the Atlantic to the Paciflo, except ing Massachusetts and Vermont, and, per haps, Kansas, and thus carry through a mighty political revolution in 1868 from the Jiopetul reaction or lbb-7. This visit of Mr. Chase to New York means business. He made a desperate but hopeless fight against Abraham Lincoln for the Repub lican Convention of 18b'4; it is not to be sup posed that he will give up the prize of his am bition or slacken his efforts to gain it with the machinery which he has secured to work up the Convention of 1808. When a man gets the little buzzing bee of the Presidency in his ear, he can dance to no other musio.till the in sect is extracted. The two houses of the For tieth Congress meet again on the 21st instant, and then we guess not many days will pass before we shall see that the radicals contem plate no retreat from negro suffrage and South ern negro Bupremaoy. At all events, if the friends of General Grant would make a deci sive impression upon Congress or 'upon the National Republican Convention in favor of their champion again Chase, now is the time for action. Bark and Bite. From th N. T. Tribune. A few years ago M. Da Chailla treated this torpid, blasS nineteenth century society of curs to a new sensation. He discovered the gorilla. This beast, as he described it, was one of the moat dreadful monsters ever let loose upon a miserable world. The old horned devil of oar grandfathers, that now happily, or unhappily, as the reader may think best, is decided to be an extinot creature, was a mere tame, purring pussy-cat compared with this inhabitant of the Afrioan jangle. The new comer, if we were to believe M. Da Chailla, had all the- deformities and hideous traits of our old friend Satan, with enough additional Ingenious ugly features, both of mind and person, to set up fifty new tract societies, each with a peculiar style of fiend warranted to have no resemblance to the fiend of any other establishment. We were about to attempt a Blight description of the animal, as set forth in the animated pages of M. Du Chailla. Rut we remember that among our subscribers are soft hearted, timorous women, beardless boys, and callow infants, and we dread the result upon such a mass of sensibility of exhibiting the plain, unvarnkhed tail of the gorilla Without warning. It was neither to be wished nor expected that anybody would be mad enough to attempt to catch a gorilla alive, much less to bring him, when caught, into the very midst of a populous city, liven Da Chailla, we believe, never attempted to do anything more than bring home a piece of the skin of one of them Who had died of starvation after having killd and eaten every living thing men; women, and children included in a district several thousand square miles in extent; and if Buuha hero as -he could only accomplish this, how could any one hope to do more 1 However, man is a creature born to trouble other people as the spark to fly upwards, and it surprised no one to hear that a gorilla hai been caught, bought Ly Mr.JJarnnm, aud, after a world of difficulties, deposited in his Museum, where he was to le Been with the 1C0.0OO other curi osities, and the moral plays, for twenty-five cents. We .were told a dorun stories of the strength and aialtgnant temper of this in domiui.ie baat on his way to the Museum. tVad Kra tha UJat out of tha BulP " ' banced a hole in her bottom ' of his detestable foot, got up Iccta of tha cap U!n4 mat, fcal crew. Whose flesh he had devoured for break fast, picked his teeth with a marlingspike, and waded ashore on an uninhabited island, in the'mldst of a fury of a hurricane, and had i- i. - ..n.hi kr thrt whole population turning out and surrounding him with lassoes and guns. We ball benevea, ana sen um f"'""i with twenty-five cents for a ticket, and ten cents for omnibus fare, to get a look at the devouring monster, and tell us the truth about him. He did . bo, and we blush for the result. After making his way, with fear and trembling, but with loyal determination, through the crowd that blocked up the side walk, the step, the capacious hall, and the three first lloors of the stately edifice, a crowd that every five minutes, hearing the cry, "lie's loose 1 beware 1" fell into uncontrolla ble panic, and swayad to and fro in wild be wilderment anl fainting, voiceless horror, he made his way directly to the front of the cage that held the Awful Despot of the Tropios, aud. mustering all his courage, gave one bold and manly look at the thing. To his great aston ishment, and equally great re ief, he saw no corilla at all, but a plain black monkey, whom, if he Was not greatly mistaken, he had often fed with apple-cores and pennies after the creature had gone through his vari ous uncouth mops and mowes to the music of his master's hand-organ, lie even thought the ceature himself looked up with a faint smile of recognition in his laded peanut eyes, as he saw before him the one being who, in a cold and heartless world, had taken pity oh him and ministered to his few and simple wants. There he sat, a melancholy picture care-worn, flea-bitten, imncrrv nnw nlavinff abstractedly with hia useless tail, now