VOL. 47. AMEIUOAK VOLUNTEER. rususnuD Erzitr. .munsDAT mokniso bt ioiixu. teBAXTos. TERMS BußservTroy.—Ono Dollar and Fifty Cents, paid lei advance; Two Dollars' if paid within the year; end Two Dollars and Fifty Conte, if hot paid within ill* year. These terms will bo rigidly adhered to in •very instance. No subscriptionldisoontinuod until ill orreprages are paid unless at the option of tho Editor.; Advertisements —Accompanied by the cash, and not exceeding ono square, will bo inserted three time* for Oho Dollar,'and twonty-flve cents for each additional insertion. Those of a greater length m ?r jOD-P™xTINO-Sucli as Hand-bills, Posting-bills, Pamphlets. Blanks, Dabols, 40. 4c., executed with accuracy and at the shortest notice. |sorii tdl. A MODEL WOBSHIPPEB. "Toll mo about tho sormon dear, Take off your shawl and hat, And come and sit beside me here; The, text first—whore was that?” "Well, really, Aunty, I don’t know, I have forgotten quite; I wish you could soo Jane Monroe, She drosses like a fright!" “Miss Lyman wore a splendid shawl, With that old horrid bonnet, , ‘The very one she wore last fall, And that old trimming on it." , "Bnt Mrs, Beacon Jones had on Ono of tho richest collars I ever saw, and her new dress Must have cost fifty dollars." "Strange what extravagance and waste Some people always show ! Thon Hatlie-Bell, what want of taste She drosses with, you know." . "The audience you remember, dear, If you do not the sermoh; Which preacher do you like to hoar. This one, or Mr. Herman? "Ob, I Ute Mr.Heman, for Ho’a handsome, aunt, you know; Then he’s so.graceful, and his teeth How splendidly they show!” TOG SILENT RIVES. There is a silent river, The rolling river. Time; In Summer's rosy blushes, In hoary Winter’s prime, It floweth, flowotb, flowotb. In whatsoever clime. Aud well-trimmed barks are sailing Upon its silent tide; With golden treasures laden, The little vessels glide,' . And Faith, and Loro, and Action, And hopes are side by side. And nh, a host of others 1 - ' Oornpoao the little floaty . .. ■ Now* soon the 'waves’uvo heaving, Now wide the waters beat; ’ Gray mists steal o’er the Waters — V' ’’pho mournful mists of Fate. Xhe.poWstar grows dimmer; ! Tho scattered vessels driven All wide in disappointment, Unto tho waves are given ; And Faith alone romainoth To boar the soul to heaven. Hlmllnmoiifl. MY AGNES. BV A MOTHER. . How cross I wasl; I thought of it all the time I was talking to that little fragile crea ture, whose lips had, made those few simple requests I might so easily have granted, had J only so willed. A slight, little lilly-of-the ralley sort of a,child she. was, heeding all the protection and care nature had afforded her; one who loved to nestle in the thick green I,oaves of parental affection,' and bidden there, ksking little else. .‘‘lt is so cold in the nursery, mamma, and John hasn’t the stove up yet; I will be so still if you let me sit here by you.” ’ V Put a shawl about you,” I answered; ‘‘there is no stove here, either, and I am sure it’s not cold anywhere this morning.” The little girl left her seat and went to the window. Her face was very wistful in its expression, and her unsatisfied look wandered up at the sky, filled With its dreary gray clouds, to the trees on the lawn swayed by the chilly north wind, then away to the right, where she could catch glimpses of the lake, With its white crested waves rushing wildly in shore. It was cold; I acknowledged it to myself as I watched her standing there, but I did nut admit it to her. “Could you let me have one of the baby’s Slips, mamma, to put on my doll? I won’t tear it.” “How absurd you are, Agnesi Don’t make such foolish .requests; your doll, I’m sure, has ruough clothes of her own.” “I love to have her look like your baby, Biamma.” “ Don’t'lease.mo any longer, ehild 1 1 can’t IW l ”your doll and the baby from the same that it quite settled." “ r> ’ Puss tell a story to me?” “ Puss has the baby to attend to, and can’t wll you atones, Agnes. .Go get your sewing and sit down in the nursery, or do what you like to amuse yourself, but do not trouble'me anymore." i She lingered a moment longer, twisting the ends of her blue sash in her little fingers; then went out of the room, closing the door so gently behind her,, I scarcely knew of her exit. . .•A. little after this, I rose, and went to the Winnow. _ I can see the trees sway now, just ps they did that morning; and the gray sky •ad ft'e gray lake; I see them, too, and.feel the biting Qutober air which made my little daughter.declare it was so cold. As 1 looked from the tall window, I saw, crossing the lower part of the garden, old Bartlemy Boyd. His gray hair blew about over his haggard face, half concealing his .bloodshot eyes and mumbling Ups. I thought be seemed more wild in manner than was usual, and wondered what' had occurred to excite him. Generally regarded as perfectly harmless, ho was permitted to go at large about, the town; chopping wood, running of errands, and picking up an honest penny in Whatever useful way no could,. Little Chil dren loved him. His entertaining stories, his worry or vivid' pictures of sea-life, rawn from his own aaiior-oxporienco of many lh! r, 'k^ r T to * um tho little ones; and ~ u gbi when I saw them clustering around |u> i more than half doubted tho propriety olri P l rmit T n J? tllom tlme to trust a half crazed nwr. T’,l d,Bllkod to *>e the first to draw my „, v d rom tho innocent circle which o y e the poor old man so much delight. To mylittlo Agnes ho often brought the blue lillies' from .the distent pond; wild roses from the distant hills, and the rich hearted daisies Trom the low meadows. -The dove of flowers amounted to a passion; and her little five voar old heart could not be made, to leap with a greater joy than when permitted to go by herself