PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. Fttlout-Citizens of thf fknatt and House of lirpresentativcs : The continued disorganization of tho Union, to which tho President has to often culled tho attention of Con grotn, i yet a subject of profound and patriotic concern. Wo may, however, find tome relief ft'Oin thai anxiety In the reflection that the painful political situation, although untried by our selves, is not new in tho experience of nation. Political icience, porhaps aa highly perfected in our own time and coun try aa in any other, una not yet dis closed any means by which civil wars can be absolutely prevented ; an en lightened nation, however, with a wibo and beneficent Constitution of free government, may diminish their frequency and mitigate their sovcrity, by directing all its proceedings in accordance with its fundamental law. When a civil war bus been brought to a close, it is manifestly the first infor mal and duty of the State to repair the injuries which tho war has inflicted, and to secure the benefit of the lessons it teaches, as fully and as speedily as possible This duty was, upon tho termination of the rebellion, promptly accepted, not only by tho Executive Department, but by tho insurrection ary States themselves, and restoration in the first moment of peace, was be lieved to be as easy and certain as it was indispensable. Tbo expectations, however, then so reasonably a d confidently entertain ed, were disappointed by legislation from which I lelt constrained, by my obligations to tho Constitution, to withhold my assent It is, therefore, a source- ol profound regret that in complying with theobligation imposed upon the President by the Constitu tion, to give to Congress from timo to time information of tho slate of the Union, I am unable to communicato any delinito adjustment satisfactory to the Amorican people, of iho ques tions which, since the close of tho rebellion, have agitated the public mind. On the contrary, candor com pels me to declare that at this time there is no Union as our fathers un derstood the term, and as they meant it to bo understood by us. The Union which they established can exist only where all the States are represented in both Houses of Congress, "where - one-State is as free as another to reg elate its internal concerns according to it will," and where the laws of the central government, strictly confined io matters of national jurisdiction, apply with equal force to all the people- of every section. That such is not tho present "state of tho Union" is a melancholy fiict, and sll must acknowledge that the restoration of the States to their prop er legnl rclutions with the Federal tiovormnent, and with one another, according to tho terms of tho original oompact, would be tho greatest tem poral blessing which God, in his kind est providenco could bestow upon this nation. It becomes our imperative duty to consider whethor or not it is impossi ble to effect this roost desirable con summation. The Union and the Con stitution are inseparable. As lonir as one is obeyed by all parties, the other will oo preserved ; and if one is de stroyed, both must perish together. Tho destruction of tho Constitution will bo followed by other and still greater calamities. It was ordained not only to form a taore perfect Union between tho States, but to "establish justice, insure do mestic tranquility, provido for tho common defence promoto the eeneral welfare, and secure tho blessings of iioeny 10 ourseivos ana our postcri- i x-i.: ; i- .. 1 ,. vj. ruining uuv implicit ODCUICUce to its requirements, In all ports of the country, will accomplish those groat ends. Without that obedience we can 4ook forward only to tho continual outrages npon Individual rights, in cessant breaches of the public peace, national weakness, financial dishonor, the total loss of our prosperity, the foticral corruption of morals, and tho nalcxtinctionof populor freedom. To save our country from evils so appall ing as these, wo should renew our ef forts against and again. To me the process of restoration ocms perfectly plain and simple It consist merely in a faithful applica tion of the Constitution and tho laws. Tho execution of the laws is not now obstructed or opposed by physical forco; thoro is no military or other necessity, real or pretended, which can prevent obedience to tho Consti tution cither North or South. All the rights and nil the obligations of St:to and individuals can bo protected and enforced by means perfectly consist ent with tho fundamental hvw. The court may be everywhere open, and, if open, their process would bo unim peded. Crimes agninst tho United States can bo prevented or punished by tho proper judicial authorities in a manner entirely practicable and legnl. Thoro is, therelbro, no reason why the Constitution should not be obeyed, anloss those who exorcise its powers Lave determined that it shall bo dis regarded and violated. Themcro na ked will of this liovcrnmont, or of some or more of its branches, is the only obstacle that can exist to a per fect Union of all the States. On this momentous question, and somo of tho measures growing outof it, I have had themislortune todifl'or from Congress, and have expressed my convictions without reserve, though with becom ing deference to the opinion of the legislative Department. Those convictions are not only un fhsnged, but strengthened by