volt Vittiburgit (gazette. F. B. PENNIMAN RUSSELL ERBEri, Erato ". TEL COSTA-MAGNA, BusrlEsS GAZETTE ASSOCIATION, Fulca/Imaa.. 3 rea. NO. SG FIFTH STREET. PITTSBURGH COEIpNUNICATIONS INTENDED FOR THE EDIT - O& SBRULD DE SED TO ..LINITOW I GA ZETTE." MADDR AR ES ES POND ANON RELATING To BUSINESS, STIoULG AZ ADDR ITSBUROB , ESSED. SIIIIPLT .GAZETEE,•• AF PA. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 0, 180 THE PRESIDEST'S MESSAGE. At an early hour yes , erday afternoon we laid tide docament before our reader& It is calm, able, dignified. The President has if.Sded.bylt to.hie own just renown, and to the honor and dignity of the republic be fore 411 other nations. In speak ug thus broadly In prinie of the message we do not mean to be runikvistcod as endorsing all the maidens taken in It, nor as surrendering that right, of independent judgment which seinalviduals and journalists it is our pre rogative and duty to exercise,and which we shall not forego. But the tone and temper of the President are admirable, and or most points we subs cribe to the doctrioe s and policies propounded, We undergiand hcismiecialiar and momentous are rho res ponsibilities laid on the Executive , as well aeon Congress, by the prewar en-paralleled conjuncture of affairs; that the nation has been forced upon path° where to man y particulars, neither the forethought of the framers of the Constitution, nor the experi ence since obtained In administering the government, stied any certain ligh , ; and that the occasion calls for all the wisdom that :an be made available, in order to de liver the nation from surrounding perils. We are not disposed to cavil at any intelli gen‘and well intenticinedcontribution made to 615 common stock of knowledge on this point by any eminent citizen, and least of all, when made by the chosen head of the nathirm . . The interest In the message centers on a , few point Hesonsfrucifen—The President briefly states what course he has pursued, and his reasons for pursaine it. He then frankly leaves the question to be finally disposed of by Congress. Nothing could be more open or yet more dignified, than this. What the President says of the indefi nite or protracted continuance of military government over tho States lately In revolt is entitled to great weight. The position cannot be shaken. This is a government of popular representation. The people have a right to be heard potentially. By the people, we do not mean either a select few, or particular classes, haying specie / interests, habits, association ands prejuill- Ce& By the people, we mean substantially tU over whom the government claims to exercise authority and from Whom It de mands contributions of personal service or pecuniary means for its support and de• fence. We doubt not the President 'tried the policy he delineates in good faith and with patriobe motives. If his endeavors had been met in a spirit of confidence and co operation on the part of the inhabitants of the and particularly on the part of those among them who have here'ofore borne the chief part In directing pu'llic snat era, the policy would have been a suc cess, and the loyal inhabitants of the north would have been satisfied. The failure la not chargeab:e to the President, but to those who resisted and thwarted his most earnest efforts to promote th sir welfare. But, this Is too large a subject to be trea ted by ea more fully now. We may return to it to-morrow. On the right of Cougress, now that the war is actually over, to dictate the basis of suffrage in We States .13 volved in rebellion the President does not leave his opinion to be inferred'. He says plainly that in his judgment Congress has now no constitu• tional warrant for interfering with the mat. ter. This Is, of course, as much as saying if a bill to that end shall be passed, it can mot isceive his sanction. The competency of Congress to deal with this subject la one question. The pro priety of its using such power, provided hsavit, is another. As to the right of Congress in the premises, we have no doubt. We believe its power is ample and complete. Whether this power ought to be exeicised or not, depends upon the solution given to several collateral questions. Is the right to yote,..natural? If so, it is Inalienable. If it is conventional, it may be given or with held as the' judgment of soot.' y shoo in cline. II the tatter hypothesis is correct, then the decision of the question will de pend on the condition of Southern society. Will the permanent restoration of the Lin ton be best conserved by admitting black sugrage or by not admitting it? T uese ate weighty questions which ought not to be dispored of in a flippant and tr:fling ni 9. British /ifiati,,is, The inculca , i , as Of the Message on this head m iy not F ai;- fy unrcflt , cting and passionEe men. Tee argument, in point of logic, does not funtify the COLICiUeiOII. After stating that the British Government is not sanctioned by hole rnationSi Inv, end cannot stmt.:ln itself in the Jadgment of mankin 1, In the line of conduct it *ideated and followed out, but was and le manlfem i In the wrong. he avows that he does not lultgongress to pro- Tide any measures of redsus. B et h e drops tad significant allusion tiuk herea f ter friendship of the two countrit, mast >igatoa mutualjustice." .4„This may be accounted timidity by p c aliort.eighted, or cowardice by the mime. loping and over zealous; but in the judg anent of mound men it will stand for high inetesmanship. The delay of the wise roakeshaste faster than the hurry of info. rior - 8. The rinances.—The moat cheering item under this head is the Tdatemont that the estimated receipts into the Treasury during the decal ending June 30,1861, Over and beyond the expenditures will bo 11112,104,941. This shows that vast as has been the strain on the resources of the people, their moans are eqiaal to the un girecedented emergency. None but a free 410Vernment, with an intelligent, educated, Farad enterprising constituency behind it, could have Incurred such pecuniary reopen ;slbillty and obtained so monibntoua a Ist '. 4EXIXO. Mutt is laid respecting .the cur. ' 3 tener and the extinguishing of the public ! debt, is admirable. A lengthened pa , Iriod of expander stilt the purposes aPecestorain stemrs and ordinary cote. .40.04 14 0. but „It,ratgliC forward business th ill 6 10, 110'4ticii0111 measures coi n:Cl:dated fo.. brink Wii;a: eettlea and re-- - -, liable •eariditliitt:Otiiionetarq affairs. A a a higkdegretof prudehee, caution, and prac 11,1001.1tidgment mart the recommendation Lf made. 4. liferico.--The President mates no 11111 011 by name to that Country ; but he ". Jays-down. doctrines, and , SO discourses of ibel* application, as to leaven doubt of He virttially reallirms the 'Mon :=108 doe trine aVritiiiiiiiabd by the tradition of the UniOn andthe instincts and senti ments of ils people. As a whole the message is cinlneritly satisfactory. It leaves the question of the extension of the right of suffrage to the blacks of the South, by act of Gongres , , as the only one concerning which there is a probability of his sharply disagreeing with the two Honses. As yet it would be pro mature to predict that on this head he will not be in harmony with the legislative bod ies ; for, while the opinions of some of the members have been declared, on ono side or the other, no body is authorized to ray that a majority, or any thing like it, are In favor of negro suffrage as an element in Reconstruction. Which way the Judg ment _.t • the Houses incline can prehatilf only be known upon a division brlag in g up more or less distinctly the full hehle. Besides, the courteous but firm °lmelon of presidential dissent, ea t> „. ground of the constitutional IncomP" cene Y of the Housces to deal with th, subject, seems to render it probable t-ti-on° serious attempt w i ll be made in la ", direction; unless the majority for bi'' suffrage is . much larger than has beeecummouly supposed. T EE 7r11 , 31 , 611 . 1 . 1 LEGT6L.IIIIILE has pass ed tho day law over the Governor's veto. It ers4Pl, all property from execution up to se value of $3,000. One object of this exemption Is to cheat Northern Creditors of their legal remedy, but Its main object is to deprive th't freedmen of the power to recover their wages by suits at law. Any freeemsn working for a planter who can get his property valued under $3,000, will be unable to recover his pay; and what Mississippian ever yet refused to avail him self of a chance to repudiate? A CMCIFICATI contemporary maintains that "the government, by forcing the South to repudiate (the rebel debts, as a condi tion of restoration to the Union,' becomes responsible for the debts repudiated; as sumes the obligation which it deprives the early in daranee of the power to perform." It might about at well be - said that a father who laid his command on a son not to run away with his neighbor's wife, by that act laid himself under obligation to ran away with her himself. COICGILESS opens well. The number of blllsintroduzod in both Houses, or of the introduction of which notice has been giv• en, all looking to the ,protection of the freedmen and to securing them In the en loyment of equal rights, gives token of the idea uppermost in the Congressional mind. The claimants for seats In Congress from the rebel States will do well to note this sign of She times, and inwardly digest it. Tar Titusvtlle Herald has an article showing that while it costs 45,62 to send a barrel of oil from there to New York by the Erie Road, it can be sent by way of Pittsburgh for $4.88 per barrel. The Her. aid is trying to argue the Erle road out of the folly - of its high charges; but the elm pleat plan, it seems to us, is to send all the oil by way of Pittsburgh and say no more about it. 