gathering these precious crumbs from the table, of our Lord. Her favorite walk, when suitably attended, had always been to tho summit of Black Rock, a lofty crag which rose precipitately from tho lake and joined the level ground by a steep and rough descent on tho shore side. - On the summit of this crag grew many a sweet herb and wild flower which Agnes knew and loved, and being a child possessed of no fear of na ture, she was wont to venture to the very edge of the fearful precipice in search of.any favo rite blossom, maintaining her fearless de meanor, 1 and that calm forgetfulness of danger which seems the sole prerogative of the som nambulist. As I said before. I was cross that morning. I felt that I had been more childish than my child herself. As the wind grew wilder and the sky more dark, I began to long for the little one’s prattle, and to regret having banished her from my own cheerful morning room, with its soft, southern aspect, and lux urious appurtenances, to the chilly loneliness of some other part of the house, with only her doll for company. I went to my door, and called her name softly. I had some oak burrs and scarlet berries in my table drawer I wished to offer her. “ Agnes,” I called again, softly. There came no answer. I thought then it was my own conscious ness of having left undone those things which I ought to have done for my little girl’s amusement and pleasure, ‘ which sent. that sharp pang through rny heart, as, leaving my my own door unclosed, I rah rapidly up stairs. I never dreamed of regarding it as a foretaste of those fiercer pangs which "wore to henceforth fill both heart and brain and bring mo here— here! “ Agnes 1” I called again. • . I can hear my own voice to-day, as it came unanswered back to me through the silent rooms. The nurse opened a door and looked out. ■ ■ . “ Have you seen Agnes, Puss?” She had not. I ran to the closet whore her shawl and hood were kept. They, were gone. A hot flush .shot up, like flame; into my cheeks. My heart throbbed so wildly 1 thought for a, moment I must suffocate. Yet I wondered at my own agitation. It wasnot Such an unusual thing for the child to go out of the house. Why should I feel so uneasy now ? I could only feel it was so, without explaining why it was. I made a hasty sur vey of the whole house. None of the servants had seen my little girl; she was nowhere to be found upon the premises. The wind was blowing a gale now, and the clouds were as black as if choked with a deluge they were about to pour upon us. I could see the waves dashing wildly upon the lake, shaking their foamy crests over the rocks which boundthe shore. Looming high above them all, like some gigantic priest of nature standing on .the shore preaching to those rebellious waters, rose the gloomily grand proportions of Black Rock. As my eye. fell upon it, a fearful dread fell upon my sou). Summoning the servants, I sped away, bidding them follow me; and, heedless of the rough path and the wild winds, I rushed up the craggy steep, struggling to gain the summit, while the wind, blowing furiously in shore, thwarted my every effort. I was about, to relinquish the attempt, when something fluttering oh a withered shrub above me caught my gaze. It was a tangled bunch of blue frihgfe. . I know where that came from. I know whoso little scarf had caught there, and left those tangled threads. With a wild energy, which out stripped the most earnest efforts of those who followed me,' I clambered up. up, and stood at last upon the.'very; pinnacle, alone. Yes, alone! Do not mind it that! utter that drea ry shriek with the word ; it will rise when I remember with what wild hope I struggled to that fearful height and found no little Agnes there. She had been there, though; for on the branch of a low thorn bush, under which some blue-eyed flowers still bloomed, was a thin tress,of sunny hair— : a little golden curl to which the cruel thorn had clung and held, to meet a mother’s gaze. What must,l believe? How much had I to fear, how much to hope? Had she gone safely down as she came up; had she wan dered off over the lowlands, or, horror of hor rors! had she fallen over the cliff into those wild waves below?. The little shreds of blue silk, the little tress of hair, plainly.proved that she had been to the uttermost height of the fearful crag. Was she alone ? Had she disobeyed my injunctions never to come here by. herself? As I stood breasting the wind in this agony of doubt, ,my eyes were sweep ing the'climbing waters below me ; and just as.the servants joined me, I descried, upon the comb of distent wave, a floating object, something which might be a drifting log ora little bout. I pointed it out to the rest. 1 It’s a boat," cried John, the gardener, as it rose again ; “ that little nutshell of a thing which the Mayor kept moored here for his boys. I know her by the queer gunwale and the scarlet flag she carries.” , What did the little boat hold for us, that kept us watching there, when we know not yet of our lost one? We were all transfixed by one wild fear. Evidently, the frail boat was managed by some one who understood his work. Who would have gone forth in such a gale, but old Bartlemy Boyd? Was our lost darling with him ? I remember that as the little plank rose and disappeared, and rose again on the foamy'waves, bow all of earth seemed to melt away, and all the world revolve in one little fragile apeok upon an angry sea. One more wave; and now, we could plainly see the boot contained two persons—one on old man with gray locks, the other a fragile, pallid, little child, sitting in the stern, her apron full of forgotten wild flowers, her bonnet gone, and her shining hair wet with the dashing water. “Ropes, John 1” I cried; “be quick; no boat can live in yonder surf. Ply! Your for tune is made if you