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Our pricee for the printing of Wanks, ilandbille, etc era oleo Increased. PRESIDENT JOHNSON'S POLICY. (treat Meeting in Philadelphia, Inauguration of the First National Union Johnson Club The National Union Johnson Club celebrated its organization by a public meeting at the Academy of Music. on Saturday evening the 19th. Several thousand people where in attendance, and several speeches by distinguished Union U. S. Senators-were made. The following resolutions were adopted as a platform of the organization: THE PLANFOICI The aim and purpose of this associ ation shall be to preserve and maintain the Union and the Constitution, and to support the President of the United States and his Cabinet in the measures And policy adopted in contradistinc tion to the revolutionary course pursu ed by the pr.esent Congress. . i. Resolved„That we are now, as heretofore, ardently attached to the Union of the States under the Consti tution of the United States• ' that we deny the right of any State to secede, and hold that all attempts at secession are null and void; that all the States are now States of this Union, as before the rebellion, and we deny the power of the general government, under the Constitution, to exClude'a State from the Union or to govern it as a Terri tory. 2. Resolved, That our confidence in ,the ability, integrity, patriotism, and statesmanship of President Johnson is undiminished, and we cordially ap. prove the general policy of his admin— istration. 3. Resolved, Th . at we endorse the resolution of Congress of July, 1861, .declaring the object of the war on our Tart to be the defense and mainten ance of the supremacy of the Constitu• tion and the preservation of the Union, With the dignity, equality, and rights, of the several States unimpaired. 4. Resolved, That, in the language .of the Chicago platform of 1860, and as quoted by the late President Lincoln in his first inaugural address, "The .maintenance inviolate of the rights of States, and especially of the rights of each State to order and control its own domestic institutions according to its own judgment exclusively, subject only to the Constitution of the United States, is essential to the balance of power on which the perfection and endurance of our political fabric depends." 5. Resolved. That under the Consti tution of the United States is reserved to the several States the right to pre scribe the qualifications of electors therein; and that it would be subver sive of the principles of our govern anent for Congress to force universal -suffrage upon any portion of the- coun try in opposition to the known wishes of the citizens thereof. 6. Resolved, "That this Union must be and remain one and inseparable for sever;" that the war for its preserva— tion boring been brought to a triton. pbant close, and the supremacy of the ;Constitution vindicated, the rights of the States under the Constitution are to be maintained inviolate,'and that loyal citizens within the States and .districts lately overrun by rebellion are entitled to all the rights gitaran• teed to them by the Constitution. 7. Resolved, That all the States of the Union are entitled by the Consti tution of the United States to repres soutation in the councils of the nation, and that all loyal members duly elec ted and returned, having the requisite qualifications as prescribed by law, should be admitted to their seats iii Congress without unnecessary delay by the respective houses, each house being the judge of the election, returns and qualifications of its own members. 8. Resolved, That treason is a crime which should be punished, and that we arejpposed to compromising with traitors'• by bartering; "universal am nesty" for "universal - suffrage." 9. Resolved, That the payment of ;the national debt is a sacred obligation never to be repudiated; and that no ; debt or obligation incurred in any -manner whatever in aid of treason or rebellion should ever he assumed or raid. • 10. Resolved, That we cordially en ,dorse the restoration policy of Presi dent Johnson as wise, patriotic, consti ,tutional, And in harmony with the loy ri nl sentiment and purpose of the pep- • pie in the suppression of the rebellion, with the platform upon which he was ileCted with the declared policy of the )ate President Lincoln, the action of ,Congress, and the pledges given dur i;mg the war. 1.1. Resolved, that the nation owes ‘ a lasting debt of gratitude to the sol— diers And .sailors of the late war for the suppression of th-e reimpen, and : that the families of the fallen li - ewes ‘ who died that the country might live Are the wards of the people, and should be cared for by the government. 