pwltft WEDNESDAY, 14, 1866. . , "The Printing Presses ehalrbe free to every person who undertakes "to examine the pro ceedings of the legislature, or any ..branch of government; and no law ever be Made tO restrain the o ly thereof. The free COZOMU nication of th t and opinions is One of the invaluable righ of men; ,and every citizen may freely speak,' write Mid print on any sub ject; being responsible for the abuse of that liberty. In prosecutions for the publication of papers investigating - the official conduct of offi cers, or men in public capacities„ or where the matter published is proper for public informa tion, the truth thereof may be given In evi dence.” • . . THE EXAMINER, referring to the am nesty proclamation issued by President Johnson, which it approves, expresses a " doubt whether any other govern ment, at the close of a greatinsurrection against its authority and existence, ever followed up its triumph with such sweep ing liberality as this." Our impression is that the British government was equally liberal with its rebellious subjects in India a few years ago. Next to our own, the Sepoy Re bellion wasperhaps the most formidable that has occurred during the present generation. Nearly all the actors in it, from the highest officer to the humblest private, were, up to the moment of the outbreak, in the military service of the government against which they rose.— This put them on the same footing With officers and soldiers of our old army, who deserted their flag to take part in the rebellion. At the outset, for the purpose of strik ing terror, the British authorities in India indulged in severities which we rejoice to say our Government never re sorted to. A number of the rebellious Sepoys—possibly ten or fifteen, or even more—were tied up to the muzzles of cannon and blown to atoms. These shocking executions were soon discon tinued, either because the Governor General of India found that they did not produce the desired effect, or because the Home Government disapproved them. At the close of the war, according to our recollection, a general amnesty was = extended to the vanquished rebels. Even the King of Delhi, who bore the same official relation to that rebellion that Mr. Davis has borne to the one our Government has just succeeded in sup pressing—having been installed as its civil head—was, we think, though taken into custody, not called upon to expiate his offence with his life. It is true this Sepoy rebellion did not threaten the " existence " of the British government. It threatened only its " authority "in India. If it bad been successful, the British government would still have continued to exist, though shorn of its immense possessions in Southern Asia. But would the suc cess of the Rebellion in our own coun try have put an end to the existence of the government of the United States ? Not necessarily. We think it would not. We believe the government would have continued to exist, though shorn of its authority in the Southern States. We are under the impression that the liberality of which the Examine• speaks, and which we areglad to find it approve, is not without example in the recent history of one of the leading powers of Europe. But if this were not so, we should still hope to find our govern ment a fit representative of that high order of christian civilization which the North (and especially the New England portion of it) has claimed as its distinguishing characteristic. IF JEFF. DAVIS don . E, get a trial of some sort, it will not be because the newspapers have not set up enough tri bunals to try him. One day they have told us he would certainly be tried in the civil courts, and the next day they have told us he would certainly be tried by a military court. And now we are worse muddled than ever, for the Wash ington Republican of June 6th asserts with great positiveness that the Gov ernment has not decided to try him be fore the civil court of the District of Columbia, but before a military coin mission ; whilst the Washington Star of the same date says preparations are going forward to try him before the civil court in about ten days. There seems to be as much doubt about this matter as there was about the composi tion of " weal pie?' in the days of Sam. Weller. " But what's the difference when the pie -men themselves can't tell ?" THE DEMOCRATS of Mercer county, as we learn from the Pittsburg Post, propose liberally to support any sound Democrat who will undertake the pub lication of a newspaper for them. There are nearly three thousand Democratic voters in the county, which is one of the largest and wealthiest counties in Wes tern Pennsylvania. The Post says : " Any person, who will publish a thorough Democratic paper, will be well supported, both with the needful and with brains. There is a printing press, owned by some Democrats in the county, that can be procured to . publish the paper. All that is wanted, is a man who combines thorough business ca pacity, and a practical knowledge of the business, with capability, and he will be ably sustained. Let such a man ad dress J. P., P. 0. Box 36, Sharon, Mer- CCP county, Pa., and he will receive all information required." REV. JOSEPH CLARK, of Chambers burg, died at that place on Friday last, from injuries received on the Monday previous. Mr. Clark was born near Carlisle in 1825, and graduated at Mar shall College in 1848. In June 1852 he was ordained and installedpastor of the Presbyterian congregation of Chain bersburg, which he continued to serve until October 18 , 57, when he was com pelled by physical disability to relin quish the active duties of the ministry. He then engaged in mechanical pur suits, in the prosecution of which he met the accident that resulted in his death. The Repository says : " Although it was well known that his injuries were severe and painful, yet no apprehension was felt for his safety until°. few hours before his death. His condition first became known to himself, and to the great surprise of his friends, at a time when all indications seemed favorable, he expressed the opinion that he could not recover. His loss will be mourned by a large circle of friends, and will be sorely felt by the church, of which he had for a long time been an earnest and able supporter, and by this community, of which he was a valuable member." "The Bloodhounds of Zion." The General Assembly of the New School branch of the Presbyterian Church, which held its session in Brooklyn, New York, by a resolution unanimously adopted, recommended granting the right of suffrage to the negroes of the South. " These clerical bodies (says the Cincinnati Enquirer) act as if they believed they were com missioned to exercise a general super vision over all matters relating to human government as well as to exercise the special one of saving souls. Probably their jurisdiction embraces all that ter ritory. If so, the Good Father ought to have endowed them with more brains than they give evidence of possessing." THE HARRISBURG UNION says the water will be let into the Pennsylvania Canal, at the several feeders between Columbia and 'Hollidaysburg, on the 15th inst., an,d . .boating will commence on or about the 20th, - - The feterevf-thefleeM-= - The fact that Jamaica and other West India Islands, which were among the most productive portions of . the world so long as they were tilled by slave la bor, have becon*little.better than bar ren wastes since :the iidiviersion of the slaves into " freedmen," led us to ap prehend that th4'abolition of slavery , in our Southern States woulitwork - -43adt vantageotisly there also. Looking over' the map of the world, we could pick out no spot that was prospering under free black labor. Jamaica and Cuba, lying side by side at the mouth of the gulf of Mexico, were found to be strong. ly in contrast with one another. The production and . commerce of the for mer have run down to nothing, whilst