f & ja American 1-1 ahnitccr s VOL. 58. aiEKIOAN VOLUNTEER. PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY HORNIIfO BY JOIMI B. BBATTOS. . )*Mjg TERMS: ■ —Two Dollars if paid within tho •SSSfiP* * Two Dollars and Fifty Cents, if not paid ;3ffllP l * n year. These terms will bo rigidly ad gplflei to in every instance. No subscription dia- until all arrearages are paid unless at option of the Editor. VBRTiSKHENTB —Accompanied by the cash, and exceeding one square, will bo inserted three Jiffies for $2.00, and twenty-five cents for each ■■t Additional insertion. Those nf a greater length in "^prdportion. —Such as Hand-bills, Postmg-billa P'atalphlots, Blanks, Labels, &o. &c., executed with and at tho shortest notice. . JNO.' c. graham, ATTORNEY AT lAf, 'WSpfHce formerly occupied by Judge Graham, Hanover street, Carlisle. jjjept. 7, *6e-ly J|||PttUh Hanover street, Canio^. '«EV SADLER, Attorney at-Law, Car- in Volunteer Building, South Hanover .fjlpftpefc. [sept. 7, ’6s—ly -mt j! m. WEAKIEY, fpp; ATTORNEY AT LAW, bn South Hanover street, in the room formerly occupied by A. B. Sharpe. 27, 1862—9 m. vpip^ ; U. NEWSHAM, f ATTORNEY AT RAW. Office with Wm. H. Miller, Esq., south » west corner of Hanover and Fomfrot streets, larlislo, Deo. 22, ISo2—tf €jdiUAS. B- IfIAOJ.AUCSiIA.IW, A T T O R N E Y-AT-L A W. 4g|FFICE in InhofTs building, just opposite ■fySSSM the Market House. - Carlisle March 13, 1862—1 y. i J. \V. FODLK, Attorney at Law. i. Office with James R. Smith, Esq., Rheon. b ill. All business culms' cd to him will bo prompt s'! tended to. . Fob. 6, 1863. i mu c. HEttlfiAN, lATTORNEY AT LAW. SfFICE in Rheem’s Hall Building, In m. tho roar of the Court House, next door to tho Xferald” Office, Carlisle. [Fob JAM US A. DITtIBAR, i' ATT cRraNBT AT LAW. iff noxt door to the vVmpr doora west of llannoti' r j t ,gpril 14.1564—1 y t - F. E. BELTZIIOOVER, 'TORN BY AND COUNSELLOR AV LAW, CARLISLE, PENN’A. IFFICE on South Hanover'street, oppo f site Bents’s store. special arrangement with the Patent Ofilce, suds to securing Patent Eights. Icpt. 22, 1864-ly t vf ! ViSf i'll ItUFUS E. SHAVfcEY, ISttorney at law. CARLISLE, PA. ! TTENDS to securing and collecting ' '.of.'jSm. Soldier's Pa;/,. Pension «. Bounties, &c, f Oflleo on South Hanover street opposit* Store. Fob. 13. 1802. Dr. CEO. s. Seaklcux, !> the Baltimore College of Dental Surgery } at the residence of his mother, East Louth l . three xloors below Bedford. [;Doc. 22, 1562, . , ’ DR< 1 >c,"LoOftlfiS, PM3JW • ; from South Hanover street to Wcsl ' v pjomfrct street, opposite the Female High Bchoolj ‘ ; <}Ckrllßlo. [April 28, 1861. I LUMBER YARD. • v subscriber having leased the Yard 1 rformorly occupied by Armstrong & Hoffor, ~| , the stock of O A L AND LUMBER, V -Yard, together with an Immense now stock, i , cK’/i'jpfljLhave constantly on band and famish to order ' and -quality of seasoned ''''lfipMßEß, i'tfi; «&8# boards, SCANTLING,- FRAME STUFF, Plastering, Lath, Shingling Lath, worked and Weathorboarding, Posts and Rails, oU fevery article that belongs to a Lumber Yard. :I kinds of Shingles, to wit; Whitepine, Hcm -3 y -''V|lo6k and Oak, of different qualities. Having oars own I can furnish bills to order of any and size at the shortest notice and on the i. reasonable terms. . My worked boards will be under cover so they can be furnished dry at ... | L have constantly on hand all kinds of FAMI *[ COAL under cover, which I will deliver clean ( r £d v any part of the borough. To wit; Lykens Val -1 |;: .p>|by,-Broken, Egg, Scoie and Nut, Luke Fiddler. I Locust Mountain, Lobbery, which I it l ' r myself to sell at the lowest prices. i 1 Best quality of i '■> v Limeburners* and Blacksmiths' Coal , on hand which I will sell at the lowest fig "■v * "ard west side of Grammar School, Main 'TICE.—I still retain the same position inn of DELANCY So BLAIR, which will be on as energetically as o/et at thur cld icar the Gas house. As our purchases, will ie together at the head of the nfarket, we mfldcnt by so doing to bo able £5 acoommo* jar customers and the public on.tbo. most table terms. Having relinquished the tan ' will deovte my entire attention to the Coal * umber business. All kinds of Coal and sr kept constantly on band and in the best ion. The Lumber Yard will be managed by )0. ZulofF, whoso experience and skill is well ito the community. By strict attention to ess, short profits, and a desire to do right w 6 to secure a liberal share of public patronage. ANDREW H. BLAIR. 15, 1865-tf RPETSJ CARPETS 11 CARPETS We havo just returned from tho city with a ipply of all graces and qualities of Carpets, :he cheapest Hemp up to tho best quality of •Ply. Also all widths of Floor Oil Cloths, jw Shades, Rugs> Matts, Looking Glasses, Ao persons in want of any of the above goods e coming season, will do well by giving us rly oalf, as we always take great pleasure in itlng oar goods and defy competition in this iU Please reinember the Stand, scuth-es* r Market Square, directly opposite Irvine and Shoo Store. * npOR SALE*.