looking with a blase, discon- his whitewashed cage, now scratching himself as if he had been buuck witn an mea, men nitrirn t im m.,1 wnlliinir hnuk and forth, with a maudlin air, and finally crouching down in one eorner witn an expreaHiuu 01 pujr auu uuu- w ho wasted their time and money for the sake nf coaintr ft emrillft nnl wurA rnalv in faint, nt the imaginary threats aud ferocity of a plain organ-grinder's monkey. For some days past for some months, in- 4 . - J 1 1 . t i' . ueeu uw newspapers juave ueeu iuu 01 ter rible rumors of the awful things that Mr. TriliruAn ia rrninrr tn An nmna tiniA nr nt.hpr t How he is going to act as if he were Cromwell, Julius Cfesar, and the two Napoleons the f rpat nnd tli little rolled into one ! How he is going to disperse Congress, and, backed by Swann's militia, to say nothing of Swann Vimoalf nnf 1rwn 11i North, nnt nn t.h """"-( i 1 x- -r South, and ride to glory over the prostrate bodies of the majority of his countrymen. How he is as mad as he can be; how, to use tne children's pnrase, ne is --noppiug maa, and means to ehow us that he is not to be trilled with. How we are to have a iirst-class "conn dVtat." whatever that may be. and how, in a few weeks, A. Johnson the First (and we may add, of our own knowledge, "the last") is to wade to his throne in blood, arA ait. arta riutirmt. nvur A onnnnorprl ?mit.i- nent. In short, the very air is black with horrible imaginings ana aireiui tnreais. Where wo live, 'l lio rlihnnRvn firA hlnwn dnwn: And. AS the? RAV. Laniunl nn a heard 1' ihtj air: atraiih'u acreunia of di eth; Anil rroplieeylng with accent tnrrlble, 'f li.re commivion, aud contused events, New hatched from this wolul 'coop.' " All this la verv distressins: but we beer our readers to take heart of crace, Threatened Dr riiTOmintr'a Millnnniiirn.will no doubt Dl'OVa a prophecy that can be pushed ahead and ahead as oiten a3 imminent is iouna 10 oe inconveni ent Tim llwvlv lmnnimt Via nrnmisM Vallan. digham and Seymour, Weed and the rest of hia lirarua ia nn rlnnht a tmrivaYAa fn.t.. 11 an? . ill i . c ' l r i .1 r t .,...! 1 . wm ne iounu a very least oi vub xaiuiBciuBs. The . President is running about the White ITnnsa trrnnn.la with ft torrihlft Tnininkin huail. lighted by a very cheap tallow candle, and we misdoubt the American people are not to be axiirai l.ir anv Bii.ih childish nonsnnSft. Lot 11 a only look boldly at the bugaboo, and we shall X n ...... ll i . Una our great gonna is auer au noming out a Imrmlaaa onA fnftiiaVi TnAnVflT. with nn tfllant. but to make himself a laughing stock to an idle woria. General Grant's Opinions. From the N. T. Herald. Outraged at the unpatriotio, partisan, fanati cal course of the Republican party and its efforts to prevent the restoration of national harmony, the people have uttered their indig nation in substantial majorities against that organization wherever its principles came before them ; but they have not yet entirely cast that party aside. It is evident, however, that it now only staifds on sufferance. It can count upon no favor except as it may deserve it from its future course ; while if it persists in the attempt to force its exploded system of reconstruction its nigger and corruption policy it will by such a course make the revolution complete and sweeping ; it will compel the people to take from it the last vestige ot power, mere are some indications that events must go to that result. Distinguished radical men and journals declare that the nigger shall still not be given up. The city organ of the radi cals says that the nigger reconstruction laws now in operation are of a class with the laws of the Modes and Persians not to be changed; a Western organ says that the radi cals must 'Tortity where they are," and Beu Wade says that he for one will not retire an inch. All this is likely enough to be only the blather and bravado of noisy fellows whistling to keep their courage up; but if it shall prove to rje a party policy, it is clear mat the warn ing is not vet sullicient. In view of this position, it now becomes necessary that the people should know the opinions ot any man likely to become a candi date for the Presidency, in order to know that he is positively with them against the ex tremists they repudiate. It is especially necessary that we should know the opinions of General Grant more clearly than we do. He is now the most prominent oandidate before the nation for the highest office in it. His patriotism and honest purposes are well known; his judgment and ability in oertaiu affairs are unquestioned, and he has shown a disposition to national economy of the hap piest promise; yet it would be well if we had lrom himself positive, affirmative knowledge of his views on the political condition of the oountry. In the absence of such knowledge of the opinions of the General, Lieutenant general Sherman stands forward as the most uiHtinguibhed soldier whoae eentimeuts are known, and knowa to be in harmony with the prebent ideas of the people. It is time, there-' fore, that (ieneTal Grant should come out. Let hiia develop his linos, that people may know here he is. The Programme or Revolution. FYoitheA'. Y. 