12. Resolved, That the National Union men of the city who aro in fa vor of the principles herein enunciated,. and who aro willing to give thorn the' ;benefit of their practical support, and thus aid in the restoration of our coun try to permanent peace and happiness,' are hereby requested to form ward as 'atociatiOns throughout the city for the purpose of giving vitality and energy to the combined action of the people this regard,-and to report such or. ganization to this club. SPEECII OF SENATOR DOOLITTLE The chairman introduced ion. Jas. B. Doolittle, United States Senator :from Wisconsin. Senator Doolittle stepped to the front of the stage. As ho came for— ward the enthusiasm burst forth afresh. The applause apparently embarrassed the statesman whose name is a houses ...42 CO 1 00 WILLIAM LEWIS, Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXI. hold word of patriotism and honor,and ho simply bowed his acknowledgment of the deafening plaudits that rose to the very roof-trees of the academy. The lower circle of the house presented a scene of singular animation. Men stood in the seats and in the aisles wa ving hats and describing irregular ovals in the air with their arms, while five hundred ladies waved the speaker welcome. The applause finally ended with three stirring cheers for Senator Doolittle, when with clear voice and excellent emphasis he delivered the fol- lowing address: Fellow citizens, ladies and gentle— men : A little. more than three years ago to night, I stood before the people of Philadelphia; it was on the evening of thollth day of March, HO. It was a gloomy period in the history of the great war through which we have just passed. It was after the failure of Mc- Clellan before Richmond; it was before the capture of Vicksburg by Grant. We were depressed,despondent. Those men who with flippant tongue could easily cry "on to Richmond"—men of small calibre—had given way; and in the Senate and out of the Senate, mon of' other calibre and other characters were called upon to come to the res• cue. It was then that the solid men, first and foremost in that groat work, entered upon the organization of that loyal Union association which, spreads in; its branches throughout the land, accomplished so much in the great work of strengthening the heart and nerving the arm of the administration. It was on that night that I stood be fore you, to mo under a load of respon• sibility, growing out of my relations to the government, and especially to President Lincoln,upon whom its great responsibilities were devolved. And more than that, fellow citizens, at that time and on that occasion, wounds deeper, more affecting even than these, were upon me. But a few months be. ford that time had I stood over the new made grave of my oldest son, who had thllen a sacrifice in this struggle, and I felt on that occasion not only the responsibilities which position put upon me, but I felt those deeper emo— tions which every father• and scary mother can well understand who has been called upon to wake the same sacrifices. By my side on that occasion stood Governor Johnson, of Tennessee [im— mense applause], now the President of the United States. [Renewed ap. plause.] It was on that occasion that I came here with him to help the lead ing men of Philadelphia to lay broad and deep the foundation of that assn, elation which should enable us to go safely through the terrible trial until victory had been accomplished. On that evening a resolution, among oth ers, was passed, to which I shall call your attention now—a resolution which spoke to the hearts of the peo• ple of Philadelphia then, which spoke to mine, and to which my soul respon• ded. That resolution speaks to my heart still, and I respond to it still— to every word and every line and every sentence it contains. This was the foundation stone on which we reared that edifice which has been so instrumental in saving the country. "Resolved, That the government of the United States is founded on the Union of the States, ['great applause], which constitutes us ono people [re newed applause], and is the main pil lar in the edifice of our independence, the only support of our tranquility at home and of our peace abroad, of our safety, prosperity,and liberty." [Great applause.] By that resolution on that occasion we pledged ourselves by word, by re solve, and by our subsequent action: To its support we invited all our fel• low citizens, without distinction of party. We greeted all American citi zens of every tongue, kindred,and per suasion, as our friends and brethren in a righteous cause. Yes, fellow citizens, "the union of the States" was the grand central ilea of the whole. [Applause.] It was "the union of the States" which was threatened by the rebellion. It was "the union of the States" for which we were contending. It was "the union of the States" for which we sent our sons to the conflict. It was fur "the union of the States" that we were wills ing to pledge the last man and tho last dollar. [Applause.] If, on that occasion when we assem bled here, any man or woman had stood Op to denounce "the union of the States,' what reception would have been given ? Perhaps to woman we might have said "You aro mistaken!" But if any man had spoken ono word against "the union of the