'LET ANOTHER PRAISE TITHE, AND NOT TRINE OWN Id orrru. "—The Louisiana leg islature has passed resolutions, declaring that the State is loyal. A testimony to that fact from some other source would have had more weight, and besides that, a State really loyal does not need to pass res olutions proclaiming the fact. BEFORE IRE MEETING OF CON4.ItESS, the New York Herald classified the Republican members of the Rome as Conservatives Radicals 56. Now It is howling over the 'Wheless way in which the Radicals are carrying all before them. What became of the Conservatlyee° Wt re they trans formed? DELI VERT or TEE PERSIDENT's ltl r!“ tu —IL is to It t WESTERN UNION TCLEOESPYI Or that we arc Indebted for the copy of the Presi dert's Mirsege. It came through in pointed sheen, and eras delivered to the different. office• Is the city at half-past one o'clock precisely, and was In type In one hour and a quarter af ter I's reception. The press generally, are Indebted to the Presi dent, for the excellent shape In which the ifecp3" of the iiessa i ge was furnished. It RA* neatly printed, Itt widely 'paced lines, and was so easily read as to be • luxury to the printer. ----... • -.----- VARIOUS It EMS. CaltnraeL AN - row - mu bis put forth s astable scheme for increasing the Pope's revenue. A society is to be formed with a capital of thirty millions of francs In six thousand charm of five hundred traces each. It will then Mane 130,000,- 000 of sf. toads, I. e. 600,000,000.000 of capital rr payable to °Mel-ulna years. The bonds will be redeemed at lOri. each by a lottery every year. The money thus obtained is to be invested for the bectfit of the Pope- who will recalTa, It is rateniatid, an annuity of 6.000.000 of francs from this source. Toe CnIIIRED POPrtaTtOla rev Ru•aseown.— Tlere are come twenty five thousand colored reone in Richmond. Br:twat - in 0,000 sad 7,000 are member., In gioi standing of Ch istian claurebrv, and nearly all a , t,wd .eryices regular ly. Time are at lent 3,000 men among this pcpulstion who are wortu Into Eadio to kW, two hundred who hare property estimated at from 0.500 to 63000, and a number who are wurtit tram 53 aCO to $25,000. The Entillsli ctiorts of appeals have decidhl iLla if the Lu•l;a•d sun a to have known noth• agii I soh co bet a vx istecce for seven yew,. ebbs of 11.-m may merry again without gouty u:lotiothy, .and that the burden of rw,or Hee upon the I ruSeattOr to the Cale, and on t gtottr.d— , het it le contrary to the, 0:61, of the Er Ohl law that a prisoner should be gaited tit an to prove a DtgirtlVE. IT is understood that Min. Freeman Ccrnjitrullcr of the Currency. take., strong ground in favor of checking Currency 01030 stone end rreeesire Importation. Ho will area, a readjustment of the Iniernal tax laws, so as to eta One the Imports to a rent leading article., mostly those of luxury. He will show that the amount of currency in elrcuiation Is re toy mil lions less than Is generally 'apposed. Istroccro AND EXPOnt6.—Tbe Import antrice for the past week at New York amount to 03,- 143,02'J. The export clearances of don:lei:le produce amount to £5,744,2''i1. The imports at, currency value ore therefore about 37,500,04, Or twice as large as the exports. Tan Yortanal Repuldicon (davannab) of the "9th tilt. , says the times of the now Rrwesert 14.Jaes in Congress chosen from that atato are Salomon Cohen, PallltpCooks Jon. ulchnuan, F. Ti. Cabal-as. J. Ti. Mathews, and T. W. Watford. -metul Outrages. be A , a Ll ea e b t et b a in regard to the riot in Janalcs of the mo i l, %Vetoed, eo does the conduct hie comman d aep apor and the troops under We have a y ema k ea mnre brutal and cruel. Issamination of the erl. dance, all given by therneeleo „ be e b„ e EiZeglish authorities on the first day; that It was , tgic: was quelled a mere loeal disturbance; but that the trot., of days afterwards scoured ilia. oar Qa, tachments so small that they reek t 'Y 10 do cut off If the people had been prepak va , been bellhop as was asserted; and seat theso r re detachments of soldiers tcumel negro v shot the cams, dogged women, and to nas pleraze of en cadet report, "enJoyou the sport greatly." Tag murder of Mr. cordon, the member of Astembly, is already exciting attention In E. og land, where he was well known, and It Is not Imponalble that the atrocloret and brutal course of the governor and troops will be lnveatlgated. Ia thateaso It le probable that this tragedy will be knovm In history, not as • negro rebellion, but at wanton and brutal massacre by the whltee. The dforant Hay correspondent of the go:matte' Standard coolly remarks, that, Is ugh ink could be proved against certainotasona cap tared by the troops, thirty of them were lashed to a gun, and flogged with the cat, recalvlng fifty blows each. Among these persons Whipped bammusenothing could be proved agelast them, was "George Marshall, a brown man of about twenty-five years old, who on receiving forty icven lashes. ground his teeth and gave a fero cious look of defiance at the provost maraud. He was immediately ordered to be taken from the gun and hanged," and he wan hanged. There aro degree of stories like this, and worse =for those English geotiemsa did not hesitate to flog women and girls as well as men.—.Y. Ent. re.t.. MW . M FEL LOW CrTIEENB OF TUE SKATE CSE OY ItzruEszNT vEI To express gratitude to Ood, in the name of the People, United States, is my Est duty for th e preservation of the in address. ing you, Our thougLaS next revert to the death of the late President by an act of parricidal treason. The grief of the nation is „ in frer ,u ; it finds some solace in the consider/once that he lived to enjoy the hi g hor proof of its confidence by enter. j ug on the renewed term of the Chief Mug orracy, to which he had been elected; thst he brought the civil war substantially to a close; that his loss was de plored in all parts of the Union; and that foreign nations have rect• dered justice to his memory. His removal cast upon me a heavier weight or cares than ever devolved upon any of his prede cessors. To fulfil my trust I need the sup port and confidence of all who are assoala• ted with me in all the various departments of Government, and the support and coati denoe of the people. There is but one way in which I can hope to gain their necessary aid; it is. to state with frankness the prin ciples which guide my conduct, and their application to the present ttte of aff airs, well aware that the efficiency of my labors will, Inn great treasure, depend on your and their undivided approbation. The Union of the United States oLtnieri ca was intended by its authors to last es long the Ftates themselves shall last. ' . TII UN• lON maim BE raare'ruar:' are the ords of the Confederation. "To form a more perfect Union," by an ordinance of the peo ple of the United States, il , I he declared pur pose of the Constitution. The hand of Di vine Providence was never mote plain'y visible in the affairs of men than in thefra m ing and adopting of that instrument It is, beyond comparison, .he greatest event in American history; and, indeed, is It not, at all events in modern times, the most pregnant with consequences lor every peo ple of the earth? The members of the Con ver.tion which prepared It, brought to their work the experience of the Confederation, of their several States, and of other Repub lican Governments, old and new ; but they needed and they obtained a wisdom superi or to experience. And when for Its validity it required the approval of a people that oc cupied a large part of a continent and acted fi,parately in many distinct conventions, what Is more wonderful than that, aqer ear nest contention end long discussion, all feel legs and all opinions were ultimately drawn in one way to its support? .. _ The Constitution to which life was thus imparted contains within Itself ample re sources for its own preservation. It has power to enforce the laws, punish treason, and ensure domestic tranquility. In case of the usurpation of the Government of a State by one man, or an oligarchy, it • becomes a duty of the Unit' l States to make good the guarantee lo that State of a republican form of government, and so to maintain the horuogenouriness of ail Does the lapse of time reveal defects ? A simple mode of amendment is provided in the Cons'itutlonitself, so that Its conditions can always be made to conform to the re quirements of advancing civilization. No room Is al:owed even for the thought of a possibility of its coming to an end. And these powers of self-preaervation have a'• ways been asserted In their comolete integ rity by every patriotic Chief Magistrate— by Jefferson and Jackson, not less than by Washington and Madison. The partin4 advice of the Father of his country, while yet President, to the people of the United S aces. was, that "the free Constitution, which was the work of their hands, might be sacredly maintained;" and the Inaugural words of President Jefferson held up "the preservation of the General Government, In its constitutional vigor, as the sheet anchor of ocr peace at home and safety " The Constitution Is the work of "the Peo ple of the United States," and It snoald oe as indestrnetible as the oeople. It is nos strange that the framers of the Constitution, which had no model in the pest, should not have (sly comprehende4 the excellence of their own work. Fresh from a struggle against arbitrary power, many patriots suffered from harasdne fears of an absorption of the State Governments by the General Government, and many from a dread that the States would break