return in time.” . I stood, fascinated, gazing at the little one, so calmly facing her fearful danger. I could not go down to the beach—l could not lose sight of her long enough for that. I could see the old man’s efforts to keep his boat out to eea. What avail was that feeble strength against the wind and waves? I saw his look of blank dismay as he found his boat rushing into to the surf He turned and said some thing to Agnes. She shook her head in an ewer, and smiled. I know, as well as though I heard her, she had told him she was not afraid. He dropped his oars and caught the child in his arms; the next moment, and'thh boat was in pieces j -anff my child, my darling, the white" waves,- in the arms of t a madman I ’ , How I shrieked—how I raved I Far out info the boiling water ran John with his ropes,, casting them toward those frantic arms which "OUR COUNTRY—MAY IT ALWAYS BIGHT—‘BUT, RIGHT OR WRONG, OUR COUNTRY." |,made no effort to reach them. Like a green monster, came rushing a huge, dark wave. For a moment it staggered with its own terri ble height; the next, it had fallen like a cur tain before the stage, shutting from my sight a little whitened face and a head of golden hair. I have a faint remembrance of seeing that face once again; it was ashen pale, and ns cold as a, snow-drift. Perhaps it was all a dream; and I never really did see it again. I remember, though, my bitter, burning re gret and agony, when I recollected my refu sal to gratify any of those little, childish pleadings that morning, ono of which, cordi ally granted, would have kept ray darling by me that terrible day. I know ray remorse was no dream. It was my intensest reality yet. Do you wonder sometimes that I wake up screaming in tho night, or that I occasion ally shriek aloud in the daytime ? I thought, when I first came here,, and heard such shouts of horrid laughter, and shrieks so much louder than any of my own, that they had brought me to a mad house. I rebelled fran tically; but I soon found out my mistake, AVhy "should they put me in a mad-house ? ’ I saw, after a moment’s reflection, how absurd ray suspicions wore. This is a large, hand some building—a great resort for invalids and sorrowing people who need change of scene. My -rooms command a lovely prospect —my harp and piano arc here. A faithful attend ant walks or drives-with me everyday. I could hot he hotter cared for. On rainy days, when the sky is gray and the wind is cold, I sit and stroke this little sunny curl, gathered from tho thorn-bash high up tho beetling cliff. I twine it around my finger. I let it uncoil itself in the rivaling sunshine when it pierces the clouds, and hind it about-with this hit of biuo fringe, which was torn from 7ier silken sash. ,1 always find a sweet pleasure in thus contemplating those frail treasures left me of my Agnes; only when my heart suddenly swells till it bursts with those relieving shrieks do I remember that my little girl went away from me with little clusters of just such curls; and occasionally, when the sun is going down, long golden bands come reaching through my window; and I know my darling is straight ening her bright curls, and laying them thus from the sunset to me, that I may go out over tho shining pathway to her in heaven. Coercion, the Doctrine. Senator. Seward, says the Pennsylvanian, who uses words to conceal thoughts, and who can talk hours without saying anything was, much against his will, compelled to say some thing in the Senate on Friday last, by the persistent and adroitly put questions of Sen ator Mason. What he said: was, coercion, ' civil war, as his last remedy. He had just as well have said, it.is his first and orily rem edy, for ho has voted for no other, proposed no other, spoken favorably of no other! - The issue is now distinctly . made by the Premier of the incoming administration, and the people of the North have got to meet it. : Wo believe; that this . proclaimed , wa,S; s policj. will encounter the determined oppositions of three-fonrtlis of tho Northern people. To a foreign war they would be opposed, but to a civil war, which may not be confined to sec tions, and that would be sufficiently shock ing, but which may rage here at the North, and array brother against brother, father against son, and friend against friend—to so atrocious and unnatural a war they will bo forever opposed. Should the Black Republi cans attempt to inaugurate such a war, their own career will very soon he terminated in disgrace and shame, -if - not in blood; Let them beware. The destruction of the gov ernment will be crime enough—let them .not add to it the horrors of civil war. With all of Seward’s recent professions in favor of peace and the Union, "when the pinch came, and, taken unawares, he was compell ed to say something definite, or stand confess ed as, a deceitful juggler—he • fell, short of Hale .even, that compound of the -harlequin and the fanatic. Hale said: —“Ho would be willing to do.anything reasonable the country; but if tho Southern States’insist up on it, let them go, and when they come back wo will kill the fatted calf and rejoice over them as a son who was dead and is alive again.” Mr. Seward will find thaft) there is much more likelihood of the Republican party be ing split by ooer. ion than by concession. How Lincoln is to be Inaugurated—Mexico in Washington. The editor of the Now York Express, who is now in Washington, thus writes to that pa per from the Capital City. Ho says: “The city begins to look more and more like an encampment. The President elect, it is clear, is to have such an inauguration as none of his prdecoesors overbad—in artillery, light and heavy dragoons, and infantry. Re publicanism thus begins its necessary advent. The less Congress is disposed to accept ‘Crit tenden,’ the more need of guns, rifles, drag