the latter is, both agriculturally and commercially, a mine of wealth and a hive of industry. Jamaica is free, Cuba slave; and before she was free, Jamaica was more prosperous than Cuba. Bra zil, too, the only country on the Ameri can continents in which African slavery has existed up to this time, except the United States, is (with the same excep tion) the only one that has steadily prospered. From these facts it seemed as if the compulsory labor of negroes was indispensable to the prosperity of countries lying within or near the tropics, and we feared that the sudden uprooting of the slave labor system of the South, would in a great measure suspend the production of that great staple which has so often turned the " balance of trade" in favor of this coun try. We are glad to find, now that the Southern labor-system is undergoing this radical change, that persons whose means of weighing the probable conse quences of the change are superior to ours, take a very hopeful view of the future prospects of the South. We hope the Louisville Journal, from which we take the following, may find all its bright anticipations. realized : "The lately rebellious States now pre sent a most inviting field to the genius, skill, industry, and wealth of the coun try. With a rapidity greatly exceeding any former expectation, the people of those States are settling again into the condition of peace and exerting them selves to repair all injuries resulting from the war. The South possesses great recuperative power which will soon prove more than equal to thelosses sustained within the last four years, and, after a comparatively brief period, the people there will realize more than their old property. Since the close of hostilities, large public meetings have been held in many portions of the South to consider the new situation of affairs produced by events of war, and, on each occasion, the clearest practical views have been expressed as to the course to be adopted to place the South fairly upon her feet again. The masses seem disposed to adapt themselves as speed ily as possible to inevitable destiny, making the best of circumstances about them. But little disposition appears to quarrel or murmur over the destruction of slavery, which was generally regard ed as a foregone conclusion from the downfall of rebel power. Turning their faces to the future, radiant with the sun of a new era, the people are seeking to identify their interests and themselves with the irresistible tendency of events by which the nation is to be disen thralled from old prejudices and broken systems. The war has carried desolation into many portions of the South, but the strong, healthy impulse now being dif fused will soon gather up the fragments of society and re-establish those chan nels of wealth and labor which are to give at last a more enduring prosperity than the Southern States have ever en joyed. Those States are yet but poorly developed. They possess resources of wealth as yet untouched by the hands of enterprise and skill. A great war brings out new forces, and, now that our civil struggle is over, a wonderful impetus is to revolutionize the social, political, and material condition of the South, which will rapidly bring to light all the elements of greatness so long concealed within her bosom. New en ergy will be given to the cause of edu cation, the spirit of nationality will dis pel the mists of secession and nullifica tion, and the inspiring touch of free labor, taking the place of the slavery system, will unfold a thousand hidden sources of power from which the masses have been excluded by the concentrated wealth of the few. In every city of the hitherto rebel lious States able newspapers have al ready been established, which are devo ted to the discussion not so much of politics as agitated by demagogues and office-seekers as to the immediate, sub stantial welfare of the South. They are inculcating a sound, enlightened, popu lar sentiment, daily urging the inest:s mable advantages of the Union, seeking to remove that sectional animosity which gave birth to the war itself, and pointing to those great interests which, when properly developed, will make the Southern States, more than ever, a powerful and glorious part of the nation. Thus instructed, the people are opening their eyes as they have never done be fore, and inviting capital and labor from the Northern States to assist in the great task of restoration. We congratulate the country upon the cheering prospect presented. It strengthens our confi dence that the spirit of fraternity is at work, and that it will soon heal the bleeding wounds of war, and re-unite the old ligaments of the Union in an everlasting bond." Won't Swallow It A letter appears in the Cincinnati Enquirer, the writer of which, that journal says, has been "an active and influential worker in the Republican party, "protesting against the new plank of negro suffrage. We make an ex tract: " Some of my party associates want the blacks to be put on an equality with the whites—to have the elective fran chise, &c., &c., in other words, to be put on an equality, civilly, and politi cally, with the whites. _ . . " That opens up a new question far beyond slavery. Universal freedom does not mean universal privileges. Policy forbids women voting—that pri vilege is denied them. Minors are not allowed to vote, sit on juries or hold offices any more than women. Aliens are not allowed to do either until they are naturalized. It is policy, not prin ciple, that controls the elective fran chise. Policy, therefore, impels me to oppose negro suffrage, either North or South." New Idea of Freedom The Philadelphia Bulletin, a bitter Abolition paper, has a letter from Rich mond, Va., which says : "Swarms of negroes have come to the city from a distance, kuowingthat they are free, and expecting to be fed and clothed and have nothing to do. But General Patrick has determined to teach them better, and a bureau is organizing, at the head of which is Captain George Gibson, of the 11th U. S. Infantry, which is to organize all the idle negroes, and set them to some useful employ ment." In the paragraph above is written the history, or rather the result, of negro emancipation. REV. CHARLES LA_NE, who has just returned from Charleston, relates an in cident concerning Jeff. Davis' house hold which has not before appeared in print. In disposing of his slaves the great traitor committed to the especial care of Gen. Saxton a little negro boy, who was about the same age (some eight or ten years) of Davis' young son, and who had been the latter's most familiar companion from infancy. When the time for separation came both lads made the most demonstrative expressions of attachment, literally being torn from each other's arms, crying bitterly; and soon after the oolored boy had been placed on board another vessel he jumped overboard, in order to go back to " Bub Davis." BEN Wade's Committee on - the Con duct of the War, after a continuous ses sion of nearly four years, has concluded its labors, and found but one General officer in the army not censurable. That officer is Ben, Butler, of Lowell, Mass. ` -- TirelcrEW'rtfitlt 'atm atiltiiiiiirz'oeff sumers generally against the stories of dealers in prints and muslin to the ef.. feet that these articles will soon - rim to and beyond fifty cuts a yard b and- Viet Itherioeds muetgoup in the:Bame pro Portion. t th*dziontilsnt geode are not abundant in the trii*et, the d& numds are large andpricOare up. But •it must be ,tieine in inltitir that all the cottoh mina, many of which had sus pended temporarily until - quite recently, are now all running on full time and to their fullest capacity. The Sun adds that every indicationpoints to a decline before many weeks: ' - The Hen/Lc/says it is not improbable that gold will reacliisObefore.long. (In that case the'Seen' , 4"eipectations of a reduction in the price of cotton goods would hardly be realized.) The specu lative spirit on the Stock Exchange is becoming stronger, and the bulls are more hopeful of a rise than they have been since the recent dePression, the in creasing ease in the money, market being in their: favor, while they argue that prices are very low. It is also ex pected that stocks will sympathize in some degree with the further advance of gold which is predicted on the basis of the large legitimate demand for ex port in the face of the limited supply. The New York flour market was firmer on Thursday, and the sales made were at slightly improved prices. Cof fee sold at 23 and 233 centsingold, equal to 31 in greenbacks, for prime Rio.