away from their orbits But the very greatnesu of our country should allay the apprehen aICI2 of encroachments by the General Gov ernment The subjects that come unques tionably within in jurisdiction are so nu merous, that it must ever naturally refuse to be embarrassed by questions that lie be yond it. Were it otherwise, the Llxecative would sink beneath the burden ; the ch in. nets of justice would be choked ; legisla• Lion would be obstructed by excess ; so that there is a greater temptation to exercise some of the functions of the General Gov ernment through the States than to trespass on their rightful sphere. " The abso!nte acquiescence in the decisions of the major. ity " was, at the beginning of the century, enforced by Jefferson, ' • as the vital prin ciple of republics," and the events of the last lour years have established, we will hope forever, that there lies no appeal to force. The maintenance of the Union brings with it "the support of the State Govern ments In all their rights;" but It is not one of the rights of auy State Government to renounce Its own place In the Union, or to nullify the laws of the Un on. The largest Nirrty Is to be maintained in the discus sion of the acts of the Federal Govern ment; but there is no appeal from its except to the VIITiOI3B branches of 111. , . U IT eimmeat itaelf, or to the people, who grant to the members of the Legislative and a; the Executive Departments no teman• tor a limited one, and is that manner alw lye retain the powers of redress. "The sovereignty of the States" it the language of the Confedinecy, and not Id, language of Inn Coirst.te l• . a. lo•tr r (colt itIE the emphatic words: "Toe C rdlittion. std the laws of the C ales which shun be made In pi: aoan then-id, nnd all treaties male o r shell L.: made under the authority of the d Stases, ntall J. the supreme law the WO; and the Judges In every S ehn.:l be bound thereby, anything in the constOution or lawn of any State to the trary notwithstan Certainly the Government of the United Slates is a limited government; and so I every State governments limited govern rnent. With us, this idea of limitation spreads through every form dl' administra lion, general, State, and municipal, and rests on the great distinguishing priaciple of the recognition of the rights of LULU. TOC ancient republics absorbed the nit vidual in the State, prescribed hla religion, and controlled his activity. The Ante ne an •eystcm rests on the assertion of the equal right of every man:to life, liberty, and the patina of happiness; to freedom of con science, to the culture and exercise of all his faculties. As a consequence, the State Government Is limited, an to the General Government in the interest of Union, as to the individual citizen In the Interest at fi eedom. Slates, wida proper "limitations of pow er, are essential to the existence of the Con stitution of the United Steles. At the very commeneement, when we assumed a place place among the powers of the earth, the Declaration of Independence was adopted by States; so also Weret_o Articles hof Con feCeration; and when "the People of the U nited States" ordained and established the Constitution, it was the assent of the States ono by one which gave it vitality. In the event, too, of any amendment to the Con• stilutiOn, the proposition of Congress needs the confirmation of States. Without States lits great branch or the legisia . tive govsrn L,ll would be Wanting. ,Lisu, If We look e a- 14,11,4 the letter of the Constitution to the comp of our country, Its capacity fa vast Wading w ithin its jurisdiction a rem of 13t:it t n 1 empire le due to the eye perpetual seta The best security for the „ mho ant h ci d t ?.a of the States is the sn• `Lthe Constitution of the tatted States. T 4 ,.. xirpotuity of the Con stitution tringe tot y or the Blatt, it , the PerP°' relation makes as /fly t"eir mutual in oar political systant> ;17 1 , ion is Indissoluble. Thu wires cannot ex ist without the parts tier the pi Aa the whole. So long as the Co e-Itin without ntion of the Coiled Buttes endures the, Stm t . ,„ endure; the destrUction of the one is ti 4,,"&" structlon of the other; the preservation or the one is the preservation of the other. I have thus explained my Views of the mutual relations of the Constitution sod the States. be came they unfold the principles t n which I hay &Melt to !Mine the Momentrana questions and orerecme the appalling dlfacultlea that met can at the very commencement of my administra- Ii has been my steadfast olect to cape from the away of momentary pensions, and to derive a healing policy from the fundamental aLd "anchannieg principles of the Coastrot ion. I Jeered the States coffering from the effeels of a civil war. Resistance to the General tiov crcrcent apteared to have exhan-ted itself. Tat United States had recoveredlmsre..iO 3 of they feas and araenuis ; aid th_lr artneee were In inn occupation of every State which Dad attcamtel reto recede. Wile h-r the te - rnory within :tad liwite cf thole Staten !hook be held as con,,aer ed territory, or_der military antnurity em ce wa d g !run the President as the head of the army, was the first gneettOn that presented itself fur dect- Mon. Now, military governments, established for an Ind, done period, would have offerei no se cev ty ler the early suppression of disceatent ; won a Lave Mildest the People alto the ven• guff:Sorra and the vanquished , and would have tno enomed t :sued, rather than bare restored affi c.lon. (Ace established, no precise limit to then morstinuance Was conceivetole. They would bate occasioned on incaiculable and exhausting tip:Lae. Peaceful emigration to and from that }oaten or the country Is one of the best means that can be thought of for the restoration of harmony , end that etnizration would have been prevented, (or what emigrant from abroad, what Industrious citizen at home, would place Limed" w.lllngly under milliary true f The chief persons who would hare followed le the train of the army a ould have bean dependents on the General Government, or men wno exoeat Pratt from the miserlis of their siren' f.l;ow • e.tiscos. Tne powers of patronage and rule which would hare bon exercised, under the Pr , sidett, ot cc a rut, mad populous, tied me a :ally wealthy r. scion, are greater than, unless ut der sets, me aece-s ty, I should be wiling to . u.r Uhl to any Oro man , hicy are each u, fur myself, I could OCT.. r, unlit, on °cessions of g. eat emergency. consent to exercise. The wil ful use of each powers. If continued thr,ffigh a period of years, would have endangered the purl y of the general administration and the liberties of the States which ram•lned loyal. Besides, the policy of military role over a conquered territory would have implied that the Sta es whone Inhabitants may have taken part in the rebellion had, by the act of those in ants. reseed to exist. But the true theory ... that all prrtendtd acts of secession were, hero the bogie filo:4, null and cold. The States e -smolt treaecm, our bcreou the troll , tdu.tl I: I: lArtla nu, 11.4‘ eotnuf sued 'mas on, any more than :het can make •dltd 1re311,, or cogatre In lawful commerce tntl, au) racer4a Power. The Statue attempting to cored- pi wed themsel Ina condition where their •ita'ity was impaired, bet uot extinguished—their four • Gone !impended, but not destroyed. But If any State DOZICCIS or refuns to perform its offices, there Is the more need ttat. the Gen• seal Government should MllltallO all Its author ity, and, es soon as practicable, resume toe' ex &Mae of all Its functions. Oa this orient:As I have acted, and have gradually and quietly, and by almost impercepUble steps, sought to restore the rightful energy of the General Government and of the Seines. To that end, Provisional Gcerrtore have been appointed for the States. Convections called, Governors elected, Legisla tures assembled, and Senators net Representa tives chosen to the esngreas of the Patted States. At the same, the Courts of the U al ted &Mee, as far as could be done, have been re opened, so that the laws of the United States may be enforced through their agency. The blockade has been removed and the CtIVoM houses re-tstabllshed In ports of entry, ED that the reyeione of the United State may be coelec ted. The Postotlice Department renews Its cerselms activity, and the General Goverment Is thereby enabled to comialmniesate promptly with lts Millicent and agents. The courts Meng security to persona and property; the opening 9f the porta invitee the restoration of Indu.t-y and commeret ; the posi.ollice renews the facil thee of social ir terecarse and of business. And is It not happy for us all, that the reetoratlow cf each one of tome functions of the General Gor en meet brlrgs with It a blessing to too Sates °Ter which they are extendedt is It not, aura premise of harmony and renewed attachme .t to the Union that, after all that has heap ne I, the rtdern of rue General rnment is k own only a, a het chreect I I 1.11.;:r very well :bat this policy Is attended w,th tome risk; t at for Its success it rtqutres et least, the arquie.cence of the RAU., which concetns; that It implim , an Invhation to th.,,e States, by renewing their allegiance to the Jul• Ltd States, to r,aome their functions 119 of the Union. But it in a risk that must 1.,3 ta. ken; In choice of difficulties, It is the smallest ark, and to diminish, and, if passible, to re move all danger, I have felt tt incumhmt on me to arse% one other power of the General G,irern• Int pt ;ha t ower of pardon. As to B.ate eon throw a defence over the crime of Venton, the power of pardon is 01,111.1,1 v vestal tu the trustee Government of