4 . ..* , , :74.7.±71".”: - .../.71 -_, E , Z1C. , 11.7, - .44:: , gifnagla -- mitugenat - iiirgEoNESDAY,NOVEMBEIt 15,1865. "The printing presses eball be free to every person .wlu> lmdertakes to examine the ceeding3 of the legislature, or any b of government; and no law shall ever be made to restrain the right thereof. The free commu nication of thouglit and opinions Is one of the invaluable rights of men; and every citizen may freely speak, write and 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.. LANCASTKB. INTELLIGENCES OFFICE. November 6th, 1885. J JAM'S F. POWNEY is authorized to re oeive money and subscriptions, and to con tract for advertising and job work for us. COOPER," SANDERSON dr. CO. The Late Colonel Bowman. The Philadelphia Press - of yesterday had the following notice of the late Col onel Bowman: Colonel Bowman was a Pennsylvanian, and was born in the year 1805. In 1821 be entered West Point, and graduated No. 3 in the class of 1825—that class in which Al exander D. Bache, for so many years at the head of the corps of Topographical En gineers, was No. 1; Benjamin Huger No. 8; Robert Anderson, of Fort Sumpter fame, No. 15 ; and Charles F. Smith N 0.19. Breveted second lieutenant in the highest brahch of the service on his graduation, he was the same day promoted to the full rank, and appointed acting assistant pro fessor of ethics at West Point. He was re lieved in the following year. The only official record which exists says nothing of his employment from that time until 1853, but simply records his various promotions. He was made first Lieutenant January 21, 1835, and Captain July 7, 1838. He saw no service in the Mexican war. In 1833 he was detached from the Engineer Corps and or dered to the U. S. Treasury Department, the Secretary of which appointed him Superin tendent of the Bureau for the Purchase of Sites and Erection of Custom-houses. He was engaged on this duty until his promo tion to Major of the Engineers, January 5, 1857, soon after which he was ordered to su perintend the completion of Fort Sumpter. He left this work but a short time before the investment of it by Beauregard. In 1862 he was made superintendent and com mandant of the Military Academy at West Point. The changes in the corps, resulting from the death of Gen. Totten, in April, 1884, very materially affected Colonel Bow man, and resulted in his retirement front the superintendency. By the death of T.otten, Colonel Richard Delaiield became Chief Engineer, and Lieutenant Colonel Bowman was advanced one in the line of promotion. His senior Lieutenant Colonel, Thomas J. Ortn, was appointed an additional Aid-de- Camp. Barnard was made a Major Gener al, and George W. Cullem, the next Lieu tenant Colonel, was given the command of the Military Academy. Colonel Bowman retired to Wilkesbarre in July, 1884, where he was engaged, up to the time of his death, in supervising the plans and propositions of his subordinate engineers for the im provement of our coast defences. The statement therein made in regard to the cause of the removal of Colonel Bowman-from the position of Command ant of West Point is not correct. He was removed by order of Stanton for having invited General George B. Mc- Clellan to deliver the address on the laying of the corner-stone of the monu ment to the graduates of West Point who had been killed during the war. For this act Stanton took pleasure in venting hispettyspite on Col. Bowman. When removed from the command of West Point he was ordered to report at Lancaster, and on representation being made by one of his friends that Wilks barre, and not this city, was the home of Col. Bowman, Stanton rudely asked : " Is it Lancaster in the order?" and being assured that it was, replied, " then Lancaster let it be." We do not sup pose a more contemptible specimen of petty and malicious meanness can be found among the many despicable acts of the Secretary of War. We had the above statement from Colonel Bowman himself, who boarded in this city for months, while his family lived at Wilks barre. To some of his military friends, who suggested that lie might safely go to Wilksbarre and have ally order which came to Lancaster forwarded to his home, he replied, that he had strict ly obeyed all orders for more than forty years, and he should remain at Lan caster until ordered elsewhere. And lie did so, until lie was appointed Chief of the board to supervise our coast de fences. This appointment was not made until he had given notice of his intention to call for a proper military examination into his case. Then Stanton, fearing to have his mean- esS exposed, appointed him to the po sition which he held at his death. There was not a mau in the regular army more universally respected and esteemed than Colonel Bowman. We have it from his own lips that during more than forty years of service he never asked for a furlough or leave of absence, except once, and then he willingly returned to duty again at the expiration of two weeks, a call having been made upon him, which, however, he was not bound to obey. Such was the man who was made the victim of Stanton's petty spite. A Nice Family Quarrel The Harrisburg Telegraph of Fri day evening has a most bitter and vio lent attack upon Colonel McClure, drawn out by his account ofthe inter view he had recently with President Johnson. The Telegraph, which is the most unprincipled and mendacious sheet in the country, is entirely in the interest of Simon Cameron. The old Winnebago gives the cue, and the cur Bergner is always ready to yelp and snarl at the heels of whomsoever his master points out as an object of hatred. This accounts for the attack upon Mc- Clure. McClure and Cameron are not friends, consequently Bergner hates him. But, the assault upon McClure is equally an assault upon all who are not in league with Cafneron. Every blow aimed at the editor of the Repository is equally a blow at Governor Curtin, at Kelly, at Stevens and at all who are not ready to come and go at Simon's bidding. It is not necessary for us to intimate that the attack upon McClure abounds in abusive epithets and is distinguished for its venom. Such is the unvarying character of the editorials of the Tele graph. The article to which we allude is instructive and entertaining. It shows what a happy and harmonious family the Republican party of this State is. We congratulate them on their pleasant relations to each other. We shall look on and enjoy the family feud, caring but little which faction succeeds in destroying the other. GENERAL KILPATRICK was arrested for bribery on election day at Newtown, New Jersey, together with the United States Deputy Collector and two or three others. He will be indicted at the De cember Term of the Court of Sussex, his native county. So says a correspon dent of the Newark Journal. THE CLAIMS of IIIIL4IR , Ohio, Wis consul, New York, Vermont, Delaware and Minnesota, for moneys advanced the Government in the early stages of the war, have been settled by the Trea sury Department. The claims of Penn sylvania are said to be in a fair way of • adjustment. The people of this State will be glad to hear that such is the case. THE NEW YORK HERALD presents the question of the admission of the Southern members to Congress in this light: " If the Southern States are in the Union, if they had no right to secede, then an attempt on the part of Congress to reject the Representatives duly elect ed is revolutionary. It is an insurrec tion, a rebellion against the Constitu tion, and the President will have full authority to exercise all the powers vested in him in times of insurrection and rebellion to put an end to their rev alutloflary work," . ankee-Patriotism.