'Jrtbuue. When a President was last to be chosen, the people were exhorted to vote the Democratio ticket, in order to end the war. "There will Fever bo ra U Uncola ba revlsct!," ti Beymour & Co.; "but debt will be piled on debt, tax on tax, until every man's farm or honse will be mortgaged for more than it is worth, while consorlption after conscription will exhaust the life-blood of the country; and the end will be disunion, national bankruptcy, and repudiation. To escape these, you must vote for McClellan." A very large minority of the people credited these assertions, and voted accordingly; but the majority did not, and reflected Lincoln. And scarcely had the latter been relngurated when the whole fabrio of Rebellion tumbled into hopeless ruin, and the land was at peaoe. The work of reconsi motion, whioh followed next in order, has been nearly completed. It was delayed a full year by the mistake of ofreung to the bouth a programme which would have allowed the late Rebels to resume the undisputed control of their several State and trample the loyal blacks under their ftiet. This was happily rejected by the Rebels; but the consequent delay is not fairly chargeable to the radicals. Ihe tratn that there was no true, Just, or safe reconstruction whioh did not put the voluntary Unionists ot the bouth at least on a par with the involuntary being now made plain, Congress tried again; anl now the process or reconstruction is peace fully and vigorously come torwara. uerore Congress can take its next summer vacatiou, every State will have its own Government, will be represented In both Homes, anl be ready to vote for President next iNovember. What does conservatism propose te do - . . . about it r The World answers this question as fol lows: "I'.y the recent elections, tho poopl have de ckled that they h not Want neio sulTraKe, and do waqi rpHtoratlon; nave decided that nero sulTiate ia ton greut a price to nay even for Im mediate riK torn lion. They will be incensed If, nfler this deciHtou, the Republicans continue to iumsi on a wnolly impracticable scheme. "The lact that negro Ooverntnents are lu pro cess of organization, and that Congress may mini it their representatives, does not vary Uie case, except to render a degrading farce more contemptible. Certain It ii that the Houtheru people will never recognize these bastard Gov i i n nu nts as fanvlne tho Bliehtest validity. Within four months after the Presidential olec- tion a heavy battering ram will tumble them into snii)eie.ss ruouiiEtti. rue isoutueru people will immediately reoreanijo. hold new elec tions. oust the negroes, send their own reore- xeutatives to Washington, and the House will ni once Biimn inem. rue souuioin ."Senators, plus the conservative Senators from the Worth. will form a majority of that body, or inize as such, and neither the House nor the President will recognize any other Senate. T.Us courae is entirely jeasioie, will be perfectly constitu tional, and beyond all question adopted, if the radicals are insane or wayward euough to recognize the negro Governments niter this ureut rebuke. Tho onlv thinr Hint poul l nra. vent it would ho acquiescence by tbo Houtheru whites Id the radical scheme. Whoever expects Hint. Is better entitled tu a straight hicket tli.in a refutation." The people will see that this is a nro- gramme of undisguised revolution a new phase of the old Rebellion. The World does not say that its party will repudiate the autho rity of the present House of Representatives to count the votes for President and declare the reEuit, and that it will refuse to recognize any President chosen by the radicailv-refion- structed States; but any one can see that what it docs assert logically involves these. In other words: sham Democracy contemplatos a ueeu uaueuion wnereDy to recover what it lost by its last unlucky experiment with fire arms, n was thus that St. Domingo was whelmed in bloody ashes. Emancioation was peacefully effected; but the attempt to reiiu- biave me uiacKs resulted in unspeakable hor rors. Ihia people, forewarned, will shun tha abyss of anarchy and murder to which the H orld would hurry us. They will elect a Re publican President and Congress by the vote of both North and South, and thus preclude the execution of the sanguinary programme of rt hellion. FaitUs la the Future The Democratio Programme Prom the N. Y. Timet. The more candid of the Democrats temper their exultation with a frank acknowledgment of the assistance derived from "citizens who have not for the last few years acted with the Democratio party." It is admitted, too, that this assistance, which has been made available by the errors and follies of the Republican organization, can be counted upon only so long as the Democratio party occupies middle ground. A return to Copperheadism, it is confessed, would drive off the voters whose help has seenred victory, and force them again into the Republican ranks. How far thsia nro. fessions are genuine, and to what extent they me auarea oy me active workers or the party, we need not particularly inquire. There might be some difficulty