States," he would have been driven from the as• sembly as a disunionist, fApplauso.] I say now that the union Of the States under the Constitution is the corner stone of the edifice of American gov ernment; and he who denies the union of the States under the Constitution, let him come from the South or from the East, from the North or from the• West, is a disunionist. [Protracted • applause.] ""he Union of the States" "consti tutes sus one people." Yes, the fellow citizens of ono grand republic The Union of the States is "the main pillar ,in the edifice or our independence." How can wo hope to maintain the dependence of the American republic if the States fltro disunited ? The union of the State is "the only support of our tranquility at home.' How can we hope for peace among ourselves if the States are dissevered, disunited? The union of the States is pe support "of Oar peace abroadfr AqW,car. we hope to maintain a peace N9o7i &tier nations if we ourselVed'itiAlbstaritially 'af; 'war With Cacti- other, if instead of speaking the voice of the United Stateg wb speak the voice of thOdissanitedStates? Who that has taken the time to reflect, does not know that if on the first day of the present session of Congress every one of these States bad been rep. resented in both houses by loyal rep resentatives who had taken no part in the rebellion, and they had joined with us in speaking the voice of the United States to France, Maximilian and the monarchists of Mexico would have left for Europe in sixty days? [Great en thusiasm.] Hero is Louis Napoleon watching us with an eagle's eye while this controversy, this unnatural lvar— fare is still going on—this warfare to keep the States disunited, dissevered, not represented—out of Congress where they have no voice to speak for them. selves, although we are taxing them by millions. (Sensation.) Hero I say, is Louis Napoleon watching with an eagle's eye these disunited States, keeping Maximilian on a throne in Mexico while England is seizing the opportunity to gather together on the North a new confederation so as to flank the republic both on the North and the South. It was not my purpose to dwell at length upon the resolution which was adopted three years ago, when in this city we laid the foundation of that or. ganization which helped so much to carry the administration of Mr. Lin— coln safely through to a successful is sue; but there aro one or two other topics to which I desire to speak briefly this evening. The organized newspa per press of the country joined in the circulation of various rumors and char ges in relation to President Johnson which have produced . a kind of alarm in the public mind in relation to Mr. Johnson. I shall speak to you briefly, but very pointedly and familiarly, of some of these charges which have giv en rise to some alarm in the public mind of the North, and first of Mr. Johnson personally. It has been char ged over and . over again in the newspaper Tress that Mr. Johnson in his personal habits ;s intemperate, even given to drunkenness. Now, I under take to say to you that this charge is utterly false. ("Good," and cheers.) During the present session of Congress,' my relations to him have been such that I have seen him frequently in the early morning hours,atinidday, and in the evening. I have had frequent con versations with several of the mem bees of his cabinet, with his private secretaries, and I tell you as a fact that ought to be published to the world as an answer to the most infamous char ges that have been circulated against him, that there is not one word of truth in the charge that Mr. Johnson is in temperate. (Great applause.) This story has been circulated for the pur pose of undermining the confidence of the American people in Mr. Johnson as the President of the United States. They have circulated other things which aro equally false and malicious, but I need not•mention them, 1 aver to you that there is no man living who labors more assiduously and more in dustriously from the early morning hours till late at night in the discharge of his high and responsible duty than Andrew Johnson. (Immense applause.) But there aro other charges made, that Mr. Johnson is not true to the principles of that great party that elec. ted Mr. Lincoln and bimSelf to office.. The charge is repeated through the press and through the whole country, and so organized has been the attempt to spread this charge from Washington through the whole region of the North that I feel called upon to answer it. I undertake to say that Mr. Johnson stands, and that. all his messages, all his speeches and public documents stand precisely upon the ground which was laid down by the great party that elected him in 1861. Bat wherein is it alleged that ho abandons the policy of Mr. Lincoln, his predecessor r What Mr. Johnson did in Tennessso he did as an officer acting under Mr. Lincoln. Tennessee was reorganized by Mr. Lincoln thro' the agencies which ho employed, Mr Johnson being one of those agencies. Mr. Johnson as President has had noth• ing to do with the reorganization of Tennessee, The policy of Mr. Lincoln, and the policy of Dlr. Ljneoln alone was carried out in Tennessee. So too in Louisiana. Mr. Johnson had noth• ing to do with the organization of the State government of Louisiana. It was organized by General Banlp un der the direction of jr. Lincoln, and in carrying out the policy of Mr. Lin coln. How can you charge Mr. John son with abandoning Mr. Lincoln's po• licy in relation to Louisiana, when. ho had nothing to do with the orfmniza don of the State government of Louis. iana or with its State constitution ?