subsc--nnent events and further reflection. The transcendent importance of the abject will be a sufficient excuse for ealling yonr attention to some of tho reasons which have so strongly influ enced my own judgment. Tho hope -that we may all finally concur in a mode of settlement consistent at once with onr true interests, and with our sworn duties to the Constitution, is! too natural and too just to be easily relinquished. It is clear to my apprehension that the Statos lately in rebellion are still membors of the National Union. When did they cease to be so f The Ordinances of Secession" adopted by a portion in most of them a very small portion o! their eilirena wre! more nullities. If wi admit now lluit thoy wer vnliii and effectual for the purpose intended by their author, we sweep trom under our feet ilio whole irrouml upon which wo Justified the war. Wore thoso Slates afterward expelled from tho Union by tho war? J lie direct contrary was averred liy this government to bo its purpose, and was so understood by thoso who gnvo their blood mid treasure to aid in its prosecution. It cannot bo that a successful war, waged for tho preservation of the Union, bad tho legal effect of dissolv ing it. Tho victory of tho nation's arms was not tho disgraco of hor pol icy ; tho defeat of Secession on tho battlo-field was not tho triumph of its lawless principles ; nor could Con gress, will) or without tho consent ol Iho J'.xocntivo, do anything which would bavo tho effect, directly or in directly, of separating tho States from each other. To dissolve tho Union is to repeal the Constitution which holds it together, ond that is a power which does not belong to any department of this government, or to all of them united. This is so plain that it has been acknowledged by all brnnchos of the Fodcrul Government. The Kxocutivo, my predecessor, as well as myself, and tho beads of all tho departments bavo uniformly actod upon the principle that the Union is not only undissolved, but indissoluble Congress submitted an amendment to the Constitution to be ratified by tho Southorn Slates, and accepted their acts of ratification as a necessary and lawful exercise of their highest function. ' Jf they wcro not Slutos, or wore States out of the Union, thoir consent to a change in the fun damental law of the Union would have been uucralory, and Conirross in asking it committed a political absur dity. The Judiciary ha also given tho solemn sanction of its authorily to the saco view of the case Tho Judges of the Supreme Court have included the Southern Slates in their circuits, and they are constantly, in banc and elsewhere, exorcising jurisdiction which doos not belong to them, unless thoso States are States of the Union. If ibe Southern Stales are component parts of tho Union, tho Constitution is the supremo law for them, as it is for all tho other Stales. They are bound to obey it, and so are we. The right of the Fodcrul Government, which is clear and unquestionable, to enforco the Constitution upon them, implies the corclativo obligation on our part to observe its limitations and execute guarantees. Without tbo Con stitution we are nothing; by, through and under the Constitution wo arc what it makes us. . We may doubt tho wisdom of the law ; we may not approve of its pro vision, but we cannot violate it merely because it seems to confine our pow ers within limits narrower than we could wish. It is not a question of individual, or class, or sectional inter ests, much less of party predominance, but of duty of high and sacred duly which wo aro all sworn to perform. If we cannot support the Constitution with tho cheerful alacrity of those who lovo and boliovo in it, wo must give to it, at least, tho fidelity ofpub lio servants who act under solemn ob ligations and commands which they dare not disregard. The constitution al duty is not tho only ono which re quires the States to be restored ; there is anothor consideration, which though of minor importance, is yet of great weight. 0I1JECT Or THE LATE WAR. On tho 22d day of July, 101, Con gress declared, by an almost unani mous voto of both Houses, that the war should bo conducted solely for tbo purpose of preserving tho Union and maintaining iho supremacy of the Federal Constitution and laws, without impairing tho dignity, equal ity and rights of tho States or of indi viduals, and that when this wusdono, the war should cease. I do not say that this declaration is personally binding on thoso who joined in ma king it, any moro than individual member of Congress are personally bonnd to pay a public debt created under a luw for which they voted, iiut it was a solemn public ofllcial pledgo of the national honor, and I cannot imagine upon what grounds the repudiation of it is to be justified. If it be snid that wo aro not bound to keep faith with rebels, let it be remembered this promise was not mado to rebels only. Thousands of truo men in tho South wore drawn to our standard by it, and hundreds of thousands in tho North gave their lives in tho belief that it would be car ried out. It wns made on the day after the first great battle of tho war bad been fought nnd lost. All patri otic and intelligent men then saw the necessity of giving such an assurance, and believed thai without it tho war would end in disaster to our cause. Having given that assuranco in the extremity of our peril, tho violation of it now, in the day of