in reconcilinir them with the fact that in Ohio and Minnesota the Democratio Candida' es for the highest positions of the tioket were, during the war. pronounced ene mies of the Union; or with the farther faot that the gains realized in Pennsylvania and throughout the West are mainly attributable to the efforts of politicians of whom Mr. Pen dleton is the most favorable type. Cat these debatable points we are not, just now, required to touch. It is enough that the success of the party in this Saate is attributed by those who have achieved it to cooperation, whioh nothing dui gooa judgment and unceasing care can retain ior iuture service. Py what process, however, mav these pro fessions be reconciled with the nraotioa which is foreshadowed on the reconstruction ques tion ? The course was comparatively clear bo long as the hopelesnness of resistance to the law on the part of the South was conoeded by that section of the Democracy to whose recent declarations we refer. There was un doubted strength in tactios which, while re cognizing the power of Lonjrress to enforce its will, aimed at future contests for the modi fication or its action. The prudence which dictated this view of the question lm been discarded sinoe the victories were obtained. Instead of aocepting the obvious facts of the case, and reserving effort for the period when statesmanship may deal confidently with a reunited country, a revolutionary policy is laid down ior the guidance of the Democratio party. The refusal of the South ern whites to submit to the opeation of tne jaw is assumed and justiued; And on the additional supposition that' the next Congressional elections will give to the De mocrats the command of the House, a plan ia sketched substantially identical with the wild notions which have sometimes been im puted to Mr. JohnBon respecting "the Rump Congress." Hem it is, in few words: With a Demooratio House, and a PreBident in alli ance with the same party, the Southern whites are to upset the State organizations formed under the Reconstruction acts, aud are to form others in accordance with their own meas, -i'i""ung altogether necro suffrase. elected, and the latter are to be forthwith ad- .u i - ..v . u i i rniiin Ml i viu ti i ... ' , u J lU0o democratic majority. Then the southern benators. rlna tha Senators from the North, will form a majority of that body, organize as iuoh, and neither the House nor the President will reoo plter Ptaa.U. Are we wrong la donating this programme revolutionary f Do we ex aggerate wnen we represent it as the beginning of a new and bitter struggle, or as proof that Democratio successes point to tumult and disaster rather than to the paoiQoatlon whioh vdb country impatiently awaits f we consider it certain, then, that the "citi r.ens who have not for the last few veara aoted with the Democratio party," aud to whom that party is indebted for the advantages acquired this fall, will not prolong the connection. The succor they have rendered, directly bv their votes, or indirectly by abstaining from voting, cannot ne continued to a party which, uses its triumph as an assurance that Rebel will remain in control of the Southern States. The conservative classes at theNorth, who, on tne world's own showing, hold the balance of political power, have not acted with the purpose of restoring the Democracy to the control of the Government. Their course was rendered possible by the comparative moderation of the Democratio platform, but in the great majority of instances they have not dreamed of affiiliatlng formally with that organization. Their chief purpose has been to rebuke the intolerance and extravagance ot the managers of the Re publican party, under a conviction that the lespon mav result in the setting asidu of ita extreme and arrogant leaders. With Coppor headism as the alternative, this had not been possible. And we may rest assured that as between the objectionable features of radi calism and the programme of violence and Rebel victory, which the principal organ of the lemocracy proclaims, there will be a moment's hesitation. In a strict party sense, this prospect is emi nently satisfactory. The more extreme the ends of Democracy the more easy the defeat of its nominees. With pro-Rebel affinities, disguised under a pretence of Union Eentiment on one hand, and radical reconstruction, with all its harshness, on the other, we have no fear of the preference that will be evinced by any Northern constituency. What occurred when the Democratic party was a rank Copperhead organization will occur again now that it avows its purpose to destroy the Senate by fraud, sustained by force, and to bring back the leaders of the Rebellion to place and power. The party will be trampled down as ruthlessly as would be its promised revolution, ihe Republican party will once more sweep every thing before it. Moderate Republicans will overcome their indiUerenoe and disgu3t, and will rally around their party standard, even though it be upheld by radical hands. The war Democrats, on seeing the feast to which they have been invited by the party for the time victorious in this State, will resume