- On the 29th of August, 1775, General Washington wrote from Cambridge, Massachusetts, to Richard Henry Lee: "I have made a pretty good stormamong such kind of officers as the Massachusetts Government abounds in since I came to this camp, having broke one colonel and two captains for cowardly behavior at Bun ker Hill ; and two captains for drawing more provisions and pay than they bad men in their companies, and one for being absent from his post when the enemy ap peared and burnt a house just by. Besides these, I have at this time one colonel, one major, one captain and two subalterns un der arrest for trial. In short, I spare none, and yet fear it will not all do, as these peo ple seem to be attentive only to their in terests." That is decidedly a strong indictment; but, we think it can easily be shown that the people of New England have been noted for selfishness, if not for cowardice, from the day of the revolu tion to the present time. To prove this we need not cite instances of an ind. vidual character—the manufacturers of wooden hams and nutmegs,_ and the horde of unprincipled adventurers whose rascally tricks have made the name of Yankee everywhere synony mous with that of swindler and cheat. The history of the country shows that" New England has always been more attentive to its own interests than to the honor and the welfare of the nation. At the time of the adoption of the Constitution, Yankeeship owners being then largely engaged in the slave trade, it was by the vote of New England delegates that the clause was inserted prohibiting the interruption of that nefarious traffic before the year 1808. After the slave trade had ceased, finding the employment of negro labor unprofitable, the Yankees took occasio‘ to sell their slaves to the people of tilt more Southern States; and it was ntt until they had nothing to lose in a pecuniary point of view that their puri- tanical consciences commenced to be exercised in regard to the sinfulness of slavery. On ' the breaking out of the war of 1814, these same Yankees, having much money invested in shipping, and being largely engaged in commercial trading, opposed the war most bitterly. They showed plainly their willingness to sac rifice the national honor on the altar of their own selfishness. They first opposed a tariff, because they believed it would lessen the profits of their shipping by curtailing foreign importation, and only favored it after manufactures had been established among themselves, which were benefit ted by protection. In short, every movement which they have made has been marked by selfish ness. The national honor, the best in terests of the country at large, and even their own puritanical fanaticism, next to selfishness the strongest motive pow er of the Yankee, have all been made subservient to their own interests. From the days of Washington down, it could truly be said of the Yankees as a body, in the words of the letter from which we quote, " these people seem to be atten tive only to their own interests." The latest instance of their willing ness to sacrifice everything to pecuni ary gain which has fallen under our notice is a petition to Secretary Seward, got up in Boston and signed by many of the largest ship owners of that city, praying him not to press our claims on the British Government for depreda tions committed by the Anglo-rebel pirates, as they are called. The reason assigned is that when England becomes involved in war, which these Boston speculators think cannot be far distant, the position which her Government has taken in regard to the fitting out of Confederate cruisers, if allowed to stand as a precedent, will give a chance to realize immense sums of money by fur nishing similar vessels to her adversary. In plainer terms, they urge Secretary Seward to pocket what they profess to regard as an insult to our national honor, in order that they may have a chance to pocket money iu the future. Such is Yankee honor and Yankee patriotism. The Election In Maryland The late election in Maryland was the veriest farce imaginable. In Baltimore, out of a vote of thirty-live thousand, less than six thousand votes were polled. So it was throughout the State. In the Frederick district of over two thousand legal voters only 674 were polled. The rest either were refused registration or their votes were rejected when offered. A beggarly minority thus rules a State which was once free. We are glad to notice that even leading Republicans are getting ashamed of such an infamous attempt to disfranchise the majority of the people of their State. Wm. H. Purnell, Postmaster of Baltimore ; Hon. Edwin H. Webster, late member of Congress and now Collector of the port of Baltimore, and others, are denouncing the infamous Registration Law. It cannot long stand against the tide of public opinion, and the day that wit nesses its repeal will see the triumph of the Democratic party in Maryland by an overwhelming majority. Negroes Demanding Equality The negroes of New York held a State Convention at Poughkeepsie, which ad journed at a late hour on Wednesday night last. A large number of the counties of the State were represented. A State Central Committee was ap pointed to urge the franchise and other questions affecting the interest of " colored Americans." Previous to the final adjournment of the Convention, the following resolu tion was unanimously adopted: Resolved, That this Convention is of the opinion that there should be a rep resentation of colored men in the city of Washington from the different sec tions to be there during the session of Congress, supported by the people, whose duty it should be to urge upon the members of Congress the impor tance of having the status of the colored American so fixed in the land that his color shall not be a bar to his occupying any position, or to the enjoyment of all the rights that appertain to citizenship. So, whoever visits Washington this winter may expect to see the lobby of the Capitol crowded with negroes, whose business it will be to button hole members of Congress for the pur pose of securing the passage of a law giving them entire equality with the whites. Whether they will succeed or not remains to be seen. General Grant's Real Name The Milwaukee News says that a prominent and reliable citizen of Wis consin was told by General Sherman, when on his recent visit to Milwaukee. that Gen. Grant's real name is Hiram S. Grant, and not Ulysses S. Grant, as he is usually designated. Gen. Sherman stated that the name by which General Grant goes was acquired by the blunder of the member of Congress who recom mended General Grant for the Military Academy, when he handed in the name of young Grant to the Secretary of War. After his appointment to West Point, the embryo Lieut. Gen. endeavored to secure a correction of the error, but the officers of the Academy declined to do so for want of authority, and referred the matter to the War Department, where for some reason it was neglected. The modest student of military tactics finally flanked the difficulty by assum ing the name which accident and the official record assigned him. His mother however never forgot to call him Hiram, and Ulysses never fails to respond to the call. Whatever of truth there may be this ste4ment we cannot say. __ .. _ `"Co~ns`W~[or e~iee~men: Gradually the fanatics of the North are being forced to admit that freedom is not a blessing to the negro. All the woes of slavery, since it was first es tablished on this continent; are but a trifle in comparison with the miseries precipitated upon the blacks by sud den emancipation. On last Sunday evening the Church of the Puritans in New York city was crowded with a congregation which assembled for the purpose of hearing some facts in relation to the condition of the freedmen from General Fisk and Chaplain French, both of the Freedmen's Bureau. Dr. Cheever, the pastor of the church con ducted the preliminary exercises. Chap lain French then addressed the assem blage. We give a couple of extracts from his speech. He said : "What has been the work of our nation for the past four years? The taking of four millions of souls out of the prison house of slavery and setting them on the world's highway. There they are now, without money, shelter or clothes. They have no friends of their own race to assist him, and a feeling of supreme loneliness has come over them. How glad they were when first they became aware of their freedom,lntici pating no hardships; and yet they had no sooner begun to snuff the air of that freedom when their sufferings commenced. They are now fast travell in g down to the tomb.