-;••••• It was organized under Mr. Lincoln before Mr. Johnson came into power. It was indeed organized before Mr. Lincoln was renominated for the Pres idency in 1864. The policy of Mr. Lincoln in the organization of Louisia na Was approved and adopted 'by the great National Union party when they renominated him for the Presidency. So in 4rkarisas. Mr. Johnson had no thing to do with the organization of the State Government of Arkansas.— It was organized under Mr. Lincoln's policy, and no other policy but the po licy of Mr. Lincoln. How, then, can any man or woman stand up and charge Mr. Johnson with abandoning the policy of Mr. LincOln in regard to these three States? (Groat cheering.) Lindialn did not change his policy in respect to Louisiana. Wo know that, because but three days be• fore his assassination he made a speech in the - city of Washington on this sub ject, and in that speech Mr. Lincoln 'went on to defend, explain, and urge upon the country tho,adoption of Ms policy in relation to that State. Mr. Lincoln said in substance, "It' we 10 not recognikelhe State Govisirlitnen,t.4 Louisiana, wo do all in'oUr power to disperse,' demoralize, and disorganize. our friends; if onthe other band wO'tic• HUNTINGDON, PA„ WEDNESDAY; MAY 80, 1866. - • " .4;4 -PERSEVERE.- knowledge the State government of Louisiana, we do all in our power to strengthen the hands of our friends, to nerve their arms and strengthen their hearts to do battle for the cause of Uni on and of the country." [lntense em thusiasm.] We know also that Mr. Lincoln stated to the Senators elect from the State of Louisiana that if they would persevere they would be admitted by the next (present) Con, gross, in his opinion. Yon know very well, fellow citizens, that in relation to the State of Louisi aim the question came up in the Sen ate of tho United States ono year ago last March; and Mr. Cutler, ono of the Senators elect; writing on the subject, states what we all know to be the fact, that there was a large majority of the Senate of the United States among the Republican members of the Senate in favor of recognizing the State Govern meat of Louisiana. There was a ma jority of nine in the Senate at that time in favor of the recognition, some of those who acted with the Democrat. ic party being opposed to the bill.— There were a few of the Senators con nected with the Republican party who opposed the recognition of the State government of Louisiana. They were Mr. Wade, of Ohio [hissing,] Sumner, of Massachusetts, [loud hissing,] Chan dler and Howard, of Michigan, Wilkin son, of Minnesota, Brown, of Missouri, and some two or three others. These Republican Senators were opposed to the recognition of the State govern ment ofLouisiana, while on the Demo cratic side, as it was called, there were Powell and Davis, of Kentucky, (more hissing,) who were opposed to the State government of Louisiana. Those of you who read the debates at that time will remember that in a moment of excitement, during one of those long and protracted struggles at night when there was an effort to bring the Sen ate to a vote, and men like Sumner on the Republican side of the house, from factious purposes, were trying to pre vent .a vote. I denounced Wade and Powell—Wade the representative of the extremists of the North, Powell the representative of the copperheads of the South. I denounced them as join ing hands together like Pilate and lie rod to crucify the free State of Louisi ana. (Cries of "Good," and cheers.) I told them to their faces that Wade would not recognize the State of Lou isiana because the negroes did not vote, and that Powell would not recognize the State because the rebels wore not permitted to vote. (Great applause.) This was but one year ago last March, whoa an overwhelming major ity of the Union party in the Senate of the United States were in favor of re cognizing the State of Louisiana, in favor of the policy of reconstruction which Mr. Lincoln had adopted, for Mr. Johr,on had nothing to do with it whatever; and yet men have the effron tery to stand up and say that Mr. Johnson is abandoning the policy of the Republican party on the subject of reconstruction of these States. The charge is utterly groundless. The truth is, the charge should be made against the other side. They are abandoning the party; they are botray. lug its principles and