— Cotton ranged from 28 to 50 cents, ac cording to quality. Hops Bto 20 cents for common to good, and 25 to 32 for choice and fancy. Molasses 40 to 60 cents per gallon for Cuba, and 60 to 65 for Porto Rico. Sugarlol to 16. Spirits of turpentine $1.70 to $1.75. Rice 9to 12 cents. Sales of three hundred pack ages of meats at 123 to 14 cents for shoul ders and 143 to 17n for hams. -- - The aggregate value of the exports, exclusive of specie, from New York to foreign ports, during the week ending June 6, was $1,250,702. TWENTY THOUSAND Polish exiles, who are now scattered over western Europe, are said by the New York Tribune to be "looking wishfully across the Atlantic for a new home." That paper thinks they would be a valuable acquisition to any thinly-settled coun try, as they are generally agriculturists and shepheirds by training. " Mr. Jos. Koronikolski," who issaid to have been the leader of the Poles who were defeat ed in the late insurrection, has arrived in New York and is about to solicit con tributions to aid the exiles in getting to this country. They design planting a colony and intend to apply to our gov ernment for a grant of land. It would be a somewhat remarkable exercise of liberality on the part of the government of the United States, which has just ex pended four thousand million dollars putting down a rebellion against its authority, to make a grant of land to twenty thousand Poles whose only claim to our bounty is founded on the fact that they are unsuccessful rebels against their own government! The public lands can be put to other and better uses. National, like individual charity, should begin at home. The Effects of the War The Church Advocate, an intensely loyal paper of this city, has published some extracts from the Fast Day Ser mon of Rev. George Junkin, D. D. Pastor of the Sixth Presbyterian Church of Philadelphia. If the same language had been used by any Democratic speaker, a hue and cry would have been at once raised against him by papers of the Aboli Lion ilk for speaking disre spectfully of our brave soldiers : • " Profai iitv, drunkenness, gambling, Sabbath ' breaking - and debauchery prevail over all the land, but above all, in the army and navy. Many hundreds, indeed, have been dis missed the service for these crimes alone; 'out the expurgation has been only partial, and this by reason of the humiliating fact thi at some very distinguished officers indulg• al in some of these criminal practices, and th us seem to be: above law. Indeed, the sentiment that swearing and intemper ance are military necessities is not unfre quen tly hinted at, if not distinctly avowed. There is too much reason to believe that alcohol has destroyed more lives in this war than gunpowder." Will our pious neighbor of the Ex pvess, and his reporters and army cor respondents, make a note of the above and " pitch in" to the reverend slan derer of the Union army? - Some people cannot enjoy life unless they have somebody always on hand to hate. Life stagnates, becomes insipid, waterish, without this. Nothing to talk about, nothing to keep up the circulation, nothing to im part heat to the temper. Some of the house dogs of journalism, that stayed about home, barking and gro‘ding, while others went abroad and chased the enemy, are in a very bad way for somebody to hate.—Last Eve ning's Express. Exactly so. What a life-like picture our neighbor has drawn of himself and the other "house-dogs of journalism" with whom he has been in sympathy for the last four years. These patriots " stayed about home, barking and growling, [at their Democratic neigh bors] while others went abroad and chased the enemy." Their greatest pleasure seems to be in having " some body always on hand to hate." " Life," with them, " becomes insipid and water ish " when they have " nothing to talk about, nothing to keep up the circula tion, nothing to impart heat to the temper." We heartily thank the Express for its candor. An honest confession is said to be good for the soul, and we are not without hope that this, our neighbor's first step in the right direction, will be followed up by a hearty and sincere re pentance which will influence his future conduct, and in the end make a decent "house-dog" of him. Who is Payne ? The Washington correspondent of the New York World, writing under date of June 9th, says: The mystery enshrouding the con spirator Payne, instead of being cleared np, is growing deeper every day. His bearing and fortitude through out the trial is something wonderful. Heat, chains, handcuffs, and the awful presence of certain death, the constant gaze of the eager and curious crowd, and all the surroundings of the commis sion, neither appall nor terrify him in the least. For his companions in misery he deeplysympathizes, and only wishes, because he is stronger and braver than they, that he could be executed for each one. To-day a Christian lady of this city sent him a pocket7handkerehief and a message that she should pray for him, and that others prayed for him. He received the present with the air and bearing seemingly of a gentleman, returning his thanks and as to the prayers he said no one praying for him should labor alone; that he prayed for himself. This last remark was made with much emotion, his eyes 'filling with tears ; his nature is two-fold ;he is. gentle, and yet as terrible as a lion. He has more endurance than falls to the lot of most men. He will go four days at a time without eating or drinking, and still be strong. He has sat in that court room thirty-two days without relief from the usual course of - natiare, and during all that time has not tittered a complaint as to his health. He is yet young. His face is beardless. When dressed as a gentleman he is lune look ing. But who he is, and where he came from, is the great mystery. THE MANCHESTER (:Sew Hampshire) Daily Union says: " Whe Lancaster In telligencer announces that Mr.Bu chan an has prepared'a history of the last six months of his adrainistration, which will be issued by a New York Publish ing House in a month or two. It is none to!. soon. H e and the Democratic party have been n lost shamefully belied in regard to ihe origin of the war, and the truth of bistc iry will oettheturight." ~l~g the pa~ltc Debt: ~'~~ The proposition to• pay the debt of the United States by voluntary subscription, which originated with the, New York Jourrsal of Cearameree, bit of which the Herald, with: character istic effrontery, now plarns the paternity, is atill undergoing d*91113.4011 In the public journals of the eQuntrY• Some think it practicable;tuid applaud it; others argue against the expediency of it; whilst nota few make it a subject of ridicule, and accuse those who have offered to subscribe with being actuated by no very creditable motives: For this people to raise three thous- . and million dollars by voluntary sub scription would seem to be almost im possible. We do not believe it can be done, and yet we would like to see it tried. If there is a doubt about it, let the proposition have the benefit of the doubt and let the trial be made. The people of this country have been diligently cutting each other's throats and destroying each other's property for the last four years. Considering that there was no good cause why they should have done it, the fact will not read well in history when it comes to be put down by an unbiassed writer. But if, after censuring us for the folly and wickedness which led to the waste of so much blood and treasure, the his torian should say that after the - carnage and destruction had ceased we had voluntarily raised enough money to pay the gigantic debt incurred, the bright ness of that page of our history would dispel the darkness of all the rest. If those who are agitating this matter in the eastern cities are in earnest about it, they should go at it systematically. Mere newspaper blowirg will fall far short of the object aimed at. A Nation al Association will have to be formed ; then State Associatio,us ; then County Associations, and perhaps Borough and Township Associations. In New York city, where the plan originated, a National Association ought to be formed on the fourth of July.