— They want coffins, and will want thousands more before the January of 1866. " In South Carolina, Georgia and Ala bama there is an excess of freedmen. As our soldiers hemmed the Southern planters in, they sent their slaves to the centre— which accounts for this. In these places, owing to drought and poverty, the people are unable to sustain this excess of popula tion. If we do not assist them we drive the Southern people to establish another system of oppression. If not assisted thirty thousand freedmen will perish in Georgia before the Ist of March. They are starving and dying there, calling for coffins because they can't get lir,ad. Ido not want to re proach the government or the people; but the freedmen require the assistance of both to save them from death." The speech of Gen. Fisk was much in the same strain, though having been confined to Kentucky and Tennessee, he had not seen so many scenes of ex tended misery as Chaplain French.— Still his account of the condition of the negroes was such as to leave no doubt of the wretchedness which prevails among them. Such is the report which northern fanatics make of the work they have succeeded in accomplishing, by means of the bloodiest war of history. They have succeeded in putting the ne groes into a position in which grim death stares them in the face. They are in want of everything, and especially in want of coffins. Polities or the Next Congress The Congress of the United States at its next session will stand politically divided as follows, without the Senators and members elected from the States lately in rebellion: In the Senate there are thirty-eight Union or Republican Senators and eleven Democrats. Eleven Southern States are at present unrepre sented in the Senate, and these will be entitled to twenty-two Senators, who will, in all probability, vote with the Democrats. In the House (exclusive of the newly elected Southern members) there are one hundred and forty three Union or Republican members, and forty-one Democrats. The Southern States now unrepresented are entitled to fifty-eight members, most of whom will probably vote with the Democratic side. The Freedmen of Mobile The Acting Mayor of Mobile, in au order to the Chief of Police, after refer ring to an order issued by the AV:it De partment, October •'-1, stopping the issue of rations to the destitute of Mobile, di rects him to arrest all indigent and des titute persons, and bring them before him. He says : " Your attention is particularly called to the influx of idle and vagrant freed men, and to their congregating in and about the city. They are here in viola tion of State and municipal statutes. Thousandsare loitering about thecity in idleness and destitution. Many of them live by theft, and have become an in sufferable nuisance to the community. The evils proceeding from this state of affairs are perceptible in the daily in crease of crime, loathsome disease and pauper burials." Mr. Buchanan's Book The Press of yesterday contained a long and bitter assault upon the forth coming book of ex-President Buchanan. The Age to-day has the following item: "We are authorized to say that the statements made in several quarters, that Mr. Buchanan's book has been published, are utterly untrue. The fol lowing telegram, from the eminent house of D. Appleton & Co., received yesterday, by a gentleman of this city, shows that the advance sheets spoken of have been surreptitiously obtained : NEW You', 13.-Mr. Buchanan's book is not published, and no copies have been delivered to editors. D. APPLETON d CO. THE NEW issue of Treasury notes and postal currency will be printed on what is called " membrane paper "—a new invention in the paper line—the success ful imitation of which will baffle the skill of the oldest counterfeiter. It will be well nigh impossible to produce the paper outside of the Treasury Depart ment at Washington, and, from its tex ture and finish, the least expert in money will be able to distinguish the genuine note. Not the leastof the many excellencies of the new currency is the fact that it will wash. AN OFFICER in the old army, who went South and joined the rebellion at the outbreak, called upon the President and asked for pardon. The President informed him that he had not yet par doned an officer, who had gone over:to the South and taken up arms against the North. He did not know what he might do in the future, but for the pres ent he held their cases under advise ment. A STORY IS GOING AROUND in the Republican papers, which publish it with evident satisfaction, " that the three daughters of the late Chief Justice Taney are left in a condition of poverty, and that two of them have been serving for a living." Simon Cameron's home organ adds that "Judge Taney died a poor man and left three daughters, and their secession friends have notcared for them as they should have done." We believe Judge Taney did die a poor man, having lived an honest one; but this story about his daughters " serving for a living" is, we are confident, entirely untrue. Of one thing we are certain. Tenderly as Taney's daughters may have been reared; they would rather " serve for a living" than eat bread stolen from a Bureau of the War Department or cover their nakedness with blankets stripped from the back of a cold and shivering Winnebago squaw. THE RESIDENT PHYSICIAN of New York city, Dr. Sayie, has submitted to the Health Commissioners the results of a personal examination he has made of the disease which broke out on board the steamship Atalanta and of the in fected passengers. He says there can be no doubt of the true name of the disease, all the symtoms telling but too plainly that it is the Asiatic cholera. The passengers on the Atalanta, pro voked by their detention at quarantine, had addressed a letter to the Mayor of New York, denying that the disease which had broken out on the vessel was choler?t. But Dr. Sayre's report settles the question and shows that the au thorities did right in preventing the ship from coming up to the city. HON. JACOB COLLAM.ER, U. S. Senator from Vermont, died at his residence in Woodstock, Vermont, on Wednesday evening. The High Prices. Gentlemen who have been putting off "the purchase of a new overcoat for a year or two, in the expectation that when this cruel war was over they - would be able to buy one at the old prices, are a good deal disap pointed this fall to find that a tolerable overcoat costa sixty dollars, and a good one ninety. The old coats having been lined, bound, cleaned, mended, but toned, and collared, till the skill of no tailor or dyer can make them decent again, the distracted owners are asking the question, with which Fourth-of- July orators used to begin the conclu sion of their orations, "And, now, fel low-citizens, what • remains for us to do?" We must confess, says the New York Weekly Review, that the high prices pre vailing just now, seven months after the peace, are not the entertainment to which we supposed ourselves invited. Housekeepers did not expect, at the close of a productive season, to pay sixty five cents a pound for butter; nor did they suppose that coffee would cost nearly as much with gold at 146, as it did when gold was at 250. If coin is so abundant, why are sausages thirty cents a pound, which used to be eleven? With farmers' barns stuffed and crammed with a remarkably large hay-crop, why has milk gone up again to twelve cents a quart? Granting that apples and pears are scarce, must a small pear, that can be eaten in four bites, bring the re tailer twenty-five cents? And is it really true that a barrel of apples is worth ten dollars? As tocoal, at twelve dollars a ton, are the Pennsylvania miners always on the strike? Last year it was the canal that had given way; this year the miners won't work. If we ascend from coal to silk, we are met with a similar story. Many respectable ladies feel that existence without a black silk dress (hanging on a peg in reserve against possible contingencies) is not worth having. Last year, with a fortitude and self denial of which women alone are capa ble, they did without a new one, and furnished up the old. What is their re ward? Mr. Stewart tells them that the cattle disease has got into the silkworms, in consequence of which silk is as dear as ever, and no one knows whether next year there will be any silk at all. Some thing has got into everything to make it cheap. Pumpkin-pie—late resort of the destitute—even pumpkin-pie is an extensive luxury, since the eggs which convert pumpkins from feed of pigs in- to sustenance for man cost four cents each. What is the use of doing well, if we have to expend all we get upon the ne cessaries of life ? But most of us are not doing pretty well. It is a fact, that any family occupying a whole house, and not having more than three thousand dollars a year, is puzzled to live within its income. Wages and salaries are higher than they used to be, but they have not been increased in anything like a proportion to the increased cost of living, and, we presume, more than half of the working population of thecountry receive their incomes in the form of wages or salary. We assure our readers that there is a great deal of respectable pinching going on at present, in houses that exhibit to the passers-by a brilliant front door and four stories of brown stone. When John Van Buren said at Albany that it was about as much as he could do to pay for three meals a day and a lodging, the audience laughed, as though it were a joke. In his own case, it may or may not be a joke, but he spoke what to very many well-dressed people is rather a grim reality. AVe do, therefore, most earnestly de sire that Congress, very early in the coming session, will strike boldly at the principal cause of the high prices—the inflation of the currency. This infla tion is the heaviest of all our taxes. Not only does it keep up the price of commodities, but by the fluctuations in the price of gold it renders it difficult to do business with certainty. Thesuper abundance of money stimulates specu lation, and compels every man to charge an exorbitant profit in self-defense There is one nuisance which a return to specie payments will immediately abate, and that is the dirty and illegible rags which supply the place of silver change. Three long years have passed since these eyes of ours beheld a ten cent piece. Where is thesilver gone ? In whose cellar is it stored? Of what avail are the toils of so many of our fellow citizens in thesilver-mines of the South west, if we cannot get enough to buy our noon-day apple with? 0, Mr. Mc- Culloch, 0, members of Congress, what ever else you omit, prick the bursting balloon of our currency, and give us back our silver change! The oil Business The Philadelphia Ledger thus speaks of the legitimate business of develop ing oil territory as contradistinguished fiom the speculation in oil stocks of fic titious value: Since the appearance of a paragraph in the Ledger, a few weeks ago, allud ing to the oil production in this State and its increasing foreign shipments from this port, already greatly exceed ing that of all other commodities ship ped hence, the business is attracting more serious attention, the practical operations in oil, as contradistinguished from the speculations in oil shares of fictitious value, proving to be of much importance as a legitimate pursuit. We have seen a statement going the rounds of the press, though we do not know from what source the facts pre sented were derived, which sets down the oil production of the present year at one and a half millions of barrels.— The exports from all the ports for the year, to the Ist inst., have been 438,025 barrels, averaging 10,561 barrels per week, and at the rate of 549,172 barrels per year. These exports are about 37 per cent. of the• production, say about 1,464,458 barrels, and estimating the average price at the well atslo per barrel, it would follow that the value of the year's product will be, say 515,000,000 From this is deducted 20 per cent. for working expenses, leaving the net profit upon the year's product $12,000,000. Nearly the whole of this profit, be it more or less, comes into Peun'a. Up to this time, the oil regions in Virginiaand Ohio have not been largely productive, while the discovery of the oleaginous liquid in our own State is steadily spreading to new points, hundreds of miles from the site where it was first found in large quantities. This is a matter of world-wide importance—it is so much additional wealth, as the re ward of enterprise and industry. It is not probable, however, that oil is con fined to even the broad limits of Penn sylvania. It was announced last spring that indications of its existence had been discovered in California, and more recently in Missouri. Of the latter, the developments, from want of time, pro bably, have not been very conclusive; but from Los Angelos, in California, re ports are said to be very favorable. Secretary Stanton's Guard A Washington correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial writes: It is asingular fact that Secretary Stan ton cannot so far recover from the belig erent attitude which so well became him while we were at war, as to dismiss the military guard from his own private residence. Passing by No. 820 K street, yesterday, about noon-day, I encoun tered a chap in blue Regimentals and dirty white gloVes, strutting up and down in front of the" palatial mansion" of the Secretary of War, and in the alley in the rear of the house was plainly au dible the tramp, tramp of another arm ed patrol, who soon came into view with bayonet on shoulder, keeping guard over his side of the fortification. Isn't it re markable, that while the forts around Washington are being dismantled, and Lieutenant General Grant comes out and goes everywhere unattended, the Secretary of War should require to be so constantly hedged in by bayonets? Our War Minister seems to be the only man in the country who can afford to keep a private battery on his premises. THE SPOT selected in Westminister Abbey as the last resting place of Lord Palmerston, is in the north transept, where lie buried Castlereagh, Wilber force, the Cannings,Charles James Fox, the Earl of Chatham and his brilliant son, and a host of worthies whose names have adorned that country's ,history.— The grave is close to the hideous monu ment of Lord Chatham, at the great north door, entering from St. Margaret's churtkyard, and on the one side of the gray% lies the body of Fox, and on, the other those of the two William Pitte. Colonel MCClure-and President Jo eon. Colonel A. K. McClure 1/3 so well known in this State that the account which he gives of what transpire(' at a recent interview between himself and President Johnson will be read with very great interest by men of all parties. Below we give his report in full, as it appeared in last week's Repository. We cannot, noteven for politeness sake, say we are sorry that the interview seems to have been unsatisfactory to our friend the Colonel. Of late he has seem ed to be getting into close communion with Stevens, Kelly and the extreme radicals of his party. That Andy John son should have boldly announced sen timents not in conformity with those politicians with whom Colonel McClure is now most intimately associated, we regard as a happy and favorable omen. The gallant Colonel says candidly that he has "occasion to complain of his own work," as one of those "who fashioned Andrew Johnson into a Vice President at Baltimore." He seems to have been annoyed by seeing one pardon seeker after another come from the President's apartments with evidences of success : but neither this nor the conviction forced upon him that Jeff. Davis would never be hanged unless he hanged him self, disgusted him so thoroughly as did the plain and manly utterances of the President in regard to reconstruction, and the admission of the Southern del_ egates to Congress. If Colonel McClure is to be believed, and no one who reads