our power, would bo a rude rending of thai good faith which holds tho moral world to gether. Our country would oeaso to have any claim upon tho confidence of mon. It would make tho war not only a iailuro but n fraud. Jloing (sincerely oonvincod that tbeso views aro correct, I would be unfaithful to my duty if I did not re commend the repeal of tho acts of Congress which place ten of the South ern States under thn domination of military masters. If culm reflection shall sstisfya majority of your horior ablo bodies that tho acts referred to are not only a violation of tho national fuith, but in direct conflict with the Constitution, I dare not permit myself to doubt that you will immediately strike it from tho statute book. To, demonstralo tho unconstitutional" character of those acts, I need do no more thnn to refer you to thoir gen eral provisions. It must bo seen at onco that they aits not authorized. To dictato what alterations shnll bo mado in the constitutions of the several States; to control tho elections of tho Stute legislators and Stato officers, members of Congress and clecters of President and Vice President, by ar bitrarily declaring who shall vote ami who shall be excluded from that pri vilege ; to dissolvo Stato legislatures, or prevent them from assembling; to dismiss judges and othnr civil func tionaries of the Pta'e and appoint oth- era, without regard to Stato law ; to i organize, and operate all tho political' machinery of the States; to regulate! tho whole administration of their do nieslio nnd local affair according to! the ntero will of strange and irrespon- j siiilu agepts sent among them for that purpose. J hrso nro powers not granted to the Federal Government, or to an v ono of Its branches; not being granted, wo violate oar trust by assuming them as palpably as ho would by acting in the luce of a positive interdict, tor tho Constitution forbids us to do whatever it does not affirmatively authorize, even by express words or by clear implication. If the authority wo do Biro to use does not como to us through .the Constitution, we can exercise il only by usurpation, and usurpation is ono of the most dangerous of political crimes. Jly that crime the enemies of free government in all iiges have worked out thoir designs aguinst pub lic liberty and private right. It leads directly and immediately to the estab lishment of absolute rule ; for undele gated power is always unlimited and unrestrained. Tho acts of Congress in question aro not only objectionable for their assumption of ungrantud power, but many of their provisions are in con flict with tho direct prohibitions of tho Constitution. Tho Constitution commands that a republican form of government shall bo guarantied toull tho States ; thai no person shall he deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law ; arrested without a judicial warrantor punish ed without a lair triul before an im partial jury; that tho privilege of habeas corpus shall not bo douied in time of peace, and that no bill of attainder bluill bo passed even against a singlo individual. Yet tho system of measures established by these ucls of Congress does totally subvert and destroy tho form as well as tho sub stance of republican government. In the ton Status to which the' apply it binds them hand and foot in ubwfuto sluvory, and subjects them toabtrungo and boslilo power more unlimited and more likely to be abused than any other now known among civilized men. It tramples down all thoso rights in which the essence of liberty con sists, and which a free government is always most careful to protect. It denies the habeas corpus aud triul by jury. Personal freedom, property and life, if assailed by the passion, the prejudice or tho rapacity of tho mler, huvo no security whatever. It bus the effect of a bill of attainder, or bill of pains and penalties, not upon nfew individuals, but upon whole musses, including the millions who inhabit the subject States, and even their un born children. Those wrongs being expressly forbidden cunnot bo consti tutionally inflicted npon any portion of our peoplo, no matter how they may have coino within our jurisdiction and no matter whether thoy livoin Stutcs Territories or Districts. I have no desire to save from the proper and just consoquenecs of their great crimo thoso who engaged in re bellion against tho government, but as a mode of punishment, tho meas ures under consideration aro tho most unreasonable that could bo invented. Many of those porsons are perfectly innocent. .Many kept their fidelity to tho Union untainted to tho last. Many were incapable of any legul of fence A large proportion even of the persons able to bear arms were forced into rebellion against their will, and of thoso who nro guilty with their own consent, the degrees of gnilt nro as various as tho shades of their char actor and temper. Hut these nets of Congress confound thorn nil together in one common doom. Indiscrimiiiato vengeance upon classes, sects, and parties, or upon whole communities for offences committed by a portion of thorn against the government to which they owed obedienco, was common in the barbarous ages of tho world. Hut Christianity and civilization have mado such progress, that recourse to a punishment so cruel and unjust would meet with tho condemnation of all unprejudiced and right-minded men. The punitive justice of this age and especially of this