— Under their direction, all the other As sociations required throughout the country might be organized in the course of two or three months ; and by the fourth of July 1866, the question might be fairly tested and fully settled, whether this grandest of all debt-pay ing schemes is practicable or impractica ble. The Journal of Commerce, arguing the possibility and the economy of the project, says: " The suggestion, as we have said, is popular, and has many features to re commend it, but the difficulty lies more in the length of time it would take to carry it out than in the present unwil lingness of the people to render it suc cessful. Americans are impulsive and take hold of projects of this sort with wonderful energy ; but they have too little patience to keep up the necessary excitement until the whole amount could be raised. Unless the whole could be done on a given day throughout the Union, the subscription, like many an other which started well, would taper down to such small sums that the inter est on the debt would overtake and de vour them. " Still the discussion itself is hopeful, and if the nation is really determined to remove this incubus upon its prosperity, there will not be wanting a practicable way. Perhaps if the subscription were at first directed toward that amount of the debt, say a little over one thousand millions, which is now redeemable at the option of the treasury, the way to reach the remainder would be free from extraordinary difficulties. " In the trying necessities of the hour of danger the public have borne their burdens nobly, and in any proper way they will now come forward and com plete the sacrifice they have so freely made, by contributing to liquidate the enormous sums which have been ad vanced upon the national credit. But they will not tamely bear through years of peace the fattening of hungry officials upon the spoil wrung from the hard hands that have too little for home com forts; and all thought of that experi ment may as well be abandoned. Let us pay the debt to lighten the burdens of labor, and not for the sake of a fresh chaiace at the poor man's scanty store." The New Gospel As a specimen of the new Gospel of Hate, which is now being inculcated and propagated by the "Bloodhounds of Zion," we select the subjoined ex tract from the eulogy pronounced over the remains of the late President Lin coln, - upon their arrival at Springfield, Illinois, by Bishop Simpson, of the Methodist Episcopal Church : "And now, my friends, in the words of the departed, ' With malice toward none;' free from all feeling of personal vengeance, yet believing the sword must not be drawn or borne in vain, let us go forward in our painful duty. Let every man who was a Senator or Representa tive in Congress, and who aided in be ginning this rebellion, and led to the slaughter of our sons and daughters, he brought to speedy and certain punish ment. Let every officer educated at public expense, and who having been advanced to position has perjured him self, and has returned his sword against the vitals of his country be doomed to this. I believe in the will of the Ameri can people. Men may attempt to com promise and to restore these traitors and murderers to society again; but the American people will arise in their majesty and sweep all such compro mise and compromisers away, and shall declare that their shall be no peace to repls." When the " big guns " of the Church give evidence of such vindictiveness and malignity, what may be expected from the small fry throughout the coun try who are bound to swear in the words of their clerical master? No wonder that infidelity is making giant strides throughout the land when the Gospel of Peace is ignored by the mag nates of the Church, and the Gospel of Hate made to take its place. The Cavalry The cavalry formerly attached to the Army of the Potomac, and that which has heretofore operated in the Shenan doah Valley, is now encamped on the Orange and Alexandria Railroad, and is being reorganized and consolidated in consequence of the mustering out of those whose terms of service expire prior to October 1. About 4,000 have already been mustered out, and but 2,000 of the same class remain to be discharged as rapidly as circumstances permit. It is believed that a coming order from the War Department will direct the imme diate discharge of all whose term of service expires before January 1, 1806. A board of officers is in session daily for an examination into the merits of every officer of the entire Cavalry Corps, and the result of the investigation is for warded to the War Department. Meri torious officers making application to remain in the service receive an ap pointment in the new consolidations, upon the recommendation of the Ex amining Board The entire strength of the Cavalry Corps commanded by Gen. Davies is about 12,000. The Ist Ver- mont Cavalry has been ordered to re port to Gen. Dix, in New York, and the 6th United States has been sent to Fred erick, Md. IT HAS been heretofore stated that Booth embarked his theatrical baggage for Nassau some time last year. It ap• pears that the vessel was wrecked, but a portion of the cargo saved, among which were three trunks marked "J. Wilkes Booth." The Quebec _News of the sth instant says : "An application was yesterday made to the Hon. Mr. Black., Judge of Vice Admiralty Court, for a commission of inspection of the trunks, which was granted. The appli cation was made by Mr. Dunbar, on be half of the American Consul .at this port. It remains to be seen whether the opening of the trunks will throw any light upon the Washington•murder." . Jefferson DIM and Our Government. "Malcolm," the able and intelligent correspondent of the New York News, • gives the following important informa tion with reference to Mr. Davis and his treatment by the 'United States authori ties since his arrest: - I need not tell the readers of the News that all the ridiculous stories abont-Jef ferscmDavis, that have ,been set afloat - ever since his capture, are pure fabrica tions, without the least foundation:— They have originated, and have been circulated, with the sole design of mak ing Mr. Davis appear ridiculous, and of ,depriving him of the ,sympathy which he otherwise would have received. Mr. Davis is our enemy . ; but he has been captured and is a prisoner; and never before in the history of any enlighten ed and Christian nation, has there been an instance where a captive has not been treated with kindness and gentle ness, with courtesy, and with ,all that consideration which is due to the rank and the position he formerly held. It has been reserved for this enlightened nation to treat an illustrious captive, a Christian, a gentleman, a refined habits, in a manner so cruel, so barbarous, so unnecessarily severe, as will leave an in effaceable stain upon our history. The falsehood about Mr. Davis having been disguised in female apparel is now exploded, and only brings