his statement can fail to see that he speaks the truth with sad ness of heart, "the President, both by word and deed, disclaims the position of a partizan executive, and is not insensible to the flattering approval of his administration by the Democratic party." The Colonel sees the contest that is sure to come between the President and the leaders of the Republican party, and declares that Andrew Johnson will separate him self from the party which elected him rather than give up his plan of re construction. The whole country will be glad to hear this announcement made on such unquestionably good au- thority as that of Colonel McClure. His report will be read with interest by all, and every conservative man in the na tion 'will approve the sentiments ex pressed by the President as eminently wise and patriotic. An Hour with Andrew Johnson Editorial Correspondence of the Franklin Re posilory. - WASHINGTON, OCt. 31, 1865. I was of those, in an humble way, who fashioned Andrew Johnson into a Vice President at Baltimore—having publicly supported his nomination be fore the meeting of the Convention and voted for him in that body. I have since then had occasion to complain of my own work, and have never after the inauguration, been free from grave apprehensions as to the wisdom of that choice. Differing with most men who besiege the Executive department in this very important particular, that the administration has no honors I aspire to, I may differ with, most of them also alike in the frankness with which I counsel, when invited to do so, and in the convictions which result from contact with rulers. I found myself here on Friday for the first time since February last, and dur ing the afternoon of the same day, call ed at the White House to see President Johnson. I found the halls, the ante chamber and all other available spaces around the Executive room, crowded with a motley mass of men, with an anxious female face here and there giv ing variety to the scene—all waiting, and some from day to day, to gain an interview with the President and plead for restoration of citizenship and prop erty. Soon the door opened and a gen teel lady emerged from the President's room with a large official envelope clutched nervously in her hand, and a benignity of countenance that told more plainly than words that another citizen had been born again to the Republic.— Soon after another and then another came with like trophies of success, and as each one passed out the mass would sway toward the door to catch the name of the next one called. In a little time I gained admission and had my first in terview with Andrew Johnson as Presi dent. There are few men who could make a more favorable impression upon a stran ger on first acquaintance, than the Pres ident. He differs from Mr. Lincoln in most external characteristics, and in many contrasts favorably. He lacks Mr. Lincoln's jolly humor; improves .upon his ungainly ways; is vastly more diplomatic, and wears a uniform and quiet dignity that would have been shockingly out . of . place in his lamented predecessor, but which well becomes the Chief Executive of a great Nation. He is about five feet ten in height, rather stoutly and symmetrically built, has long hair well silvered by the frosts of time, rather a cold grey eye that that looks as if in its calmest glances there slumbers behind it quite enough to quicken it; a finely chiseled Roman face, usually sad in expression at times relieved by a genial smile, and in man ner and dress serenely plain and unaf fected. Such is, in brief, a portrait of Andrew Johnson, but two yearsago the despised, the reviled of traitors ; the man upon whose head fell their fiercest denunciations and against whom were hurled their keenest and deadliestshafts, and now the President of the United States with his foes at his feet suppli cating his pardon, and charged with the highest duties and responsibilities ever imposed on mortal man. He meets the visitor cordially, and speaks in the softest tone and in well measured sentences. There was little formality—the usual greetings and thence we passed to questions of graver moment. However reticent he may be on some issues, he seems to have no re serve as to the policy he conceiv i es to be the true one to bring back the insurgent States. He discussed the position of those States and their people with great interest and occasional warmth, and with a frankness that left no doubt as to his purpose. He holds that they were never out of the Union ; that se cession, however accomplished as a fact, cannot be accomplished in law; that the supreme authority of the govern mentin those States was not overthrown by rebellion, but simply in abeyance, and of course it logically follows his premises that, since rebellion has ceased, the States resume their proper place in the Union and restoration is accom plished. This, in brief, was the stand point from which the President dis cussed the question of reconstruction for more than au hour, and answered sug gestive objections at times with an earnestness that demonstrated how ar dently,he is working to givesuccess to his policy. I could not but remind him that his theory stripped all traitors of the protection they might claim as public enemies ; that it would stamp as guilty of treason within the law, every man who aided the rebellion, and of necessity demand at his hands commensurate punishment for what he must hold as unmitigated crime—as appalling murder and desolation for which there is no ex tenuation to be plead. " You have," I " added, given us on every hand the " Nation's monuments of Mercy—where " will be its monuments of Justice ? " Davis is a proclaimed assassin, as well " as a traitor—his agents have died, an " other (Werze) will follow—how are " the ,principals to atone to a people " doubly bereaved in their homes and " in .their cheif sanctuary of power ?" To this the President answered with much animation that the measure of, and the time for, atonement were yet for the future to determine. I shall not soon forget the emphasis with which he declared that the South must come back and be a part of us, and " it must come," he added, "with all its manhood—l don't want it to come eviscerated of its manhood!" To this proposition abstractly there could be no objection made. We want the South with all its manhood, which I would con ceive to be the Southern people with their treason abandoned and theircrimes pun ished—not punished revengefully ; not in imitation of the Guillotine of France or the Inquisition of Spain; but by making the leaders who conspired to overthrow the government, strangers to its honors and its citizenship and thus through life the monuments of the power, the jus tice and the magnanimity of the mighti est nation of the earth. The President said that such may be the measure of punishment; that he hadpardoned but few who would, come under such a rule ;- that there are excepti.Ona to all rules, andtherewere both civil func tionaries and army officers who might be pardoned with propriety. He said that he had not yet gone as far in his amnesty, either general or special, as Mr. Lincoln proposed. -He explained what is not generally known, that his pardons are mainly of business men, many of whom were Union men, who must have pardons to enable them to sell or mortgage their lands, or to get credit in their business operations; and added that he had not yet reached the consideration of such cases as Lee, Stephens, Longstreet, Beauregard and others of that class. He spoke freely of the proposed trial of Davis, and said that as yet the gov ernment had not taken any steps in the matter. If he is to be tried in Rich mond, the trial must necessarily be postponed until the civil authority is fully restored, and then it will be a ques tion for consideration under the condi tion of affairs which may at that time exist. As Virginia is still practically under martial law, certainly wholly under military rule, I judge that many moons may wax and wane before we can have a great State trial. I do not question the wisdom of