its trusts. They aro denouncing the platform on which Mr. Lincoln and Mr. John Son were elected to power. They are proving false to the very grounds upon which wo won the victory of 1804. Now in relation to the question of suffrage; all that Mr. Johnson contends, all that I contend, is that the question of suffrage belongs to the States. If the people of the State of Massachu setts desire that suffrage shall be ex ercised equally by all persons, whites, blacks, Indians, nogroos, within their limits, that is then right; Massachu' setts 1111-S a right to say so. Or if Mas sachusetts chooses to say, as I believe she does say in her constitution, that any man twenty ono years of age who can read the Constitution of the Uni ted States in the English language, and is a citizen of the United States, shall be permitted to vote, Massachu setts has the right to say so. So, too, the State of New York, if she chooses to say all white male citizens twenty one years of ago and-upwards shall exercise the right of suffrage, and that all colored men who are of sufficient capacity to acquire two hundred and fifty dollars' worth of property upon which to pay taxes, may vote, New York has the right to say it. So here in Pennsylvania, if you choose to do the same thing, you have the right to do it, or you have the right not to do it, and the Government of the United States, the Federal Government, has no right to force that thing. upon you because under the Constitution of the United States, that is a right which belongs to the people ofa State in their capacity as the people of aState. So if you go south If Tennessee or-any State in the south chooses to extend the right of suffrage to certain classes of the colored men, the superior' class es among them, those who have edu cation, and those who have property liable to taxation, Tennessee has the right to do it, hut wo have no right to force Tennessee to do that. (Applause. That is the difference. It is a State affair, and not, a Federal affair; it be longs to the State, and not to the gov ernment of the United States. And hero allow me to say that in my judgment, those who take issue with the President and - hie policy OVdr look this great distinction between What the Federal government ought to do and what the State governments ought to do. The truth is tho State koyerathents, so far as our individual rights aro'conoerned,..'are of infinitely greater importanbe than the Federal government. The Federal government is mainly valualildto'sdenre us against ff)rsi•ga aggression, to- seem . .9 us- the benefits pf free trade ono withanother among 'the different States, and to so. / 4 ',J./ 'Z . /2 // • '7/"." / OM ,; IM, cure to each citizen of ono State when he goes into another State the same right which its citizens possess. Were it not for these three great purposes: to secure us in ourrelations with for eign powers, to secure ns in domestic tranquility at home from war with one another, to keep the States from fight ing with each other, and to secure to the citizens of each State equal rights when in other States; but for- these three great, essential, paramount ob jects of the Federal government wo would not care to have any Federal Government at all, because the State governments are those governments which secure and best secure the great mass of human rights. Take my own case, for instance: It is the State of Wisconsin that secures to me my rep• utation. If my reputation is falsely assailed, I can seek no redress at the hands of the Federal government. I cannot go into a Federal court to re• cover in an action of libel or of slander. So in the person of my wife and in my relations to my family, those dearest rights of human nature, it is Wiscon sin as a State that defends me in the enjoyment of them all, and not the Federal goVernment. [Applause.] So that, after all, in the great mass of hu man rights, those things which most nearly concern us, our individual lib erties, we are defended, protected, and maintained by the governments of the States, and not by the Federal govern ment. It, is because, in my opinion, these persons lose sight of this great distinction between the powers and the purposes of the Federal govern ment and the powers and purposes of the State governments, that they seem to desire that the Federal government shall mingle in everything. Mr. Johnson has said, in some of his speeches or letters—J. believe I have seen it more than once—that as a eiti• zen of Tennessee, acting upon the question at home, ho would advise, and he believes that it would be best, that the right of suffrage should be extend ed to the superior classes of the colored men of Tennessee—those who have su perior education or have property— because ho believes it might have a tendency to elevate the whole colored race if the superior ones could have the boon of suffrage extended to them.