their places in the Union ranks, and will vote as steadily as during the Rebellion against a policy which aims at combination with Southern malcontents to secure possession of the Federal Government. We shall again have plain, straightforward sailing. .There will be no tacking or trimming, no bolting or staying away from the polls, in the presence of an organization conducted in the interest of the enemy. But other than party considerations are in volved in the issues which will hereafter divide the Democrats and Republicans. The bane of the latter has beeu their excess of strength. Presuming upon the Congressional weakness of their adversaries, they have been reckless in the policy adopted towards the South, and indifferent to subjects immediately affecting the material concerns of the country. Measures have been pushed through on the hypothesis that a certain amount of moderate support might be dispensed with, without injury to the party. Radicalism has insisted on having its own way, regardless of conse quences. The same may be said of the party action in local matters. The extremists have wielded authority with a defiant air. Mode rate men have been denied admittance to con ventions and participation in the working of the organization. Corrupt candidate, have been foisted upon the party, despite of protest and warning. Now, all this could scarcely have happened had the party in opposition borne a less ob jectionable record than that of the Democracy. A compact, high-principled opposition is one of the essentials of successful parliamentary government, and its absence from Congress has been a prime cause of the errors that have been committed, as well in regard to recon struction as in reference to finance and taxa tion. Of late the Democrats in the Uoase have been a faction, fighting now with one wing of the Republicans, now with another, and finally throwing their little weight into the scale of ultraism. Under an expectation that faction might be superseded by a respon sible opposition, we have not shared the alarm which has been excited in some quarters by the results of the elections. Confident that the Union sentiment of the country is strong enough to keep the Government out of Demo cratio hands, we have hoped that the presence of a respectable minority would exercise a wholesome inflaenoe over the conduct of busi ness, the tone of debate, and the character of legislation. Such an influence cannot be looked for if the suggestions of the World indicate the objects of the party with whioh it acts. If it intwnd to conform to the reputation it earned during the war, to resist reconstruction at every stage, and to give ad and comfort te the Southerners who reject the scheme embodied in the law, it will le powerless except for evil. As a qualifying, correcting agency it will be impotent. And the objects for which it con tends will at once stimulate and excuse the extreme measures of the radicals. Unless the Republican management be given over to men to whom experience teaches no lesson, we may trust to the efficacy of the warning administered by the elections. What ever the Demoorats plot or threaten, the party now dominant in Congress owe to their sup porters and the coantry greater moderation and energy than have yet been shown in the work of reconstruction. Energy and judg ment in hastening its consummation are above all tldngs necessary, that the great stumbling block to national unity and peace may be for ever removed. But moderation is needed all the time to restrain extremists, and to prepare the way for that policy of forbearance and generosity which should distinguish the final stage of the reconstruction business. Only some gross and cruel blunder can furnish the Democrats the opportunity on which they cal culate. A Word to publlci. From the JV. Y. World. If we can convince fair-minded Republicans that negro suffrage is not needed to proteot the black race in the South against oppres !., ,hll thereby remove their remaining DlVUf W v r doubts of the Bafety of giving up the recon- etruction scheme. . Their unassisted reuecuons might bring them to the conclusion more greedily than arguments from a Democratio, and, as they may think, interested, stand point We will change the standpoint, and arcue from Republican premises. As a first step we ask Republicans to carry their thought back for a single year and make a reeurvey of the position of the party in the .elections, of lStio'. What was the 1 wafer unlral luflrage. upoq tha cproes. xr-v r mi T.T7? LARGEST AND BEfc-T STOCK OF FINE OLD RYE WHISKIES IN THE LAND IS NOW POSSESSED BY HEKItY S. H ANN I S & CO.. Nob. 218 and 220 SOUTH FliOTST STREET, WHO OFFEIL THE SADIE TO THE TR1DB IM I.OTF ON TEBT I VAWTAHK.Uii IEBHIi Vlt.tr Rto.k of Rjra Wbliklu, 1M BOID, Mairliii 11 th ftrorlt krinei pii d. "''""B "om wotb of loA,'60, and oftlila y.ar, up ta L.II..rl contract, aa.d. fov lot. to arrlT. at Pa iilvanla Railroad U.n.ti Krrlc.o. ia. M barf. or at Uo.d.d W.r.boa..., a. "ar tl. "m, ilirt, V'Vmtl The platform was the pending Constitutional amendment; its leading feature a change in the basis of representation, giving to