the Gutted States, 14 exercising that power, 1 Lace liken every pe ., . caution to connect it with the clear at re,,ent lion of the Itlnr:!..g 'a ce of the laws of the U r. Led State& sod an unqualified ac'...n twled4atent of the great stoat change of condill Ca in reyla d to slavery, which has grown out of the war, The next step which I here taken to restore the ev miltutional relivions of the Slates, has toot ar. Invitation to theta to participate as the high attics of amending the Constitution. ET. fly park: ain't wish for ;:en, al notneoty at tho earliest epoii roust. ,tit wait put..tc ..ofrty. For this um" PI uc,l of s r ..eteor• of aL °plutons, add the spirit of mutual conelL alien. All patsies in tie late terrible conflict MUM. work ingather harmony. It is Hot tot mach to ask, in the name of the whole people, that, on the one able, the plan of restoration shall proceed in conformity with a willingness to east the disorlers of the past into oblivion . and that on the ether, the eridonce of sincerity in the future m.mten t are of the- own shall be put beyond any doubt tie the ratification of the proposed amendment to the Comaltation, which provides for the abolition of slavery former within the limits of our county/. Selong as the adoption of this amendment In delayed, so long will doubt. said J.mlonar and uncertainty prevail This la the measure which telface the rad memory of the past , this Is the measure which will most certa niy call poimlatiou, and c spits!, and security to those parts of :het:llion that rift] them most. Indeed. a tt tot too much to ask of the States which a - e now resutrimg their pia,. In the family of the Caton to give this picite of perpetual I.yalty and peace. Until it is the past, tooWttrotr touch we may deal, it, will c. tbe forgott n. The adoption of the um tid neht ruin tine tot b 4 yund al, power of clisrapti•clt. It i., als ate ot•und that in stir; Ini•urfectl) I to, ed . It remo,vo el ivory, the clement which tine an tong perpteled and dltlded the c•. ter It lucks.; aoaco mui.• 0 it u;to • a.,; - rat s tel strtwgthened, tound mere th ; • em it:,: alit , 110 U and snfl.L•rt. Tie amenemett to the Con•t:tuton b:lng a: apt, d it would remain for the ;states. wt, •ss leectirre hate been CO I ,'g In fitr. yance, t., ra .tne tha tr places in the two Loanches tel the No tors; girlo.ere, and thereby at e 1 kof reetnrrton. Here it Is far pan, I. 1., ;t s, es trilby Senao. and (or 31m, fellew,al re, of the lion e of Iteprcs,t to !•1 trt••, •I. 01 icetree, It 11..] elect; toe, ee• Wee, and .inet !neat toe. of our own members. 1 he tot lorettuitt of the truce. 01 Ili , (lea , re: Cu, c ' , quires the t of I. tr — al; r s. t I ILs elo'l tit art wilt 111 the nun o here t t elf cutherltt has been Intarritioto d, In tt at; rtsent pot tare Or Out totibtic agora. filt,an t g it ]. clone have been orgrd to folding thous c.,erts lc or; of tic ii:eves where th, reb..ldon has raised ; set! It was A:curtained, by lepiry, that the Citcult Court of the Uoltay.l abates would not he hold within the o , etriet of Vir g:els during the autumn or early wislor, nor until Genareas should have •'at oppirtunity to consider ano act on lb , whole subject." To your deliberation . the ritaturia . tittn atilt.; breach of the civil authority of the United Stews Is therefore neetwarily re erred, with the tope that early provision will he m Ida (or thd re. anmption of all its functions. it Is martin:at . that treason. most fl agrant In character, ba s been committed. Perilous who are charged with Its ram Mission &mold have fair :red lin partial 'vials In the highest trlimeals of the er'ht.irl, la order that the Conalltutiou and tie laws Inca be folly vindicated t the truth tienrly established and affirmed that treason Is a crime, that (Tolima should be punished and the dunce made Internees ; and, at the titre, {bat tilt question may be jaalcially set tled, easily and forever, that no State or its own will lean the right to teuounee Its plane In the Union. lise relations of tho General Oovwomint to wards Lho four cattle:a of inhankatt, whom the war has called Into freedom, have engaged my most eerlonn consideration. 0.1 the propriety of edit topting to make the freoltoto electors by the procleinalion of Ito Eznentive, 1 tool; for my ecuctol tho Constitntlon Its toe L,ferpro tailor a of that lostrumeut by Its authors and lLr Ir coat, mnurerter, and recent inlet..llga by Cuntrimn. When, at the movement to n'ards Indetiete.nee, the Congress piths United States itt tructed the several Slates to Inallto le governmeots of their swn, they left Cita BUI , U to decide for Itself the condittoes for the enJ went of the , lective franchise. DilinC the pe riod of the Oonlederaty„ Mare walk:mil to ex ist a very great diversity In the Tulle rations of electors In the ir Mates, hoc eves within n State & distinetion at qualincatlons prevailed with regard to the offlcers who wore to be oho ten. The Coattitution of the Untied Stem ro. content these diversities when 4; enjoins that, lathe choice of members of the Howe of Soo resentatives of the United States, "the electors in each Slate shall have the qualifications vs. for electors of themes% numerons branch ot the State Lrgialatttre." After the formation of tLe Contiltution, it remained, as before, the uniform none for each State te enlarge the body of Its electors, according Witt °WO Jedg• meet; and, under this system, one State after another bas proceeded to increase the neither of Its electors, until now naive:sal suffrage, or something very near it, is the general rule. So eked wee this reservation of power in tha habits of the people, and so unquestioned has been the Interpretation of the Conetitntion, that during the civil war the late President never harbered the ymrpose-acertalnly never avowed the par. pate—of disregarding It; and In On acts of Congress, during that period. t o'h g eon ho found which, daring the contine Ole., of boatlY , "i", much less after their close, would have sanctioned any departure by the it tear lye tram a 'Tolley which bea so untfortnly obtasned. ?do:rover, a concession or the elect re rranchise to ;he freedmen, by act of the President of the toned Stai es, must bare been extended to all colored Mort, wherever Coned, and ro must have t,Lbbli.t...d a char re of e.r.ffre.ze in the z.;,,rth -L. Y.,.14.1; , , 6,45. a e., me. lban in the b, and S/UlbWeSt.Crr:. sqyz`.l an act a cold hare created a new class'of voters, sr d would hare been an 11.6 , 91111P1i,Z of p)wer by the l'rer..2.rnt which bottling in the C•n,:tn t !war at the United Stater w.ruld have wall atm 4. On the 'Aber hand, every danger of eandiet it avoided when the settaemeht of the questios Is referred to the esve• el Stela. They can, each ton Itself, dreideon the measure, and whether it le to be adopted at once aua absolutely, or ta t o'uctd.gradually and with In my Judawmt, thy freedmen, if they show par.drmze atd mainly vi•tues, will trooper obtain a pose-i -patioo In the elective franchise throne; the Sint, (Lan tr.r.mgle the General fhveran•nt, teen 1 it Lad power to intervene. NV:en the tn. melt of r motions that have. b en rAlsel by the auddenni is Grine El >dal change shall hare sn'r. aided, it miy prove that ;bey will receive La, kiLdla at usage from some nt on Ivh im they have beretAne most el ',stip depended. But white I hare no doubt that now, aPrrr the close of the war', it is not rompetent for tile tri octal ( irrvernment to ettend the elective Iran. chive in the tevcral Staten, It ii c , tear that grod faith requires the s•erirtty of the freedmen in their gberty and their property, tteir right to lerror, and thrrir tight to larm the Just return of their lab,. I cannot to i strong' ly urge a distao,lotrate tree-ott it of this sub fee), which r.hould be carefully kept al, f from all party cute. We 3113 t clean) , a; ,Id horny as,nri,pilins or any rater.,! linprrssibility for two races to jive side by side, in a Slatt• or im tual benefit and gad will. Tier exprrrlment crofter tin In U 0 ille 1 , his:racy; let tie 01,, 4, en attd make fiat et perimcnt in good faith, nun mg be too easily dklieurt erred. The county Is In ner d of labor, and the freedmen are in need of employment, culture and pi - auction. While their tight of voluntary migration and cry i;ri ction in not to be questioned, I would not ad vise their forced removal and colonization. Let or rather encourage them to honarable and use ful in nary, where it may be benefleiar to themse.ree and to the country; and instead of hearty anticipations of the certainty of fai are, 1 1 there be nothing wanting to the fair trial of the experiment. The change In their condition Is the substitution of labor by contract for the KILOS of slavery. The freedmen cannot fairly be atennui or unwil tagness to work, so tong as dinibt ',ninths about his freedom of chti'ed iii litsour. nitd tie erta tine of Id. re. tiverinz Ltd rtil ciatid s. e. In Lila the •—• -Ps f the emir], er hod the etnidori .1 .r. 1 eolith)) cr deeireat in his workm,.n apt , it an I .thic rity, and the.: can be permanent/ y act, tired in no other way, And if the one ought to be atil t() rob Mc the contract, anought the other. Th • public 'mere:l will he beet promoted,jf tee lee. eral States will provide adequate protectint auJ re mi dies for the freedmen, Until this is in tame way accomplished, there in to chance for the advantageous use of their labor, and the blame or illrauccesa will not rest ou them. I know that sincere philanthropy Is earnest for the Immediate renlieotlon of its remotest alms; but time It always no element. In reform. It Is one of tho greatest arts of record to hay? brought 'our mit lora of people Into freedom. The career of free Industry must be fairly open ed to them, and then their future prosperity and condition. must after all, rest mainly i,a them selves. If they fat', and no perkh away, let nr he careful that the ?align! shall not be ay.rin utable to any dent II of justlor. In a.! that relates to the do tiny of the freedmen, we need not be too anxious to road the tutor, many Incident. which, from .1 speculative point of clew, might raise alarm, will quietly settle themselves. Now that elavrry is at an end or near Its end, the greatness of lea evil, In the point cf view of public Ittmorny, becomes more and more appa rent. Slavery was essentlally a monopoly of labor, and an so • h locked the States where It pre vailed against the incoming of free indnitry. Wh• re labor was the property of the white MOM was ereloSed from trap:opt:tent, or had bat the second best chance of dadiaz it. and the foreign emigrant turned away from the region where his roniltien would be to ',rues- Moue. Wlb the }retrain - 110 lof the m •nop tree labor i!! hasten from all ;•.I to of It, roll wor'd to tarot in der..