— desirable property in the I* north-east portion of the Borough of Carlisle. A nice home for » small, family. Apply to « C. B* MAC L A UGHLIN, In IS, r ll~* Jginf/er Omm ind s6| Printing office 'a hotel. Three thousand one hundred and eighty ono persons ’ last their lives, and nine hun dred and thirty-five other persons suffered bodily injuries by accidents, upon American railroads or steam'bofilts, or by explosions of powder magazines or the fall of buildings, in America, during the period between the close of the war for the Union and theSlst ultimo—just five months. These figures, supposing the whole year to present a simi lar record, would give a total of'seven thou sand six hundred and thirty-tWo deaths, and -tfwo thousand two hundred and forty four persons wounded within the space of twelve months. ■ If we could arrive with.any certainty at the number, not of the accidents of the above classes, accounts of which appeared in print, but of all that have occurred during this five months, the aggregate would be still more startling. But that would bo impossible. — The first effort of railway officials is general ly to conceal disasters, and next to belittle what they cannot ignore. The public must be content, therefore, with such information as it can obtain,- and draw the clearest con clusions deducible from the evidei ffs before it. It is to hid in drawing these conclusions that we have prepared the statement to which attention is called. One of the commonest attributes of our nature, and perhaps in a peculiarly high degree of American natures, |s to.forget soon a timo of danger or a period of discomfort. An accident occurs on a-rail way line,_or a' steamboat, which is of a very fatal character, and we remember it perhaps until the coroner’s jury has gone through its farce of investigation and has settled upon its harmless verdict, but no longer. As for the hundreds of minor casualties, - who reads of them or cares about them, unless they are shown forth in their horrible oggftgate of suffering and death. Then, and not till then, we begin to perceive that we have travelled for months with a terrible average of risk to oarsplves, and we became indignant and alarmed and inquire what is to be done ? Our own opinion is that bathing Short of the vigorous fiction of public prosecutors will meet the evil. But what a disgrace it is that no punishment, even upder the present system, is ever meted out to public murder ers, for those who control these death-dealing agencies, but do not prevent their horrible slaughters, are no better than murderers. — Nay, we cannot see in what respect n care less captain, or a reckless nilrnad • nployce who.neglects the supervision he is employed to use, is morally the superiur.of the Wretoh who slays bis single victim for a little mou oy-or to gratify revenge. Nor in-thus speaking are-we using lari gaage'on* whit too strong to meet the ease in point. In. New York State alone there were 285 persons killed and on railways during 1864, Compare this with the 20 deaths from the same cause in Eng land during the same period. Is there nut a pretty sqund conclusion alt ilnable 7, The whole subject of criminal neglect on steamboats and' railways is one requiring in stant consideration. And we ' trust' that what we print will not Ws an incentive to wards its being brought about. —New York Times. ANDREW H. BLAIR. LEIDICH & MIIiLER. poetical. the barefoot 801. BT JHO. a. ■WHITTIER. Blessings on tbco, little man, Barefoot boy with cheeks of tan I With upturned pantaloons, And thy Aorry whistled tunes— With thy rod lip, redder still Kissed by slrawborri i s on the bill— With tho sunshine on tby face, Through tby lorn brim’s Jauntly gra.'.e ; From my heart I.give *heo jdy, I was onca.a barefoot boy.. Oh !.for boyhood's paidhss play. Sloop that wakes In laughing day. Health that mock's the doctor's rules, Knowledge never learned at school! Of the wild bee's morning chase, Of the wild flower's time and place, Flight of fowls pud habitude Of the tenants of the wood. How the tortoise bears his shell. How the. woodohmk digs his cell. And the ground mole sinks his well, How the robin feeds her young, How the oriole's nest is hung; Where the whitest lilies blow, Where the freshest berries grow, Where the ground-out trails its vino, Whore the wood-grape clusters sbino; Of the black wasp's cunning way, Mason of his valid of clay, And the architectural plans Of gray-hornet artizans! For eschewing books and tasks, Nature answers all he asks ; Hand in hand with her bo walks. Face to face with her ho talks, Part and parcel of her joy— Blessings on the barefoot boy I Cheerily, then, my little man, Lire and laugh, as boyhood ban. Though the flinty slopes be bard, titubblo—spread the newmown sward, Every morn shall load thee through Fresh baptism of the dew; Every evening from thy feet Shall the cool wind kiss the heat; And too soon those feet shall bide the prison cells pride, Lose the freedom of tho sod. Like a colt for work be shod. Made to tread tho miles of toil, a Up and down in ceaseless moil— Happy if thy track bo found on forbidden ground— Tlappyif they sink not in Quick and treacherous sands of sin. Ah ! that thoo know thy joy, Ero it padses, barefoot boy! lEtetlniiwirs: “ACCIDESTSv” Jt®“Tho New York Herald says the name of the “ loyal” pardon broker who received $5OO for getting the Presidential signature to a pardon was Hon. Thomas Corwin. K 7" The Sharp’s- rifle factory, at Hartford, Conn., was, entirely closed on Saturday night, for the first time sipco it has been in operation'. ttf Oar Devil has got the bluest “OUR COUNTRY—MAT IT ALWAYS BE RIGHT—BUT RIGHT OR V RONG OUR COUNTRY." MAMMOTH TREES. Enormous as those fir trees are, however, they are still surpassed by tho red wood and mommoth tree, two allied species, whose di menfeiens task the imagination to realize,— The former is foundin considerable quanti ties throughout Culiramia. Speaking of it, Douglas says: “ Tlio great beauty of Califor nia vegetation in a species ofTaxodium which gives tho mountains a most "peculiar—l was almost going to say awful—appearance, some thing which plainly tells us wo are not ip Eu rope.” And it would appear that this sol emn