oons, artillery. So reasons, doubtless, Gen eral Scott. ■ ■ “The army quarter-masters have just en tered into n contract for barracks for one hundred.men near the. Capital, and for sta bles for one hundred and twenty-five horses. These are to bo for the light artillery; and, as Lincoln takes tiie oath in front of tho Cap ital, the grinning artillery will bo ready to rattle grape, if necessary, among the gaping lookers-on. Pleasant inauguration day! Nice time for women, fashion and crinoline . “General Scott is making, this city his head-quarters, and tho head-quaruers of the United States Army. Tho quartersof his Aid-de-camps are engag ed, and all, in all respects, arc to be ready, as Justice Taney administers the oath, to do their duty with grape if necessary.” Why can not Congress disperse those sol diers, and restore peace by adopting the Crit tenden Compromise ? ■ How They Soldier at Fort Morgan.— A letter from Fort Morgan in the Montgomery (Ala.) Advertiser, says: . . “Wo are quartered in the casemates. They are arches in the walls of the fort, about forty feot deep, twenty feet wide, and fifteen feet high. They are connected by side arches. Wo have hay for bedding, and two blankets —no pillows. Wo have planked up the ends of the easements, so as to keep out the wind. We have, plenty of coarse victuals badly cooked, bad water, and nowash pans. Three or four of our men aro sick from work and exposure. I enjoy it, however, very much : am well pleased and contented. I have not shaved since I left home, and begin to look as rough as tho roughest. This brings me into fashion. Gen. Scott says ho is too old to mount his horse and ride in the procession at tho inau guration of President Lincoln, but that he shall ride near the carriage-of Mr. Lincoln, in acarriaga with Commodore Stewart, both of them ready to preserve the peace with tho ar my and naval forces, CARLISLE, PA., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY §l, 1861. If you alre in trouble'or quandary, tel. your ■wife—that is if you have one—all about it at once. Ten to one’her invention will solve your difficulty sooner than all your log ic. The wit of woman has been praised, but her instincts are quicker and • keener than her reason. Counsel wi& your wife, or your mother, or your sister, and be assured that light will dash upon yout* darkness. Wgjn on are too commonly adjddged ns verdant in all but pure womanish affairs. No philo sophical student of the pel thus judges them. Their intuitions or insight are more subtle, and if they cannot see a eat in the meal, there is no cat there. In counselling one to tell his troubles to his wife, we would go further and advise him to keep nope of his affairs se cret from her. Many a homo has been hap pily saved, and many a fortune retrieved, by man’s full confidence in his “better half." Woman is far more a' seer and a prophet than man, if she bo given a fair chance. As a general rule, wives confide the minutest of their plans and thoughts, to their husbands, having no involvements to screen from them. Why not reciprocate, if but for the pleasure of meeting confidence ? Wbare certain that no man succeeds so well in the world as he who, taking a partner for’life, makes her the part ner of all his purposes. What is wrong of his impulses or judgmontshe will chock or set right with her almost universally right in-1 stincts. “Help-meet’’ was no insignificant ti tle, as applied to man’s’ cbm'mmion. She is a meet help to him in every darkness, difficul ty and sorrow of life. And what she most craves and most deserves, is confidence —with- out which love is never free from a shadow She had do mother 1 What a volume of sor rowful truth is contained ih that single sen tence—no mother I We must go down the hard, rough paths of lift, aiid come inured to care and sorrow in their sternest forms, be fore we can take home to oitr experience the dread reality—no mother—without a strug gle and.a tear. But whon'it is said of a frail young girl, just passing frpm childhood to ward the lift of a woman,, how sad is the sto ry summed up in that one short sentence. Who now shall check the wayward fancies — who now shall, bear with the errors and fail ings of a motherless girl ? peal gently with the child. Let not the cupvpf sorrow bo over filled by the harshness of j’our hearing, or your unsympathizlng coldness. Is she heed less of her; doings? Is'she Careless in her movements? Remember, ohjremembor, “she has no mother 1” When her, young compan ions are gay anij joyous, does she pass with, a downcast eye and languid - ttep, when you would fain witness the gushing and overflow-, ing gladness of youth? Chide her not, for she is motherless, and the great .sorrow comes down upbn her souk like - an/ inoubua. , Can you gain her confidence, you win her ftye L.Cpnjie. tbouy boon of your tenderost sarii;> JSI by the mem ory of your own ’ mother; ’ pothapa already passed tiway—by the fullpcsa of-your own re membered sorroww-byj the - possibility that your own childmay be motherless—contrib ute, as far as you may, to relieve the loss of that fair, frail child/ who is written Mother less. • .f ; ■ ’ The Human FiGURE;---Tlie portions of the human figure are strictly mathematical. The whole figure is six times the length of 'the foot. Whether the' form is slender or plump, this rule holdsjjped. ‘ Any deviation from it is a departure nJjm|Jho highest beau ty of proportion. The Uriahs made all their stntues'hccording to . this rule. The face ; from the highest point on the forehead, whore the hair begins, to the chin, is one-tenth of the who e statue. The hand, from the wrist to the middjip finger, is the same. The chest is one-fourth; and from the nipple to the top of the is the same. From the top of the” chest to the highest point of, the forehead, is a