country', docs not consist in stripping whole States of their liberties and reducing nil their people, without distinction, to tho condition of slavery. It deals separ ately with each individual, con 11 nes itself to tho forms of law, and vindi cates its own purity by an impartial examination of every case before a competent judicial tribunal. If this docs not satisfy all onr de sires with regard to Southern rebels, let ns consolo ourselves by reflecting that a freo Constitution, triumphant in war nnd unbroken in peace, is worth far moro to lis and our children than the gratification of any present feeling. I am aware il is assumed that this system of government of the Southern Stufes is not to bo perpetual. It is truo this military government is to be only provisional, but it is through this temporary evil thut a greater evil is to bo mado perpetual. If the guaran ties of tlio Constitution can bo broken provisionally to servo n temporary purpose, ami in part only of the coun try, we can destroy them everywhere, nnd for all time Arbitrary measures often change, but they generally change for tho worse. It is tho curse of despotism that it has no hulling place Tho intermitted exercise of its power brings no sense of security to its subjects, for they can never know what moro they will be called upon to enduro when its red right hand is armed to plague them again. Nor is il possible to conjecture bowor where power unrestrained by law may seek its next victims. Tho Slates that aro still freo may be enslaved at any moment, for if tho Constitution does not protect nil it protects none. It is manifestly ami avowedly tho object of theso laws to confer upon negroes the privilego of voting, nnd to disfranchise such a number ol white citizens as will give tho former a clear majority at all elections In tbo South ern Slates. This, to tho minds of some persons, is so important, that a vioJa Iiition of tho Constitution is justified as a means of bringing it about. Tho morality is always false which excuses a wrong because il propose to accom plish a desirnblo end. Wo nre not permitted to do evil that good may come But In this cae the end itseif is owl ns well us the hiiiiin, 'Ibe subjugation of Slates to nrg'n iom:. tuition would bo worse than the mili tary despotism under which Ihey aro now suffering. It w ns believed before hand thai the people would endure any amount of military oppression lor any length ol time, rattier than tie-, grade themselves by subjugation to tho negro race. Therefore they have been lelt without a choice. Negro sufliago was established by net of Congress, nnd tho military offi cers were commanded to superintend tho process of clothing the negro race with political privileges lorn from whito men. Tho blncksof the South aro entitled to be well and humanely governed, nnd to have tho protection of just laws for all their rights of person and property. If it wero practicable, lit this timo to give them u government exclusively their own, unuer which the)' might manage their own ufl'uirs in thoir own way, il would become a gravo question whether wo ought to do so, or whether common humanity would not require us to save them from themselves. Hut, under tho circumstances, this is only a speculative point, k is not proposed merely that they shall gov ern themselves, but that they' shall rulo the white, race, miilio and admin ister Stato laws, elect Presidents and members of Congross, and shape, to a greater or less extent, tho future des tiny of tho whole country. Would such a trust and power be safo in such hands ? Tho peculiar qualities which should characterize 11113 peoplo, who are fit to decide upon tho management ot public alt. ins lor a great Mute, nave seldom been combined. It is the glory of white men to know that they bavo had theso qualities in sufficient measure to build upon this continent a great political fabric, nnd to preserve its stability for more than ninety years, while in every other part of the world all similar experi ments have failed. Hut if anything can Le pi o veil ly known fuels; it all reasoning upon evidence is not aban doned, it must be acknowledged that in the progress of nations r.egrocs have shown loss capacity for govern ment than any olhcT raco of people. No independent government of any form has ever been successful in their hands. On tho contrary, wherever they bavo been lift to their own devi ces they bavo shown a constant ten dency te relapse into barbarism. In tho Southern States, however, Congiess has undertaken to confer upon them the privilego of tho ballot. Just released from slavery, it may be doubtful whether, as a class, they know, more than their ancestors, how to organize and regulate civil society. Indeed, it is admitted that the blacks of tho South ure not only regardless of tho rights of property, but so utter ly ignorant of public; affairs that I'nelr voting can consist, in nothing more than curbing a ballot to the place where they aro directed to deposit il. I need not remind you that, tho ex ercise of the elective franchise if the highest attribute of an American citi zen, and when guided by virtuo, in telligence and putriolism.andu proper appreciation ot our tree institutions, it constitutes tho true basis of a demo cratic form of government, in which tho sovereign power is lodged in the body of the peoplo. A trust artificially created, not for its own sake, but solely as a