character has reigned over the land scape, not merely for thousands of years, (the rings of annual growth in one treo, where they were counted, proved upwards of twelve hundred years,) but far back into the dim abyss of time, before even' the wandering sa vage passed under its shade, down in the ter tiary deposits. M. Lescpiereux has identified this tree among the fossil remains of the ter tiary strata in Yanoouver’s Island. The mammoth tree or Wellingtonia gigan tea is still largertban its ocusin'tbe red Wood. The average dimensions of a full grown- tree are about three hundred feet in height and ninety feet in circumference, bat Dora Rich ard Grosveoorsaw one four hundred and fifty, feet high and one hundred and sixteen feet in circumference. The portion of the bark of one of these trees set up in the Crystal Pal ace has familiarized Englishmen with the general appearance of its stem; the bark is of great thickness and strength, a property which is essential to the existence of the tree, far the timber is so soft and brittle that, but for tbe bark supporting it, it would be brok en across by tlie-wind. Tho following account of on expedition, by Mr. Patrick Black, to procure seeds of if, il lustrates this as well as some other points of interest. The.species is only known to exist in three localities, one at Calaveros, (tho grove first discovered,) whence the specimen in tbe Crystal Palace was obtained, and where ninety-two trees still remain ; another ot Ma riposa, which contains about four hundred trees ; and a third in Fresno county, the trees in which amount to about six hundred. The grove selected by Mr. Black for his opera tions was tho Mariposa grove: “ Well supplied with ammunition, (for the seeds weie to be obtained by shooting down the cones, which are about the' size of wal nuts, and cannot be reached in any other way,) he took his departure for the Mariposa grove, which is a long way in the outer world, not that it is without its own inhabitants, its own hotel, (kept by an old hunter,).nay, even its own authorities, as Mr. Black had like to find to his cost. lie took np his quarters with tbe old hunter, who may rather be said to have kept open bouse than a hotel, as the sky was the only roof he had, a roof nppa rently not yet being considered essential to the comforts of a hotel in these parts, altho’ one might have thought that it would, seeing that tho forest is six thousand feet above the level of the sea, and there was frost every night'while Mr. Black was there. He visited the grove daily, shooting down a cone or two. to see that they were ripe, before beginning to make.his collection.- He soon found, hqw- ever, that it would take a battery of ammu nition and an army of sharpshooters to make even a moderate collection of seeds. The seed is exceedingly small, a mere scale, so that the product ol a whole week’s shooting might be held in one’s waistcoat pocket. Mr. Black soon tired of this, and seeing one or two trees of less size than the others, and be ing apparently a man of a Jogioal turn of mind, came to the conclusion, first, that if Would be easier to fill his wallet by cutting down n tree than by shouting down the cones: second, that it could bo done ; and, lastly, as it could be done it should bo done ; so boldly putting behind him the fear of the anathe mas of the Now York Courier and of the Gar dener’s Chronicle, ari well as the nearer tor ror of the local authorities, at once, with the assistance of his best and two Frenchmen, (that the three most civilized nations in the world might all be represented in the perpetration of the sacrilegious deed,) pro oeeded to put hie intent into execution. They first selected the, smallest tree which they could find in the grove; it was twenty-four foot in circumference and took Black and the hunter three days’ hard work to level with the ground, one cutting on each side of-the tree. Increase of appetite growing by what it fed on, another and another shared the same fate, until they had actually out down four of these magnificent trees, the last ami largest being forty-two feet in circumference, which took a week to cut ond fell before the two Frenchmen j not, however, before the echoes of their axes reached the ears of Jinigo Lynch, who soon stopped the fun, and, in simple but unroistnkeablo language, gave him to understand that it would be ‘ danger ous’ to try it again. In other words, the nif thorities interfered, and although they did not lynch Pat, (which would not have set the tree’s up again,) they told him that they would it he cut down any more. He found the wood exceedingly soft and brittle,' so much so that one of the trees in falling snapped in three places before it reached the ground, carrying away whole grfrves of silver firs and pine before it.- ,Bift the bark was correspondingly tough, and Mr. Black and his friends found it a great deal worse to cat through than the wood —this being one ol those beautiful compensative arrangements which we frequently meet with, in the mech anism of nature.” —Edinburgh Jievtew, A Snake Sroar.—Mr. M. is very much ij. the habit of ‘ drawing the long bow.’ One of his stories is as follows: ‘Did you ever seeone of these hoop-snakes ?’ ‘ No,’ says the listener ; tl didn’t think there was any such things/ ‘ Oh, yea 1’ says Mr. M., ‘ I’ve seen one.— Me and my hired roirn was down there in the home lot, by the side of the road, and we seen something rolling down the hill, and says I, ‘ I guess that ere must be one of .them hoop snakes coming along.’ My hired man he was nfeard and climbed up a tree ; but I took my hoe in my hand, and went out and stood side of a tree in the road, and when he came along i stack oat the hoe handle, and he hit it a slap, and. made a noise jest like a pistol; and, sirj it warn’t mor’n a min ute alter that are hoe-handle was swelled up as big os my leg 1 ‘ 0”ln 1832 William H. Johns, a Welsh miner, came to this country ,and worked at his trade in Pennsylvania. Succeeding well he bought some mining property there, and after a long career of business prosperity died lost week, leaving an estate valued at $2,000,000. During the past three years his inhume amounted to $6-14.863. He had late ly given- $5,000' towards building a new' Methodist church in Pottsville, Ho leaves five children to inherit his wealth. [CT" The, following is o' copy of a letter re ceived by a village schoolmaster: “Sur, as you are a man of 'college; 1 intend to-inter my eon- in your skull/* CARLISLE, PA.,THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1865. Cheeking perspiration—-Fads WIiUl body Ought to Enow. Edward Everett booamo^ovorhoate- tifying in a court-room, wont to K Hall, whioh was cold, sat in a draft! until his turn came to speak:'bi hands and feet were iob, my Inn lire. In this condition I had to spend three hours in tho court room, died in less than a week from thus ohi the perspiration. It was enough to k man. Professor Mitchell, while in a state )f per spiration in yellow fever, the certain ign of recovery, left his-bed, went into npother room, beqnmo chilled in a moment, ana died the same night. _ | If, while perspiring, or while warm'ef than usual from exercise or heated room, there is a sudden exposure.to still, cold air, damp nt mosphora„or to a draught, whether at an op en window or door, or street corner the inev itable result is a violent and instantaneous closing of tho pores of the skin, by which waste and impure matter, whioh were mak ing their way out of the system, are compel led to seek an exit through some weaker part. The. idea is presented by saying that the cold had settled in that part. To illus troto: A lady was about getting into a small hoot to cross the Delaware; but wishing first to get an orange at a fruit stand, she ran up the banks of tho river, end on'her return to the boat found herself much-heated, for it wm. summer ; but there was a little wind on water ond her clothes soon felt cold, whiati" settled on her lungs, and within tho year she died of consumption, A strong man was working in a garden in May, feeling rather tired about noon he sat. down in the shade of the house and fell asleep; ho woke up chilly : inflamation of the lungs followed, ending, after- two years of great suffering, in consumption. On op ening his chest there was such on extensive decay, that (he .yellow matter was scooped out by the cupful. ■ A Boston ship owner, while on the deck of one of bis vessels, thought ho would lend a hand in some emergency, and pulling off his coat .worked with a will, until he perspired freely, when he eat to rest awhile, enjoying the delicious breeze from the sen. On at tempting to rise he found himself Unable, and. was so stiff in his joints that he had to be carried home and put to bed, which he did not leave until'tho ond of two months, whoa he was barely able to hobble down to the wharf on crutches. A lady, after being unusually busy all day found-herself heated and tired towards sun down of a summer’s day. She concluded to take a drive to town in an open vehicle. The ride made her Uncomfortably cool, but she warmed herself up by an hour's shopping, when she turned homeward; it being late in the evening she found herself more decidedly chilly than before. At midnight she had pneumonia (iuflamatioo of the lungs,) and in three months she had the ordinary symptoms of confirmed consumption, A lady of great energy of character lost her cook, and had to take her place for four days; the UVtchen was wafrvrand a draught of air through it. When the work was done, she, warm and weary, went to her chamber and laid on the bed to rest.— This act was repeated several times. On the fifth day she had an attack of long fever; at the end of six months she was barely able to leave her chamber, only to find herself suf fering with all the prominent symptoms of confirmed consumption, such as quick pulse, night and morning cough, night sweats, de bility, short breath and falling away. A young lady rose from her bed on a No vember night, and leaned, her arm on (the cold window sill, to listen to a serenade.— Next morning she had pneumonia, lindlsuf fered the honors of asthma for the remainder of a long life. Multitudes of women lose health and life every year, in one or hiore ways, by busying themselves in a warm kitchen until weary, and then, throwing themselves on a bod or sofa, wfthout covering and perhaps in & room without fire ; or by removing the outer clo thing, and perhaps change the dress for a common one, as soon as they entered the muse after a walk or o shopping. The rule should be invariably to go at once into a warm room and keep on all the clothing for at least five or ten minutes, until the fore head is perfectly dry. In all weathers, if you hav£ to walk and ride on any occasion, do the riding first. —HalVs Journal, The Tree of Life, and What Came of it. That very good paper for antiquarian lit erature as well as architecture, the Builder, has got together the following legend of the Tree of Knowledge: The angel guarding the portals of ; Para dise gave three pips of the tree fro'm which Adam and Eve had eaten to Seth, who plac ed them under his father’s tongue when* he buried himin the yalley of Hebron. .They sprang up into three saplings, which, ,by;the time of Moses, had united and, become one. It wss with that t) e struck the rock, &o.