( .p.ng va•;.ms and Imm.asur..ble resoun es whir It hare bit hell., lain rlormaut. The eight or nine States w• real the Gulf of INI,Aco have a o Ii of exhuherant fertility, a dtmate friendly to 1 ,-. 5 Ii re. and r an sustain a denser populatino 4 than is found as yet In any pa;t of our e.nnitry. And the fut,re in Buz of pod illation to them will be mainly fro the North, or Pow the moat cultivated 1111,011 i In h:tt 1, Isom the .mt.f..rir..,v that ha, at tett..:r d !loon during .Put late ..truggle, let :It away to the future, Yolilrlt IS out , to to• lade% for them with el - eater prvspertty than has ever ho le-re been known. The remora! of the moult, oly of shire labor I. a pledge that I hoer r.. 44,011.1 will be peopled by a 1111111 , 000 and ea:v.:Tr...mg prvillatton, whlrh with any In the VT/i,lll lu torttpactues , , In emit -- g,ins, wr I:th and indroary. tor u, r, runlet, springs from sad eras made for the peouh—el rt too oeoph frr tho ..ovbrume“ Or them it owes aloartao, . from I hem 11 go 'lli aeri, •ta %our mg. •trengto and go It st. while the Govvroutout is Ito, brand I defer to it, people, from anent it lit . r• 1 , / err "to, • u nbonld, teem the very eon/Oa-v.11,S 01 as or. he a roog In Mr power of reels sore to toe I, • 1.110 qii•ltto.. •rtol. ;i 41,p..t -t..0 and mt.. :cgottatosa, are sencore] to tae fore governmest, and ought a e to b , %b -loated. Item, these la no roam for restored alas... o Moneta:4ler; the prillCiptO of our govern Le I' Is that of equal lain sod freetunt of Latins rt. berelrer nr Impels at tains a toothed. it tastes tote • source at Sanger- discord and trout,. We shall but ruled our duties as legislate • by actor, the 'ritual nod exact jut ice to all men," tpeotal ptivLeges to noon The floyernmeat to tv.hrd hate to the people; but. as tso agent• and to-preach. WA, of Ina people, it must be hell superior to mosopollre, andh h, la theme,. Ought b ever to be granted, sod terich lea. re ices es let, must ao stat , lrelnate and yield tot he 00,01,11112001. the Ifflonstltutloa confers on ,loagrase the right to reant• earmaintrca amoug the several State.. It la II the d at 0000.11.1,. for the taa.n wean. of the I 141012, that that cothrscree ehault as free tad unobstructed. No s.tate ran be )ustillist la may des Is. to Las 'he LTIMIIit of t rot , I and co mate. corrce bats....`.lAM.. The pos.tiom of moult ',ate. la such UAL, If thy wale allowed to Lek- 81 , 160010,, of It for parpotel of boo, !merr:3e, the crm. motor between Nlatt • mist:: be 11,141 lady bur. 'fd. or virtually p °Whited ly IN heat, h le the c ountry. Ill: yeasts. and the ten Sauey to ths g• r a/ money diva Lyle Sod I. mill or hie, to use thy pow' I of exagress int as to pt•reat an, !Ninth ita; edit:neat to the free ot.mul• Ito torn Alao a pribindise A tat oh travel and tort. ch•celt". In tit• tr tt aunt, 0011.1: use. ouo oI the wet et forms of namanp dy, and .he evil la Lore., chi if 0.4 a h • rat al of the that,. route Wbch Ite vest r y"ent of our son.try ts to der• ed, II It 1.1. m , it earn' ot, tame to tar frt.' ..cu lattou of cumm.. re • between thy 'slates m. 12.111 to le sternly gm•olcu eget.. hl sporopna.e NEN:a tt.. within .lie titel:a 01 lb. conatltutiom The rrport of the `...oretery of Her I..tefl.er, , pfe.is t:. , •at.lithert of the pub!e little the ran.- ertte..s of the Patent lellft rear , S4 a in1n3,1,14,.ul oter let.te ere efre.re, thee fee or we. tenor In LI, r tiuu tee, 1',:.10 raf...eh. Z 1 I A /:.•: • /k r.•rm .ti .ft fee eereere. te t.f le,at feteree: Ile leste.e. Co I! re tense or the efte.c.... Inl ;Telef.. ..1 the Rosiest. eel t, U 1 3 ,1, t e ott•• :svi.e. knot.. •:,: tit. It to rat, zte 1 that t . ,e • t U.,. nr . t. runt tent tu er i:.e 1.... ..• n 1 to he taw, en I Oispor.,i, e,• t, it.l ane.er act, an•l p•yt.i. at. Lt. t.. the tatter,: of ft n, I , rty t 'My per t.e made by st 'rho rely I t ia at any efolte titti ',rt., exp.•nitott wl.lch it liotha wise t ~ 1 et,t.lotthed only - tong tred: r a; , erten,, , I. t•, ~.t the tat cis, In the heads el 111.tivar1..... settlers, tiler creates wealth an•l ,Locil,ll,ate. Ifrvettn , ittert, ere tv•rth more 11., the I ' , tate. than they had been tetr,red at a tunic for future purchasers ent.l.4 thelaat I tls. and the ermrtflee. In 1•1•• by 11,-' zallant in., o/I Army an.: N• 4 y. have *welted th , re , or,l* of tqe. Pension Ilare•ti to an unprecedented extent the Nth tl , ty o 1 JoaoWIC taint Ontant.t of pen tanner. ,Yen rattylAng f 'hell nitnnt I ty. sclu.lre , I expense., the sum of $9,,,,t,14, The nutither of applle•tlon• that have been athlete.' amer bolt date will recinlic n Isrwe tin - tat, of ount for the next stsonl y•-•r. the mtan. for the !My went. the .ttpendit Jae, under eatati. law., to ell! dtgratted ..4.lters sod Salton, an l to the tettollte. of aneli a. have perish...l In the tier at Flit :NUM..) . will no douht Ito chnerf,e,ly nod promptly gran-ea, A itnrmefot no , pte Will not bealtale to ann , tion one merman , . r.tr their cduret the relief at .11/4,111 ode tnthelltuni In Ult. elltorte 10 r..fetei se u,,t ut If anal to lalenec. The report of the P.talmasler (instal presents an inewouraglag es..4lbit or the opetations of the Poe Ulnae P.P.:linen'. ermine the roar. To, nev em.. of the Pall year from the royel t •I,tas treated.] ',,en; maelmure sonnui remerpts from ell the elm.'res nrevroue to the rebellion, to 150 .1 , 11 of ',45,01f1a and the aunnat. avers. Ingrilan nf rev ebun durtmg the last fool pear., apartment rellr, the revenues .4 the four. year. immediate p Arch oeillt.g !he rebellioe, Woe 0.3,63 i ,oft. The revenues of Mr I let deem peer amountml to ell MCI lOt, an I the espmollturen to 01.,804,723, leaving a ear due nt receipts mot r spsolguare. nt T9el,ra 1. Pro• pea. hoe been mad, to te.torint the pi WM Vl' rite In the Nouthern States. The meul. p•sented by the Po.tmeet en General leaf sat the polio. or armaing Metes to ocean Mall ler/to:WIT 1t..., oun ustabilehod roues, and to teem of eonttou. In p c the p opium, Which 11 , 11 , • the Oompen alloll for 00.0 ettride to the rootage earnino, arc Cr °mondani. d r the osraltn cane-d, ration of (Innen.. it eppears, from the report of the nirorotary of the Nadi, that while, m the cionietoieeme e r of the prlti4at y•oltr, there Were Irl eemothwing et, vomme of all Mow., and btu, td lb , t OW guns and manned by MAW man, thil of yeesels at present to 00=011111021 Ls 111, with 830 gnus and It e lta men. 13y this prompt re ro e . Woe on the naval Imes, the riot:lmre of the Use. crament have been largely dtettetshed, a bomber of ventele, purahaard toe naval pu ree ., the maaa a ae s moue, have been flattened la the pettemul pursuits of oommezilo. hi. t h e suppling= of utile hoettlithui our foreign equatiroes have bermes-established, sue er t eel e y of vessels ranch more efficient than rho,. em o uee d •mallar service preyletre to the rebelling. The euggestloo for the enlargement of the Itern,-yards„, and especially for the eatatillihmont of one in fresh water for Iron clad vessels, is de ea m us aonalderasthe, as Isalso the reoomtuentlatlon for &threat location and move ample =muds for the Naval Asademy. In the report of the &oratory of 'Wore a gen cralfa given of rho military cam palgos of 150 i nod 1905, ending . la . the auvoroa - .100 of mined realatonca to the lntiop id au ., lhorlty In the Insurgent Slate,, Tito operations of the geteral alholalalaotive fluroaris of the War Deportment during the part year are de t all cd,artd an emirate° made of the eppropriallone that will be repalrod for mthlary purposes to the fiscal year commencing the 30th day ofJun• I' , CA"I The nation./ military Porte an the firs: of May, 1665, numbered 1,000,316 men, It in proposed to redact the military establishment to a peace footing, comprehending fifty thous .ai d troops of of all &tens, organized so as to ad zu.t ~1 an enlargement by tiling a, the ranks to 'Ol (0, if the teCoad tier of the c o tv_try ahculd require run aagmcntatl n of the army. The volt:m.4.er force had airen.:,y been reduced by the diactarr,e from service of over eight hundred thousand troops, and the Da partment to rapidly procridlne in the wort: of Punt. r reduction. The war mtintates aro refuted foam 5516.:!1 0 .131 15.433,,,a14,461, let.,ch am mat in toe opinion .