seventh. If the length of the face, from the roots of the hair, to the chin, be divided info three equal parts, the first di vision terminates where the eyebrows meet, and the second the place of the nostrils. The navel is the contral part of the human body; and if a man-should lie oh hi« back with his arms extended, the periphery of the circle whioh-might bo described around him, with the navel for its centre, would touch the ex tremities of his hands and feet. The hight from the top of the head is the same as the distance from the extremity ,of the fingers when the arms are extended. Shadows. —The,shadows of all day lijhg play at silent games of beauty. Everything is double if it stands in light; The tree sees an unrevealed and muffled.self lying darkly along the ground. Tho slender stems of flowers, golden rod, way aide asters, meadow daisies, and rare lilies, (rare and yet abund ant, in every nice, level meadow,) oast forth a dim and tremulous line of shadow, that lies long all the morning, shortening till noon, and creeping out again from the root all af ternoon until the sun shoots it westward in tho morning. A million shadowy arrows such as these spring from Apollo’s how of light at every step. Flying in every direc tion they cross, interlacing each other in a soft net-work of dim linos. Meanwhile the clouds drop shadow-liko anchors, that reach the ground but will not hold; every brows ing creature, every flittng bird, every moving team,, every unconscious traveler, writes it self along the ground in, dim shadow. The Silent Conflicts of Life. —A tri umph in the field is a theme for poetry, for painting, for history, eulogistic and aggrandi zing agencies, whose united tribute consti tutes fame; but there are victories won by men oyer iJiemaetves more truly honorable to the conqueror than any that can be achieved in war Oh, though these silent successes we never hear, the battles in which they are obtainod are fought in solitude and without help save from above. The conflict is some times waged in the still watches of the night, and the struggle is often fearful. Honor to every conqueror in such warfare! Honor to the man or woman who fights temptation, hatred, revenge, envy, selfishness back to its last covert in the heart, and then expels it forever. Although no outward show of hon or accrues to the victors of those good fights, they have reward; a higher one than fame can bestow. They come but, of the combat self-ennobled. KIT” “ My dear Amelia,” said Mr. Pickens to the young lady whoso smiles he was seek ing, “ I have long wished for this sweet op portunity, but I hardly dare trust myself now to speak the deep emotions of my palpitating heart: but I declare to you, my dear Amelia, that 1 love you most tenderly; your would Shed-would Shed-1 saw your smiles Nevermind the wood shod," said Amelia, 11 go on with the pretty talk. Tel! Your Wife. JloJlollier, The Great Government Swindle. 11 OVER $8,000,000 ABSTRACTED, By Ex-Sccrelary Floyd, W. 11. Russell, God ; ard Bailey, and Others. EXPOSURE OF THE WHOLE PLAN OF . ROBBERY.' The select committee, to whom was referred the resolution of the House, adopted on the 24th day of December last, directing them to inquire into and report the facts in relation to the fraudulent abstraction of certain bonds held by the Government in trust for the Indi an tribes, from, the Department of the Interi or, and to whom were, also referred the com munication of the. Hon. John B. Floyd, late Secretary of War, and the letter of the Hon. Robert M’Clelland, late Secretary of the Inte rior, have submitted their report. The repo;t opens by describing the bonds. United States stocks and certificates, which were abstracted. They were, held in trust for certain Indian tribes. Under previous Administrations, the bonds were placed in the immediate charge of some clerk, selected for liis integrity and capacity, who kept them in a safe in the Indian Office.. No stamp or other mark ; of designation was placed upon any of them, with the exception of a small portion, and the only safeguard the Government had was the faithfulness and hon esty of the person entrusted with their keep ing. So careless a mode of transacting the public business, and administering a trust so delicate and important, astounds us by the magnitude of its folly. Neither the Commis sioner (if Indian Affairs nor the Secretary of the Interior ever counted the bonds in person, and tho only information that cither of them could have possessed, touching their safety was the payment of the coupons every six months, and such examinations as they occa sionally chose to order to be made by others. Fortunately for tho Government, however, no loss was sustained during previous Adminis trations.. The report then speaks of Godard Bailey, the clerk in whose bauds the bonds were plac ed, saying;—The evidence shows that Mr. Bailey came to Washington a bankrupt in for tune, and a political adventurer, seeking of fice. Ho brought with him, however, the highest testimonials of confidence and respect from various distinguished men in Alabama, where he lived, and in South Carolina, where ho was born, and had previously resided. • THE ABSTRACTED BONDS.' All tlft stock?,, including those that were abstracted, wore kept in the room in the Inte rior Department, occupied by Mr. Bailey, in a safe, the key of which was in his sole pos session. The extract marked V B’’ will show the character and respective amounts of the abstracted bonds, us well ashe States by which, they wore issued, except in this—that the whole amount, as shown by said abstract,, is 372 of SlOOO each, when,.itvftcb. hlr,. Bailey delivered to Mr. William 11; Russell, 870 on ly- * VBAII.Br RUSSELL’S NEGOTIATIONS. ; *»sJioj'epoft goes on to show that W. H. Rus aoll and Godard Bailpy had negotiations dur ing