ridicule upon those who believed it. It served its pur pose, however, and probably not one in a thousand of those who heard the false hood have since seen its contradiction. The inhuman treatment which Mr. Davis has received, however, since his incarceration in the-dungeons of For tress Monroe, deserves to be placed be fore the world in its true colors. I here with send you the facts as I havelearn ed them. The conduct of Mr. Davis, ever since he has been imprisoned in the Fortress, has been exactly what those who were his former associates in' the United States Senate would have expected from him. He knew that it was useless for him to struggle against his fate or repine at the misfortune that has befallen him. He has, therefore, accepted his misfor tune in a spirit of true Christian resig nation. He has never given utterance to an angry, sentiment ; nor used lan guage unbecoming a gentleman. The man is to be pitied, indeed, who is credulous enough to believe that Jefferson Davis railed at his jailors, or at the Government, that he threw his food at the head of the attendant, that he knocked down two of his guards in succession, and that he violently re sisted the guards, while they were plac ing the shackles and manacles on his limbs. Any man of common sense would know that it would - do no good to act thus; and Jefferson Davis has never for a moment forgotten himself, or the position which he occupies in the eyes of the world. At some time, not far distant, the secrets of his prison house will be revealed. • Mr. Davis is entitled, by the usages of nations, to the treatment of a general officer and to the food and table service pertaining thereto. Every European Government would have recognized that right, and Mr. Davis, knowing that it was his, demanded it, in firm but courteous language. lie refused to eat the coarse food brutally thrown down before him; and his right to proper food has since been grudgingly allowed. The placing of the manacles upon his limbs is an outrage for Aftich there is no excuse. He was not violent; he did not knock down either one or two of his guard; he had done nothing affording the slightest pretext or provocation for such an outrage. It was done to gratif fy the most malignant feelings of res venge and hatred, and it was not au thorized by President Johnson. It is pretended that the brutal act was or tiered by General Miles, and that it was sanctioned by telegraph by Secretary Stanton. No resistance, except by words, was made to this last indignity. Who, but a crazy man, would have thought of resisting a party of men composed of an officer, a blacksmith, and four stronm ' soldiers, all armed to the teeth, with eight more soldiers at hand ? All these facts, I repeat, will one day be known to the world. And now, how much more it would comport with the honor and dignity of the country ; how much more lustre would it shed upon President Johnson's Administration, if General Miles had been directed to take the parole of Mr. Davis not to escape, and then to have allowed him the liberty of the Fortress and a seat at the General's table? I presume a great many of your readers have seen Fortress Monroe, and remem ber its internal arrangement. Guarded as the prisoners could be, even with this liberty allowed to him, his escape would be literally impossible. With a guard of 60 vigilant men, 20 on duty at the time. with orders not to let him be out of their sight for a moment, he could not escape, even without his pa role. It is not too late to change the manner of his imprisonment even now. It cannot be denied that, up to this time, the indignities that have been heaped upon Mr. Davis and his rigorous im prisonment have not been owing to fears of his escape, but in order to wreak vengeance upon him for some fancied complicity of his in the assassination. Even to permit such things is unworthy of a mind like President Johnson's, and it may be hoped that lie will put a stop to them. MALCOLM Allegheny County Leads in Opposition to President Johnson. The first official declaration of the Abolition party of Allegheny county, places it in direct antagonism to the Ad ministration of President Jbhnson, and side by side with Wendell Phillips and the New England revolutionists. The Convention of Wecinesday,emphatically resolved that "the people of the loyal Northern States have the right to de clare the conditions upon which the people of the revolted States shall be permitted to reorganize their State Gov ernments." In another resolution one of these "conditions" is thus set forth : "That to permit any of the seceded States to resume the exercise of the rights and powers in the Union, while refusing to guarantee, by constitutional enactment, to the loyal colored people of such States the enjoyment of all the rights of citizenship, including the elective francise, on the same terms and to the same extent as they, may. be guaranteed to the white people of these States, would be inconsistent with sound policy and the dictates of true patriotism, they having performed welZand truly their part in the great struggle for tuitional life." The gist of all this high sounding lan guage is, that as a " condition precedent" to the re-organization of the revoted States, negroes in those States must be permitted to exercise the right of suf frage and hold any or all State offices, "on the same terms and to the same extent as the white people." President Johnson, in his North Caro lina proclamation, rejects this " condi tion precedent," and plants himself squarely on the constitutional right of the loyal citizens of the revolted States to determine for themselves the identi cal questions which our local radicals assert Congress must control and de cide. Thus, at the very outset of the new administration, it meets with direct op position and embarrassment from those who claim to be its especial and exclu sive friends, while Wendell Phillips and his jacobinism, are espoused and cham pioned. The Convention should not have stultified itself by a hypocritical expression of confidence in the Presi dent, and at the same time emphatically indicated opposition to what promises to be the great political question of his ad ministration. Query.—Do the intensified loyalists of Allegheny county propose to embar rass the Government?" to render " aid and comfort" to its assailants? in a word, have they concluded on "trea son," and made up their minds to wear the brand of " traitor ?" Or have they lost all remembrance of applyihg these terms to those who hitherto questioned Executive infallibility. The portals of Fort Lafayette opened on hundreds who ventured upon such temerity. Political conventions were dispersed for no great er offense, and printing offices mobbed, pulpits vacated, and communities dis franchised. Let the Loyal Leaguers be ware!—Pittsburg Post. Who Payne Is Who Payne is, the assassin of Secre tary Seward, still remains a mystery. Miss Brandon testified before the Court that she knew him as far back as the battle of Gettysburg, where he acted as nurse in Union hospitals, and was call ed Powell AprommtENT.