means of promoting tho generul wellaro, its influence for good must necessarily depend upon thu cle- valud character and truo allegiance of the elector; it ought, therefore, to be reposed in none except those who ure tated, morally ami mentally, to nd- minister it well, for if conferred upon persons who do not justly estimate its value, and who arc imlilU renins to its results, it w ill only servo us a means of placing power 111 tho hands of the unprincipled and ambitious, and must eventually end in tho complefo de struction ol that liberty which it should be tho most powerful conserv ator. I bavo, therefore, heretofore urged upon your attention the great danger to bo apprehended froni'nn untimely extension of tho elective franchise to any new class in onr country, especially when the large majority of that class, in w ielding the power thus placed in their hands, can not bo expected correctly to compre hend the duties nnd rcponsibiliiics which pertain to suffrage. Ycsler- day, as il were, four millions of j lion ot prescribed rules, which we persoi.s wero held in a condition ol' bind ourselves to observe, must de slavery that had existed for genera-; moralize tho peoplo. Our only stand stills. To day they nro freemen, and I ard of civil duty being set nt naught, aro assumed by law to bo citizens. It tho sheet nnchor of our jKiliticul cunnot bo presumed from thoir provi-1 morality is lost, tho public conscience ons condition of servitude that ns a ! swings from its moorings, and yields class they aro ns well informed as to 1 to every impulse of passion and inter tbo nature of our government as the j est. If wo repudiate tho Constitution intelligent loreigner w no mnUes om-i land tho land of his choice. In tho case of tho latter, neither a residence of five yeBrs northeknowi edge of our institutions which It gives. nor attachment to the principles ol the Constitutions are tho only condi-1 lions upon which bo can be admitted to citizenship. Ho mtisl prove, in ad dition, n good moral character, and thus give reasonable ground for the belief that bo will bo faithful to tho obligations which bo assumes as a citizen of tho Kepublio. Where a peo plo, tho Bource of all political power, speak by their suffrages through the instrumentality of the ballot-box, it must bo carefully guarded againsf the control of thoso who aro corrupt in principle ami enemies of free Institu tions, for it can only -become to onr political ami social system a safo con- uucior 01 healthy popular sentiment when kept free IWrni demoralizing in- fluencer. Controlled thrnui'h fraud ; nnd usurpation by the designing nn-j nnspcakahlo calamity, that every true archy nnd despotism must inevitably j patriot must desire to avoid whatever follow. In tho hnnds of tho patriotic might expose it to the slightest dan nml .worthy our government will bo per. Tho great interests of tho coun- preserved upon tbo principles of the v unsimiiioii inncriicj irom onr lath- ers. ll lollows, thrrclorc, that In admit admit-1 class of 'xerciso i ting to tho ballot-box a new voters, not qualified for tho exercise r ii.. .1 rf. .. in mo elective iranemso, we wonicen our system ol government instead of , adding strength nnd durability. ih.i l'rOV" .,n "T '"'""V. lis.lnl' . .K,,"C? ,- B 11? rl T. n 1 Vl i; V Y i I I S?Lrta , hi h "-ed hitherto, which makes the ballot a privilege and a trust which renuiros of some cls..es a timo smtabfe for probation ami preparation. To give It lii'lin-iiminal' Iv to a new rill", wholly unprepared by previous biibils Bint opportunities to perform the trust whiih it demands, is to degrade it. and finally destroy lis power, for it may be safely assumed that no politi cal tiuth Is better established In an thai such indiscriminate ami all cm bracing extension of popular suffrage must end at lust in its overthrow and destruction. 1 repeat tho expression of my wil lingness to join in any plan within thu scope of our constitutional author ity which promises to better tho con dition of the negroes in tho Sout h, by encouraging them in industry, enlight ening their minds, improving their morals and giving protection to ull their just rights as freemen. Hut Iho transfer of our political inheritance to them, would, 111 my opinion, bo an abandonment of a duty which wo owe aiiko to the memory of our fathers ami tho rights of our children. The plan of putting tbo Southern Slates wholly, nnd the General Gov ernment partially, into tho hands of negroes, is proposed at a time pecu liarly unpropiliouH. Thu foundations of society huvo been broken up by civil war. Industry must bo reorgan ized, justioo rc established, public crcd it maintained, nnd order brought out of confusion. To accomplish theso ends would requiro ull tbo wisdom and virtuo of tho groat men who formed our institutions originally. 1 confidently believe that Ihcir descend ants will bo equal to the arduous tusk before them ; but it is worso than madness to expect thut negroes will perform il for us. Certainly wo ought not to ask their assistance until we despair of our own competency. Tho great difference between the two races in physical, mental and moral charac teristics will prevent an amalgama tion or fusion of them together in ono homogeneous mass. If the interior obtains the ascendency over tho other, il will govern with reference only to its own interests for it will recognize no common interest and create such a tyranny us this Continent bus never yet witnessed. Already the negroes arc influenced by promiso of confisca tion and plunder; they nro taught to regard as an enemy every white man who has any respect for tho lights of his own race. if tins continues it must become worso and worso, until all order will be subverted, all indus try cease.