which Bailey delivered to'Russell these bonds in instalments, both parties of couse knowing that tho bonds was not their proper- ■ • Mr.. Bailey’s motives for stealing the bonds are not clearly ascertained, but the Committee are, however, constrained to express the con vict on that behind the events that have been made conspicuous, and beneath the exterior of 'tho transactions that have been described, is a purpose which, although successfully hid-- den, was none the less powerful and efficient and lias given unity and vitality to the schemes now partially exposed. MR. BAILEY'S CONFESSION. ‘ A part of the evidence adduced is found in a communication froni Mr. Bailey, dated ilo cefnbor Ist, 1860, and addressed to the Hon. Jacob Thompa’on, Secretary of the Interior, containing a statement that a -portion of the bonds constituting the Indian Trust Fund, amounting to §870,000, were no longer in his possession. This confession was,-on the 13th of December, placed in the hands of Mr. Wag ner, with the request that it should be deliv ered to the Secretary of the. Interior five days beforo-thn expiration of his term of office, or, ns Mr. Wagner understood it, five days before the 4th of March. On tho 20th of the same month, Mr. Bailey addressed a note to Mr. Wagner, requesting that the note previously committed to him (Mr. Wagner,) should bo given to the Secretary of the Interior imme diately upon his return from North Carolina. Mr. Thompson arrived on the afternoon of the 22d of December. AUDITOR FULLER THE CAUSE OF THE EXPOSURE OF THE FRAUD. Mr. Bailey, in tho exorcise of forethought prudent to avoid detection, made up his stock account for the current .year, showing on its face that all the bonds were safely in his cus tody, and had caused its presentation to the Second Auditor, Mr. Fuller. That officer re fused to approve it, for the reason that the coupon account, designed to be a check upon it, did not accompany it. It is, perhaps, to this refusal that may in part he attributed the .early disclosure of the fraud. The report next speaks of the disposition of the stolen bonds. It appears they were all sold by. Mr. Russell and his agents to certain parties in New York, Baltimore, Chicago, &c. bussell’s business man makes himself SCAnCE. An important witness, Jerome B. Simpson, who would be found in Now York, it was ex pressed, could not bo obtained. He had ac ted in that city as the confidential business agent of Russell, Majors & AVaddell, and knew, it was believed, all the details of their business transactions with the Government, and of the abstraction of the bonds. The most active and diligent search for him proved un availing. As none of his acquaintances re membered to have seen him since about the day following Mr. Russell’s arrest, as no trace of him has yet been discovered, it is evident that he absconded or concealed himself to | avoid the responsibility of his acts, and an ap-1 pearanoe before the committee or the courts. HUSSELL don’t like to face the music. When Mr. Russell was brought before the Committee, ho wanted to write Ins Various interrogatories were proposed, which were promptly and freoly answered. Butwhen asked, “Did you ever, directly or indirectly, give to any person any considora "on. or make to any person any present for services rendered to you connected with your business with the War Department? Mr. Russell declined to respond before consulting with his counsel. Upon this suggestion the examination was at once suspended. On the 23d of December he again appeared, and was reminded of what had boon said to him on a previous occasion, and more fully ad monished that ho was not required to answer any questions that might criminate himself. He then evaded the questions asked him. TUI ACCEPTANCES ISSUED BY TUB SECRETARY OP WAR. When the iniquitous act perpetrated by one of tke subordinate officers of tho Interior De partment in the abstraction of bonds was made known, it was discovered, at the same time, that acceptances, unauthorized by law, and deceptive and fraudulent in their character, had been issued by tho Secretary of War, in favor of Messrs. Russell, Majors & Waddell. If your Committee could rest here, and could feel justified in expressing the belief that there are no other outstanding liabilities, and that no further demands would be made upon this or any future Congress, in connection with these extraordinary proceedings, they would deem this an occasion for congratulation to tho House, But, unfortunately, there are transactions of a similar character, but of a still greater magnitude, that claim your at tention. In 1858, the Secretary of .War commenced the issue of acceptances, and, at tho same time, wrote to various banks and individuals urging their purchase or discount. One of bis letters, and one tvom Col. Drinkard, Chief, Clerk of the War Department, to James T. Soutter, Esq., President of the Bank of tho Republic, will be found included in the testi mony taken in New York. ; These letters and representations are im portant, as showing the ipenns adopted by the Secretary of War, to get the paper ho issued into circulation. . MORE THAN §6, 000,000 OP ACCEPTANCES IS- SUED, In relation to the,acceptances issued uncon ditionally by the late Secretary of War, your Cominittee deem it their duty to state all the facts they have been able to discover, as fully as possible. They amount, in the aggregate, to. the enormous sum of $0,179,395. Add thereto the conditional acceptances which have already, been thrown back upon the Govern ment, tlirough the agency of Mr. Bailey, and the sum total is $6,977,395. This estimate is based upon .data furnished by the War De partment. It appears therefrom that accep tances to the amount of 5840,000 were return ed to the Department for cancellation. Mr. Russell, however, claims