— David also possessed this tree, and, after having performed many wonders with it, planted it in his garden in Jeresalem. Sol omon, finding it large and strong, had it out dawn for one of the beams of the Temple, but the workmen were unable to make it fit in anywhere. It was untimely thrown into a pond, when it rose to the surface and formed a bridge.- • When the Queen of ‘Sheba saw it she told Solomon that One would bang on it who would be the Savior of Adam and all his pos terity, which caused him to 1 bore it overlaid with gold and silver and placed over the door of the Temple, that all who entered might ; bless it. Behoboam, however, stole it fur the sake of the gold and sitter, and buried it out of sight. But a well was dug many years afterward just over the spot, and up came the beam to the surface of the water. . This was the pool of Bethesda. As it floated there it was siezed by the Jews and fashioned into , the cross upon which the Lord was nailed. Jefferson’s Decalogue of Canons rbß Practical Life. —Here they are : * 1, Never put off till to-morrow what you can do to-doy •; 2. Never trouble another for what you con do yourself.- 3. Never spend your money before you have it. 4. Never buy what, you do not want bo : cause if is cheap it WiH bC dear to'Von. 5. Pride costs us more than hunger, thirst, apd cold. 6. We never repent of having eaten too little. .... ~ , , 7. frothing iff trouhlOironio that rto do'wil lingly- 8. How much pain have the evils which have, never happened, cost us.- , tf. 'fake things alwhya by their smooth handle. 10. When angry, - count ten before you spent; |f very angry, a hundred. SPEECH OF Eterf- HON. GEORGE H. PENDLETON, IN TUB OHIO STATE COhIIntION. iin tpa inneuil ;of air it my i;s on and ’ He eking U any Mr. Pendleton said he would qpt detain the convention long ; that this was not the time nor the place for much speaking ; that ho would not enter into details nor discuss at length the topics which appropriately belong to this campaign. lie congratulated the con vention that at length grim visaged war had smoothed his wrinkled front, and the ques tions now to be considered belonged to the, domain of argument and not arms. Ho con gratulated the country that the Democratic party still lives in all its vigor, to confront these questions; and to put their to the orubical test of thoaO principles by which ■it so long and ,so safely and so prosperously administered tfie government. - “ The Eiem’noratic party is dead,” say our opponents. Let them look here upon us this day and believe that in numbers, at least, it iis formidable. Let them look into the histo ry of parties and the philosophy of the gov ernment,, aqd if they answer "honestly, they must say that so long as a free government shall last, ithere must bo, there will be, a party asserting our principles, advocating our policy and probably bearing our name. The war is over. , Its avowed object of breaking the military power of the South is accom plished. The surrender of Lee confirmed it. The capitulation of every armed toroe be tween the (Potomac and the Rio Grande rati ■fled it. The march of Sherman to Washing ton, the review of the armies and the muster ing out of regiments and brigades, and di visions . and corps l established it. And yet here and ■ there, and especially now, when ■the exigency of elections requires the exer cise of arbitrary power or the support of ex treme positions, we hoar from some ex-Major General, who wants an office, or shoddy con tractor, whose maw is not yet filled, or fa natic, who wonts more power, that the war is notoveryet. Why not? Has not the Fed eral power bean astahllahod ? Have not the Constitution and tire laws been asserted over the seceded States ? .On the22d day of July, 1861, the Republican party, in Congress de clared “ that the war is waged to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution, and to preserve the,Union, with all the dig nity, equality and rights of .the several States unimpaired.” Was this true? Then the objects of the war are accomplished, its pur poses are attained, and all that belongs to a state of war should cease. We cannot be de ceived. it is a false pretext to cover over illegitimate ends. It seeks a for the use of usurped power. Courts martial, mili tary commissions, suspension of hebeas corpus suppression'of newspapers, interference with irco speech mid free elections these hnve been the fashions for years past. When we re monstrated, we were told they were the nec essary incidents of a state of war, and aids to tho war making power; that when the war ceased they would cease. Then they were maintained to support them. Tho war is at an end. Many of its effects can never be erased. The furrows "wiiiblrtt - lmB“lßft~iTroiir-sociol-and-govern mental system can never be smoothed over, its influence on the feelings and character of our people will remain. The relations of the people and the sections can never be ex actly restored. Tho questions whioli it has raised must be settled. The results which it has brought about must be accepted. Wo cannot recall the past. ,We cannot undo what has ‘been done. We cannot re-estab lish exactly the old order of things; hut we can be just and true. We can bravely and •honestly meet new issues, and like wise men, accepting the unavoidable, yield to accom plished facts. We can, as nearly as possible adhere to old landmarks, and thus secure to ourselves all the blessings of good govern ment. “ Let the dead past bury its dead.” Let us