-and the fertile fields of the South grow up into a wilderness. Of ull tho dangers which our nation has yet cnoountcrod, nono ure equal to thoso which -must result from the suc cess of tho effort now making to Afri canize the half of our country. I would nov put considerations of money iu competition. ith jnslico and right, but iho expenses incident to ricOhst ruction under tho system adopt ed by Congress aggravate what I re gard us tho intrinsio wrong of the measure itself. It has cost uncounted millions already, and if persisted in w ill add largely to tho weight of tax ation already too oppressive to be homo without just complaint, and may finally reduce tho treasury of the nation to a condition of bankruptcy. We must not delude ourselves. It w ill requiro a strong standing army, and probably moro than two hundred mil lions of dollars per annum to maintain the supremacy of negro governments after they aro established. Tho sum 1 thus thrown away would if properly used, form asinking fund lurgo enough to pay tho wliolo national debt in less than fifteen years. It is vain to hope 1 that negroes will maintain their as- J eendoiicv themselves. Without mili tary pow er they are wholly incapable I of holding in subjection tho white people of the South. 1 submit to the judgment of Congress whether the , publio credit may not bo injuriously affected by a system of measures like this. Willi our debt, nnd tho vast privato interests which are complica ted wilh it, wo cannot bo loo cautious of 11 policy which might by possibility impair tho confidence of the world in onrgoveiiiment. Thut conlideneccun only bo retained by carefully incalcu laling the principles of justice nnd honor on the popular mind, nnd by the most scrupulous fidelity to all our engagements of every sort." Any seri ous breach of the organic law, per sisted in for a considerable time, can not but creata fears for tho stability 01 our Institutions. Habitual viola wo will not bo expected to care much for mere pecuniary obligations. The violation ol such a pledgo as wo mado tn tho 2L'd of July.'lSlil, will assuredly diminish tho market value of our promises; besides, if we now neknowiedgo thai the national tlcbt was created, not to hold the States in tho Union, as the tax-payers wero led to suppose, but to expel them from it nnd hand them over to he gov erned by negroes, the morul duty to pay it seems much less rleur. I say it may seem so, for I do not admit that this or any other argument in fuvor of it pndiutioti can be enter tained as sound; but its influence on some classes of mimN may well be apprehended. The financial honor of a great commercial nation, largely in debted, and with a republican form of government administered by ngents of Iho popular choice, is a thing of such delicate texturo, and tho destrtic tion of it would bo followed bv such try require imniodiiiterolicf frcm those onurimcnis. mcnts Husiiioss in the South is . lyzed by sense of general mse-1 para ctirity, a terror of eocfisc.it ion and the dread of negro supremacy. I ho Southern trade, from wh rli dm v ,,l 1. 1 1 ' " iXolth h.ivn derived mi irmn mm. 1 ioiin navo ticrivcu so great a I under a government of law, still Ian- . ....,.. ,.,, , g.iishes, and can never be revived T U r to -oietteretl by tho rl..trry power whtrh m.k. all its "P"-at,o,,s unsafe. That rich country, the richest ,n national resource, the 1 world ever saw. is worso than loi if: it be not soon placed nnt.er the pro! tecfion ofa free Constitution. Inst.ad I of being, it it ought Io he. n source of wealth and pow er, it w ill I ccome mi intolerable Imrdi 11 upon the I'i'st of the nation. Another reason for lelrucing our step will doubtless be seen by Con - gress In the lato manifestations of public opinion upon this subject. Wo livo in a country whero popular will always enforces obedience to itself, sooner or later It is vain to think of opposing it with anything Bhort of legal authority, backed by overwhelm ing force, ll cannot have escaped your attention thut, from tho day on which Congress fairly and formally presented tho proposition to govern the Southern Suites by m'litary force, with a view to the iiltimulo establish ment of negro supremucy, every ex pression of tho generul sentiment has boon moro or less averse to it. The allections of this generation cannot be detached from tho institutions of their ancestors. Their determination to preserve the inheritance of free gov ernment In thoir own hands, and trans mit it undivided and unimpaired to their own posterity, is loo strong to be successfully oppescd. Kvory weak er passion will disappear before that love of liberty and law for which the American peoplo are distinguished abovo all others. in tho world. How far tho duly of tho President "to preserve, protect und defend the Constitution" requires him to go on in opposing un unconstitutional act of Congress, is a very serious and im portant question, on which I have de liberated much and felt extremely anxious to reach a proper conclusion. Where an uct has been passed accord ing to tho forms