•: the Doper tweet, to adequate for a peace r • ' 'l , hment. The measures or m ire, clamant criba Barest and branch of the etr• ice tat. - ligent ccon,i, worthy of commendation e Is also made lot 011 ripwt to the n.e ~Ity of .trotid!ad for s nal form military • - and to the propriety of making suite- p 'hi on for wth:ded and area: led ale, s ate voletterv. The revenue intern of the country is a atm- Jo et of •ital interest to Its honor and pro-polity. and should command the rarest ene . o d, cat i on of t ongvois. The Sr. re'ary of the Trcuser• will ley before you a full nod detn,l••si report of the receipts and disbursements of th.• last f-••::1 ot the firat quarter of the pre,eat Ureal 'year, of the probable receipts and cep ociltn•., fe t e the ortmr throe quarter,, arid the estimatev for the year g the :50th of JOOO . INCA. I might content myself with a refer ence to lb it rep. rt. la which yon will rind all the inform+, •ion r. •,nirtd f.,1 your .I:l.berat. :no and •lecia tot . tillt the tot irnts:stanee Oh o so' est to rri,res Itself on tar toted, that I in not l•dt lay before you Toy Otevre of the tn..a,res wl,teh are re. ; ulred for the good character, an tulitilt almost hoc thc ex.st •• of tell p pe. plc. Tu. ;.:c of ,t rie:ow. lies sonata's :n the eveigy, virtue, and inte::l,-,e •:( its cit.- arne. but It is e.,gally true that a god rev , upe soot , mis the :Ire rf an organic. -..1 g I inert you at a lime when the nation has yolun t.tr ly burdened tt,elf witl. a debt I...ipre,ed.mt r.t a •ur Va, as is is run ,unt, away into nothinir when compared with thr countleva lalcuan..ra that will be conferred 1Lf..1 our country and upon Dian by the preSerTation of the nation'el 11 0 0. Now, on the first oc, of the electing; of Cong,eSs since the return of 1-:-err. it la of the uttnomt impOrtaure in Mau. gurate a just p..llfy, R +aa// at once be put In motion, and which snail commend itself to those who come after us for its eontinnaece. We must aim at nothing less than the coin ,I,ete effacement of the financial evils that nece,sa.lly followed a stein of civil war. We mast endear or to apply the earliest remedy to ;Cho demrmed tut , of the rurrenPy, and net shrink from de it, without i.e.; rig oppreialve iturnestiatedy irett'i: to off •et ft Is • duty 41 prtpar • 1 , 1 our r 1 ~,y from the over-10 ,i,a.,13‘ eV.II. f •it an Irredeecuahre currency, with° it a sudden re vulsion, and trot without untimely prdersaAna- Lion. For that end, we must, each In oir re an ctive positions, prr pare the way. I bold it the duty of the Executive to Insist upon frugal. Sty lia,the expenditures; and a sparing ed,nonay Ir itself a great rational resource. Of lee backs which authority has been given to Inane notes sccured by bends of the United Stn'es, we may require the greatest moderation and prudence, and the law must be rigidly refereed when its donuts arc clot eded. We may • each our of as, tuusss I our a , •:lce and enterprlsiny en retrvmen to be cosstactly on their guard, to :I , ruidate debts contracted In a paper currency, aad, by conducting business as nearly a; possible on a system of c3;h. pa} M-nti er alter; c edits, to hr.„1,1 themstivea orcparci to return to steadied of gold and Over. To a.l our folio a cane Is 10 tie 1 rudent marlazesnent of Welt mamcntary affairs, the dry devolves on as to diminish by law the auMnat of papal money now In amnia tier. Five years ago the bank note clrt ilationv of the country amounted to not much more tissu two hundred million,; row the circulation, bank and natiOnekLeXCeeds seven L u scr rd mil ions. The simple statement of the fact rscommeads more strongly than any words of onion conld do, the at:rutty of oar restraining this eipstmion. The gradual I ednet!o3 of the currency I. the only measure that can save the business of the count try front disastrous calamltiers; and this eau be almost Imperceptibly ssecomolished by gradnalry fund in ,r the cationa!mrculatl m le securnic, that may I.e ma'c I,oe , m.OlO at tt.3 plea! ..re of the rt•y: rnmunt. bur debt is doutti, SeCtlfe—ti rat, in the a!: ewealth and still greater undevelnp,l run In• - • re of the country; and neat, In the character of our instill:alone, The not. ob -6 tveta among political eeol3oMlsLi have not faded to remark, that the public debt of a country Is cafe la prol>oll.loo as tea 'pie are free; that the mot of • I::pubi'd Is Lac safer. of all. Oar history confirms and tzLannenea the theory. and Is, 1 firmly believe, deaLlue.l to glee It a t 1.11 more signal illustration. Tn., Se 'rnt of I Lle tUpon,rtly springs not merely from the fact that In • tentinllC the Nat.:nal 0b'41....t00s are dletilhtzted more widely tt•rough coun . .lm.s numbers In all classes of society; it has its root ID the character of our laws. Lldre all turn con tr.bnia no id.< mirth, weifare, and bear their fur that of the public luoueuv Itar,ig the woe. ender d imputes of patth.r.,:u, the one, of the great body of the people, without rcgard to their own compara• lee want of wealth, thrond .1 to cur a. tums ‘110: tilled our !le,. war. u.d Old therm. , !ves to offer me', lives for th., coed, New, is their turn, the proper., and itcorne of the country should bear their pot pioportlon of the burden of taxa ion, wttie in our Impost system. through means of waled Inc:rased citailty Is Incidentally Imparted to all the industrl4,lnteresta of the nation, the datles should be so adjusted as to fall most heavily on articles of luxury, leaving the necessartes of life as free from taxation as the absolute nuts of the Governmett, economically administered, nW Jastlfv. No favored class eh mid demand Irttdom from ttaxastueni, and the tax's aboad no no attributed as nut to fall unduly on the poor, but rather on the accumulated wcal,h of the cot:nu,' We should lout at the nett coal debt net as it is--not as a national bleeolurt, but as a heavy burden on the Industry of the crux try. to Do Lath .rued without unnecessary eelay. It it est tem.. 1 by the nLreeetsry of the Treasury taut the expel:halm. to the nneilye c. , L the 'Mtn of Joao. tact:, tell. <cored the reempts 5112.14 oil IL Is arnttlylng, hr , teeeer, to state that r. is ale° est :n...tott that thnt v,e !eent, for the yet, rndlng Otto .10th of June, 1.7, 01 v 11 ea -mod the to the sum of el I elem.,. or so muen as may deemed aunt :Lent for the iumpose, may Inc &mate.: to the re.lootoln of the 10. nil .le,..which. uo the list di. of tt•ho her, -63 was it: El cry re.:uotton will mlnist. the ti an swoon' of totem, to be pno , l, nlarin. t .t hemen. 01 01111 further ro.tuc. uht 11 the v. t.o e shin he 11.,.u...5ted,•in I tan, he seen 11.0111 the est...on,s of Inc ut the Treasury, may 11 a:L....a nopea yrc .4 01 1,1 men, vie , Ott hot n nit ...g tarty ears. be. e tnath that we shi I ll :(1 nil rd nn 1.1 r; that, au.5.....1 the inn., by the sapt•rene.on et v.l • 1,.. It • ns (to h. to h, the root, thy r..ment no e sh•,l INUI ly shoo toe u of ohr ....tit otions by the 1•r•.: , i,1 an,l fa.tl.l - ,1 dtsch,rtte ut ant/unit oho:. 'on, T` c lirparteasor of A c lout urr, unlor ity r.orciroo. I.g tae is x.. 4.. eleug much In levy .r.L. 01...11Le v•el asir.,o,..t.c. L.: tire mittylri . fOr lob reencom mope, ea tee 'mall. of Its nisneo,•/oew rele:etwe remla to e ac t oust report of itreLl.lllo,l.lllorlor. hat. Coe, lima !WI) on our domestic +ifs,. I...cause or tater lintraceurimit I.puf lane, Cad-. .11,y c.e..01.6“.1., a, yoar great es.yo .1 of Le:r.oll 0011.1) ef mint it germ.'. utmost r.r nn ibleg that ts :re 000 yr e o,r toe nett , 40.1 even ,o 11: forte of oryn, 'Lake us rim iris 10 lat:a2en dent of tLe v ;, lc,' of Ia r etgo roter're. ro.d Iry• , eft 00 eTert t:1apt,....1 to •'OO F .1.100 h le , talepie maa,nt tire re.establlsliment of arc lawny, sal the •treugyrt rest co.. from harmony, will be o rr te-.t seve re y syyllut ustwor who f ecl pow°, gal forget For mrseil, It It Is eve sari it isio be my constr.l ape to promote pram aril natty %nth rill foreign nations 4.1 Po wt.; and 1 h•ec every en, son to believe Shot lire; nil, withant e ore,rtioe.nre seimated Mly tire same dispositt re. re - re; vi, ins 01th the Ezreror of Chinn. so recce: to [lett ortyle. are mast triers fly. Oar so amerce with lib; Unary-lions oelelug nete ilcrelopalee.t4; Sod It IN lieu 'leasing to burl th .1 the Ifa• s rirerctit of that great Empire rani:db.:a s ,ttst ea - tlntine e.lth our par Icy, anti reposes j :rt rang Ica 3e la the flirt exam which merit, our =free. roe mit h i UV o •rmoby '.et worn the t t tater and 1:01pelni Itti.:o,a I. s arse suploil !Nisi no ente , prise ile.local 011, 181.,ra;11e Ilne. 1. 