---Edward J. Iloye, colored, who twenty years ago, was a - barber in Terre Haute, Ind., has been appointed Chief Justice of Liberia, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of Rev. Boston J. Drayton Address by the Governor. Piniassri..warte EszcirrrvE CHAMBER, Rizrwritrao, PA., June 10, 1863. To the People of Pennsylvania: The bloody struggle of four years is ended. The fires of rebellion are quench ed. The supremacy of la* and right is re-established. The foulest treason re corded in history has been beaten to the earth. Our country is saved. • These blessings we owe—ander God —to the unequalled heroism—civic and military—of the People. In the darkest hours—under the heaviest discourage ments—falter who would—they never faltered. They have been inspired with the de termination to maintain the free Gov ernment of our fathers—the continued Union of our whole country—and the grand republican principles which it is their pride and duty to defend, for the sake not only of themselves, but of the human race. I glory in saying that the people of Pennsyllenia have been among the foremost in the career of honor. Their hearts have been in the contest. Their means and theirblood have been poured out like water to maintain it. The remnants of the heroic bands that left the soil to rescue their country, are now retur.,ing, having honor ably fulfilled their service. They have left tens of thousands of their brothers on many a bloody field. Their memories will be preserved on our rolls of honor. For their widows and families, a grateful country will suitably provide. Let the survivors who are now return ing to us have such welcome as it befits a brave and patriotic people to give to the gallant men who have saved the country, and shed new lustre on Penn sylvania. I recommend that in every part of the State, on THE APPROACHING ANNI VERSARY OF INDEPENDENCE, special observances be had of welcome to our returned defenders and of commemora tion of the heroic deeds of themselves and their comrades who have fallen. An Interview with Forrest—llls Versio of the Fort Pillow Massacre. A correspondent of the New Orleans True Delta describes an interview with the rebel General Forrest at Meridian, Mississippi. Forrest, he says, is a man of fine appearance ; about six feet in height; dark, piercing, hazel eyes ; care fully trimmed moustache and chin whiskers—dark as night; finely-cut fea tures and iron-gray hair. His form is lithe, plainly indicating great physical power and activity. The writer asked, after some preliminary questions: "Now that you have time, General, Ito you think you will ever put upon aperghe , true account of the Fort Pil- "Well," said he, "the Yankees ought to know; they sent down their best men to investigate the affair." - - "But are we to believe their repor General?" " Yes, if we are to believe anything a nigger says. When I went into the war, I meant to fight. Fighting means killing. I have lost twenty-nine horses in the war, and have killed a man each time. The other day I was a horse ahead, but at Selma they surrounded me and I killed two—jumped my horse over a one-horse wagon, and got away." I began to think I had some idea of the man at last. He continued : "My provost marshal's book will show that I have taken. thirty-one thousand prisoners during the war." "At Fort Pillow I sent in a flag of truce, and demanded an unconditional surrender, or I would not answer for my men. This they refused. I sent them another note, giving them one hour to determine. This they refused. I could see on the river, boats loaded with troops. They sent back, asking for an hour more. I gave them twenty min utes. I sat on my horse during the whole time. The fort was filled with niggers and deserters from our army—men who lived side by side with my own men. I waited five minutes after the time, and then blue my bugle for the charge. In twenty minutes my men were over the works, and the firing had ceased. The citizens and Yankees had broken in the heads of whisky and lager-beer barrels, and were all drunk. They kept up firing all the time, as they went down the hill. Hundreds of them rushed to the river and tried to swim to the gun boats, and my men shot them down. The Mississippi river was red with their blood for three hundred yards. "During all this, their flag was still flying, and I rushed over the works and cut the hallyards, and let it down and stopped the fight. Many of the Yankees were in tents in front, and they were in their way, as they concealed my men, and some of them set them on fire. If they were burned to death, it was in these tents. "They have a living witness in Cap tain Young, their quartermaster; and I will leave it to any prisoner I have ever taken if I have not treated them well." Darkey Rebellion in the Car On Tuesday last, a colored gal got on board the morning train, East, on the Baltimore Central Railroad, at Avon dale, and, passing by the seats assigned to passengers of her color, with great boldness took possession of one of the middle seats of the car. When the con ductor came along for the tickets, he quietly informed her that she was not in the proper place, and requested leer to take a back seat before reaching the next station. When the train arrived at New Garden, wenchey was still in her choice seat. The conductor again asked her to change, and she refused. He gently put his hand upon her to ease her up, but she held back and showed a disposition to resist. De siring to avoid anything like a fuss with the impudent creature, the conductor was about leaving her, when she broke out upon him in a loud voice; told him she had heard of him before ; that he could not make hersit where he pleased; that he was a mean fellow; and, (per haps by way of showing her loyalty), denounced him as a " copperhead." She having thus fired the first gun and opened the the war, the conductor concluded that this rebelTion against his rightful authority under the laws laid down by his superiors, must be at once suppressed. In order to effect this without injury to the person of the re bellious passenger, he called to his aid the brakesman, and baggage master; and they, not in a violent, rude or angry manner, but as gently as possible, picked up Miss Wenchey, carried her out, and carefully deposited her upon the ground, shd however during the process, vocif erating " murder ; and making all the noise and resistance in her power. The train then Moved forward, and peace, law, order reigned in all the cars. Such is our report from disinterested and re liable sources. It so happened that the conductor denounced by the colored gal as " a copperhead," is a verydecided Re publican, and was an ardent supporter of Lincoln. We have frequently travel ed in trains under his charge, and, though differing from him in politics, we cannot but say that he always de meaned himself with the greatest pro priety towards passengers, and we be lieve he is universally regarded as a very civil gentlemanly conductor.— Westchester Jeffersoniau.l Opinion of Stephen A. Douglas. In the discussions before the people of Illinois just previous to his last election to the U. S. Senate, Judge Douglas said: " I hold that a Negro is not, and never ought to be a citizen of the United States. I hold that this Government was made upon a white basis by white menJor the benefit of white men and their' posterity forever, and should be administered by white men and none others. I do not believe that the Almighty made the Negro capable of self-government. " Now I say to you, my fellow-citi zens, that in my opinion, the signers of the Declaration of Independence_ had no reference to the Negro whatever when they declared all men created equal. They desired to express by that phrase, white men of European birth, European descent f lind had no reference to the Negro, the savage Indians or other inferior or degraded races. At that time every one of the thirteen Colonies was a slave-holding colony, and every signer of the Declaration represented a slave-holding constitu ency, and we know that no one of them emancipated his slaves, much less offered citizenship to them when they signed the Declaration." A CORRESPONDENT of the Shippens burg News proposes the purchase of a home in the Cumberland 'Valley for General Sheridan, who "cleaned out'; the rebel General Early in the Valley of Virginia. General Grant's Arrival at the Military Academy. [Correspondence or the World-1 W.V.sr POINT, Thursday, June 8. General Grant arrived here shortly before 11 &clock to-day. He left New York in the steamer Henry Burden, which was plentifully bedecked with flags, fore and aft and upon her wheel houses. Grant and lady took places above the cabin under the awning, and while they chatted pleasantly in the blue atmosphere of his cigar, the aids in true soldierfashion drew corks and grew merry below stairs. The general's un mistakable figure and physiognomy were recognized even from the shore, 'and all the way along the North river he was hailed by platoons of cheers.