to have returned on ly $200,000 or $250,000. lie' further states that the acceptances which ho did return wore those which had matured in his own pocket, and could not, therefore, be negotia ted. But.this assertion is positively contra dicted by the endorsements, on the, returned acceptances, and by the testimony of Mr. Ir vin. a Olerk in the War Department. From the careless and irresponsible man ner in which business was transacted by that gentleman and the late Secretary of War, and from the fact,that it was the habit of Gover nor Floyd to issue acceptances at the Depart ment or at his house, or at whatever place he happened to be, it is a matter of great uncer tainty whether or hot the §840,000 should bo Redacted frdta the silnv The probability is, that when the acceptances wore returned to Governor Floyd by Mr. Rus sell, he accepted others at the same time for the same amount, of which there was no reg istry made. It is deemed safest to proceed upon the supposition that the, acceptances made in the place of those returned were reg istered. Upon this hypothesis, the 5840,000 must be deducted from the 50.179,395 of un conditional acceptances made and registered in the War Department. This would leave of them, so far as is shown hy the records of that Department, 55,339,395 still in circula tion ; and to this amount, the 5798,000 of con ditional acceptances received by Mr. Bailey in lie‘ii of the bonds, and the aggregate is 56,137,- 395. Hero, then, confining the statement to the records of the War Department, is a defi cit of $6,137,395 to fall upon the holders of , these acceptances, or to be assumed in some way by the Government. WHAT WAS DONE WITH THE ACCEPTANCES, The evidenee shows that tho acceptances have been sold in various parts of the United States, wherever a bank or private individu al could bo induced to purchase. Inasmuch, however, as the amount of those that have been traced directly in to the hands of present hold ers constituted but a small fraction of the sura still unaccounted, for, and as tho owners are daily filing additional claims at tho War De partment, it is deemed unnecessary to give a detailed statement of the discovered acceptan ces, orto make other mention of them than to refer to the papers relating thereto presented by the War Department, and to the general evidence. It is proper, however, to remark, in this connection, that while your committee do not deem it necessary to give said details, the da ta in the War Department fixes the minimum amount of outstanding acceptances known to that Department at $1,445,000. FURTHER LIGHT ON GOVERNOR FLOVD’s PRO- CEBDINOS. Mr. Richard B. Irvin, the faithful and in telligent clerk, to.whom reference has been made elsewhere in this report, says in his ev idence:. “There may, of course, ho other out standing acceptances, of the whereabouts of which the Department has no knowledge.”— There will also be found embraced in hia evi dence, given upon being recalled before the committee, on the 6th instant, a letter address ed by It. A. Barnes, Rsq., President of the Bank of the State of Missouri, under date of January 24th, 1861, to the lion. Joseph Holt, Secretary, of War, which is of interest, and will throw light upon the conduct of Governor Floyd’s proceedings and assurances in regard to the acceptances. Mr. Irvin still further, testified to the receipt of other letters by. the War Department since the papers furnished to the Committee by that Department were frans-1 inittod, of a character similar to Mr. Barnes’.) This branch of the inquiry is evidently prob fio, and could be pursued to a great length if necessity required or time would permit. Bussell’s testimony as to the millionsof do-1 Inrs’ worth of acceptances issued by Secretary | Floyd, is next commented upon, PECULIAR RECORDS OF THE WAR DEPARTMENT. By reference to tho testimony of Mr. Irvin, n clerk in the War Department, it will be seen tlmt ho kept a registry of the acceptances on loose pieces of paper, only as they wore repor ted to him from time to time, and no other was made. He states, too, that there was no registration made of th 05798,000 of condition al, acceptances which fell into Mr. Bailey’s hands; and.that immediately after the discov ery of the abstraction of the bonds. Governor Floyd went to his office and directed him (Mr. Irvin,) to enter an order of cancellation of those acceptances, which ho did upon a slip of paper ns ho had entered the dates and amounts of others that had been issued. The acceptances being in tho hands of the Hon. Jacob Thompson, having been placed there by Mr. Bailey, in lieu of the abstrasted bonds, an order of cancellation, at such a time, was simply, an order .against tho Government.— Had the acceptances boon held by other par ties, the order would have been equally futile for, if legally issued, it could not invalidate them. . Payments to rossell, majors and waddsel. It also appears from the records of the 'War, Department that while these acceptances were being issued to the amount of millions of dol lars, Kussell, Majors and 'Waddell were regu larly receiving their pay for the services pet' formed under their contract, in money, from, the Government. The aggregate amount.cf the payments made to them, in cash, during the years 1858, 1859, and 1860, i5§4,842,964- 41, and a largo portion of this sum was-paid by the proper officer at Leavenworth .City, Kansas. Governor Floyd admitted in his ev idence that every acceptance .which he made “ran against unearned money," and was,de signed to give them (the contractors,) “tho credit of thou - contract." Yet there has hot' been discovered the slightest indication that J ho made any inquiry about the payment, or concerned .himself to see that they were, when made, applied to the acceptances. ■ TESTIMONY OP SENATOR BENJAMIN. Mr. Benjamin, who promptly appeared at ■ the request of the committee, and testified with commendable and courteous frankness, states, that during the first session of the present Congress, some twelve or eighteem months'; ligo, he was written to by the attorney of Dun- ■ can, Sherman & Co., of New Work, and his opinion requested as to the legality of accep tances issued by Governor Floyd,’to Russell, • Majors & Waddell. It was mentioned in that letter that'theae “ crafts,!’ ns they were then called, were offered for negotiation with the assurance that they were issued with the ap probation of the President and Attorney Gen eral. Mr. Benjamin visited the President, and . submitted the inquiry to him. The President replied that he knew nothing about tho mat ter, that they had been issued without any knowledge of his, that-he did not know by virtue of tvhat law they wore issued, but that he (Mr. Benjamin,) might rely, if Governor Floyd had issued them, be had issued them properly, and that ho had better apply to him (Governor Floyd,) to ascertain hy virtue of what law ho was acting. GOVERNOR FLOYD REFLECTS, Mr. Benjamin visited Governor Floyd, and expostulated with him about this swindle.— Two doys afterwards, Mr. Benjamin received a note from him informing him. that he was obliged for the frank statement he. had made to him, and that upon reflection he,had deter mined ho would accept no more. The report closes by showing that Governor Floyd, even after Mr. Benjamin’s expostula tion and his .own “ reflection," continued to issue acceptances. Whether this manifest contempt of counsels, disobedience’of law, and violation of a solemn promise, can be reconcil ed with purity of private motives and faithful ness to public trusts, is for the House to.dotor mine. It is the opinion of your committee that they cannot,, KECOMMENfiA.TIONS FOR NEW LEGISLATION. .... Wens committee have now reported, ho far as ascertained, all the material facts connected with the Abstraction of Bonds from tho Interior Department, and with a series of transactions unprecedented in their character,.and remar kable for oltornate exhibitions of fraud and folly. . As one of tho results of tho examination they have made, they submit a bill to provide for the more certain and effectual punishment of crimes, such as those that have been brought to their notice, and also amendatory of the second section of the act of Congress,, approv ed January 24th, 1857, entitled, An not more effectually to enforce the attendance of ■witnesses on the summons of either House of Congress, and to compel them to disclose tes timony.” ; They also beg leave to suggest that the floa tations of the stock market, and the delay and uncertainty in the collection of the interest on the bonds, seem to demand some further' leg islation in regard to the Indian Trust Fund, as a measure of obvious justice, and humanity to the Indians. All of ■which is respectfully submitted, on behalf of the Committee. I. N. MORRIS, Chairman . Tlie Poor of Philadelphia. There is no denying,.says tho Phiadolphia Argus, that there is air immense amount of suffering among the poor of the city of Phila delphia. In the winter season, in our Nor thern cities, there is always more or leas hu man suffering, but at this time in Philadel phia, owing to the crisis brought upon tho country by the fanaticism and ‘‘the triumphs of Republicanism thus fur/’ the distress among the poor and the laboring classes has been increased in a degree terrible to content- pinto. . We observe that the same state of things exists in Now York, and wo copy the follow ing from the New York Herald, with'a view of commending the suggestions therein, ns worthy of the attention of the wealthy and business men of our city, who, by their sup port of the Republican party, hnve produped in a great degree this s'ate of things. The Poor of New Yutk in the Crisis, —The official reports of the Commissioners ot Uuar itios and Correction show that they have now under their charge 8777 persons as inmates of the city institutions, an increase of 465 over 1860, and of 850 over 1859—correspond ing periods. Statistics as to the condition of the outdoor poor are still more suggestive. Our reporters have ascertained that the dis tress among the laboring classes in this city is unprecedented., As many as twenty-eight thousand persons, able and willing to work, are now idle. The Superintendent of out door poor has received no less than ten thou , sand applicants for coal during the last two or three weeks. The same official receives; daily applicants who wish to be committed to the workhouse. Beyond this, there is, _ of course, an immense amount of suffering which is concealed through false pride and shame. | Would it not .be well for our Republican friends, bank-presidents, and so on, who voted for Lincoln, to devise some plan for the alle viation of the misery which the political ex-' citement consequent upon his election has caused in the Northern cities? In the South, wo find- the negroes sleek, fat, comfortable, and devoted to their masters. In the North,' the white laboring classes are walking about the streets with alternatives of pauperism, starvation or crime. The contrast is not a very pleasant one for us, but it is -absurd to [ deny that 'such is the state of things. . (t7* The fall of snow in Western New York and in Canada West is unprecedented. The Buffalo and Late Shore Railroad is blocked no. Fourtren engines are at work to clear the track near Stratford. On Friday night, a passenger train stuck fast in a snow drift, and the conductor and train hands walked four miles to Stratford to get food for the passed gore, who, with the help of good fires, passed the night comparatively comfortably. , , Quarrel with dead men, and’you won’t get hurl. 11 ' no. 37.