0 0 Lntinent of AM., tcroegh his do minions, end It. to yernoect U. wan nil E rropn by A new etinnoel of IL torcourso. ir 0 Menet. with SoLtle America is etto rut to receive eate:lr reg. 010111 by a direct line of mail steerestripe to toe flat rg Empire of Our I. The distinguiserl p yrty of 11,11 of sal- ace whi Dart, nectotly left our c r• try to male • mreutifle •xplorstlOn of the osiers/ history rind Slyen and monntsln r urges of loft region, hove received from the Emporia, first gen et. us welcome which or.. to taro been ear mood from his coostant friendship far the United itCr j r mad his welt-knowr real in prorneting lb • so vancement of tnowleyiga A trope la eater t steed that our v.:merry with the rich sod popuioas courrines that to trier tun himittorescresn *en m•yr be ferrety triartoired. Nothing will to 'seating, or lira port of this resrnment, to extend the protec tion of nur ring over trio noterpriso of our f illow mittens, We reeoPe• from the Prewory In ttint ra g10111110•011100e. of rood will ; and it is worthy of ante that a secotol envoy has brought us 111.103 , 11ge, of condolence on the lerith of our late Chief Msg. Irritate from the Bey of Touts, whore Eire !naiades the rid domfaloar of ("arttinae, oa the Melo. stylist- ()or domestic cot test now happlly ended, hes 1(1111, , Ino traces In cur 'ns with ono at least of the gloat maritime ?overt. The formal et a Mum of belligerent rights to the insurgent Stales woe unprecedented, and hat ant been Jus tified by the Issue. Bat In the systems of neu trality perinea by the Powers which made that concession, there was a marked difference. The materiels of war for the luau/gent States were furnished, in a Brost Measure, from the work. alarms of Great Britain ; and British ships, man. nod by Blitiph subJecte,'and prepared . foe receiv ing British iirmamerta, salleld from the ports of Great Bntain to make war on American cum tneree, nude the sheltered a commission from the Insurgent States. " These iffdpa, haling Once escaped from British parte, ever afterwards en tend them mevery part of the world, to refit, and so to renew their depredations. The con sequentra of this conduct were most disestroas to the States thee In rebellion, increasing their desolation and misery by the prolanzallon of our deli contest. It bad, moreover, the effect, to a groat e - atent, to dnvs the American nag from the and to treader much of our stipp les and ememerne to the very Power whose su bje ct. bed Greeted the necessity for such a Change.ese event. toot pram before I was celled to the ad snitontretion of the Ciovernment, Toe Willear, de• site ter peace by which I am animated led we to approve the proposal, already made, to rabic:US the question. which had thus arts= between the consul., to arbitration Thee* questlone ere of such moment that they mint bare coma:tended the st efitlon at the crest rowers, and are ao inter woven with the peace tad interests of every one of them as to hare =mired an impartial deatsioh I rev. , to Inform you that ()feat Britain declined the sr bitratneul, but, on the other hen I, Welted us to the lornoetton of anoint mmtacton to tat. tie c.. tbs. x elm. bete era tr t , q 4.1 trio, 1, 'a 'oh eh tics e for the u- pre (.'tons haws. rum. (tour) should be excluded. The prop aaittort In Oast very unsatisfactory form. hes been decllurat. The United States did not present the subjc ct as an impeachment of the good faith of a power wid,h was professing the most friendly disposition, but as Involving ques tions of put+, law,ot which the sealemen• Is essential to the peace of nations, and,thOugh pecuniary reparation to their Injured cit izens would have followed incidenially on a decision against Great Britain, such com pensation was not their primary object. They had a higher motive, and It waste the Icte:t!ts of peace and justice to establish Important principles of international law. The correspondence will be placed before you. The groand on which the British ministry rests its justification is, substantial ly-, that the municipal law of a nat.on, and the del:nestle I ntt rpretations of that law, are the measure of Ito duty sea neutral ; and I feel bound to declare my opinion before you and before the world that that justification cannot be sustained before the trthnn tl of the nations. At the same time Ido not ad. vita to he y resent n:telapt at redress by acts of lzgialation. For tie future, friendship betwut n tie two eOu tries must root on the basis of mutual )ustire. Front the uoimeht of the el tabltahmeht of our free Constiturit.u, the o ythred world has been cot., uize.l ....lea. in to, lorcroste of dem• ocean cr r f monarchy; but through all lAose to r olut lov• the 1 oltfal: tares have bu; e y and drialy tr d to become propagandists of reeobileantese. It is the wily gerrornment suited t o our condition; but sr have oat ec southt to may tee Iton others; and we have consistently follow ed the advice of Washington to ree mmend It only by the careful preset motion and prudent use or the blessing. puttee all the inter•milous period the }'alley of Eu-opean Cowers and of the rolled States has, rn lb. whole, been hmmochous. Twice, Weed, umen of the Invemon of cone parts of America, in toe Interest or monsvehr, have prevailed; tortes, my predecessors have had occasion to P12110.1C0 the new of chit nation In rerpert to mirth inter ference. to both recamous the remonstrance of the ed stares was res pected, from a deep con viction, or. In. part 4.1 European Governments, LIMA che •yetem of noe-interferenee and mutual abstinence front prOp[4l.olol.l was the true I alit for the twe hemispheres. Since those time. we have sdranced to wealth and power; but we retain the same purpose to leave the nations of Enropito choose their own dynasties and farm their own systems of government. This consistent moderation may justly de mond e corresponding moderation. We regard It an a teettt calamity to our -1" the sauce of good government, sod of the world, should tiny Etuopeen Power challenge the American people, as it were, to the defence of repel, lictanism against foreign interference. We cannot foresee, and are unwilling to con elder what opportunities might present themselves, what combinations might offer to protect ourselves against designs Inimic al to our form of government. The United States desire to act in the totems as they Lave ever acted heretofore; they never will be driven from that course but by the seeteeshn of European Powers; and we rely.on tie wisdom and justice of those Powers to respect the system of non inter ference wtlah has so long been sanctioned by time, and which, by i s good results, has approved Itself to both continents. The cerrespoodeece between the [Jelled States acd France, in reference to gnash lee which have become subjects of dismission be tween the two ti overuments, trill, at a proper time. to laid before Congress. Whee. on the organlmtion of our Govern ment, under the Constitute - in, the ?resident of the titled States ;delivered his Matig - aral ad dress to the two Homes of Congress, he laid to to them, aou through them to the country and to mankind, that the preservation of the en. reed fire of liberty and the d -stray of the eepeb :lean a oat I of goverr meat are lastly enniattered as deeply, perhaps as finally staked oa the ex po hetet intrusted to the American Po.Ple." Aid the House of Brpersentativ, answered Wer.t.te gton by the voice of Me 'Sett We adore the ievisible Hand which has led the American people through so many dittieultles. to cherish a coerce°us respensibtfity for the des tine of repel-limo liberty." More than seeen tv-slx years have glided away since these words acre sticker! ; the United States have passed through coverer trials than were foreseen ; and tow, at this new epoch in our existence as one a. n. with ore Union purified by eonrows, and etrinie it, ere tiy cot filet, ant tete..shed by tte virtue of the people, the greatness of the Greases's IntitaS us once more to repeat, with et:aqui:Lite, the pledges if our father, to hold our selves at ewe ruble before oar fellow-men for the •ei cite the republican form of eovernment. ter peeler ce has proved its •nflil 'teeny in pace ried in war, It has vindicated its authority through deeeere, nod atiliereetr, and redden and tree:hie emereeeeles, which wewile hare crust ea any 63 new that has been lees firmly e red ill the heart of the peotsle. At the Wage eratiou of Warelegeon the ferelien relations of the country were few, and inn trade wan re ••- see by hostile regulations; Dow all the Mr • ier.ed vane, sot the elope welcome our com merce, and their Governments pitifesa towards us amity. Then oar country felt its way heal- entirely siorg an oreried path, with Stem 60 leek boned together try rapid meson of commucleat ion as to be hardly know a to me another, and with historic traditions. extending over a very few years; now intercourse between the States s swift end in timate; the experience of centuries has been crowded into a few gererallons, and tins created an Intense, Indestructible nationality.: Then our jurtsdietion did not reach beyond the Incon venient boundaries of the territory which had [whit red independence ; now, through coa same of lands, first colonized by Semite and Fiancee the country has acquired a complex cLeiarter, and has for Its natural limltstbeenain 'ekes, the Gulf of Mexico, and on the east and west the two great corona. Other na liens were wasted by civil wars for ages t eft, e they could establish for them selves the necessary degree of unity; the latent c, esti( ti in that our form of government in the best ever known to the world, has enabled fie to Inn-tan fiiim civil war within four genre, wilba complete vinditiatlon of the conntltution a authority of the general Government, and with our lo: al libertine and, State Institutions unimpaired. The tterooge of emigrants that eretra to oar short a are witnesses of the ronti ifirece of all peoples in oar permanence. Here la the great lard of fit, labor, where Industry is lilseeed with etre - templed rewards, and the tread of the we:km:rine. is sweetened by the D. uite'slt it the cause Of the country "IS his owe cause, ihisown safety. his own dignity." li. re ~very one enjoy, the free use of his 'seal tee mei the tholes of activity Ito a natural right. H. re, end, r the come...reel inll acres of a fruitful it. I . kt ',Oat etiOaet, altl tilppt .nstatllloos, pop ul trllntil a ona- Ito). Here, through the easy development of nd!, s ri anate(a. weelth has increased week lere-tole grt ater rapidity than numbers, On that as have tr.esme ' , Tula against the enarreeil 11,6roludee of oihrr r, LatettS, and alike In 1,5...i -t...a amt in opinion, are self centred aud trey independent. ilcre more and more tare .s given to provide edncatien for every os, Meseta 0:1 our soil. litre religion, re leoete loom politica. connection with the cllil eoveinlieut, vernier to subserve the craft 01 statesmen, fine becomes, to its in dependence, the spiritual lire of the people. Ilt re