— Ile has said that if ho were in Tennes see, acting on that. question simply as a citizen of Tennessee, he would vote for it, but as President of the United States, administering the powers and duties of the Chief Executive of the nation, he has no power to endeavor to force suffrage upon the States of the South or upon any of the States of the Union. [Great applause.] But it has been charged, sometimes, that Mr. Johnson has been inconsistent, with his former speeches and declara tions, because be has granted pardons from time to time to those who have been engaged in this rebellion against the government of the United States. Now, felloW citizens, let me call your attention to the fact that the great mass of the pardons granted by Mr. Johnson were granted before the adop tion of the constitutional amendment abolishing slavery. They were gran Led at a time when it was not certain that we could obtain the ratification of three quarters of all the States; and, these pardons were g ranted with eon. ditions annexed, and were the most powerful instrumentality that could be conceived in order to create that pub lic sentiment at the South on the sub ject of slavery which would lead those States to adopt the constitutional am. endment abolishing it forever. The pardons all contain an express condi tion that the man to whom a pardon is granted shall take an oath to support the emancipation proclamation of Mr. Lincoln, and ho shall also—it is axon. dition of the pardon—never engage in the slave trade, and that he shall not purchase, own, or use any slave labor. You cannot conceive of any instru mentality in the world more powerful than these very pardons that were granted to those men at the South to bring that people up to the point of being willing not only to abandon sla very as havingdied under the blows in• fluted by the war, but so far to aban don it as to vote (mr an amendment to the Constitution of the United Sates which should elmlish it forever and put it out of the power of any State to reestablish it. (Great applause.) Bat some say that he has issued so many pardons that we cannot punish the leading rebels in this rebellion. Dow many do you suppose remain un pardoned ? How many is it:necessary to try ? I ask the person who is the most earnest in fa.vor of the prosecu' Lion and punishment of the leading reltels, how many do you wish to try and to punish and to execute ? There aro over one hundred and fifty mem bers of the rebel 'Co'ngress that ha-12,' not been pardoned. There are one hundred and forty generals in the reb el army that have not been pardoned. There is the whole Cabinet of Jeff. Da vis, all the men connected with his gov ernment,•and Jeff. Davis himself, re—. maining unpardoned. There ere hun• dreds, aye, thousands of the leading rebels of the South still unpardoned. Are there not enough remaining on whom the justice or . the vengeance of the government can be exorcised to satisfy him who would be the most de termined in favor of their prosecution and punishment? I reedllee,t that the other day, in a discussion in the Senate with a gentleman who was presqng this as a charge against the President, that holvid . nol, tried and executed the leading rebels, when I pressed him with the question how many ho thonght, I it was nceecsary to execute to satiely •., . the Idw, Ire was compelled to say that even if it wereleft to him ho would not try more *at five or six: (Greatlitugh ter.) Ilero'ero thousands of them re- I Mai fling unpardoned, any'nne of whom can be indicted for treace • if. arrested, I 6 7\• TERMS, $2,00 a year in advance. tried, condemned, and executed or ban ished. Why then, this charge against Mr. Johnson ? But they say ho has not tried them. Why has he not tried them ? Some say he ought to have 'tried them by a court martial. The Supreme Court of United States has decided in a case coming before it that civilians, persons who were not actually in the military service, cannot be tried and condemn, od by court martial. (Great applause.) If these men must be tried in - court it is necessary that you have judges and courts and juries in order to try thorn. Who does not know that Mr. Johnson from the beginning of this session of Congress—aye, from before the begin— ning—,or as urging upon one of the jus tices of the Supreme Court to bold a court in his circuit in the State of Vir ginia, so that some of the loading trai— tors might bo brought to trial ? Johnson cannot compel a judge to bold a court, and Mr. Johnson cannot try one of these criminals without a court to try him in. I say, therefore, that this charge against him is 'groundlosis. It is unjust, it is false, it is cruel thus to charge this man, upon who now rest the responsibilities of tho govern ment with all its great cares and duties, as if ho were abandoning his duty and proving false 'to his pledges and false to the great position which be occu pies. It is true that they may sometimes say, and they do say, that Mr. John son, now that the war has closed, does not use the seine language which he did in the midst of the war. I can con• ceivo that ho does not. I