each State members in proportion to its voters, and not, as at present, to its in habitants. It proposed to leave the regu lation of the suffrage to the discretion of the States, allowing them to admit or ex clude the negroes at their pleasure. Now, if the elective franchise is indispensable for their protection, the Republican party proposed last year to surrender them to oppression. The party is wrong now or it was dereliot then. It is more natural to suppose its present fears chimerical than that Republicans were last year accomplices of cruelty. Men's views change amid the passions of political life, but the facts of nature do not thereby lose their stability. Human nature in the South was the eame last year as this, and the means of judging it equally trust worthy. If the policy then proposed would have been safe (and the Republicans must have thought it safe), the present scheme rests on no necessity and has no valid defense. If an accountant adds up a column of figures and finds the amount, the same process will give the eame result unless some disturbance clouds Lis faculties. The passions generated by the quarrel with President Johnson have disturbed the perceptions of many Republi cans, and the heat of opposition gives to chimeras a semblance of reality. If they be come as cool as when the Constitutioual Amendment was proposed, they will see as little necessity as then for forcing negro suf frage. Let us go back still another step, from the Thirty-ninth Congress to the Thirty-eighth. We find another Republican estimate of the necessities of the situation. The war had not ended, but the Emancipation Proclamation was nearly two years old at the point of time to which we direct attention. The obli gation to protect the negroe3 was as great as it could ever become. It was in the summer of 1864 that the Republican Congress, expecting an early termination of the war, passed, by large majorities in both Houses, a Reconstruc tion act prescribing the conditions of readuais sion. President Lincoln defeated it by a pocket veto, thinking it too rigid, so that it never became a law; but it is none the less valuable as evidence of the views of the party at that time. The hill contained not a word about negro sufl'rage, although manifesting the liveliest solicitude for the 1'reedaieu. The only condition it imposed on the States in reference to the negroes was the insertion in their constitutions or a provision declaring that "involuntary servitude is forever pro hibited, and the freedom of all persons is guaranteed in said State." The bill did not propose to trust the protection of their free dom solely to the States; it provided for a release from compulsory servitude by habeas corpus, and imposed a fine of not less than $1600 and from five to twenty years' impri sonment for reducing any person to slavery. In view of that bill every hone3t Republican must admit one of these two conclusions either that Congress did not think the suffrage necessary, or that it did not think it had any authority to require it as a condition of re storation. If there was no necessity of pre scribing it then there can be none now, if it is authority that was wanting, the Thirty ninth Congress had just as little as the Thirty eighth. We have preferred to rest the case in the aotion of Congress rather than the opinions of individuals, as more fully expressing the col ective sense and average judgment of the arty. Some eminent Republicans did not 1 esitate to say that the action, of Congress i verstepped the limits of any real necessity. President Lincoln, who refused to sign the rst Reconstruction bill, will not be accused of eartless disregard of the welfare of the negro, verybody knows that he did not require egro suffrage as a condition of restoration. He strenuously favored the prompt admis sion of Louisiana and Arkansas, while the war was yet raging, with constitutions whioh ex cluded all negroes from the suffrage. We suppose Mr. Reecher will be as little accused of Indifference to the welfare of the freedmen as Mr. Lincoln. Nobody can have forgotten that this gentleman was opposed to excluding the States even as a means of compelling them to adopt the milder constitutional amendment. But we lay no stress on the views of particu lar men. What we wiah to emphasize is, that the Republican party last year, and the Re publican party in 18G4, undertook to prescribe the conditions of restoration, and that it neither saw the necessity, nor claimed the power, of conferring the suffrage upon the Southern negroes. The point we make is, that a danger which was not then perceived can have no real exist ence. It is a figment of fancy generated by party heat. It has no more correspondence to anything in nature than tho swiftly changing perceptions of old "Polonius," in the play of Hamlet. He Bald: Ham Do you iee yonder cloud that's almost '"iJoii'-alST'Ind 'M. like a camel, Vnm! Methlnks it is like a weasel. Iol It la hacked like a weasel. Horn. Or, like a whale? Pol. Very like a whale. Chief Justice Chan and the National Hanks. Pi-om the Sandusky (Ohio) Register. We frequently hear it said that Chief Jus