toleration is extended to every opin ion, in the quiet certainty that troth nests only a fair !kid to secure the victory, litre the brimful mind goes (call unshack led in the pursuit of science, to collect stores of imowiedge and acquint an ever ts. teasing mastery over the forces of narare. Item the nu:loud domain is offsred and held in millions: of separate freehold% so that our fellow-citizens, beyond the occu pants of nay other part of the earth, con stitute In reality p people Hera exists the democratic form of government; and that form of government, by the confession of European statesmen, "giver a poker of which no other form is capable, because it Incorpora'es every man with the State, and mouses every thing that belongs to the F 0111." Where. to past Matory, does a parellel exist to the put its b•ireinem watch is within the mach of the ;movie ef the United elate. t Where, say pant n( the alone, eon tut% Often! OS fauna ao suited to their habits or ao satinet to their lore as their own free Conatliallon I Every one of L teen, to whatever pa -t of the land be has 1, , a tees, to wish its peepctutly. Who of them wall cot new aektowleden, in the words of Washlngten. that "et cry step by whiehthepeop'e of the Vatted etetes have ads/seised to the character of an hopepeneent scams to halo beers distinenishal by soma token of Frweidentlal egeneyr Who will not jean with MO in the prayer, that the Inelsible hand which has led as through the clouds that glooMed around oar path, will ao guide zee onward to a perfect restoration of fraternaSadectioa, that we of stile day may be able to transmit oar great inheritance, of State Governments in all their delta. of the General Government in Its whole constitutional vigor, to oar posterity, and they to theirs through countless general i ties.' . _ ANDREW Jott:vsorr WAIIIILKOTO3, Dec. 4541, iutto the month of November thg Corner slot er of Pensions admitted 2419 wldows'elsisas and selected 127 bt the same, The total number 01 widows' cases disposed :of ,WIS 2,246. The number or U/WA push= granted dating the same period wu 1 957 ; dumber of the BAMO re. lecred we. 9 : 6. Total sugmher of the same caste disposed of was 2,40. On the nut and second ballot for 81:eaker of the North Carafins senate.Basle, Union, recd Ted 22 vo ws, and Colonel Ferebet„ aatrong mo.tet, fir. the whole number antes bo th, 4 c me. nettle wu finally electe4 by three malorillr• Wave Gisszaviun, Mercer eonntv. no /outer ands. the paw of the town hest:4osec change] co Greenville. The posteilleo M.IS also be icsown as the Gremlin* pc: chalets. NEW ADVERTSEMENTS. iZII TA Y ED —To the precul:es of the sub-- Li scriber in Yllzaoeth toweattio, a SI E dR. hav• bog White Ear Marks and . proud no the Left Hip; weight, about Nice Hundred Pounds. lite own er wail rail, prove property Pup otisr4o. take h.m away, or else he. wth oe eon! •crord fro to law. decauswwr O. P. Fdis COW.—Cniod to the residence L of the su , scriber, resteling on the hark Lewis Farm to Lower St. Clair township, on or about the tat inst., a BRUCE/LE CO W, seren or eight years old, with White spot. on the belle. 01, both hind feet white. The owaer a requested r eine f Merl, prove property, Os 9 charges and eke her away, or flat will be dimore4 of eeeoras lug to law, dea,ttex STRAY COW —Came, to the premise* of the ¢n ersiened, e warm weir With hest spot on her head and now bss a call. TAO owner mil I cell, i.rnelkikroperty. pay nharlt,w asa 1110 her s way, or she will he sold for °large', at H. ELDDLF.L.wrume , ilie. 181 I.llsellY IZEZIZI (IIi'STERP I OYeTERS ll We am d•11y receiving CAN. SEIELL and BUCKET ( , Y STEN., but tip by John :McKenna. Salttclore. We base a - good stook eordetantly on bans, end can supply our euetomers Sad the Trade at toe lowest telees. POTTER, AIKEN er. STriF.P.III.D; des 26. Liberty street. 1 )Itth , OLUTION OP PaißTNEitSill P.— Tie Pet tnership heretofore elistins between WN. B. HA YS sad JCH.N -GLY BF:, to the Park scklmr and Pmvielon levelness, ender the name and sty le of Wll. B HA YS & CO hots Coma dim. aol red ay the death of Mr. SOHN CLYDE on the 1 - rth ult, All those haring ehtims egslast the late 0 , 0, lel it 4 plesse present them for settlement, rs.l all ir-nehted will please settle Up et thou earliest vier lease. Business re, he settled up at three I. Me... (161) Liberty Sent, the •urviving partner, h 1 a FLAYS. Pittsbursh, DPe..he, 2£65.-,det told A LLEGBENY CITY UOMPIIO.IIISE RENTED. CITT Of ALLEM:MIT PA TREASCISH'S urines, Deo. 4th. 1645. Partin holding Comoro:alse Bonds of the limy of Allegheny, Pe., are hereby notified that the Sinking Fond for 1605 win Abet nvested in these bond. et t.e 10,0011. Mt. Oirdlet Proposale e7lll be reoelved be the underligned •niii MONDAY, January lA, IBM. D. Ild/iOFEUROT, dea.td Treasurer:elwile[ hen) , Oat 'AKB Is °TICE —Putt No. 1 W. ti. 1 LARD OIL. FIN k SPERM OIL, tiaIIBON OIL, FISH OIL, NE6TS FOOT OIL, OHIJDE OIL, sta. Sold to acanthiu to snit customs.. Persons Wanting n.py of the &DEMO 64111 ed Ona, WOll4 do Will to call and examine our stock, as We are de termined to sell the. goods TEBY LOW FOB CASH. CMITEM. DRUG EITOILS. Corner Oblo and FednealStreete,lute• Market House, Akteakel.l Cltr. tax, G COMAE A. KELLY. TOI S . AND HOLIDAY PRE9Emr..3 OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, WHOLESALE AID RETAIL, At mumnblo ittees, at J. G. LAUkR'S, No. 2400.1. .115EieLrizet NEStareat. REAR Farm o 1 COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYL TANI 6, Allegheny county, To enamel Giese, Administrator of the estate of laza* Struehan fate of Robineon: townehtp, deceased; also the ;etre and next of kin and others Interest ed In the eetate of geld daeadant, 111 pureuranee of the fifteenth section o• an set of Amembly of said Commonwealth, entitled an act 6, create a slaking fond, and provide for the gradual eatin gel t ailment of the debt of sail Commonwealth, paned the loth day of AP/11; A. D. lan, you ate hereby cited to be and appear before me, Wllasto J. Brthardson, Register of Nitta, he., la and for the said county; on or before SATURDAY, the [oh day of January, A. D. 1600, thane to chow enure, If any you ham why. the Aloltsteral Leber- Itance tax should nos he paid. Herein fall not un der the penalty that may ensue: Circe under my hand and telt of ofllee, We 6th day of December, A. 71. 1666.: w J. It IeILALIDSUN. Refuter. d, 6.1 wdiret seerwT r - OMMOWWELLTH Or PENNS YLVA- Allegheny County, as.: To Witham Thompson, Administrator of the estate of Mar garet E. Thompson, to of Minis township de• enlisted, also to the heirs, next, of kin, anti all other. Interested to the estate of aforesaid deco• dept. In t ersuence of the fifteenth section of an Act of asembly of said Vommonwettitli. mailed An Act to Cream a Sinning goat and provide for the liradual Exiingulsement of the Debt of the Commonwealth, passed the lath day of Affoit, A. 1t.,1949 you are hereby cited to be and appear De note WH. J. FLICHABD.SON, Register of Willa, ac , In and for stilt bohot7, on or before Yaturday the bib day of January next, there to show cause, if any you hare, Islay the colt/Literal inheritance tax due by said decedent should not be. paid. lie”ln tail not under the penalty that ' ZLV .' ;l3 ".' h 7 hder my ha D. so said of ofdoe, this stit day of December, A. D. bid.s. W3f. J. 6.IOIIARDSON. Deglet dee6:lledukaveLluree. ABGE BALE OF GOVERNMEN T bULLDINGS. Dararr QD6l2.l.2BladaTell Cintrunat...6 0111 - 0; t PITSDISraoIt, PS.. Lica. I. Idea. 0/11.1 be .old at Public Auetion.lon the 11th of DECEMBER. 1E66, all the !BC/LT:INDS AND eARRACKS AT CAMP REYNOLDS, (Britt. dadta Field.,) a. follow., sin) 9 Itullthop, litllcer. wlarters: 6 do Barracks: • 2 do Quat te rmaster's S torah Ion; 2 Co Commissary do 2 do Prlsan; I Co Cuss, Bowe; 0 do Out Braidings; I. do Stable; I do Forage and Store House; I do Carpenter and Smith Sem 1 do Quarter..(o.l.fflechantes. es.; I do Bake Hour.; 4 do Cook Housen. I do Lame dry. A leo, tho Board Fence enclosieg the Camp. Pure/Jason will be mortised to remove the build Logs within ten days alter the Bale. Tanns—thmth, United States Cumency. Sale t i commence at 12 n. Trains leave Pitts burgh for Camp Reynold., on Penna. H.H.at 6 40 sod 1420 A. on Pittsburgh And Connell. wine EL R. at Toe dad 11,60 A. R. 0. CROSS, del :id Lt. Cot. and DepUtY Q. M. adoaraL BOOTS, AND SHOED FON ILL AGES AND SEXES, Dress or Ev eryDay Wear, MfiEciOlellEn,rici's. BLANKETS, 262u.5a11.a.m. MSC 0.1511 cm-y-, GEATLEII as , UNDERCLOTHING, ALL SORTS OF W - ctcole72 moods, Nos. 55 and 57 Fifth Street- The prides at which these gOode are ntfgred defy competition. And whsle at it, attentions dirante bloc): of DRESS GOODS, GENTLEIEN'S nEiDI-SIDE ClOlll/10, OVERCOATS, DIISINEAS COATS, VESTS and PANTS. ORLI and see ;lam And secure Darold,. THOS. A. McOL.ELLAND, Jet, 55 AND 5T PUTS STREET. s SATES I suit Tips!! SKATES ,500 PAIR Ladies, Gents nnd Children_ S i A r i " IPA S IN EVERY VARIETY, FOR BALE LOW BY Jalf/Ei , $o IF ; :r, No. 136 Wood Street. nal vat) ," THANSEIGIVIIte a.esbOysters to tins asul, bait eanin Spleei Mince Meet, Wiwi an/ by. kbe penmen: Mots' & Du ekwa/Ss Plaits and smuts- Shaker Dried . Cara, Green Cern and Peas broanerFrirsb Saw-ties, Strawberries, Pme App!., Lima Beam Samar ask, Tomatoes, Lobster, Salmon and Mackerel la cans; alio, •Ceirrantr; Handal, Citron; Prune., Crease and Lemon Pat! in se .ry sarktT, for sate at the Family Grocery Mora DI JUILN 'I2ENSHA W, .Is Linear WM Hand meat& Pow —Co bt:,,exoc to a mi-adt/MitpbTATRICLX- .R° i , 00 .3 eau Nu. ul an I IZI Liberty. maul. rEAD y —4OOO Pigs B Jg & Cialigui Lead RR .L.. , ..r, b. OJINPICia
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