forgot the war except for the_ lessons which it teaches. Let us banish it as the memory of a horrid calamity, in which the innocent and the guilty, the pure and the wicked, the unfortunate and the undeserving, the conqueror and the conquered alike suf fered a common woe. If any would recall to nourish hatred between the sections, or to excite the people of cither section against each other, let his name and his fame be ac cursed ; let him be anathema mara naiha. When Mr. Lincoln delivered his inaugural address, he said : “ Suppose you go to war. 1 After much suffering on both sides, and the advantage on neither, you will have I he same questions of intercourse to settle which you have now.” He was right. Wo have had war—we have had much suffering—and what ard the questions remaining? The status of the negro in the States, and the relation of the States among- themselves. To a Demo crat these questions appear easy of solution. He brings them to the test of the Constitu tion. The Constitution declares that the powers ” not delegated are reserved.” It al go defined the relations of the States. No power had been given, to the Federal Gover nment or aiiy of its departments to interfere with the status of the people of the States, or to change or define the refutiohs of the States to each other. If the war was waged to maintain the supremacy of the Constitution, surely the .success of the war and the attain ment of peiitee should not be made the occa sion of impairing it. These questions must be left with the Stales themselves. If the war wos for another purpose; if Black Republicanism was all a lie; if coer cion was a base pretext, and armed reyolu : tion was the real design, we confront anoth er question What ought to be,- not-what is the Constitution ? And to this question we are being brought. Mon high ip authority propound it to U's. I see that s citizen of our own State, now on the stump, an aspiring man, announces that he will never consent to the admission' to Congress of Representa tives and Senators from Southern States, un til they Shall, by their vote's, have adopted the pending amendment to the Constitution, and another, changing the rule of represen tation,- until they shall have shown by their aptitude for free goveriWffebt, as he mroking ly terms it, by the faoilty with which they can put their hands on their mouth and their .mouths in the.dust; and. like' fawning sydb pbants, degrade thepselvdS by base servility. 1 am in favor of no change in' the Consti tution. , I would leave the question of suf frage to the States, because the Constitution leaves it there - . I would recognize the right of the Southern States to their old position in the Federal system, instantly, without delay without experiment, without condition,-save only that they acknowledge the supremacy of the Constitution, and admit its provisions to be the binding rule uf-the State and Fed eral action ;■ and this because, the Constitu tion creates a confederation' of equal States. ■ Two theories have alone prevailed in this Government from the beginning. One party , denied the' right of secession; the other pn|T ty nSaintained it. Both agreed that if the ordinance of secession were invalid, it was utterly void, inoperative for all purposes, in effective upon either the people or tho terri tory, either in their relations to tho Federal or tho State Government. They also agreed that if it were valid, it severed tho tie which hound the State to tho Union. Tho State re sumed, the delegated powers and became again wholly independent; ns it had been wholly sovereign. They both ngreed that tho States were sovereign were independent —except in so far ns they had consented to bo bound by the Constitution; and that whenever they recognized the nower of the Federal Government as defined by the Con stitution, they had performed their whole Federal obligation, and that in no event wore they subject to control or interference with the organization of their local government or tho management of their domestic policy.— Tho one party, however,_olnimed that when they denied the Federal power, ond obstruc ted its .operation, armed coercion might bo used to compel obedience to its lawful re quirements. This was the extreme doctrine of the Federalists—this was tho theory of who called themselves the friends of the government. This was the theory on whioh tho war was commenced. This was the the- ory of coercion. This Was the theory of Mr. Lincoln, when ho said that alter a war tho same questions would exist as before. This was the theory of the Crittenden resolution, and the Republican party in Congress. This was the theory of General Sherman when he entered into his.truce with General Johnson. And ho said rightly, that its ob servance would bring peaco from the Poto mac to tho Rio Grande—a veritable peace a pacification. Resistance to Federal authori ty would have censed, armed forces would have been dispersed, arms and forts would have been given up, the Federal laws would have been executed. On the other hand, the State Governments would have been left in- .tact, the functions of civil society would have been unimpeded, tho civil law would have been administered by ordinary tribunals, the ordinances of secession would have been re- pealed or treated as' nullities, the Federal Government and Stale Governments would, by this time, have revolved harmoniously in their respective orbits, and then to the States would bo left, ns they properly beldng, tho questions of negro suffrage and new consti tutions, and the relations of labor. I think General Sherman proved himself oven more wise in