tice Chae is "identified with the national banks, and therefore," etc. etc Judge Chase is "identified" with the national banking sys tem to this extent and no farther, thatlie founded the system in 18o3, and as Secretary of the Treasury controlled its operations, under the laws of Congress, daring the first three years of its existence With the close of J udge Chare's term as Secretary, his official relations with the natioual banks ended; and other than ollioial relations with them he has never had. Do the people understand what reasons led Judge Chase, when acting as financial head of the nation, to devise, and put in operation, the present national banking system Those who do tot know that kia vUvu w IL sicies. of a financial necessity which was imperative, a national need which was appalling, aHd that the result of his action was Immediate and timely relief to our bankrupt treasury, and through that to our unpaid armies lu the Hold those who do not know these facts have overlooked one of the leading features of our recent struggle. When Judge Chase first urged upon Con gress the passage of the National Banking aot he found lew to second his efforts, but, pressed by a great responsibility, and exercising a statesmanlike forecast for which history at least will give him due credit, he labored on until he converted a majority of Congress to his views, and the national banking system was inaugurated. livery other means for raising the needed funds to carry on the war having failed, the then Secretary had promised Congress that if they would adopt this mea sure he would be responsible that money was forthcoming. The result more than justified his confident predictions. Three hundred mil lions of bank capital was poured into the empty treasury at a most critical period of tha war; the comparatively irresponsible banking institutions and the unsecured currency of the States were together swept out of existence; a uniform and perfectly secured currency was given to the country, and more than a thou sand efficient and responsible agencies were established in all parts of the land, whioh aided very materially in the negotiation ani absorption of future Government loans. The finances of the nation were changed from chaos into order; from weakness into strength; from insecurity into soundness and safety. Such were the immediate fruits of Judge Chase's "identification with the national banks." It ia not expected that patriotic service to the country, performed in connection with its financial interests, however distinguished may be the ability shown, however disinterested the spirit manifested, and however beneficial the results, will beget a great degree of enthu siasm towards the person rendering that ser vice; but it certainly is not too much to expect of the American people that they will at least refrain from misrepresenting a publio servant to whose profound statesmanship and faithful devotion they are indebted more than they know for the success of their efforts in sup pressing rebellion. Nothing could exceed in injustice, . in gratitude, unreasonableness, and untruthful ness the charge, so persistently made, that Judge Chase was actuated partly by personal motives in originating aud organizing the noble system of finance which has proved, and is proving, Buch a blessing to the nation. The suggestion that the late secretary of the ireasurym devising ma great financial re form, Bought to put himself into such rela tion with the combined capital of the country as that he might profit by it politically in tha present or the future, has not even the merit of plausibility, for statesmen (and dema gogues, even), whose leading aim is to secure preferment and promotion through the good will of the people, would not for the world even seem to identify themselves with capital as distinguished from the other interests of the country. The tendency is always strongly in the opposite direction, often even hurt fully so. Aside from this (which of itself ought to ba conclusive) is the fact that the very nature of the national bank organization is such that it is Biroply impossible to use it as a political engine in the service of anybody and this ia one of the chief excellences of the system. There are probably not half a dozen banks in the country which have not both Demoorats and Republicans among its officers, directors, or stockholders; and if any attempt were made to use the banks in the interest of any man or party, the bank men of the opposite party would be prompt to discover, expose, and thwart the undertaking. And this feature, of the national system is cot only approved by Judge Chase, but is the direct result of his foresight and design. L O O KING -GLASSES! OF TUB BEST FBENCII PLATE, In Every Stylo of Frames, ON BAND OR MADE TO ORDER. NEW ART GALLERY, F. DO LAND & CO., 11 1 Sm2p JNO. Ol-i ARCH Wtreet. BLANK BOOKS. JJIGUEST PREMIUM AWARDED FOU BLANK BOOKS, BT THE PABIS EXPOSITION. WM. F. MURPHY'S SCjNS, No. 330 CHESNUr Street. - ' Dlaak Book Blanufactur.rf, Stitm Power Printers, and Statlou.r. A full assortment of DA-NK BOOKS AND COUNT INO-riOUbll W T ATI OH E R Y constantly oa