of the Constitution, by tho supremo legislative authority, and is regularly enrolled among the public statutes of the country. Execu tive resistance to it, especially in time of high party excitement, would bo likely to produco violent collision be tw ocn the respective adherants of the two branches of tho government. This would bo simply civil war. and civil war must bo resorted to only as tht last remedy for the worst of evils. W hat ever might tend to provoke it should bo most carefully avoided. A faithful and conscientious magistrate will con cede very much to honest error and something even to perverse malieo before be will endanger tho public peace, ana he will not adopt forcible measures, or such us might lead to force, as long as those which are peace able remain open to him or to bis cou stiluonts. Ti 1 t .i . . .. . " "v in.u cose may occur iu which tho hxecutivo would be com. I polled to stand on its riuhts. and main 1..;.. i ? ,. mui Hum rcgnruicbs 01 uii consequen ces. If Congress should pats un uct w uicu is nui tuny mpaipaoio Connie . wnn too i.onstiiuuoii, bul will cer tainly, if carried out, produce immedi ate and irivpnrublo injury to the or ganic structure of tho government, una 11 there to neither ludicial rome dy for tbo wrongs it inflicts, nor power iu tho peoplo to protect themselves without the official uidof their elected defender ; if, for instance, tho Legis lative Department should pass un uct, ovon through all the forms of luw. to abolish a coordinate department of 1110 government, in sucli a case the President must take tho hiirh resnons- ibilitios of his offieo, and bavo tho life ol tho nation lit ull hazard. The so-culled He-construction acts, though plainly unconstitutional us any thai can be imagined, were uot boliev ed to be within tho class last mention ed. The peoplo were not wholly dis armed of tho power of self defence. In ail tho Northern Statos thev still held in their bunds tho sacred rights of tho ballot, and il was safe to behove thut in duo time they would come to mo rescue ol their own institutions. It gives me pUasuro to add that the appeal to our common constituency wus not taken in vain, and that my confidence in their wisdom nnd virtue seems not to buve been misplaced. It is well nnd publicly known that enormous irauds huvo been nertie tratcd on tho Treasury, nnd that co lossai loriunes huvo been made at tho public expense; this species of corruption has increased. is incrcasintr. and, if not diminished, will soon bring us iiiiu ioihi ruin nna uisgrnee. I ho public'creditors and the tax-payors aro alike interested iu an honest adminis tration of tho finances, and neither class will long enduro the high-handed robberies th.st have recently occurrod. For this discreditable state of things thero nro several causes. Some of the taxes nro so laid us to present an irro sistiblo temptation to elude payment. The greut sums whirli officers may win by connivance at fraud, crcato a pressuro which is more than tho vir tue of many can w ithstand, and there con be no" doubt thnt tho open dis regard of constitutional obligations avowed by somo of tho highest and most influential men in the country, has greatly weakened tho moral sense of those who servo in subordinate places. Tho expenses of the United States, including interest on the pub lic debt, nro more than six times ns much as they wcro seven years ago. To collect and disburse this vast amount requires careful supervision, as well as systematic vigilance. The system, never perfected, was much disorganized by the "Tenure of Oflice bill," which hns almost destroyed official accountability. The President may bo thoroughly convinced that an officer ia inrnpablo, dishonest and un faithful to thu Constitution, but. under the luw which 1 have nnmed, the ut most bo enn do is to complain to the Senate, and ask the privilege of sup plying bis place w ith a belter man. If the Srnato bo regarded as person ally or politically boslilo to tho Pre sident, it is naturally and not alto gether unreasonable lor tho officer to expect thnt it will take his part as far as lioBsiblo. restore him In hii nliu and give him a triumph over his Kx - ecutive superior. Thooffinprhnsnihnr chances of impunity, arising Irom ao- cidenlal defer! of evidence, tha ,ude .l ;..nti.. u ... i .1 , ......... iB inn. uio secrcsy oi iU 1. : ,,, ,,, , ii, ia mil won t wonderful that official malfeasance h,...l,l Ke,, bold in proportion ns tho delinm.onu think themselves safe. I am entirely persuaded that under such a rulo the .'resident cannot perform the great duty assigned to iiim of seeing tho U.... r..;i.r..n .-j -j .1-. i.:i. . i- i - . . . dales' ,n v IZ ! fort that nm..M!,.T bio j poeesi-arv toi the due execution 1 f il ' rcveiine ia w . . The Oio-ti:ulion invest tin- pu., jdelit w ilh iutlio ,ty to decide u .j removal should he made in aiiv ' given esse; the at I ol Congie J.j.li,, j i" snlmtunre thut he shull only ,., ; such us lio supposes to lie unw 01 thy uf 110:11 Hunt.. I IMJ l onsMlllllOU Uiaki him the sole Judge in tho lirein 1 .u.. .1 '. . mi iou ruitiuiu iani'8 away nig pir;( diction, transfers it to tho Senate, aid leaves him nothing but thooilious, sometimes impracticable, duly in b. coining a pr secutor. The prum cutios is to bo conducted bef r a tiihimul whose member are not, like him, to sponsible to tho whole peoplo, but to sepurato constituent bodies, and who may hear hi accusation with grut disfavor. Tho Senate is absolute!? without ny known stundurdof decij. ion applicable to such a case lu judgment cannot bo autiuipatoj, Ut il is not governed by any rulo. Tho law does not defino what ihall bo deemed good causo for removal ; it i impossible even to conjettur what may or may not he so consider, ed by tho Sonute. The nature uf the subject forbids clear proof. If tin charge bo incapacity, what evidence .