-- The clay was fine and the Hudson sparkled with graceful sails, under which the various crews, on the lookout for Grant, gave him the benefit of their hats and voices. To all of these he either made standing obeisance or took off his corded hat. Itis remarkable how well Grant stands the heat and'worry of popular ovations. He is the toughest man in the service, both for fighting and for squeezing; yet all the while his twinkling good humor is prolonged, as if the cigar he smoked was an invigorator. Meantime, at West Point and Coz zens all the country people were gather ing. The Cozzens House has in it a tall and mantled figure, who walks upon the piazza slowly, with the assistance of a staff. He may be six feet five inches high, and in his lofty shadow we lesser men seem members of a degenerate race. His hair is very thin and white, like a new-born child's ; upon his blood less and furrowed, yet plethoric face, there are marks harsher than time, and the grand stature is a little stooping, as if invisible years were heaped upon his broad shoulders. He wears soft slip pers, and his voice is broken, like one who talks in sickness: All the boys and grown-up folks look at him as he passes, and then their eyes wander and grow abstract, as if they saw behind him a phantom panorama conjured up by his age. His dress is civil; he is very kind andgrave, and when he speaks in his feeble way, his long arm raises, and the index finger has in its sweep the ghost of high command. His face is large and his eye has the wreck of splen dor about it. This is Winfield Scott. The old lieutenant-general, to give the new one a fitting reception, attired him self this morning in a handsome dress coat of blue, with yellow silk lappels and golden buttons ; he wore no shoul der bar, and the remainder of his dress was altogether citizen, except his vest of white Marseilles, which buttoned with the regulation eagle. At eleven o'clock the Henry Burden, which had been signaled far below, came up to Cozzens' Landing, but to everybody's disappoinment, did not stop. There was at once a general va cation of the Cozzens' House, all the teams on the place being required to convey half the guests to West Point. The landing at the latter place had meanwhile received the taut little ves sel, and Grant and party disembarked. The entire body of distinguished visi tors numbered only a handful. There was Mrs. Grant, a plump and sensible lady, who seemed conscious that her husband was the honored guest, and she only reflective of his greatness ; Mrs. Waller, a fair and intelligent lady, just past youth; Miss Stetson , the pretty and modest daughter of the proprietor of the Astor House; Colonel Parker, Grant's big Indian ; Colonel Badeau, and Col. Bowers, Grant's aids; Captains Ammon and Babcock, aids also; Generals Hunt and Augur, of the New York headquar ters. These got into carriages at once with Captain Boynton, adjutant of the post, General Cullum and some other minor officers. They drove straight through the grounds of West Point, where many visitors were already as sembled, and passing the cadet barracks received tremendous cheers from the young gentlemen in gilt and gray. At the residence of the superinten dent, the ladies adjusted their toilets, as all ladies will do, even on state oc casions. After this they all repaired to the library, where the examination was being conducted. The spacious hall was plentifully filled ; all the visitors, with the exception of Doctor Campbell, being in their places, and about a hun dred brilliantly dressed ladies occupied places sitting and standing along the walls. General Grant's entrance was the signal for the cadets to suspend their display of mineralogy and the test of the hydro-oxygen blow-pipe. He was upon the arm of Cullum, his wife fol lowed in the escort of Adjutant Boyn ton, and other officers of the Point brought in Mrs. Waller and Miss Stet son. "Gentlemen of the Board of Visitors. A. G. CIIRTTN said General Cullum, " I present to you Lieutenant-General Grant." All rose, and the general shook hands immediately with each of the board, and afterward with the faculty. He then presented several of them to his wife, who remained seated. She wore a bonnet of orange straw, gauze bosom, and a splendid lace shawl and a travel ing dress. While the various gentlemen of the board paid their respects to Mrs. Grant, the general invaded the ladies' side and took the hands of all of them. There were some beautiful young girls, just turning womanhood, who pressed up to him and spoke ; and at the request of some of these, he sat at a desk and wrote his autograph. There were no speeches; the customary dignity of the room was for a time suspended, and when the doors were closed, and sentries placed upon them to keep the crowd back, the place within was transformed to a chatty and agreeable drawing-room. After a lapse of time the lessons were resumed, and then General Grant took up a bound report of the institution, and silently looked over it. The visit to General Scott took place at 1 o'clock. It is a mile from the point to Cozzens, and two barouches took all the party. As these passed the little Gothic church, and turned into the pic turesque lawn, a gun boomed out from the ferry below, and the grand piazza, crowded with beauty and manliness, sang out glad cheers to welcome the herb of the republic. He alighted from his carriage, and seized the hand of the grim old veteran of former wars. " General Scott," said Ulysses, "1 bid you all good wishes. I am pleased to see you well !" "And you, general," said 'Winfield, " I thank God that you have passed through so much peril and glory un harmed. Welcome to my bachelor home !" The dense crowd fell back reverenti ally, and arm in arm the little man went under the shadow of the colossal figure of whom he had read in his child hood. Age and strength, the veteran and the commander, they went together through the breezy, wide hall, and turn ed into the great drawing-room. There they sat side by side, and the ladies were presented to the general of Lundy's Lane. s he stooped down to take them each by the hand, the people who had fol lowed them in uncovered, and the old man said something touching and courtly to each. Then Grant and Scottchatted gravely together as to the present and the past, and while thef satin mutual reverence, the people in couples and by single file 'lked up and took the hands of both. They partook of a collation, chatting pleasantly as they sipped foaming cham pagne, and after awhile they gave each other the right hand of fellowship again, and Grant joined his carriage to tre mendous cheering. While the ladies at Roe's Hotel were getting themselves up fur the grand dinner, Grant and a few of the Point officers went around the buildings, of which they are many at the Point. They visited the cool and solemn chapel, whose walls contain black slabs of pol ished marble, commemorative of the good patriots who have fallen in battle; they looked up to Kosciusko's monu ment in passing, and drove to the plaza, where, among historic trophies, re poses the remnant of that prodigious chain stretched across the Hudson in the Revolution. ' The dinner given to General Grant by the board of visitors commenced at half past 4 o'clock, and was truly a magnifi cent affair. Fifty-four plates were held, and the entertainment, served by Mr. Roe, was rare and excellent beyond anything knowh at the Point. General Scott was obliged by feeble ness to decline an invitation forwarded to him. In the evening at six o'clock General Grant reviewed the battalion of engi neers, Colonel