this delay, for it is certainly better for the government to avoid the danger of defeat in attempt ing to convict of constructive treason in Washington, than to force a trial which might afford a technical escape for Davis and leave the great questions undeter mined. If I were going to guess on the subject, I would say that Davis is more likely to be paroled during the next year than to be tried, and if he is ever banged, he must do it himself. The President is clearly adverse to confiscation and that question is practi cally settled. Whatever might be the views of Congress, confiscation is not possible with an Executive determined ly hostile to it and with the pardoning power in his hands. I infer, however, that on this point Congress will har monize with the Executive, as a num ber of even the radical leaders, such as Greeley and Sumner, openly oppose it. If our credit can be sustained otherwise I am content. Five years hence we shall all be wiser on that point than now. I believe that the President will wield all his power to effect the admission of the representatives of the rebellious States into Congress during the next session. The Senate being organized the question cannot come up there un til it is brought up in order ; but there will be a strong pressure to force the admission of the Southern members by placing their names on the roll when the House meets. This Mr. McPherson will not do, and on all votes of instruc tions he will call only those who are returned from States clearly entitled to representation. The law forbids him to do otherwise, and he will be faithful to it. The question of their admission will then agitate the house, and I fear make a sad breach between the Presi dent and Congress. The South is en couraged by the position of the admin istration to be importunate in its de• mand for admission, and it is not im probable that it will in the end be ad mitted. I have seldom seen Congress struggle against power and hold out to the end. The his tory of such conflicts is always dotted with frail ones who fall by the way. I have ever felt that the revolted States should take no part in the government they vainly sought to destroy until all issues arising from the war, and all its logical results should be settled by faith ful men. To the victors, not to the van quished—to the friends, not to the foes of the government does this duty belong, and if it shall be otherwise, there are many who will tremble for the safety of the Republic. On the future of the freedmen the President talks well. He displays more sense than sentiment on the question, and means to solve the problem fairly as demanded by civilization and humanity. Of their abilty to win a po sition that will enable them to be incor porated into our system of government as citizens, he is not eminently hopeful, but feels that it must be fairly tried with an open field for the negro. That failing, he looks upon colonization as the only alternative. It would be foolish to disguise the fact that the President, both by word and deed, disclaims the position of a partizan Executive, and that lie is not insensible to the flattering approval of his administration by the Democratic party. I do not mean by this that he is in sympathy and fellowship with them; but I do mean that he is not wholly in sympathy against them • and he will, I feel warranted in saying, adhere to the political fortunes of the Southern States without regard to po litical consequences. This may or may not sever him from the party that sus tained and cherished him in the dark est days through which he passed, and that won him the highest honors of the Nation through a flood of obloquy ; nut if it does, I infer that he will accept the situation. He evidently means above 'all other things, to compass the admis sion of the Southern members :and the complete restoration to power of those States, and if Massachusetts and South Carolina can strike handsover the same administration, then will We have a faithful President and a harmonious country. If not I leave the future to tell the story. Where in all this record soon to be made up the Nation shall see that "treason is the greatest of crimes and must be punished," is not to my mind apparent. A. K. 31. Gold in Pennsylvania There has been, as our readers are aware, a great deal of talk of late, about the gold being found in Greene county, in this State. The good people in that locality are waking up in a lively man ner to the bright prospects that glimmer before them. From the certified report of the officers of the U. S. Mint in Phil adelphia, it will be seen that the en thusiasm of the Greene county people is not entirly without foundation, for there is indeed gold in Greene county, and of extraordinary richness. " Report of the examination of a small specimen of Ore brought by Mr. F. W. Corinth, of Philadelphia, and stated to be from Greene county, Pa. " The Ore is Sulpheret of Iron and Lead in quartz which appears upon hasty inspection so much like the pyrite as to be easily mistaken or overlooked. " It was assayed in three parcels of various weights from about 14 grains to 3 pennyweights, and by different methods, either of which give accurate results. These results show much ir regularity as to the amount of precious metal, but in any case a very extraordi nary richness and the largest parcel pro duced the highest return. The results are as follows : " The amounts are per pound Avoir dupois and it should be stated that the silver returned, is present as a natural alloy of the Gold, making it somewhat pale, the fineness of the Gold is from 796 to 816 (thousands,) about 191 Carats. One part gave per pound, $.9 40 in Gold, 13 in Silver. ;38 53 Total per pound Another part gave per pound, $l6 00 in Gold, 26 in Silver. $l6 26 per pound. The Third and largest part $B7 90 in Gold, 1 00 in Silver. CSR 90 per pound. [Signed by] J. R. ECKFELDT, Assayer U. S. Mint, Phil'a, Oct. 21, 1865. The Waynesburg, (Green county) Messenger says: "We had the pleasure lately of see ing in the possession of Joseph G. Ritch ie, of our town, several specimens of what is supposed to be Gold ore from the `Maple Run Well.' These specimens, unlike those discovered in other wells, are not found in the quartz rock, but in a soft slate rock. The depth at which these specimens were procured is about three hundred feet. Mr. Ritchie has also a very fine speci men of gold-bearing quartz rock from the `Stella Well,' which be is about to send to Philadelphia to have it tested in the Assayer's Labratory. We trust that it may indeed prove `pure gold tried in the fire.' " TUE JEWS have, as a body, shown their full share of patriotism. The num ber of Jews in the United States army during the late war was 40,000. They have established five asylums for dis abled soldiers, their widows and or phans, the benefits of which are limited to no faith or creed—one at New York, one at Philadelphia, one at Cincinnati, one at Chicago, and one sq St. Louis. le~CDsrL9=- - Hie'Tilsl: "'~ - - - ~ ~ Messrs. Speed, Rousseau, Everts, and others, counsel for the Government, an nounced in a New York paper as positively determined on, was true in August, but is not true now. Public opinion has changed since then, and Government measures always follow public opinion. It is admit ted as a fact that any trial in a Southern State would be a farce. It is equally a fact that the Southern States unanimously desire his pardon; that the majority of the Democratic party hold the same opinion, and now that the leaders of the radical wing of the Republi can party have exnressed the same wish, it is believed it will be taken for granted that amajority of the nation are opposed to his punishment. —N. Y. Tribuue. To sacrifice Mr. Davis would be to make him a martyr, and give his memory a power which he living can never acquire. The act would be un worthy of a great and powerful gov ernment. It is but just to say that Mr. Davis did not belong to the party of ex treme and original secessionists. He was originally opposed to the measure. In the South, before the