-11 . : . 4 L-:.li:. .t. will support, ill a luuiiiy iu w-uiuf). stitutioii may bo understood or mis understood in a thousand different ways ; and by violent mon, in violent party times, unfuilhfulness to the IW stitution may cvon como to bocomid ercd meritorious. If tho officer bo ac cused of dishonesty, how shall it bo made out ? Will il bo inferred from acts unconnected with public duty, from private hibtory, or from general reputution f Or must tbo President await tho commission ofar. actual misdemeanor in office f Shull ho, iu the meantime, risk tho character aud interest of tho nation in the hands of men to whom be cannot give bis con fidence f Must bo forbear bis com plaint until tho mischief is done and cannot bo prevented? If bis zeal iu the public service should impel him to anticipate tho overt act, musthemovs at the peril of being tried himself for the offence of slandering his subordi nate? In the present circumstance! of tho country, some one must be held responsible for official delinquency of every kind. It is extremely difficult to say where that responsibility bhouU be thrown, if it be not left where it has been placed by tho Constitution. Hut all ium men will admit thut the President ought to be entirely reliovod from such responsibility, if be cannot meet by reason of restriction placed by law upon hi action. Tho nnrestricted power of removal from office is a vory great one to bo trusted cron to a Magistrate thostn by the general suffrago of the whols people, and accountable directly to them for his acts. It is uudonblotiijr b'ablo to abnse, and at some period! of our history perhaps has been abused. If it be thought dusirablo and consti tutional thut it should be so limited as to mako tho President, merely s common informer againsl other pub lic agents, be bhould at least be per mitted to uct in that capacity before somo open tribunal, independent of party politics, ready to investigate the merits of every caso, furnished wilh tho means of taking evidence, und bound to docido accordiug to established rules. This would guar antee tho safety of the accuser whea be acts in good fiiilh, aud at the same timo secure the rights of the other party. I speak of courso with all proper respect for the present Senate, but it does not seem to ino that any legislative body can be so constituted us to insure its fitness for theso func tions. it is not the theory of this Govern ment that public oificoi are the prop erty of those who hold them. Thoy aro given merely as a trust for the public benefit, sometimes for a fixed period, sometimes during good beha vior, but generally they aro liable to bo terminated at iho pleasure of the appointing power, which represents the collective majesty and speak tbo will of tho people. The forced reten tion in oflice of afinglo dishonest per son may work greut injury to tho public interests. Tho danger to tho public service comes not from tU power to remove, but from tho power to appoint. Thereforo it was that th Ira mors of tho Constitution left tho power of removal 11 ores trie tod, -while 1 hey gave tho Senate a right to reject all appointments which, in its opinion, wero not fit to bo made. A little reflection on this subject will probably satisfy nil who have the good of the country at heart that our best course is to take the Constitution for our guide, walk in the path marked out by the founders of Iho Kepublio, and obey tho rules made saored by th observance of our great predecessor. i he present condition ol our Imniicos and circulating medium is one to which your early consideration i in vited. Tho pioportion which the currency of any country should boar to th whole vnluo of the annual produce cir culated by it moans is a nuo ion upon w hich political economists have not agreed. Nor can it be controlled by legislation, but most bo lelt to the irrevocable laws which ovorywlier regulute commerce and trado. Tho circulating medium will ever irresisti bly flow to thoso points w here it is greatest demand. Tbe law of supply I and demand is a unerring a that which regulates the tides of tho ocean; and indeed currency, like tho tmo, has its ebbs and flows throughout th commercial world. At the beginning of the rebellios the bnnking circulation of tbo country amounted to not more than J'-'OlUW.-(Kill; now tho circulation of National Hank notes and those known a "leg' tenders" is nearly i;oil,lHK,Ol)U. Wail j it is urged by somo that this smount I aim,. 1. 1 l.A i..... .... .. I v.iilnni 1 that a decided roduction is ubsolulalj I .,.niii i iu k... nf lit country. In view of these divers opinions, it may be well to ascoruia ..' .' . ' .. 5 , me reui value ot our paper isu, I . . . I I ,,. when compared wilh a tnetallio or I ,r,ril,iJ .. w. ,1.;. nur ! nose lt . innm-e .,.h . mid and '.. ........ . silver could be purchased by tin 7.K.U0,lKH) of paper money now ia circulation f Pill ably ool .nor. th" half tho amount of the latterhow .1 . . 1. cp.wlTir. .