Black commanding. The young fellows mustered about 1,201, and passed creditably through many 'diffi cult evolutions. About five hu dred FIIOII WEST POINT. spectators were' present. At the:end of the review, amid the firing of cannon, the general took his departure for Al bany. Gerrit Smith's Speech. His Views as to the Punishment of Traltorg • • Gerrit Smith addressed a large audi ence in New York, on the Bth, holding that the way to a permanent peace lies through justice and love. As one of the founders of the Abolition party, his re ' marks possess peculiar interest. We quote the points of his argument : "The South, in plunging this nation into war, committed the great crime of the age. The North, under the persist ent clamors of press and pulpit to punish the South for treason, is in danger of committing the mean crime of the age. All over the North there is clamor for the blood of the leading rebels whom we have captured and those whom we hope yet to capture. I have no sym pathy with this clamor. The South fully surrendering, let bloodshed cease, and all punishment. Of course I have no reference here to the assassination of our beloved President, nor to the starv ing and murdering of prisoners. Let all merited punishment fall on those who are guilty of these infamous and infernal crimes. His position was simply this—that the South shall not be punished for the rebellion, or, to use other words, the South shall not be punished for treason. He admitted that she had been guilty of treason, but con tended that she should not be punished for treason, because the North agreed that she should not be. The North came very reluctantly to the agree ment to conduct the war according to the rules of war, by which he meant the rules of international war. He went on to say that the South was treated as a belligerent, and read copious extracts from Vatel,Hallam,Macauley and other writers, to show that the North treated the South in that way because the laws of war required it. He was not willing that it should go down through all the ages and over all the earth that millions of his countrymen were pardoned traitors. Another reason why our civil war should be 'conducted according to the laws of war was found in the fact that where great masses of men took very momentous and very respon sible steps it was not only charitable, but just, to conclude that they had a sincere and deep belief in the wisdom and rightfulness of such steps, and that they had, in fact, no little reason for taking such steps. He was of the opinion that if our government had re fused to conduct the war according to the laws of war we should have lostour cause and country. Where such great num ers o len carry on a war we may will belive there has been suf fering enough in it, especially to the defeated party, without adding punish ment at the close of it for treason." Mr. Smith held that the North was to blame as well as the South, and that the pro-slavery spirit—the cause of all our troubles—existed in each locality. Booth, he said, was a product of the North as well as of the South ; be was moulded by northern pulpits, northern presses, and northern spirits, as well as by Southern pulpits, presses, and usages." Horace Greely was called out. He said be was in favor of trying all men, North and South, who had violated the laws of war by starving and shooting prisoners; but they could not be brought to trial unless it was assumed that the laws of war governed the con test. When that was proved the men who were paroled under the . laws of war—he did not care if it wa'4 Lee— could not be tried or hung without a black violation of faith. A Difference We invite a comparison between the spiritof the following resolutions, adopt ed by the General Baptist Association of Virginia, on the sth of June, and the action which characterized the General Assembly recently in session in Pitts burg. It will not reflect very favorably on the violence and church property zeal of the Old School Assembly, for while the Baptist resolutions breathe the spirit of enlightened Christianity, their " deliverance " was far from merit- ing such praise : WHEREAS, The unfortunate and deso lating war in which this country has, for four years, been involved, has been brought to a conclusion ; and WHEREAS, It is the manifest design of an All-wise Providence that the States of the American Union shall continue under one Government ; therefore Resolved, That whatever may have been our past views, aims or eilbrts, re garding issues which have divided the Northern and Southern States, we deem it our duty as patriots and Christians, to accept the order of Providence, yield unreserved and faithful obedience to the powers that be; and to cultivate such a spirit, and to pursue such a course of conduct, as shall best promote the peace and prosperty of the country. And we earnestly recommend to our brethren throughout the State to prove themselves to be loyal; citizens of the United States, and to enter, with zeal and activity, upon the dtscharge of the responsibilities devolve on them by their new social and civil relations. The Opposition of the Radicals The Nashville Union, which may, perhaps, be regarded as the home organ of President Johnson, in its issue of the Gth inst., says: "The failure of the Administration to come up to the standard of the most progressive of the anti-slavery radicals, will, probably, cause the formation of a strong opposition party, composed of active, enterprising, aggressive ele ments. The loss of these to the Admin istration party might be regarded with seriousness, were it not for the assurance that their places would soon be filled by steadier and more reliable supporters. If this should be the result, the country would be benefitted by the change. " The policy of clothing a race of people unlettered, and ignorant not only of the ordinary affairs of the Gov ernment, but of business life, with the ballot, is not a thing to be determined in the midst of excitement, and with out deliberation. Too much is involved in the result to justify anything like haste or want of proper investigation. The interest of both races and of our institutions, are in the scale. We trust, therefore, that, notwithstanding the de mands of the inconsiderate, the admin istration will not be swerved from the matured policy announced." The Dead Letter Office The public may be surprised to learn that the number of letters which are now being received at the dead letter office, sent there under the new law, which makes prepayment of postage compulsory, amounts to more than 15,000 per week. These figures denote great carelessness or ignorance of the law on the part of the senders of these letters. The public should remember that the old law allowing letters not prepaid to be sent forward according to the address and double postage collect ed of the , receivers, has been repealed ; that now every letter not entitled to be carried through the mails free must have a stamp upon it, or it is sent ei the dead letter office. Especial care should be taken by every person to observe at the time of depositing a letter in the post office that the postage stamp is firmly fixed upon It. Such attentive scrutiny would soon reduce the number of letters "held for postage," and con sequently prevent the embarrassments and vexatious delays now arising from this class of letters. TIIE Pittsburg Gazette is in favor of striking the word white out of our State Constitution. The matter will be brought before the next Legislature in the form of a proposed amendment. This is the first step towards striking out the white race altogether by amal gamation with the blacks. Blair County. At a meeting of the Democratic County Committee' of Blair, held at Hollidaysburg on the 31st ult., Dr. J. P. Thompson, of 'Williamsburg, was se lected as the delegate to the State Con ventim, to be held on the 24th of Au. gust.