war, he was regarded as a conservative, however much we may astonish some people by the assertion. It is thus admitted that public opinion in this country is decidedly against the idea of punishing Mr. Davis, and con sequently is in favor of his pardon. We hope he will be. We see no reason why Mr. Davis should not be, butmany why he should be. It will be good policy. It will gratify the Southern people, or at least great numbers of them, and even those who opposed most strongly the war, and who were life-long opponents of the doctrine of secession which Davis professed. It would be a victory over their hearts, a victory over passion and vengeance. It would ti nd strongly to cement together the Union, and be an additional proof that the Government is earnest in its endeavors to blot out the past and to look only to the future. It would prove that the Government re gards the Southern people as a part of the people of the United States and re spects their opinions and prejudices ac cordingly. Upon his memoitible tour to New England, he described in one of his speeches the secessionists of the South as the "mosquitoes that sing around the ox," for which bovine simile he was soundly belated, and in no very gentle or complimentary terms, by the extre mists of Mississippi. They even went so far as to call him a ." traitor to the South." When the conspirators felt that their hour had come, the hour for which they had long labored, for "pre cipitating the South into a revolution," they never exhibited more skill than in selecting Mr. Davis as their standard bearer. They selected him because he was a conservative, as they calculated and calculated rightly that his name would reconcile many to the movement who would otherwise have bitterly op posed it. His conservatism, his general purity of character, and his military ability as evinced in the Mexican war, were the reasons which prevailed with the more astute precipitators and caused them to fix upon Col. Davis as their leader. It is not perhaps generally known that there was bitter opposition to him in the Montgomery Convention and that he was successful only by the change of a single name. The candi date of the Simon Pures was ToOmbs. Alexander H. Stephens was selected for the Vice-Presidency of the Confed eracy, for the same general reasons which prevailed in the case of Davis, viz.: because it was thought that his identification with the cause would disarm to a great extent opposition, as it did. Thus it turned out that the real originators of the strife in the South, those who had been long holding other issues subordinate and that of revolu tion supreme, when the terrible ordeal came took back seats, and did not, ex cept to a very limited extent and in an unimportant sense, guide the whirl wind which they had raised. This is often the case. But we have said more than we designed. It is a gratifying and suggestive re flection that as time elapses the public sentiment of the country becomes more and more disposed toward a magnani mous and conciliatory course. With time, passions die out, the desire for rigor and vengeance diminishes. In cannot be concealed, in this con nection, that the good conduct of the Southern peoplegenerally ; their prompt acceptance of the issues of the war, and their return with so much promptness and alacrity to their allegiance as citi zens of the United States, have had not a little to do with the growth of the magnanimous feeling we refer to the East and West and Middle States, and the wish on the part of the conservative masses generally for the pardon not only of those who had acted in the war against the Government in subordinate capacities, but of the leaders of the re volt themselves. Many of these have already paid the debt of nature, and are beyond the jurisdiction of any earthly tribunal ; and those who promoted the revolt in a small way have in a multi tude of instances, almost universally in fact, been sorely punished for their course. They have eaten of the bitter fruit of the tree which they planted and cultivated. If punishment is what is desired, then indeed have they been punished The voice of humanity cries out, " Hold, enough." Let the sword be stayed, and let mercy now be heard. We believe the pardon of Mr. Davis could not possibly do any harm in this country, but would greatly exalt the Government and our institutions in the eyes of the whole eivilized world. Policy demands it, no less than hu manity and good sense. If the demands of those who shout perpetually that " treason must be pun ished" were to be complied with, and if " treason " is opposition to the Con stitution and the Union, then assuredly not a few of those very persons would fall before the sword of justice. If this definition of treason be correct, many of them have been the most blatant traitors the country has ever held. They at least ought to hold their shameless tongues. They are guilty, and every honest, intelligent man in the Republic knows it. The sword they call for is two-edged, and cuts both ways. They of all others should avoid it.—Louisville Journal. The'Currency of San Francisco Mr. Bowles, of the Springfield Re publican, speaks of the currency of Cali fornia in his last letter from that region. Utah and Colorado have the paper money of the East in use, but all the States and Territories to the westward use only gold and silver. Mr. Bowles says: " Paper money has been kept out by the force of a very obstinate public opinion and the instrumentality of State legislation. Our national currency of greenbacks are here simply as merchan dise; you buy and sell them at the brokers for about seventy-five cents in coin to the dollar. Of course, being made a `legal tender' by United States law, it is competent to pay a debt here with them ; but no man who should do this once, without the sum being made proportionately larger, of course, could henceforth have any credit or standing in the mercantile community. All large and long credits are now coupled wjth an express stipulation that they are on a specie footing, and a law of the State, known as the 'specie-contract act,' protects such arrangements. But public opinion so far, and in all the small daily transactions of trade, is the great and controlling law on the sub ject." The Bonnet Question The ladies are rebelling against the winter fashion for bonnets. The prin cipal of a wholesale millinery house in forms us that his customers never pur chased "bonnet frames" with equal re luctance. The buggy-top pattern require a large amount of materials, and makes a very small show for it. Moreover the show, when it is made, is any thing but graceful. To construct a bon net over the gig-top frame requires three-fourths of a yard of material, with ribbons and lace and flowers, ad infinitum. The small bonnets of last summer, that made quite as much display, and were tenfold more graceful, required less than half a yard of material. The consequence is that the fashion dictated to the ladies is not accepted as fashions generally are, and that a good many dames and demoiselles are in open rebellion, and refuse to ac cept the dispensation of the Empress Eugenie for the winter of the year of our Lord 1865. This unacceptable mode makes the millinery trade com paratively dull, and many a discarded bonnet will be revamped this winter, that, were the fashion more acceptable, would find its way into the rag-bag.— Philadelphia News. THE VERMONT Legislatureadjourned eine die at 8 o'clock on Thursday morn ninge ..F, . 'rOm the ' October report of the Cornte missioner of Agriculture we compile the - following comparative statement of the undermentioned crops in the years stated. The returns are from all the States excepting those lately in rebellion and exclusive of those on the Pacific coast. 1863. 1864. 