the! that change myself. When we ware in the midst of war, when it was necessary to fill up our armies and to urge our sons to the tattle field, when the very life of the government was dependent on the question whether wo should by arms overcome the rebellion, I used different language in addressing my fellow citizens from what I desire to use now. Then we were in war. I spoke for war. My voice was all the while for war, until the war closed. Bet when the enemy surrendered, when we had vanquished him, when every armed rebel soldier had surrendered at discretion. to the victorious arms of of the - Union, could I then urge my sons and my brothers still to strike the fallen foe Y (Wild enthusiasm.) From my earliest childhood, when a mere boy, if engaged in personal conflict with another, the moment he surren dered and cried "enough," I could not strike another blow. (Renewed cheers.) And shall a child of ten years teach us what every heart ought to know in which magnanimity and honor and patriotism dwell. [Applause.] What does ail history teach ? It teaches us that towards an enemy when defeated magnanimity, not ven geance, is the- way to conquer him. [Great applause.] What does Christi anity teach us ? Does it teach us to inspire our own hearts and the hearts ofothers with a spirit of vengeance to waeds an enemy ? When the enemy relents, when he says "enough" when ho says "I surrender, I give over the controversy," every principle ofchris• tianity, every principle of honor and magnanimity, all history teaches us that we should be magnanimous to wards a fallen foe. [Great applause.] - I can very well concede then that Mr. Johnson may use now different lan guage when he speaks of the people of the South from that which he used when we were in the conflict of arms,when our sons were being slaughtered by hun dreds and thousands day by day. - know from myself there were occa sions in the midst of the conflict, and especially after I was called upon 'to make the great sacrifice to which I have alluded, while the War was still raging, when, as a friend of the country and as a father who bad beep wounded, I could have asked heaven almost in the language of pray er to curse the leading rebels who had involved all these sacrifices. There wore times too when I looked upon the city of Charleston, that hot,b3d of secession, where it was hatched and born, and when I read accounts :of General Gilmore from behind his bat teries three or four, miles away from the city raining upon it day after day and month after month his storming shell and Greek fire, I could have al most wished in my heart that he could have rained hell fire upon that cit,j , . But when the struggle was over and I entered the harbor of Charleston, on the 20th of March, a year ago, sailing as the sun was rising from the ocean past Fort Sumter, then in our posses sion,passing along the deserted wharves , where we were compelled to go a whole half mile before we could find a single dock remaining where we could make a lauding ;' and when I looked across the slreets at ail the warehouses and saw them battered dawn, church es demolished, and the whole city for a mile and a half or two miles square a deserted, dead city, every building injured if not utterly destroyed,when looked upon all this desolation which came upon them, almost equal to the raining of hail and fire and brimstone upon the cities of - the plain, I confess to you, fellow citizens, my fel,),lings changed ; my vengeance, so to speak, was satisfied; Charleston had been punished, terribly, terribly puniphed far her great crime, and:7l3er people' had been punished and impoVerished. I can well conceive, therefore, that Mr. Johnson now may not always use the same lcnguage'of denunciation to wards the people'of the South which ho used in the midst of the war. I can conceive Mr. Johnson in two great crises' 01' hiC life. Ono when he stood in the Senate of the United States when Davis, Toombs, Benjamin, mid the oth er traitors around him were' making their insulting speeches, withdrawing from the Senate for the rurpose of ur ging the Sauth into the rebellion THE G-1.033M SOB PRINTING OFFICE T HE ."GLOBB JOB OFFICE" ie the mutt complete ,of any in the country, end pOx- Fleeces the most ample facilities , for . Ir444Optly executing m the beat style, every. variety of Job Printmg, such ITAND BILLS, PROGRAMMES, BLANKS, POSTERS; CARPS, CIRCULARS, BALL TICKETS, LABELS, &C., &C., MI NO. 48. CALL ARC EXAMINE NPECImEXEI op WORE, LEWIS' BOOK. STATIONERY & 1411 SIC STORE against the United States, when Air. Johnson turned upon those men with' that look of burning indignation upon his face which I can never forget. There was a moment in the life of Art• drew Johnson when, if he could have boon adequately protrayod by the pencil of high genius and placed upon canvas, it would have given the world a picture that would be immortal. It would live forever. (Applause.) And there was another moment in his life which occurred after he had taken