negotiation than formidable in war, and that his statesmanship, move than his arms would have maintained tho Union. But in these latter days a new theory has sprung into being. It is the offspring of more than yankee ingenuity, stimulated by more than yankee fanaticism. It holds that acts secession are both valid ami invalid— valid to destroy the State, to dost. Oy the Union. The State of Virginia ndoptel and ratiiicd the Constitution, not as pult of the people of the United States,s|ot as a ma jority of the people of Virginia, but in her capacity as a sovereign State, regulating her relations to other sovereigns. The oi l .con federation had been practically dissolved, the new one had not been formed. Virginia was absolutely sovereign, and, ns such, gave her parent to the Federal Constitution. By that act she became a member of the Union. By 'thnt act alone—hv her command alone—her citizens owe obedience to the Federal Gov ernment. Virginia repeals that ac tof ratin cation, and thereby endeavors to secede from the Union, and to release herself from Feder al obligations, and her citizens from obedi ence to Federal law. These gentlemen aver that the act of re peal docs not dissolve the the tie which binds the, territory, the Union, but does destroy its State Government; does dissolve it ns a po litical community ; does absolve the Federal Government from all,duties, and docs confer upon it all powers of management and con trol. I will not soy that the gentlemen do not themselves believe this doctrine but I will say that if they can maintain it, the war was not for the Union, but for conquest, and the result is then, the South is subjugated, not to the constitution, but to the wlil of the North. And then it follows that the imposi tion of negro suffrage, of new constitutions, of amendments to the Federal Constitution, the restoration of civil law, or the continu ance of military rule are questions of policy, not power, and to this position do these gen tleman, most of all things, desire to reduce them. Midway between these positions is the.tho ory adopted by tlie Administration, or per haps, I ought to say by President Johnson. He believes that the question of suffrage be longs to the States. Ho believes the ordi nances of secession were invalid for every purpose—-utterly void; —that they dj not af fect either the'territory or the people, or the State Government, bat that the officers of the State Governments, in resorting to war became usurpers, and by force, and in fraud, uorverted the powers of the - State to illegal Unde; that their aciff, so far da executed,are utterly void. This usurpation sopplantol the legitimatogovornraents vthich tiff dormant imperative now, but entitled to all the pow ers and rights of the States, when the mar nation displaced them. lienee ho dfifioiats Provisional to set tho old machine in motion and seek a pivotal-point on which its revolution shall commence. I wish the President had gone further.— He would have done better if he had accep ted Shormim’e truce, lie would havo dune better if, when he received the submission of armed forces, he had recognized the legiti mate powers of organized State Governments. But he hoe done well in this, that he recog nizes the powers of thC'States Over the ques tion of sffffrage ; that he appoints ns Provis ional Governor the citizens of the States, and not supefserviceablo patriots from Ohio or Massachusetts—that hd desires the States to resume their relations to the Federal Gov ernment as BQOn as possible and to be' repre sented in- both houses of Congress—and on these points I desire fo' give him a cordial and hearty approval Tho first desire ot every patrlpt now is the pacification of the country, the return to.thff ways dtfties aiVd prosperities ot peace; and this can moat speedily and only be acoom pliahed by securing to thepeopleof the south self government.in their States, and their ap propriate influence' in the Government o [ the. Union. The Constitution will do_ this. It need only be observed, - Its provisions uro uH-suffioient. It needs no Amendment.— Wise men made it; good men administered it for eeventv years ; peace and prosperity at tended it. "It will Wing again anion and freedom and prosperity. It secures the rights ] of tho States at homo, It secures the just rights of the Federal Government.. It secures, the liberty i f the oitiz'eri. If the President will fairly administer it; if he will mate an lionest effort to applv its provisions ; if he will remember that the pnworsjftf the Feder ,al Government arc ill delegated, and the are dll reserved; that trial by j ur y» free Bpeeoh, free press are to b 6 held invio lato ; that military commißiionß for tho trial of civilians, arc absolutely prohibited, I,[for one, believe it to bo ray hightcst duty to giyo him a warm support.' If ho will not go so far, I will support him where he is right, and as earnestly condemn him when he is wrong. The party which has,not been diverted intho midst of the terrors of the past four years from its steady support of the rights of the States and the rights of the people cannot bo seduced by hopes of power, nor driyon by fear of. consequences to abandon that position now. It demands nothing which is hot pre scribed in the Constitution j it will bo Satis fied with nothing less ; it will bo unselfish and earnest in its support; it will bo deter mined, and active in its opposition ; it rises above party aims ; it banishes party aspira tions ; it will bo true to him whoever ho may be who will bo true to tho constitution and the country. The questions now in controversy touch the very organization