1865. Wheat, (bus.) 179,404,036 160,695,523 14&522.828 Rye, " 20762,782 19,672,975 19,543,9% Barley, " 11, 3 68,155 10,M2,178 11,391,286 Oats, " 173,800,575 176,680,064 22 ,252,295 Hay, (tons,) 19,736,847 18,116,751 23,538,740 While the crops of oats and hay are greater than in any former year, tne yield of wheat, rye and barley is less than in 1863 and 1864. In all cases, however, the crops are more bountiful than in 1860, the year before the war. There are no figures in the report from which to estimate the corn crop of 1865, but Mr. Newton, the Commissioner, says it has never before been equalled. All the fall crops are reported to be in good condition. In the Northern States there is an improvement in the yield of cotton, but in the South it is much in jured from worms and rain. He reports, also, a material decrease of fatted cattle in nearly all the States. Canada, it is said, has better crops than usual of late years. Concerning the English harvests, the Commissioner quotes the following from the Mark Lan e Ex - press, of October 2d: "The last week in September has closed in brilliant sunshine and summer heat, giving such an opportunity to the North for harvest purposes as very seldom occurs, and serving somewhat to abate the general fears about the deficiency of the crops of the kingdom :it a period when the prospect of foreign imports has materially lessened. Nearly all that was upon the ground before the sickle i r the scythe began their work has now been housed, and though much is in poor condition, the damage by actual sprouting has been small. As a nation, therefore, we have been signally favored, and we doubt not that a willing tribute of thanksgiving has been sent up from a mul titude of hearts. There is a timely increase of live stock in Ireland, and hence a mate rial increase of human food at a time when this will be sure to fetch its price to grow ers, and be a signal benefit to the kingdom. Our belief that the late depression in new wheat had run its term (of low prices) has been justified by the state of the market, which throughout the country, with im proved condition in the samples, has reach ed to fully 24 cents per 480 pounds; but the more we • hear of the potato crop, the less as surance have we of its keeping qualities. In some localities the whole growth has been lost." From this it will be seen that the En lish harvest has probably not been so short as anticipated, and it is believed that a considerable quimtity of the old crops remain over. As to the effect the cattle plague may have in increasing the consumption of breadstuffs, no opinion is given.—Ledger. Difficulties in Gathering the Cotton Crop ---The Freedmen Obstreperously Inde pendent, According to the Texas Pa- pers. From the Houston (Texas) Telegraph of 25th.] We have just returned from a trip to. Washington county, and found the drought had nearly ruined the corn. crops, and it is estimated that only one half a crop will be made this season.. The same will prove true of the potato crops. Cotton looks well, and we have, been informed by old citizens that7they never before seen such a fine and heavy yield as this season. We hear loud complaints everywhere of the scarcity of hands to pick it and save it; and we saw acres of the finest cotton that ever grew dropping off the bolls, and wast ing for the want of hands to save it. The planters made contracts with their former slaves to remain with them and save the crops, but they proved un faithful and deserted the first oppor tunity. Thousands of bales of splendid cotton will be lost in Washington county by this cause, and the neighbor ing counties are no better off. We have heard good judges estimate the loss by this cause throughout the State to be 40,000 bales. It is a deplorable night to witness large cotton fields waisting. The weather has been beautiful for picking for some time past, but the ne groes left at the very time they were needed. We have heard some of the largest and wealthiest planters say they would not hereafter depend on this kind of labor, but they would rent their plan tations to enterprising German emi grants and give them a liberal share of the crops. We find that many of the largest planters in Washington county are satisfied that the labor of freedmen can no longer be profitable, for the reason that it cannot be depended upon when. wanted. Many planters have com menced ginning and baling this season's crop and rushing it alto market. The high prices cotton commands stimulates. them to sell now. Every station on the Central and Washington county hail roads is crowded with cotton bales, and the railroads cannot ship it off as fast as it comes for the want of sufficient roll ing -stock. I Boy Shoots Both Ills Parents and then Kills Himself. A shocking tragedy occurred in the town of Caledonia, Racine county on John Stitesky, night. A boy named Stitesky, the only son of a respectable Bohemian residing near the Chicago and Milwaukee Railroad track, in the the northern part of Caledonia, Racine. county, committed one of the most atro cious and cold-blooded acts of combined parricide and homicide that has ever been recorded in the annals of crime., The circumstances are as follows: The father, who was a farmer in ex cellent circumstances, had been labor ing in the woods during the day, and had come in at nightfall for his supper. The meal was prepared, and the mother called John, who is an only son, about nineteen years old, to come in to tea. The aged couple sat down to their meal, thinking the boy would presently join them, when suddenly a shot was fired through the window pane of the room, and the father was struck by the ball in the left arm, completely shattering it at elbow. The mother started up, and at the same instant another reportresound ed, and she was struck in the abdomen by a bullet, which passed completely through her body ! In another moment another discharge was heard in the yard, and the father, who with parental instincts divined the nature and effect of the third shot, summoned strength enough to get out of doors, where he found his son welter ing in his blood, and already gasping his last! He had murdered both his aged parents with the two barrels of one gun and had shot himself through the body with another weapon, ending his life almost instantly. As the reader has already surmised, the boy, author of this terrible tragedy-, was not sound in mind, although he has never been noticeably insane. We conversed with a neighbor who knows. the family well, who assured us that the boy had never been crazy. He has, at intervals, though he has never been violent, or been considered at all dan gerous.—Millwaukcc Sentinel, 3d. The Freedmen A lady agent of the Michigan Freed men's Relief Association has just re turned from a trip to Harper's Ferry, where she has been engaged in the gratuitous distribution of about one thousand dollars worth of quartermas ters' stores among the Indigent whites and freedmen of that neighborhood. Eleven hundred and fifty-two deaths among the colored population of the District of Columbia are reported since the Ist of January last up to October 31. The Freedmen'sl3ureaulas just comple ted the following statistics regarding the blacks over which itexercises direct control: Total number of freedmen in Washington, 15,000; in Alexandria, 7, 500; living in freedmen's village, 1,069, on Government farms in Maryland, 501; in Loudon county, Virginia, 6,000; in Fairfax county, 3,ooo—making a to tal of 373,070. The medical department of the bu reau gives the following figures; Out of the above number of freedmen there were 2,445 under medical cure during the month of October, of which there are 778 now under treatment. Officers of the Veteran Reserve Corps. It has been ascertained that eighty five per cent. of the six hundred and forty officers of the V( teran Reserve Corps have been wounded in battle, some of them as many as seven times. Five per cent. became disabled from other causes, and teu per cent. from die eases contracted in the line of duty. Ninety-ores underwent amputations, There were eight dissections of the arm and sixteen lost an eye. There is a probability that this corps will be made permanent by the ensuing Congress, as they have rendered important service in war. It is net doubted, they will effi ciently perform their duty in time or peaces