possession of the presidential_ chair,. when the delegates of ten of the States that had revolted against the govern ment of the United States assembled in the White louse around him, and ask him, then the President of the United States, that he would look mercifully upon the people of the South, Wlie now were;subjugated:and subdued,who_ had given up their cause and their, struggle and were ready to resume their places in the Union. Mr. Johnson, in the midst of that crowd, occupied another place, playing another high role, that of President of the United States,iepTesenting a great government in the lour of its victory and in the hour of its magnanimity, extending pardon to some of thesd rebels. A picture drawn .from such an occasion, though it would present; Mr. Johnson in a different attitudd and under different - cirotinaStandes: would he equally striking and endur ing. The question arises, now that peace has come, now that blood has: ceased to flow, now that no more sons are to be sacrificed, shall we use the same language of denunciation, Of vi; tuperation, of war and of vengeance to- wards the people of the South that we did while the struggle was going on ? Is there any human heart that would desire that wo should now engage in this denunciation and warlike spirit to: wards the people of the South [Cries of No I no I and cheers.] Fellow-citiens, when Latium rebel- led against Rome and was subdued by her arms, the question came, "What shall be done with Latium ?" In the Roman Senate there were some who cried en t," "confiscation," "disfrancliio them." "No," said the groat Cantifft4 "make them our fellow citizens, and thus add' to the power and the glory of Rome." [Deafening applause.] CHINAMEN AND THEM`PAYS.-21k. Ca:World:l letter has thefollowing Queer chaps these Chinamen are, and queer customs they have. In ono corner of the room sits my Chinese boy,.reading a book upside down, and after the manner of his country, grin ning like a champan4eo over hierogfY z . pines that look like bunches of black. radishes. Ho understands it all i thoUgli, and probably finds that style, of ljter ature very funny. I attended the Clii nose dinner which was given to Col fax, ate with chopsticks, swallowed a little oreacb of the quo hundred qn4 eighty nine courses that constituted the repast. We sat down at six sharp, and got through at one prompt. Te§, I ate broiled bamboo, and. steWed whafebono—which perhaps may be styled the spring vegetables of the Chinese-sharks' fins,, birds' nests, and oth‘er delicacies Xec• recuperative to mention, ed cucumber and melon seeds, and all manner of sweet things. Taken as a, whole, however; I don't think I should like a steady course of Chinese diet; though the tea which they gave 14 was of most wonderful flavor. It was served up without sugar or milk,' and cost fifty dollars a pound, which is per haps, the reason why they did not ask us to take second cup. You would have been amused could you have seen each guest making frantic attempts to get something into his mouth with the chopsticks. Try to eatwith a knit ting needles, and you will have sonic. idea of the difficulty of the feat. If I W 9 VD a bearding house keeper I thinly lid ring them in upon my borders tO use instead of knives and tbrks. A little hash would go a Weuderful great ;Ay with them. I flanked the difficulty by taking hold of anything with them by sharpening mine at the end and ha. : punning the meat and vegetablkis. " A. young Englishman, while at Naples, was introduced at an assembly of one of the first ladies by a Neapoli tan gentleman. While ho was there his snuff box was stolen from him. The next day, being at another . bouse,.hs saw a pei•sOn taking snuff out of box. Ire ran to his friend. ."There,'.' said he, "that man in . blue, with gold embroidery, it talOug out ortbe box. hat Viis stolen troM ine y . estoi.day. Do you know him ? Is ho not a shar per ?" "Take care," said the other, "that man is of the first quality." "I do not ca'ro for his quality," said the Eng' : lishmum "I must have 14' s:tila 'box. again; I'll go and ask him for it." L - said his friend, "be quiet; and leave it to me to get hn.ek yOnetmx." Upon this assurance the Englishman went away, affei• invitiag his friend to dine with him thO•next *.y. Ho ay. cgrdiuglY *came, and as he e4erCif, '.There," said he, "1 havo brought your snuff box." "Well, how did you obtain it ?" "Why/'said the Neapoli tan nobleman, ‘!.I did not. like'io Make any noise about it, therefore I picked his pocket of it." tom-A young man was undergoing an examination at the College of Sur , goons, when the questions Put were of a - very searching character:' Aftet''ati 7 , swering a number of questions, be was asked what ho would prescribe . to throw a pa,tieqt into 'a profuSe perspy, ration. "Why," exclaimed the youth. ful Galen, "I would send him here to be examined; and, if that did not give him ';'l, sweat, I do not IcrioW what would." LE7=:,-lieep Fr reams run silently 0 BILL TIEADS,