of the Federal Govern moct. They revive the old theories of con federation and Consolidation. They are hid den under spuriobs and deceptive names Reconstruction, ns oub opponents use tho word, means not restoration of tho Union, but reconstruction of tho.Co.nstitution ; change in tho frame-work of tho government, and every change proposed is in diminution of the State, and aggrandizement of the Federal Government. Delay in reconstruction means thnt military governments are to be used to effect them. The tendency of war is to Con solidation. AVe mdst resist it. It will lead todespotism,local aolf-goVetnment, tho rights of the States confederation. Those are tha only hope of liberty. Our fathers saw' this, and they formed confederation. In few and simple words, they established the test of all questions. " All powers not delegated are reserved.” Lotus bring all to this test.— Let ns solve them by it and ns fur as human wisdom can effebt.it,-Wo escape all dangers. Shall wo change that tost now 1 Shall we destroy tho States? Shall wo impair their powers ? Are wu wiser, more patriotic, mora honest than our forefathers ? Itfo. Lot us restore tho Government as they made it.— They, gave us a blessing; lot us beware that we do not make it a curse, , The speech Wits Warmly received and elic ited throughout marked attention and great applause. PiiiLosoi'iiEris At a Beer Gaiuies.—Pro*- feasor Thiersch, has long stood nearly at the bead of the classical scholars in Gormnpy.— He was especially interesting to rao, because I tirst gained a radical knowledge of tha Greek verb; as long ago as 1822, by studying a work of his which my teacher, Mr. Simeon Putnam, accidentally possessed. He was notr at home when I culled, but in the course of the afternoon bo camo to our lodgings and called on mo. He is a gray-headed old gen tleman, and always walks.with a chno, and accompanied by a dog. Ho speaks English a very little. He invited mo to walk wife him to a “bier keller,” where he would in troduce mo to tho principal celebrities of Munich. I forgot the name of tho keller, but Agas siz will doubtless remember it, as he must have toon there many a time. It lies at some’ distance outside the city, on the hill, which is hollowed out for beer barrels. The but laco is occupied by a house and garden, with trees. Under the trees are arranged plain wooden tables and benches to match. A band of musicians is in attendance, and, as tho evening comes on, tho whole is lighted with candles. Tho extensive gardens are rapidly Idled with all sorts of people—students, cit izens With their wives-and daughters, profes sors, lawyers, and so on. The teller furn ishes absolutely nothing but Bavarian beer, aud black bread, fur which each person pays' six groshen, or about four or live cents. If - he wants anything else, ho must bring it witlvhim. Arriving at the place, Professor' Thiersch conducted me through tho tables,- the occu pants of which saluted him with the greatest respect as we passed along, until he found the one ho was in search of. There was sit ting Steub, tho author of an admirable work on Greece'. Fullmorayer, tho author of a great work on the, Slavonian immigration linto Greece ; Mailer, the first. Orientalist in Germany ; and four or five other gentlemen, whoso names are classical in tho literatnro 1 of the ago, sitting on a rough bench, at a ta- ble of black and weather-worn plunk, each with a pot of beer aud a slico of broad as daek as the table. An eminent jurist, whose opinions are law over half tho civilized world, hail brought in his pocket a slice of ham, wrapped up in n piece uf newspaper, which lity before him, and added something substantial to his en tertainment. Ho cut it up with a jack-knife', and laid the bits on the black broad. Professor Thiersch called the damsel in attendance, ordered two pots of beer, and two slices of black bread, and wo joined tho 'learned' revels of tho com pany. I never met a more intelligent, genial, and pleasant circle ; and for the sake OT their delightful conversation I readily drank tho beer aud ate the bread, which, without such a seasoning, I should have found it impossi . bio to worry down.- It was a most curious and characteristic scene, and I have describ ed it partly for Agassiz with whom I wish you would talk about it. I think ho will recognize the fidelity of the picture. At ths end of tho evening wo returned, and Profea -1 sor Thiersch invited me' to his house, llis family was seated at a tea table in tho gar- wife, two daughters, and a sister; and, as 1 had Pot Supped very heartily at the “ bier kellor/’ I had no objections to a nice cup of tea and a sandwich.- -Professor j Felton’s Letter from: Munich, 1854. (£/” A sporting young Indy says. “If the course of true love' never ran smooth,’ why don’t they Water it regularly until they got the course so smooth that u dunkey could ruq upon it?” 03> A contraband in Washington being asked the other day how ho liked freedom, said, 0, berry well, but must hah de right •f sufferage ’fore I'so rea l satisfied.” O” If it was not good for Adam to Hv9 single when there was only one woman' OM earth, how very criminally guilty aro old bachelors', with the woi'ld full of pretty girls. C7* Works of Art of the yalae of ’morn than $445,000 were exported Irom Romo ia 1804.- 33?” A curious inquirer, desirous to know how he looked when asleep, eat with closed eyes before a mirror* 33?” One of twin brothers dieda fellow* meeting the survivor, asked, ‘ which is it that’s dead, you or your brother V (£7” Many of the slaves used to abuse slap very, and now they abuse their freedom* NO. 13.